A/N - Sorry, a day late, had a party last night *lol*
Thank you so much for the feedback, and here is the last completed part (sort of), I hope you enjoy and I'll be back soon!
I also have to take a moment and say a special thank you to La'Shon, for without whom I would not have updates for you. Because while I enjoy writing more than I can say, sometimes RL drags me down, but she is my cheerleader on the sidelines telling me to keep going because I do love it. Love you!
*waves* to the new readers, hello so the current and well...basically the character I was referring to, was Dexter and he is stable and is in a good marriage, maybe Max will follow the lead...or maybe he won't!
And now some answers from Liz...and your 'longer' part
*hugs*
Tanya
Chapter Sixteen
<center>
The joy…of dating</center>
“When do I get to see your place?” Liz asks, while rummaging through her closet for a jacket. “Later, if you’re lucky,” I say, as I take in her wardrobe. While she has nice looking work clothes, her other casual clothes have been looking a little warn for wear (except for those great short, summer dresses, of course).
I don’t say anything, because Isabel has told me that a guy should never comment on a woman’s clothing unless he’s going to say something flattering. Apparently women know when they need new clothes, but for obvious reasons they don’t have them.
Still, it irks my ass for some reason. She’s going to need maternity clothes soon, no? I’m not sure, she’s still small, but we have a doctor’s appointment in less than an hour, maybe I’ll get a better peek then.
“Okay, I’m ready.” Liz turns and offers me a smile, that’s when I finally get a better look of her. She’s grown in the last week. I’ve been so busy at work, we’ve got a major launch in a week, we are confident that we will oversell last year’s record breaking numbers, but it’s time consuming and I have today off to spend with Liz.
“Wow, the baby is really growing,” I say, reaching out my hand and resting it on her stomach. I must have a look of hope on my face, because Liz reaches down, placing her hand over mine and says, “It will happen again. He wants to wait for the right moment.” I offer her a weak smile by anyone’s standards. I can’t help but feel disappointed that I haven’t felt the baby move yet.
“So you think it’s a boy?” I smirk, and she swats me away. She’s been back and forth about it. One day she’ll say it’s a girl, the next a boy.
“I’m getting big, fast,” she mutters as we disengage.
“You’re not big. You’re pregnant. There’s a difference.” I say sliding my arm around her shoulder and ushering her out the door.
She stops, and says, “Max, look at my shirt.” I do, and then I look back at her. “It’s too small. I’m getting big!” I am wholeheartedly unprepared for what to say to a pregnant woman. I’ve been pretty lucky with Liz up to this point; her hormones have not kicked into gear. Now though, it seems they are rearing their ugly head.
Instead of trying to find the right words, which will come out wrong anyway, I lean down and kiss the tip of her nose. “We have to go, or we’ll be late.” I tug her along gently and out of the house.
“So, you’ve been really busy. Alex says the game is set to launch in a week.” I smile at the fact that she tries to keep up with the business. It shows she’s interested in knowing, and that means a lot to me.
“I know. I’m sorry, Liz. Once we’re done, the game will speak for itself. I mean we have several coming out the rest of the year, but this is our big one. Alone, the sale of that one title makes exceeds our profits by half, add to that our other releases and we come out on top again this year. It’s not easy, and it takes a lot of time and money, but in the end it’s worth it.” She looks at me intently; almost a stare and I ask her what’s on her mind.
“Nothing,” she says, looking out her window and then says, “I’m just really proud of you. I mean, of Alex too. It’s so great that he gets to do what he loves, and finally getting the recognition he deserves. But—,” she trails off, as I pull up to a red light.
“What?” I turn my head to regard her fully.
Liz lets out a long sigh, and then finally turns to face me. “Max, what are we doing?” I crease my brows in confusion.
“Us? What are we doing?”
“Liz—”
“You know what? Never mind. We’ll talk about it after the doctor’s appointment,” she rushes out and I attempt once more to tell her what’s on my mind, but she asks me to please wait until later.
So I do.
<center>****</center>
Once we are alone in the room together, I watch Liz as she watches the monitor. I’m not sure what she’s looking for, but I know that ever since I asked the doctor to give us a moment, she hasn’t said a word.
“Liz, we don’t have to do this if you don’t want.”
She shakes her head, and says, “No, I want to know.” I don’t believe her at all. Maybe that’s because she’s not looking me in the eye.
I reach out and take her hand and say, “I want to wait.” I voice the one thing I’m sure she she’s feeling. She doesn’t want to know the sex of the baby, not now. A part of me has to agree. I don’t want to know either. At first I thought I did, but honestly, the thought of waiting until the baby is born is more appealing to me.
Liz lets out another sigh, of what I can only describe as relief, and then turns to look at me. Her eyes aren’t brimming with tears, but she looks damn near close to having that happen.
“I always thought, when the time came, I would want to know. Then again, I always pictured my life differently. I thought I’d be married, thought I’d have a house with a room that was ready to be decorated, as the nursery. None of that is the case in this instance. And while a part of me wants to know, another part of me wants the surprise. Wants to wait until the moment the doctor places the baby on my chest.” She stops and looks beyond my shoulder, and I turn my head slightly to see the doctor has once again joined us.
Giving Liz as reassuring smile, I tell the doctor we want to wait until the birth. She smiles and continues on with the exam. I haven’t felt the baby move yet, it seems that every time I go to feel it, the baby stops.
“I’m beginning to grow a complex,” I joke, but half mean it. Liz laughs, as does the doctor. “You know Max, it’s perfectly normal for you to have still not felt the baby kick. Liz is technically with the baby twenty-four hours a day, she has an unfathomable probability over you, to feel the baby.”
I shrug. Yes, I know all of this, but it doesn’t make me feel any better.
“Thanks for being here, Max.” Liz says as we step out onto the sidewalk and make our way towards my car. I’m not sure what it is, but something about her
thanking me for doing what I would without a doubt, seems really odd. I don’t like it. I don’t appreciate it, and damn it, it pisses me off.
I stop right before opening the door for her, turn and stare her right in the eyes and say, “I’m really getting tired of you saying that.”
“What?” she asks, looking perplexed.
I lean against the door, cross my arms over my chest and look away for a minute. What is it that’s bothering me today?
“Why is it I get the feeling you still aren’t sure if I’m going to go through this with you?”
“I didn’t say that,” she defends, getting visibly upset.
“You didn’t have to. Liz, every time we do anything together, particularly when it has to do with the baby, I get this feeling that you think I’m going to change my mind or something.”
She shakes her head, opens her mouth to say something, but stalls out. Not one word. So she doesn’t deny it, but she doesn’t confirm it either. Where does that leave me, I wonder.
“This is my thing, you don’t say anything to me about…well…anything. I’m really tired, Liz. Just tired of feeling like this person that’s standing outside, looking in. I am trying to be a part of this,” I signal my hand between her and I, but she doesn’t even blink. She doesn’t even move. And I wonder what the hell is going on in her mind, yet again.
I really should be used to it, but I’m not. I’m not comforted by her silence, not in the least.
After a minute, she squints her eyes and turns her head to the side. She watches the passerby’s, and then shakes her head. Without looking at me, she steps closer.
“When I was sixteen, I realized that my life was going to be different than the life I created in my mind, from when I was a little girl. My parents weren’t coming back home; they weren’t going to suddenly realize that they love me enough to come back. So I decided it was time to stop living in that past, in a future that no matter how much I wanted; I couldn’t create. I decided, that Alex was enough, because he is. I decided that I would settle for whatever came my way. I never finished school because, I was scared to get to the end and still not know what I want to do with my life. I never fell in love with anyone, not really, before Danny. Then I settled again,” she pauses, her voice clogged with tears and a part of me wants to stop her. But the other part of me, the part that needs to understand her, to figure out where she’s at, to figure out if there can be a future for us, and if that includes us being together or not, yearns to hear it.
Liz moves beside me, resting on the door with me, and wraps her arms around herself, never looking at me, but continues to speak.
“Danny, was good looking, smart, and had a great perspective on life. I wanted to soak that up. He was everything I thought I needed in my life to be happy. So I settled. I settled for the fact that I knew deep down he may have loved me, but he wasn’t in love with me, not really. I think he thought he was too, and I didn’t dare say anything, because that would jeopardize my world.”
I take this opportunity so say something, “Appearance means a lot to you.” She nods, but doesn’t say a word.
“Liz, why was it important for you to be with Danny? Why not someone else?”
She lets out a huff-laugh, and then says, “I was trying to figure out my life, and he came along and I realized, I didn’t know what the hell I was doing. He had a career, he had a house, and he had family. I thought ‘this is what I need in my life’. If I stick with him, he’ll help me, he’ll show me the way.”
“And did he?” I ask, because I can understand where she’s coming from. Liz didn’t have a normal upbringing, and somewhere between her father leaving, and her mother leaving, she got lost in the shuffle. I may not have been through the situation, but I can understand the concept. My marriage got lost in the shuffle.
“No. He didn’t. He couldn’t give me the things I needed, because I didn’t know, I still don’t know what I need. I realized too late, I was trying to make Danny understand me, but he couldn’t possibly. He was so much older than me; he didn’t want kids with me. He said it would be a mistake, a regret I would have, and he didn’t want to be that,” she laughs self-depreciatingly. I turn to my side to face her. I ache to touch her.
I want to ask her, if she regrets it now. If she regrets trying to have his baby, and ending up with mine instead. “Liz—”
She shakes her head, “No, Max. I don’t regret this baby, ever. And if I was honest with myself, I’m relieved it’s not his.”
“You don’t have to say that,” I say, my voice sounding unfamiliar and filled with too many emotions to name.
“I know I don’t. Max, you remember that day in the doctors office, when I fainted?” I nod. She takes in a deep breath, and locks eyes with me.
“I’m not going to lie and say that I wasn’t shocked. I was hurt, because I had convinced myself that what I was missing in my life was Danny, I didn’t know how to be without him. We weren’t together long yet my every action had everything to do with him. And the day I made the decision to have a baby, his baby, even though I knew he only made it possible because I guilt-tripped him into it; was a year after he died. I felt angry, so angry with him for leaving me, even though it wasn’t his fault. With Danny, I didn’t have to decide anything. He made all the decisions…and that was wrong. So when I fainted, not all of it, but mainly, it had to do with my relief. I would have to let him go. That didn’t mean I didn’t want my baby, Max. I do. I always did. But the pressure of having Danny’s baby didn’t hit me until after I found out I was pregnant. And then that day, in that room, I saw you when I opened my eyes, and they are really…great eyes. Caring and understanding, and I’m not used to you, I wasn’t ready for you.” Tears stream down her cheeks, and I lean closer, wrap my arms around her and press her closer.
“Thank you, Liz.” I say, with tears in my eyes, and while I should be wary about my public display of affection, I can’t get over Liz’s words. All this time I was resenting her for wanting the baby to be his, when all this time, she was happy it was mine.
Alex was right. Liz is happy that it’s mine. I’ve been fighting her for it, almost like stamping my territory, when all along…she was glad it was me and not him.
A bubble of laughter shoots to my ears, and I look down into her upturned face. “What are you thanking me for?”
I reach out a hand and push a piece of hair away from her face. I search her eyes, and realize that look that Liz gives me, every time she looks at me, means something. All this time I was waiting for her to say something, to tell me, and I realize that Isabel was right. Liz can’t give me something that’s broken, some piece of her that she may not ever get back.
And that’s okay. Because I have enough in me, to give to her, and when she’s ready, I’ll be right here. Because I’m ready to stop being selfish, I’m ready to show Liz that she’s not the only one to lose something here.
“For telling me, that I’m good enough.”
“Max, I’m sorry. I never meant to make you feel that way. It’s just so…I…” I smile at her right before I lean in and kiss her soft lips. I caress her with a tenderness I didn’t know I was capable of, and when I feel her body melt under my fingertips, I pull away.
“Max—”
“Liz, I wanted to ask you something.”
“O-okay.”
“How would you feel about going on a date with me tonight? I’ll pick you up around seven.” She freezes, stares at me for a minute, but I don’t dare move. Finally, she blinks, offers me a crooked smile, and says, “I would love that.”
And I realize, that taking a break from Liz was the worst thing I could have done. But since I’m a guy, and I knew no better, I’m giving myself a pass on feeling bad about it.
Now of course if I mess things up, after this, I’ll have a bone to pick…with myself.
<center>****</center>
“So, she’s your girlfriend now? I think that’s great,” Michael says as he dribbles the ball down the court.
The sun is setting, and I’ve got about two hours before I have to pick Liz up for our date. I’m not sure why, and this has never happened before, but I feel eagerness to see her. I feel like this afternoon, something between us changed.
For the better.
Finally.
“Not exactly. I mean, we made some real progress, and we are going on a date. But seeing as I’m not with anyone, and neither is she, and I spend a lot of my free time with her, I guess you could say that.” I smile at the thought.
“I’m happy for you, Max. Really. You’re going to have a kid with her; you should be getting along with her.”
I decide to switch gears for a minute. “I told Serena about the baby.” He stops running and whips around to look at me.
“You did what?”
“I told—”
“No, I heard you. What were you thinking? Were you trying to hurt her?” He looks pissed, but I can’t honestly imagine why.
“Do you have a problem with that?” I ask, and he drops the ball and walks over to me.
“It’s your life. But I don’t get it, why hurt her?”
“You think I would do that on purpose? She had a right to know, either way.” I defend my actions, as I narrow my gaze, getting a little bit angry myself, at him.
“Obviously that was what you were going for.”
“How the hell would you know? Michael, I’m not going to argue with you about my private life and my decisions. So what gives? Why are you picking a fight with me over this?” I ask and he drops his gaze to a point beyond my shoulder. Never once has he picked a fight with me over my relationships, or lack there of. His mood swings are getting more frequent and I have to wonder if maybe Maria told him about leaving.
“I’m not picking a fight. I just don’t understand why you would tell her.”
“Because I thought, if I keep it to myself and it comes out later, somehow, then she’d be more hurt that I didn’t. It was the lesser of two evils. Besides, she’s with Greg, and I couldn’t be happier for her. She deserves it after the marriage I gave her,” I say, shaking my head in thought.
While I know I wasn’t a horrible husband, I was more her best friend. I think that was the problem from the beginning. I was so comfortable with Serena. She just went along with everything. We were married for eight years and out of them, I think we spent four of them together in total.
“You were young, Max.” I smile, as he defends me. He always defends me, if I veer down the road of self-loathe (which is seldom, for me). I try not to dwell on the things I can’t change.
I should amend, I didn’t use to dwell before Liz came along. Now all I do is dwell about my feelings for her, her feelings for Dean, Dean’s feelings for her, Danny and well just about anything else in between that.
“We were young, but we thought ‘we’re in love and that’s all that matters’. Surely you remember what that feels like.” I smirk, throwing out a punch to his right arm.
“Yeah…I guess.”
“You guess? It wasn’t so long ago that you and Maria were together and—”
“We were talking about you,” he effectively cuts me off. I eye him carefully; there is something extra tense about him today. I ask if anything is bothering him.
“No. I’m good.” Just what I thought, something is really on his mind. He never answers my questions like that, normally it’s, ‘Max, I’ll tell you when I feel like it.’
“Why don’t you tell me what’s on your mind?” I try and persuade him, snatching the ball from near his feet, and walking over to the bench on the opposite side. He follows me, slides down on the bench and leans forward resting his elbows on his knees. He doesn’t say a word, so I wait, patiently.
“I know what you mean about being young. When I met Maria, I wasn’t as young as you and Serena, but I was immature. Maria just blew in, and I never felt that caught up in a girl before, never. She made me happy, so damn happy, and so furious all at the same time.” I listen intently, Michael and I have a really open and honest friendship, and we’re brothers but friends first. I want to help him get over this funk he’s been in, for the last four years. Personally I know it has everything to do with Maria, but there was a part of him that never felt ready to tell me why he walked away, not the real reason. I never pushed, because Michael is not like me.
Pushing me will eventually get you the answer you’re looking for. Pushing Michael simply pushes him away. It’s that simple.
“She was the first girl that made me think of forever. She made me question all those years I wasted on all those other girls. I wasn’t her ticket out of this town, poetically speaking,” he pauses, gives me a look that says, ‘if you repeat a word of this, I may just disown you,’ I nod without a word.
He runs a hand through is sandy-brown hair, disheveling it a bit more than it normally is, and tips his head towards the sky. “Damn, I wish I didn’t miss her. It would be so much easier to forget her. I still see her, you know. I still see her, I make it a point to make
sure I see her once a week.”
I take his long pause, as a signal for me to jump in. So I ask, “Are you doing it because you want to see her, or because of something else?”
Michael lets out a short laugh, and says, “I want it to bother her to see me. I’m an ass, right?” I slap him on the back, and tell him that’s exactly what he is.
“You talk about me hurting Serena, you know if she knew half the shit you said and did to Maria, you’d already have a nice headstone picked out right?”
“Fuck! I know, but you don’t understand what it was like for me, with her.”
I lean back, lifting the ball from my lap and spin it up my palm to the tip of my finger. Michael and I learned to do that when we were younger, it was important that we could mimic everything our father could.
“What was it like? Cause I gotta say, Maria is pretty easy to get along with. And while she has her quirks, she’s got a great heart. So tell me something I don’t know.”
He stands abruptly, pacing back and forth in front of me. I stop my ball play, and let it fall to the ground.
“That’s just it. There isn’t a bad bone in her body, Max. Not one. I could be a dick to her, and while she’d fight back, she still loved me anyway. I was moody with her, if I was missing a game to stop by one of the stores to pick up a scarf or skirt, whatever, the hell she needed. But she just told me to grow up, and get over it, and she always…
always recorded the damn thing for me. I always bitched, but I knew she was recording it anyway. Yet, she put up with me. I forgot our ‘dating’ anniversary, I felt like a heel, but she forgave me. She told me, she knew I was busy and I tried to make it up to her. That’s what it was. She gave. I took. That wasn’t fair to her.”
“You are selfish.” I note, and wait for him to turn on me. Because while I don’t think Michael is selfish, he is a bit immature, at least he was, until he broke things off with Maria. Something changed after that in him. Changed for the better.
“Fuck you, man. You just like to ride that wave. I loved her.”
“I’m sure you did.”
“I did! It just wasn’t enough.”
“For her?” I quirk my eyebrow up at him, this is like pulling teeth, without Novocain.
He shakes his head, “For me.”
“Michael, what are you saying? Don’t tell me you loved her, but thought…”
“It wasn’t enough. Did you hear anything I just said?” He turns on me, sweat forming on his brows and a deep crease etched on his forehead.
“I heard you, but I gotta be honest, you’re not making much sense. Spell it out for me.”
“Maria, wears designer clothes, sunglasses, gets a manicure and pedicure every two weeks, her hair is always done and I walk around in a pair of jeans I’ve owned since I was eighteen and a T-shirt with some faded picture on the front. How could she even think she was in love with me? I think it was the bad boy imagine I was toting around for awhile.” I scoff at the idea that’s just run through my head. Michael couldn’t be so stupid as to think that Maria gave a shit about what he wore…could he?
“Damn, Michael. Tell me you didn’t…God…tell me you didn’t break up with her because you thought you weren’t good enough?” I somehow manage to scoot to the edge of the bench, not wanting to stand and pressure him, but wanting an answer.
“Max—let it go,” he grinds out, and now I stand.
“All this time, you’re trying to give me advice, and you walked away from her because of this stupid shit?” I accuse, and reach out to his shoulder, forcing him to look at me.
“Sorry, this is worth repeating, but, fuck! I know I messed up, but Max it’s so much more complicated than that. When you said I was immature, you have no idea, what I did.”
I raise an eyebrow and cross my arms, prepared to stand here all day until I hear it all.
Unfortunately, the sky decided it wanted to open up and rain down on us. While I was prepared to stand there all afternoon and wait, he wasn’t. He took off in a run, and when we reached our cars, he was already making excuses about needing to meet Kyle.
“This conversation isn’t over, Michael,” I warn him, and he mumbles out an, “I know,’ before closing his door and driving away.
I wish I had more time with him, but I realize looking down at my watch, I’ve got about forty-five minutes to shower and get ready for my date with Liz.
I can’t help the smile that tugs at the corner of my lips; it’s our first official date.
<center>****</center>
“Max, are you sure you don’t mind,” she practically groans out, miserably.
I arrived at her place a few minutes ago, only to find her dressed in a pair of jeans and a T-shirt, saying it was the only thing that fit her. They were her ‘fat’ jeans, whatever that means.
I laugh, as I run a hand through her hair. I never realized how much I enjoy touching her, but tonight, everything with her feels different. Maybe it’s because she opened up to me, and allowed me a bigger piece of her picture. Well…that and the fact that she smells amazing, like baby power and flowers, sweet if you will. When she swung open the door, a smile was plastered across her face, and her eyes were dancing. I can’t lie; it boosted my ego a bit (alright, a lot, but that’s my secret).
I enjoy, holding her, wrapping my arms around her waist. She just feels, right.
“I thought we’d swing by my place, give you the tour, have dinner and see from there. How does that sound?” I ask, because if she was expecting more, I’d be more than happy to oblige.
“It sounds great. Let me just get my jacket.” She pulls away, and I tug her back, place a kiss on her lips, lean my head against hers, and smile. “Hi,” I whisper. She smiles shyly, and whispers back, just as soft, “Hi.”
I let her go. But a barrel of ignited gunpowder couldn’t knock the smile off my face. I find myself doing that a lot; smiling. I feel like a sap, but with Liz, it feels natural.
I like it. I don’t have to put up false pretenses with her. I’m just me, and that’s okay with her.
“What are you thinking about,” she asks as I close the door behind us, making our way to my car.
“Just that, it’s been a long time that I’ve gone out on a date and not have had to worry about what we’re eating or doing for that matter. But don’t get me wrong, soon, I’ll be taking you out on the town.”
“But I’m pregnant,” she says quickly, almost as if that explains why she can’t go.
“So? Liz, pregnant or not, I’m taking you. Deal with it,” I say, helping her inside.
When I’m in the car with her, she looks around the inside and says, “Just how many cars do you have?” I shrug my shoulders, and tell her only four.
We’re in the car for not longer than two minutes before she steers the conversation back to where I left off, can’t say that I’m not surprised.
“Were you’re other…dates less accommodating?” she asks, sounding really uncomfortable. That is an endearing thing; she might be shy, but she will still ask the question. A lot like Alex, I think. Nothing about her is faked or premeditated, just like Isabel described Alex.
Before I answer her question, I wanted to straighten something out with her. “Liz, you should know it’s been months since I’ve been on a date. I don’t want you thinking that I’m dating you and someone else, because I would never do that. I might not have a shiny background, but I would never degrade a woman like that, ever.” I vow sincerely, and she reaches out a hand to me, removing it from the steering wheel, and clasping it in both of hers.
“I wouldn’t peg you for that kind of guy, Max. I’m just not a real good judge of character, when I li— I mean when I am getting to know someone. Please don’t think that’s why I asked,” she quickly recovers from you slip up. Don’t think I didn’t notice, because I did. It was clear, what she was going to say was ‘like’. I try and keep my features neutral.
“I know you didn’t mean it that way. But to answer your other question, yes, my other dates wanted the fancy restaurant, dancing, extravagance and then when the night was over…” I realized I just lead myself down the wrong path. I do not want to discuss having sex with women after my date because I have no intention of having sex with Liz anytime soon.
Not that sex wouldn’t be nice, more than that, but that’s beside the point. I’m not ready, and I’m sure she’s not either.
“Sex?” she says, with confidence, although her body language says anything but.
“Sorry. I didn’t mean to say that.” I feel embarrassed, boy how the tables have turned.
“That’s okay. Max, you’re a good looking, single guy, if you told me otherwise, I’d have to wonder.”
I whip my head to the side quickly, before returning my attention to the road. “Wonder, what?”
“That, you were…ruined by your divorce, or marriage or…never mind.”
“Oh, no please, continue.” I wave my hand in the air, waiting for her to elaborate.
“I’m just saying, I was watching this show—”
“What show?” I interrupt, just because it’s fun to watch, as her lips get pouty as she is forced to tell me everything.
“Oprah. Now, back to what I was saying. She did an interview with men who didn’t have sex since their divorce. They felt inadequate with themselves, and they felt this pressure to…you know…
perform…and it caused them to have…
issues…” she mutters out, and I can’t help but choke back a laugh.
“You’re not serious,” I say incredulously, and she nods her head.
“Max, it happens. I mean they said they tried to…you know…”
“Have sex?” I coax, and she just nods.
“Say it,” I taunt.
“No. You know what I mean.”
“Say it,” I sing.
“Fine! Sex! Okay, are you happy? Sex. Sex. Sex!” she puffs out a breath of air, and it fans her bangs away from her face.
I smile triumphantly. “I’m very happy, please…continue.” I turn down my street, and flick on my headlights, the sun is setting pretty early nowadays.
“So they basically, couldn’t have
sex, with anyone other than their ex-wives.”
I choke, not in laughter, that’s for damn sure. Luckily, I made it to the driveway before she said that.
I pull up, and into the garage before killing the ignition, and then I turn to face her.
“Liz, another thing I should assure you of. I don’t have those kinds of feelings for Serena. I haven’t had them in a long…
long time. And you can trust me when I tell you I have no performance
issues.” I say seriously and watch as her eyes drop. She rolls her hands over in her lap, palms up and says, “Oh good.”
“Good?”
“Well, not good for me, just good…for you. I mean when you are with someone, that you can…”
“Perform?” I bite the inside of my lip to keep from bursting out laughing.
“Right! Not that, I was thinking about your performance or anything like that,” she rushes on, a crimson blush rising on her cheeks. Damn, if she doesn’t turn me on with her innocence.
That’s what it is. Pure innocence. I recognize it, very easily on her.
Ironic for a woman who is pregnant, but seeing as how that happened, it makes perfect sense.
“You weren’t?” I question, my eyes glinting with mirth.
“No! I wasn’t. I don’t think about you like that,” she says, sneaking a look up at me.
“Oh,” I say, trying to sound disappointed, which I would normally be, except that I can read her really well for this. Not a bad thing at all to be able to do. Her wanting me is not something she can hide, and I’m thankful for that.
She groans and throws her head back against the seat. “Max, that’s not what I meant. You’re a good-looking guy, sexy even, you know that already though. What I meant was, well I don’t know what I meant, or why the conversation is suddenly about sex. I think we should go inside now,” she mutters out, already opening the door and practically jumping out before I have a chance to utter another word.
I let her get away with it.
I’ve had my fun, for now.
TBC…