by S. J. Bishop
When the waitress left, he leaned in and reached across the table, taking up my hand. “You really look great, Sarah.”
“Thanks.” I smiled lightly, hoping it hid the fact that my stomach had seized up, the pain of our breakup fresh in my mind. I never had closure with Andrew. We’d broken up twice. Once in college and once after, and I never really knew why. Both times, Andrew had made it seem as though breaking up was to our mutual benefit - that we needed space to grow as people.
“I was reading your blog,” said Andrew, sitting back. “Can you tell me about Bali? Those pictures looked fantastic.”
I blinked. “You were reading my blog?”
“What about Croatia? I saw those pictures, too. How was Croatia? Where were you when you took that picture of the cliffs?”
Andrew was following my blog. This shouldn’t have been that much of a surprise. I advertise my blog on my social media page and actually had a robust readership – but how had Andrew even found my blog? I’d unfriended him the last time we broke up. Had he googled me? The thought that Andrew was maybe not over me, had been thinking about me, left me fiercely triumphant. I like to think I’m not that forgettable, but spend enough time playing second fiddle to a model and it was easy to doubt yourself.
“Sarah?” Andrew prodded. “If I want to get to Croatia, where’s the best place to fly out of?”
I took a deep breath. Stay focused, Forte. Just because Andrew read your blog doesn’t mean he was interested in getting back together. “Providence,” I said. “Unless you don’t mind the extra three hundred dollars it will take to fly out of Boston.”
In the end, I spent an entire hour longer than I meant to with Andrew. He talked about Chicago, and we argued over the best deep dish pizza places. He had read almost every article I’d written about my travels with Yvette and had questions about some of the places I’d visited. He’d recently been to Barcelona, so we talked about some of the places he’d seen.
Only when Andrew had finished his sandwich and paid the bill did we get up and head out.
Andrew walked me back to Yvette’s building. When he leaned down to kiss me goodbye, he gave me a small kiss on the lips. “Let’s meet up when I come back. I’m going to check out a few of the places you recommended. We’ll compare notes.”
“Sounds good,” I said, feeling a bit sad but trying to hide it. He must have heard the regret in my voice, however, because his smile softened, and he reached out and took my hand. “It’s really great to see you,” he said. “You look fantastic. I’m glad you’re doing well.”
“You, too,” I said, trying to sound sunnier than I felt. “I’ve got to get back to work. I’ll see you later.”
4
Burke
“I don’t know, Bro. You want me to kiss your ass or you want real talk?” Caz cut off a large bite of his T-bone steak and eyed me warily.
“Please, Woods. As if The Berserker could handle ‘real talk.’” Mac grinned at me, all teeth and challenge.
“What the fuck’s that supposed to mean?” I snapped.
“That you can dish it out but you’re pretty shit at taking it,” said Mac.
I looked at Caz, and he shrugged, still chewing. Dicks. “Fine. Real talk.”
Mac’s grin widened, and Caz’s muscular throat worked to swallow. He took a sip of water and shrugged again. “You go after the wrong women, dude. Like, all the time.”
I stared at Caz. What the hell was he talking about?
“Bimbos,” Caz clarified.
“Trust me,” I said sourly. “Yvette Delacroix is not a bimbo.”
“Maybe not,” Caz shrugged. “But she’s a model, right? So what do you like about her?”
I didn’t need to go pouring my heart out to an idiot like Cassidy Woods.
“B,” said Mac. “That’s his point. You like her ‘cause she’s hot.”
We were eating at Garcia’s Table in the South End. It was a local spot that served thirty dollar lunch entrees but had a damn good selection of on-tap beers. It was Mac who’d invited us both out for lunch. He’d wanted to throw some new business venture past us – and we’d both turned it down. It’s not that the prospect wasn’t an appealing one, but Mac’s a tough dude to get along with, and the idea of partnering with him for business… Thanks, but no thanks.
“Fuck you both,” I said, leaning back and crossing my arms over my chest. “You’re telling me you don’t purposefully date women who are attractive?” I glared at Mac. “Do you even date women? I thought you just fucked them.”
“I told you,” said Mac with his mouth full, waiving his fork at me. “He can dish it out, but he can’t take it. Bro: We don’t go out of our way to date ugly chicks, but models, man? Caz can tell you all about dating models.”
“They’re crazy,” said Caz, shaking his head. “Here. Look.” He took the cloth napkin off of his lap and laid it across the table. Then he looked up at Mac. “Mcloughlin, you got a pen?”
The fullback dug one out of his pocket and handed it over. Silver Sharpie. Who the fuck carries around a silver sharpie? I had to bite back a snide comment about autographs. Mcloughlin was lucky if someone even recognized him. He was a career Patriots player, but he wasn’t exactly franchise.
“Look,” said Caz, drawing a line graph. Along the Y axis he wrote the word “hot,” and along the X axis he wrote the word “crazy.” He gestured to his graph, labeling hot and crazy between a 1 and a 10. Then he drew a diagonal line. “You don’t want to date anything below this…” He scribbled out the section of the graph that landed between 1 and 7 on the hotness scale. “And you don’t want to date anything above this…” He circled 7-10 on the crazy scale.
“But models fit in right here,” he said, drawing a star where 10 on the hotness scale intersected 10 on the crazy scale. “That’s the way the world works, man. That’s science, bro, right there.”
“That’s some pretty stupid science,” I said. “Did you graduate college?”
Caz grinned. “Stanford, motherfucker.”
“No, man, he’s right,” said Mac. “Listen to the man. Just look at Vic.”
I rolled my eyes. “Yah, well, there’s no scale in the world that can calculate Karissa Kruise’s crazy.” Vic Ferguson, one of our safeties, was dating Caz’s ex-girlfriend, a fiery and certifiably insane Venezuelan model. I reached over and wadded up the napkin. “And this moron dated her for two years. Not the best person to be getting advice from.”
“Listen,” said Caz, holding his hands up in defense. “I’m trying to tell you…”
“Mmm. Look at that ass,” Mac interrupted, staring over Burke’s shoulder toward the hostess’ stand. Both Caz and I turned to look.
The woman leaning against the stand had her back to us. She was average height but wore expensive, skin-tight jeans that highlighted a pair of high, round, muscular cheeks. She wore heeled, black boots, and her hair was braided in a French braid. Even from behind, she looked familiar, and I tried to place her.
“Damn. Look at that thing. What are the odds, boys, that she has a face to match?”
“Slim,” murmured Caz, who’d looked back to his plate and was cutting another bite. “But you can keep dreaming…”
As if the girl had heard us, she turned, giving us a glimpse of her profile. Naturally tanned skin; rounded, apple cheeks; and a straight, slightly upturned nose.
“Wrong, Woods,” said Mac. “She looks pretty damn hot from here…”
“Shit,” I said, getting up.
“Where are you going?” asked Mac. “Dude, I’m not buying your lunch.”
“Get you back,” I muttered, walking over to the hostess stand. The hostess had left, and the girl was now standing by herself, checking emails on her phone.
“It’s Sarah, right?” I asked, smiling apologetically as she jumped, startled, and looked up at me. Honestly, if Mac hadn’t said anything, I might not have noticed her. I had been so keyed up the last time we met – but it was Sarah, Yvette’s assis
tance. And Mac was right, she was pretty. She wasn’t Yvette pretty, but she was really good looking. When she saw me, her eyes widened, and I saw that they were an interesting shade of brownish-green, with gold rings around the outside of them. “You’re Yvette’s assistant?” She was staring at me as if I’d lost my mind. Maybe I had the wrong girl?
“Yah, I am. Hi,” she said, shaking her head and regaining her equilibrium. I get that reaction a lot, honestly. I’m a big dude, and I had startled her.
“You having lunch?” I had half a mind to invite her over to our table. I wanted to know more about Yvette, and I also wanted to prove those other assholes wrong. If anyone could vouch for Yvette, it would be her assistant.
“No, picking up. Busy day.” She wore a form-fitting, navy blue top and a black blazer that stopped at her waist, highlighting how lean it was. She was remarkably fit. I recalled that she had played a sport in college. I wondered how many years out of college she was. She still looked pretty young.
“So, what’s the deal with your boss?”
Sarah blinked. “Wow,” she said. “That’s really blunt.”
I shrugged. Why beat around the bush? Yvette Delacroix had given me the write off, but I wasn’t willing to give up yet. I was willing to bet that Sarah whatever-her-name-was could help me. “Yah. So? What’s her deal?”
“She’s really busy,” said Sarah.
“We’re all really busy. And we all need to eat. She’s blown me off now, twice. I want to know why. Am I not her type?”
Sarah looked around as if there might be someone to rescue her from the third degree. I should have felt guilty, but I didn’t. My sisters have always told me I’m like a dog with a bone, but I’ve found that you’ve gotta be persistent to get anywhere in life.
“Come on. I’m a big boy,” I said, and for some reason, I don’t know why, I couldn’t resist flexing for her. I saw her eyes land on my bicep and watched her lick her lips. I smiled inwardly. Too easy.
“I guess she’s just not that interested,” said Sarah, tilting her chin up so she could meet my eyes. Her expression was a bit hard to read. She had these thick, almost black, lashes that fluttered down to obscure her gaze. “And yah, you’re right. I don’t think you’re her type.”
“Bullshit,” I said. “I’m everyone’s type.” It was true. I’d figured it out in college. Girls were attracted to the body and the face – just not the brain. If I gave them what they expected – hot, blond, and dumb – I found I could get anyone I wanted.
The hostess, a plump young woman with dyed black hair, came back, carrying a cloth bag that clearly held several to-go containers. “Here you go,” she said, handing the bag over. Sarah reached up and took it, turning back to look at me as she backed up toward the door.
“I’m sorry,” she said, flashing a nervous, apologetic grin. “I’ve got to get this to Yvette while it’s still hot. If it helps, she is really busy….” And before I could stop her, she turned around and left.
Fuck. Of all the fucking useless bits of information. What was I supposed to do with that? I wasn’t Yvette’s type? What was her type? What did I need to do to gain her attention?
“Dude, you know her?” asked Mac when I came back to the table. His eyes were following Sarah as she passed by our window. “You have got to introduce me!”
I don’t know why, but the thought of Mac and Sarah together made my stomach turn, so I shook my head. “No way,” I said. “She’s nice. I’m not hooking her up with a player like you.” Mac was loose as fuck. “Use ‘em and lose ‘em” was his motto.
Mac frowned and opened his mouth, no doubt to rip into me, but Caz held a hand up.
“Now that’s a girl you could date,” said Caz. “She was hot. And she wasn’t a model. How do you know her?”
I rolled my eyes and sat down. “Cool it, both of you. She’s Yvette’s assistant. She’s nobody. I'mma finish my lunch. I’m done talking about this shit.” No offense to Sarah. She was pretty. But I was after bigger fish.
The two subsided, Mac looking annoyed and Caz looking resigned. I didn’t care. Fuck them both. I wanted Yvette Delacroix, and I was going to have to up my game. I just had to figure out what my next move was.
5
Sarah
I had a ton of things to do before the end of day tomorrow. I needed to solidify the booking with Givenchy. I needed to make sure we had first class tickets to Abu Dhabi for next week. I needed to make certain that the samples Vogue had sent for their upcoming cover made their way back to NYC…
“À demain!” I called to Yvette. See you tomorrow. Yvette said something back, but it was muffled by the closed door of her apartment. I hit the elevator button and rode the elevator down to the lobby, thumbing through my texts and making sure I’d left everything in order. There was a text from Roz, checking in and letting me know that she’d be at her boyfriend’s tonight…
The elevator doors dinged open, and I stepped out.
“Have a good evening, Sarah!” called Phillipe from his position behind the front desk. I waved back, noting that Phillipe was in the midst of dealing with a customer. Whoa. Not a customer. Burke Tyler.
Burke looked up when Phillipe called my name, and he smiled at me, waving a friendly hand. My heart fluttered a bit, and I waved one back, feeling nervous and excited at the same time. What was he doing here?
Burke turned to say something else to Phillipe. The concierge nodded to him. Phillipe was not a small man, but Burke made him look tiny.
“On your way home?” asked Burke as I passed the desk. We were both heading for the door. God, he looked great, like he’d just come from a business meeting. He wore crisp black pants and a soft, blue, button-up shirt with a black silk tie. The sides of his head had been freshly shaved, and his braided Mohawk glinted gold beneath the dim lights of the hall.
“I was, yes. What are you doing here?” I asked.
“Dropping off a letter for your boss,” said Burke. “She’s not responding to texts, so I decided to go old school. Will that get her attention?”
A letter? I shrugged. “Maybe.” Luis wrote her letters all the time. They came to the apartment sealed with red wax – like he was some medieval lord writing his lady. It made me slightly queasy, to be honest. Burke Tyler didn’t seem to me like the kind of guy who wrote letters. But what did I know? In just the two short conversations I’d had with Burke Tyler, he’d upended every single idea I’d had of who he was.
“Maybe,” Burke repeated, frowning. “Is it, me, Sarah, or is Yvette an enigma?”
“It’s not you,” I said, pushing open the door and exiting out into the chilly April evening. “It’s part of her appeal. I’ve worked with her for three years. Even I don’t get her.” It was true. She was inconsistent. I had no idea what motivated her. In her more petulant moments, she was impatient, crabby, and sullen. She seemed to thrive on drama and strove to create it. In her brilliant moments, she was focused, friendly, funny, and magnetic. She refused to tolerate fools, cut past all bullshit, and understood the bottom line. She had a great mind for marketing, and she was her own best product.
“Hmmm,” Burke mused thoughtfully. He stopped and stared out across the street. While we were gradually coming out of the winter blackness, at 7 p.m., it was fully dark and the streetlights lit up Boston like stars floating in the night sky. God, I loved this city!
“Have you had dinner yet?” he asked suddenly, turning to me.
My stomach plummeted into my feet, and I swallowed. “No.” I shook my head.
“Come back to my place,” said Burke suddenly. “I want to talk somewhere where people aren’t going to be taking pictures of us.”
It wasn’t a request; it was a command, delivered with the confidence of a guy who knows you’re not going to say no. Ugh, why does that bullshit work? A part of me just melted, and my brain chose that moment to remind me of ESPN’s Body Issue: Burke Tyler, stark naked and chiseled, a football in front of his crotch. Eyes blazing and intense.
“Is that a good idea?” I asked before I could stop myself.
Burke looked at me as if I’d grown another head. “Sarah,” he said, his voice dripping with sarcasm. “I’m not going to have my way with you on my kitchen table.” The graphic image that erupted before my eyes had me wet. I was in trouble.
“I just want to pick your brain…” Burke continued. Why was it guys just wanted to pick my brain? Was there something wrong with my body? I ran. I did Pilates. Burke was still talking. “I want to know more about Yvette. I’ve got lobster in my fridge. I’ll fry it up with some buerre blanc and scalloped potatoes? Who says no to potatoes?” His smile would have melted an iceberg.
“Okay,” I said, and I knew I sounded as dazzled as I felt.
Burke had parked in a nearby parking garage and, as we walked to his car, I asked him why he was dressed up. Apparently, one of his sisters was in town for a medical conference, which had culminated in a fancy dinner, and she’d asked Burke to be her date.
“Sister?” I asked.
Burke frowned. “I have four of them,” he said. “This is one of the middle ones…”
“And she’s a doctor?”
“Cardiothoracic surgeon,” he said. He fished his keys out of his pocket and hit the unlock button. A sleek, black SUV blazed to life in front of us. I tried to figure out what kind of car it was, but I wasn’t good with cars. It looked expensive.
Burke went to open the door for me, but I waved him off. “I’m not Yvette,” I said. “I can open my own doors.”
Burke shrugged and hopped into the driver’s seat, turning the key into the ignition and allowing the car to roar to life.