Welcome to my new series. This is a spinoff of the ongoing A New Alexandra stories. The characters in this one appear primarily in Chapters 13 and 14 of that series. The first scene of this story is a scene in Chapter 14 of A New Alexandra, told from a different perspective.
As always, I love feedback, whether it's in the comments or via the private feedback tool. I might not always respond, but I do read it all. Thanks for reading. ~BE
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It wasn't my fault that the words began tumbling from my mouth like a tiny waterfall of truth. I hadn't wanted them to, at least not so explicitly. Especially not so incompetently.
It was Alexandra who made them come out that way. Of course on some level I wanted this to happen, and that's why she was here in the first place. She sat there in the high-backed booth with her cat's-eye makeup and her side-shaved pixie and her all-knowing smile and waited for me to keep talking. I suppose that's easy to do when your vibe is cooler-than-you twenty-something gay chick and you have the girlfriend who looks like she just walked out of a fitness magazine to prove it.
But Kira - Alex's girlfriend - wasn't here to interrupt, so idiot that I am, I kept talking. Blushing and talking.
I'd invited her to this dark, sultry speakeasy not because I wanted to sleep with her - which, looking at the couples occupying all the dark wood booths around us, was on the menu for everyone except us - but because I couldn't come here alone.
And I desperately wanted to come here. I was in the midst of a shitty divorce from an unfaithful husband who'd wanted nothing from me besides conformity to his vision of life: two-car garage, joint last name and bank account, and absolutely nothing dynamic in our lives. My one weekly escape was a Saturday recreational soccer league team I played on with a loose group of friends. This was the two-person after-afterparty for our weekly match.
We'd won. Alex had scored twice. I think I touched the ball about eight times, and one of those had been an accident.
"I can't stop thinking about her," I said. Alexandra had joined the team just months earlier and hadn't lived down the New Girl moniker. She was good enough to merit a nickname; I was just Kelly. But I kept talking. "Like, if I could go on a date tomorrow night with one person in the entire world, that's her."
Her
meant Cassandra, the bar owner who'd invited me to her retro speakeasy with no name and now stood behind the bar looking alternately bored and hyper-focused, but all the while with the same sharp clarity as the single painted blue diamond that adorned the joint's opaque door.
"Ooooh," said Alexandra. Her eyes flashed with a newfound energy that I found mildly disconcerting. She reached a hand across the table and placed it atop mine. The hand felt good. "
In vino veritas,
hmmm?"
"If only two rounds also imparted courage," I said. Three wouldn't be enough. Nor four, five, or... "I'm...well, a bit terrified. Like, how do I ask her out or something?"
It turns out that one perk of being female and straight amid heteronormative dating expectations is that one doesn't need to extend oneself and risk rejection. I hadn't really had a shortage of people asking me out, at least pre-marriage, and the thought of having to approach romance from a different angle was a major reason for the bead of sweat running between my shoulder blades.
"Are you scared that she'll say no, or scared that she'll say yes?"
Alex had asked the question I'd asked myself too many times, and now she was waiting for an answer.
Silence.
"You need another drink," she said. She stood up, grabbing her phone and card. "I'll be right back."
After taking one step, she turned and bent towards me.
"And I don't think you'll have any trouble with women." Her voice was low now, eyes at first searching for eavesdroppers. Then they locked on mine. "My first thought after you did that body shot off me was 'um, more where that came from, please?'"
Oh.
Yes, there was that New Years' party. Me, freshly separated from my cheating spouse, secretly bi-curious and in a room full of stylish and accomplished gay women. I felt like I stuck out like a rhinoceros at a flea market, and not least because my dress was too boxy and my hair was too suburbs and my manner was too timid. These ladies were
badass.
And then it passed midnight Eastern time and the Times Square ball dropped. This led to something that Meg Riis - one of my soccer teammates and co-host of the party - described as the Golden Hour. One hour of absurd debauchery.
Part of that hour featured Alexandra Henderson and her six-pack abs reclined on the kitchen island allowing all comers to pour tequila down her exposed stomach, slurp it off said six-pack, and finish it with salt and a lime.
I hadn't been the first girl to do a body shot off Alex, and I wasn't the last. But if anyone was more nervous than me, they could shoot my boring ass dead.
So when Alexandra turned and headed off to get us another round of drinks, my mind was torn in two directions. There were Alex's taut abs, now facing the bar. The abs, the dress that had been hiked up to her chest, and the long legs that my mind wanted to...
Yeah, I'd had some dreams about Alex. But not as many as about the chick she was talking to now.
Both those facts scared the fuck out of me. And while they talked, my mind wandered. About where this conversation had been (me, openly admitting my attraction to another woman for exactly the first time ever; an almost-flirty banter ranging from Shakespeare to
Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries
; me standing and spinning my appropriately-vintage dress in the dark, Prohibition-era bar). About where this conversation was going (no idea). About how nice it was to be in a bar that smelled of crisp night air, of old varnished wood, and most decidedly
not
of stale beer.
Yes, I was drunk. Not falling over, slurred-speech, hello-ocifer-my-Kelly-is-name drunk, but tipsy enough to talk about my sexuality and feel like I was actually on the cusp of following through on any of it.
Did I mention I was scared as fuck?
Alexandra returned, a Dark and Stormy in one hand and a dark beer in the other. She placed the former in front of me, then folded herself into the booth's opposite side. The dark wood framed her beautifully in the low light.
I swallowed hard. Smoothed my dress over my thighs and thought about how earlier I'd given it a quick twirl at Alex's insistence. How I'd tried to ignore the eyeballs I felt flick in my direction.
She didn't say anything for a long moment. Just took one sip of stout and then another.
I felt my jaw loosen and the beginnings of speech in my throat, but she beat me there.
"Why me?" she said, cocking her head to one side, cheek resting on her open palm.
"Pardon?"
"Why me? Why am I the one you chose to come over here and - let's face it, sweetie - basically come out to." She took another swallow of beer and blushed. I felt the color rise in my own face. "Not that I'm not flattered, but you've known Kira and Mette and Meg and, well, pretty much all of them much longer than me. And trust me, all three of them are much greater authorities on female sexuality than I am."
"You listen."
She laughed, eyes glinting. "That'd be news to Kira."
"Seriously, though, you do. Remember New Years', when we sat on the couch and I blatantly used you as an unpaid therapist for far longer than you should have put up with?"