Mr. Sugar

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Mr. Sugar Page 36

by L. D. Fox


  And their heart.

  Ugh. Pearl strode out of the kitchen and shimmied through the tightly packed furniture scattered over the club’s main dance floor, heading for the reception booth where Cheryl took entrance fees. Even from here, she could see the large, flat box resting on the counter. The receptionist saw her approach and turned to her, arms crossed over her chest. The girl was twenty-two — the same age as Pearl — but with her blond hair in a high ponytail, she looked much younger.

  “There you are.” Cheryl smiled at her and tapped the top of the box. It was red. “Mable went to find you like fifteen minutes ago. This came for you.”

  “Me?” Pearl asked. She stood at the counter, staring at the box. It had a ribbon keeping it closed, but no card.

  “It’s heavy,” Cheryl said. “Well? Open it!”

  “What if it’s a body part or something?” Pearl grimaced at the box. It was large enough to contain at least a pair of legs. She’d been sent things before. Disturbing things. Cute things. Sad things. Nothing like this, though.

  “Box is too nice. Plus—” Cheryl grabbed the box and tipped it over “—the bottom would be all soggy and gross.”

  “Cheryl!” Pearl snatched the box from her hands. “What if it’s something fragile? You can’t just throw it around like that.”

  “It would have had ‘handle-with-care’ stickers all over it…” Cheryl said, sighing at Pearl’s idiocy.

  “When did you become an expert in packaging?” Pearl mumbled.

  “I’ve had fifteen minutes to study it, already.”

  Pearl glared at her but then smiled. “You open it.”

  “What? No. It’s your… whatever the hell it is.”

  Pearl moved her mouth to the side and studied the box. Whoever had sent it had gone to a lot of effort with the packaging. It practically oozed money.

  Mr. Armani.

  Pearl’s spine straightened of its own accord.

  “What?” Cheryl asked.

  “I think I know who it came from.”

  “For shit’s sake, Pearl. Open it! You’re driving me crazy.”

  And she did, but carefully and with trembling fingers.

  Why would he be sending her stuff? Was this in lieu of a tip? Maybe he hoped a gift would prompt that phone call.

  The dark satin ribbon slid off easily enough, the silky fabric thrilling her fingertips. The box itself was covered with another fabric, almost as soft as the ribbon. She ran her fingertips over it, feeling the suggestion of a pattern, one too faint to be clear in the dingy club.

  “You’re killing me, Pearl.”

  Pearl shot Cheryl another glare and levered the lid off the box.

  Cheryl inhaled sharply. Had her lungs not frozen, then she might have gasped too. Cheryl’s manhandling of the box had shifted apart layers of tissue paper, allowing the shimmery fabric inside to catch the light.

  “Oh my God, it’s clothing. A dress. A coat. Take it out, take it out.”

  She didn’t need Cheryl’s prompts: her hands were already reaching for the box’s treasure.

  Heavy, slinky fabric. Dark gray, shimmering with flecks of silver. She’d never seen cloth like that. Then again, her wardrobe consisted of poly-blends and nylon. And the color… it kept shifting from gray to silver to black as she tried to hoist it from the box.

  She dragged it out, holding it up between her and Cheryl. The receptionist moved out from behind the counter. Her fingers made mounds in the fabric as she drew her fingertips down the length of the dress.

  “Oh… my… God…” Cheryl breathed.

  “It’s a dress,” Pearl said.

  “A dress? More like a… a…” Cheryl obviously couldn’t find the words to describe the thing of beauty dangling from Pearl’s hands.

  “It’s exactly my size,” Pearl said, again in the same deadpan voice.

  “Yeah it is.”

  “How did he know?”

  Cheryl grabbed her hand and moved it aside, staring at Pearl with her head cocked to the side and wide, interrogatory eyes.

  “How did who know?”

  “Mr. Armani.”

  “Mr. Who?

  Pearl shook her head and bundled the dress up. It was ridiculously difficult to take her eyes off the thing. It felt amazing against her fingertips and arms as it spilled down them. What would it feel to wear—

  “Who, Pearl?” Cheryl’s voice had reached shriek-level.

  “This guy…” Pearl managed to stuff the dress back into the box. Her fingers brushed against something hard and square. She hunted through the tissue paper and drew out another card, exactly like the one he’d given her last night.

  Pearl snorted and handed the card to Cheryl. “Obviously thinks I lost the first one he gave me. You know, because of all the drugs I take.”

  “F.P.?”

  “Yup.”

  “What the hell does that mean?”

  “No idea.”

  “Well, let’s find out.” Cheryl reached for the reception phone, her eyes glancing up to check if the boss was anywhere in sight.

  “Cheryl, no!” Pearl slammed her hand over the receiver.

  “You’re not going to call?” Cheryl’s wide eyes brimmed with disbelief. “He bought you a dress that probably costs more than both of our salaries and tips combined.” Cheryl peeked into the box. “For a year.”

  Pearl growled and snatched the card from Cheryl’s fingers. “I don’t know this guy from a bar of soap. And anyway, you know what he wants.” Pearl sniffed. “And I don’t do that.”

  “I know you don’t but…” Cheryl looked inside the box again. “What if I put on a red wig and—”

  “Cheryl!” Pearl slammed the lid closed on top of the dress, shutting off its mesmerizing display. “I’m going to toss it.”

  “Nooooo,” Cheryl wailed. “Don’t do it. You’ll regret it.”

  Pearl glowered at the box for a few seconds. “Fine. Whatever. But if he thinks I’m going to call him and let him pay me for sex, then he’s wrong. So very, very wrong.”

  “God,” Cheryl breathed absently, her fingers running over the top of the box. “If you wear this out you’ll get hit on so bad.”

  “Or I can sell it and actually pay back some of my debt.”

  Cheryl snorted. “Yeah, you do that.” Her phone rang and she gave the box a last, lingering stare before turning away to answer the call.

  Pearl took the box and stowed it in her locker. It didn’t fit lengthwise, so she had to prop it on its side. She could feel the dress sliding into a pile at the bottom of the box and stared at the thing for a few seconds before slamming the locker door shut.

  Who did he think he was? Buying her things. Sending them to her work. Correctly guessing her size?

  She squeezed her hand around the card. Now she had two of the things. Would he just keep leaving them for her until she told him off? She should toss it.

  Pearl walked past a wastebasket on her way to the changing room. She dropped the card inside and gave a small smile when she heard it clank against the side on its way down.

  *

  Chapter Two: Bazinga!

  Mr. Armani didn’t show up at any of her performances that night. Pearl’s stomach remained perpetually knotted as she waited to see the slim, dark figure whenever she spun around her pole.

  But although the seats around her dance floor filled up, none of them were Mr. Armani. By her last performance, she’d almost forgotten about the stranger and his creepy gift and his sleek business card. Right until someone walked into the Red Room; someone that, for a moment, looked just like him.

  Pearl, at the time halfway through a complicated maneuver, almost cracked her head open. There was a gasp from the assembled crowd, so loud that she could hear it through the pumping music, but she quickly recovered. Staring out over the heads in front of her, Pearl searched the Red Room for that figure. It turned out not to be Mr. Armani, but a guy with a similar build wearing slacks and a dark golf shirt.

  Wh
en she retrieved the box from her locker later that night, it had grown heavier. She avoided questions about it as she lugged it out of the club, throwing Cheryl a warning glare as she passed. She hailed a cab, sitting with the box on her lap the entire way home.

  She’d promised herself she wouldn’t, but she did anyway.

  Pearl stood in front of her spotted, cracked mirror, studying herself.

  The dress clung to her like a greedy lover. It caressed every curve of her body, reflecting various monochromatic hues when she turned and twisted. It did something to her complexion that made her blue-gray eyes pop like cloudy sapphires, and her red hair — despite being overdue for a wash — glow blood red.

  It gathered on the floor, brushing the linoleum when she stood on tiptoes. She always wore heels, so to expect the guy to correctly guess her height was asking a bit much.

  Pearl ran her hands down her waist, took a deep breath that did impressive things to her breasts, and then ripped the dress off as quickly as she could without damaging it.

  Shoving it back into the box, Pearl left the shameful thing on her dresser and tried to sleep.

  *

  Three days later, Pearl caved. Maybe, if she hadn’t slipped into that dress every night after coming home from The Doll House, she could have kept her resolve. Pearl phoned Mr. Armani that Thursday night, using the club’s reception phone while Cheryl kept a look out for the boss.

  It rang twice before someone picked up.

  “Hello?” answered a woman with the hint of a foreign accent. Russian? German?

  “Uh… I think I have the wrong number,” Pearl said, but knowing she didn’t.

  “This is Pearl?” the woman asked. Yup, Russian. There was no mistaking the way the woman rolled her r’s. “Please hold. I will transfer.”

  So Pearl held. She held onto the counter with the tips of her fingers as if letting go would mean falling over. Her heart was beating an unpleasant tempo in her chest that she could feel vibrating all over her skin. There was a faint click, another, and then the sound of someone inhaling.

  “It looks ravishing, doesn’t it? The dress? I sincerely hope the tailor didn’t make it too long.”

  Pearl blinked. Her mouth opened and closed a few times before she could rally a response.

  “Uh… no. It’s fine. The dress is fine. But I can’t—”

  He interrupted her so smoothly that she still said a few words before breaking off. “You know of the Plaza Hotel?”

  Mr. Armani also spoke with the hint of an accent. It might have been European too, but it was too faint for her to be sure.

  “The Plaza…” she repeated like an idiot.

  She’d been right. Paid sex. Her hand trembled around the receiver as she tried to force herself to slam the phone down.

  “You will meet me for dinner tomorrow night at eight. Give me your address and I’ll send my driver to collect you.”

  Seconds went by while Pearl wrestled with her tongue.

  “I’m not giving you my address,” she managed, even injecting a tiny measure of defiance into her voice.

  “Then I shall meet you at the Plaza, Friday night at eight. I look forward to seeing you in the dress. Do not wear makeup.”

  The line went dead.

  Pearl put the receiver down, turning on stiff joints to face Cheryl. The girl had both fists clasped to her throat, her wide eyes begging for a full retelling of the conversation.

  “What a creep.” Pearl shoved past Cheryl.

  “That’s it? He’s a creep?” Cheryl followed her a few steps, but the evening rush had begun and she couldn’t abandon her post. “Pearl!”

  “Later,” she called over her shoulder. Adding a, “Maybe,” under her breath.

  *

  She kept telling herself that she wouldn’t go. Why would she, after that phone call? The way Mr. Armani just assumed that she was available. That she would show up wearing that ridiculous dress at some super-extravagant hotel where he obviously planned to bang her.

  Except…

  His voice haunted her. It woke her up from a tattered dream early Friday morning when she was supposed to be sleeping.

  How had he known she had Friday off? It wasn’t usual for her to take a Friday off, but she’d been planning to watch a movie with Cheryl. Plus, it was the last day of the damn Game of Thrones theme, and the boss had planned a whole bunch of geeky games for the night.

  But Mr. Armani couldn’t know that. Which meant he thought that, not only was she interested in his yet undeclared proposition, but that she would put off earning good money to see him.

  Entitled much?

  But that voice…

  She imagined someone who owned a company — several companies — spoke like that. Someone who lived in a mansion and owned a yacht. Who was married to a woman who owned one of those handbag dogs. Oh God… not only would she prostituting herself, she’d be committing adultery.

  Wait, when had she decided she would go?

  Pearl threw back her covers in disgust and went to shower. She tried on the dress — it had become a ritual after every shower — and stashed it back into its box at the bottom of her cupboard.

  Absurd; she didn’t even have shoes to go with that ridiculous thing.

  But Cheryl did.

  *

  “Took you long enough,” Cheryl said.

  “What’s that supposed to mean?” Pearl glanced through her dingy window, cellphone pressed to her ear. Even with the window closed, if she stood this close she could pick up the faint scent of piss from the alley below. And not cat piss, either.

  “You phoned him on Wednesday. Never told me what he said, just that he was a creep, and now you’re canceling on me?”

  “It’s not… I just…”

  “Where are you meeting him?”

  “Ugh,” Pearl squeezed the bridge of her nose. “If I tell you, promise me you won’t say or do anything weird?”

  “Promise. And I just crossed my heart since you refuse to go on facetime when you phone.”

  “Data costs money, Cheryl. I don’t have either.” She took a deep breath, knowing she would regret telling Cheryl but this way, at least one other person in the world had to know where she was going tonight. It made sense.

  More sense than actually going.

  “The Plaza Hotel. I have to meet him at eight. He wanted to pick me up—”

  “The Plaza?” Cheryl breathed into the phone. “Bazinga!”

  “Whatever. Look, can I borrow those silver shoes of yours?”

  “Sure. Should I drop them off or—”

  “No. You’re on the way. I’ll come fetch them.”

  Cheryl clapped her hands. Pearl drew her ear away from the phone until the noise stopped.

  “— wearing the dress?” was all she caught of Cheryl’s babble.

  “You sound like a ten-year-old.”

  “You’re not even a little excited? I mean, this guy’s loaded, Pearl! You could charge him just for showing up! People do that, you know. Women escorting men around like arm candy and stuff.”

  Pearl lifted her eyebrows. She hadn’t even considered that. It would definitely be the lesser of two evils.

  “I mean, he didn’t even touch you or tip you when you were dancing, right?”

  “Yes, but that doesn’t mean—”

  “And you told me he was super good looking.”

  “Serial killers can be handsome too, Cheryl.”

  “Mmm…”

  “Ugh. I don’t even want to know what you’re thinking right now.”

  “No,” Cheryl agreed with a laugh. “You definitely don’t.”

  “I have to get ready. See you later, you perv.”

  She hung up while Cheryl was still letting out an excited squeal, wiggling a finger in her ear. She caught sight of her reflection in the mirror. Definitely a dancer’s body: long legs, firm thighs, a flat stomach, and toned arms. Most of the definition came from pole dancing six days a week, three shows a night. The firs
t few months had been absolutely punishing, but she was used to it by now.

  Pearl studied her selection of underwear. Nothing seemed to suit the dress, and almost everything would show under the slinky fabric. Commando then. She showered, washed and styled her hair, and hesitated in front of her makeup bag.

  Don’t wear makeup.

  That command almost made her want to tip out her makeup bag and beginning slathering on cosmetics until she looked like the Joker… but she never wore makeup on her night off anyway, so what was the difference? She glanced at herself in the mirror. Her lips were light pink, her eyebrows, naturally thick, framed her blue eyes enough that they still popped without mascara.

  She climbed into the dress, hitched it to her shoulders and did up the zipper by contorting her arms into several awkward angles.

  Another look in the mirror.

  God, it was sexy.

  Taking a deep breath, Pearl turned to the door and froze.

  Nope. Not going to happen.

  She sank onto the edge of her mattress. Then she slid out of the dress and laid it on her bed. Pearl went to her cupboard and drew out a scarf she almost never wore, except when she went out and felt like being fancy. She wrapped it around her hair, lit another stick of incense, and rested her leg on the windowsill while she took a deep toke of what was left of her joint.

  The alley was dark. A few of the windows opposite her were lit up, but no shadows moved beyond them. They never did. For all she knew, the apartment block next to hers held nothing but automated lighting. Maybe it was used as some kind of undercover hideout. Or a drug dealer’s hangout. That was more likely.

  She took a last hit from the joint and blew the smoke through the window crack. Her nose wrinkled; the incense did little to disguise the stink filtering in from the alley below.

  As Pearl reached up to grab hold of the window sash and drag the window down, she spotted movement. Her eyes swiveled, a cold worm of realization already burrowing into her spine.

  There, four windows across and two down, a man leaned out of his window, investigating the alley below. Well, he had been investigating the alley below, now his head was tipped up and a pair of large brown eyes studied her instead. Stared, really. His mouth was even open a little bit.

 

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