Authors: Donna Milward
Poetry peered around at everything except him as they sipped. “Well,
I’d give you the grand tour, but this is really it.” She motioned at the few
walls. “Not much to see.”
“Lead the way.”
Poetry brought him to the main floor. “Watch your step,” she said.
Adrian’s skin began to bead from the heat of the ovens. In the dim
lighting he noticed the sheen of sweat on Poetry’s neck and breathed in
her iron musk. Over the collar of her uniform he could make out shades
of sunrise pink and blue. He stared so intently that when she stopped he
nearly buried the back of her head in his chest.
“Interesting.” It looked clean enough, no shaving piles or scraps like
the others, but it had an organized chaos that Adrian figured only Poetry
would understand. Boxes of beads jammed next to spools of leather and
wire, stacks of papers and photos stuffed in cubbies.
“May I?” he asked as he pulled the unfinished piece from her fingers
and brought them to his eyes. Yes, they were roses, and well crafted ones
at that. It almost appeared as though she’d placed the petals individually.
“Nice work.”
“Thanks. Do you recognize them?”
“Yeah, they’re roses.”
She smiled. “They’re modeled after the ones you gave me.”
“Yeah, and the one you sent here.”
What?
“Say that again?”
Adrian had no clue who sent it, and obviously neither did she. Her ex
was probably out of the clink by now. The asshole couldn’t have found
her yet, could he?
Poetry shrugged as she picked a roll of silver wire from a ledge.
“Thanks.” She pivoted to face him but her eyes were on the shining
thread in her grip.
She peered up at him, and even with the dim lighting Adrian didn’t
miss the dilation of her pupils. Big as dimes. Her breath stirred
gooseflesh on his neck as she strode forward; her scrutiny awakened long
quiet sensations and tickled nerves in his gut.
He watched her gaze as they wandered over his features. First his
eyes, then his lips. It lingered along his jaw as though she longed to
touch it. Her mouth parted, and Adrian became aware of her reaching
hand…
“Poetry, come up here and get changed,” Jenny said. “Time to go.”
“What?” Poetry asked.
Jenny skipped toward them, at risk of cracking her skin with her
smile. “Gary and I are going to work things out.” She faced Adrian. “You
don’t mind driving us, do you Adrian? Seeing as how you’re meeting
him too?”
Adrian released the air in his lungs. Thank God. He’d have something
else to do other than referee for Gary and Jenny. If he knew Ranjan, he’d
find ways to excuse himself from the drama, leaving Adrian to endure it.
At least Poetry had some personality. They might actually find something
to talk about.
Poetry tried to savor a mouthful, to take pleasure in the subtle hint of
hops before gulping it. Why did she agree to come? Oh right. Because
I’m Jenny’s best friend. Another swallow and another nasty thought
wormed into her mind.
She reflected on that. Of course, Jenny had tried to warn her. Several
times. And she’d been right. Kevin was the worst thing to ever happen to
her. Beside her, Jenny and Gary alternated between words of adoration
and biting criticisms and blame.
Poetry was getting drunk but refused to feel bad about it. She deserved
alcoholic tranquilizing after her terrifying run from Jasper Ave. She had a
tendency to think of Edmonton as a really big small town. Riots didn’t
happen here. Not like say, Vancouver. It freaked her out to see it
firsthand.
She glanced at Jenny. What had happened to her? Did she even
remember it? She’d been like a beast, snarling and scratching to join the
violence. Yet here she sat, the same old Jenny, crazy only for guys in
pricey suits and stepping into a relationship at breakneck speed.
Adrian looked worse, and he hadn’t even been there. He kept fiddling
with his cell, nervousness etched creases between his brows. She
couldn’t figure out why. He’d shut his phone off.
“What’s he playing?”
“Arkanoid.”
“Are you serious?” Poetry could picture the grainy screen from the
mother of all ping-pong games with its rolling capsules of goodies. “I
didn’t know any of those were still kickin’ around.” As though to
emphasize her point, a series of loud pops resounded accompanied by
grunts of frustration from Ranjan.
“Uh-oh,” Adrian said. “That sounds like the one with the extra balls.”
“The light blue?”
Ranjan let out a loud groan and the game buzzed in triumph. He
glowered at the screen before downing the rest of his drink. He spared
their table a nod and retreated to the bar.
Nice of you to acknowledge us, Poetry thought.
She held her tumbler toward Poetry. “Wanna try it?”
“They’re good,” Gary said. “They kind of have this sweet and sour
thing going on.” He drained his glass and signaled the waitress with a
spin of his finger, ordering another round.
The Rosemount seemed quiet tonight. Either Tuesday’s weren’t busy
here or the loving couple’s side show chased away the rest of the
customers. Their group remained the only people in the place.
“You want to play?”
Poetry faced Adrian. His eyes were on the corner Ranjan vacated.
“What? Arkanoid?”
“Sure. Why not?”
The server arrived with two Apple Jacks and two Kokanee.
Poetry couldn’t help but stare. The girl’s eyes had the upward tilt of a
cat and shone like the purest jade. The waves of her silken hair made
Poetry finger her dry strands self-consciously. She wondered if the girl
was part Asian. She had pale luminescent skin. Stunning.
No wonder Ranjan gave up Arkanoid to sit with her. Even Adrian,
who struck Poetry as being too cool for ogling, sat with his mouth
hanging open until the super model sauntered away.
Arkanoid twittered to life and Poetry got comfortable. She cracked her
knuckles just for show and positioned her hands on the wand and the red
button like a pro gamer. Time to make the ball sing.
Sure enough, the controls in her skilled hands did their thing as she
spun the knob and sent her silver bar across the screen. Another pill
tumbled toward it, and Poetry chose the navy-colored oval. A hum
sounded and her ark grew in size.
“Good one,” Adrian said, sipping his beer. “Did you play this a lot?”
“Some. I used to play it in the Wizard’s Castle at West Ed.”
“Nah. I only went when my dad gave me his change.” They shared a
silence that Poetry found surprisingly nice, listening to the beep and
chime of the game. Poetry blinked against the dryness of her eyes while
piano music played in the background and Jenny’s voice had returned to
a melodic metronome.
“We went to U of A together.”
“Same fraternity?”
“No. Fraternities are for sheep.”
Poetry grinned, unsuccessful at squelching her approval. “I agree.”
The incessant chime of the computer ball couldn’t compete with the
crescendo of Jenny’s whining. Like a dentist drill. Poetry darted a glance
over her shoulder to check on her…
“They definitely should’ve taken things slower.”
“Relationships are like Kendo,” Adrian said.
Poetry knew nothing about Kendo. But she remembered the stance
he’d used at her apartment, the graceful fluidity as he slid on the balls of
his feet. His posture remained perfect and the hands holding the
improvised weapon never shook or wavered. He did it so naturally it
made her forget he’d wielded a broomstick. He obviously understood
more than just the basics of his sport.
The mostly empty lounge echoed with their laughter and it gave
Poetry’s heart a lift. She’d needed that and her stomach ached with a
pang of wistfulness. How long had it been since she’d shared a joke? Just
appreciated the moment?
She and Adrian let their chuckles subside while wiping mirth from
their eyes. Poetry expelled a happy sigh as she shifted in her chair. Quiet
had fallen between them again. The game waited with lights flashing for
the next play.
“That’s not such a bad idea.”
“What? Dating drills and mock affairs?