"Are we going to see you there tonight, Jake?" Sierra leaned against the opening to Jacob's cubicle, arms crossed under her full breasts.
"Um, what's your costume going to be?" Jacob looked up from the design prints spread out across his desk. The curve of Sierra's hip in the snug black skirt was...distracting.
They heard a chuckle from his friend's cube across the aisle. "I've got it - Morticia," Karl said, winking at Jacob.
"Nope, Sierra's too tan." Jacob began shoving the designs into his case and powering down his laptop. Did he detect the slightest blush in the unflappable Sierra?
"OK, a witch? She could pull that off." Karl leaned back in his chair, arms behind his head.
Sierra shook her head, smiling, and reached an arm behind her to give Karl her single finger assessment of his costume ideas.
Jacob smirked. "No-look bird; you just got told. What about you Karl?"
Sierra turned her head toward Karl. "I don't think most of us would recognize it, but douchebag would be a perfect costume for you Karlina."
All three of them laughed.
Jacob tilted his head, regarding Sierra, his lips a half smile. "Way too pretty to make a witch believable. I'm thinking a female vampire, or maybe a succubus?"
This time her blush was unmistakable.
"Suck a - what? Jesus Jake, at least try to keep it clean."
"Dammit Karl, it's not - " Jacob dropped it at Karl's knowing grin.
"All right kids. It's been fun, and it's been real; it's been real fun," Karl said, stepping out of his cube and shrugging on his coat. "You gonna be there tonight Sierra?"
She nodded, giving him a playful shove.
"I'll be in the truck, bro," Karl said, with a quick nod of his head.
Sierra watched Karl go for a moment, then turned back to Jacob. He was still trying to stuff the remnants of the design prints into the soft case. He needed a bigger desk.
"You bringing anyone?" Her voice was quiet, neutral.
He shrugged. "How about Jim? Will he be making an appearance?"
"No Jim," she said, flipping her dark hair out of her eyes.
Truth be told, he thought Jim was a fucking moron not to spend every waking moment with Sierra. She deserved better than that smarmy tool. Then again maybe Jacob was just a tad biased in favor of the gorgeous woman, who just happened to be his best friend. He wasn't sure if any man would be good enough for her, at least in his eyes.
"He have something more important to do than hang with his girl? A confused man that one."
"No Jim. Period."
"Ah shit, Sierra. I'm sorry."
Open mouth. Insert foot.
"It's really OK," she said, shaking her head, her eyes downcast. "He's just not - right. I can't really put my finger on it. Better to just cut the cord now than to keep kidding myself."
He could tell it had been a little more serious than she let on. His strong, but vulnerable Sierra.
A stack of the prints fell off his desk, scattering all over the floor of his cube.
"Shit. No, that's OK Sierra."
She had crouched down to help collect the papers. His gaze fell directly on the deep cleavage the bodice of her dark gray top revealed in that position.
Stop, Jacob. Don't ruin a good thing. You're still a mess.
They collected the prints, and finally got all of them into his case. He tried to ignore the movement of those heavy breasts. Damn it.
She looked up at him, smiling.
No, she can't read your mind, dipshit, but you'd better stop blushing or she won't have to.
They both stood, Jacob slinging the strap from his laptop case over a shoulder.
Sierra, took half a step closer to him. She'd been doing that more often lately, and he wasn't sure how to handle it. Well, his body was quite confident how to handle it; his mind, not so much. Some things had changed between them after Mara, and this was one of them. A new tension, new uncertainty.
"If you come tonight you can be my date. Two singletons can drown their sorrows together." Her smile was dazzling, as always.
"You want me to walk you out?"
She shook her head.
"I really hope you'll show tonight, Jake. At least just for a little while. You're turning into a hermit." She touched his arm, then walked off. He fought with himself not to crane his head out of his cube to watch her go.
---
"You know don't you?," Karl said as he turned onto the on-ramp, gunning the truck's engine.
Jacob was busy tapping out an e-mail on his phone. His boss never ceased to find reasons to travel, and as result, e-mail was the only way he could reach her most of the time.
"Dude, you there?"
"What? Sorry, I have to get this sent out, or there's going to be a shitstorm on Monday. What'd you say?"
"You know about Sierra don't you?"
"Well, she's my best friend, so yeah I guess I would, right?"
"Do you know what I'm talking about?"
"Not really," Jacob said, smiling, thumbs tapping the tiny screen. "But then I am kind of used to it. You are smarter than me."
"Asshole."
"OK, what about her?" Jacob finished the e-mail, dropping his phone into a cupholder.
"She's into you."
Jacob groaned. "Not you too? Karl, you and I have been friends since what? Forever?"
"Freshman year in college, genius. But it feels like forever sometimes."
"Well, you should know better then. Just friends, that's it. It really IS possible for a man and a woman to be friends you know."
"You can't bullshit a bullshitter, dude," Karl said, cursing under his breath as traffic up ahead began to slow. "Look I see it, we all see it. Something's different."
Jacob looked out the passenger side window at the slate gray sky, darkness rapidly approaching. "Everything was different afterward, Karl."
"I know it. But maybe it's time to try something else. Start something new. It's been two years." Karl's voice was quieter, his tone gentle.
Jacob didn't say anything for awhile, just watched the world go by. It was too soon to think about it. He really was a mess - no getting around it. But with time, he
hoped.
The truck pulled up to the curb in front of the house.
Jacob got out, closing the passenger door, then rapped his knuckles on the window. Karl rolled it down.
"It's colder than a witch's tit out there Jake. In or out?"
"How long have we been doing this Karl?"
"What, me giving your lazy ass a lift? A year?"
Jacob smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "I don't want to do this anymore. I'm going to start driving myself."
"Thank Christ," Karl said, shaking his head and grinning. "You change your mind about coming tonight?"
"You have fun." Jake turned and walked up the brick walkway to his porch.
"Jake, if you don't come, at least call her," Karl yelled out of the window.
Jacob waved a hand behind him, and Karl drove off.
---
Halloween night. Two years to the day. He used to love Halloween. A chance for adults to be kids again for one night. Now he hated it. Hated the pain of it.
He sat on their couch in the study, gazing out the deck door at the snow that had begun to fall, listening to the sad stillness of their house. It was abnormally early to be snowing on Halloween, even up that far into the Cascades. The kiddies were going to freeze.
His gaze turned from the snow to the dark plane of the bar. The warm orange firelight flashed on the angles of the crystal glasses, shone on the dark, deadly curve of the Glen Livet. His face blanched.
No, not now. One night at a time.