Submit and Surrender (7 page)

BOOK: Submit and Surrender
12.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“What can I get you, madame?” the poor man said.

“Everything on this page,” Lola said.

The waiter rocked back on his feet.

“Madame?”

Adra stifled a laugh.

“The appetizers,” Lola explained gently. “I want them all. I can’t decide, so I won’t. I know it’s weird, but I am hungry and pregnant and I don’t care. Bring me all of them. Trust me, I’ll eat them.”

Adra decided to help the poor guy out.

“I’ll just pick off of her plates,” she said.

“My appetites are
insane
,” Lola sighed as soon as the waiter was out of earshot. “It’s absolutely killing me.”

“Appetites, plural?”

“Yeah, you wouldn’t believe what these hormones do to you,” Lola said. “I’m seriously pissed off at Ford for taking up any of Roman’s time tonight. Getting back to bed is practically all I can think about. No offense,” she added.

“None taken,” Adra said, trying to act nonchalant. “So Ford is taking up Roman’s time?”

Lola groaned. “Oh God, please don’t make me be tactful,” she said. “They had to talk about something, I don’t even know what.” Lola arched an eyebrow. “Possibly friendships.”

“Smooth,” Adra laughed.

“Are you going to tell me?”

“No,” Adra said. “Ok, maybe a little. We are…we did say we’d be friends.”

“You know that’s not the good part.”

“There isn’t a good part.”

“Bullshit!”

Adra sighed. She knew she wouldn’t get away with this forever. Maybe it was better to get it over with. “We had one night.”

“Oh my God, one? All of this from one night?”

“You knew?”

Lola laughed. “Of course I knew,” she said. “Adra, you know I love you, but near-sighted strangers who see you two from across the street know. There has never been anything more obvious than the sexual tension between you and Ford.”

“Don’t tease me,” Adra begged. “It’s a fresh wound.”

“Then tell me about it!” Lola said. “You keep so much bottled up, Adra. I worry about you, you know?”

Adra shook her head to keep from showing how much that affected her. It shouldn’t affect her, right? The idea of Lola worrying about her? That there might be reason to worry shouldn’t make her want to cry?

“I don’t even know what to say,” Adra said, and realized it was the complete truth. “He is perfect. Everything is perfect. Except that nothing is really perfect, you know? And I just…I know I’m not built for it, Lola. I know how it would end. And I just can’t do that again.”

“Adra…” Lola said.

Adra looked away. Just Lola’s tone of voice told her what she needed to know. Lola thought Adra was being foolish, running away from love or emotion or whatever, but Lola didn’t know. She didn’t know Adra’s past, she didn’t know Adra’s family, and she didn’t know what Adra knew. And it was impossible to explain.

And luckily Adra’s phone rang—with her sister-in-law’s ringtone.

Adra had never been so glad to answer a phone call in her life.

“Sorry, Lola, family stuff. One sec,” she said. “Nicole? What’s up?”

There was a far too lengthy pause. And a sniffle.

“Is he with you?” Nicole finally asked.

Adra’s heart plummeted to somewhere well beneath the earth’s crust. Her brother Charlie had…

No, better not to say that he’d run off yet. She didn’t know anything. It might not be that.

“No, honey, he isn’t,” Adra said. “What happened?”

“Has he called you? Do you know where he is?”

“I haven’t heard from him yet, Nic,” Adra said, trying to quell her own panic. This brought up every fear Adra had, but it was nothing compared to what Nicole must be feeling. “What happened?”

“I’m probably just overreacting,” Nicole said. “He’s probably just out late bowling or something. It’s just he’s been distant again, and he isn’t answering his phone, and…”

“I thought things were getting better,” Adra said, pulling her chair back as the hapless waiter rolled an entire cart of appetizers up to their table. Lola couldn’t hide her excitement.

“They were, for a little while,” Nicole said. “But he won’t talk to me. He gets so stressed out, and then he just shuts down, and then…”

Adra didn’t need her to finish that sentence. It sounded sickeningly familiar. She steeled herself for the next question.

“Is he drinking?” Adra asked.

“Oh God, no, he wouldn’t do that,” Nicole said. “I know he wouldn’t do that. He’s not your dad. It’s so important to him.”

It was important to Adra, too.

“Adra,” Nicole said, her voice catching. “I’m sorry to call like this, it’s just I don’t know what to do, and I just…”

“I know,” Adra said. “I know, Nic.”

And she really, really did. She remembered it very well. And maybe that’s why this was the one time when she had no idea what to say. Everyone always came to Adra with their problems, and she always knew how to help, whatever it was. She would listen, and she would comfort them, and she’d be able to see, somehow, what the unspoken issue was. And maybe it wouldn’t fix the problem, but it would help them feel better.

Except for this. This was the one thing that left Adra speechless. All she could think about was all the times she’d felt the same way, needing someone who wasn’t there and might not be coming back and powerless to do anything about it. She’d never figured out how to make that better. If she had, her life would be a whole lot different.

Lola offered her a plate of something delicious looking covered in cheese, and Adra looked up to see her friend’s worried face.

“I’ll call him, Nic,” Adra said into the phone. “I’m so sorry.”

“I’m worried about him,” Nicole said softly. “I know it’s totally screwed up to be calling you about our marriage problems, but it’s not…I mean, you know it’s that I’m worried about him.”

“I know,” Adra said. “Me, too.”

“Thank you,” Nicole said. “You’ll call me?”

“Of course,” Adra said. “And you let me know when he comes home, ok? Give the boys my love.”

“Thank you, Adra,” Nicole said again, and hung up.

That was it—that final thank you. That was what broke Adra’s heart. That gratitude for something that shouldn’t have to happen in the first place. Because Adra wasn’t even worried about her brother’s physical well being, as screwed up as that was—Charlie was always fine. Instead, Adra knew what this felt like. This was Charlie freaking out. This was Charlie acting like their father.

Adra sent a simple text to her brother: “Call me so I know you’re not dead.”

It was what they used to ask their dad to do years ago. If that didn’t get a response, then there was a problem.

Goddammit.

“Adra,” Lola said.

Adra forced herself to smile. “Yeah? You gonna hog all that calamari or what?”

Lola passed another plate, disturbing the precarious balance of the mountain of appetizers between them. But she didn’t lose her focus. Lola never did.

“Adra, I really do love you,” Lola said softly. “So I’m saying this from a place of love. You don’t have to talk to me, but you’ve gotta talk to someone eventually. You can’t keep carrying the weight of the world on your shoulders like this. You have to let someone help every once in a while.”

“I know,” Adra said, nodding slowly. “I know.”

Except that she didn’t, really. It was one of those things that made perfect rational sense, and yet whenever she thought about it, her entire body revolted against the idea in a fit of panic.

And Lola was watching her try not to freak out.

“Well,” Lola said, popping a bacon-wrapped scallop in her mouth. “If you want something else to freak out about besides your reluctance to rely on your friends, I can help with that.”

Adra laughed out loud, her hand to her chest. “Please.”

Lola smiled evilly.

“I hear tomorrow you begin coaching the actual scenes? Like,
scene
scenes? With Ford? And your ex? In the same room?”

“Oh my God,” Adra said, laughing helplessly until a tear rolled down her cheek. “What is my life.”

~ * ~ * ~

Ford and Roman’s pool game had been ruined by a single phone call from Roger Corvis, executive producer of
Submit and Surrender.
It had started off badly. Ford could hear Corvis’s tone from across the pool table, and laughed when he thought about how Roman would handle the guy.

But when Roman came back, he wasn’t laughing it off. He looked serious.

“Something happen?” Ford said.

He hated the idea of the film taking over Volare, but it did give him back his friendship with Adra. He cared now. Damn it.

“Someone leaked the filming location,” Roman said, setting up another shot. “Security is going to be an issue. Corvis seemed to think it was someone at Volare.”

“Bullshit.”

“That’s what I said, in so many words,” Roman smiled. “That said, we need to cut this short.”

“Of course.”

Roman looked at his friend carefully.

“What did Claudia have to say?”

“Nothing important. She’s moving to L.A. They’ll want memberships.”

Roman raised an eyebrow but said nothing. Roman had known Ford when he’d found out that his wife had been having an affair with his best friend and colleague, Jesse Gifford, and that that had been the real root of the problems in their marriage. The games that Claudia had been playing with Ford for months while their marriage deteriorated were just about her guilt, nothing more, and that had been one last mindfuck to add to the list. It wasn’t something Ford talked about much, but Roman knew, and that mattered. Still, there were some things even Roman didn’t know.

Like about the child. No one knew about the child.

“Ford,” Roman said, setting his pool cue down. “You know that Adra is nothing like Claudia.”

“Of course she isn’t,” Ford said. The idea pissed him off, and what Roman was getting at pissed him off even more. It wasn’t about simple parallels; Adra didn’t have to be just like his ex-wife to be incompatible with him. And Adra was the one who’d called it off. “Don’t compare them.”

Roman put his hands up. “Of course. I shouldn’t have offended Adra with the comparison.”

“No, you shouldn’t.”

“Do you know what you’re doing, Ford?” Roman asked seriously.

Ford met his gaze. It was obvious what Roman was talking about: Adra.

“About as much as you knew what you were doing with Lola,” Ford said. “She’s my best friend, Roman. I won’t let anything or anyone hurt her, including me.”

“Your best friend?” Roman said.

“Stop smiling.”

Roman only smiled again, this time ruefully. “Neither of us should be smiling. Someone leaked the location, and that might hurt all of us. We have a long night of security preparations ahead of us. That, and finding out who the leak is.”

“You got a guy for that?”

“Not in Los Angeles. Do you?”

“Yeah. Private investigator I’ve used for legal work,” Ford said. “He’ll get it done.”

Ford made the call, and then spent the rest of the night trying to figure out how to secure an entire compound from a ravenous press and a rabid fan base. By the time he drove by the Volare compound, the photographers had already staked the place out, and there was another accident at that damn stoplight involving a news van and a food truck that had shown up to feed the gathering fans.

It had taken just a few hours for the circus to start. People were going completely crazy over this movie.

And Adra was going to have to get through this sea of security risks the next morning. The studio would take care of the movie people, but Ford didn’t trust them to take care of Volare people. Which was how he ended up knocking on a neighbor’s door at about six in the morning.

***

The neighbor—Volare’s neighbor to the south, to be precise—was actually surprisingly accommodating. An older guy named Dan had owned his Venice property since the seventies, and he still surfed every day. He was friends with Thea, and was perfectly willing to let Ford hang out until Adra was due to arrive.

Just as he knew Adra would be about to get up, Ford texted her directions. “Avoid Abbot-Kinney, and don’t go directly to Volare. Meet me at 28 Altair.”

“What happened?” she asked.

“Secret’s out,” Ford wrote back.

It wasn’t until he saw her face as she stood on Dan’s front porch, waiting for him, that he realized he could have chosen his words better. She looked confused and way too anxious for this early in the morning.

Ah. She thought he meant
that
secret. Which now meant he was thinking about that night.

Who was he kidding, he’d be thinking about that no matter what. Just looking at her was enough to stir up those memories. He just had to deal with it.

“The press knows they’re filming the movie at Volare,” he said, trying not to smile at her nervousness.

“Right, of course,” Adra said. She bit her lip and looked down at her feet. Damn, did he want to kiss her. “So what am I doing here?”

Other books

From Souk to Souk by Robin Ratchford
The Secrets We Keep by Nova Weetman
All the Way by Jordin Tootoo
Fade to Black by Alex Flinn
The Horse Lord by Morwood, Peter
Sweet Texas Charm by Robyn Neeley
The History of Luminous Motion by Bradfield, Scott
Is by Derek Webb