Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
clip, leaving the escaping strands alone, hoping they looked
sexy rather than messy. I was reasonably sure, judging by
the look of desire on Elena’s face, that I’d pulled it off.
“I just want you to know on my way out earlier today,
I had to caress my front door in fond memory.” I winked at
her. “I’ll never look at the foyer the same way again.”
“Maybe we should plan on changing the way you look
at
every
room in your house.”
“And then in yours.”
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“I’ll drink to that.” She held up her wineglass and we
clinked.
e evening went on like that, regular conversation
peppered with sexually infused flirting, and God were we
good at it. I often had to stop and remind myself that this
was the very same untouchable, unattainable bank manager
I’d been ogling for months. I had been so sure she was out
of my league and now here we were, sitting together at
dinner talking quietly and teasingly about all the filthy
things we were going to do to each other when we got
home. It was almost surreal and by the time we were
handed dessert menus by the waiter, I was so excruciatingly
wet I half expected to slide out of my chair and end up
under our table on the floor at any given moment.
I didn’t need to open the dessert menu. I knew I was
getting the chocolate cherry cheesecake.
“I’m going to have the crème brulee,” Elena informed
me. “I almost always order that when it’s available.”
“Your favorite?”
“What’s not to love? Hot and sweet outside, warm
and creamy inside…” She let her voice trail off and sipped
her wine, looking smugly satisfied at what I was sure was a
dopey (possibly drooling) expression on my face.
“Jesus Christ,” I muttered, grabbing for my water.
“You’re going to be the death of me yet.”
Our desserts arrived quickly and I tried hard not to
scarf mine down like a starving person. My mind was stuck
in an endless loop, like a skipping record, and all I could
think about was taking Elena home and getting my hands,
my mouth, my tongue underneath that black dress. ere
would be no quiet climaxing tonight. Oh, no. I was bound
and determine to wring some serious noise out of her.
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“Avery?” e voice surprised me because it wasn’t
Elena’s. I wrenched my gaze from across the table and
looked up to see my ex, Lauren, standing over me with a
smile. ere was something in her eyes—a glint? a glare?—
that came and went so fast, I almost missed it. “I thought
that was you. Hi!” She bent down and gave me a hug,
which I returned awkwardly.
“Hi,” I said to her. She was smiling widely, her eyes
were bright, and she looked…I couldn’t come up with a
word. But it made me squirm.
“Hi there.” She glanced in Elena’s direction.
“Oh, God, I’m sorry. Where are my manners?” I
nodded across the table. “is is my…date, Elena Walker.
Elena, this is Lauren Gardner.”
“I’m Avery’s ex,” Lauren added, though I figured
Elena had probably put two and two together just using
the name. ey exchanged greetings and shook hands
politely.
“I can’t stay long…my date’s in the ladies’ room.”
“Your date, huh?” I said teasingly, hoping to allay the
weird feeling I had. e mention of a date was promising.
“Yeah, she’s great. I met her at my ob/gyn’s office. She’s
the receptionist there. Can you believe it?”
I shook my head. “Leave it to you.”
“And I’d seen her quite a bit because…drum roll…I’m
pregnant!” She all but squealed her news, causing several
other patrons to glance our way. I didn’t mind, though. She
was so ecstatically happy about it and her glee was
contagious.
“Lauren! at’s terrific. Good for you.”
“You know, it’s also gotten me thinking about a lot of
past stuff,” she said, sobering a bit, the glint returning.
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“Past stuff?”
Uh-oh.
“I owe you an apology, Avery.”
“An apology? No, you don’t. Absolutely not.”
Please
don’t say it.
I waved a hand at her, hoping to brush the
whole subject away like so much dust, and I couldn’t bring
myself to look in Elena’s direction, for fear she’d see the
panic on my face.
“Yes, I do. I shouldn’t have tried to force you. If
somebody doesn’t want to have kids, it isn’t fair for the
other person in the relationship to try to change their
mind. I know that now.”
And there it was. I wanted to stop her from talking,
but the look on her face told me she was doing exactly
what she’d come to our table to do. I just sat there while
she did more damage, injecting a tone of genuine
understanding into her voice. I never expected that she’d
want to hurt me; I thought we were friends, sort of. She
had to know Elena had a child; it was a small community.
Why else say this stuff?
“You were so adamant about not ever wanting kids in
your life, about having no desire to be a parent, and I never
took the time to understand. I mean, kids are a ton of
work. A ton. Believe me,” she babbled on, “I’m just starting
to get that. You told me time and time again that you
didn’t like kids, you’d never wanted them, that they’d ruin
our relationship, and you were right. Just because you loved
me didn’t mean you’d love having a child, even if it was
mine. Or ours. I should have listened instead of fighting
with you endlessly and making you the bad guy for simply
being honest with me. You know? I’m really sorry about
that.”
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I’d tuned out about halfway through her diatribe, the
moment when I felt Elena go perfectly still across the table
from me. All the delicious food I’d consumed during the
previous hour threatened to make a reappearance as my
stomach turned nauseatingly.
“Ooo, there’s Kristy,” Lauren said, her gaze locked
across the room and a glowing smile on her face. “I’ve got
to run, but it was so good to see you and I’m glad we
cleared the air. It was nice to meet you, Elena.” She winked
at me, the bitch, and she was gone.
When I finally had the courage to look across the
table, Elena was studying what was left of her crème
brulee. She didn’t eat any more of it.
e waiter brought the check and I gave him my
credit card before he could walk away. We needed to talk
about this, but not here, not in a restaurant full of people
and not at the table across which we’d been discussing
which articles of clothing were coming off first. at
conversation suddenly seemed a million years ago.
e night was beautiful—balmy and comfortable—
but we walked to the car in silence. I wanted to give Elena
time to absorb all the information she’d been thrown, and
at the same time, I wanted to
stop
her from absorbing too
much. e bottom line, though, was that I had no idea
what to say. I was damned either way. Either I’d broken up
with Lauren because she wanted children and I didn’t, even
though I’d led Elena to believe otherwise. Or I’d lied to her
and let her believe that’s the reason I broke up with her,
which was just cruel.
ere was no good way out of this and I knew it.
I wanted to kill Lauren.
“Elena…” I began as we got into the car.
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She held up her hand, not looking at me. “Just…don’t
talk to me for a minute. I have to think.”
Her tone was low and brittle, like ice splintering under
my feet. I swallowed down the acid that kept rising into
the back of my throat and keyed the ignition.
We drove the fifteen minute trip in silence and it felt
like hours. I kept opening my mouth to say something, but
again, I had no idea what and I’d close it again. Elena
stared out the passenger side window and said nothing, her
mouth a straight, inexpressive slash across her face, telling
me nothing other than she was not happy.
A tiny bubble of relief floated to the surface when she
followed me into my house and I was grateful she didn’t
just leave. I let Steve out back, shut the sliding glass door
and turned to face the music.
Elena was gazing off to her right, shaking her head
very slightly back and forth.
“Elena, please look at me.” My voice shook, which
annoyed me.
“Why did you break up with Lauren?”
It was a straightforward question, and yet the answer
was so complicated. I wet my lips and grimaced as I
searched for the right words.
“It’s a simple question, Avery. Why did you break up
with Lauren?”
“It wasn’t working,” I said, hoping Elena didn’t think I
sounded as lame as I did. “I wasn’t in love with her and she
deserved better. I told you that.”
“Did she want children?”
“Yes.”
“Did you?”
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ere was no good way to answer that. “No.” At her
snort, I quickly amended, “Not with her.”
“And now you’ve suddenly changed your mind?” She
pinched the bridge of her nose between her thumb and
forefinger. “God, I’m an idiot,” she muttered.
“You are not an idiot.”
When she finally looked at me, her dark eyes snapped
with an anger I never expected. “I have a child, Avery.”
“I know that.”
“Well, apparently, you don’t
understand
it.”
What?
“What the hell is that supposed to mean?”
“He always comes first. Do you get that?”
“Of course I get that.”
“Do you? e woman I spend the rest of my life with
is going to end up being another mom to him. Do you get
that
?”
“Yes. You said yourself that I was good with him, that
I took good care of him.”
“You did. And he’s been an angel most of the time
when he’s been around you, but that’s not always the case.
What about when he’s sick? What about when he throws a
tantrum? What about when he’s being a little brat? What
about when he lies or hurts himself or is just plain crabby?”
She paced around the room as she spoke, gesturing wildly
with her hands and arms. “It’s not all fun and rainbows. It’s
not all puppies and tee-ball games. What about when he’s
throwing up in the middle of the night or when he breaks
something of yours or when he just flat out doesn’t listen to
you?”
“What are you talking about?” I asked, bewildered, but
trying hard to follow her logic. “You’ve lost me.”
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“I know.” She nodded and I didn’t like the look on her
face then. “God,” she yelled at the ceiling. “I never even
asked you if you wanted a kid. I just assumed. And you let
me! I am
so stupid
! I even told you I wanted another one
and you didn’t say anything. Did it never occur to you it
might be a subject we should discuss?” en she went from
yelling to muttering, rubbing angrily at her forehead with
her fingertips. “I let you into Max’s life. I introduced you to
my family. On assumption. All on assumption. Blinded by
my hormones, like I’m a fucking teenager. I am
such
an
idiot. Jesus Christ, what a mess.”
“Wait, wait, wait,” I blurted, holding my hands palms
forward like a crossing guard stopping her at the corner. A
sense of panicked foreboding was settling on my shoulders
and I couldn’t shrug it away. I inched closer to her, but she
took a step back from me. “What are you saying?” I asked
her, trying not to sound as terrified as I felt. “We’ve got
something good here, Elena.” My head was pounding, my
stomach churning dangerously. “I love you. And you love
me.”
She looked away and rolled her lips in, biting down on
them. When she looked back at me, her eyes were wet. “I
am a mother. First and foremost, that’s what I am. My son
comes first; he has to. Max will always come first.”
“I know that.”
“No, I don’t think you do.”
“Elena, please don’t do this. Please.”
“I’m not doing anything, Avery. It’s already done.”
I stood frozen as she picked up her bag and her keys
from my side table and walked out my front door. I’m not
good in an argument. I’ve never been able to debate. I can’t
think quickly enough to get my points across. At that
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moment, I wanted to scream to her to stop. I wanted to
throw myself to the floor and wrap my arms around her
ankles like a toddler. I wanted to beg her not to leave, to
talk to me, to let me explain, to give it a chance.
But she was too stubborn to stop and I was too
destroyed to move.
Instead, I stood there and watched her leave, fairly
certain I could hear walls crumbling around me.
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CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
I fell into such a state of depression, I could barely
function. I vacillated between being angry at Lauren for