After the Kiss
Page 13
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Turned out she’d underestimated a few things.
Namely, hills.
And the sun.
Oh, and the fact that Mitchell apparently had a motor shoved up his ass, because the man had not slowed down.
“You okay?” he called from where he was jogging in place several feet ahead. He’d passed her about five minutes in but had stayed within her visual range. It didn’t take a genius to see that he was holding back for her.
“Oh, this is great,” she said, catching up to him and bending at the waist to put her hands on her knees as she gasped. She eyed a nearby baby drinking from a bottle. Milk was hydrating, right?
“Come on, we’re only a couple of miles in,” he said, still jogging in place. Correction—he was practically jumping.
“What the hell are you so excited about?” she asked around pants. “We’re running in a big circle, right? It’s not like Santa’s sleigh is at the end of the run.”
He gave her a sympathetic look. “We can just walk for a while if you want. I probably set the pace too fast. I’m so used to running with Evelyn, I forget not all women are cut out for it.”
Something red and dangerous flashed before Julie’s eyes, and she forgot all about the fact that her throat felt like sawdust and the sweat between her boobs could have filled Lake Superior.
He had not just thrown the ex-girlfriend at her, had he?
“Let’s go,” she said, faking energy she absolutely did not have. “I’ll follow.”
He shot her a happy grin, and as Julie forced her screaming calves to chug after him, she had the sneaking suspicion that she’d just been played. Again. He’d known that the mention of an ex-girlfriend would spur her on.
Then she forgot about everything except putting one foot in front of the other. Mitchell had disappeared around a bend. She wouldn’t be surprised if he was already on a second loop, ready to lap her.
Surely she wouldn’t die here. Would she? Was this the way she was meant to go? Collapsing in the middle of Central Park, where some tourists from Minnesota would find her body and take pictures with their big-lensed camera? And then what if they decided to sell the pictures? Then Stiletto would probably be forced to print an obituary featuring an image of her with a sweat-stained crotch.
Just when she was about to cry, she saw Mitchell just a few feet ahead. Well, it looked like a few feet. It felt more like a mile or five.
She told her body to kick into high gear for those last steps with her head held high, but who was she kidding? If there had been a wagon nearby, she’d have fallen into it and begged a homeless man to push her to the nearest hospital.
Julie finally reached him in all of his shiny, reflective gear and slumped onto the bench beside him. He handed her a water bottle and a hot dog.
She took several long swallows of the icy water before ripping open the foil and digging into the dog. He’d put relish on it, which she hated, but at this point he could have put maple syrup on the damned thing and she’d have eaten it.
“Nothing has ever tasted this good. Never,” she said with a full mouth. “How many calories do you think I burned? Two thousand?”
Mitchell nodded toward an elderly couple sitting on the bench across from them. “Seeing as they passed you about a half mile back, I’d say you burned around fifty.”
She guffawed, not caring that the tiniest bit of hot dog bun flew out. She was long past being her best around Mitchell Forbes. “They did not. That woman has a walker.”
“Well, maybe we should get you one of those,” he said, patting her knee. “Or perhaps we could get you a big dog and Rollerblades and you can hitch a ride that way.”
She swallowed the last bite of her hot dog and eyed his remaining half greedily. He caught her glance and deliberately took a huge bite.
Julie sighed and settled for the water. Her breathing had slowed slightly, although now she felt vaguely sick. Come to think of it, none of her fitness magazines had ever suggested that scarfing down a hot dog within seconds of almost dying of heatstroke was a good idea.
“You’re not wearing your glasses,” she said, noticing for the first time.
He shook his head and dusted hot dog bun crumbs off his fingers. “I don’t like to run with them on.”
“So you run blind? Surely we could find you a nice pair of goggles to go with the rest of your spacesuit.”
“I have contacts.”
“Why don’t you wear them all the time?”
He wiggled his eyebrows at her. “I find the ladies like the glasses.”
“It’s not the glasses they like,” she replied distractedly. “It’s the eyes.”
His smile faltered, and she blushed as she realized what she’d said. “Don’t get too excited. It’s about the only thing you have going for you.”
He grinned and looked away.
“So,” Mitchell said, crumpling up his foil and plucking hers out of her hand, “wanna do it again next weekend? I was thinking that we could start a little earlier and get a long run in.”
A long run? What the hell did he think they’d just endured?
“You know what I think?” she purred. “I think you should run with someone more your own speed. Maybe the U.S. Olympic track team.”
“Oh, come on. You didn’t enjoy it even a little bit? All this fresh air, the burn, and the endorphins?”
Julie rolled her eyes for his benefit, but to tell the truth, now that she was halfway convinced she wasn’t going to die, she did feel . . . good. And the park was beautiful—no matter how many times she came up to Central Park, which wasn’t often enough, she never failed to marvel at the peaceful green oasis in the middle of the hectic city. Of course, usually she preferred walking through it.
“So you and Evelyn,” she heard herself saying. “You guys did the whole Sunday jog-and-hot-dog routine too?”
Mitchell snorted. “Evvy wouldn’t touch a hot dog. But we did run together every weekend. Although she wouldn’t be sitting here afterward. Said she didn’t like lounging in her own sweat.”
Julie sat up slightly. She hadn’t given a thought to how awful she must look right now. Her once perky ponytail was now completely damp with sweat, and she didn’t even want to think about how red and shiny her face must be.
But Mitchell didn’t seem to notice, which wasn’t surprising. He didn’t seem to notice anything about her.
Except for that kiss. Which he had started. And then walked away from.
Julie let out the smallest of sighs. This relationship business was exhausting.
“What about you?” he asked.
“What about me? Do I like lounging in my own sweat? Yeah, I’m totally digging it. I can’t decide what I like more, the slick feeling of fresh sweat or the gritty feeling as it starts to dry.”
Mitchell let out a small laugh. “No, I mean what about you and ex-boyfriends on weekends? What did you do? Not running, I take it.”
“Definitely not,” she said. “I actually haven’t spent much time with ex-boyfriends on weekend days. Saturdays and Sundays are my time, ya know? Laundry, girlfriends, yoga . . .”
Mitchell shifted on the bench to face her. “Come on, you never do weekend activities with a guy? Never? What about the more serious boyfriends?”
She tilted her head up at the sun. “Never really had one, not like that. Not anyone I’d want to go darting around the park getting all sweaty with.”
He was watching her with an unreadable expression. “But you’ve been in love?”
“Oh, yes,” Julie said with a smile. “It’s a gift of mine, falling in love fast. Just so long as they leave me alone on my weekends.”
She felt him studying her again, but she didn’t care. She knew what he was thinking. That it hadn’t ever been real love. That love couldn’t happen after a couple of dates and subsist only on Friday and Saturday nights. But it could. Maybe not the forever kind of love, but certainly the quick and easy kind. It was still love. At least she was pretty sure it was.
“There was one guy,” Julie found herself confiding. “Long time ago, right after I first moved to the city. Adrian. He lived next door, and he and I would sometimes spend all Sunday drinking mimosas and listening to indie music.”
Namely, hills.
And the sun.
Oh, and the fact that Mitchell apparently had a motor shoved up his ass, because the man had not slowed down.
“You okay?” he called from where he was jogging in place several feet ahead. He’d passed her about five minutes in but had stayed within her visual range. It didn’t take a genius to see that he was holding back for her.
“Oh, this is great,” she said, catching up to him and bending at the waist to put her hands on her knees as she gasped. She eyed a nearby baby drinking from a bottle. Milk was hydrating, right?
“Come on, we’re only a couple of miles in,” he said, still jogging in place. Correction—he was practically jumping.
“What the hell are you so excited about?” she asked around pants. “We’re running in a big circle, right? It’s not like Santa’s sleigh is at the end of the run.”
He gave her a sympathetic look. “We can just walk for a while if you want. I probably set the pace too fast. I’m so used to running with Evelyn, I forget not all women are cut out for it.”
Something red and dangerous flashed before Julie’s eyes, and she forgot all about the fact that her throat felt like sawdust and the sweat between her boobs could have filled Lake Superior.
He had not just thrown the ex-girlfriend at her, had he?
“Let’s go,” she said, faking energy she absolutely did not have. “I’ll follow.”
He shot her a happy grin, and as Julie forced her screaming calves to chug after him, she had the sneaking suspicion that she’d just been played. Again. He’d known that the mention of an ex-girlfriend would spur her on.
Then she forgot about everything except putting one foot in front of the other. Mitchell had disappeared around a bend. She wouldn’t be surprised if he was already on a second loop, ready to lap her.
Surely she wouldn’t die here. Would she? Was this the way she was meant to go? Collapsing in the middle of Central Park, where some tourists from Minnesota would find her body and take pictures with their big-lensed camera? And then what if they decided to sell the pictures? Then Stiletto would probably be forced to print an obituary featuring an image of her with a sweat-stained crotch.
Just when she was about to cry, she saw Mitchell just a few feet ahead. Well, it looked like a few feet. It felt more like a mile or five.
She told her body to kick into high gear for those last steps with her head held high, but who was she kidding? If there had been a wagon nearby, she’d have fallen into it and begged a homeless man to push her to the nearest hospital.
Julie finally reached him in all of his shiny, reflective gear and slumped onto the bench beside him. He handed her a water bottle and a hot dog.
She took several long swallows of the icy water before ripping open the foil and digging into the dog. He’d put relish on it, which she hated, but at this point he could have put maple syrup on the damned thing and she’d have eaten it.
“Nothing has ever tasted this good. Never,” she said with a full mouth. “How many calories do you think I burned? Two thousand?”
Mitchell nodded toward an elderly couple sitting on the bench across from them. “Seeing as they passed you about a half mile back, I’d say you burned around fifty.”
She guffawed, not caring that the tiniest bit of hot dog bun flew out. She was long past being her best around Mitchell Forbes. “They did not. That woman has a walker.”
“Well, maybe we should get you one of those,” he said, patting her knee. “Or perhaps we could get you a big dog and Rollerblades and you can hitch a ride that way.”
She swallowed the last bite of her hot dog and eyed his remaining half greedily. He caught her glance and deliberately took a huge bite.
Julie sighed and settled for the water. Her breathing had slowed slightly, although now she felt vaguely sick. Come to think of it, none of her fitness magazines had ever suggested that scarfing down a hot dog within seconds of almost dying of heatstroke was a good idea.
“You’re not wearing your glasses,” she said, noticing for the first time.
He shook his head and dusted hot dog bun crumbs off his fingers. “I don’t like to run with them on.”
“So you run blind? Surely we could find you a nice pair of goggles to go with the rest of your spacesuit.”
“I have contacts.”
“Why don’t you wear them all the time?”
He wiggled his eyebrows at her. “I find the ladies like the glasses.”
“It’s not the glasses they like,” she replied distractedly. “It’s the eyes.”
His smile faltered, and she blushed as she realized what she’d said. “Don’t get too excited. It’s about the only thing you have going for you.”
He grinned and looked away.
“So,” Mitchell said, crumpling up his foil and plucking hers out of her hand, “wanna do it again next weekend? I was thinking that we could start a little earlier and get a long run in.”
A long run? What the hell did he think they’d just endured?
“You know what I think?” she purred. “I think you should run with someone more your own speed. Maybe the U.S. Olympic track team.”
“Oh, come on. You didn’t enjoy it even a little bit? All this fresh air, the burn, and the endorphins?”
Julie rolled her eyes for his benefit, but to tell the truth, now that she was halfway convinced she wasn’t going to die, she did feel . . . good. And the park was beautiful—no matter how many times she came up to Central Park, which wasn’t often enough, she never failed to marvel at the peaceful green oasis in the middle of the hectic city. Of course, usually she preferred walking through it.
“So you and Evelyn,” she heard herself saying. “You guys did the whole Sunday jog-and-hot-dog routine too?”
Mitchell snorted. “Evvy wouldn’t touch a hot dog. But we did run together every weekend. Although she wouldn’t be sitting here afterward. Said she didn’t like lounging in her own sweat.”
Julie sat up slightly. She hadn’t given a thought to how awful she must look right now. Her once perky ponytail was now completely damp with sweat, and she didn’t even want to think about how red and shiny her face must be.
But Mitchell didn’t seem to notice, which wasn’t surprising. He didn’t seem to notice anything about her.
Except for that kiss. Which he had started. And then walked away from.
Julie let out the smallest of sighs. This relationship business was exhausting.
“What about you?” he asked.
“What about me? Do I like lounging in my own sweat? Yeah, I’m totally digging it. I can’t decide what I like more, the slick feeling of fresh sweat or the gritty feeling as it starts to dry.”
Mitchell let out a small laugh. “No, I mean what about you and ex-boyfriends on weekends? What did you do? Not running, I take it.”
“Definitely not,” she said. “I actually haven’t spent much time with ex-boyfriends on weekend days. Saturdays and Sundays are my time, ya know? Laundry, girlfriends, yoga . . .”
Mitchell shifted on the bench to face her. “Come on, you never do weekend activities with a guy? Never? What about the more serious boyfriends?”
She tilted her head up at the sun. “Never really had one, not like that. Not anyone I’d want to go darting around the park getting all sweaty with.”
He was watching her with an unreadable expression. “But you’ve been in love?”
“Oh, yes,” Julie said with a smile. “It’s a gift of mine, falling in love fast. Just so long as they leave me alone on my weekends.”
She felt him studying her again, but she didn’t care. She knew what he was thinking. That it hadn’t ever been real love. That love couldn’t happen after a couple of dates and subsist only on Friday and Saturday nights. But it could. Maybe not the forever kind of love, but certainly the quick and easy kind. It was still love. At least she was pretty sure it was.
“There was one guy,” Julie found herself confiding. “Long time ago, right after I first moved to the city. Adrian. He lived next door, and he and I would sometimes spend all Sunday drinking mimosas and listening to indie music.”