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The Brawler Page 8


  “Looks like the only way to stop you two from harassing our best cook is to get you to a table quick,” Odette, the waitress who’d greeted Aly at the door said, carrying a Belgian Red and a local brand beer with a lemon wedge poking out. “Got a clean one. Mind sitting under the Ménage?”

  A pair of headshakes answered, then the waitress guided them to a sunken dining area and a red-lit table beneath an oil painting of a woman giving oral to one man and receiving it from another.

  Nabbing a seat beside Chelle, the waitress asked, “Which of you’s getting the X-rated pizza? Enzo doesn’t cook those up for just anyone.”

  Aly pointed to her friend. “It’s Chelle.”

  “Shell?” Odette asked, offering a hand decorated with a mix of stones set in gold and silver and leather. “I’ve seen you pass through here, but never did get your name.”

  “You got it fine. It’s short for Michelle.” Her broad smile was…inviting?

  Blanking out the sultry holiday tune gushing through the restaurant, the aroma of flavorful food, the red light washing over their table, Aly sensed awareness crystallizing.

  Odette plucked her hand from Chelle’s. “What are you after, Aly?”

  “This beer and a small deep-dish cheese pizza.”

  “No guy?”

  “No guy.”

  “Ah…what could that mean?” Odette’s plum-colored lips softened to an unmistakably hopeful smile.

  Odette, with her Louisiana drawl, artsy tattoos, crimped blond hair, grunge style and sweet-as-molasses charm, wasn’t the first woman to hit on Aly, and odds were she wouldn’t be the last.

  Sarcastically, Aly said, “Tabloids say I haven’t worked my way through every eligible man in Vegas. I’m determined to keep going ’til I snag a Guinness World Record.”

  “Tabloids? I’ve snorted better mind rot.” At Aly’s quirked brow, she said, “Snorted. Past. My system’s never been so clean and frankly it’s annoying as fuck. So, c’mon, tell me the truth and I won’t give you a bitchy look if you leave without tipping me.”

  “The truth is I don’t date. But I’m interested in somebody. Chelle, pry your eyebrows off your hairline.”

  “Sorry, this is my I-can’t-believe-what-I’m-hearing face.”

  “Well, he’s zero good for me. Domineering. Straight-up rude. Gets on my nerves.”

  “But you want to fuck him anyway,” Odette quipped.

  “Uninhibitedly, creatively, and acrobatically.”

  “Any chance another Belgian Red—on the house—will change your mind about a certain Cajun girl?” Odette twisted her index fingers into her dimples.

  “No more than a beer will change your mind about men. But if I ever wanted to fuck a girl, I’d choose you.”

  “God, Aly, you’re such a heartbreaker.”

  “That’s what they tell me.”

  “’Kay. So a small deep-dish cheese for you—” the waitress nodded at Aly, then she smirked at Chelle “—and Enzo’s number for you.”

  When Odette left the table, Chelle glared at Aly. “Either you made up that stuff about this guy you’re googly-eyed over, or you just dished some hot-off-the-press details to the waitress.”

  “Odette’s a good waitress. And my friend.”

  “So you weren’t lying. Name, occupation, glove size.”

  “Glove size?”

  “Approximate works. It’s said to be a reliable indicator of whether a man’s well endowed…or unfortunately so.”

  “Why not just ask for his condom size?”

  Chelle bit her lemon slice and grimaced. “Um. Do you know his condom size?”

  “Nope.” That, she could say honestly. She knew from firsthand—firstmouth?—experience that Jackson was very fortunately endowed and almost too much to take down. But Chelle hadn’t asked her that, and didn’t need to know Aly had been too focused on getting flesh-to-flesh with the man to note the brand, size, material, whatever of his condom.

  “Then if you had to guess his glove size…” Chelle led.

  “Sweetie, that sounds suspiciously like a sex myth. I’ve had my fill of those, thanks to the PSA pitch at work.”

  “Then name and occupation.”

  The arrival of Chelle’s pornographic pizza and a slip of paper with Enzo the cook’s digits on it interrupted the interrogation.

  Aly picked a slice of pepperoni, nibbled thoughtfully.

  “Mind?” her friend complained.

  “I circumcised it for you.” Pinching the neck of her beer, she asked, “Gonna call Enzo?”

  “Yeah.” But the word was preceded with uncertainty so thick it could’ve smothered them both.

  “What if this pizzeria hookup is the beginning of your great, wonderful love affair, Chelle?”

  “Crazy girl said what?”

  “Your epic storybook love? Happy endings?”

  “That’s on your agenda. And I don’t boot men out of my life all day long, then dream about fairy tales at night. I don’t defeat my own purposes.”

  “You’re saying I do?”

  “If your purpose is to have wedding bells and babies and a love story of your own, then, yes, you do.” Chelle blinked up at the painting over Aly’s head. “At first glance, that looks like tug-of-war.”

  Aly turned, craned her neck. “Naked tug-of-war. Is his nose in her asshole?”

  “I’m thinking yes.”

  “Then I’m thinking I want to buy this painting.”

  “Hey.”

  “Hmm?”

  “Sorry. About that whole ‘defeating your purpose’ criticism. It was a bitchtastic thing to say.”

  And accurate? Aly speared the thought. She didn’t like the idea that she blocked her own happiness. How messed up was that?

  And how could she let her friend do the same?

  “The epic love story I was talking about—” she looked Chelle in the face “—I didn’t mean Enzo.”

  “Who, then?”

  “Odette.” The name was there, as bold and vibrant in her mind as the woman was in reality. “I saw you smile at her the way you tried to smile at Enzo.”

  “And new subject starts now.”

  Aly wasn’t going to reopen a discussion Chelle considered closed and classified. Not here, in a restaurant with a pizza between them that presented pepperoni arranged in the shape of a dick.

  “Let’s talk about your lust life. You have access to a stock of men most girls can only daydream about.” Chelle’s eyes widened. “Like Jackson Batiste. The media’s calling him Las Vegas’s king. Only Vegas would declare a man whose fists are lethal weapons its ‘king.’”

  Jackson didn’t fit Aly’s idea of a king. He was too rough-hewn, too scarred, too dominant. And for those exact reasons, to name only a few, she was drawn to him. “This city’s synonymous with risk and gamble and winning. Who better to represent that than the cockiest undefeated fighter in professional boxing?”

  “Cocky. Guess he’s got to be, to say he’ll retire when he loses a fight. As far as promo goes, it’s brilliant. But is he serious?”

  “Far as I know, yes.”

  “Wow.” Impressed, Chelle started on her neglected pizza.

  Worry braided Aly’s stomach, and only by pushing Jackson and his crazy risks out of her mind would she undo the damage.

  Giving her phone a glance as Odette brought her hot, cheesy pizza, she said, “Would you to-go that, please? Math tutor duty.”

  “Who’s going to keep me company?” Chelle said with an exaggerated pout.

  “I’m about to take over the bar, cher. I’ll relocate you there.” Odette offered. As Chelle nodded, the waitress added, “Enzo’s due for a break.”

  “Actually,” Chelle backpedaled, “I do have a thing. Across town.”

  “You are going to call him, right?” Odette asked, her eyes mystified under a canopy of shimmery gray shadow.

  Mumbling some noncommittal response, Chelle guesstimated
her bill, handed the waitress some cash, and split.

  Odette glanced from the money to Aly. “I’m confused.”

  No, Chelle was. She didn’t want to want Odette. Just as Aly didn’t want to want Jackson. But that’s what attraction and love could be—unbiased trouble.

  * * *

  Days had passed since Aly had done anything to piss off her mother, drive her father to pop antacids, or provoke a lecture from either of her older sisters, so she figured she was past due for an “Aw, crap!” moment.

  It came when she swung into the parking lot at Faith House, strolled past security, and almost collided pizza-box-first into her sister Veronica in the lobby.

  “Hold it, chief.” Veronica, who had a several-inch height disadvantage even in her tallest stilettos, spied the box, then rolled her gaze up to Aly’s. “Soixante Neuf?”

  “Dinner. A girl’s gotta eat.”

  “That box isn’t going in there.” She gestured to the brightly lit interior sprawled behind a pair of glass doors.

  “How many French students am I likely to pass on my way to the kitchen, anyway?”

  “Sis,” Veronica said with a knowing smirk. “You figured out what soixante neuf means long before you actually studied French.”

  As aggravating as debating with Veronica was, it had at least restored her hunger. Gooey cheese and zesty sauce occupied her thoughts. “I’m a half hour early, I’m hungry, and will eat in this lobby if I have to.”

  “It really is good pizza.” Defeat. Veronica waved her toward the interior doors. “Straight to the kitchen, and be quick.”

  “Yes, Mom.”

  “I’m not her. Never could be.” Not that it was for lack of trying. Veronica, the self-appointed spokeswoman for Too Perfect to Be True, had been a remarkable imitation of their mother, until Veronica’s no-no affair with the Villains’ quarterback had blown that to pieces. The real Veronica had some flaws, quirks, and kinks—and was a hell of a lot more fun.

  Aly might tell her so. Someday.

  Logging in at the reception desk, she clipped on her staff ID tag. A knot of volunteers and teens advanced toward her, and thinking swiftly, she hid the pizza box with her satchel.

  The newness—or novelty—of her hadn’t yet worn off at the outreach center. People’s fascination with her reputation, money, and connections was something she didn’t understand. For the Greers, wealth and celebrity came with voyeurs, liars, and backstabbers.

  Looking forward to a quick dinner then a few hours of exponents and factorials, grid paper and protractors, Aly retreated to the gallery-style kitchen.

  Raoul, a grizzled man who was never seen without his head scarf and had tattoos for sleeves, nodded a greeting as he towed a stock pot to a cupboard.

  “I’ve got a pizza to reheat,” she said.

  “Keep bringing outside food into my kitchen, and you’re gonna hurt my feelings,” he said. “Next time, call and I’ll put together something.”

  Put together. If cooking was the art form that plenty of foodies claimed it to be, then Raoul—a classically trained chef who’d soon be leaving Nevada to open a spot in the South—was the Rembrandt of the culinary world.

  “You spoil me, Raoul. Too bad there won’t be many next times.” Faith House’s HR staff had already begun the recruitment process for his replacement.

  At the counter she nudged aside a stack of travel magazines to make room for her satchel, pizza and copy of Vanity Fair.

  The magazines fanned out to reveal a worn United States road atlas at the bottom. Who used print atlases when there were so many free navigation apps?

  The thing was vandalized with sticky notes marred with scribbles detailing flight itineraries and bus schedules.

  “Planning a US tour—”

  “That’s my stuff!”

  Aly recoiled with a pang of embarrassment before she realized she’d done nothing wrong—technically. How was she supposed to know a fat stack of travel magazines and a ratty road atlas belonged to a kid she’d never met, who was rocking last year’s fashions, a half-dozen piercings in one ear and a fishtail bun that might’ve been attractive had frizz not conquered it?

  “Bring down the attitude, Maddie.” Beneath Raoul’s sternness was an admirable note of patience. “Nobody here’s the reason your foster mama’s having a rough go.”

  Fosters, runaways, delinquents, addicts, victims—Aly had been introduced to them all through Faith House. Each child, each dark story, circled her heart and tugged.

  “Maddie’s foster mama’s a chef,” he told Aly. “Got her break on a competition show and works in one of those celebrity chef restaurants on the Strip.”

  A battle between pride and melancholy raged on the kid’s freckled face.

  Encouraging, “Introduce yourselves,” Raoul left.

  When the girl remained stalwart, Aly said, “Maddie, I’m—”

  “I know. Everyone knows who you are. On Online you’re trending as the ‘sexiest heiress in Sin City.’”

  For all her frivolity and hubris, it wasn’t a label Aly wanted. She didn’t care how many Las Vegas heiresses were competing for the title. “I was going to say, ‘I’m Aly Greer and I’m irretrievably nosy.’”

  “I’m Maddie Hawkins and I’m leaving.”

  “Or you can stay, if you think this kitchen’s big enough for the two of us to coexist without getting in each other’s way.”

  A soft huff, then Maddie plunked down onto a stool, sending over a gust of air pungent with the scent of Faith House’s commercial-grade antibacterial hand soap.

  Did the kid soak her hands in the stuff?

  Maddie unzipped her hobo, took out a textbook and a jacket, and jammed her atlas and magazines inside.

  The same sterile scent rose from the fabric. Had she used hand soap as laundry detergent? By “rough go” did Raoul mean Maddie’s foster mother was struggling financially?

  “Want some reheated pizza?” she offered.

  “Because I’m a hungry, pathetic charity case?”

  Sparing the girl insult, she lied, “No, I’ve got late party plans and want to preserve my appetite. Seems wrong to throw out a perfectly delicious cheese pizza.”

  Maddie eyed the box in front of Aly, smirked, but didn’t comment.

  “What’s funny?” Uh-oh. “Can you read French?”

  “My school takes foreign language seriously, so yeah, I know that soixante neuf translates to the number sixty-nine in English. I can name just about every restaurant and bar in this city, so I know what that restaurant’s about. Plus everyone knows what oral sex is.”

  Shit. Maddie didn’t appear offended or corrupted, but Aly felt at fault regardless as she reheated the pizza. “You’re a food and drink know-it-all because your foster mother’s a chef?”

  “Was. She hasn’t worked in a while.”

  “Laid off?”

  “Cancer won’t let her work. And the state’s effing labor laws won’t let me work a real job.”

  “How old are you?”

  “Thirteen.” Maddie gripped her textbook for a long, tense moment. Petite and slight, she looked barely ten in spite of her piercings and tough-girl frown. “Sorry. People don’t like sad stories.”

  “That doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be told.” Aly set a plate in front of Maddie.

  “My foster mom wanted me to sign up for math tutoring, but I’m here for cooking tips. I’m collecting from-scratch recipes.”

  “Can’t help with the cooking, but math’s the love of my life.” Aly tapped the front of the book and her pampered, gel-polished fingernails contrasted with Maddie’s jagged nails and bandaged cuticles.

  A biter.

  “What’s got you stuck?”

  “Quadratic equations.”

  “Factoring? That can trip people up.”

  “Formula.”

  Likely the quadratic formula wasn’t all that had Maddie stuck. But if she could help the girl
with that, it’d be a start. “Pencil? Notepaper? Let’s do this. My shift hasn’t started yet.”

  “I’m eating your pizza and taking all your time,” the girl said hesitantly.

  “I come to Faith House to share my time.” Initially, the commitment had been part of some lesson Veronica had wanted to teach her. But the place and people had become a treasured part of her routine. “Crack open that book, chickadee. We have only a few minutes to get quadratic equations to make sense.”

  “Great.” Maddie gnawed on a thick chunk of crust. “At least something will make sense.”

  One problem at a time, Aly was going to help this kid. “This,” she said, indicating an equation for Maddie to copy, “needs to be in standard form. So to make this term zero and transfer it to the other side, subtract.”

  The girl labored but identified the coefficients to plug the values of a, b and c into the formula.

  “2a is the denominator for everything sitting above it there,” Aly reminded when the girl neglected to attach the a.

  “Right.” Then she stopped, scrunching her face. “Aly, if it’s plus or minus, how do we get the correct number?”

  “Number—singular—is a misleading expectation. Finish calculating with plus, then calculate with minus. Remember, the goal is to find the two values.”

  The values determined, and added into the quadratic for confirmation, Maddie beamed but quickly sobered. “Pure luck.”

  “Pure learning.”

  “So you’re a math geek?”

  “I understand math,” Aly explained. “It’s something I count on to make sense when it seems nothing else does. I have the bandwidth to tutor another student, and it’d be nice to add a girl to my list.”

  “Only boys signed up?”

  “Oddly.”

  “Not surprised. The girls are insecure because you’re hot and the boys are horny idiots. Just my guess.”

  “Oh. Well, if you ever find yourself stuck—on an equation or anything else—tell me.”

  Maddie hunched over her food. “Whatever.”

  Aly jotted her cell number on a corner of the notepaper. “I’d like to help. This is for you and your foster mother.”

  “I probably won’t be sticking around much longer.”

  The travel magazines returned to the forefront of Aly’s thoughts. “Are you running away?”