Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 75547 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 378(@200wpm)___ 302(@250wpm)___ 252(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 75547 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 378(@200wpm)___ 302(@250wpm)___ 252(@300wpm)
Kristen shakes her head. “I’m living free,” she states. “You should try it sometime. I am proud of the woman who stares back at me in the mirror. I can’t say that when I’m with you.”
He blinks. The porch light makes his face heavy, mean. The car behind him ticks as metal cools. His shoes are too clean to be trusted. He looks at me because the line between us is the only thing he recognizes as a boundary.
“You really think you can give her what she had with me?” he asks, needle under velvet. “You can’t buy what I buy. You can’t open doors where I open them. You can’t even take her to a restaurant that gets written about.”
“She doesn’t want to be in places that get written about,” I tell him frankly. “She wants to be fed life.”
Kristen’s laugh spills out as she mutters. “He makes a great grilled cheese.”
Brian ignores it. “You think the patch on your back and that growl in your voice make you a man? You’re a boy with toys. Clubs and noise. She will get tired of it. And when she does—”
“When she does,” I interrupt, slow, patient, like explaining weather to someone who thinks the sky cares about his schedule, “she’ll tell me. And I’ll listen. I won’t lock her out of her life and change the code on the gate like a coward. And I won’t fucking tow her damn car.”
Something mean unfurls behind his eyes. “You’re talking big for a guy whose retirement plan is a jar of change.”
“Careful,” I warn low, because the only place this goes next is ugly and I’d rather not decorate the porch with him. “You shouldn’t talk about things you really don’t know about to people you don’t know.”
Kristen moves closer; her shoulder brushes mine. She steps forward one half-step, claiming space in front of me. “You don’t get to talk to him like that.”
His eyebrows rise. “You’re defending him now?”
“I’m defending me,” she declares. “Because every time you open your mouth, it’s the same insult dressed differently. You keep telling me what I’m allowed to want. You keep trying to sell me who I am. Brian, I’d rather count change with someone who sees me than drown in your money and lies.”
He scoffs. “You’re being dramatic.”
“I’m being real.” She tips her head. “I have a box with a number on it at the post office and a job that deposits my money into my account and a future that is whatever I decide to make it. Those are tiny things until you’ve had just to take away. Now they’re everything that is my own.” She turns and walks back a few steps behind me.
He looks lost for the first time. That’s the thing about men like him—take away their angles and all you get is air.
“Go home,” I order. “You’re done here.”
He steps in like he might try to slide past me and up the steps. I shift. He meets a wall that happens to be ribs and a man who decided tonight is not the night he lets a snake into his house. His mouth twitches, and for a second the polish cracks and the real snarl underneath unleashes.
“You threatening me?”
“No,” I taunt. “I’m explaining cause and effect.”
He snorts, glances at Kristen again, tries for soft. “Baby, this isn’t you.”
She smiles with only her mouth. “You don’t know me at all.”
“I made you.”
“You dressed me up. You decorated me,” she corrects. “You taught me the song and dance you wanted me to perform. Then you tried to take me apart when I wouldn’t stand where you put me.” She breathes out, slow, and the night breathes with her. “We’re done.”
Silence. The kind that’s choice, not accident.
Brian flicks his keys into his palm. He glances at me, and what he says next is meant to be the knife he turns as he leaves. “You can keep the trash,” he says, eyes on me. “It suits you.”
I don’t move. I don’t bite. The best way to beat a man like this is to let him hear how small he sounds when the world doesn’t echo him back.
Kristen doesn’t let it go. “One more thing,” she says, and he pauses because arrogance can’t resist an audience. “Stop showing up here. If you do, I call the cops, and I will press charges for harassment. Also, don’t call the spa. If you try to cause trouble with my job, I will ruin your day with a hundred small, legal things that add up to pain you can’t buy your way out of. Because Brian I do know your secrets, sweetheart.” There is venom in her tone.
He flares again. “You don’t scare me.”
“You don’t have to be scared,” she challenges. “You just have to be gone.”
He hesitates—two beats, three—like he’s listening for permission he’s not going to get. Then he turns on his clean heel and stalks back to the car. He doesn’t slam the door because men like him think slamming is for the poor. The engine starts, purrs, backs up slow, headlights sweeping the porch and catching Kristen’s face as she watches him leave without flinching. He points the hood toward the street. Gravel crunches. The tail lights go red, then shrink, then disappear around the hedge.