Confession #12: Reese could distract me from pretty much everything.
Reese immediately turned to me, clearly not an idiot. âYou donât have any classes with her, do you?â
I gnashed my teeth, thinking up every curse word known to man. âNo,â I admitted.
She suddenly moved her hand off my arm. âOh.â
I felt rejected, exposed, and ashamed all in the same breath.
But what did I really expect? It wasnât as if Iâd taken the morally upright path in life. And that scared off certain kinds of people. ~Reeseâs~ kind of people. I shouldâve known better.
Damn, I ~had~ known better. I just⦠I hadnât been able to help myself. Iâd had to talk to her today as much as Iâd needed air in my lungs.
Snagging my bag, I started to stand, calling myself an idiot. âThis was a mistake,â I bit out. âI never shouldâve sat beside you.â
Now Monica knew who she was, and Iâd put Reese in danger. Plus, Iâd probably just killed her reputation, too.
As I stood, Reese muttered, âWell, thanks a lot. I had a sucktacular time talking to you too.â
~Dammit.~
âI didnâtâ¦â Iâd hurt her feelings. I hadnât meant to hurt her feelings. Closing my eyes, I fisted my hands and sat back down next to her. âReese, I didnât mean it that way. I swear.â
âThen how exactly did you mean it?â she said. âBecause it sounded pretty rude from every angle I heard it.â
I looked at her before motioning vaguely around the quad. âDonât you get it? I just doomed you. By talking to you in public, by sitting with you at this tableâ¦â Unable to tell her ~everything~ but hoping just this much would be enough, I waved my hand. âEveryone here thinks weâve had sex.â
And sex with the likes of me would slaughter her image.
She laughed as if I were being ridiculous. âOh, whatever. I seriously doubt that. I barely even touched your arm. People do notâ¦â She glanced around and blinked at how many people were actually paying attention to us. âOr maybe they do.â
As her shoulders sank bashfully, her eyes wide with alarm, I felt the humbling need to apologize.
But she nodded and gulped audibly as if accepting her new reputation with grace. âSoâ¦uh, Dr. Janison is really one of your, umm, clients then?â She groaned suddenly and let her shoulders sag. âWow. This is going to make my next Early British Literature class ~way~ awkward.â
âWait.â I grabbed her arm, trying not to panic. âAre you saying you have a class with her? With Dr. Janison?â When she nodded, my hopes sank. âShit.â
âWhat?â Reese asked, her voice alarmed. âWhat does ~that~ mean?â
âLook.â I sighed, knowing Iâd do anything to fix this, to keep her grade from suffering, because I was the dumbass whoâd approached her in public and freaking sat beside her the night after calling her name inside another woman. âIf she starts giving you a tough time, or failing you orâ¦~anything~, let me know. Iâll talk to her.â
Except I planned to talk to her, anyway.
Reeseâs eyes grew wide. âWhoa, whoa, whoa. Why⦠Why would she fail me just for sitting next to you on a public bench?â Then her face paled as if she were already getting a clue.
Iâd already told her too much so I sat there miserably as she shook her head.
âBut that makes no sense. Even if we hadâ¦you know, had sex or whatever, she has no reason to get jealous. Doesnât she know she canât possibly be your onlyâ¦customer?â
âOf course she knows,â I muttered, not about to tell her exactly what kind of bone Monica had to pick with Reese specifically. So I said, âBut youâre obviously ~not~ a customer. She might feel slighted if she thinks I gave you aâ¦â I waved a hand, thinking quick before blurting, âYou know, a freebie.â
âWow.â Pulling back in obvious insult, Reese lifted her hand. âOkay. But wow. Not only is this the strangest conversation ever but, wow. A ~freebie~?â
âYou know what I mean,â I mumbled.
But Reese only laughed. âJust convince her I paid for it then, that Iâm, you know, a client too, just like her.â
Huh? âWhat?â I asked. âYou donât want me to tell her weâre not fooling around at all?â
With an immediate blush, Reese averted her gaze and waved a hand. âOr that. Thatâ¦I mean, sure, the truth would probably be best. Yeah. Letâs stick with the truth.â
God, she was cute. How the fuck could she make the worst thing feel fun? âExcept she wonât buy it,â I said, forcing myself to remember the gravity of the situation here. âAnd she knows you canât be a client.â
âHey. Why couldnât I be a client?â
Damn, she was perfect. I loved the young, innocent naïve parts of her just as much as I loved her spunk and verve. âReese, you just admitted you couldnât afford the same kind of shoes as her. Thereâs no way you could afford ~me~.â
âOh, really?â She arched an eyebrow and set her hands on her hips. âJust how much do you cost, Mr. Ego?â
Going for shock value so she would stop making such light of this, I leaned in and whispered, âThree grand,â into her ear.
Her mouth gaped open before she squeaked, âOkay, yeah. I couldnât afford that. But⦠Wow, I donât know.â She waved a hand. âDonât you have a payment plan or something? Reduced prices for the lower income?â
I laughed. How was this girl even possible? She was about as intuitive as she was clueless. The mix charmed me as much as it worried me. She seriously needed protection from every Monica and Patricia of the world. Theyâd eat her alive. And that would probably destroy ~me~.
âNo,â I said. âI do ~not~ offer payment plans. Are you for real? I play the expensive way or I donât play at all. I donât do this for my health, you know.â
âThen whyââ
âBecause being a decent, moral ~upstanding~ citizen didnât keep the eviction notices away,â I exploded. âIt didnât get my sister a new wheelchair. It didnât put food on my motherâs table. It didnât keep the electric company from turning off our power in the middle of the hottest day of the year. And it sure as hell didnât get me enrolled in college this semester. This is all about the money. ~Only~ about the money. Got it?â
When she shied back, I realized Iâd gone too far. Felt like Iâd just slapped a damn kitten.
âGot it,â she said, trying yet failing to smile. She waved a hand. âActually, that explanation makes you sound kind of noble, you know, with you falling on the sword of absolute depravity to save your family. Youâd probably make a good Saturday afternoon movie.â
Iâd been trying to warn her hereâshe could get into all kinds of different trouble from hanging around meâand yet ~she~ was trying to make me look like some kind of selfless, noble martyr. Had she missed the part where I got paid to fuck people?
When the hell had I slipped in a rabbit hole where everything I thought to be true was backward?
âYouâreâ¦insane,â I murmured, not sure what else to say. Because it was either that, or ~Iâd ~gone insane. But in a good way. I may not ever want my lucidity back if crazy was always like this.
Reese flashed me another one of her adorable nose-wrinkles. âOnly on Thursdays.â
Okay, that was it. One genuine conversation with this girl and I think she owned me. I was hooked. I liked her crazy, her sass, her sweet, her perception, and even her ignorance. She was strange, and interesting, and fun, the perfect bit of escape from my morally depraved, life-sucking existence.
Momentarily forgetting all my worries, I ate another tomato, feeling lighter and brighter, just from being in her company. Everything that had been weighing me down just kind of took a back seat.
âSo, you donât give out freebies?â she asked in a conversational tone, as one might use if she wanted to borrow a pen. âLike ever?â
I stopped chewing, my mind going places Iâm sure it shouldnât, but there it went anyway. âAre youâ¦asking for one?â
The scary part of that question was, Iâd give her one. If she said yes, she wanted me, I would drop every bit of ethical beliefs I had left and Iâdâ
âWhat?â Her eyes went huge as she cried, âNo! ~God~, no.â
Well, okay then.
Ouch.
Her rejection was definitely for the best, but still. A simple no would have sufficed. She ~was~ the only girl I wouldâve done this for, after all.
But then she glanced away, blushing, making me wonder if she was lying. Hope flared back to life inside me. Not that I actually wanted her to say yes, but it wouldâve been nice if she secretly wanted me as much as I wanted her.
âIâm notââ She broke off abruptly, making me wonder what sheâd almost said, before she forcefully repeated, âNo! Iâm not like that. I need to be in, you know, a committed, monogamous relationship, andâ¦in love, and stuff, before Iâ¦I sleep with someone.â
In love.
Hearing her say those words made me jealous of anyone sheâd ever slept with. I wondered what it would feel like for this girl to love ~me~.
My curiosityâand, okay, some jealousy tooâgot the best of me. I eased closer. âHave you ever been in love?â I had to know.
She gaped at me. âAre you asking if Iâm a virgin? Because Iâm notââ
Whoa! What? I lifted my hands, instantly retracting. âThatâs not what Iâm asking.â
âOh.â She relaxed, then cleared her throat and glanced away. âWell⦠I donât⦠Iâm not sure what I was, if it was stupid, too-young-to-know-better infatuation or what, but it definitely ~wasnât~ love. And Iâm not about to make the mistake of not knowing the difference ever again.â
That answer shouldnât please me. Sheâd pretty much just confessed that some guy had hurt her, but all my stupid brain could compute was that sheâd never given anyone else her heart. And so I heard myself saying, âGood,â before I could properly think my words through.
Reese gave me an odd look before blatantly changing the subject. âSo, if itâs common knowledge around here that youâre really, you know, what you are, then how have you never been arrested before?â
âItâs not common knowledge. Itâs a common ~rumor~,â I corrected her, hating that she only wanted to talk about that, even as I felt a certain relief thatâfinallyâI had someone I didnât have to be so deceptive around. Plus, talking about it made it a blaring reminder that I could never have her. It was a good thing to keep out there in front of both of us, so I wouldnât cross any lines.
Still. It bothered me how filthy and depraved she must think I was. Because I had done some pretty kinky shit I wasnât exactly proud of, shit I wouldnât have done unless someone was paying me a lot of money. Which⦠Probably only made me an even lower life form than before. Jesus.
âYouâre not going to leave this alone, are you?â I asked, ready to move past the memories of every despicable thing Iâd done in the name of paid bills.
And yet, Reese merely grinned as if this was all just entertainment to her. âHey, itâs not every day I meet a gigolo.â
I choked on the tomato chunk Iâd just taken a bite of, my eyes growing wide over how loudly sheâd announced that.
With an apologetic wince, she hunched her shoulders and nearly whispered, âCan you blame me for being curious? I have, like, a million questions. But⦠Only if youâre cool with answering them.â
I stared at her, not sure what to say. She was so blasé about the whole thing. It was relieving not to be judged, just as much as it was maddening, because I kind of wanted her to care. I wanted her to be as interested in me as I was in her, therefore she should be resentful of my secret life. It was a strange, contradictory wish, I know, but so was everything else in my life these days. I always felt pulled in two polar opposite directions.
Deciding to be amused, I sniffed out a laugh and shook my head. âYou read a lot of Nancy Drew mysteries when you were a kid, didnât you?â
She wrinkled her nose. âNo. Iâve never even read one. ~Harry Potter~ is more my style, and yeah, his curiosity got him into trouble a lot too. As you well know.â
But, âNo,â I countered, shaking my head. âIâve never read ~Harry Potter~.â
Gasping, she pressed a hand to her heart. âAre you kidding me? But⦠~Everyoneâs~ read ~Harry Potter~.â
âNot me.â
âButâ¦butâ¦theyâre soâ¦amazing. Donât worry.â She patted my arm and nodded in reassurance. âI have all the books in the series sitting in my apartment. Next time I babysit Sarah, Iâll bring the first one over for you to see what you think.â
God, I liked it when she touched me. And what was worse, she didnât remove her fingers after the friendly pat. Her flesh began to burn against mine with the most delicious kind of heat. And all I could seem to think about was how good itâd feel if we were touching everywhere with no clothes between us.
I wanted to find out what that would be like with her.
Which was weird. These days, I never had sexual fantasies about women. I mostly just wanted to avoid them. But this girl with her eclectic moods and quirky way made me ~want~.
âI donât do freebies,â I reminded myselfâunfortunately aloudâslowly pulling my arm out from under her hand. âEver.â
Meaning, I couldnât do ~her~. And hell, I shouldnât even talk to her.
âBut I wasnâtâ¦â she started, only to roll her eyes and pick up her fork to stab at her salad savagely. When she petulantly muttered, âWhatever,â I realized how sheâd probably interpreted my words.
I hadnât assumed sheâd been coming onto me when sheâd touched me. I should probably tell her that. But if I let her think I was an ass, maybe sheâd keep her distance, because that was safer for both of us.
âWhat about your personal life, though?â She went on a second later as if I hadnât just hurt her feelings. âWhat about dating andââ
When I laughed and shook my head, she scowled at me. âWhatâs so funny?â
I lifted my eyebrows. She really didnât get it, did she? âDating? Personal life? Are you serious? The only girls who sniff around me are willing to pay or theyâre looking for free services rendered, which only pisses me off.â
âButââ
âAnd all you monogamous, ~relationship-~conscious ladies stay as far away from me as possible for obvious reasons.â
She wrinkled her nose. âThat canât be true. Iâm sure plenty ofââ
âReese.â I lifted my eyebrows. âHonestly, would ~you~ date aâ¦person of my occupation?â
With an apologetic cringe, she mumbled, âGood point.â
âYeah,â I sighed. âExactly.â
âWell, thatâs just sad.â She looked at me as if she wanted to touch me again and comfort me. âYou canât date or have recreationalâ¦fun or even fall in love just because you went to drastic measures to save your family?â
âI was eighteen when I fell into this,â I tried to explain. âAt the time, I was too young and stupid to think about how it would impact my futureâ¦so...â I shrugged. âThere you have it. Now Iâm stuck.â
âNo.â She must be an eternal optimist because she sent me an encouraging smile. âYou canât be stuck. Surely thereâs ~something~ else you could do to make money. Something ~legal~ andâ¦andâ¦â
âMoral?â I suggested dryly.
She pointed, nodding encouragingly, like some kind of life coach. âYes, and moral. And...â
I laughed and then did the forbidden. I reached out and briefly let my fingers barely drift across the surface of her cheek. âYouâre cute, Reese,â I said, mentally making this my farewell speech. âCheerful. Optimistic. Funny. But completely deluded.â I stood up, forcing myself to finally go. âThanks for making my sister smile. And thanks for the tomatoes. Iâll see you around.â And I took off before I could mess anything else up.