Reckless tsoss-2

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Reckless tsoss-2 Page 24

by Devon Hartford


  Mental note: buy novelty glasses ASAP.

  I chuckled, because I was seriously considering doing it. Sure, she’d see right through the disguise, but I’d be willing to bet she’d think I was two handshakes away from being a serial killer after that. It could work as a deterrent.

  Samantha, on the other hand, would probably think it was hilarious. Maybe Brandon was right. Maybe I did need to paint Samantha.

  But I didn’t think I’d get her to sit nude.

  Then again, the Mona Lisa wasn’t a nude. Neither was the Girl with the Pearl Earring.

  It could work.

  I walked back into the house. In the living room, I opened the liquor cabinet and poured myself an inch of bourbon, straight up. After my long day in the studio, I needed to unwind.

  I threw back the entire glass in one long swallow. I poured myself another inch and walked into the studio.

  The painting of Isabella was coming along faster than I’d expected. Most of it was still rough, but the face was finished and was as flawless as Isabella’s. My technical mastery of oil paint was clearly evident.

  The only problem?

  It wasn’t doing anything for me. Sure, her face looked photo-real, but it was lifeless. I’d captured her pouty, full lips, her sultry eyes, her delicate jawline. She looked textbook sexy, which meant boring sexy. Cardboard. Cookie-cutter.

  There was no spirit to the painting.

  I’m sure I could sell it to some pin-up art collector for ten grand. But that would be taking five steps backward with my pricing. The painting of Isabella needed to go for at least $80,000 if I was going to build my name. Not $10,000, of which I’d get $5,000, meaning $3,000 after taxes, another $500 for supplies, leaving me with $2,500, which was not worth the weeks I would end up putting into it by the time I was done.

  I gulped down the rest of the bourbon in my glass.

  Maybe the painting would come together when I finished her body.

  I went into the living room to pour myself more bourbon.

  Chapter 15

  SAMANTHA

  Romeo and I walked into Professor Bittinger’s class extra early. I wanted to get there long before the woman had reason to give my grief.

  The room was empty when we arrived, so Romeo and I set up on sculpting tables next to each other, pulling out our sculpting tools and armature wires from the previous class.

  “Do you think Hunter will be back today?” Romeo asked as he peeled clay off of his armature.

  I did the same with my clay, preparing my wire stick-figure for today’s sculpting. “Yeah, he told me he’s going to be here all quarter.”

  Romeo frowned. “When did he tell you that?”

  “When he followed me to my car after the first day of class.”

  Romeo’s face lit up. “Hunter is stalking you? You lucky bitch!”

  I rolled my eyes. “You can have him.”

  “I think I’d need to get breast implants first.” Romeo pushed his chest muscles together with the palms of his hands. “I’d have awesome cleavage, don’t you think?”

  “Are you saying you would go girl, just to get Hunter? I mean, have a sex change operation?”

  Romeo rolled his eyes dismissively. “I may be gay, Sam, but I’m not crazy. I would never behead my Little Romeo.” He patted his crotch affectionately. “Poor little guy, Sam here would have you sliced off with one of those little cigar-cutter guillotines. But she totally didn’t mean it,” he looked at me pointedly, “did you Sam? Tell him you’re sorry,” he demanded.

  “I’m not apologizing to your pants, Romeo!”

  Romeo looked heartbroken. Then he cupped his hand to his ear. “What did you say, Little Romeo? Uh-huh. Mmm-hmm. Oh, Little Romeo, how rude! Don’t talk like that about Sam!” Romeo’s face turned sad. In a grave voice he said, “You really hurt his feelings, Sam. You really ought to apologize.” Romeo raised his eyebrows expectantly.

  I was so swept up in Romeo’s genuine outpouring of emotion, I actually whispered, “I didn’t mean it, Little Romeo.” I giggled, and looked Romeo in the eyes. “How was that?”

  “Excellent, now just give Little Romeo a hug and a kiss, and everything will be fine.”

  “I’m not hugging and kissing your Little Romeo!” I blurted, perhaps louder than I’d intended now that the room was full of students.

  “I’m kidding, Sam,” he smiled. “Little Romeo only likes boys. Just like his old man.”

  Chuckling, I shook my head.

  “Good afternoon, class!” Marjorie Bittinger said as she walked in the door. “Sorry I’m late. Traffic was terrible due to an accident on the Five.”

  I guess it was okay for her to be late and full of weak excuses.

  “I’m sure the only accident she had on the freeway was in her pants,” Romeo said. He wrinkled his nose.

  I giggled, but, ew. “I think that’s her perfume.”

  “Smells like pewfume to me,” he winced. “Did somebody let a skunk in?” he whispered.

  “Are you through?” Professor Bittinger asked, suddenly standing behind Romeo. How the hell did she always do that? Did she have a teleportation device in her pocket, or just trapdoors scattered throughout the room for her to pop up through?

  “All done,” Romeo said casually while holding up his cleaned armature wire, purposefully misunderstanding her.

  Marjorie scowled at him. “I’m glad to see that you have paid such fastidious attention to your 1/12th scale armature, because you won’t be needing it today,” she said victoriously. Marching to the center of the room, she said, “Today we’ll start on our 1/3rd scale sculpture of the model. We will be using the large armature wire you purchased at the beginning of the term.” She turned to me whip-fast. “Did you remember to purchase the large wire, Miss Smith?”

  I struggled to not stick my tongue out at her. “Yes I did, Professor—” I almost said Bitchinger, “…Bittinger.”

  She glared at me like she’d known what I’d been thinking. Then she closed her eyes dismissively before turning away, as if merely closing her eyes would magically banish me to Hell or Hades, or wherever she hoped I’d rot for eternity.

  For the next hour, we built a much larger wire stick-figure man.

  When I was finished, I noticed Hunter Blakeley walk into the room. He was preppie-sexy and had the aviator sunglasses on again. He walked directly to the professor and they chatted for awhile.

  Marjorie Bittinger transformed into her usual preening, flirty self when Hunter was in close proximity. The way Hunter acted, you’d think they were dating.

  “Do you think those two are hooking up?” Romeo whispered.

  “It seems that way.”

  Hunter walked into the corner and changed into his robe behind a hanging curtain. Marjorie stole glances at him the whole time.

  “She’s peeping at him!” Romeo whispered, faux-offended. “You think she’d wait until he was standing naked in front of the entire room. She’s totally desperate.”

  I could relate to that feeling of desperately wanting something you couldn’t have. I felt like I’d been seeing as much of Christos lately as Marjorie was getting to see of Hunter at the moment. Glimpses.

  With any luck, that would change this evening when I had dinner with Christos. I crossed my fingers. And my toes.

  Hunter walked out from behind the curtain and onto the dais wearing his robe. He flung it off with a flourish.

  Sigh, yeah, he was totally hot.

  I noticed a gleam in Marjorie’s eyes as she pretended to give Hunter’s naked body a cursory inspection. She tried to play it off like no big deal. But her hunger was obvious.

  “Hunter,” the professor said, “please take your pose. Class, grab some clay from the warmer, and go to it.”

  It turned out the bigger sculpture needed way more clay. I had to go back to the warmerator three times before I had enough. I slapped clay onto my armature, and went to work with a wooden paddle smoothing out the planes. I was getting the hang of
this sculpting thing, and had my voodoo man blocked in pretty quickly.

  Minutes later, I discovered that working larger was more difficult. There was a lot more room to screw things up. I was getting hung up on one of the legs. The knee looked wrong and the calf was three sizes too big.

  “Your paddle,” Marjorie demanded.

  “Huh? Oh.” I handed her the wooden tool, which looked like a small spatula.

  Despite Professor Bittinger’s lack of interpersonal pleasantries when it came to anyone other than Hunter, she was amazingly skilled at sculpting. She plucked off a hunk of clay from the calf muscle on my sculpt. Then, with three quick swipes of my paddle, she transformed my wonky clay leg into a work of art.

  “Wow, Professor. That looks amazing.”

  She handed me the paddle unceremoniously and walked away.

  I rolled my eyes behind her back. Was that supposed to be teaching, or just showing off? Despite her clinical beauty, she was a robot in the social arena. She was totally hotistic.

  During the break, Hunter robed himself and bee-lined right over to me. I couldn’t help but notice Marjorie’s glaring eyes glued on him. I felt like running out of the room, just to get away from Hunter. Either he didn’t realize or didn’t care that he was souring my relationship with my professor, which would probably have an impact on my grade.

  “Hey, beautiful,” he smiled. “Been thinking about you.”

  I almost said, “That’s funny, because I haven’t,” but realized such a brush-off might sound like flirtation. I didn’t want to be a rude Bitchinger either, so I opted for bland, “Hey, Hunter.”

  “You remembered my name?” He grinned. “That’s a start.”

  “If you say so.”

  “I do,” he smiled.

  I swear, everything with Hunter was a come on.

  “Hiiii, Hunter,” Romeo smiled longingly. I think he batted his eyelashes. At least, he may as well have based on his fawning tone.

  Hunter glanced at him dismissively. “Hey, dude.”

  “You remember Romeo, don’t you, Hunter?” I shifted positions so Romeo was between me and him. “I need to, ah, get some more clay.” I didn’t, but it was a worthy excuse.

  Too bad Hunter followed me to the warmerator. I opened the door and pretended to scan for what I needed.

  “How was your weekend?” he asked.

  “Fine.”

  “Aren’t you going to ask me about mine?”

  “No.”

  “It was pretty awesome.”

  “I’m sure.”

  “Me and some buddies went skiing at Mountain High. Powder was insane. Do you ski?”

  “No,” I lied.

  “I could teach you. I bet you’d be great, with some expert instruction.”

  How the hell did he manage to turn everything I said into an opportunity to hit on me harder? He was a genius. Maybe if I led him toward Marjorie, she could take over for me. But she was on the far side of the room, talking to a couple of students. Weren’t there any other available females for him to honey badger?

  Hunter chatted me up for the remainder of the break. Luckily, it lasted only five minutes. It seemed like five-hundred and five. Sigh.

  Who would’ve thought a hot guy hitting on you could be so tiresome?

  The class resumed sculpting when Hunter returned to his pose in the dais.

  At one point, I glanced beside me at Romeo’s sculpture and noticed his had a huge erect dick.

  I clapped my clay-covered hand over my mouth before I guffawed.

  “What are you doing!” I whispered.

  He looked confused. “What do you mean?” he asked innocently

  “His thing!” I whisper-squealed. “It’s not that big!”

  “You sure?” Romeo asked doubtfully. He lifted his monocle to his eye, squinched it into place, and glanced repeatedly between Hunter and his sculpture. “Looks right to me,” he said seriously, then lowered his monocle, allowing it to pendulum from its string.

  “Yours is like twenty sizes too big. And his isn’t at attention.”

  Confused, he said, “It was earlier, wasn’t it?”

  “No!”

  Romeo shrugged sheepishly. “Silly me. I must have been day-dreaming.” He pressed the clay penis down with two fingers, causing it to break off and topple to the floor. “Oops!” He bent over and picked it up, holding it in front of me. “You ever hear that song ‘Detachable Penis’ by the band King Missile?”

  “What?! There’s no such song!”

  “There totally is. Look it up.”

  “Having fun?” Professor Bittinger asked, fists on hips. The toe of one of her shoes machine-gunned on the cement with restrained irritation.

  “Definitely,” Romeo smiled at the professor. “Have you ever heard that song—”

  I clapped my hand over Romeo’s mouth.

  Through my fingers, he said, “Defafaffle Fefis?”

  Marjorie frowned at me. “Is your friend all right?”

  “No, I need to get him to a doctor or something. He’s sick.”

  “Perhaps you should escort him to Student Health. That way, neither of you will waste anymore class time with your obtrusive Tom Foolery. While you’re there,” she said to me directly, “perhaps you should see a doctor as well.” She stalked off on her firecracker heels.

  “Shut up!” I hissed at Romeo. “You’re going to get us kicked out.”

  “Do you think Marjorie has a detachable vagina?” he whispered. “I think she does, and she lost it at a party, like, ten years ago. She hasn’t been laid since then. That’s why she’s so irritable.”

  SAMANTHA

  After sculpting class, Romeo walked me to my job at the campus art museum and we said our goodbyes. He had section for acting class again.

  When I was behind the counter, I pulled out my notes from History and started reviewing them.

  Not long after, Hunter walked through the doors of the museum.

  I tried to duck behind the counter, but he’d already spotted me.

  “There you are,” he smiled, striding over to the counter. “I thought I saw you walk in here.”

  “Hey,” I said morosely. Maybe he’d pick up on my zombie tone and take the hint?

  Nope.

  “You looked like you were having fun in class with your buddy today,” he smiled. “I saw Bittinger giving both of you guys dirty looks. What was that all about?”

  “I think she hates me,” I groused.

  “Why? What’s to hate?”

  I smirked and rolled my eyes. “I’ve been asking myself that since class started.” Wait. I just realized Hunter was tricking me into a conversation. I wasn’t going to say anything else. I officially zipped my lips.

  Hunter grinned. “She’s probably jealous, like all the other women on campus. Speaking of which, I went out with your friend Tiffany.”

  Okay, that was worthy of de-zipping. “You what?!”

  “Yeah. I took her out for sushi at Japengo. It’s a fancy sushi place on the other side of the freeway. A workout buddy of mine is a waiter there. He always cuts me deals.”

  “Okay, wait. Back up. You went out with Tiffany? Like, on a date?”

  “Yeah,” he smiled.

  I was in shock. I hadn’t actually seen or heard of such a thing. All I knew was that Tiffany was always trying to steal Christos from me. “Well, how’d it go?” I was dying to know.

  “I don’t kiss and tell,” he said suggestively.

  Bastard! But I wouldn’t let on. The last thing I wanted Hunter thinking was that he had anything I wanted, even if it was merely gossip. I stared at him, waiting him out.

  I scrutinized his face. I couldn’t decide if he had really gone out with Tiffany, or if he was lying to make conversation. Sure, I could picture Tiffany going out with a guy like Hunter, but I needed proof.

  Then, inspiration struck. “Well, if things went well, she probably wouldn’t be happy seeing you here with me.” That was an understatement. If Ti
ffany had gone out with Hunter, and the date had gone well, she’d tear me apart if she caught Hunter with me.

  Hunter chuckled cagily. “Why, does Tiffany hang out at the art museum a lot?”

  “No.”

  “Then we don’t have to worry about her, do we? It’s just the two of us.”

  Like I suspected, Hunter was a player or a liar, which basically amounted to the same thing. “Hunter, I’d love to chat, but I have homework to do.” I motioned toward my books.

  “I can come back later.”

  “Please, no,” I pleaded.

  He chuckled and waved as he walked out. “Until next time, beautiful.”

  I didn’t wave back. The last thing I needed in my life was more Hunter, no matter how hot he was.

  Where was Christos when I needed him?

  Sigh.

  If Hunter were to take one look at my hot, tattooed boyfriend and see how totally in love we were with each other, I believed Hunter would finally give up on me and go away.

  I truly knew my love for Christos was that strong.

  But I needed Christos in my arms for our enchantment to work and shoo Hunter off.

  At the rate things had been going, that might not happen for days or even weeks.

  Sigh.

  SAMANTHA

  The drive north from campus took awhile in traffic. I knew the Pacific Ocean was somewhere to my left, but it was blacked out by the glare of oncoming headlights.

  My relationship with Christos was starting to feel as inconsistent as my view of the ocean. We never had enough time for each other, just brief moments that lacked in both quantity and quality.

  Between my classes, my homework, my museum job, my never-ending job search, and Christos’ crazy round-the-clock work schedule, I feared we were slipping apart.

  I started weeping at the wheel of my VW.

  Yes, I had met the perfect man and we had fallen in love, all in the span of a few short months. But in the span of a few short weeks, I felt like our relationship was crumbling to dust. I knew our love was strong, but if we never saw each other, how could it grow? Love wasn’t a static thing. It required effort, commitment, and constant attention. It needed tending and care for it to grow, otherwise it was bound to wither and die.

 

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