Chapter Seven
M arsha was never thrilled about him using his “social time” to get all “broody artiste” on her. Her words. But his art was her paycheck, so she never said no.
Which was why Zack was in a borrowed studio today, torturing metal until his muscles burned. He’d basically turned the place into a forge, which was another reason Marsha didn’t necessarily love accommodating him. Because he essentially took over whatever studio he inhabited.
But whatever. He made a ton of money. More than a lot of other living artists. So everyone could deal with it.
And they did.
Which was one of the best things about the art world. He was eccentric here. Not just a jerk. With great genius came great jackassery, or whatever. It worked out for him because it meant he got to do whatever he wanted.
He needed to work today. Needed to get this piece finished. He’d started it back home, and it had come over with the rest of the pieces for the show, but this one wasn’t done. And he wasn’t sure exactly what to do with it.
It was a giant iron figure, like the rest of them. The vague shape of a man, faceless, as they all were. He was standing. Just standing. And Zack didn’t know why. He didn’t know what the hell the thing was supposed to be.
And today he’d taken the thing’s arm off, bent it at the elbow and reattached it with what would be its palm facing upward.
He had no idea what in hell he was doing.
But then, that was fitting. He didn’t know why the hell he’d told Grace about Steph and Tally. He didn’t know why he’d spent the night, only to wake up feeling like his chest was being crushed by an anvil.
He’d left at 5:00 a.m. and wandered around until six, then he’d called Marsha about getting the studio space for the day.
Yeah, there was something about Grace that turned his head to oatmeal. And he just did crap. And said crap. And he had no idea why.
Sex .
Yeah, it was probably the sex. It had been so damn long before her. Longer still since he’d wanted it. Really wanted it. With more of himself than just his erect member.
His body wanted sex a lot, it was the rest of him that didn’t care. The rest of him that was still too numb,
But not with Grace. She lit a fire in him that he could feel all the way down.
He was still deciding whether or not he was okay with that.
If he wasn’t, it meant no more sex for the remainder of his time in the city. Which was not okay with him.
Not at all.
He was enjoying dipping his toes back in the pool, so to speak.
His phone buzzed and he walked across the studio and looked down at the number. A NY number that he hadn’t added to his phone, but one he recognized.
“Gracie,” he said, picking the phone up and answering it.
“Zack, you left before I woke up.”
He leaned back against the wall and looked at the iron monstrosity he’d just been torturing. “Yeah, I did.”
“Why?”
“I had work to do.”
“Such as?”
“Sculpting. Welding. Had to fire up the forge and hammer things.”
“You were hammering me.”
His body immediately stood to attention. “Yeah. But... I have a job. And a piece I need to finish.”
“What more does it need to be finished?”
He looked at the lifeless lump of iron. “I don’t know. It’s dead. I can’t figure out how to make it live.”
“Lightning storm?”
“Yeah,” he said, laughing in spite of himself. “Maybe. Want to come and be my hunchbacked assistant?”
“Can I really come?”
He hesitated. “Sure,” he said finally. “Why the hell not?”
“After work. I’ll be there after work.”
“I’ll still be here. Banging my head against a wall.”
“Well, I’ll see you then. Try not to give yourself a concussion.”
“I’ll do my best.” He hung up and put his hand on his chest. There was a weird feeling there. Originating from around his heart and spreading outward.
Happiness. For heaven’s sake. He felt happy. Standing there in front of a crap-ass statue, he felt happy.
The thought of seeing Grace and showing her all this was the cause. He was happy to see her. To show her his garbage work. What the hell?
He shook his head and took a deep breath. Sex was more powerful than he’d given it credit for, that was all.
It certainly wasn’t that his heart was thawing out. Hell no. It was just his body.
That was it. That was all it could ever be.
Grace was ready to climb the walls of her office by the time five o’clock rolled around.
Normally she was the last to leave. Such was her level of commitment. Not just to her job, but to this vague notion that she had to cause no trouble and make no mistakes. But with her boss treating her like he had been, and with the new “projects” that had just come across her desk—which included mundane paperwork that would not advance her or grow her income, and was someone else’s flipping job—she wasn’t hanging out.
No. She had something to get to. She had life happening. Freaking life. And wasn’t hanging around in an office with what smelled like a slowly dying career.
She let out a harsh breath as she exited the building. This was the kind of thing that would make her parents worry, she was sure of it. And they had enough worry. She didn’t want to add to their worry. She was supposed to be their success story, her own adding to theirs. She would reach a point, a place, where she didn’t have to try so hard. Where they could bask in her accomplishments and so could she.
Success. Success was the gold ring. Not satisfaction. Not vague, positive emotions.
Certainly not burning, quivering lust. Which she didn’t just have. She was full-on burning, quivering lust. It was ridiculous.
But she didn’t care. She was going on to the art studio, aided by the address he’d texted over. And she was going to screw his brains out, instead of staying at work late. So there.
Yes, she, Grace Song, who had always screwed with her brains firmly in, was about to go shake the brains out of a man. Via her excellent sex skills.
Which, she had, if she said so herself. And Zack seemed to confirm this by his desire to keep...well, having it with her.
She got out of the cab, dodging little puddles on the sidewalk as she went, and scurried into the building.
She sent him a text.
Where R you?
Upstairs.
Where upstairs? she typed, snorting.
Top floor. The whole top floor.
She stepped into the elevator and punched the up arrow, jiggling her knee while she waited for the lift to reach the desired floor.
When the doors opened, she stopped.
The room was massive, a wall of windows on the far side, drop cloths, tables, sculptures, canvases, all throughout the giant space.
“What is this?” she asked, walking inside, her heels clicking on the cement floor.
“It’s a space that Marsha has set aside for her clients to use. Though, she hates to let me in because I make a mess.”
Her heart stopped when she saw him. He was wearing a white T-shirt, streaked with black, his muscular arms covered in the same dirt. He had sweat tracks on his face and his hair was sticking up at opposing angles, like he’d run his fingers through it several different directions.
“Yeah...” she said, looking around. “You did, kind of.”
“And also the fire.”
She looked past him, at the wrought-iron stove behind him. “It’s warm in here.”
“I don’t play well with others,” he said. “It shouldn’t be too surprising.”
“You play pretty well with me....”
“When I have to keep my clothes on, people don’t like me much.”
“I like you,” she said, feeling girlish and silly as soon as the words left her mouth. She liked him. What the hell was this, junior high?
“Well, that’s only because you mostly don’t talk to me,” he said, turning to face the big, wrought-iron figure at the center of the room.
She was captivated by it. Completely. There was a heaviness to it, a sadness. She wasn’t sure how he’d managed to pour emotion into metal, but he had.
“This is amazing,” she said.
“It’s junk.”
“No, it’s not.”
“Yes, it is. I don’t know what it is except metal. It looks like everything else I’ve ever made. It has no inspiration.” He pushed his hand back over his hair again.
“You’re an artist,” she said, laughing. “You play it off, but you care about this. And you’re temperamental.”
“So?” He growled the word. “It’s my right.”
“You act like you don’t care at all. But you’re...”
“I’m a wreck over this. Happy? I don’t have anything else to care about. So I care about...these,” he said, sweeping his hand in the direction of the iron statue. “Not because people will see them, but because...”
Because they were his emotions. Because it was the way he was dealing with his grief. It felt intimate to see this, knowing his past. She wondered if it was what everyone else saw when they looked at his work, even if they didn’t realize it.
“Yeah,” she said, “I get it.”
“Do you?”
“Yes.”
“Well, then maybe you can tell me what this is supposed to be.”
“I don’t think I have an answer for you.” But it meant something that he’d asked, even if his words took on an exasperated tone.
“How was your day? Boss from hell poke you with a pitchfork?”
“No, but he gave me busywork to do like I’m an intern and not one of his most valued team members. He’s putting me in my place.”
“What a jerk. Because you wouldn’t screw a client?”
Grace shook her head. “I don’t know...maybe it’s just because of the way I handled it. I stepped out of line and I... I probably shouldn’t have. I should have...”
“Do you really think that, Grace? That you should just be polite when a guy starts talking about your ass in the middle of a business lunch? No. That is ridiculous. You’re supposed to feel guilty about dealing with someone else’s inappropriateness? No way.”
“I know,” she said, “I know you’re right but...but my parents taught me that you just work hard. They...they tried to instill in us the importance of that. I... I have a sister. Hannah. And she...”
“Let me guess, she’s a doctor or something hugely successful?”
“No,” Grace said. “She’s a junkie. A junkie who’s God knows where. We were taught all of the right things but she...she didn’t want to work hard. She didn’t care about school. Or even our parents enough. But I do. I care. And I want... No one gets anywhere by taking shortcuts, or checking out of life, Zack. Things happen, they aren’t always fair, but you have to be able to rise above it. And I’ve spent my whole life believing that, because I’ve seen what happens when you don’t. Because I won’t disappoint my parents the way she did.”
“To what end?”
“To not being a loser burnout,” she said, frustration rising in her.
“Bull, Gracie. There’s so much freaking ground between being so hard on yourself you feel guilty for telling some jerk to shove it and being a junkie—the two aren’t even in the same hemisphere. So you tell me, really, to what end?”
She took a deep breath, shrugging her shoulders. “Success,” she said.
“What about happiness?”
“What about it?” she asked. “It’s never mattered. I mean...no one says that, Zack, come on, my sister probably thinks she’s happy half the time, but she makes our parents miserable. She’s made me miserable. I don’t have to do that. I want to aim for...for a certain level of success. My parents worked really hard to give me the life that I have. It wasn’t about what made them happy, it was about...making things better. For me and for Hannah. She threw that away, but I won’t. Especially not when I’ve pushed everything else out of the way for it.”
“What things have you pushed aside for it?”
She shrugged, then tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. “Everything. Friends. My ex-boyfriend. I just... I ignore people when I get busy because something is going to slip and I know it can’t be the job. It can’t be my parents. I... I don’t know who I would be, to them or to me, if I wasn’t the best. I don’t know how I would matter.”
“Look, Grace, I’m sorry about your sister. I am. I’m sure... I’m sure you feel like you need to make up for the lack of it. I wouldn’t know how that is. I’m an only child, and my parents never expected big things from me. Nothing more than taking care of the family ranch, getting married, giving them grandkids. And they were never rushed about it. So... I don’t know, the family expectations were always manageable. So I can’t speak to disappointing parents, or wanting to make up for what a sibling has done. But what I can tell you is that I’ve had happiness. True, blinding happiness. Holding your child for the first time? There’s nothing deeper than that. It changes you. It grows your world. I’ve felt that, I’ve lived it. And I’ve had success. But only one at a time. Not one with the other. And I think...having had the happiness first? I would choose that, Grace. If you have a hope of that? Screw success. I would trade so much to go back to obscurity, and a small house in Oregon if my daughter could just be asleep in the room down the hall.” He lifted his head and looked at her, golden eyes so full of pain it cracked her heart. “The reason I care about all this so much? It’s only because I don’t have anything else to care about.”
“Maybe someday...”
“No,” he said, his words harsh, shotgun fire in the stillness of the room. “I had it. And the flip side of that is that I’ve lost it. There’s a limit to what one man can go through and... I don’t even think I could feel that again if I wanted to. I think it broke something in me.”
“You’re not really selling it, Zack.”
He laughed. “No, I guess not. But trust me on something, okay?”
“Sure.”
“You deserve happiness. You should have that. And you should figure out what it means for you.”
“I’ll keep that in mind.”
“You can go home,” he said. “I think I’m going to be here until I figure this out.”
She sat down in a chair near where he standing. “Then I guess I’ll be a while, too. Should we order food?”
He smiled, and it made her heart do a weird, flippy thing. And she didn’t even try to stop it. “Sure,” he said. “I could eat.”
“Great. Get to work.”
She watched him labor over the statue while she sat in the chair and ate noodles from a carton. She took off her jacket, he took off his shirt.
After about an hour she stood up and put the carton under his chin, lifting her chopsticks to his mouth. “Eat.”
He opened and took a bite, then glared at her. “Are you force-feeding me?” he asked around a mouthful of food.
“Yes. Because you didn’t stop to eat.”
“I’m pondering,” he said, crossing his arms over his bare chest.
She couldn’t help but ponder the drops of sweat running down his skin. She wanted to lick his body. All over. And then she wanted to hold him all night. She’d never felt this way about anyone before. And that was...well, it wasn’t what she’d bargained for.
It felt a lot like what she’d been missing in her previous relationships.
It felt a lot like she was falling for him.
Lusty. It’s just super extra lusty-pants stuff.
It was all it could be. He’d said himself, it would never be anything else ever.
“Well, chew and ponder at the same time,” she said.
“It’s good.”
“I know. One of my other favorite places. I don’t cook, if you were curious about that.”
“You don’t strike me as the type. I cook,” he said. “If you were wondering.”
“You cook?”
“Yes, because I also eat. And I’m single. And there isn’t much in the way of good takeout in Pine Ridge Falls.”
“Oh, seriously, that’s a place? It sounds like a hollow in a...made-up story with woodland creatures.”
“It’s a real place,” he said. “On the Oregon coast. And there are expanses of beach with no one there. Trees, mountains and not a single high-rise building.”
“Sounds like...a good place to visit.”
“That’s how I feel about the city.”
For some reason, that made her heart sink. Which was silly. Because it wasn’t like their relationship had staying power. It wasn’t like they had to want to live in the same place.
They just had to want to inhabit the same space, naked, for the next couple of weeks. This wasn’t about changing things, or finding deep feelings. It was about letting go, exploring this completely unknown level of chemistry.
That was all.
“Well, fine, but in the city you have takeout.”
“And at home I have the farmer’s market. And beef from local ranches...”
“We have Whole Foods.”
He laughed. “You do. But the traffic.”
“Yeah, I know. I know. But this is why you order groceries, and food, and have it come to your house. And then you don’t have to leave. Or see people.”
“Are you really blaming your job for your lack of a social life? Because it sounds to me like you’re kind of a willing hermit.”
“What about you? Do you have friends in Mayberry Glen?”
“Pine Ridge Falls. And not many. It’s hard. Everyone kind of looks at you with sad eyes all the time. Because in a small town everyone knows you and your business. And you can hardly go out and eat alone without people patting you on the back and asking if you’re okay.”
“Thus your cooking skills.”
“Thus. Plus, like you said, being alone is nice sometimes.”
“Boy, aren’t we a pair?”
“Yeah,” he said, a small smile tugging the corners of his lips. “We are.”
She wrapped one arm around his waist and kissed his mouth. He leaned in and deepened it, and she tried to wrap her other arm—still clutching the takeout—around his neck.
“I think we can call this finished,” he said. “I’m in the mood for something other than art.”
“Me, too.”
“Not here, though, because technically it’s a shared space and I don’t share. Not my studio time, and not you.”
And she feared that all her good intentions, her desire to remain detached, had crumbled in that moment. She did her best to keep it light. To keep it teasing. “Oooh. Possessive.”
“I’m old-fashioned that way. No other guys are invited to this party.”
“Other women?”
“Nope,” he said, “not even then.”
“Good. Because while certain extra, vibrating artificial body-parts are welcome... I’m not that adventurous.”
“Well, maybe we should see just how adventurous you are.”