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Authors: Dawn Atkins

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BOOK: Friendly Persuasion
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“W
HOSE TURN IS IT
?” Kara asked, staring blindly at her spades hand.
“Huh?” Tina said, bringing her gaze back to the card game. No one seemed interested in the game today, but at least Tina was happy—she was in a lovestruck haze over Tom. Kara and Ross smiled at each other, but tension buzzed between them.

She’d never forget the look on his face—
how could you do this to me?
Like she was his mother making him eat Brussels sprouts or do his homework.

What had she done that was so wrong? She’d been helping him as a friend. In fact, when she’d spoken to Siegel they’d still been only friends. He’d accused her of trying to change him. Not fair at all.

They planned to meet at Ross’s place for dinner after work. They’d get past this awkwardness, she was certain. Make-up sex was supposed to be the best.

F
IVE HOURS LATER
, Kara stood on the terrace outside Ross’s apartment and watched rain drip off the eaves to form puddles at her feet. Here she was, waiting for Ross in the rain—just like the night of the cab sex. He was an hour late. Where could he be? They’d left the office at the same time.
The landlords weren’t home or she’d have waited with them. She could go to her own apartment, but she kept thinking Ross would be here any minute. How had it all gone so wrong? The weekend had been so perfect—they’d been best friends in love. She’d thought they had it all—sharing love and work and life.

But since the argument, it was as if the filter over a lens had popped off and everything that had been soft and hazy and pink and pretty now looked hard and clear and flawed. She’d always promised herself she’d choose her man carefully and with her future in mind. How could she have chosen Ross?

He was always late, even now when they were both on their best behavior. Was he doing it on purpose? At work, he’d seemed to
want
to be angry at her about the job. Almost as if he’d been looking for an excuse.

The rain poured down, increasing her gloom. During their cab fantasy, the rain had been mysterious and sensuous and romantic. Now it was just wet and irritating. Where was Ross? Was he ducking her? Was this some passive-aggressive way to show his anger?

He was on a motorcycle, she remembered abruptly. Dangerous in the rain. She pictured the bike sliding on a greasy puddle, his poor body tossed onto the street. Oh, God.

She was about to bang on a neighbor’s door to start calling hospitals when she saw Ross’s motorcycle pull into a parking spot. He bounced off the bike and strolled across the lot, taking his time, as though she hadn’t been waiting for him for an hour, terrified for his life.

He looked up at her from the parking lot. “Kara!” he said, his face pure delight.

She would not smile, much as his expression warmed her. They had to reach an understanding about this. When he’d bounded up the stairs to her, she said, “Where have you been?”

“I’ll show you.” He opened his backpack and pulled out a dozen bedraggled daisies, which he presented triumphantly to her. “For what happened today.”

“Thank you,” she said, taking the flowers. He was trying, at least. “I’ve been waiting and waiting, worried sick.”

“Why would you worry? I picked up dinner and it took longer than I expected to get the Peking duck.” He held his open backpack under her nose, showing her the white sack, grease spotted, emitting the enticing scent of sesame oil and garlic.

“That’s great,” she said, trying to calm down. “Next time, call me. What if you’d been hurt? I was about to call hospitals.”

His open expression closed up. “I wasn’t hurt, Kara. I was getting our dinner—and flowers for you.” Again she felt like his mother, or his jailer, and she hated it. “I just forgot you don’t have a key yet.”

“I’m sorry. You’re right. I just…I just worry.” That wasn’t a helpful thing to say, but the day’s frustrations and her fear about their relationship and his possible death by rain-wobbly motorcycle had just balled up into a panic.

“I know you do,” he said with a weary sigh, the kind of sigh you gave your parents when they reported you missing after midnight or something equally over-reactive. “I’ll get a key made. Relax.” He reached past her and unlocked the door, shaking his head as though she was neurotic.

She wanted to apologize for her outburst, to explain her tension and the newness of everything, but instead she joked. “I guess we’re having our first fight.”

But he only frowned. “We’re not fighting.” As if a fight meant something terrible, instead of just part of a relationship.

They laid out the food—an activity usually filled with jokes and pokes with chopsticks—in near silence, then sat down to eat. Even the tattered daisies didn’t lighten the mood.

Ross took a bite of beef broccoli, frowned, then examined one of the small containers. “This is the wrong sauce,” he said, his jaw muscle ticking. He picked up a bite of duck with his chopsticks, chewed, then stopped. “Is yours cold?” he demanded.

“It’s okay,” she said, though the meat was icy.

“No, it isn’t. It’s cold. I’ll get them to deliver something better.” She knew Ross didn’t care about things like this. He patronized the mediocre restaurant because the owner was a friend. He didn’t care about the food, just the gesture. He was worrying about it because of her.

She dropped her chopsticks and felt tears slide down her cheeks. “This isn’t right, Ross. You’re acting strange.”

“I’m doing my best. What do you want from me?”

“I want you to be yourself, except…” Better? Was she trying to improve him? “I just don’t know how to do this—this relationship thing.”

“Neither do I,” he said, taking another bite of the cold food. They chewed in silence for a minute. Then he looked up at her. “I know I love you,” he said hopefully.

“Me, too,” she said. But that obviously didn’t solve the problem. Wanting it to work wasn’t enough. You could shave the corners off a square peg, but it would always be a squeeze into that round hole. “Maybe we can’t do this,” she whispered, voicing her worst fears.

“Sure we can,” he said stubbornly. “You didn’t mean anything about the job. You were trying to help me.” But that didn’t make him feel any better, she could see in his face.

“You got so angry with me. If we’d still been just friends, you would have shrugged it off.”

“If we were friends you wouldn’t have pushed.”

“Maybe this is a mistake,” she blurted.

“No, it’s not. We should give ourselves a chance,” he said, but his expression said
yeah, BIG mistake.

“Maybe we just got carried away with the fantasy,” she said slowly, her throat so dry and tight she could hardly squeeze out the words.
Please argue.

“Do you think so?” he asked carefully.

“What do you think?”
Last chance, Ross. Tell me I’m wrong.

“We might have done that,” he said. “It happened fast. I saw you with that guy and knew I didn’t want to lose you.”

No. Had it just been jealousy that made him say he loved her? It couldn’t be just that, could it? She wanted to erase those words, take back today, try again fresh. “I’m sorry about Saul and about getting mad about your being late,” she said, tears sliding down her cheeks.

“I’m making you cry,” he said, leaning forward to wipe her face with a napkin. “That sucks.”

“It’s okay,” she said, sniffing. “It’s not you. It’s me.”

“Hey, now. You’re stealing my clichés.”

She tried to laugh, but the sound jammed in her throat. “Have we ruined things between us?”

“I don’t think so,” he said slowly.

Relief filled her. They’d just overreacted and assumed the worst. They had to give each other some slack, get used to this new thing between them.

“Ground rule number one, remember?” Ross said. “You’re my best friend, Kara. I don’t want to lose that. No matter what. The most important thing that’s happened these past weeks is that we’ve gotten closer as friends.”

She looked at him, stunned, while the world tilted on its axis. He was worried about ruining their
friendship,
not their
relationship.

“The sex has been amazing,” he continued. “Beyond words—really—and I don’t want to give that up.” His eyes flared with heat for a moment. “But even that isn’t worth it if it ruins our friendship.”

“What about—” she gulped “—the love part?”

“I know.” He frowned. “I guess love brings out the worst in us. You’re acting neurotic and demanding and I’m—”

“Neurotic and demanding? Because I thought you might have been killed in the rain? Because I don’t like waiting for an hour?”

“Let me finish. Jeez. I was about to add that I’m acting flaky and belligerent. See what I mean? We’re so uptight about this we’re picking fights. We’re trying too hard.”

You can’t give up who you are for someone else.
That was what he’d said when he was trying to convince her how wrong he was for her.

If not for the amazing sex, Ross was the last man she would choose for herself. But there was so much more she’d felt and wanted and believed possible. Her tears poured down in earnest.

“Hey, hey,” he said. “You’re turning your Kung-Pao chicken into Kung-Pao soup.”

She swiped her cheeks.

“We have to hang on to the best of what we have,” he said. “Our friendship. That’s always worked.”

She nodded.

He leaned forward and kissed her.

Despite her misery, she felt the sizzle, the race of electricity along her nerves, and she wanted to forget everything they’d said and just fall into bed with him.

Ross broke off the kiss. “I want to make love to you so bad.”

“Me, too,” she said, fighting tears and lust and heartbreak. He would do it, too. He would try to have friendship and sex. It was love that was the problem—love and the commitment and adjustments that went with it. “I can’t do that,” she said. “It hurts too much.”

“I figured,” he said sadly.

Relationships were hard enough with both people pulling in the same direction, hoping and loving and compromising away. But Ross was uncertain and she was scared. They were too different. Being opposites struck great sparks for sex but made for a destructive blaze everywhere else.

“You want to stay for the basketball game?” he asked.

She looked around the apartment. Everywhere were touches she’d put there—a bookcase for his video games, stripe marks on the carpet where she’d vacuumed. He had a dish drainer now and hot pads and kitchen scrubbers, even a toilet seat cover—a non-girlie one. She couldn’t stay. Not in this nest she’d been fixing up for the two of them.

“Too soon,” she choked out. She needed to go home and sob.

“Later then. When we’re feeling more normal.”

“Right.” Normal? She’d fallen in love with her best friend. How would she ever feel normal again?

14
“I
TOLD YOU
I’d meet you at your place when I got off,” Tom said crossly to Tina, leaning across the bar.
“I was bored,” Tina said. “I wanted to get out. Let’s go dancing at that after-hours place.”

“I have to study tomorrow,” he said.

“You always have to study. We never do anything fun.” She knew she sounded bitchy, but she felt that way. Ever since last week when Tom had convinced her to go to his parents’ house for dinner. She’d seen the nervous looks his parents had exchanged over Tom’s head.
What trouble has our poor son gotten into?
Tom insisted they were just protective of him, but she could tell they saw her as a slut who was taking their precious darling for a ride. That made her blood boil. To make a nice impression, she’d worn a modest dress and very little cosmetics. It hadn’t helped a bit. She was who she was and it showed.

Since the dinner, she’d taken a good hard look at what had been happening between Tom and her and hadn’t liked what she’d seen. She’d been changing herself to please Tom. She’d cut down on her makeup—he’d convinced her she looked better without it—started reading while he studied and keeping hours that were compatible with his class schedule. She’d even tried to learn to cook for him, though he hadn’t asked and seemed perfectly willing to prepare all the meals.

The capper had been letting him talk her into the family visit. She’d actually been nervous about what they would think of her, hence the conservative dress. On top of it, Tom had taken her for granted while they were there, leaving her to help his mother clean up the dishes, while he worked on his dad’s engine with him.

Things had changed between them without her noticing. The night they’d first had sex, when Tom had been in agony over her, he’d agreed to do it her way—sex only. But he’d gradually pressured her into becoming the kind of woman he wanted.

He hadn’t
forced
her really, just seduced her with his adoration. But it wasn’t adoration, she knew. It was sexual fascination. She’d seen it before, but this was the first time she’d succumbed to it. In his heart of hearts, Tom disapproved of her as much as his parents did. Once he stopped being obsessed with her body and the remarkable sex they had, that disapproval would bloom big time. So, she’d started forcing the issue, even while a secret, weak part of her prayed she was wrong.

“We do plenty of fun things,” Tom said patiently. “We went sailing on Saturday and to a movie after the dinner at my parents. What are you doing, Tina?” He said the last words low.

“I’m being me. That’s not acceptable?”

“Stop it.”

“Stop being me? Sorry, no can do. I’d like a drink, please. Martini. Shaken, not stirred.” She lifted her chin at a hell-raising angle.

Tom blew out a breath and went to mix her drink, but he looked puzzled, frustrated and worried. For a second, she felt awful to be hurting him, but she couldn’t seem to stop. She seemed to want to show him her worst self, to get her cards on the table and see if he could take it.

Tom brought her the martini. “Don’t overdo it,” he said wearily.

“I can handle my liquor,” she said, deciding to dump this martini into her water glass when he wasn’t looking and order another one.

“If you say so.”

“You poor, poor dear,” she said. “I make you suffer so.”

To his credit, Tom resisted her gibe and went back to work.

Tina turned to the three men standing nearby. “So, what business are you guys in?”

It turned out to be insurance—some tedious kind—so she drank a second martini and disposed of two more in her water glass when Tom wasn’t looking, all the while pretending to be fascinated by the Three Bland Men who lived and breathed the nuances of premiums and underwriting.

Tom was stewing behind the bar, shooting her glares. Good. He was mad. Now she’d force him to say what he really thought of her.

She had just asked one guy about collision deductibles when a hand gripped her elbow. “I’m taking you home,” Tom growled in her ear.

“I’m not going home,” she said, pulling her arm away. “Your shift’s not even over.”

“Jane’s covering for me.” He tugged at her.

She let him walk her out the door and across the parking lot, striding so fast she could hardly keep up on her short legs. She’d never seen him angry before. They would fight now and probably end it tonight. Part of her felt sick with sadness at the thought.

To fix that, when they reached the car she yanked her arm away. “Quit dragging me around like property. You don’t own me.”

“I’m trying to take care of you.”

“I can take care of myself. I’m getting sick of this he-man act. And just because you’re a stick-in-the-mud doesn’t mean I have to turn into one.”

He stared at her for an angry minute, then shut her door and went to his side and got in. “Why are you making this into an issue?”

“Because it
is
an issue.”

He rolled his eyes and started the car.

“You always do that. Dismiss my concerns like you’re above them. Like you’re above me.”

“We have a nice relationship. Why are you trying to wreck it?”

“I was just having a drink with some friends. Do you have a problem with me talking to other men?”

He glared at her. “I don’t give a damn who you talk to unless you’re doing it to hurt me.”

“You knew I was a flirt when you met me.”

“You put on that act because you’re insecure.”

“Oh, ho. Aren’t you the shrink? Listening to a bunch of drunks’ woes does not make you a psychologist, Tom Sands.”

“I’m just being honest, which is something you can’t seem to be—even with yourself.”

Tears stung her eyes. Why was she letting him get to her? “I can’t argue when I’m drunk,” she said, though she wasn’t even tipsy. She leaned her head on the back of the seat and felt tears slide into her ears. Now she was crying? She’d really lost her edge these past weeks. Her self-control had gotten downright flabby.

Tom didn’t speak the rest of the way to her house. She didn’t either, contenting herself with dark thoughts and an occasional glance at his profile to be sure the muscle still danced angrily in his cheek.

When they got to her apartment, Tom came to open her door, but she was already out. He took her by the arm, as if to steady her. She could have shaken him off, but since she was pretending to be drunk, she decided to let it be. This might be the last time he held on to her, and it was so nice, leaning on him like this.

He walked her into her apartment and straight to her bedroom, where he pulled back the covers for her. She lay down and allowed him to take off her shoes and dress, revealing his favorite bra and panty set. He looked longingly at her, wanting her, but he covered her with the sheet, keeping his face neutral, just like the days before they’d slept together.

He disappeared and she could hear him in the kitchen pouring water. He brought back a glass and two aspirin. “Take these,” he said grumpily.

She did.

He turned to go and panic shot through her. She didn’t want him to leave. She’d accomplished her goal—gotten him mad—but it felt like someone had turned off the sun, and left her in the deep, cold darkness, all alone. “Don’t go,” she said humbly. “Let’s talk.”

With his back to her, he sighed and dropped his head. Without turning, he said, “I thought you didn’t want to talk when you were drunk.”

“I’m not that drunk,” she said.

He turned to her with a brief smile. “Yeah, I got a whiff of your water glass.” He returned to her bed and sat beside her.

“I’m sorry I’ve been mean,” she said, embarrassed that fat tears were sliding down her cheeks. “I just feel really bad. Your parents don’t like me and I—”

“They don’t
know
you. And you didn’t help, saying things just to shock them. Why did you tell my mother you consider Madonna a role model?”

The truth was his mother had complimented her dress, adding that it was nice when women didn’t have to show everything they had all the time. That pissed her off. She liked showing what she had. “Because Madonna’s message is be who you are, and too bad if people can’t take it. Your mother can’t take who I am.”

Tom was silent for a moment. “My parents might be old-fashioned, but they’d like you fine if you’d be yourself instead of trying to be outrageous every second.”

“Outrageous? You think I’m outrageous? You’re just like your parents. You despise me, too.”

“I love you, Tina.”

His words closed down her throat. “But I’ll make you miserable,” she blurted, forcing out sound. New tears surged out. That was what was really bothering her. She sat up and took his arms, her lips trembling. “Don’t you see? You’re pretending I’m someone I’m not. You don’t know me.”

“I do know you. The real you—the one you hide from everyone.”

Not true. Couldn’t be true. Tom was telling himself some hero myth. Since she’d met him he’d been happiest when he thought he was rescuing her, whether from melon martinis or overbearing barflies or her own boo-boos.

Tom leaned in to kiss her and she wanted to melt into his embrace, pull him into bed and forget all this relationship insanity. But something in her wouldn’t give up. She’d realized she’d been pretending to be the woman Tom wanted, just as her mother had molded herself to please her temperamental father all those miserable years. And now that she knew the truth, she couldn’t go back to before.

She would not turn out like her mother. Not even to have Tom’s big hand to lead her up the walk, his broad shoulders to lean on, his big bear body to make love with. Not even for that.

“I’m not who you want me to be and I never will be.” She stiffened her arms to hold him away.

“You’re more than you think you are, Tina.”

He wanted her to be more. He wanted too much. And she knew as sure as she was sitting here in her underwear that she couldn’t be more. She had to break things off. Now. Say what she had to say to end it. “The real problem is that I’m getting bored.” She swallowed hard because her next words, a terrible lie, would do the trick—get him to leave her alone, to stop looking at her with all that longing and trust and love in his eyes. “I don’t love you, Tom. I’m sorry, but I don’t.”

“You don’t mean that.”

“Yes, I do. That’s why I’ve been so awful to you lately. It’s over.”

“You’re serious about this? You don’t…love me?” He looked slapped and pale as a ghost.

She nodded, shaking a tear to her cheek.

He was silent for a long time, his breathing ragged, his face filled with anguish. “Okay, then. I won’t beat my head against the wall. I don’t want that pain. I did that once. I quit school over a woman. Set my life back too far.”

“So it’s good you know now before it gets worse.”

He gave a humorless laugh. “What makes you think it can get any worse?” His blue eyes sparkled with hurt, then he pushed to his feet and headed to the door.

Everything inside her wanted to leap out of bed and fling herself at him.
Don’t go. Don’t give up. I’m bluffing.
But Tom was a decent, sensible guy, and he knew when enough was enough. That was part of him she craved—that rock-solid stability—and it was what allowed him to do the right thing. Walk out of her life forever.

Tom turned at the door. “Take care of yourself, Tina. I’d like to say I’ll be here if you change your mind, but I don’t think I’m strong enough.”

And then he was gone.

Pain coursed through her in waves. The joke was on her. Somehow, Tom Sands, with his study sessions and sailing lessons and golden-brown cheese sandwiches had burned through the Teflon coating of her heart and made it ache. It would take a long, long time to heal, and she was scared to death she’d never be the same again.

BOOK: Friendly Persuasion
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