A Little Like Destiny

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A Little Like Destiny Page 14

by Lisa Suzanne


  “Why?” Jill asks.

  “Because he’s Mark fucking Ashton. How many people in their pasts do you think have used them to get to him? How many times do you think they’ve been burned because they were close to him? And now they’re living with him.”

  The door opens, and all our heads swing over to see who’s about to step through it. I expect it to be Brian or Becker—or even Jason, or some combination of the three of them, but to my utter shock, it’s none of them.

  It’s Mark.

  He looks delicious tonight, decadent in a black t-shirt and black jeans. Day-old stubble outlines a strong jawline. His green eyes fall on me, blistering and burning as he pins me to my spot, and I can’t believe I didn’t see the resemblance between brothers before.

  The shame I felt from that night is completely gone. In its wake is a new layer—a layer of need and desire, of longing for this man who somehow drew me in and connected with me on a level I didn’t even know existed.

  I wish I could read what he’s thinking, what he’s feeling. His face is a mask, though. I suppose it makes sense that he’s had to train himself to hide whatever’s going on inside him when he’s on stage, and of course that would extend to his personal life.

  Tess starts to shriek that Mark Ashton is in the same room as us, but then he throws the door closed behind him, and it shuts with a loud slam.

  Her mouth shuts when she sees the ferocity in his eyes. He strides across the room toward me, and I stumble back a bit at the intensity. I bump into the dresser. He’s too far away from me, not close enough to reach, but I have the sudden, inexplicable urge to rush into his arms.

  I let out a gasp. My hands tremble and my heart pounds.

  I’m sure Jill and Tess are staring at us in the periphery, but my gaze is focused on the rock star.

  “I never expected to see you here,” he says, his voice low as he ignores the fact that there are other people in the room apart from the two of us. “Least of all with my brother.”

  The door flies open. Brian’s eyes flash with anger. “There you are,” he says to me, his eyes cooling just the tiniest bit as they land on me. All the anger is back, though, as he glances at his brother. “Here to steal my girl?” he asks. He’s clearly going for a teasing tone, but he has no idea what happened between us. “There’s a couple of groupies waiting outside the door. Might be able to finally get that foursome you’ve always talked about.” He laughs after he says it, but he’s the only one laughing.

  Mark blows out a breath and gives me one last long glance that goes unnoticed by Brian, who has made his way over to me and thrown a possessive arm around my shoulders. Jill and Tess stand silently across the room from me, two sets of eyes staring widely at me. Mark disappears out the door.

  “We should, um, leave you two alone,” she says. “Come on, Tess.” I throw a pleading look in Jill’s direction, but she’s already out the door.

  I don’t want to be alone with Brian right now. I want to be alone with Mark. I want to know what he meant by his words. A million questions cross my mind in the span of a few seconds.

  Is he mad that I’m here with Brian? Does he even care? Does he think I’m some sort of slut for sleeping with him and moving right onto his brother? Was I just another Vail tail to him? Does he think I’m using his brother to get to him? Does he even know that I didn’t know they were related until I walked through the door marked 4701 tonight?

  Is he hurt that I showed up tonight as Brian’s girlfriend?

  Is it bad that I want him to feel hurt by that? If he did, then I’d know he had feelings for me—that he didn’t remember me as one fun night, that he feels more between us in the same way I do.

  His words were confirmation that he remembered me, and the way he left the room after Brian came in tells me he doesn’t want Brian to know we shared that night.

  So I’ll keep quiet for now, and I’ll hope and pray that I get Mark alone again—just to talk. And soon.

  “What did he say to you?” Brian asks.

  “Who? Mark?” My voice squeaks on his name, and I clear my throat as I try to regain control despite my still thumping heart and shaking hands.

  Brian nods, and I feel again like he knows something happened between his brother and me.

  I shrug. “Nothing.”

  “Did he hit on you?”

  I laugh. “No. Nothing like that.”

  He gives me a long gaze, and then he nods as if he’s satisfied with my answer.

  I’m not sure why I feel like I dodged a bullet.

  nineteen

  For the first night since I met Brian, I stayed over at his place. Well, his brother’s place.

  It’s strange waking up next to him somewhere other than my own bed, especially with the knowledge that Mark is sleeping in another room just on the other side of this condo. I didn’t sleep at all. Instead, I stared up at the ceiling, awake with my thoughts and the guilt that burns everywhere in me. I’m not sure if I feel guilty because I slept with his brother or if I feel guilty because I want to do it again.

  I contemplate what to do. I could stay here and wait for Brian to wake up, wait for him to escort me out, and miss my chance at a conversation with Mark. Or I could quietly creep out of bed while Brian sleeps and hope that I run into Mark.

  My heart twists as the thought of Mark with another woman crashes into me. Did he have another woman in his bed last night—is she there now? Did he rasp to her in the middle of the night? Did he tell her to come back to bed as she sat in the chair by the window and looked over the glowing lights of the Strip? Did he make love to her in that very chair with those very lights reflecting in her eyes? Did she wrap his cashmere blanket over her naked shoulders?

  It’s not just my heart twisting. My stomach lurches violently, and I force those images out of my head.

  I get up like I would any other morning. I don’t try to be extra quiet so I don’t have to deal with the guilt if Brian catches me sneaking around his brother’s condo. I head to the bathroom. I gaze at myself in the mirror. I look like a hot mess. Dark circles from the bleeding eyeliner that I didn’t bother to wash off last night shadow my eyes, and my hair is a stringy mess. I dig through my purse and find a hair tie so at least I can get one mess under control, and then I splash some cool water on my face and wipe at the smeared make-up with a towel.

  I never expected to see you here. Least of all with my brother.

  I can’t get his words out of my head.

  They play on repeat, and I dissect every single one as I attempt to make myself look presentable.

  I never expected to see you here.

  Is that because he wanted us to be one and done? Was that all it was to him?

  Least of all with my brother.

  Was he upset I was with his brother because it was his brother? Or was it the other way around—he was upset that I was there with his brother because that meant I was with someone who wasn’t Mark?

  I want it to be the second one more than I want air to breathe, but all that would do is complicate things.

  I think of the way he looked at me when he walked into Brian’s bedroom. His eyes were on me, full of the things I wanted to see there—I think. It could’ve been the vodka or my overactive imagination. It may have been wishful thinking. Either way, he came to find me, and he left as soon as his brother walked in the room. That has to mean something.

  I need to see him. Fuck the guilt. I sneak out of Brian’s bathroom as quietly as possible. I creep through the quiet hallway, praying Mark will somehow be sitting at the kitchen table, as if fate stepped in to give us the time together we deserve.

  But fate can be a real cruel bitch sometimes.

  Mark’s not in the kitchen. The room is empty, just like it was the last time I crept quietly through this same condo the morning after spending it in a man’s arms.

  I glance around me, really take in the view. The place is a mess, bottles and empty cups strewn across the counter, crumbs and plates
and napkins scattered across table tops and the floor. It looks like there was a great party here last night, and I wish I knew how the night ended for Mark.

  My eyes automatically go to the hallway where I know his bedroom is located. It’s the only room down that hallway, the master suite. The thought attacks me again: is some other woman in there with him? I want to know. I’m desperate to know.

  A singular sound pierces the quiet when a key slides into the lock of the front door. My head swings that way, and then an older woman walks through it. Her gray eyes fall on me, but she shows no emotion. “Hello, miss. Are you a guest of Mr. Ashton?”

  Not last night, I wasn’t. “I’m Brian’s girlfriend.”

  She smiles and touches a hand to her gray hair. “Oh, Brian is such a nice boy. I’m happy he found someone.”

  Who are you? My mind is begging me to ask, but my lips won’t form the question. She heads straight to the counter and starts gathering the garbage. She gathers the empty bottles in one area and the bottles with liquor still in them in another.

  “Do you need some help with that?” I finally ask.

  “Oh, no, sweetheart. Thank you. I get paid well to come in and do this.” She smiles at me. “I’m Hazel, by the way. Mr. Ashton’s housekeeper. And, I suppose your boyfriend’s, too, until he finds a place of his own.”

  “Nice to meet you, Hazel.”

  I wonder what sorts of things Hazel has seen. She seems completely unaffected by the fact that there are cigarettes and joints mingling together in ashtrays as she dumps them into a garbage can.

  I stand awkwardly, not sure what to do. No one else is out here. It’s just me and Hazel, and she doesn’t want my help.

  “Can I get you anything?” she asks me.

  I could use a strong cup of coffee, but I don’t say that. “No, thank you.”

  “Don’t mind me. I’ll have this place back in tip top shape in a few hours.”

  “How long have you been working for Mark?” I ask.

  She glances upward in thought. “I guess he’s been here about three years now.”

  “Is this his main residence?”

  She shakes her head, mindlessly emptying some beer cans into the sink before tossing them in the recycle bin under the sink. “No. He lives in Los Angeles, but he stays here pretty regularly. More so over the past couple months.”

  “Where else does he have houses?”

  She glances over at me. “Why don’t you ask him, sweetie?” She says it so nicely and so genuinely that I almost miss the fact that she’s sort of scolding me.

  I don’t want her to think I’m with Brian because of his brother. “Brian didn’t tell me he was related to Mark,” I blurt. “I just found out last night. We’ve been together about a month.”

  “Ah,” she says knowingly. “So you’re a little fascinated and a little shell shocked?”

  I nod. “Yeah.”

  “He’s a good man. Mr. Ashton, I mean. Brian is, too. You’re a lucky girl. The two of them have such a tumultuous relationship sometimes, so I see why Brian doesn’t tell girls who his brother is.”

  “I get it, too.”

  “Especially after what happened with that Kendra girl.”

  “What happened?” I ask.

  She covers her mouth. “I’m sorry. I’ve already said too much.”

  “No, not at all.” I think fast. How can I get her to tell me more?

  Time runs out on me as I hear footsteps approaching. Brian’s sleepy head appears from the hallway. “There you are,” he says. He walks over to me and kisses the top of my head. “Morning, Hazel.”

  “Good morning, Brian,” Hazel says. “How are you this morning?”

  “Better now,” he says, wrapping his arms around my waist and leaning down to press his lips to mine.

  I wrap my arms around him, too—an automatic response after being with him for a month. He holds me in a hug and I look over his shoulder out the window. The view here is the same as the one from Mark’s bedroom. I think back to last night when he told me he loves me as we looked over a different view. At least this view still belongs to Mark and me.

  More footsteps approach, but this time they’re from a different hallway.

  My heart squeezes as I try to untangle myself from Brian’s arms, but he doesn’t let me go.

  “Morning.” I hear his familiar voice, that sweet sound that’s kept me company for so many hours of my life. I want to turn, want to look at him, want to see what emotions are on his face, but Brian still has me locked in his embrace.

  “Good morning, Mark,” Hazel says brightly.

  “Morning,” Brian says. He kisses my temple and finally lets me go.

  I finally turn and smile over in his direction. He looks tired, dark circles shadowing those green eyes, and he won’t look at me.

  “Did you end up with Delilah or Miranda last night?” Brian asks his brother.

  “Neither,” Mark mutters, walking past us and toward the refrigerator. He pulls out a bottle of beer, pops the top off, and proceeds to drink down half the bottle with one long pull.

  Hazel looks over at him with disappointment in her eyes, but he doesn’t look at her, either.

  “Couldn’t close the deal?” Brian asks.

  “Fuck off.”

  Hazel remains quiet during their exchange, but I can tell she wants to jump in. It’s easy to see she cares about both of them like they’re her boys. I wonder if she has a family, kids and grandkids, a husband. I wonder what her life is like.

  Mark takes his bottle and heads back to his bedroom, and I can’t help but wonder if he didn’t end up with Delilah or Miranda last night, who did he end up with?

  *

  I don’t see Mark again that day. Brian takes me home, and I spend the afternoon dissecting his words over and over again. I never expected to see you here. Least of all with my brother.

  I go over them with Jill a hundred times, too. Jill claims Mark gave me a smoldering look when he walked in, but what the hell does that even mean? And does it even matter?

  Brian has plans all day Saturday, but he comes to my place afterward, which is probably the better route. It’s easier to push Mark out of my mind, to pretend like I didn’t feel an intense heat between us in the three seconds we shared last night. It was awfully convenient that Brian walked in when he did, though.

  I don’t get to see Lizzie again before she heads back home to Chicago, which is unfortunate. She’s a breath of fresh air, someone I could see myself being friends with. Brian doesn’t mention her, but surely he got together with her again before she headed home. I feel a little insulted that I wasn’t invited along, but it’s purely me jumping to conclusions. If Brian wants to be dodgy and secretive about his family, that’s his prerogative.

  Another week passes, and I’m torn between the feelings for Mark that won’t seem to go away and my blossoming feelings for Brian. I keep wondering if it’s love between us. He hasn’t said it again since that night against the window in his bedroom, but the words have been on the tip of my tongue as he kisses me, as he makes love to me, as he caresses me with a gentle touch.

  I haven’t brought up Mark to Brian, and he hasn’t mentioned him, either. I wonder if he thinks it’s strange I haven’t asked about his brother, but then I think he might prefer it this way.

  One evening in early July, Brian and I are snuggled on my couch, being lazy with wine in my glass and whiskey in his as we watch mindless television.

  “I have a question,” I say.

  “What?”

  “Do you gamble a lot?”

  “I wouldn’t say a lot. I go once in a while.”

  “Do you spend a lot when you go?”

  He shrugs. “I play like I did that night with you. I don’t spend as much as my brother, but I also don’t do Vegas quite like Mark does.”

  So to answer my question, yes. I want to ask if the money is his or his brother’s, but I don’t.

  A shudder races up my spine at the
mention of his brother. “What does that mean?”

  “It means Mark likes to party.” My heart races at his name. “He likes to drink. He likes to drop a lot of money at the tables before he heads out to a strip club, where he spends even more money. He likes finding women to take home for the night. And when he’s done with that one, he moves onto the next.”

  “If he’s like that, why do you feel like there’s so much competition between you?”

  “I told you before, Reese. He’s charming. He makes women think he cares about them. He’ll feed them lines, make them think he’s in it for more than a night. He’ll say he’s going to write songs about them. He’ll tell them how intriguing they are.”

  My heart stutters as he repeats the very things Mark told me that one night we were together. He wrote down those words to write a song. He told me I intrigued him. Were those just lines? Sadness tugs at my heart as it starts to pull me under. I know I shouldn’t let it—I’m with Brian now. My one night history with Mark doesn’t matter, even if I thought I was different. But I wasn’t. He says those same things to every woman, and that small bit of knowledge hurts more than it should.

  “They’re all just lines, though,” Brian continues. “Can we not talk about him?”

  I want to keep talking about him. I want evidence that it was just a line, that he’s said those same things to other women. How could the connection I thought we shared be nothing more than a few lines he says to every woman? It doesn’t feel possible.

  “Sure.” I do my best to hide my disappointment. I’ve become somewhat of an actress on that front in my professional life. If I’m having a bad day, I can’t take it out on my students, so I’ve learned to mask what’s going on inside. It doesn’t always work, and it’s not always perfect, but I do my best to put on a show. I push my thoughts about Mark to the side and focus on the man in front of me. He deserves my attention. He does want more with me.

  “I have to go to Houston again,” he says.

  “When?”

  “I don’t know. I’m on call for now and pretty much need to hop on the next flight when I get the call.”

  “How long will you be gone?”

  “Undetermined right now.”

 

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