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The Kiss Quotient

Page 14

by Helen Hoang


  “She just wants you to like her.”

  The words punched Michael in the stomach. He did like her, and knowing this didn’t impact that at all. She was still the same person. Except he understood her better now. At least, on a conscious level, he did.

  Subconsciously, he felt like he’d always known. Because he’d grown up with Khai, he knew how to interact with her. He didn’t even have to think about it. That had to be why she could relax with him when she couldn’t with others . . .

  A strange charged sensation buzzed through him, tensing his muscles and putting his hairs on end. Maybe he didn’t have to end their arrangement.

  Maybe accepting her proposal wasn’t taking advantage of her. Because she was autistic, maybe she really could use a practice relationship before she entered a real one. Maybe he was the perfect one for her to practice with. Maybe he could help her for real.

  He didn’t have to take the entire fifty grand. Come to think of it, he didn’t have to take any of it. He had credit cards. He could make up the difference next month. By helping her without financial motivation, he’d finally prove he wasn’t his dad.

  He yanked his gear off and tossed it on the floor in a careless heap. “Put that away for me, will you? I have to go.”

  * * *

  • • •

  Stella’s phone beeped, dragging her out from the world of her data. Her office materialized, her desk, the computer screens with the command prompt and all the clever code she’d written, her windows, the darkness beyond them.

  The alert on her phone said, “Dinnertime.”

  She opened a desk drawer and pulled out a protein bar. Her mother would be angry if she saw Stella eating one of these for dinner, but she didn’t care. She just wanted to work.

  Absently chewing on the cardboard-y chocolate mixture, she made small adjustments and refinements in her algorithm. It was good. Maybe some of her best work.

  Her phone buzzed, and the screen lit with a text message from Michael.

  Is that your office on the 3rd floor with the lights on at 6PM on a Saturday?

  She dropped her protein bar and stood up to look out the window. A familiar form leaned against a lamppost in the parking lot. She immediately dodged out of view, too humiliated to be seen.

  Her phone buzzed with another message. Come down. We need to talk.

  She sank back into her chair. This was it. He’d come to end it. Her thumbs shook as she composed a short response. Just tell me via text message.

  I want to talk to you in person.

  She threw her phone onto her desk and crossed her arms. She was tired and embarrassed. She didn’t need to witness the dissolution of their arrangement in person. Or were there additional things he wanted to talk to her about? More things she’d done wrong?

  Maybe she shouldn’t have apologized to his mom? Had that been creepy and intrusive? Why couldn’t she get anything right?

  She ran her hands over her hair and attempted to slow her breathing. Did she have to apologize for apologizing?

  The phone buzzed yet again, and she flipped it over with the tip of a trembling finger so she could read it.

  I’m going to stay out here until you come down.

  She rubbed at her temple. Her head throbbed, and sweat glued her clothes to her body. She needed to go home and shower.

  Might as well get this over with.

  She tossed her once-bitten protein bar into the trash, saved her work, and powered down her computer. Tossing her purse over her shoulder, she shut the lights off and left the room.

  The empty halls and low-lit cubicles usually comforted her. Tonight, they made her lonely and sad. As she strode to the elevator, she wondered how long it would be before this feeling went away. A week? A month? She wished everything could go back to normal—like before she’d met Michael. These highs and lows in emotion were exhausting.

  The click of her heels on marble echoed through the reception area, and she made herself push the front doors open and walk outside.

  Michael shoved away from the lamppost and dug his hands into his pockets, looking like his usual gorgeous self in the glow of the streetlights. “Hi, Stella.”

  “Hi, Michael.” Her chest tightened and began aching. She drummed her fingers against her thighs until she caught him watching and fisted her hands.

  “My mom told me you stopped by the shop.”

  That was it. She’d really done the wrong thing. Her heart plummeted, and her face threatened to crumple. She schooled her features into place. “I’m sorry if I shouldn’t have done that. I couldn’t bear knowing I’d hurt her. I never mean to hurt people, but I do it all the time. I’m working on fixing this, but it’s so complicated, and I just—I just—I just . . .”

  He stepped toward her until they were separated by an arm’s length. “What are you talking about?”

  She stared down at her shoes. She was so tired. When would this be over so she could go home and sleep? “You’re angry. Because I went to see your mom. That’s intrusive.”

  “I’m not, actually.”

  She lifted her gaze and found him watching her with sad eyes. “Then . . . I don’t understand.”

  “As your practice boyfriend, shouldn’t I be here? It’s getting late.”

  She took a surprised breath. “After everything I said at your mom’s, you still want to have a practice relationship with me?”

  “Yeah. Things are complicated with my family, and I should have prepped you ahead of time. I’m sorry I didn’t think to do that.”

  When he wrapped an arm around her waist and pulled her close, she was too stunned to speak. He was apologizing to her?

  “Are you okay? You look like you’re going to pass out.”

  She tensed at his nearness, unsure what to do. “I’m fine. Don’t worry.”

  “When was the last time you ate?”

  “I don’t remem—oh, I ate something right before you texted.”

  “What was it?”

  She was not telling him. He’d probably act like her mother and chastise her. That was the last thing she needed right now.

  He brushed his fingers along her jaw before clasping her face in his palm and tipping her head back. A butterfly-light kiss teased her lips. “You smell like chocolate. Did you have candy for dinner, Stella?”

  “Not candy. A protein bar. There are vitamins and stuff in it.”

  “You’re coming with me. Don’t argue. I’m going to feed you.” He walked her to her car, which was parked not far away, and by that time, she was simply too tired to protest.

  The doors unlocked when they sensed the key fob in her purse, and she sat in the passenger seat. She fumbled for the seat belt, but he caught it and buckled her in with sure movements. He got in on the other side and pulled out of the parking lot.

  The motion of the car lulled Stella into a drowsy half slumber, and it was several minutes before she realized he’d left downtown and headed across the freeway. “Where are we going?”

  “Back to my mom’s.”

  A surge of adrenaline burned the sleepiness out of Stella’s head, and she sat up in her seat, wide awake. “What? Why?”

  “There’s a lot of food there. My mom had me cook for like a hundred people last night.”

  She adjusted her glasses as her heart started ramping up for takeoff. “I’d really like to go home.”

  “Do you have anything to eat at your place?”

  “I have yogurt. I’ll eat it. I promise.”

  He shook his head as he released a tight huff of breath. “I’ll feed you quick and then take you home.”

  Before she could think up a suitable response, he pulled into the driveway of the little gray house. When he opened the door, she could hear the same music carrying faintly on the wind. She gripped her seat belt like a lifeline.

 
; “I can’t handle the TV tonight,” she confessed in a pained whisper. After last night, her usual tolerance was gone. She’d fall apart and scare everyone. Michael would change his mind about the arrangement—she still couldn’t believe he didn’t want to cancel. Or he’d start walking on eggshells around her, which was worse.

  “Hold on a minute.” He dug his phone out of his pocket and typed in something on the screen.

  Within moments, the music stopped.

  “You made them turn it off? Won’t your mom and grandma be unhappy they can’t watch their shows?” Her entire body flamed with embarrassment. She despised it when people had to make changes for her.

  He gave her a funny look. “It’s just TV.”

  “I don’t like it when people have to act differently for me.”

  “We don’t mind.” He walked around to her side, opened the door, and held his hand out. “Will you come in?”

  * * *

  • • •

  When Stella’s small hand landed in his palm, the hard knot of tension in Michael’s gut loosened, but an awful brew of guilt and sadness continued to eat at him.

  She looked terrible. Her bun was off-center, and messy strands framed her drawn face. Her normally bright, expressive eyes were dim, swollen, and shadowed. His heart dipped when he realized she must have cried a lot to make them that way. He’d made her cry.

  This was not his Stella.

  Well, the sweatiness of her hand was all Stella. He squeezed gently and led her to the front porch.

  When he opened the door and prepared to enter, she stiffened and dug in her feet. “I forgot to bring something. Google says I’m supposed to bring something. Let me go and—”

  “It’s fine, Stella.” He wrapped an arm around her waist and propelled her into the house.

  Inside the entryway, she shut her eyes and took a breath. He could see her absorbing the silence, feel her body relaxing against his arm.

  “You know you can always tell me when things bother you, right? Like the TV last night . . . or the club last week.”

  Her eyelids fluttered open, but instead of looking at him, she stared off to the side, suddenly tense all over again. “Did Quan say something to you?”

  Michael hesitated to answer. Something told him it was extremely important to her that he didn’t know, so he did what he’d learned from his dad even though he hated it. He lied. “Only that the noise and crowd were too much for you. Why didn’t you tell me? I wish you had.”

  “I already told you I don’t like it when people have to act differently for me.”

  “We could have done something else,” he said in exasperation. The last thing he wanted was to hurt her or make her uncomfortable.

  “Why are there oranges here?” she asked, indicating the plate of oranges next to the urn of incense and bronze Buddha statue on the table in the entryway.

  “Don’t change the subject.”

  She sighed. “Fine. It embarrasses me. A lot.”

  All that self-torture . . . because it embarrassed her to admit she was different? His insides melted down, and he grabbed her hand and squeezed.

  “Can you tell me about the oranges now?”

  He smiled at her single-mindedness. “It’s an offering for the dead. Supposedly, they get hungry in the afterlife,” he said with an uncomfortable shrug. As a scientist type, she had to think this was silly. He did, too, but it was something Ngoại and his mom liked to do.

  A small smile played over her lips. “Do you give them other kinds of food, too? I’d get tired of fruit all the time, myself. How about candy?”

  He laughed. “You’ve had enough candy today.”

  “What do you do with the fruit now that it’s been offered? I assume the dead don’t actually rise and consume it . . .”

  “We eat it. I’m not entirely clear on how long you’re supposed to wait, but at least a day or so, I think.”

  “Hm.” She inspected the Buddha statue, angled her head so she could see behind it. Judging by her expression, she was fascinated, and he recalled that she loved martial arts films and DramaFever. She did not look condescending or bored or imposed upon. She did not look like his dad.

  “Do you feel like you’ve entered the set of an Asian drama? Is that what’s going on here?” he asked.

  “This is better. This is real life.” She pointed to the box of incense hidden away behind the statue. “Can I light one? Will you show me how to do it? I’ve always wanted to.”

  He rubbed the back of his neck. “I don’t actually know how. I mean, I don’t remember the order of the lighting and the bowing and all that. When I was little, I refused to do it, and Ngoại stopped requesting it.”

  “Does it take very long?” she asked with a frown.

  The corner of his mouth tipped up sheepishly. “I don’t think so, no. Let’s go say hi to my mom and grandma, and then I’ll feed you. Okay?”

  “Okay.”

  She followed him through the dining room and into the kitchen where Sophie and Evie were dishing rice noodles, shredded mint and lettuce, and barbecued beef into large bowls. They looked to be back on speaking terms. Considering their track record of enemies one day, best friends the next, that was about right. Ngoại and his mom were slicing up heaps of mangoes at the informal seating area where they did all their eating—the formal dining table was for presentation only. Ngoại was dressed in her favorite black knit cardigan, and his mom wore a Christmas sweater even though it wasn’t holiday season.

  “Hi Ngoại, Mẹ,” Michael said.

  His mom nodded at him before considering Stella. “Welcome back. Dinner’s ready soon. Sit and eat, ah?”

  Stella smiled, but her grip on his hand was fierce. “Sure, thank you. It looks good.”

  “These two are Sophie and Evie. They’re not twins,” he said, bringing her to the kitchen island that was covered with food stored in brand-new Pyrex containers. “Sophie—the one with that red stripe in her hair, God, when did you get that?—is an interior decorator, and Evie is a physical therapist.”

  “Hi, Stella,” they said at the same time. Mom must have told them about Stella’s apology because it looked like they wanted to make a fresh start.

  Stella gave a tiny wave. “Hi.”

  “Is Angie here?” he asked.

  “Nope. More work stuff,” Evie said.

  “On a Saturday,” Sophie added with a sneer.

  “Because people work—”

  “On Saturdays—”

  “All the time.”

  The sisters faced one another and traded knowing glances.

  Michael whispered in Stella’s ear, “They’ve been finishing each other’s sentences since they were little. I think they’re aliens.”

  Stella’s lips trembled into another smile, and she leaned into him. Poor shy girl. His family had to be overwhelming for her, and this wasn’t even all of them. He tightened his hand around hers and fought the desire to kiss her. Something about the way she turned to him like he was her safe place satisfied caveman needs Michael hadn’t known he possessed.

  He cleared his throat and asked, “Where are Janie and Maddie?”

  “Upstairs doing homework. They’ll come down when they’re hungry. They both have tests soon.”

  “They’re the two youngest,” he explained to Stella. “Maddie is the baby. She’s a sophomore at San Jose State.”

  “I’m going to forget everyone’s names.” She looked so worried—Michael melted a little. Why did she care? These people couldn’t be special to her. They were just his family.

  “That’s okay. I wish I could.”

  “Very funny, Michael,” Evie said with a roll of her eyes. “You only have to remember me. I’m a PT, so if you get carpal tunnel or something, you know who to look for. Posture is everything.”

  “Why cou
ldn’t you be a doctor, then, E?” his mom asked as she peeled her tenth mango. “All I wanted was a doctor in the family, and not one of you could do that for me.”

  “Stella’s a doctor,” Michael said with a grin.

  Her eyes rounded into giant buttons. “No, I’m not.”

  “Yes, you are. You have a PhD. That makes you a doctor. And you went to the University of Chicago, the best school for economics in the U.S., probably the world. You graduated magna cum laude.”

  As he’d known would happen, his mom perked up with interest. “That’s fantastic.”

  Stella blushed, bringing much needed color to her cheeks. “How did you . . .”

  “Google stalking.”

  Her eyes searched his, and a surprised smile hinted at the corners of her mouth. “You stalked me?”

  He shrugged. It was his turn to feel awkward now.

  “Okay, lovebirds, dinner’s ready. Come eat,” Sophie said. She set down a bowl filled with noodles that had been cut short with scissors and ultra-thin sliced meat in front of Ngoại and kissed her temple like she would a baby.

  Once they’d seated themselves at the table, Michael watched as Stella carefully mimicked Sophie’s food preparation ritual, adding chili sauce, pickled daikon and carrots, bean sprouts, and fish sauce to her bowl of noodles, greens, and beef.

  “Have you ever had this before?” he asked.

  She shook her head absently as she mixed everything together and took a bite. Her eyes opened wide, and she grinned as she covered her mouth. “You’re a good cook.”

  “Michael is very good with his hands,” his mom said with a proud nod.

  Sophie rolled her eyes before she smirked suggestively and asked Stella, “Do you agree? Is he ‘good with his hands’?”

  His mom scowled at Sophie, but Stella merely smiled and nodded. “I think so.”

  Sophie arched her eyebrows and sent Michael an is she for real? look.

  As dinner progressed, Michael watched Stella through a new lens provided by his recent discovery. He didn’t notice so much when it was just the two of them, but she had trouble with eye contact. She rarely spoke unless someone asked her a direct question, and then her answers were short and to the point. When she listened, however, her focus was the kind of stuff she probably used on complex economic problems. She frowned, hanging on every word like it was of utmost importance.

 

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