you’re not even sure is that into you. Right?
Wrong. I knew it was wrong. I knew I was clutching at straws. But someone had to want me, right? I was dolled up. I wasn’t that bad looking, was I?
“You don’t want me to call you a cab?” the valet said, again looking at Rob for some indication that he was going to step up and get me home safely, or at the very least, get me off the steps of this fancy restaurant.
“I don’t want a cab,” I said again, and I could even hear the slur in my words.
God, it was awful. I was that drunk chick at the end of the night who’s insisting on making some pointless scene with the restaurant staff.
I looked at Rob, but he was just standing there blankly as if he didn’t know how this was going to play out. What the fuck was he waiting for? I was offering myself to him on a plate. Why wasn’t he offering to drive me home? He’d hardly had a glass of wine all night, two at the most. Hell, I was going to let him take me home and fuck my brains out. Wasn’t that what guys wanted at the end of a date?
There was a long pause. No one said a word. What the fuck was Rob waiting for?
I looked at him desperately, and I never felt so pathetic in all my life.
And then the words came from my lips. I still cringe when I think of it. It was possibly the lowest moment of my entire existence. This is what I said.
“Won’t you give me a ride, Rob?”
I don’t know if I’m getting across how utterly pathetic I felt. I was practically begging him to take me home.
And did he say yes? Did he take the bait? Did he stand up like a man and take me home for a fuck?
Actually, he looked at his watch. And then he scowled, like it was getting a bit late and what he’d really have preferred to do was get home and get some beauty sleep. He didn’t even want to fuck me.
And even then, I could have still rescued the situation. I could have told him to forget about it. I could have told the valet to call me a cab, and it would have been the last time I ever set eyes on Rob in my life.
But you know what I did instead? I’ll tell you. I’ll tell you exactly what I did. I begged. I got down on my hands and knees, into the mud, and I begged. I mean, not literally, but really there was no difference. I basically begged my date to take me home.
I said, “Please, Rob.”
And the fucker sighed again, like it was a chore.
“Sure,” he said at last, and he couldn’t have possibly said it with less enthusiasm.
*
R OB HAD A MERCEDES, and the valet brought it around and watched as I dragged my pathetic butt into the passenger seat. I shuddered at the thought that I’d have to go back to the site of my humiliation to pick up my car.
“So you want a ride all the way to Socorro Valley?” Rob said once we were on the highway.
And it only got worse.
“Oh, that’s too far to ask you to drive,” I said.
“A hotel then?” he said, without missing a beat.
Fucker. Why didn’t he want me? Was I really that repulsive to him? I thought about all the perfect women he must see on a daily basis. He’d made it eminently clear that I was nothing close to perfection.
I should have said, sure, whatever, drop me at a hotel.
But what I said was, “Or we could go back to your place.”
I gave him my most seductive smile. He’d rejected me and I still wasn’t getting the message. I’ll never live down the humiliation I felt that night.
“I guess,” he said.
*
I FELT SILLY WHEN WE got to Rob’s apartment. It was obvious he was a bachelor, but the drawer in his bedside table was full of condoms, and I spotted a woman’s thong on the floor in the bathroom.
He was a player. He slept around. And again it hit me, how pathetic he’d made me feel, practically begging him to take me here to his bed. How had that happened? Had he planned it. Had he manipulated the situation so that it would end up that way? All that talk about how I wasn’t as perfect as the women at his clinic, was that a way of
Philip Kerr
C.M. Boers
Constance Barker
Mary Renault
Norah Wilson
Robin D. Owens
Lacey Roberts
Benjamin Lebert
Don Bruns
Kim Harrison