Let me start off by saying, I don't know what this is or where this story is going. It's been hounding me for months, needling my brain with its insistence to be written down (despite the fact that I have so many other things to do).
I've kept it on my laptop to marinate, but I suppose it's time to give the story wings.
Please don't ask what's going to happen, where it's going, or if there's going to be sex. I can't answer any of those questions because I'm as in the dark as you.
I hope you'll come on this trip with me; it's shaping up to be an interesting one.
Rosi
***
"How do you want it?"
What a question. The waiter didn't mean anything by it, I was sure. Though my Spanx, full face of makeup, and cleavage sitting on the table kinda hoped he did. Hoped he was mentally transmitting images to my date of the cool sheets, head board slamming, knock your socks off sex variety.
"She'll have it medium well, and I'll have the same," Dan—nope that wasn't right and for the life of me I couldn't remember my date's name—delivered smoothly like we'd talked about this. Like we talked AT ALL. So far, all I knew was that he drove a nice, expensive car, dressed to impress, and understood the ostentatious, French menu.
This is such a waste of time.
I knew it and he probably knew it too. But decorum dictated we do this dance. So instead of getting up, hailing a cab, and planting myself on my couch with my laptop and reviewing a grant application for next Thursday, I sat and smiled and pretended to like my steak medium-well.
"Medium-well," the waiter said with a hint of surprise. "Is that right?"
Flipping my eyes up to the waiter, I nodded. "Sure."
His eyebrow shot up as he waited and waited and waited. Finally, Derick—or was it David? Dick maybe—cleared his throat. "We're done."
The waiter never took his eyes off me and the longer he stared the more something pushed at me from the back of my memories. I'd known a fair amount of men in my 32 years, a lot of them black, a few of them white, but I couldn't remember any Middle Easterners. Or was he Medaterianan?
Something close to the sea and in the East if the hue of his skin and the tilt of his eyes said anything. The way he was looking at me made it clear that this wasn't our first meeting, but he didn't offer the familiarity of school friends, ex-lovers, or that strange acquaintanceship of a friend-of-a-friend.
"Of course," he said smoothly, just a hint of an accent that let me know he hadn't been born here, or maybe English wasn't the main language at home, coming through. "I'll be back with your drinks."
The niggling in the back of my mind intensified as I reached forward to sip at my cool, lemon water.
Maybe that Spanish immersion summer camp? Or what about Michelle's 21st at—
"Do you know him?" David—I was 93% sure his name was David—asked, steepling his fingers.
I shrugged as I set my water back down, trying and failing not to fidget as the liquid hit my constricted stomach. Damn Spanx were too tight. "Not sure. You know when you see a face but can't place it."
"No."
Oh.
"So, David, you're with Heather's law firm?" I switched the conversation quickly, trying to salvage this date.
"It's Patrick, actually," he corrected, glancing down at the gold watch on his wrist and then back at me. "And yes, I am. Heather tells me you're a writer."
"Actually a Scientific Review Officer. For the NIH."
"NIH?"
"National Institute of Health."
"Is there a lot of writing in that job?"
"Not like you're thinking."
Instead of responding, he reached for his water and took a sip.
This is just going so well. So freaking well. Might start planning the wedding.
Trying to keep my mental snark in check was a full time job and I was off the clock tonight. This was a shit show that I'd smelled a mile away when Heather had had to practically beg me to go on this blind date. He was everything I didn't like about wealthy men: snobbish, entitled, and elitist. I dealt with his type on a daily basis, and when I got home I didn't want to deal with it. I'd known from her description it wouldn't work, but 32 and single was a desperate age. So I'd thrown concrete reasoning and deduction out the window in favor of "giving it a try."
"Here we are," the waiter, who I was pretty sure I knew but couldn't place, interrupted with practiced ease, setting down my gin and tonic and David—no, Patrick's—old fashioned.
"Thank you," I said automatically, already reaching forward to take a much needed gulp.
"No problem, Stripes."
Stripes?
The niggling increased, wiggling to the front of my brain as I snapped my head to look at the man. Had to be at least five years younger than me. But tall. Really tall. Wavy brown hair with a slight curl, just like his mom.
His mom.
"Jor..." I said slowly, seeing if the name fit on my tongue. His smile crinkled the corners of his eyes and brought out the dimple in his right cheek. A dimple I'd poked at incessantly during one of the summer's at my dad's place. Well, not really my dad's; he'd split the time between his house and his new girlfriend, Monika's house. Monika with the three kids: all boys with the youngest being Jordan.
Jor.
My body reacted before my mind could: bolting up, wrapping Jor in a tight hug, laughing in shock and delight and maybe just a touch of uncertainty.
For three months, Jor had been my entire world. At twelve, so much had started to change from getting my first period and experiencing all the pitfalls that came with having a uterus to accepting that my parents divorce was permanent as my father introduced me to Monika and kissed her on the lips. I'd felt strange, on the cusp of tween-age with the maturity level of an eight year-old. Jor knocked that right out of me with bubbling laughter, animal crackers, and his obsessive need for me to read him
Harry Potter
novels.
Jor's arms envelopes him as fast as mine had him: bigger, hairier, and way more muscular than I remember. Gone were the gangly limbs of a toddler-becoming-child, replaced by a man's arms. And height! Jor had barely come to my unusually tall, five foot shoulders. Now, my head just cleared his chest. In two and a half inch wedges. Gone was the little boy who couldn't say his "r"s and insisted on being barefoot everywhere, replaced by a hairy, scruffy, giant of a man.
"
Chetorin, azizam?
" Jor said softly, pulling me closer and burying his face in my perfectly styled updo.