Icy Pretty Love (12 page)

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Authors: L.A. Rose

BOOK: Icy Pretty Love
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RG: I was starting to kind of like this guy. Trust him, even.

 

RG: I just had this gut feeling I couldn’t shake that there’s more to him than he lets on.

 

RG: That there was something important that all that meanness was protecting, and I wanted to find out what it was.

 

RG: But then this woman I know told me that she used to be with him, and that he beat her.

 

RG: I have no reason not to believe her.

 

RG: But this guy, he says it’s not true, and pointed out that this woman has a good reason to want me to stay away from him.

 

RG: And my instincts, which I’ve always trusted, are saying that he’s telling the truth.

 

RG: But I know men. I know what they can do.

 

RG: And I don’t want to be the kind of person who’d automatically assume she’s lying.

 

RG: It’s hard. This is new. If any of my old girlfriends had told me a guy I knew had hit them, I’d believe them in an instant.

 

RG: I don’t know what to do.

 

Sam: Women don’t usually lie about that kind of thing.

 

RG: Believe me, I know.

 

Sam: And this guy’s an asshole, right?

 

RG: Yeah, I know that too!

 

RG: So you’re telling me…I should believe her?

 

Sam: Here’s what I’m telling you.

 

Sam: If you choose to believe he’s telling you the truth, you better do it for good reasons.

 

Sam: It’s a decision you’ll have to stand by. No going halfway.

 

RG: Right…ugh, my head hurts!

 

Sam: Can I ask what is it about this guy that makes you want to trust him?

 

Sam: A jerk that no one likes. I’m curious.

 

RG: It’s…this is going to sound dumb.

 

RG: It’s his laugh.

 

RG: He almost never laughs, but when he does, it’s like this beautiful whole person shining out from behind all these dark clouds.

 

RG: It feels so much more…real to me than the clouds do.

 

RG: I want to get to know that person. Does that make sense?

 

RG: Sam?

 

RG: Sammmmmmmm

 

RG: Boo :( Fine, then. I’m going to bed.

 

RG: …thanks for talking to me.

 

~8~

 

The next morning, I wake up to the sun spilling through parted curtains. For a second, when I open my eyes, all I see is white. It blazes me clean. I make a decision.

I go and sit at the kitchen table, trying to act like someone who isn’t a nervous wreck. I scroll through my phone. Sam never replied to my messages last night. Maybe his phone died.

Cohen’s not home yet, and I settle in for a long wait, but it’s barely five minutes before the door opens.

I jump up. “Cohen, I need to talk—Jesus! What happened to your face!”

“Nothing,” he snaps, shutting the door and turning around, but I’ve already seen his black eye. It’s as if one of his insomniac circles spread to flourish as a bruise in the tender skin between his eyelid and eyebrow. There’s a scrape just under his brow too, livid in the purpling skin.

“That needs ice. Sit down, I’ll get it,” I say.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t know I was taking orders from you now.” He glares. The bruise makes it even more intimidating to the average onlooker, but I look past it, to the exhaustion.

“Well, now you do,” I say with chilly politeness. “Sit down. I’m getting you ice, and then I’m going to make you a cup of tea and some breakfast. You look like you’re about to keel over.”

His glare doesn’t abate, but he finally takes a seat. I rush into the kitchen, wrap a handful of ice in a paper towel, and put the kettle on before going back to the dining room. His lip curls as I lift his hair up to get a better look at the bruise, but he doesn’t swat me away.

“Looks nasty,” I muse, holding the ice to it. A small hiss escapes his teeth at the pain, but I ignore it. “So who was brave and/or stupid enough to take a swing at you after one of your remarks?”

“Someone who is almost definitely in the hospital this morning,” he says.

For a second, my newfound faith in him shakes, but then I remember what Sam said. I have to stand by my decision to believe in him.

I sigh heavily and push the ice into his hands. “God, you are making this so hard.”

“What did I do now?” he says indignantly.

“Besides sneak off in the middle of the night and come back looking like you’ve killed somebody?” I sit down. “I wanted to tell you something.”

“I’m overjoyed,” he mutters.

I glower. “I take it back.”

“No, what were you going to say? I assumed it was something idiotic and now I want to know if I was right. I usually am.”

“I’m only going to say it to someone who isn’t a complete and total ass,” I fire back.

“The room happens to be empty of people who aren’t complete and total asses at the moment, so good luck.”

The only people here are him and…me. Goddamn it. “Do you have a special premonition for when somebody’s going to say something nice to you, so you can cut them off by being even meaner than usual?”

He adjusts the ice. “That explains why people generally don’t say nice things to me.”

“Count me as one of them, then.”

“I already knew what you were going to say.” He’s smirking. I hate him.

“Is that a fact? Because…because I was about to tell you about…jellyfish. Lots of jellyfish facts. Yeah.”

“No you weren’t,” he says. “You were about to tell me you’ve decided to believe me about Annabelle.”

“The box jellyfish can sting up to—”

“You’re being yourself again. That’s something you only save for people you like and trust.” His smile gets wider.

“Just because you’re right about the Annabelle thing doesn’t mean I li—”

“So I was right. As usual.”

In the kitchen, the kettle’s boiling over, as is my temper. To stop myself from pouring both of those things all over his head, I run in and turn off the stove. Then I toast a baguette and make some scrambled eggs to give myself time to cool down.

Am I doing the right thing?

My stomach answers the question for me. For the first time since Annabelle showed up, it’s not doing backflips.

I slide the food onto two plates and carry them back into the dining room. Cohen’s abandoned his ice, and it’s melting into a puddle in the center of the table. When I pass him a plate, he eyes it suspiciously.

“You’re welcome,” I say.

“Did you poison this?”

“Yes, Cohen. I’m going to murder you because that definitely wouldn’t stop your father from paying me. Not at all.”

He takes one bite of egg and grunts. High praise, coming from him.

“Thank you, this is delicious,” I instruct. “That’s what you say.”

“They’re eggs.”

“They’re goddamn delicious eggs and you know it. I put cheese in them. Thank me!”

“Gratitude doesn’t count under duress—”

I snatch the plate away. He looks at it sadly.

“Thank me,” I say.

“Thank you. Now give them back.”

“Give them back,
please.”

“Does this mean the niceness lessons are back on?”

“I think you mean, keep giving me niceness lessons,
please.”

“This is moronic—”

“Your breakfast is getting cold.”

“Fine.
Please
will you give it back, and
please
will you continue to torture me under the guise of making me a better person.”

“Good!” I say brightly, returning the food. He digs in.

“What made you change your mind?” he asks after a while.

“Well.” I hesitate. “Any other time, any other person, and I’d believe her and not you. I want you to know that.”

“Fair enough.”

“But there was a voice inside me that kept insisting you were telling the truth. That voice has never led me astray before.”

“Hearing voices is the second sign of madness,” he says.

“What’s the first sign?”

“Trusting me.”

It’s almost like he wants me to believe Annabelle. Like that would be easier for him, somehow. “I guess I’m full-on crazy, then.”

“Apparently.”

We eat in silence for another few minutes. I wonder if this is what it would feel like if I really was engaged. Eating breakfast together in a comfortable quiet…I’ve never known that. The only thing I’m used to is the early-morning escape.

If Georgette Montgomery was real, she’d be a lucky girl.

But she’s not. And I have to remember that.

I finish eating and stand up. “All right. We’re behind on the niceness lessons and we gotta catch up. I’m only here for a month and the clock is ticking.”

“What’s planned for today? Someone peels my fingernails off one by one and I’m supposed to compliment them on their wardrobe?” But his tone isn’t quite as harsh as usual. If I weren’t an idiot, I’d say he was hiding contentment.

“Today,” I announce, “we are going to go to the catacombs. Yes another cool Parisian touristy thing I’m sure you haven’t done yet.”

He leans back. “I’m starting to suspect you’re using these niceness lessons as an excuse to hit all the stereotypical tourist spots.”

“I am offended. Deeply, deeply offended. I try my hardest to improve your attitude and you repay me by being a jerkface.” I sniff. “Can I help it if you happen to be annoyed by loud people and crowded places and that just so happens to be a description of all the fun places in Paris?”

“You sure you want to go to the catacombs, of all places? You do realize it’s a dark tunnel full of human skulls.”

I blink. “Is that what it is?”

He snorts.

“What? All I knew about it was that it was a thing lots of people went to see in Paris, so I just assumed it’d be fun.”

“Things that large crowds of people enjoy doing are very rarely
fun.”

“Now we’re definitely doing it, if only because you’re a giant party pooper.” I grab his plate. “Get dressed. We’re going now.”

"Now? I was planning on getting some work done—"

"If you wanted to get work done today, you shouldn't have been out all night. We're going to go stare at some skulls whether you like it or not. Call your mysterious driver."

"His name is Geoff."

"Call Geoff. These are valuable minutes that we're not spending looking at creepy-ass skulls."

"Do you know you do that?" he says later as we're on our way out of the building, Renard nodding at us suspiciously. He always nods at me suspiciously, like I'm carting Cohen off for black-market organ collection or something. To be fair, it'd be interesting to find out if his heart is normal. Maybe it's black and shriveled. Maybe it's located in his toe. That would make anyone grumpy.

"Do what?" I ask. His heart must be the size of a peanut if it's located in his toe. Or a smallish strawberry, depending on which toe. I should ask.

"You add ‘ass’ to random words. Creepy-ass. Weird-ass. Stupid-ass. Do these adjectives actually just apply to the asses of the subject, or...?"

"If you spoke to more young people instead of weird-ass old businessmen, you'd know this is how hip young people talk."

"You mean hip-ass young people?"

"The -ass is generally applied to words with a negative connotation. Also, hip-ass sounds weird because hips are a body part. Like someone whose hips are combined with their ass."

"So you mean hip-ass sounds weird-ass."

"Shut up. Now it's sounding weird to me."

"You mean weird-ass—”

"Shut up!" I scream, pounding his shoulder. The divider rolls down and I get my first glimpse of Geoff, a harried-looking man in his thirties with a mustache probably envied by sea captains all over the world. He stares at me in amazement. He's probably not used to people telling his grouchiest passenger to shut up. Or touching them voluntarily.

Cohen smirks.

"You were just trying to annoy me," I accuse.

"Try? It's not exactly hard. Apparently I do it just by breathing."

"Yes, please do stop that."

"You're not the first to want that. And you won't be the last."

The car eventually stops near the entrance to the catacombs. The place is mobbed with tourists, predictably. Cohen takes one look, and I have to drag him out of his seat.

We buy tickets and wait in line. And wait. And wait. And wait. Those romantic Hollywood movies with the two hot people making out in the City of Lights never show them standing in line, tapping their feet and timing how long it takes the tantrum-throwing kid in front of them to take a breath between screams. Thirty seconds is his record so far. Quite impressive lung capacity, that one. He should go for competitive swimming. Although, to be fair, if I was seven years old and my parents were dragging me to an underground tunnel filled with human skeletons, I would probably throw a tantrum too.

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