//Author's Note the first: This story was co-authored by
AwkwardMD
.//
//Author's Note the second: This story contains darker tones, emotionally, and more graphic sexual content than most. It is not a romantic tumble in the sheets on a sunny Sunday afternoon. However, if you like your sex with a strong dose of catharsis and a fair bit more reluctance than standard, then maybe this is the story for you!//
I stood outside, shivering in my coat. It helped me look cute, but the light fabric was poor insulation against the cold. It barely covered below my waist, and my unusually-exposed cleavage not at all. To make matters worse, the small canopy in the alley gave woeful protection against the relentless, drizzling rain. I was well aware of what a pathetic sight I must look—the lonely smoker outside a comedy club at ten o'clock at night—but I didn't care.
"Got a light?" came a voice from what I'd assumed was empty darkness next to me, surprising me from my self-flagellations. I looked up and saw the owner of the voice was a man in his mid-thirties with longish, swept-back hair. A few strands had refused to join the others, choosing instead to frame his face, and he had at least a two-or-three-day growth of stubble. I couldn't believe he had gotten so close without me noticing him. He was hardly Batman. I sighed, as all this only seemed to underline, in angry red marker pen, how far off my game I was.
I was staring, assessing him, when I realized that he was waiting for a reply. Feeling caught out, I went with the first thing that came to mind. "Er, no. Sorry. I don't smoke."
He raised an eyebrow and glanced down to the lit cigarette in my hand.
I felt my cheeks burning, the only visual clue of the stupidity I felt inside, and I shrugged. "My first in over fifteen years, if you'll believe that." My voice sounded distant, even to me. I offered him the cigarette and noticed the amount of lipgloss on the filter. For a moment I focused on it, wondering how it had gotten there before I remembered my heavy Claire-applied make-up. I hoped he wouldn't notice. "Had to bum this from a couple who were leaving."
He smiled and took the cigarette from me, pulled one out from his pocket, and then used the tip of mine to light his. When he'd finished he handed my cigarette back to me.
I turned it over in my hand, looking at the burning end with the filter coated pink. It had been so hard to give up, and with a sigh I stubbed it out. Taking up smoking was not the answer I was looking for. Tonight was supposed to be about new beginnings, not a relapse into old habits.
"So what was the big occasion?" he asked.
"Huh?" I turned back to him. My mind felt clearer, and I looked at him as if seeing him for the first time. He was a lot better looking than I'd thought, somehow more dignified and sophisticated. I wondered if his unusual manner of speech played a part. "Where are you from?" I asked, not answering him.
"Los Angeles, originally, but spent some time in England. It kind of messed up my accent." He paused to rub his fingertips over his stubble. "Sort of
Sean Connery meets Mark Ruffalo
, or so I've been told," he said with a smile.
"I'm thinking more Bieber, if I'm honest," I said before I caught myself.
His eyes flashed with surprise, which turned to mock annoyance before a smile broke out on his face. Thankfully, he seemed to find my humor funny rather than offensive. "Beiber? Really?"
"Embrace it," I said, with an eyebrow cocked. "The girls go crazy for him."
"What about this girl?"
"I haven't been a girl for a long time, darling," I laughed. "Very much a woman now." I swept my hand up my body and then flat under my chin, emphasising my point.
He laughed again. "Okay, what about
this woman
then?"
"Afraid not." I said with a serious look before smiling again. "Beiber is my daughter's thing. I've always been more of a young Connery girl."
He smiled. "You like the suave, debonair thing? The smart guy in the smart suit?" He copied my hand movement, of moments ago, to show off his suit jacket.
"Yeah, that or the whole
tear off your bikini and choke you with it
thing," I said.
"Ah, the 60s," he said, with a laugh.
"Diamonds are Forever was seventy-one."
"Christ, you are hard to keep up with!" His smile reached his eyes.
"Are you even trying to keep up?" I countered.
"So, the cigarette," he prompted.
I frowned. "Thought you'd forgotten that question."
"Nope."
"Ask me later," I said, with a tease I didn't feel.
"Is there going to be a later?"
I grinned. "Well, if there isn't then I'm not going to have to tell you, am I?"
"But if there is, then you will," he retorted.
"Technically I didn't say I'd answer. I just asked you to ask me again." This was becoming fun.
"So there
might
be a later," he said with a smile.
"It's a possibility." I looked at his cigarette, lit and smoldering away. "You don't smoke either, huh?"
His smile was his only reply.
"Which means you came out to speak to me."
"Are you that full of yourself? There must be loads of reasons why a guy would ask a pretty girl —sorry, pretty
woman
— for a cigarette."
"Pretty Woman huh? Is this you asking if I'm a prostitute?" I watched him bristle before I disarmed him with a smile. "So, let's say you didn't come out to speak to me. That would mean you'd have gone through all the effort to come out here, ask for a light, stand in the rain, and then after all that, not bother smoking that cigarette?"
"Maybe you've distracted me."
"I certainly hope I have." I grinned. "So, Mr.
I don't smoke but I ask for a cigarette anyway
, what brought you out here?"
"You," he said.
I glanced at him and then away, looking down the alleyway to the parking lot beyond.
"You saw the show then?"
Just then, my friend Claire exploded out of the door behind us.
"There you are!" she said loudly, her voice impacting like a nuclear shockwave and flattening everything in close proximity. "What happened? Why didn't the MC say that thing about your dad like we'd talked about?" Then Claire's eyes reached my companion, and widened considerably. "And who is this handsome devil then?"
His smile widened. He turned to face Claire, away from me, and I was at the same moment both hurt and relieved.
"I'm James," he said.
Cute name,
I thought.
"Hi James, I'm Claire. How long have you known Maggie?" Claire smirked, and added, "Just like her to keep something like you a secret."
"We just met!" I said, with a glare over James' shoulder.
Then her eyes lit up. "Did you see Maggie's spot? Wasn't she awesome? Maybe only a warm up, but a great start, huh? Everyone's gotta start somewhere."
"Jesus Christ, Claire," I hissed under my breath.
"What?" Claire said, completely oblivious as usual.
"It was a fucking disaster," I said, sidestepping to talk around James.
"Don't be silly, Mags," Claire retorted. "I thought it was great. The bit about your tits was hysterical. What did you think, James?"
"Claire," I said, stopping James before he could start, "no one laughed.
No one.
I bombed. You don't need to soften the blow. I'm a big girl." The words came out harsher than I'd intended them to be, but Claire was characteristically unfazed.
"The audience liked you though," James said, surprising Claire so much that she turned her whole body to stare at him. "They listened! It's a big thing for the audience to like you."
"Whose side are you on?" Claire said narrowing her eyes at him. "What do you know about comedy?"
James actually backed up, with his hands held up innocently, and it brought a smile to my lips.
"He's actually right," I said, liking the idea of defending James. Maybe he'd show his appreciation afterwards with drinks, celebrating his acquittal together. My smile widened. It was a nice fantasy, but I forced myself back to reality with a shake. "Johnny Carson said it all begins with the audience liking you." I turned to James and smiled. "You thought they liked me?"
"Yeah, definitely. They listened, didn't heckle you, and they clapped at the end. That's a big deal," James said.
"Are you just saying that to get laid?" Claire blurted, which resulted in both James and I staring at her.
"Jesus fucking Christ, Claire!" I said, "Remember what I was saying last week? You know? About you having no filter at all! And you remember what you said? You said, you'd try and work harder at not saying the wrong thing?"
"I just said that to shut you up," she said with a sly smile.
I turned to James and added, "Sorry about her. She just talks without thinking."
"I had noticed. Can I get you girls a drink?" He hooked a thumb at the door and raised his eyebrows. "Should be at the intermission by now, and the bar should be open again."
"Jack Daniels and Coke for me," I said, "and she'll have a vodka and orange."
"And," Claire added, "just cause we're taking your drinks doesn't mean either of us is going to sleep with you."
"Claire!!" I said again in frustration. I turned to James and gave him a pleading smile. "Would you give us a moment?"
"Sure. I'll see you at the bar." James smiled at both of us, clearly amused, and walked inside.
I waited until the door closed to round on my friend.
"
Oh my fucking god
, Claire! What are you doing?" I didn't sound as mad as I felt. I thought I should have been mad, but as the sound of my own voice played back in my head I sounded... nervous.
"Trying to get you laid?" Claire said. "Obviously."
"With him?"
"Do you see any other hot guys around? Maybe one with a hot friend... or two," Claire said with a wicked smile.
"I just met him, and—"
"And what? People fuck strangers all the time! I've seen it!"
"In porn maybe," I replied. "This isn't porn."
"It could be if you wanted it to be. You're single."
I held up my left hand. A leather glove covered my wedding ring, but you could still see the shape of it.
"Well, almost single," she conceded, with an exaggerated eye roll. "In, like, in a month or whatever."