The Sweet Life #2: Lies and Omissions

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The Sweet Life #2: Lies and Omissions Page 2

by Francine Pascal


  Really, when she thought about it, she had every right to fuck Liam.

  She knew that. But she also knew that if Todd ever found out…Well, that would be bad. She felt she would be able to forgive him. At least right now that’s what she thought because right now, he was the only one she wanted. But would he forgive her? She didn’t know and wasn’t going to take the risk to find out.

  So Jessica hadn’t texted Todd back right away. She’d waited. And plotted and planned. After all, Jessica Wakefield didn’t leave anything to chance. She couldn’t afford just to play it straight and hope everything worked out. That was for perfect and purely blessed and talented people like her twin, Elizabeth.

  Some people might have thought she was a manipulator, but Jessica knew the truth: If she didn’t have a plan, she would never have anything or anyone. Todd included. She’d learned that a long time ago. She had to be smart about what she wanted and have a plan. And a plan needed a scheme.

  Now she had one. The first part was simple: She would quit her job. She would give up her career so Todd would be able to see just how much she loved him.

  And in return for that sacrifice—which wasn’t a small one—she was going to allow herself the gift of pretending that night with Liam had never happened.

  Lila had given her the idea when she’d said, “Who cares about drinks and dinner? So what?”

  Exactly. So what? Only she and Liam knew what had happened that night, and there was no reason Todd would ever need to know.

  The important thing was that she and Todd get back together. They were meant to be together. They were made for each other, and what he didn’t know couldn’t hurt him.

  Or her.

  In this case, the end would justify the means. What was a little lie—really just an omission—if it saved true love?

  And she knew exactly how she would not tell him. She would not tell him about Liam over a romantic dinner at their special restaurant, tomorrow night after the huge MeanGreen gala.

  Jessica heard her nanny, Liza, and son, Jake, come rumbling in through the front door, back from the park.

  “Mommy!” Jake cried, bounding into the room. Jessica scooped him up in her arms and gave him a snuggle. Instantly, he gave her a full report on his time at the playground.

  “Fast slide, Mommy! Fast!”

  He beamed with excitement and pride. Jessica could imagine Jake wobbling up the stairs to the toddler slide. As he spoke, she saw that expression he got on his face that was pure Todd, the one when he couldn’t wait to tell her about something new. It was the same way Todd looked when he talked about covering some fast-break play in the NBA playoffs.

  Jessica gave Jake another big squeeze before she handed him back to Liza. Seeing Jake gave Jessica a renewed determination to reconcile with Todd, whatever it took. She wanted her family back together again.

  Jessica pulled up Todd’s cell number and dialed it. Butterflies danced in her stomach as she counted the rings.

  One…two…

  “Hello?” Todd’s voice sounded hurried, or maybe it was just his haste to pick up his phone. “Jessica?”

  The way he said her name, with hope and warmth, caught her by surprise. It had been so long since she’d heard him say her name like that. Without anger. Or bitterness. His voice went straight to her heart and warmed it.

  “Todd, I got…”

  “Did you…”

  They both spoke at the same time.

  “I’m sorry, you first,” Jessica said.

  “No, you.” Todd gave a nervous little laugh. They sounded like awkward teenagers out on a first date.

  Jessica decided to take charge. Lila was right. Why sit around and wait for the boys to come to them? Girls rule, right, Beyoncé?

  “Todd, I got your messages and I think we should talk. Really talk.”

  “But you and Liam…”

  “We’re nothing,” Jessica added quickly.

  “But you went out…?”

  “For dinner.” This was the omission part, leaving out the sex that came after.

  “Hey, that’s great. I mean, dinner, who cares?”

  Just what Lila had said. Jessica tried not to feel guilty about the relief in Todd’s voice. She was doing what she had to do.

  “Unless it’s us having dinner together. Like maybe a late dinner tomorrow night at Le Bouchon?”

  There was a pause on the other end of the line, and Jessica wondered if she’d overplayed her hand. Le Bouchon was their restaurant. Their life together as a couple officially started there. At least, their open, nonsecret, nonaffair life.

  “We haven’t been there in a long time,” Todd said.

  “Is that a yes?” Jessica’s heart hammered hard in her chest as she waited for his answer.

  “Definitely a yes.” Todd couldn’t keep the excitement out of his voice.

  Jessica laughed. She knew she had him. Everything was going to be all right.

  Chapter Three

  When Elizabeth arrived at Jessica’s town house the next day, she found her sister in party-prep mode, gearing up for the big MeanGreen gala, a Bluetooth handless receiver accessorizing one ear and a diamond chandelier earring dangling from the other. Jessica’s makeup artist and stylist were just leaving. On big gala days like this one, Jessica left nothing to chance.

  Jessica wore a glittering diamond choker necklace on loan from Tiffany and a sleeveless red slinky gown and strappy heels. Her hair was blown dry straight and fell long past her shoulders. Elizabeth felt dreary and dull, the left-at-home sister in her jeans and flats and her hair thrown up in a hasty ponytail. She never knew how her twin could make walking in six-inch stilettos look as easy as meandering around in Keds, but she managed it. Glamorous, was what she thought when she looked at her twin. Everything I’m not.

  “The models are used to marathon makeup sessions, or they should be, so I wouldn’t worry about that,” Jessica said into her hands-free set as she gave Elizabeth a quick hug hello. “I’ll be there in twenty, but make sure to put the Vogue photographer front and center. He gets to set up first. I know—you have this covered. Thanks, Katy.”

  Jessica clicked off the phone.

  “Is now a bad time?” Elizabeth asked her sister.

  “What? No. I’ve got ten minutes before I have to hit the freeway. I went over there this morning and just came back to change. The models are still in prep mode. They’re not getting the body paint until tonight, and Katy has things under control.”

  The body paint was the kicker for the show. It would look like all the models were wearing was green paint, but the giveaway would be the zippers and buttons that couldn’t be hidden…. except that the zippers and buttons were trompe l’oeil. The models really were naked.

  Jessica’s eyes shone as she spoke about the MeanGreen gala, and Elizabeth saw that familiar spark whenever Jessica talked about work. It was like a whole other Jessica. Elizabeth was surprised but happy that her sister loved her work. It hadn’t seemed like that would ever happen.

  “I’m glad you’re here, actually, because I didn’t get a chance to tell you I’m having dinner with Todd tonight,” Jessica said.

  “He’s going to the gala?” Elizabeth sounded surprised.

  “No, no. I’m meeting him after. At Le Bouchon.”

  When she heard the name of the restaurant, the darling French bistro known for romantic, candlelit dinners, she felt a little twinge of something close to jealousy. “The bistro where he proposed?” Elizabeth asked. She knew that because Jessica had told her. Sometimes, Elizabeth wanted to believe that she truly was fine with Jessica and Todd as a couple, and yet there were moments like these when she was reminded she might not ever be completely fine.

  She could tell herself all she wanted that Jessica taking Todd turned out to be a life changer for her. It had made Bruce possible, but sometimes, she wondered, would she ever, truly forget the way it had happened?

  “Yes. Our place.” Jessica was beaming, her eyes brimming wi
th excitement. Elizabeth realized it wasn’t just the MeanGreen gala that had brought the color back into her sister’s face.

  “What’s your plan?”

  “What do you mean?” Jessica tried to sound innocent.

  “Don’t play coy. I know you have a plan. You always do.”

  Jessica shrugged. “Well, you know what we’ve been fighting about. You know how Todd feels about me working. So, I’ve come to a decision.” Jessica took a deep breath. “I’m going to quit my job.”

  Elizabeth just stared. She couldn’t have been more surprised than if Jessica had told her she planned to join NASA’s space program to Mars.

  “I’m sorry—did you say quit?”

  “Todd doesn’t like me working, and he can support us all, so I’m going to tell him tonight that I’m going to stop working. I’m going to be there for him and Jake—one hundred percent. That way, he will see how much I love him and how much I’m willing to give up for him, and, well, how can he say no to an offer like that? Don’t you think it’s perfect, Lizzie?”

  No, Elizabeth did not think it was perfect. It was about as far from perfect as you could get. Jessica had only just found this career where she was not only a valuable member of a team but was also supremely competent. Elizabeth thought of the magic her sister had worked with Bruce’s PR nightmare, and she knew it wasn’t just a fluke. Jessica had serious talent. To give that all up for Todd? Was she crazy?

  “Have you thought about…” Elizabeth began softly, trying to figure out a way to say what she thought needed to be said without upsetting her sister.

  “How I’m going to do it?” Jessica cut her off, eager to tell her all about her plans. “I’m going to resign tonight, right after the gala. By the time I meet Todd for dinner, I’ll be able to tell him it’s already done.”

  “Are you sure you want to do that today? You could wait.”

  “Why wait? My mind is made up. I’m doing it tonight.”

  Elizabeth thought Jessica was making a huge mistake, but as she looked at her sister’s face, her twin, and saw the happiness and hope there, she knew she wouldn’t be the one to burst that bubble. Besides, when Jessica had a plan it was almost impossible to derail her. And Elizabeth could be wrong.

  Not to mention, Elizabeth didn’t trust her own motives. She did want Jessica and Todd back together for Jake’s sake and for everyone, really, but maybe part of her…Well, maybe a very small part of her hoped they wouldn’t. The smartest thing would be to stay out of it, she decided.

  Jessica failed to notice the doubt on her sister’s face. She was busy scooping up a spare lipstick and compact and sliding them into her clutch. “But here I am going on about Todd. Did you find out anything about the lying skank who is accusing Bruce?”

  Elizabeth flinched at the harshness with which her sister dismissed Robin Platt’s claims. If she knew how scared and sincere the girl really seemed, she doubted Jessica would be so heartless.

  Elizabeth remembered the girl’s shabby place and the fear in her eyes when she’d talked about Bruce nearly raping her.

  Elizabeth didn’t know what to think or whom to believe anymore.

  And as much as she tried to forget, all she could think of was how Robin seemed to know such private things about Elizabeth that only Bruce could have told her. Plus, there was the little tidbit about him saying that the sex with her was boring. It was hurtful, horrible actually, and it tapped right into Elizabeth’s lack of confidence, her fear that she was just the way she looked tonight—dreary and dull, the boring, do-gooder sister, plain old Elizabeth, without any of the sparkle and excitement of her fabulous sister.

  Standing in her jeans next to Jessica’s sequins and platform stilettos only seemed to underline this point.

  “Um…No, nothing more…but…” Elizabeth couldn’t meet her sister’s gaze. She didn’t like lying to her about Robin, but she wasn’t ready to tell her or anyone else what she’d found, either.

  “But what?” Jessica’s radar was up and sharp.

  “Well…the more I dig, the more I talk to the bartender and…Everyone else. I don’t know, Jess. Some things just don’t match. I have doubts.”

  “Doubts? What do you mean? About Rick Warner being behind this?”

  “No. There are inexplicable holes in Bruce’s story, Jess. Like the bartender saying he was really trying to pick up this girl. And how he supposedly had had too much to drink and…”

  “You can’t honestly be suggesting that Bruce tried to rape an intern.” Jessica’s voice was stony. Elizabeth could see her mistake. Jessica was firmly in Bruce Patman’s camp and there was no budging her. Of course, she knew only part of the story. “We’ve known him most of our lives. You can’t doubt him now. And you live with him. Come on, Elizabeth. You can’t let some random bartender talk you into something that’s just not true. You know Bruce.”

  “I know.” But did she? Did she really? After all, he’d been kind of a jerk—actually worse than a jerk—in high school. What if, after all this time, he still was that guy? Maybe the new Bruce personality was just some kind of put-on for her, a cover story to hide the real Bruce underneath.

  “So? Don’t let the story get to you,” Jessica said. “I know in the end he’ll be vindicated. Just you watch.”

  Chapter Four

  Mme Dechamps placed a bowl of steaming bouillabaisse in front of Elizabeth in Bruce’s formal dining room.

  Since there was no red meat in it, it was actually something she could eat, and yet ironically, she had no appetite.

  “Bon appétit!” Mme Dechamps sang, then retreated to the kitchen.

  Elizabeth could feel Bruce’s gaze on her as she pushed mussels and bass listlessly around her bowl.

  “Did you want to go out?” Bruce asked. “I could ask her to wrap this up for later. We could try.”

  Elizabeth shook her head.

  It wasn’t likely that the two of them could make a clean getaway with the paparazzi lining up outside his gate, and they both knew it. Not that Elizabeth minded a quiet night in, but the air was thick with questions she needed to ask Bruce. Yet she was afraid of the answers he’d give.

  “Elizabeth. Is something wrong?”

  “I interviewed the bartender,” Elizabeth said, still staring at the bouillabaisse. “He said you’d had more than one drink.”

  “I’m pretty sure it was one,” Bruce said. He paused as if remembering.

  Elizabeth didn’t like the uncertainty in Bruce’s voice. Why did it seem like his story was shifting? Or was she just imagining that?

  “He said you were hitting on this girl,” Elizabeth said, and then instantly tried to talk herself out of it. “But then, bartenders see pickups all the time. They probably assume all conversations between strangers are pickups.”

  “Impossible,” Bruce said, sounding firm and certain again. “The girl was obviously frantic. And I suggested she call a shelter. There wasn’t anything sexual about it.”

  “To you, maybe. And you still aren’t certain how many drinks you had.”

  “Okay, I wouldn’t swear…”

  “And you were dizzy.”

  “From the food poisoning,” Bruce said, raising his voice a little.

  “Okay, so you weren’t feeling quite yourself,” Elizabeth said. “And you were just being friendly and she misinterpreted.”

  “No, it wasn’t that way at all. She was upset. I was just trying to help.”

  Elizabeth opened her mouth to tell him she’d interviewed the girl, but something stopped her. Somehow, she knew, if she told Bruce, he’d insist on talking to Robin or on releasing her name to the public. She wasn’t ready to do that to Robin. Not yet. But she still needed to know about some of the things she’d said.

  “You were overheard talking about me that night.” Elizabeth glanced down at her uneaten dinner.

  “You?” Bruce said. “Why on earth would I be talking about you with this girl?”

  “You supposedly said I was…” Elizab
eth swallowed. She couldn’t quite get out the words boring in bed. “You weren’t happy with me.”

  “Elizabeth.” Bruce turned three different shades of red. Was he angry? Or was he just trying to figure out how to lie his way out of being caught? Elizabeth couldn’t help remembering the Bruce Patman of high school: the arrogant, entitled Bruce who believed he could get away with anything. “You know me. Do you really think I’d talk about you to a stranger? Where are you getting this stuff?”

  Elizabeth glanced up at him, hoping she’d regain her trust and confidence in the new Bruce, the thoughtful and caring man who wasn’t an arrogant kid anymore. That was the Bruce who had helped her through the most difficult period in her life, after Todd left her for Jessica.

  All she wanted was to believe him. Why was she having such trouble?

  “Maybe because of the alcohol and being dizzy you don’t remember what you said,” Elizabeth said. She wanted an excuse. If he admitted to drinking, maybe this would all make sense.

  “No.” Bruce shook his head.

  “The bartender was sure he’d served you more than one drink.”

  “Well, he’s wrong.” Bruce put down his spoon and it landed with a tight plink in his bowl. “You don’t believe me.”

  His voice sounded hard like steel and there was a flash of anger in his eyes. For a second, Elizabeth tensed, remembering a flash from the past.

  It had been after she’d been in that motorcycle accident in high school. She’d had a concussion so severe it put her into a temporary coma. A few weeks after the accident, she’d been at the Patman’s beach house, and Bruce had been plying her with wine. She’d been flirty with him at the time, she remembered, which, in high school, since she didn’t like him then, was proof of just how much the concussion had affected her.

 

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