by Corri Lee
Fascinated, I watched him sing on that stage like he did it every day with a voice as silky as his laugh. The crowd was mad for him, ravenous even, and bounced on their toes to the beat of the drums and bass guitar. On occasion he glanced sideways and shot me a smile that hit me so deep down inside that I started to feel light-headed and winded.
“First time watching him?” I nodded, unable to speak. Chase laughed and crammed a glass into my hand. “He’s a complete show off. Great showman. Ah.” He pointed out towards the stage just as Blaze took a step back and ran out across the stage, throwing himself over the dangerously small sea of heads and hands that somehow still carried him safely to the back of the room while he continued to sing as though he was standing still. My heart jumped into my mouth the minute his feet left the ground but I quickly coughed it out with a laugh when I knew that he’d reached the foot of the wooden staircase safely.
“He’s crazy.” I muttered, turning slightly to smile at Chase. I knew my eyes must look far too bright and pupils too dilated like I was drugged. Honestly, it felt like I was.
“He is. Are you too?” There was something in his tone that told me he wasn’t talking about my mental stability.
I tested the waters with a vague response. “It’s not like that.” Instinctively, I thought he was referring to Blaze, but didn’t want to risk incriminating myself with any awkward confessions. Besides, when someone implied that a man that transcendent was crazy for me, I couldn’t help but be a little sceptical, not really sure how I could possibly deserve that kind of high regard.
“Sure looks like it’s ‘like that’, Emmy. I’ve spent a long time warning him that one day he’d meet a girl who’d turn his life upside down and force him to seriously consider the way he lives. I’ll be the king of Denmark if you’re not that girl.”
“I’m just a font of sarcasm, uncomplicated sex and a guaranteed lay.” Definitely not the dream woman he was making me out to be.
“There’s no such thing as uncomplicated sex.” He squeezed my shoulder gently and made towards the stage as Blaze emerged next to us, glistening with sweat and his shirt tucked into the waist band of his jeans. Was I really that much of a big deal for this man who was so damned beautiful it hurt to look at him?
“So, what do you think?” Without hesitation, he curled an arm around my waist so our bodies were flush against each other. “Enjoy the show?”
“You’re amazing. Ah...” I glanced downwards, hoping that my hair would cover the embarrassment. “Amazing out there. Quite a turn on, actually.”
“You want me inside you? Too bad you’d just fall asleep afterwards, or I’d service you in the middle of that audience and nobody would ever know. We’ll have to wait.” I pushed myself back from him and grunted an objection. “It’s as much as a disappointment for me, too, Emmeline. That skirt is so short...”
“You keep saying,” I tugged at the back of it fruitlessly, covering no more flesh that before, “I keep telling you that it’s your own damn fault for picking it.”
Blaze bit his lip playfully and pulled me back towards him by the V of my vest. “My, don’t we get feisty when denied the good lovin’?”
I sneered. “Who says it’s good?”
“Oh, mean implication! But I know you’re lying.” He dipped down and kissed me, softer than he ever had before. I melted into him and wrapped my arms around his bare neck, one hand sliding down to the firm muscles in his chest.
I was—I was crazy about him. That much was sure. How I’d ruin my life over another inconvenient fixation was still a mystery.
“Just for tonight, Emmeline, let’s not focus on why we can’t and focus on why we are anyway. Now, nothing would make me happier than seeing you stripped, sweating, caked in glitter and boneless after a good fucking across that stage...” My jaw hit the floor at his brazenness and my eyes tracked across the length of the stage. That was a tantalising idea but we both knew that it would put an abrupt end to our night. “But I’ll compromise and settle for sweating and caked in glitter. But for now, into the fray with you.”
Someone threw up in my mouth at some point between ‘the fray’ and my getting home. I didn’t remember it, but I was certain it had happened from the way I felt the next morning. That or the apocalypse had come, localised entirely in my skull.
Sticky eyed, and almost definitely still drunk, I had little to no memory of what had happened after Blaze led me down into the crowd and insisted that I climb on his shoulders. I think I fell, I might have flashed my chest, and for some reason I recall a zebra. The details are a fuzzy black hole in my mind, but what I do know was that I woke up in my bed, undressed and stinking of sweat and liquor.
A sequinned orange top hat lay on the bed next to me and the ache between my legs gave me the impression that I might find myself getting another noise complaint. I just hoped it was Blaze who’d left the bite mark on my inner thigh.
It wasn’t until I lifted my arm to rub my eyes, I noticed the thick black letters drawn on my skin.
Told you I’d get your number. Call me!
Blaze
But no number to call. In the same second, I realised that there was music playing outside in the lounge and the nauseating smell of greasy food. No... that was the burger I was lying on. No... it was outside. The unmistakable smell of bacon tugging at my gag reflex.
“Blaze?” My shout came with a cough and a hand full of glitter. Well, I appeared to have either had a good time or sucked off a clown. And swallowed.
Half dressed and carrying a breakfast tray, Blaze slammed in singing unreasonably loudly and looking so good it was unfair. I felt like the Crypt Keeper and he looked like fucking Hercules in the flesh with his own sheen of glitter. It was only his unsteady hobble toward me that made him human.
“How dare you look so good on a hangover.”
“I’m not hungover.” He giggled cheekily and put the tray down on the bed next to me. Again, it was covered in speckles of blood, but somehow it was the glitter that made it look nightmarish. “I haven’t slept, I’m still drunk.”
I groaned, “Me, too,” and pulled a pillow over my head. “What time is it?”
“Roughly seven in the morning.”
“What the fuck! When did we get back?”
“Five-ish. We stumbled in, I fucked the hell out of you for about half an hour, you begged me to take the ass, proposed, then passed out with me still inside you.”
God knows I wanted that to be a joke, but the play by play flashback ran involuntarily through my mind. “I remember that,” I groaned. “I feel like someone’s pissed on my brain. Did we have fun?”
“Lots,” Blaze assured me, removing my squashed burger from under the duvet before pulling it over us both. “Eat your breakfast so I can curl up on top of you and listen to those exquisite little moans you make when I’m inside you.” His leg pinned down both of mine, leverage for him to clamber over me, nuzzle between my breasts and inhale deeply. “I can’t get enough of you. Damn it, I can’t keep up with how much I want you. Your tiny waist, flawless skin, your sweet, pink, tight little pu—”
“Shit, Blaze!” I blushed violently at the way he spoke about my body. Those buzz words were fine, yes, if said in regards to someone else. Still, drunk Blaze had a dirty mouth and I have to admit, it got me a little hot under the collar.
“Oh, but Emmeline!” He whined pitifully and ran his tongue down my body until he disappeared beyond the duvet. “You’re so snug and still full of my cum...”
“Oh God, don’t—”
There went another hour of my morning, my breakfast on the floor and a large chunk of my so-called innocence. I guess I spoke a little prematurely about how dirty his mouth was.
My post-coital power naps seemed to be getting shorter. I didn’t know if that meant my body was becoming immune to my soporific endorphins or eager to get back to the person who triggered them. I was almost physically addicted to Blaze and needed more and more of him to satisfy the cravings
.
But having to leave me to wake up alone seemed to be wearing thin. Still drunk and ‘shagged out’, Blaze had needed to leave me right away before he fell asleep next to me and retreat to the couch. I desperately wanted to let him rest with me, but we both knew already what my brain would do when we woke up together—freak out. I was scared of how I’d react if he was there, petrified by the big question mark that hung over my own indecisive mind. I didn’t want to turn polar and kick him out of my life, afraid to let him into my heart, anymore than I wanted to become one of those needy, psychopathic girlfriends who became irrational and demanding. So I evicted him to the lounge and slept alone, listening for signs of him around when I woke up.
That morning, I had nothing but the buzz of music still playing outside and a text message on my phone.
Don’t let me sleep.
Okay, so I had his phone number now, and he’d already saved it in my phone book with a heart next to it for good measure. He’d also changed the background to a picture of him curled up next to me, grinning into the camera while I slept. The image was new, obviously taken that morning. The glitter gave it away. When he wasn’t around, I would at least have the reminders that he existed, evidence that he wasn’t a reoccurring dream or another hallucination to add to the list. Flesh and blood man who cared enough to bunk on my back breaking furniture to keep ‘us’ a reality.
But I made a promise to myself not to text or call him unless he did first. It was like being back at the basic rules of dating etiquette.
When the room steadied enough, I crept through the lounge to the kitchen and watched him napping on my couch. I’d seen Chris, Daniel or Jonathan grace that camelback many times, but Blaze looked the most at peace there. He didn’t have bad dreams like my friends and I did every time they slept, just lay naked, midriff covered with his jacket, mouth slightly open and one foot dangling over the arm rest. The muscles in his torso flexed and defined as he breathed steadily—in, out, in, out, almost hypnotically. I had no idea that watching someone sleep could be so entrancing.
I poured us both cups of coffee and tiptoed in to crouch next to him, finding myself smiling. He really was beautiful, and as far as the world knew, mine.
But he’s not yours, is he? However much you think he wants you, you can never be the focal point in his life. You’ll only ever be a part time lover—God knows what he’s doing in the week.
Shut up, he’s caring for someone. It’s his job, he gets paid for it.
Unless he’s lying. Maybe he does care for her, but maybe he’s fucking her as well. You don’t keep yourself for him, why would he? You don’t really have a right to complain, do you?
“Emmeline?” Two sleepy green eyes fluttered open at me and crinkled with an accompanying smile. It stopped my heart to see him so unguarded in those first waking moments, before his brain could start to process and produce his usual cockiness and wit. Shakily, I raised a hand to stroke across his hairline, feeling something I thought I’d obliterated from my emotional repertoire years ago: tears burning the backs of my eyes and complete, pathetic, unreasonable dread.
He meant too much. I was already hurting. If I cut him off now, it might save me from years of obsession, but it would shred me to do so. And down the rabbit hole she goes...
“Hey, don’t cry.” Even the quiet encouragement couldn’t stop me. I was ‘feeling’ the most I had in years and was a little resentful about it. All the framework I’d put in place so far to become indestructible had been burned to the ground and lay in sad little piles of ash at my feet. Back to square one, somewhere I’d come to London to escape.
“This is all just too much, Blaze. You are too much. I don’t think I’ll come out of this in one piece, even if I step back now.”
“Oh, Emmeline.” Shifting to sit, he pulled me up into the couch with him and manoeuvred me onto his lap, pressing his nose into my hair. “This time last week I felt the same way. I thought I’d come and see you again just once to say goodbye and limp home to lick my wounds because I was in too deep.
But then I heard two words. Two words that perfectly epitomised our dilemma and told me how to proceed. Two words who came from a woman neither of us know; a woman who’d just been told that if she discharged herself from hospital and refused chemotherapy, she’d die.”
“Go on.”
“ ‘Fuck it’.” I twisted to look at him and raised an eyebrow. He nodded briefly, then pulled me back into the warm snug of his arms. “Wonderful woman, ancient, vulgar to the back teeth, and she said ‘fuck it’. Her explanation was that life is too short and she’d already taken more time than she deserved. She said she’d wasted her life second guessing impulse decisions and saying no when she should have said yes, and ‘damned if it isn’t about time someone took it away from me so I don’t balls it up further!’ “
“She sounds wise.” The hassle I’d have been saved from if someone had taken away my life or freewill...
“Not so much. She smoked sixty a day and had lung cancer. But I understood what she meant. I don’t want to waste my life on ‘what if’s. How do I know this would turn out so bad if I don’t even try? I’d rather walk through life saying, ‘Oh well, at least I know’ than turn my back on something that isn’t so significant for no reason. I told you yesterday that nothing will get rid of me now, not when my mind is so made up and I’ve finished second guessing. We just need time. Do you have time?”
“Yes.” I had time in bucketfuls because I was guilty of wasting it, too. With or without him, I’d keep wasting it, but at least the scenery was better when he was wasting it with me. “I really don’t have any choice but to sit here waiting for you, do I?”
“Sure you do. You can send me away and go on with your life as normal. But that doesn’t mean I won’t stop coming back.”
So, waiting it was. This was my ‘normal’ now—door watching and making the effort to leave the house looking good every morning whilst trying to maintain my usual patterns of behaviour so it didn’t look like I was too far gone, then intermittently being swept off my feet and spoiled with compliments and affection that would drive my feelings for him deeper, making it more painful every time he left.
As depressing as it may have sounded, I really didn’t mind it. It was almost like my routine with Hunter except he didn’t spare me the kind words and subdue me with orgasms at every chance. The roar of the cynical voice in my mind was easily blocked out when Blaze spoke to me and wanting him wasn’t nearly as self-destructive. I was actually kind of happy about it.
We stayed wrapped up on the couch while we drank our coffee, idly chatting and trying to piece together the fractured memories of the night before. I did fall off his shoulders, and Blaze caught me. How symbolic. Spending this kind of quality time together was peaceful and soothing, the fact of it being uneventful being proof that our strange relationship had substance beyond the alcohol and animal sex.
He looked like hell and he still looked great. We both stank to high heaven but somehow he just wore it like a movie role, cast as my party animal ‘boyfriend’. The word still felt strange.
“I think I need to de-funk.” The words lacked motive. I was still exhausted and heavy-headed, putting ‘moving’ fairly low on my to-do list.
Blaze lifted my arm and stuck his nose into my armpit, squeezing me to stillness when I tried to squirm away. “Jesus, you’re right. You’re noxious.”
“You disgust me.” I thought about daring him to sniff lower down but, not trusting him to hold back from the challenge, I begrudgingly pulled myself away from him and made tracks through the bedroom to the en suite, groaning at the sight of my bed. I had to trim my fingernails.
“You’re a natural blonde.” Blaze caught me by the elbow just as I was about to step into the shower and smirked downwards. I followed his line of sight and grimaced. The point of focus was the fine muzzle of pubic hair making an appearance between my legs.
“I was about to deal with that.” Grooming had neve
r been essential but somehow it just made me feel feminine and a little more acceptable. “So if you don’t mind...”
“You want me to leave while you shower?” I glared at him like the question was stupid. It was stupid, but he raised an eyebrow and leaned into the shower screen, not flinching at the ice cold sheet of glass pressing against his still very naked body. I didn’t even try not to eye-fuck him. “Why are you so body conscious? You have an amazing figure. Even with those god damn scars, you’re still one of the sexiest women I’ve ever met in person.” I was about to ask why I wasn’t the sexiest when I remembered he’d been in a music video with Amelia Marsh. There was no way to compete.
Shuddering inwardly, I backed under the water and closed myself in before I confessed, “because I used to be fucking fat.” He had to hear it sooner or later, and there really was no time like the present. If he was insistent on throwing around claims of sticking with me despite everything, it was better I told him when it was easier for him to take back.
His scoff and disbelief rang over the hiss of water. “No, really.”
“Really, Blaze. I was the fat, ugly, sweaty, blonde nerd who hoarded chocolate in her pencil case.” The memory of looking like a two tonne whale made me literally gag.
“So what the hell happened?” I paused and closed my eyes, praying for the subject to go away. “Emmeline?”
“... Boys. One in particular. He was really nice to me when other people weren’t, and gave me and Daniel the time of day. I was mad for him to the point of being downright brazen but he ignored it, so I figured it was my weight. I took the weight loss to the extreme. I...” My voice broke. Reliving those memories was painful and talking about them now of all times—when I was naked—wasn’t helping. No matter how hard I looked in the mirror, I saw fat and I saw ugliness. I couldn’t remember the last time I looked at myself and saw anything I liked. Sure, I was a little more accepting of it since Blaze had been around, but still, Fat Emmy was always there.