《Kairos》5.
Advertisement
"Now, what's a nice girl like you doing in a time like this?"
Kairos hadn't had to do a lot to Sam to bring him up to the fashion standards of the day. Idly, I wondered if the seersucker suit had been from Sam's private collection—and if it wasn't, how in the world Wardrobe had managed to get one in his size on such a short notice. But regardless of who was responsible, I had to admit it was a clever choice. The blue stripe of the material was a near-match for Sam's eyes.
He leaned one massive arm over the cab door, grinning at me in a self-satisfied way that I had to remind myself wasn't endearing anymore. I didn't dignify him with an answer.
"Aw, c'mon, sugar. That was a pretty good line. At least give me a smile." He glanced further down the street. "Don't know where you're headed, but why don't you hop in? The meter's running."
"It's not too far away. I can walk." I could feel my stockings slowly rolling their way down my knees but I couldn't dare touch them. Not in front of Sam. "Besides, I wouldn't want to keep you from your appointment."
"Appointment?" he echoed before nodding in recognition. "Oh, that. Let's just say she wasn't my type. And if you don't mind me being a mite forward, I don't think that boy was your type none either, now was he?"
Sparing a glance behind me, I half-expected to see Henry emerge from the restaurant. The street was crowded with unfamiliar faces. "I guess not."
"C'mon, Ada." Sam slid his bulk over. "For old time's sake. Promised you lunch, didn't I?"
"It's a little past lunch, I think."
"Then I'll buy you dinner."
I puffed my cheeks, buying myself some time to think of another excuse. "No. I can't, sorry. Teddy would be furious."
"Only if he finds out." Sam gave a diabolical chuckle. "Boy's still keeping you in line, huh? How is he?"
"Teddy's all right." I was hoping a short answer would end the pleasantries, but Sam just looked at me expectantly. "He's working for Kairos, actually."
He nodded. "Thought I might have seen him when I checked in. What department?"
"Hair and Makeup." I waved a hand over my face. "He was my stylist today."
"That's a relief. I was gonna have a few choice words if he was working in Wardrobe." His gaze dipped down to take in my outfit, lingering a little too long on the hem of my skirt. "I think a nun's habit would've been more provocative."
"Gee, you sure know how to make a girl feel special." Somehow I managed to sound annoyed despite the telltale warmth spreading through my face. I shifted my weight, unsure if he was enjoying the view or if he could see that my stockings were slipping. "Look, Sam, I'm not sure what you're up to, but this isn't the time. I just got out of a bad date. All I really want to do is go home and eat my feelings."
"Sounds like fun." He extended his hand to me through the open window, expression softening. "Why don't you let me make it up to you?"
"What?"
"Seems a shame to let some no-count loser ruin your whole evening. C'mon." Sam patted the seat beside him. "I'll show you a good time. Maybe we'll find out why they call it the Roaring Twenties, huh?"
Advertisement
I hesitated.
It was a terrible idea, but the temptation was there. I'd seen Sam more in the past two weeks than I had the past two years and was curious to know how he'd been. Moreover, I wanted to know what his game was. While I seriously doubted Teddy's theory that Sam was behind the break-in at my apartment, I knew all too well that my ex was never without an ulterior motive. The coincidences were stacking up fast.
"All right." I opened the cab door and sat down. Despite the cool weather, the air inside felt uncomfortably warm. "But I've only got about three hours before I'm due back at Washington Square."
"You have my word."
I wasn't sure if I was ready to believe that or not.
Sam nodded at the front seat. "Driver, we're ready."
The car lurched forward, reentering the sluggish flow of traffic. Briefly, I made eye contact with our cab driver—a skittish-looking man who hid his red hair under a driver's cap—but it seemed like he was trying particularly hard not to eavesdrop. I searched for a seat belt only to remember they weren't mandatory yet. "Sorry, by the way. About before, in Little's office. You caught me at a bad time."
"So I'd gathered." Though Sam draped a casual arm over the back of the seat, he was working the ring on his right hand in circles. He always did that when he was nervous. "Gonna guess that date didn't end as planned, either."
"My 'eligible bachelor' turned out to be not as eligible as we thought. His lover threw a pot of spoiled chicken stock at me."
"Oh." Sam worked his jaw. "Yeah, reckon that'd do it."
The restaurant grew smaller and smaller in the distance. Rows of laundry fluttered on lines stretched between buildings, dark shadows against the jeweled sky.
I cleared my throat. "So, I guess you're single again."
"Yeah." He stared down at his ring, straightening it. "Penny got the farmhouse."
My stomach dropped out. "Oh, Sam. Your mother's farm. I'm so sorry."
It was strange to think that at one point, that farmhouse was almost ours.
"Don't be. Ain't the worst thing I lost in all this." He looked out the window. "If anything, I'm the one who ought to be sorry."
The last remnants of Chinatown had disappeared completely before I spoke again. "Why are you here?"
"Told you before."
"Yes, in that pithy one-liner double talk you're so fond of," I snapped. "I wrote your speeches, Sam. I know bullshit when I hear it. Why are you really here? In 1922 New York?"
His shoulders sunk with a deep exhale.
"Thought it was time for me to move on. But with my schedule, and my age, dating's been hard. Kairos fixes at least one of those problems. A whole evening out in just a couple minutes. Time travel is something else." He gave me some curious side-eye. "What about you?"
I couldn't tell him. The seat pulled at my skin like adhesive as I fidgeted. "I think I told you once about my grandmother."
He nodded. "The one you were named after, rest her soul."
My smile betrayed me. I hadn't expected him to remember such a small detail, though I should have. He'd always been good at making someone feel like they were the center of his entire universe. I guess it was a necessary skill for politics. "Maybe she was right after all. That's why all my relationships end in disasters. I was born in the wrong time."
Advertisement
"Maybe we both were." Sam thumbed his ring again.
"Really." I yanked at the tops of my stockings through my skirt discreetly. "Where you think do you belong?"
His eyes rolled to the ceiling in thought. "Well, don't know if I belong there, but I think I'd have an awful lot of fun in old Vegas. Say what you want, but the mob understood class."
"I shouldn't be surprised," I said around a laugh. "That sounds just like you."
The corner of his mouth quirked in a smile that turned bittersweet as he looked at me. "Where do you think you'll end up?"
"Oh, well," I began, at a loss of how to answer my own question. "I'm not sure. I'll know when I find it."
It was as though the words knocked the wind out of him. He settled back in his seat at that, breathing shallowly. A bead of sweat dripped from his hairline.
"Soon as I saw you in Little's office I knew I was only kidding myself," he said, voice hoarse. "I thought I could just say goodbye, but—you, with somebody else. It'll kill me. I can't move on. I don't know if I ever will."
"Sam." Was I pleased or nauseated by his confession? "No. If you're looking to start over, you're about two years too late."
A single window—front seat, passenger side—had been cracked open, but the tepid breeze that passed through smelled of exhaust belched from passing cars. Sam took a handkerchief and dabbed at his forehead. "Better check your watch. I'm not two years too late. I'm about ninety years too early."
"You're being ridiculous."
"You know what's ridiculous?" There was a bite to his tone as he stuffed the handkerchief back in its pocket. "A girl going back a hundred years in search of a beau that's probably gonna choke on a goldfish with a flagpole up his ass, when she's got somebody right here. Somebody who loves her. Somebody who'd do anything for her. Even chase her across time."
"Maybe we have gone back in time, because I've definitely heard this story before and I know how it ends." It hurt to see him flinch under my words, but I knew I had to stand my ground. "You made your choice."
"Adaliah, I am sorry." He reached for my hand but I jerked it away. His fingers curled closed, drifting back to his lap. "You were right. You were always right, you know, 'bout everything. But I was scared. No matter how much you love somebody, throwing away everything for 'em is a hard thing to do—"
"—Unless you've got nothing to lose," I finished. It was a hollow victory to see Sam blink away tears. Soon I was blinking them away too, the world outside the cab's windows turning to dripping oil paints. "Damn it. We can't do this. Things have changed too much."
"Can't we try?" he whispered.
The cab was pulling into a tall building framed by the dappled hues of Central Park. It was like a fairy tale palace in the middle of Fifth Avenue. Its many windows and pearl green roof glistened like a jewelry box in the last lights of the day.
He reached for my hand again. "Please? We've got a whole evening ahead of us. You deserve a lot more than whatever disappointment that sad sack doled out tonight. Let me do this. One night."
I tried to formulate a response, some reason to refuse him, but the stifling air of the taxi had turned my thought process to mush. His hand dwarfed mine.
"One night," he said again. He leaned closer, his deep voice so low that it registered in my core like the thump of bass on the dance floor. "And if you can so much as remember that boy's name in the morning, I'll never bother you again."
I shuddered.
This was insane.
It was reckless.
And it was easy.
"Okay," I exhaled as the car came to a stop beneath the palace's awning. "Okay. One night."
Before I could react, he kissed my cheek. The world paused, hanging on my halted breath. Stunned, I giggled reflexively, but it felt like it was coming from someone else.
Sam scrambled from the backseat, nearly hip-checking a valet out of the way in the process. With a curled lip, the uniformed man backed off, lingering awkwardly at the gilded double doors.
The rush of cold air almost stole my breath as Sam held the car door for me. The color of early evening settled over him, painting the laugh lines at his eyes; creases I'd put there myself years before, when things were easy.
"Welcome to the Plaza Hotel," he murmured against my neck as I stepped out onto the pavement. "Let's go. The concierge has been expecting us."
Maybe we really could go back.
***
The hotel suite removed any lingering doubt that Sam hadn't known exactly what was going to happen that night. Fire glowed from the hearth. Tiger lilies, my favorite, covered the marble mantelpiece. A matching bouquet rested on the baby grand tucked away in the corner. White packages topped with turquoise satin bows overflowed from the tufted settee and a pair of wing back chairs.
Sam had always been lavish with his gifts—especially for me, and especially when he was sorry.
His reflection grinned at me from the art nouveau mirror over the fireplace. With the click of the door behind us, he looked cartoonishly devious, as though he might swallow the key. "Like the arrangements? Not exactly easy to find here, but I think it was worth it."
I took off my cloche. Between it and the humidity of the taxi, my curls had turned to frizz. "Who did you bribe?"
Some of the smugness drained from his face. "You're killing me, Ada. The flowers came honest. All this came honest."
Scrunching my hair up did little to revitalize it. I sighed and threw the hat onto the entryway table. "I meant about Kairos. Whose palm did you grease to find out where I was going? Ms. Little doesn't seem the type."
He held up his hands defensively. "You know they keep their mouths shut over there. Terms of Service and all."
"Then how? You can't expect me to believe you just so happened to be driving by that particular street corner, of all the times and all the street corners in New York City."
"Stranger things have happened, ain't they?" He shrugged out of his seersucker jacket. Giving it a cursory glance, he beat the dirt off of it before hanging it on a rack by the door. "You know, it's funny. The whole time travel dating thing's awful convenient but it sure does take the magic out of chance happenings. Like when I met you."
With his outermost layer gone, I could tell that Sam was still every bit the over-sized brute I'd met in my second year of law school during my internship at the offices of St. Laurent & Broux. The picture of a former golden boy gone to seed, Sam had never really adjusted to a life that didn't involve loading up on carbs before a game. His body was a knot of muscle that hadn't disappeared; it was just buried beneath years of sinful excess. Me and my food blog inspired midnight binges hadn't helped matters. And judging from a generous swell of Sam's belly that I didn't recall—the divorce hadn't, either.
"I don't think there was anything chance about us." My gaze finally met his. I was fairly sure I saw his cheeks deflate, like he had been holding his breath while I was inspecting him. Sweet, but Sam was a little bit past sucking it in. "You were in a bad marriage. If it hadn't been me, it would've been someone else."
"Now that ain't true. I wasn't some common philanderer looking for a side girl, no matter what the papers said." He leaned heavily on the back of the settee. "Ada, a fella thinks he knows what love is until he falls head first into it. I love you. And I miss you."
The quiet became so clear I found myself picking out the punchlines from a radio show someone was listening to on the next floor.
Big, wonderful, generous Sam.
Secretive, underhanded, bag-of-dirty-tricks Sam.
I wanted to say I felt the same way. I really did. But years later, the wound I carried was still wet, still fresh, spilling blood and bile with every beat of my heart. I couldn't miss Sam. Not yet.
I could only miss that he was easy.
The silence whittled away his smile until there was hardly anything left of it. He gestured to the presents spread out on the furniture. "C'mon now, I wanna see your face when you open these."
The bow on the largest package fell away easily as I picked it up. Rose perfume rolled from pale pink tissue paper. Nestled inside was a dress.
The handkerchief hemline uncurled and pooled on the floor in soft chiffon and silk the color of peacocks. A smaller box revealed a matching feathered fascinator. Both were detailed with tiny gold beads and amber-colored stones that seemed to pulse in the ebb and flow of the firelight.
He looked at me with hopeful eyes. "You like it?"
I held the dress against me. Unlike the clothes Wardrobe had provided, this was not a sack. It was sleeveless, with thin, beaded straps. The back was scandalously low, even by modern standards, with nothing but a cape of gauzy material to lend me modesty. "You don't think I'll stand out too much in it?"
He picked up another box and took the seat it left behind. "As a matter of fact, I was hoping you would."
The next gift was a pair of silk opera gloves. Then stockings and a garter belt that provoked a blush from me and a darkly mischievous laugh from Sam. The rest contained jewelry—a choker and string after string of pearls dotted with pea-sized insets.
"Sam." I looked up at him, almost begging. "This must have cost a fortune."
"Yeah." He leaned back, arms folded over his belly. "But it's worth it. You know, I always saw a lot of myself in Jay Gatsby. Just a nobody chasing after unattainable women by throwing money at 'em 'til they can't help but trip over it."
Swallowing back an acidic reply, I sat down on the arm of his chair. It seemed cruel to pick a fight so early in the evening, and after Sam had gone through so much trouble. "Don't say that."
"It's true, though; a small wonder you climbed into that cab at all." The gentle weight of his hand on my hip coaxed me towards his lap but the flutter in my stomach told me that was dangerous. "You're too sweet for your own good."
I smoothed the pale brown gingham of his bowtie. "Or maybe I just know what I like."
Briefly, Sam met my gaze again. I flashed him a reassuring smile, but he looked away just as quickly. "Entirely too sweet."
The far-off applause of the radio show gave way to the soaring sound of a big band. One of his wingtips tapped to the rhythm absently in the ensuing silence.
That gave me an idea. "When was the last time you danced?"
He blinked in surprise, his eyebrows cresting and falling in thoughtful waves. "I might have done the Electric Slide for the Policeman's Charity Ball three months ago..."
"Okay, let me rephrase: When was the last time you danced and it wasn't for a publicity stunt?"
Sam could see exactly where this was leading as he pushed himself from the wing back, wincing as his elbow gave a sharp crack. "That would be three years ago, at the townhouse. With you."
"That's what I thought." I worked the heel off of one of my Mary Janes, kicking it off playfully.
With a wicked grin, Sam stooped to help me with the other. "It was your birthday, and we finally got around to those foxtrot lessons I'd promised you."
"It looked so much easier in Dirty Dancing—" I didn't get a chance to finish that thought, rendered speechless as I felt Sam hook his thumb beneath the roll of my stocking. I remembered how to breathe one inch at a time as silk slipped down my leg.
"You been fighting with these old things all evening, sugar," he growled slyly as he set to work on the other leg. His hands lingered on my calf just a moment too long, but I didn't exactly mind. "But as I recall, your dancing career came to a tragic end when you tried to two-step right through the coffee table."
"I might have come out of retirement last week." I cleared my throat, hoping it would return to its normal range. "I waltzed with my first Kairos date."
Sam's mustache twitched with an aborted laugh. "Mr. Chicken Stock?"
I winced. "That's the one. He wasn't too impressed with my footwork, either."
"That's only 'cause you never been taught." Pulling me to my feet, Sam's fingers laced through mine. His other hand moved to the small of my back. "Of course, it might be a little more timely if I taught you how to Charleston..."
"You know how?" I stifled a giggle.
"Not really, but I've seen enough to get the gist of it. There's a lot of head bobbing," he said as he took me through a few steps. Despite their simplicity, I found myself a beat off, dragged around more like a rag-doll than a dance partner. "Posture, Ada. Keep your head up."
I threw my shoulders back and feigned a haughty expression. "And remind me why you went for football in college instead of dance?"
Advertisement
- In Serial56 Chapters
Destroying a Monster (Xavier)
When Aubrey moved to a small town, no one warned her about him. She didn't know that he was dangerous. She wasn't told the small town stories. So when she runs into Xavier one day she has no idea who she is dealing with. Xavier is the leader of a motorcycle club that has terrified his small town since his parents were killed. He is ruthless and has made a point to shut off all emotions. Aubrey refuses to believe anyone is that bad. She refuses to fear him and in doing so, puts herself in a dangerous position. Now it is up to Xavier to decide weather to leave her to take care of her self or give in and go against his nature to be the hero.Thank you @honey_sprinkles for the cover!! Heavy editing on seconds half of story!!!!!
8 495 - In Serial61 Chapters
The Unspoken Heart
[ Completed ]Zoha's life has been weaved with tragical fate. Her parents died in a tragic car crash, when she was four. Her Dadi, or grandma, raised her with relentless love and care. She bloomed into an ambitious girl, studying to become an architect. Opposite of her was her cousin, Manal, daughter of her Zafar uncle, who lived in California, owning a restaurant. Manal always resented Zoha since the time she was really little. She is a conceited, spoiled girl, always proving to be better than Zoha.One day when Dadi leaves her too, Zoha feels she is forever left alone. There is no one who is close to her as her Dadi was. She feels weak and discouraged without support. And as much she tried to come out of the grief of loss, Manal's enmity intensifies and she has planned to kick her out of the house, by taunting and demeaning her self-esteem. But Manal's brother Shehryaar who comes to Pakistan from California, is a generous, kind person. He treats Zoha rather warmly. When Manal pressurizes Zoha to leave her house, because she stands as a problem to her, Zoha is all broken from inside. She can't move away from a house in which she grew up. She has memories of her childhood with dadi there. She doesn't realize when Manal's hate is that strong to throw her out of the house, so there is a strong pull of Shehryaar's kindness and love that keeps bringing her back. ******************************************************This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictiously and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishment, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
8 202 - In Serial36 Chapters
Falling for a Star (Complete)
I had never paid much attention to celebrity gossip or what was going on in Hollywood because that was so far from the lifestyle I lived as a poor college student, working as a barista to save up for my own house after graduation. But then, without my knowledge, my Dad submitted my name into a talk show sweepstakes to win a week with Hollywood superstar Dylan Chase, to see what it's like to live like a celebrity for a week. My Dad thought it would be the perfect chance for me to get out of Iowa, see the world and have an adventure for once. I was dreading leaving home, flying for the first time and going by myself all the way to L.A. Plus the idea of spending a week with an arrogant, rich, snobby actor that was probably the worst kind of womanizer didn't sound like my idea of fun. What I found when I got there and met Dylan was the total opposite; a man that was humble, hard working, easy to talk to, and down to earth. Spending a week in Paradise in the guest house of Dylan Chase's Malibu mansion right on the beach, attending a movie premiere on his arm, shopping on Rodeo Drive and eating at five star restaurants was like a dream come true, but sleeping in his bed and falling for a guy from a completely different world than me was never part of the plan because we could never end up together. WARNING - 18+ Very mature sexual scenes.Highest Rankings: #2 in Erotic Romance out of 12,000 stories.#1 in Celebrity out of 18,000 stories
8 447 - In Serial31 Chapters
My Love Story 1 || [✔️]
Урангоо гэх охин Солонгос хөвгүүдийн хамтлаг болох Astro-ын фэн ба 12р ангиа төгсөөд солонгост их сургуульд орсноор үйл явдал эхэлнэ. Тэрээр fantagio энтертайментэд стилист буюу загвар зохион бүтээгчээр дадлагийн ажил хийхээр болж өөрийн хамгаас хайрт хамтлагийн Ча Инүтэй танилцах болно♥️♥️Энэхүү бичвэрт дурьдагдсан үйл явдал бүр бичээч миний санаанаас гарсан болно.
8 181 - In Serial20 Chapters
Divinity ✔
[Completed] Corrine Adara has a secret so vital that if anyone were to find out, her and her entire family would be executed immediately. As a result, she lives in hiding among her family until one fateful night, she meets the Mad Prince of Daemons.Nikolas Veil is known as the Mad Prince for good reason. One could say he holds two spirits in his body; their personalities so different that they go by different names. Niko is responsible, sweet, and gentlemanly. Kol is violent, devious, and dangerous. Neither can agree on a single thing until they meet Corrine.When Corrine's secret is revealed to the Prince of the Daemons, she's certain her and her family will be executed. Instead, in a surprising turn of events, Prince Nikolas demands her to marry him. And Corrine, unfortunately, has no choice but to accept.Excerpt:"Look at me," He growled, releasing his grip to grasp my face in his claws dangerously. He forcefully turned me to face him, but I just as firmly held my eyes closed tight. "Let me go," I demanded breathlessly."Look at me or I'll rip your eyes out right now," Kol demanded in turn. His grip tightened and his other hand lifted, reaching with those sharp claws no doubt to pluck my eyes from my skull. My eyes flew open and I gasped in panic, looking at those hovering fingertips.He froze above me, stunned. Tears stung at my eyes as I realized they were fully bright, molten gold before a Daemon; meaning I was doomed regardless. Daemons had wiped out all Seraph already. They wouldn't allow me to live and they would punish my father for hiding me."Don't hurt my family," I pleaded abruptly, a sob escaping my throat as I began to tremble under him."You can hide your eyes?" Kol asked with great interest. I choked on a response, but nodded quickly in fear. "Don't rip my eyes out," I requested tearfully."I would never."
8 180 - In Serial3 Chapters
We all need love (Mother Miranda x Fem Reader)
Started: 06/21/2021Finished: 07/18/2021Y/N = Your NameN/N = Nick NameL/N = Last NameE/C = Eye ColorSoooooo lets get into this
8 189

