Authors: Danielle Steel
"I'm really awfully sorry. Do you need a lift?" Why not? She couldn't be headed far off his path; probably to an office a few blocks away.
"Yeah, sure. Thanks. It's too hot to walk." She smiled again, and struggled with the handle on the door. Ian released it for her from within, and she pounced onto the seat, displaying a comforting amount of cleavage. That much was real.
"Where can I take you?"
She paused for a moment and then smiled "Market and Tenth. Is that out of your way?"
"No, that's fine. I'm not in a hurry." But he was surprised at the address. It was an odd place to work, a bad place to live.
"Did you take the day off?" She was looking at him questioningly.
"Sort of. I work at home." He wasn't usually that expansive, but she made him uncomfortable, made him feel as though he should talk. She wore a heavy perfume, and her skirt had slipped well up her thighs. Ian was hungry. But for Jessie. And she was still ten hours away.
"What do you do?" For an odd moment he wanted to say he was a gigolo, kept by his wife. He argued the point in his head as he frowned.
"I'm a writer." The answer was curt.
"Don't you like it?"
"I love it. What made you ask that?" This time he was surprised.
"The way you started to frown. You're a nice-looking guy when you smile."
"Thank you."
"De nada. You also drive a nice-looking car." Her eyes had sized up the scene. The well-cut St. Tropez shirt, the Gucci shoes with no socks. She didn't know they were Gucci, but she knew they were expensive. "What is this? An MG?"
"No. A Morgan." And its my wife's ... the words stuck in his throat. "What do you do?" Tit for tat.
"Right now I wait table at the Condor, but I wanted to see what the neighborhood looks like in the daylight. That's why I came down here for lunch. It's a whole different crowd. And at this time of day they're a lot more sober than they are when we get them later."
The Condor was not known for its decorous clientele. It was the home of the "Original Topless," and Ian assumed that the woman waited on tables half nude. She shrugged and then let her face grow soft in a smile. She looked almost pretty again, but there was a sadness somewhere in her eyes. A kind of regret, haunting and distant. She glanced at him oddly once or twice. And again Ian found that she had made him uncomfortable.
"You live at Market and Tenth?" It was something to say.
"Yeah. In a hotel. You?" That one was a bitch to answer. What could he say? But she filled the pause for him. "Let me guess. Pacific Heights?" The brightness in her eyes was gone now, and the question sounded brittle and accusing.
"What makes you say that?" He tried to sound amused and look mock-hurt, but it didn't come off. He looked at her as they stopped in a snarl of Montgomery Street traffic. She could have been someone's secretary, or a girl doing a bit part in a movie. She didn't look cheap. She looked tired. And sad.
"Sweetheart, you smell of Pacific Heights. It's all over you."
"Don't let fragrances fool you. As in 'all that glitters' ..." They laughed lightly together and he played with the choke as the traffic jam eased. He turned the car onto Market.
"Married?"
He nodded.
"Too bad. The good ones always are."
"Is that a deterrent?" It was an insane thing to have said, but he was more curious than serious, and the gin and tonics had taken their toll.
"Sometimes I go for married guys, sometimes I don't. Depends on the guy. In your case ... who knows? I like you."
"I'm flattered. You're a nice-looking woman, as you put it. What's your name?"
"Margaret Maggie."
"That's a nice name." She smiled at him again. "Is this it, Maggie?" It was the only hotel on the block, and it was no beauty.
"Yeah, this is it. Home sweet home. Beautiful, ain't it?" She tried to cover her embarrassment with flippancy, and he found himself feeling sorry for her. The hotel looked bleak and depressing.
"Want to come up for a drink?"
He knew from the look in her eyes that she'd be hurt if he didn't. And, hell, he was in no shape to go home and work. And he still had nine and a half hours to kill before driving out to the airport. But he also knew what might happen if he accepted Maggie's invitation. And letting that happen seemed like a rotten thing to do to Jessie the day she was coming home. He had held out for three weeks. Why not one more afternoon? ...
But this girl looked so lonely, so unloved, and the gin and the sun were spinning in his brain. He knew he didn't want to go back to the house. Nothing in it was his, not really his, except five file drawers of his writing and the new Olivetti typewriter Jessie had given him. The gigolo king. Jessie's consort.
"Sure. I've got time for a drink. As long as you make it coffee. What'll I do with the car?"
"I think you can park it in front of the door. It's a white zone, they won't tow you away."
He parked the car in front of the hotel, and Maggie carefully watched the back of the car as he pulled in to the curb. It was an easy plate to remember. It spelled what she thought was his name. Jessie.
Jessica heard the landing gear grind out of the plane's belly and smiled. Her seat belt was in place, her overhead light was out, and she felt her heart begin to beat faster as the plane circled the runway for the last time. She had a clear view of the lights below.
She looked at her watch. She knew him so well. Right now he would be frantically looking for a parking space in the airport garage, terrified that he was late and might miss her at the gate. He'd find a space then, and run like hell for the terminal, and would be panting and smiling, nerves jangled, when he reached her. But he'd get mere in time. He always did. It made coming home something special.
She felt as though she had been away for a year, but she'd bought such good things. The spring line would be lovely. Soft pastels, gentle wools cut on the bias, creamy plaids, silk shirts with full sleeves, and some marvelous suedes. She could never resist the suedes. It would be a great spring at the boutique. The goodies she had ordered wouldn't begin to arrive for another three or four months, but she was already excited thinking about them. She had them all memorized. The spring line was set. She liked to plan ahead like that. Liked knowing what was coming. Liked knowing that she had her life, and her work, all mapped out. Some people might find that boring, but it never bothered Jessie.
She and Ian were planning a trip to Carmel in October. Thanksgiving would be spent with friends. Maybe Christmas skiing at Lake Tahoe, and then a quick hop to Mexico for some sun after the New Year. And then the spring line would start to come in. It was all perfectly planned. Like her trips, like her meals, like her wardrobe. She had what it took to make plans--a business that worked, a husband she loved and could always count on, and reliable people around her. Very little was variable, and she liked it that way. She wondered if that was why she had never wanted a baby: it would be a variable. Something she couldn't totally plan. She didn't know how it would look or act, or exactly when it might be born, or what she would do with it once she had it. The idea of a baby unnerved her. And life was so much simpler like this. Just Jessie and Ian. Alone. And that way there were no rivals for Ian's affection. Jessie didn't like to compete, not for Ian. He was all she had now.
The wheels touched the runway, and she closed her eyes ... Ian ... she had longed for him over the past weeks. The days had been full and the nights busy, yet she had usually called him when she'd reached the hotel in the evening. But she hadn't been able to reach out and touch him, or be held. She hadn't been able to laugh into his eyes, or tickle his feet, or stand next to him under the shower, chasing drops of water past the freckles on his back with her tongue. She stretched her long legs ahead of her as she waited for the plane to come to a halt.
It was hard to be patient. She wanted the trip to be over. She wanted to run out and see him. Right now. There had never been other men. It was hard to believe, but there hadn't. She had given it some thought, once or twice, but it had never seemed worth it. Ian was so much better than anyone else, in her eyes. Sexier and smarter and kinder and more loving. Ian understood so well what she needed, and fulfilled so many needs. In the seven years they'd been married, she had lost track of most of her close women friends in New York, and hadn't replaced them with others in San Francisco. She didn't need women friends, a confidante, a "best" friend. She had Ian. He was her best friend, her lover, even her brother, now that Jake was dead. And so what if now and then Ian had a "fling"? It didn't happen often, and he was discreet. It didn't bother her. Men did those things when they had to, when their wives were away. He didn't use it, or flaunt it, or grind it into her heart. She just suspected that he did it. That was all. She understood. As long as she didn't have to know. She assumed, which was different from knowing.
Her parents had had a marriage like that, and they had been happy for years. Watching them, Jessie had understood about the things you didn't talk about, didn't hurt each other with, didn't use. A good marriage relied on consideration, and sometimes keeping your mouth shut and just letting the other guy be was consideration ... love. Her parents were dead now; they hadn't been young when she'd been born. Her mother had been in her late thirties, her father just past forty-five. And Jessie had been four when Jake was born. But marrying late, they had respected each other more than most couples did. They were not inclined to make changes in each other. It had taught Jessie a lot.
But they were all gone now. It had already been three years. Almost exactly. Her parents had died within months of each other. Jake had died a year before that, in Vietnam, at the crest of his twenties. Gone. Jessica was the only one left. But she had Ian. Thank God there was Ian. It sent little tremors up her spine when she thought of it that way ... what would she do without Ian? Die ... the way her father had done without her mother ... die ... she couldn't live without Ian. He was her all now. He held her late at night when she was afraid. He made her laugh when something touched too deep and made her sad. He remembered the moments that mattered, knew the things that she loved, understood her private language, laughed at all her worst jokes. He knew. She was his woman, and his little girl. That was what she needed. Ian. So what did it matter if there were occasional indiscretions she didn't really know about? As long as he was there when it counted. And he always was.
She heard the doors slide open; the people began to press into the aisles. The five-hour flight was over. It was time to go home. Jessie brushed the creases from her slacks with one hand and reached for her coat with the other. It was a bright orange suede that she wore over beige suede pants and a print silk shirt in shades of caramel. Her green eyes glowed in her suntanned face, and her blond hair swung thick and free past her shoulders. Ian loved her in orange, and the had bought the coat in New York. She smiled to herself, thinking how he'd love it--almost as much as the Pierre Cardin blazer she'd brought him. It was fun to spoil Ian.
Three businessmen and a gaggle of women pressed out before her, but she was tall enough to see over the chattering women's heads. He was there at the gate, and she waved as he grinned broadly, waving back, and then he moved swiftly toward her, gently weaving his way through the people ahead of her. Then he had reached her and was taking her in his arms.
"It's about time you came home ... and looking like that, you'll be lucky if I don't rape you right here." He looked so pleased. And then he kissed her. She was home.
"Go ahead. Rape me. I dare you." But they stood where they were, drinking each other in, saying it all with their eyes. Jessie couldn't keep a smile from her lips, or her hands from his face. "You feel so good." She loved the softness and spiced lemon smell of his skin.
"Jessie, if you knew how I missed you ..." She nodded, knowing. She had missed him at least as much.
"How's the book?"
"Nice." They spoke in the brief banalities of those who know each other better than well. They didn't need many words. "Really nice." He picked up her large brown leather tote from the floor where she'd dropped it to kiss him. "Come on, sexy lady, let's go home." She looped her arm into his, and together they walked in long even strides, her hair brushing his shoulder, her every move a complement to his.
"I brought you a present."
He smiled. She always did.
"Bought yourself one too, I see. That's some coat."
"Do you like it? Or is it awful? I was afraid it was a little too loud." It was a burnt caramel bordering on flame.
"On you it looks good. Everything does."
"Jesus, you're being nice to me! What did you do? Smash up the car?"
"Now, is that a nice thing to say? I ask you. Is that nice?"
"Did you?" But she was laughing and so was he.
"No, I traded it for a Honda motorcycle. I thought you might like that better."
"What a nice thought! Gee, darling, I'm just thrilled. Now come on, tell the truth. How bad is the car?"
"Bad? I'll have you know that it happens to be not only in impeccable condition, but clean, a condition it was not in when you left. That poor little car was filthy!"
"Yeah, I know." She hung her head and he grinned.
"You're a disgrace, Mrs. Clarke, but I love you." He kissed the tip of her nose and she slid her arms around his neck.
"Guess what?"
"How many guesses do I get?"
"One."
"You love me?"
"You guessed it!" She giggled and kissed his neck.
"What do I get as a prize for guessing?"
"Me."
"Terrific. I'll take it."
"Boy, I'm glad to be home." She heaved a small sigh and stood in the circle of his arms as they waited for her bags to appear on the turntable. He could see the relief in her eyes. She hated going away, hated flying, was afraid to die, was afraid he'd die in a car wreck while she was gone. Ever since her parents and her brother... so many terrors. It wasn't as if they had died violently. Her mother had just been old. Old enough. Sixty-eight. And her father in his seventies. He had died of grief less than a year later. But Jessie hadn't been ready for the double loss and it was incredible to see what it had done to her. She had never fully recovered from her brother's death, but after her parents ... At times Ian wondered if she'd make it. The terrors, the hysteria, the nightmares. She felt so alone and so frightened. At times she wasn't even someone he knew. She was suddenly so dependent on him, so unlike the old Jessie. And it seemed as though she wanted to be sure he was equally dependent on her ... That was when he had let her talk him into quitting his job and writing full-time. She could afford it. But in some ways he wasn't sure he could. It suited both of them though, most of the time. And supporting him made Jessie feel more secure. He really was all she had now.