First Kiss (13 page)

Read First Kiss Online

Authors: Kylie Adams

Tags: #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Reference, #Weddings, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Love Stories, #Humorous Fiction, #Interpersonal Relations, #Manhattan (New York; N.Y.), #actresses, #Hotelkeepers, #Bridesmaids, #Beauty Contestants, #Beauty Contests

BOOK: First Kiss
2.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"Yeah, let's not," Kiki agreed.

"When I was with him, though," Tiffany Lynn went on, "I just felt like there was a part of him that I couldn't reach. You know? He was looking for some quality that I didn't have. And I wanted to change for him, but I didn't know how. That's stupid, right? To want to change for some guy. At the end of the day, you never really can." She shrugged. "What can I say? I wanted him for the long haul, but he was a great three-week boyfriend. A girl could do worse."

"I think he's sort of a sport dater," Kirby went on, now and then tossing a glance to Tiffany Lynn, who stood there offering occasional nods of confirmation. "Novelty girls are his thing." He tilted a head toward the obvious object of his desire. "She was the newest and hottest dancer at the club. Just in from California. Everybody was talking about her. Then he dumps her for that chick who made it to the final two on The Apprentice ." Kirby shrugged. "I don't know. High profile babes must do something for his ego." He halted, regarding Kiki for a moment. "So what's your story? Besides the green face."

I'm the tabloid scandal girl of the moment . Kiki kept the words to herself. But she was definitely thinking them.

"Wait a minute!" Tiffany Lynn exclaimed, staring lasers at Kiki as she pieced together the who's-that-girl puzzle in her mind. "You're Kiki Douglas!"

She shrank from the positive ID and hoped nobody within earshot heard or gave a damn.

Kirby just stared blankly. Clearly, the name carried no meaning to him, a man who probably dealt in point spreads and batting averages, only trafficking in celebrity gossip when a story got so big that it came out of the water faucet and proved impossible to ignore.

"She's the girl from today's Post ," Tiffany Lynn informed him. "You know, the one with Tom Brock"

"Ah." Suddenly, a ripple of awareness skated across Kirby's face. He nodded, smoothing the hairs on his goatee as he said, "What can I say? My case is rested."

"Fab didn't seek me out, though," Kiki said. "We met by accident." But the words sounded lame once they reached the air.

Kirby knew this and shared a secret look with Tiffany Lynn, shaking his head with when-will-they-learn wisdom while he served up a second dose of the good stuff. "Hey, maybe he's changed. Maybe it's true love. The fact that you're Topic A from Trump Tower to the subway john is probably a coincidence."

In response, Kiki swallowed the tequila faster than a badass in a biker bar. Then she slammed the shot glass back onto the counter with an almighty crash. "Just shut up and pour, bartender."

Chapter Eight

 

"When you think about it, Fab's really not that handsome," Kiki slurred. "I mean, come on, he's practically ugly."

"This girl is hammered," Kirby said. "She's so hammered they need a new word for it."

Kiki was sandwiched between Camisole's bartender and one of the club's most popular strippers (certainly Fab's favorite) in a taxi barreling toward the Meat Packing District, and, ultimately, Affair.

Right now she was brimming with love for her two new best friends. They were marvelous. "Party in my suite!" Kiki roared, collapsing into a fit of drunken laughter.

Tiffany Lynn gave her a sisterly pat on the knee. "Honey, there's not going to be any kind of party. We're going to get you into your room, put you in bed, and let you sleep this off."

"No!" Kiki shouted. "Party in my suite!" Quite suddenly, perhaps weakened by the outburst, she slumped against the rock that was Kirby's shoulder for several long, disoriented seconds.

Then a great idea sprang to mind. Hmm. Maybe she wasn't so drunk after all. "Hey, let's find Fab so you can beat him up." She peered at Kirby as she suggested this. "I've got his mobile number. We should call right now to set up the smackdown." Frantically, she looked around. "Where's my purse? Who's got my purse?"

"It's right here," Tiffany Lynn assured her. "But the battery's low on your cell. Let's call him later."

"Okay," Kiki agreed. She held onto Kirby's Popeye arm with both hands. "Do you really think you could beat him up?"

He laughed. "Fab Tomba? I think you could."

Kiki smiled. "Okay. If you say so. I just would feel bad if you got hurt or something. That's all."

"What?" The question hit the air as he puffed out his chest. "You don't think I can wipe the floor with that guy?"

"Nobody is wiping the floor with anybody," Tiffany Lynn cut in. She reached over to pull roughly at Kirby's hair.

He winced. "Shit! What'd you do that for?"

"Because you're not helping the situation," Tiffany Lynn hissed. "You're not going to beat up Fab Tomba."

"But I could," Kirby shot back. "Trust me. He doesn't want a piece of this."

"What are youtwelve?" Tiffany Lynn asked.

"I'm just saying," Kirby went on. "I could kick that guy's ass from here to Long Island and never even break a sweat."

Tiffany Lynn let out a frustrated groan. "Why are we even having this conversation? It's stupid."

"She" Kirby began.

But Tiffany Lynn stopped him cold. " She is drunk and has no idea what she's saying."

"Oh, yes, I do," Kiki answered, even though her eyes were closed. "I know what I'm saying, I know what you're saying, and I know what he's saying. And if the cabdriver could speak English, then I'd know what he was saying, too."

But Tiffany Lynn ignored Kiki to continue fussing at Kirby. "How many shots of tequila did you give her?"

"I don't know," he mumbled. "A lot. She told me that she could handle her liquor. I guess she lied."

"Oh, you think?" Tiffany Lynn sighed.

Kiki found herself drifting in and out of sleep as she snuggled against Kirby. "I feel so bad for you," she murmured. "I really, really do."

"How come?"

Kiki yawned. "Because. None of the dancers at the club will go to bed with you. They've got you pi-geonholed in this older brother role. And then you have to stand there while they parade around naked and pretend not to want them. I saw you watching Tiffany Lynn tonight. How could you not? The music was hot. She was doing her thing. It must be torture."

An awkward silence descended inside the car.

"Tiffany Lynn, let me ask you something. What's so wrong with Kirby?" Kiki asked.

"There's noth"

"Now I realize that he's not Fab. But you just have to get over that." Kiki bulldozed on, feeling a second wind now. Somehow the alcohol clarified this unrequited thing between her new friends. Maybe she could help.

"What does that mean?" Kirby asked. " He's not Fab ." His voice mocked her.

"Oh, please," Kiki scoffed. "You know what I mean. Fab is gorgeous. Accept that and move on."

"Just a few minutes ago you said he wasn't that handsome," Kirby pointed out.

"Okay, now who's hammered?" Kiki rolled her eyes. "I never said that. In fact, my mouth couldn't even form those words. Fab Tomba is the most beautiful man I've ever seen." She patted Kirby's bulging bicep. "But you're pretty hot in your own right. And you should be proud of that. Face it, though, there's only one Fab."

"I don't care about Fab Tomba!" Kirby yelled.

"You're the one who's obsessed. You can't stop saying his name."

"That's insane," Kiki sniffed. "I've hardly mentioned him all night."

Kirby gave up.

Tiffany Lynn giggled.

"Let's get back to the two of you," Kiki said. "Why aren't you da"

The driver negotiated a sharp turn, careening his passengers to one side of the vehicle.

Kirby and Tiffany Lynn recovered quickly.

As for Kiki not so much. A terrible nausea hit, exploding like a dirty bomb in the center of her chest. She couldn't see, think, or move. It took every bit of foggy concentration not to lose the contents of her stomach. This was democracy in action. No matter how high-end the booze, it could deliver low-end results.

The car stopped moving.

Tiffany Lynn handled the fare business.

Kirby eased Kiki out of the backseat and onto the street. Her knees buckled the moment her feet hit the pavement. Standing up required an industrial strength that the liquor had atrophied somewhere back on the Upper East Side.

But Kirby was right there, his arm clinched around her waist. "That's it, party girl. Nice and easy."

Kiki slumped against him. The class was Vulnerability 101. And right now she was at the top of it.

Thank God for the nice guys of the world. She met Kirby's kind eyes and managed a loopy smile, silently apologizing for the tequila psychosis.

His look was instant forgiveness as he half walked, half carried Kiki inside the hotel, Tiffany Lynn flanking her on the other side. When they entered the luxurious lobby, Kirby whistled softly. "Swanky. Maybe we should get a room and sleep it off, too "

"Sleep what off?" Tiffany Lynn countered. "I'm not drunk, and you're not either."

Kirby shot up his eyebrows. "Forget the sleeping it off part then. Let's just get a room."

"I don't think so."

"Oh, you should ," Kiki chimed in. "And why won't you give Kirby a chance? Is it because he's a bartender?"

"What's wrong with my job?"

"How old are you?" Kiki asked.

"Thirty-four."

"You need a grown-up job," Kiki said matter-of-factly, the worst of the nausea receding as they scooted her inside the elevator. "And I think I speak for all women when I say that nobody wants to be married to a forty-year-old bartender. That's just ridiculous."

Tiffany Lynn nodded in agreement.

Kirby glowered. "Which floor?"

"Five," Kiki answered.

He pressed the corresponding button, then spun back to finish the argument. "And who said anything about getting married?"

"Oh, I totally see the two of you married," Kiki said. Her voice rang with such absolute certainty that a casual bystander would believe that the only thing left to decide was which band should play at the reception. She reached out to clutch Tiffany Lynn's wrist. "I can be one of your bridesmaids! I'm already in five weddings this summer. I mean, what's one more?"

The stripper and the bartender exchanged uneasy glances. But hints of longing were there.

Finally, Tiffany Lynn said, "I can't marry him. We haven't even been on a date yet."

"Or slept together," Kirby put in. "And it's important that a couple be sexually compatible. I read that in Maxim ."

Kiki jabbed him in the gut with her elbow. A small price to pay for saying something so stupid. "Okay, I'm not even a lesbian, and I'm sexually compatible with her." She giggled at her own joke, then stumbled.

Kirby caught her in the nick of time. And the shy half smile on his face said that he already knew the answer to the compatibility question. Raising it was just a ploy.

The elevator doors opened.

Kirby secured his arm around Kiki's waist and ventured out for the final gauntlet to her room. With-out preamble he said, as much to the corridor as to Tiffany Lynn, "We should go out sometime."

Kiki grinned, feeling quite the matchmaker. Where would these two be without her? Not here together. That's for sure. Tiffany Lynn would probably be home sweating out an essay for an eight o'clock class she always skipped. And as for Kirby, well, his scenario would probably have something to do with Tiffany Lynn's photograph in the Camisole calendar and a very busy right hand.

Other books

7 Days and 7 Nights by Wendy Wax
The Lady Chosen by Stephanie Laurens
The Huntress by Susan Carroll
At Home with Mr Darcy by Victoria Connelly
Stolen Dreams by Marilyn Campbell
The Time Paradox by Eoin Colfer
The Promise by Tony Birch