by R. R. Banks
I laugh. “I'm seriously gonna kick your ass for that,” I say. “She damn near broke my arm.”
Tony shrugs. “But hey, she didn't,” he replies. “So, it's all good.”
We haul Angel to his feet and march him out to the car, our work for the night done.
Chapter Six
Abby
“Why do you stay with him?” she asks.
I'm sitting in the Daily Grind with my best friend Dana. The Grind is our usual haunt – good coffee, good pastries, and with plush couches and chairs, is a comfortable place to sit and chat. Dana and I get together every Saturday to hang out and talk. We're both busy, and though we get together for dinners now and then, our Saturday morning ritual is something we very rarely ever miss.
“He's a good guy,” I say. “He treats me well.”
“As long as you stick to his precious routine,” she says and laughs.
I sip at my coffee, a faint smile touching my lips. She's right. To James, the routine is everything. But then, don't I have my own routines? Coffee with Dana every Saturday morning. I usually got up for work in the mornings and followed a routine – cup of coffee, shower, dress, second cup of coffee – my mornings were pretty well regimented. A lot like James' life.
“We all have our routines,” I say quietly.
“Don't get me wrong,” Dana says. “He's a nice guy and he's pretty sexy. But he's – weird.”
I laugh. “Weird?”
“Just his whole routine thing,” she says. “And the fact that he gets all weirded out if you try to break it at all.”
I flash back to last night and know what she's talking about. But being a psychologist, I somewhat understand it and can empathize with him.
“He's got some very serious OCD tendencies,” I reply. “I don't disagree with that. It's something we're – working on.”
Dana laughs. “Working on?”
I nod and take a sip of my coffee to avoid saying too much. The truth is, I hadn't worked on it with him. He didn't even seem inclined to work on it, honestly. For James, he is who he is. And although I felt unsatisfied, I can't sit here and say it's a horrible relationship. He doesn't beat me. He doesn't degrade me. Overall, he treats me very well. He'll send flowers for no specific reason. Bring me little treats just because. It's sweet.
“Tell me something,” Dana leans closer and pitches her voice low. “Has he given you an orgasm yet?”
I feel my cheeks grow hot and know they're turning a shade of red not found in nature. I laugh and shake my head. I'm not shocked by Dana's question, but it's still embarrassing nonetheless.
“Well?” she persists. “Has he?”
Still blushing, I can't even bring myself to answer. So, I just shake my head instead.
“And why do you think that is?” she asks.
I can't get the embarrassed smile off my face. “I don't know.”
“You're the therapist here,” she says. “Diagnose the problem.”
The problem – aside from Dana knowing all of my intimate details – is that no man has ever given me an orgasm. And I don't know why. I've enjoyed sex with the men I've been with – not that there have been all that many. And I know I've gotten close to orgasming with a couple of them. But for whatever reason, I've just not been able to get over that hump. I've never been able to let loose and just give myself over to the pleasure entirely.
I don't know why. All I know is that it's frustrating as hell.
“I really don't know why,” I finally admit. “It's something I've thought about, but I'm too close to the situation.”
“Have you talked to somebody else in your field?” Dana asks. “Sometimes even a shrink needs a shrink.”
I laugh. “No, I've not seen anybody about it,” I admit. “It's a little too personal and embarrassing.”
“Babe, you really need to get over that,” she says. “How would you feel if your clients said the same thing to you? What would you tell them?”
“Probably what you just told me,” I say. “That they need to get over it if they want to really fix the problems.”
“Exactly,” Dana replies and takes a sip of her drink.
We both fall silent for a little bit – I, consumed with my thoughts, and Dana watching me. These are questions I've wrestled with in my own mind for a long, long time. But I'm no closer to answering them today than I was when I started asking them years ago. For whatever reason, I am completely unable to orgasm with a man.
“Want to know what I think?” Dana asks.
I grin at her. “I have a feeling no matter what I say, you're going to tell me anyway.”
“Damn right,” she laughs. “I think you're holding yourself back. You're like – stuck. In a holding pattern.”
“Holding for what?”
She shakes her head. “Damned if I know,” she says. “But there's some mental block there. Something holding you back and not letting you be with somebody completely.”
“That's not entirely true.”
Dana gives me a look that says she's definitely not buying what I'm selling. Yet another problem with knowing her as long as I have – she knows when I'm bullshitting. Even if I don't entirely know it myself.
“Honey, as long as I've known you, you've always had one foot out the door when it comes to your relationships,” she says. “You never let yourself fully commit to them. To anybody. Hence, you're orgasmically constipated.”
I laugh out loud, and narrowly avoid spitting out my mouthful of coffee. I manage to swallow it all down and regain my composure, doing my best to avoid the odd looks other patrons were casting my way. Dana just sits there smiling, looking entirely too pleased with herself.
“Orgasmically constipated?” I ask.
“I'm afraid that when you finally do get off, the release is going to be so powerful, you might just explode and set your house on fire.”
“There is something so wrong with you,” I say as I giggle and shake my head.
“Yeah, but you love me for it.”
“Most of the time,” I say.
Dana takes a sip of her coffee and sets her glass back down, her expression growing a little more serious and thoughtful. “Think about it though,” she says. “You've been in committed relationships, sure. But you've never really committed to them entirely. Why is that?”
I pursed my lips together. She was right. I know I've told her as much. I look at her and smile though.
“So, now you're going to play armchair psychologist?” I ask.
“Hey, I took two or three psych classes as an undergrad,” she replies with a smirk. “I think I'm qualified. So, stop deflecting and answer the question.”
“Oh, deflecting,” I tease her. “There's a good psychology word.”
“You're doing it again.”
I smile, but sigh. “I suppose I just haven't seen a real long-term future with any of the guys I've been with.”
“But why is that?” she presses. “What's holding you back?”
“I honestly don't know,” I answer. “When we start out, things seem great. I can even trick myself into thinking that yeah, maybe we have something that can last...”
As my words tail off, Dana looks at me and tries to urge me on with her eyes.
“But?” she finally asks.
“But eventually, that feeling fades and I'm just kind of left treading water,” I say.
“And waiting for the inevitable end of your relationship.”
I shrug. “Yeah, I guess so.”
“That's why I'm saying you're stuck in a holding pattern,” she says. “What is it keeping you from being fully there with them? What's preventing you from fully committing?”
I laugh. “If I knew that, we wouldn't be sitting here having this conversation right now.”
“I know,” she replies smoothly. “This is all just food for thought.”
I sit back in my seat, turning everything she said over in my mind. Obviously, I know there's some sort of mental and emotio
nal block in me that prevents me not just from orgasming, but from having a deep connection with anybody. I mean, I have connections with my boyfriends. I just haven't had the sort of deep, lasting, soul-consuming connections one should have in a relationship that has a future.
“You know, for having only taken a few classes,” I say, “you're pretty good at this psychology stuff.”
She smiles. “I do my best,” she says and glances at her watch. “Listen, I have to run. I'm meeting with a client today.”
“On a Saturday?”
She shrugs. “His trial is next week and he needs somebody to hold his hand a bit,” she replies. “Besides, I kind of want to go over his testimony now just to make sure we don't have any surprises when we get him on the stand.”
“That's my girl, always meticulous, always prepared.”
She smiles at me. “What are you going to do today? Clients?”
I shake my head. “Not today,” I reply. “I'll probably finish up my coffee and then head over to help Brooke at the shop.”
She grins. “Why don't you guys just hire some more people?”
“That's what I keep asking,” I say. “But you know Brooke. She likes being the one in charge.”
“True enough.”
Dana stands up and leans over, giving me a quick peck on the cheek. “Call me later, okay? We should do dinner this week.”
I nod. “Of course.”
“And think about what we talked about.”
“What you talked about,” I correct her and laugh.
“Yeah, yeah, semantics,” she smiles back. “Seriously though, think about it.”
I snap her a quick salute. “Aye, aye, captain.”
“Love you, bitch,” she says.
“Love you too, whore,” I reply, completing our little ritual – a ritual we'd had since high school.
I sit back in my seat and think about things. Am I really all that different from James? I have my own routines and rituals – just as he does. Sure, I don't schedule out our sex down to the very last minute and prefer to have a little spontaneity in some things – but, truth be told, there is some comfort in the expected. The familiar. At least with the expected and familiar, you don't find yourself getting smacked upside the head by something out of the blue.
That line of thinking of course, inevitably leads me to think of him.
And although there is still a dull ache back in the deep recesses of my heart when I think of him, it's nothing like it used to be. I've learned to cope a lot better than I knew how to before. Now, there is a whole lot of anger mixed in with the sorrow.
But, thinking about – him – isn't doing me any good or serving any purpose. I push those thoughts back into the box where they belong and lock them up in the attic of my mind – that place where all of the dark and depressing things are stored – again. Finishing up my coffee, I stand and head out to help my sister at the shop.
Chapter Seven
Caleb
“Dude, you're such a dickbag,” I say and laugh.
“Not my fault,” Tony replies. “You didn't do your homework. Like always.”
I take a drink of my beer and set it back down on the table. We're sitting in McGill's, a bar in Huntington Beach, winding down after having gotten Angel processed and over to lock up, where he'd remain until his trial. Once you jump bail, you don't get a second bite at that apple. Dumbass.
“You could've given me a heads up.”
Tony takes a long swallow of beer and nods. “Yeah, I could've,” he says. “But then, we wouldn't have this awesome story of you getting your ass whooped by a ninety-pound girl.”
“A ninety-pound girl with a frying pan and a home run swing like Barry goddamn Bonds,” I reply.
Tony shrugs. “But still, a ninety-pound girl.”
“Fuck off,” I laugh and take a drink of my beer.
The crowd in McGill's is loud and lively – typical of the place on a Saturday night. Though the large crowd of obnoxious as hell frat boy types annoys me, I can't help but admire the crowd of sexy sorority girl types that come with them. The atmosphere is filled with electricity, the sound of laughter and music, and of course, the aroma of expectation.
Most of the guys who come into McGill's are looking to go home with somebody by the end of the night. It is a well-known hook up joint in Huntington. Which is why I particularly liked the place.
“How's your arm?” Tony asks.
I flex it and rub the spot she'd clocked me with the frying pan and smirk. “I've had worse,” I say. “But I'm telling you, with a swing like that, that chick could probably play DH for any club in the Majors.”
Tony chuckles and shakes his head. “You know, if you'd read the file, you would've seen that Angel had a girlfriend with a temper.”
“Or, you could've just told me,” I repeat.
“Now, where would the fun in that be?”
“Asshole,” I smirk at him as I take a drink of my beer.
I look around the bar and notice a small group of girls clustered together at a nearby table. They're laughing and giggling, a couple of them looking over at Tony and me. Obviously checking us out. They're cute. Early twenties, long hair, tight bodies, perky tits – this would probably be too easy. Tony and I are big, fit, muscular guys. We're in great shape and I'd go so far as to say, we're pretty good looking.
And when the chicks find out we're Marines and ex-Special Forces, they usually can't get their panties off fast enough. God Bless America. I should be ashamed to say it's a card I've played to get laid on plenty of occasions – but I'm really not all that ashamed about it.
“You ever going to settle down?” Tony asks, noticing the group of girls checking us out.
I laugh. “Please,” I say. “Why in the hell would I do something stupid like that?”
Tony smirks and I give him a lopsided grin and a shrug of the shoulders.
“No offense, man,” I say. “Marriage looks good on you, bro.”
He laughs. “Yeah, you should probably stop digging and quit while you're already behind.”
“All I mean is, I'm not the marrying type,” I say and nod toward the girls. “I mean, how in the hell can I pass that up?”
Tony takes a long sip of his beer and looks at me. “You know,” he says, setting his bottle back down, “you're one of the bravest assholes I know.”
I tap my bottle against his. “Damn right.”
“You'll charge your ass into the middle of a firefight without a second thought or hesitation,” he says. “And yet, whenever the subject of marriage – or hell, even a committed relationship – comes up, you turn white as a fuckin' ghost, man.”
I laugh. “That's bullshit.”
Tony shrugs. “Just tellin' you what I see, man.”
I look over at the girls and give them a smile and a nod. “All I'm seeing right now is a couple sweet pieces of ass,” I say. “And if you're not going to take one for a spin, I may just need to take 'em both out for a ride.”
He laughs again. “Hey, I'm not judging,” he says. “Just making an observation. But I've known you a while now and it just seems like you have some sort of aversion to anything that lasts more than a night or two.”
“Life is a wonderful buffet, my man,” I reply. “And I want to sample everything before I die.”
“Well, you certainly do seem to be making your way down the menu,” he says. “Seriously though, haven't you ever thought about settling down?”
I finish the last of my beer and signal the bartender for another round. “Not really,” I reply. “Not really my style.”
The truth is, there was one time in my life when I could actually picture myself settling down and being happy. But that was a long time ago in a completely different lifetime. That day had passed and I had no desire to revisit it. My life is different now. And I'm enjoying the hell out of doing what I do. And as the girls flash me a shy little smile, I smile back, enjoying who I'm doing it with.
Tony shrugs.
“Fair enough,” he says and looks at his watch. “Speaking of which though, I should probably get my ass home.”
I laugh. “Just one of the many reasons I'll never get married, bro,” I say. “I don't like curfews.”
“Yeah well, it's really not so bad once you get used to it,” he replies. “It's actually kinda nice to come home to the same person.”
I give him a mischievous smirk. “I'm sure it is,” I say. “But it's not nearly as nice as banging two sorority girls and never having to see them again.”
He laughs. “Well then, happy hunting,” he says. “And thanks for the backup tonight. I appreciate it.”
“Anytime, man,” I say and shake his hand. “I mean it. Anytime. I've got your back.”
“I know you do,” he says. “And I got yours.”
Tony walks out of the bar, leaving me alone. The brunette watches him go and I can see that she's bummed out. She'd obviously been hoping to hook up with him. But the blonde gives her a nudge and they walk over to where I'm sitting. I turn to face them as they stand there, smiling.
“I'm Kayla,” says the blonde. “This is my friend Michelle.”
“So, is your friend coming back?” Michelle asks.
I give her a small smile. “He actually had to go home,” I say. “To his wife.”
I can see the regret in her eyes, but I can also see that she would have screwed him knowing he was married anyway.
“That's too bad,” Michelle says.
“But hey,” I say, “I'm still here. Nothing saying the three of us can't have a drink or two together.”
“Nothing at all,” Kayla says, her smile mischievous. “Sounds fun to me.”
They sit down next to me and although Michelle looks a little more hesitant than Kayla, I can tell that she's game for it. My kind of girls. I wave to the bartender to get us a round of drinks and then turn to them, already counting down the minutes until I can get them out of the bar and into a hotel room.
“So, you were in the military, huh?” Kayla asks me.