Write to Me (9 page)

Read Write to Me Online

Authors: Nona Raines

Tags: #Contemporary,Older Woman

BOOK: Write to Me
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Good morning, beautiful. Ran out to get some decent coffee and breakfast for us. Back soon.

There’s juice in the fridge. Help yourself.

Gloria smiled.
Beautiful.
That’s how she felt, how he’d made her feel. And he’d gone to get them breakfast. So thoughtful.

There was time to grab a shower, but she’d rather not take one alone. She’d wait for Bryan and ask him to join her. She poured herself a glass of juice and took a turn around his apartment, looking at his photographs, perusing the books on his shelves. Stealing a few moments to learn more about him, indulge her curiosity. She didn’t feel too guilty. After all, she wasn’t going through his drawers or leafing through the papers on his desk.

A wave of unease rippled through her as her gaze fell to the wastebasket beside his desk. Was he truly over Courtney? Was putting the past behind him really as easy as tossing away a note?

She shook her head and pushed her fears aside. She trusted Bryan.

Even knowing that, something niggled at her as she returned to the kitchen. Something about the note…

But which note? The memo Bryan jotted was right where he left it on the counter. His bold slashing script perfectly reflected his personality.

Ice water crept through her veins, replacing warm blood as awareness slowly dawned. His handwriting…

Didn’t match the other letter.

Gloria slowly and carefully placed her glass on the counter. She walked into the living room, her steps measured. She bent and retrieved the crumpled note from the wastebasket.

Bryan’s grand gesture.
This is the past. It’s over. I want to move on.

God, she was an idiot.

She smoothed out the wrinkles and read the letter to Courtney start to finish.

I don’t know if I’ll have the courage to send you this letter and if you’ll even care enough to read it if I do. But it doesn’t really matter, because I’m writing it for me.

I want to tell you now what I never had the nerve to say before. I love you. I never said it, because I knew you’d never say it back. That made me a coward.

But you were a coward, too. You never really let me close. You hold the whole world at arm’s length, thinking that makes you smart. But it’s sad, because the truth is you’re scared of being hurt. You don’t even know how lonely you are.

We could have been happy. Or at least we could have tried. But we were both afraid, and that makes me sad. We’ll never know what we both lost.

I’m sorry

She knew the truth, even before she returned to the kitchen and placed the two notes side by side for comparison.

They had not been written by the same person.

There was no denying the difference in handwriting—the round, loopy script in the first letter and slashing downward strokes of the second.

She knew Bryan wrote that second note. But he hadn’t written the first.

He was a liar.

Gloria stood at the counter, too stunned to move. She could barely think. Everything in her wanted to make sense of it, find some reasonable explanation.

There was none. Bryan had lied from the moment she’d shown him the letter. All the time they’d spent together, all the personal details they’d shared. For a moment, the room wavered as nausea rushed through her.

She clapped a hand to her mouth as acid surged up her throat. She scrambled into the bathroom and emptied the contents of her stomach into the toilet. When she felt steady enough, she rinsed the sour aftertaste from her mouth. Bracing herself on the sink, she glared at her bleary reflection in the mirror.

You’re a chump. You let him play you.

Bad enough she’d slept with him, but worse, she’d shared her fears, her deepest secrets. He’d listened, pretending to care, to sympathize. She’d told him about Emilio…

And he’d betrayed her. No, she’d betrayed herself by trusting him.

It all began with a lie. How could she believe anything after that was the truth? Was everything he told her a fabrication, made up on the spur of the moment? Was it all just a game to get her to sleep with him?

No. If he’d only wanted a bedmate, there were plenty of women who’d have happily obliged. But he pursued
her
, drew her out, pried into the intimate details of her life. Why go to all that trouble only for sex?

Because that’s his M.O. He’s not your run of the mill lothario. He draws a woman in, makes her feel special. Like he really cares. And each silly little female goes in with eyes wide open, thinking she’ll be different. He’s not satisfied with a woman’s body. He wants her heart and mind, too. Much more satisfying when he pulls the rug out from under her. And here you are, like all the rest, making excuses. Trying to tell yourself you were special.
Pobrecita.
Poor little you.

She stalked to the bedroom, jerked on her clothes, and grabbed her purse. In the kitchen, she set her juice glass atop the two letters on the counter. When Bryan returned and found them there, side by side, he’d know what happened. No further explanation needed.

And that’s it? After all he did to you, that’s how you’re going to leave it? Why don’t you send him a
real
message?

Just as two volatile chemicals in a test tube might create a dangerous new mix, Gloria’s hurt and humiliation had anger foaming in her gut. She could live up to the fiery Latina stereotype and go postal on his ass.

That pitcher on the counter looked good and heavy. She could wait here until Bryan came back and brain him with it or at least have the satisfaction of throwing it at him when he walked in the door and watching it shatter on the wall.

A pair of scissors lay in the drawer under the counter. She could take them, tear his clothes out of the closet, and slash them to ribbons. Some women would.

She could grab the bottle of bleach from the bathroom and toss the contents on his sofa, armchair, and carpet. Destroy his belongings. Plenty of women in her shoes would think he only had it coming.

She could ransack his cupboards and refrigerator, break all his crockery, squirt ketchup and mustard on his curtains and walls. Leave the shards on the floor and all the other mess for him to clean up. Women everywhere would cheer.

She allowed herself a few moments to fantasize doing all that, then decided
no
. She wasn’t a vandal. Revenge would be meaningless, especially if it meant neighbors calling 911 and her mug shot appearing on the evening news. She would hold her head up, take the high road, and let his conscience deal with him. That is, if he had one.

As Gloria stepped out of the apartment and quietly closed the door behind her, her own conscience was clear. She was good. She was fine. Karma would take care of Bryan Dunn.

On the other hand, why should Karma have all the fun?

****

Bryan carried a waxed-paper bag of jelly donuts, still warm, in one hand and a coffee carrier in the other as he walked the two blocks from the donut shop to his building. He hoped Gloria hadn’t awakened yet.
He looked forward to surprising her with breakfast and then a long morning of lounging together in bed, sharing powdered-sugar kisses.

Another first for him. He’d always been a “get to the point” kind of lover. Though careful to make sure his partners were satisfied, he wasn’t a cuddler. Foreplay was to put a woman in the mood for the main event, not something he particularly enjoyed for his own benefit. After sex, he’d always mentally tap his foot, forcing himself not to check the clock, wondering how much time could elapse before politely suggesting his partner leave. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d spent the entire night with a woman.

It shamed him to recall what a selfish, shortsighted lover he’d been in the past. Being with Gloria had shown him that. He’d cheated his partners and cheated himself.

He frowned and his steps slowed. He had other, more pressing things to be ashamed of. His lies to Gloria. Last night, he’d bargained away his guilty conscience. But this morning he knew he couldn’t keep weaseling away.

He had to tell her the truth. He hadn’t written the letter she’d found in the book of sonnets. There was no Courtney. He’d constructed a web of lies to draw Gloria in, then to keep her with him. But he wanted a real future with her, and that wouldn’t happen without complete honesty.

She’d be furious, and he was ready to take whatever she dished out. He only hoped her anger, once she got it out, would eventually give way to forgiveness.

With that in mind, he squared his shoulders, prepared to take his punishment. When he reached his building, he did a little juggling to fish for his key.
He was surprised to find the door to his apartment unlocked. He could have sworn he’d locked up before heading out.

His heart thumped in alarm. Had someone broken in and—

“Gloria,” he shouted, his voice hoarse. No answer. He quickly dumped his things on the counter, not caring that one of the cups upended, spilling coffee to the floor.

He checked the bedroom and bathroom. Her clothes were gone and so was she. What the hell?

Dazed, he returned to the kitchen and swore when he saw the coffee mess dripping off the counter. He grabbed a handful of paper towels and swabbed the floor. Cursing again, he tossed the soggy mass into the trash and noticed the two letters anchored by a half-empty juice glass.

Oh, hell. Oh, shit.

He was screwed.

Chapter Nine

Bryan waited for Gloria to unlock the shop door. He smiled tentatively as she opened it and offered the bouquet of red roses in his hand. “For you.”

He was afraid his sweaty palms had ruined the tissue wrapping the flowers, but he needn’t have worried. She barely glanced at his gift and made no move to take it from him.

Her expression was as stiff as a mask. “Come inside.” She turned and walked to the front desk without looking to see if he followed.

Chastened, he trailed behind her like a dog with its tail between its legs. Had he thought Gloria was going to make this easy? Maybe so, considering she’d finally answered his calls and texts after weeks of ignoring them. He’d imagined sweeping her into his arms while she responded to his apologies with tears and kisses. A parody of some weak chick flick.

How the mighty have fallen.

She wasn’t about to let his ass off that easily, that was plain. He’d need to do some serious crawling to earn her forgiveness.

All right. Time to start crawling. He lay the bouquet on the front desk. “Gloria, I—”

“Before we talk, there’s something I need to take care of in back.” She gestured to the chairs in the waiting area. “Have a seat.”

With a silent sigh, he planted his ass as she directed. She disappeared into a back room while he cooled his heels. The little power play steamed him, but he resolved to keep his cool and wait her out. For distraction, he picked up a styling magazine from the side table and leafed through pages of grinning models with bizarre haircuts styled by a chainsaw wielding madman.

A nearby chair scraped quietly as someone sat. “Hello, Bryan.”

He glanced up and his jaw dropped. It wasn’t Gloria seated across from him. It was a tall blonde whom he hadn’t seen in…months? Longer? “Hello, Courtney.”

Courtney. One of the many women he’d pursued, dated, and later dropped when he lost interest. He’d forgotten her. But then again, maybe he hadn’t. After all, it was
her
name that had rolled off his tongue when he pretended he’d written the love letter Gloria found.

Courtney leaned back, crossed her legs, and gave him a brittle smile. “I’m honored you remember, considering how many must have come after me.”

That stung, though he deserved it. “Of course I remember.” He glanced toward the back room.

“Oh, Gloria’s still here,” Courtney said, following his gaze. “She just wanted to give us some time alone. To talk.”

So this was Gloria’s way of twisting the knife. He almost smiled in admiration. He should have known she’d find a way to make his ass pay, but he never dreamed she’d go to these lengths. “I didn’t realize the two of you knew each other.”

Courtney swung the leg she’d crossed over her knee. “It’s a recent acquaintance. We’ve discovered we have quite a bit in common.”

Knowing him. And hating his guts? Ouch. “So…how have you been?” His question, admittedly weak, elicited a smirk from Courtney. How long had it been since they’d dated? A year or more? “I haven’t seen you lately around campus.” She worked in administration as he remembered.

“That’s because I haven’t been there. I quit my job ten months ago.”

Another hit. “Oh.” All right, he was a clueless dick. “Where are you working now?”

Her mouth thinned. There was a hardness to her that he didn’t remember from their time together. “Let’s skip the niceties, why don’t we? It’s not as if you really care, after all.”

His patience snapped. This situation was just as awkward for him as it was for her. “Just trying to be pleasant.”

“Of course, Bryan. You’re always pleasant. Always charming. And it’s not an act, is it? That’s what makes you so dangerous.”

“Dangerous?” His mouth twisted. What was he, a serial killer? “Are you serious?”

Her eyes narrowed, assessing him. “You honestly don’t know, do you? Wow, it must be great to be you.”

How was he supposed to answer that?

He didn’t have to, because she spoke again. “Gloria tells me you’ve been sharing quite a bit about me and our relationship. I have to admit, I was surprised…”

His face grew hot as shame rushed though him. “Courtney—”

But she didn’t let him finish. “Considering we never had a relationship. Or if we did, it was completely one-sided. On
my
side. To you it was just an extended hook up.” Her swinging foot stilled. “Tell me something. Do you remember how long we dated?”

No.
“Uh, I, uh—”

“Three months. Oh, I knew I wasn’t the only one. You never mentioned being exclusive, and I never pushed it. I knew your reputation. I didn’t want to scare you off by being too demanding. But I had hopes, you know? I thought we really got along, had a great time together. Not just in bed. I fell for you, and thought you had feelings for me, too. I really believed I’d be different than all the others. But of course, I wasn’t. You got tired of me and dropped off the face of the earth. Just that easy.”

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