Darius slipped his hands in his pockets, staring at the path through which, someone had pointed out, the runners would return. Nothing yet, not that there should be. He’d only been watching for a few minutes.
He inched closer to the finish line. Some people who had stood farther out in the earlier part of the race were inching back toward the end and he wanted to be in front of them.
The man who had hugged Ariel was talking to another woman, older with a mane of gray hair. She laughed and touched his arm as they spoke, and then, suddenly, the man enveloped her in a hug.
Darius’s fist curled again. If that man was going to hurt Ariel, he would have to answer to Darius.
The man rocked the woman the same way he had rocked Ariel, and their bodies seemed just as attuned. Finally the man pulled back, held her arms, and talked to her. She laughed again, kissed him on the cheek, and went to the sign-in table, where she seemed to go back to work.
Darius nudged the guy next to him. The guy looked down, surprised.
“Who is that man?” Darius asked, pointing at the serial hugger.
“He’s the guy who organized this whole thing. Used to be pretty good himself, I heard, until he blew out his leg.”
Darius raised his eyebrows. An injury? “He blew out his leg?”
The man next to Darius nodded. “I think. Or maybe it was his back. Or something. All I know is that he doesn’t compete any more and my girlfriend is glad of it. She said he used to be real shovey on the course. Real arrogant. People put up with him because he’s, like, important, but I don’t think any of them like him.”
Darius frowned. He thanked the man beside him, then stared at the serial hugger. Sure enough, he was hugging another woman. She had a pained expression on her face as she let him hug her. Then, just as he had done before, the serial hugger pulled back, held the woman by the upper arms, and talked to her as if he were her coach. The woman gave him a polite smile, patted his cheek, and moved away.
Had Ariel been humoring him? She didn’t seem like the kind of woman who would humor anyone.
A wave of discomfort ran through Darius. If she didn’t humor anyone, then she welcomed the serial hugger’s attention, which Darius liked even less. He didn’t want her soul mate to be a man whom everyone else took as an annoyance.
“I see them!” someone yelled, and Darius whirled toward the path, amazed that he had forgotten to watch for Ariel.
He saw a flash of color through the trees. His mouth was dry and he wished he had thought to bring something to drink. He hadn’t expected to be this nervous, or this uncomfortable.
A man charged down the path, running as if he were in Spain and a bull was behind him. The man was red in the face, his shirt wet with sweat, his arms pumping, wasting energy.
Ariel was right behind him, moving gracefully. She looked like she could run all day. Her shirt was damp, but not doused like the man’s was, and her skin was flushed, but not red with overexertion.
They were the two leaders. No one else was even close.
The man glanced over his shoulder, panic on his face, as if Ariel were a hound let loose from hell to purse him. She didn’t seem to notice him. She passed him as if he were a rock in the road and continued toward the finish line with those easy, graceful sprints.
She was made to run. If Darius had thought she was stunning before, he thought she surpassed it now—becoming, simply, the most perfect human athlete he had ever seen. Her entire body moved together, without effort, like the giant cats of the African plains, running after prey. She had been born to run, and she probably hadn’t realized it, with her focus on the Ironman.
She had no idea how wonderful she looked.
She broke the tape, someone took a Polaroid, and she slowed down, grinning like he had never seen her grin before. The man came in after her, looking dejected.
Ariel still didn’t acknowledge him. She was doing a small celebratory jig all by herself, near the aid station. Other runners trickled in, many of them red-faced and exhausted, having given their all to the 5K distance. A few, even farther behind, didn’t look as tired, but they were clearly out to finish, not set a personal record.
The serial hugger approached Ariel and congratulated her. Darius moved closer so that he could hear the conversation. The serial hugger held out his arms, but Ariel shook her head and danced away from him, saying something about being too sweaty.
Then, as she turned her back on him, her mouth pursed in distaste.
Her expression sent a shot of joy through Darius. He tried to quell it—she had a right to be attracted to other men. She would be someday. He knew she would be. She had that soul mate in her future—but he was so glad the serial hugger distressed her as much as he distressed the other women.
Darius smiled, not just because Ariel had rejected the serial hugger, but because her joy at winning was so palpable. He was glad she had focused on the running, glad her attentions had turned away from him. She seemed so much healthier, so much more vibrant now, as if she had been in a dark place and had suddenly stepped into the light.
Darius turned away, heading toward his car. For the first time, he’d watched a race and hadn’t regretted that he had short legs and no discipline. The race hadn’t been about him.
It had been all about her.
“Mr. Vari!”
Ariel’s voice carried over the murmur of conversation and the shouts of congratulations from friends of the runners now crossing the finish line.
Darius kept walking, pretending he didn’t hear her. He hadn’t wanted to get caught. This was her moment; she didn’t need him lurking around.
“Mr. Vari!”
Her voice was closer and he couldn’t pretend he didn’t hear her anymore. He turned. She was running to catch up to him.
Her joy was unmistakable up close. She grinned, and the entire world got brighter. “What are you doing here?”
He could lie, he supposed, but he couldn’t think of anything convincing. “I came to watch you race.”
“You saw it?” Her voice rose with pleasure. “Really? How did you know I’d be here?”
“You mentioned it to someone at work and I overheard.” He shrugged, feeling out of place, like a voyeur who’d been caught. “I wanted to see how you did.”
“I did very well.” She was bouncing on both feet, as if she couldn’t stop moving.
“I know.” This time, he couldn’t keep the smile off his face. “I saw. Your race was spectacular. You sure pissed off that other guy.”
Her grin became mischievous. “He hated losing.”
“I think he hated losing to a woman.”
“That too,” she said. “You know, he arranged this race so that he could win.”
Darius leaned his head back in surprise. “He did? How do you know that?”
“You know the guy who fired the starting gun?”
“I saw him. I don’t know him.”
“He’s one of the biggest gossips in all of sport. Not to mention the oogiest toucher.” She shuddered. “When I asked him how the race got organized, he told me who was behind it, and I knew. The races he organizes get shorter and more obscure, and he usually moves on to a new venue for the next year, leaving the other partners behind. I suspect this year he’ll really be gone. He hates losing to anyone, but this’ll be fun. Watch how he posts the results: it’ll be men first, with him as winner with his slow time, and women second, with me as winner with the better time. And there won’t be any overall winner.”
“Doesn’t that bother you?” It bothered Dar. He wanted to find the bigot and set him straight.
Ariel shook her head. Her eyes twinkled. “Doing well is the best revenge. And no matter how he manipulates the numbers, I won.”
Dar’s grin matched hers. “You did, didn’t you?”
He wanted to hug her but didn’t know how, especially after her comments about the serial hugger. Not to mention the height difference. He would have the disadvantage of hugging her waist
, with his face buried in a private part of her anatomy.
Not that he would mind that, but she probably would.
“I’m so glad you came,” she said again, flapping her arms as if she didn’t know what to do with herself.
“What are you going to do to celebrate?”
She wiped a damp strand of hair off her forehead, then shrugged. “Gee, I don’t know. Take a shower?”
He’d invite her to lunch, but it was 9:30 in the morning. “Beer’s not appropriate this early, but we might be able to scrounge up some champagne. Add a little orange juice and it’s perfectly legal.”
“I’d love it,” she said, “but I don’t do alcohol when I’m training. It dehydrates the body and puts the wrong kind of chemicals in.”
Then she rolled her eyes.
“Listen to me. I’m such a tri-geek. I appreciate the offer, really.”
He nodded, feeling awkward again.
“Breakfast would be nice, though. But I have to wait for everyone to get done. They have a ceremony. “
It felt like she was throwing him a bone. He struggled to keep the smile on his face. “I—um, have to be at Quixotic at ten. Maybe the next time?”
“Sure.” She didn’t seem at all upset by his inability to stay. Then she bent and kissed him on the cheek. “Thank you for coming. Really. It meant a lot.”
And she danced off, her joy sparking off her like a candle shedding light.
Darius touched his cheek. The kiss had been meaningless, a gesture of thanks, nothing more. But it had sent a shiver of desire through him, followed by a thread of hope.
Which he quickly buried.
She was making the transition away from her obsession to a new and healthier fascination. He had to do the same thing.
He threaded his way through the crowd to his car and headed to Quixotic, even though it was his day off.
* * *
Ariel’s limbs tingled and her lungs burned. Even though 5K was an easy length for her, she wasn’t used to going so fast. The race had drained her more than she had planned.
She clutched the small trophy, the certificate done by a local calligrapher, and the free T-shirt she got automatically as the winner, and headed to the parking lot. She had used the showers provided by the organizers, but she had forgotten to bring her own soap. Her skin smelled of industrial cleansers and was already starting to itch.
Still, she had enjoyed herself, more than she ever thought possible.
The race had left her in a good mood, but the cap on her experience had been Vari’s presence. She had been feeling sad and a little sorry for herself when she had arrived at the race location. It seemed she was starting this athletic career the same way she had started the other one—alone.
Throughout her triathlete career, she had raced for herself and herself only. When she had dated, she usually dated men who were also competitors and often were in the same races she was. She dated few non-athletes. The ones she had dated, like that lawyer in Boise, had been completely uninterested in triathlons. If she could drag them to a race, they would get bored because the triathlon (particularly the Ironman) was an all-day affair. It wasn’t like football or basketball, where the spectators constantly had something to watch.
As a consequence, no one had ever willingly stood on the sidelines and rooted for her. Until today.
Vari’s presence had touched her deeply. She was even more touched because he had tried to leave without being seen. He had been interested, and the interest had been pure.
So had the support.
Ariel smiled to herself and got into the car, feeling restless. She needed to do something to celebrate. Too bad Vari hadn’t been able to go to brunch with her. Maybe she would invite him to the next race, with the idea that they could go somewhere afterwards.
Then she hesitated. Her relationship with him had been so strained because of her obsession with Darius. Would Vari be uncomfortable if she asked him?
There was, of course, only one way to find out.
And she had two weeks before the next race, so she had some time to think about it.
She pulled out of the parking lot and paused. She deserved a nice meal and something fun. Normally, she would have stayed downtown, but this time she wanted to do something different.
This time, she was going shopping.
She grinned, knowing there was good shopping in Portland’s downtown. But good shopping wasn’t what she wanted. She wanted kitsch and noise and the camaraderie of a bunch of people she didn’t know. She wanted an Orange Julius and a Cinnabon.
She wanted a mall.
Ariel knew of two (even though there were probably more)—the Clackamas Town Center, where Tonya Harding used to practice her skating in the built-in ice rink, and the Washington Square Mall, which had nothing whatsoever to do with athletics. The malls were on different sides of the city.
So she drove west, to Washington Square, where she wouldn’t have to think about anything. She could join the hordes of Saturday shoppers and pretend that her life was just like theirs, whatever that meant.
Besides, she thought she had seen an Orange Julius stand the one time she’d been in Washington Square.
The drive was congested—all of Portland shopped in the suburbs on Saturdays—but she didn’t care. She was enjoying her time out. Her mood was better than it had ever been.
Portland, she was beginning to realize, was a runner’s paradise. It was Nike’s hometown, and as such, had a great deal of respect for athletes of all stripes. The city and the outlying areas also had a lot of casual races, which was what she needed to get into her new mindset.
Boise was an athletic city as well, but it didn’t have the same traditions as Portland. Portland’s weather made running a year-round sport. Locals, if they were involved in athletics at all, were usually runners.
If she wanted to, she could talk to anyone passing on the street about running.
She liked that.
She pulled into Washington Square Mall’s parking lot and circled for a while, looking for an available space. Even though this mall was older and hadn’t really expanded enough on its latest remodel, it was still very popular on the weekends. She finally managed to find a parking space near the Barnes & Noble on the other side of the access road. She got out of the car, locked the precious trophy inside, and headed toward the mall.
Ariel didn’t find her Orange Julius, but she did find Cinnabon. She had a real lunch, followed by a tiny cinnamon roll covered with too much wonderful frosting, and she shopped for two hours without buying anything more expensive than a book.
On the way back to her car, she wandered past the shops in the strip mall that had sprung up across the road from the mall. Most were business-related stores, like Kinko’s, but some were older. There was a for-rent sign in one window, and she got the sense that the turnover among the non-business shops was higher than the strip mall’s owners anticipated.
As she passed a pet store she had never seen before, she spied a puppy in the window. The puppy was a basset hound with liquid eyes, and ears so long that he kept stepping on them. He looked sadder than average basset hound, and her heart went out to him.
Usually, she didn’t go into pet stores. Her tri-geek lifestyle hadn’t allowed her to keep pets—she was on the road too much—and if she got a pet, she would have gone to the Humane Society and saved one’s life.
But she couldn’t pass up the puppy. He was darling. Almost before she knew what she was doing, she pushed open the pet store’s heavy glass door.
To her surprise, the store’s interior had an odd twilight lighting. Fish tanks of all sizes lined the walls, and their lights provided most of the illumination. They were filled with fish of all sizes and shapes. Some of the fish had tanks to themselves. Others were in large groupings.
A desk in the center had a cash register and all sorts of fish paraphernalia, from pretty colored gravel to multicolored glass seashells. Empty tanks filled a center aisle, along wit
h other tank supplies: hose, bubblers, and heaters. Fish food and chemicals lined another aisle.
The puppy was the only mammal in the store—besides Ariel and the man behind the counter. He looked up from his newspaper as she let the door close behind her.
“Help you?” he asked.
“The puppy caught my eye,” she said.
He smiled knowingly, apparently seeing her confusion. “The puppy’s on loan from the Humane Society. We help them out when they have too many dogs to get rid of. Sometimes people are willing to buy from a store but never go to the pound.”
Ariel felt her cheeks flush. “He just caught my eye.”
“He’s a cute little bugger,” the man said. “It’s his first day here.”
She walked over to the large cage the puppy was in. He followed her every move, his tail wagging. His ears trailed alongside him.
“He looks purebred,” she said.
“Oh, he is.” The man sounded bitter. “One of the local puppy mills got shut down. A hundred dogs, all living in their own filth. I guess they had to put twenty to sleep.”
Ariel winced. “I hadn’t heard.”
“Happens a couple of times a year around here. That’s why I don’t carry pets. It encourages these idiots who are just into breeding for the money. With so many animals going homeless or being put to death because no one will adopt them, animal breeders are just perpetrating a crime.”
“All of them?” she asked.
He shrugged. “There are legit folks. But why get a purebred dog? They’re usually nervous and high-strung, with a ton of health problems. Mutts live longer and are much happier.”
She put out her finger and the puppy licked it. His big sad eyes reminded her of someone.
“Is this guy okay?” she asked.
“Oh, yeah. He was one of the lucky ones. They nursed him back to health. Now they have 80 dogs to get rid of. Some of the pet stores are helping, and they’ve put out big notices in the papers and stuff.”
The puppy wagged his stubby tail.
“How much is he?” she asked, unable to believe the question had come out of her mouth.
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