Chapter Twelve – Angela
Chapter Twelve
Angela
My afternoon was booked with one of my long-standing appointments: an art deco framed back piece done Waterhouse-style of a woman with long hair contemplating herself in a mirror.
The woman I was tattooing used to be a showgirl, but had retired upwards into the arms of a RV-sales millionaire.
This tattoo was a commitment for her—after getting this, there was almost no way she could go back to her old life.
I found it ironic that someone would spend their whole lives showing people other parts of their body, only to finally decorate those parts to be privately seen.
Three hours in, and I could tell she was over it, twitching and squeaking—especially when I got to the hair spooling near the soft skin of her waist. I got to a good stopping point then asked, “Ready to call it a day?”
“Yes, please,” she said, slumping into the chair. “Longest session yet?”
“Yeah,” I said, spraying water and sliding it away with a towel. “We’re almost there. Just a few more hours.”
She dismounted the chair, a little wobbly with endorphins, into the waiting arms of her older husband.
“It’s gorgeous, honey. Just as gorgeous as you,” he said.
His sleeves were rolled up, revealing his own faded Marine tattoos.
I knew better than to offer to touch them up for him. Some tattoos were best left alone.
He steadied her as I taped her up, and I couldn’t help but smile at them. He came with her each session, to drive and support her, and in the mirror I could see the way she looked at him for strength when the needles hurt. They were genuinely happy.
Would I ever get to be?
“So, three hours?” the Marine said, interrupting my thoughts.
I glanced at the clock. “Precisely.”
He pulled out a wad of hundreds, licked his thumb, and counted several out for me—my time, plus a tip. I tossed my gloves in the trash, then took the cash. “Thanks, as always.”
“See you next month?” she said, beaming at me. She’d rebounded into the happy part post-tattoo—the primal pleasure your body took after weathering pain.
“Of course,” I said, leaning in for a very gentle hug.
I gave my wrist a thirty minute break, paid some bills, and did boss-like stuff, which included studiously not cramping my old artists’ style while keeping an eye on the newer ones.
We generally had a probationary period of three months where you had to not only prove you were decent, but that you were trainable, and that you could play well with others.
I’d stopped being surprised by how many artists failed long ago.
I wasn’t sure if it was supervision by a woman or supervision at all—a lot of artists couldn’t take suggestions.
And I had high standards, for customer service, quality, cleanliness, and punctuality that my artists met or exceeded all day, every day.
All of which was to say I was in charge at all times. Which was why truly telling Mark thanks but no thanks tonight should be easy, right? Right.
Then I saw my next client get out of her car through my nice new Mark-provided glass window.
I picked Rabbit up from his afterschool program and drove us home. His favorite dinner was my favorite bribe.
“Are you going out again?” he asked over a chicken stick.
I usually only went out one or two times a week, on weekends not weekdays. “Yeah. Is that okay?” If he said it wasn’t, then I could call Mark and postponえ—
“Can I play videogames?” His voice rose in excitement.
My shoulders sank. Betrayed by my own son and his computer. “After you do your homework.”
“Did I hear someone say homework?” my mother shouted from the living room where she was watching Wheel of Fortune. “I love homework!”
The expression Rabbit made then—caught between a ridiculous grin and an eye-roll—I could tell he was reaching that age when the adults in his life wouldn’t be cool anymore soon, but we weren’t there yet.
I laughed at him then he laughed with me, and I felt my heart stretch tight.
I would do anything for him, give my life for him.
There had to be some way to never tell him he was Gray’s.
“You okay, Mom?” he asked, hopping out of his chair and pushing it back in.
“Yeah,” I said, forcing a smile. “Go help your Grandma learn fractions. It’ll be good for her brain in her old age.”
“I heard that!”
He grabbed his plate and my plate and I swatted affectionately at his bottom as he ran on by.
The one fry I’d eaten floated on a sea of stomach acid as I went upstairs to my room.
What do you wear when you’re fairly certain you’ll be breaking up with someone?
I’d been a nun for Halloween a few years back, maybe I could see if it still fit.
Habits seemed very forgiving. I snorted at myself and then opened up my closet doors.
What I wound up with was a swingy black shirt-dress that had a fabric belt.
It was cute, but perhaps a little more churchy than date-y.
I put on cute black flats, small gold hoops and soft pink lipstick, and redid my eyes a little, but not too much.
Still altogether church-ish, although perhaps a stylish and fashionable one.
I was pulling my coat out of the closet when the doorbell rang.
I made it through the gauntlet of my mother and son and answered the door after peeking through the peephole to make sure it was really Mark and not some biker.
Which was, in and of itself, the biggest reason I needed to break up with him. I’d have to be looking over my shoulder for the rest of my life. I couldn’t condemn anyone else I loved to that torment too.
I swung the door open and plastered a smile on. “Hey Mark.”
“Hey beautiful,” he said. He offered me his hand and I stepped outside.
We made it down to his car silently together, him guiding me toward the passenger side.
“So it’s like that, is it?” he said, looking from the dress to me with a bemused expression.
I pretended not to know what he meant. “Hmm?”
“Hmm,” he hmmed back, with a bit more gravel, and swung the door to his beemer open.
We drove the same path we had the night before, back to the Fleur de Lis. “I’m not dressed for that,” I complained, the second I realized where we were going. I wasn’t dressed for a night out here. What if we were skipping a restaurant and going to a club?
“Relax, it’ll be fine.”
Easy for him to say. He parked and tossed the valet his keys, again without giving his name or taking the tag, took my hand, and pulled me inside.
The floor of the casino was like a cross between a ballroom and an art gallery.
Lines of slot machines stopped where baroquely carved roulette and black jack tables began.
People, classy people, wearing suits and satin, milled near each of these, with drinks in their hands, talking to their friends, blowing on one another’s dice.
I let Mark lead me through and take me to an elevator on the floor’s far side. In typical Vegas fashion, I’d be lost for a bit now even if I wanted to leave—all casinos were built half-labyrinth.
We stepped into the elevator and it lifted us, its glass walls giving us a view of the entire place, and it seemed to keep going for an incredibly long time.
“Where are we going?”
“Mon Toit—my roof,” he translated for me. The elevator slowed and the doors opened, proving him right.
It was a restaurant with wall to wall views of downtown.
Ever since they’d bumped the legal height restrictions up, casinos had been nudging higher—and the Fleur was currently the highest one of all.
I walked through the doors and towards the windows like a moth to a flame.
And then I noticed that we were apparently the only people here.
“What?” I whispered, in slow realization.
All the tables were set, but it was just us—Mark came up behind me, and pulled a chair out at the table with the best view.
“Care to join me?” he asked. I walked over to him and sat down, letting him tuck my chair in. He took the seat on the opposite side, and as soon as we were seated, waiters appeared as if by magic, bringing glasses of water and dark red wine.
“There’re some things I need to tell you, Angela. I think some of them you maybe already know—which is why you’re pulling back. All I ask—all I want—is to give you context.”
I swallowed. This was a turn. “Sure.”
“You know how I’m a lawyer?”
I nodded and took hold of my water glass.
“Well I haven’t exactly been forthright with you. And you—you never really asked any questions—so I never had to come up with answers.”
It was hard to keep the confusion off my face. “Just spit it out, Mark.”
“I’m head legal counsel here. And I’m kind of a big deal.”
My eyebrows rose. “Big enough to close out the entire restaurant for us deal?”
He gave me a rueful grin. “Only on a weekday. Weekends, too many people use this place for marriage proposals, I wouldn’t want to ruin their fun.”
“So, you’re a big rich lawyer. So what?” I said. “Oh—God—is this where I find out that I’m the other woman?”
He laughed. “No—no, no, no.”
“Then what? Because while cash is nice and all—"
“You remember all those movies in the 90’s?” he asked and gave me a hopeful look, gesturing to indicate our surroundings.
“Barely—I was pretty young,” I said, as realization dawned. Before new Vegas there was old Vegas, and old Vegas’d been run by the mafia. My boyfriend was a big rich lawyer—for the mob.
I wasn’t sure if I was going to laugh or cry or laugh-cry. I grabbed the wine glass and took a huge swig of it, then another, as Mark studied me from across the table.
My wolf—me—one of us—had unerring instincts, dammit. To find the biggest, baddest guy in the room and fall for him.
Even when I thought I wasn’t—I was.