"Buy me a drink."
I turned to the smirking face of a thin, sharp-edged woman. Aggravation flared into anger as I watched her white-blue eyes dance over my face.
"I'm sorry, who are you?"
I wanted to be left alone. Not bothering with politeness, I turned back to the bar.
She never wavered. Instead, my attitude seemed to do nothing but whet her appetite.
"I'm your date."
"Now," she paused dramatically, before sliding low onto the stool next to me. "I said, buy me a drink."
Okay, first of all, I'm not into any of that S & M shit, so I wasn't about to be ordered around. And, I had no intention of buying
anyone
anything.
With a sneer, I tossed my shoulder length auburn hair over my shoulder and opened my mouth to let her have it.
Before I could say anything, she laughed.
Bitch
!
"Listen, I don't know who you think you are..."
I was fuming, but she simply winked.
"I'm guessing you're not going to buy me a beer. I'll tell you what," she said with a suddenly disarming grin. "Give me five minutes outside. If you still don't want anything to do with me, I'll disappear. Scouts honor."
Still pissed; I thought about telling her to go to hell, but something stopped me. I hated to admit to myself that she intrigued me. Her approach, her manner, her demands all screamed trouble, but I hesitated. The truth was, I was bored. None of the women I had known so far had anywhere near the cold, steel nuts this woman seemed to carry with so little effort.
The decision made; I slid off the stool.
"Five minutes. And this better be good."
The cocky smile never left her face.
"I don't think you'll be disappointed."
I led the way to the door and into the cool September air. Once outside, she took the lead and stopped beside a metallic gray Mustang convertible.
"My car," she announced with unconcealed pride.
"That's great," I replied with as much sarcasm as I could muster. "Is this what I came out here to see?"
"Hardly," she said cheerfully.
That damn smile was beginning to seriously get on my nerves. I wanted it gone.
"You're down to three minutes."
I watched as she reached into the front of the Mustang and pulled out a thin stack of paper. Under the lamps illuminating the parking lot, she handed the stapled lot to me.
My stomach flipped as I recognized one of my short story manuscripts.
"What the hell are you doing with this?"
I fought the panic that was beginning to edge into my voice. The story was one I never intended to have published. I wasn't even sure why I had written it. It was a frighteningly personal account of one of my deepest fantasies and not something I would ever have the nerve to actually do. In fact, I had kept it buried in the back of my closet for months. No one knew it existed, except...
"Shit! Did you get this from Beth?"
Beth, my ex-roommate turned archrival. She and I had not ended our relationship on good terms and now it seemed she had scored an embarrassing hit on my pride.
"She seemed to think it was good office reading."
Perfect,
I thought.
Just perfect.
"You mean she passed this around to all the restaurant staff?"
I was going to kill that crazy whore!
White, blinding spots filled my vision as I felt a sharp rage settle in behind my eyes.
"Hey," the stranger's soft voice cut through the thunder rumbling in my head.
"It's okay," she reassured me calmly. "I was the first person she handed it to and I kept it to myself."
Relief washed over me.
I leaned heavily on the car beside the woman and turned to her, all the sarcasm and attitude gone from my voice.
"Thank you. I mean it. I owe you big," I extended my arm toward her. "I'm Charlie."
She took my hand in a warm grip. "I know. It's on the manuscript."
Oh, yeah.
"I'm Tessa."
I looked at her, really looked for the first time and was surprised to find that she was actually pretty attractive. Her face was angular and sharp, yet warm and open at the same time. It was an interesting contradiction.
She glanced at her watch and then curled her lips into a playful smile.
"I think my time may be up. Should I go or can I get that beer now?"
The least I could do was buy her a beer. I mean; she had saved me from total humiliation. If anyone had read that story...
I stopped breathing momentarily as I realized that someone had. At least two someones, to be exact. Beth, oh man, Beth had read it and was no doubt planning on telling the world, one person at a time. I shuddered at that idea, and then reassured myself by making a silent promise to rip her tongue out the first chance I got.
That left Tessa.
My face flushed hot red.
Tessa must have noticed my sudden mental panic attack.
"Maybe I should go," she said quietly.
I glanced at her again. For the first time, she was wearing a serious expression. Shockingly, I realized I wanted that smile back.
"No," I said rather loudly. "I'm sorry. I'd like to buy you a beer. I mean; it's the least I can do, right?"
That's all it took to get her smiling again.
She let me buy her a beer, and then two. It was around midnight when the short story came up again.
"My ex took off with my cat and most of our savings account and left me with a run-down apartment and a six-month lease, in my name," Tessa recalled with a shake of her head. "So, here I am, working at that God awful restaurant until the lease is up and I can go back to Texas."
I could sympathize. I'd had my share of 'screw-you' breakups.
"That's a tough one," I stated. "But, sounds like you're better off without her."
Tessa smiled at me from across the table.
Her eyes drifted down to the forgotten manuscript beneath my elbow.
She tapped it once with her fingertips.
"I liked it."
Damn!
"Uh, thanks." I wanted to change the subject, fast. "So, you don't like it here, huh?"
She wasn't going to let me off the hook that easily.