No Strings Attached Page 10
And promptly threw up all over him.
Hangovers, Heroes, and Hope
Joss
Joss moved stealthily and swiftly. Barely one step ahead of the sirens, he flew into the house, tossed the hurling, half-dressed Harper over his shoulder, and ran. He dodged out the back door, betting the cops wouldn’t bother to come after him. Breaking up house parties packed with underage kids drinking and doping had to be routine for them. They’d haul in a bunch of them and call it a night. He didn’t worry for Katie and Mandy; they were survivors. They’d get out.
Ali was most likely to offer herself up on the altar of confession, in a backward attempt to prevent trouble for the others. He could only hope someone had talked better sense into her. Otherwise, dude, she’d be in for one hell of a sobering night. Ali had mentioned something about a party, but it hadn’t really registered. In her spacey way, she said a lot of things. Didn’t mean she’d actually do it. Make that, overdo it.
This was a bad scene; yet, running down the beach, a heady sense of adventure filled him, as if eluding the fuzz with a helplessly hammered chick was something he did all the time. It was like James Bond, only he was the antihero. For the first time since he’d ditched his life of privilege, he wasn’t just free, he felt unshackled.
If only he could stop the spinning wheels in his head. He knew what would happen next. After the roundup, after parents had been notified, and some kids had spent the night in the clink, the police would find the person whose name was on the lease.
That would suck. Mitch, the poor slob, would be blindsided, and since he was over twenty-one, held accountable. Joss was sorely tempted to intervene. All he had to do was make one call, and the whole incident would be erased, like it’d never happened. That, however, meant calling his father, using his family connections. And he’d cut those ties, man.
Harper, who’d stopped upchucking, now kicked and punched him. “Put me down!” she managed to belch out.
Turning to be sure they hadn’t been followed, Joss slowed enough to let Harper slide off him. He didn’t free her completely, though. He kept a grip on her slender wrists so she wouldn’t run off.
“Let me go!” she cried, fighting him, pulling away.
“It’s okay, it’s okay, it’s gonna be okay,” he said soothingly.
Then Harper looked up at him, and he wanted to die.
What had happened to her? She was ravaged. Her innocent, beautiful face was stained, scratched, smeared; her hair stuck in clumps to her wet cheeks. Her eyes were red and puffy. Were those bruises on her neck—or maybe hickeys? It was hard to tell in the dark. Her bra hung off her shoulder; her pants were down around her ankles. Joss hoped they’d fallen while they were running. He didn’t want to even think of the alt-scenario, that they’d been removed during the party.
His heart ached as he folded her into his arms and kissed the top of her head. “Let’s go over to the water, get washed up a little. Okay? It’ll be all right, little one, I promise.”
In his entire life, Joss had never welshed on a promise.
For once, he was glad the bartending gig forced him to wear a jacket over his shirt. He’d need both. Peeling them off, he soaked his soiled shirt in the surf and used it as a towel, cleansing Harper’s face, arms, and neck. Eventually, she stopped fighting him, refastened her bra, closed her trousers, and accepted his jacket as cover-up. She wrapped it tightly around herself. She looked like a wet, bedraggled wire-haired terrier, all big, baleful eyes. And Joss wanted to hold her, to tell her she could confide in him, that he could make it go away. He knew better than to say, or do, anything. It would be up to Harper to tell him what had happened—if she ever wanted to.
Katie
Katie had escaped the roundup by tailing Joss out the back door, then hiding behind the fence, watching others pour out the house. Only the first wave had managed to avoid capture. The two squad cars on the scene had apparently called for backup and, within five minutes, enough cops were at 345 Cranberry Lane to escort dozens upon dozens of partygoers into the paddy wagon and off to the precinct.
No way could Katie allow herself to be caught, even if only to be let go a few hours later. From sporadic e-mails back and forth to her parents, she knew nothing had gone down yet—they were on their cruise, all was well, and they assumed she and Lily were ensconced in the McCoy mansion in Chatham. The FBI had not come calling on the Charlesworths, nor would anyone be looking for her yet. Even though Taylor Ambrose might have some intel about her working at a drone job, Katie needed to be under the radar until she could figure out a scheme.
Katie had waited a good half hour after all the squad cars had gone before slipping back inside. So far as she could tell, she was alone.
The place was trashed. Bottles, butts, and smashed glass littered the living room floor. Lamps had been kicked, or had fallen over; two of the couches bore the scars of cigarette burns. And one thought pounded at her: Lily.
If Lily were here, Katie wouldn’t be.
If Lily were here, Katie’d never have driven a stake into poor Harper’s heart.
If Lily were here, Katie wouldn’t be scared shitless.
Just then, something skittered across the floor and Katie jumped, screaming. Clarence. The stupid ferret—dragging the do-rag on his foot—had smelled food and had scampered across the room to feast on it. Slowly, Katie’s heart settled back to normal.
Sure that the kitchen was in worse shape than the living room, she didn’t even want to check it out. She needed to do something, call someone. She found her cell phone and dialed Mitch.
Mitch
It was nearing dawn when Mitch, tossing and turning on the couch in Leonora’s den, got Katie’s panicked call. He was only surprised it hadn’t happened sooner. Of course there’d be a party—he was a veteran of too many summer shares to know it was inevitable. Didn’t matter what rule he imposed. It was like the Cape Cod fog, or the windswept beaches, its own force of nature during a summer in a house shared by six young strangers. This time, he’d likely be held accountable since his name was on the lease. But it was useless to stress. Until the cops came for him, there was a ton of work to be done.
He took charge, like always, and without whining, placing blame, blowing a gasket, or otherwise giving in to his emotions, Mitch methodically got everyone aboard the cleanup train. He sent Joss to the twenty-four-hour Meijer in Centerville for mops, buckets, industrial-size garbage bags, and other supplies. He taught Katie how to use a vacuum cleaner, and after calming a guilt-ridden Ali, set her to scouring the kitchen. “Go slowly and carefully,” he cautioned the whimpering girl.
Then he rolled up his sleeves. Until Joss got back, the heavy lifting was his alone. Of the two housemates not participating, his concern was only for one. Not Mandy. In the beginning of the summer, at his sister Beverly’s suggestion, he’d programmed his cell phone number into her Nokia. Since she hadn’t called, he assumed she wasn’t in police custody—nor was she alone.
He was nervous about Harper, who, despite her stinging sarcasm, he’d become really fond of. He wondered what had caused her to get so drunk, so out of control. Joss, who’d rescued her, claimed not to know.
Mitch believed the guy. His suspicions lay with Katie and Ali. He was sure something had precipitated it, and they knew what it was. But no one was saying. As he hoisted the remains of another smashed lamp into a black garbage bag, he rewound to the real reason for his own quiet freak-out.
Leonora hadn’t bailed on him, as he’d feared. She’d been ready, on time, when he came to pick her up—Lee, the girl who always kept him waiting. Maybe that should’ve been his first clue. The rest of the evening she’d been, what? Contrite? Wary? Jittery? Too quick to laugh at his seriously lame jokes. Too chatty over dinner, too interested—if that were even possible—as he blathered about his tennis clients at the Chelsea House, listening without hearing. She was flushed, fluttery, and kept looking at him weirdly—guiltily, even. As if she was searching his face for a
clue to something. But what? That he loved her? That he wanted to spend the rest of his life with her? She knew all that.
Her bizarre behavior made him squirm. He kept asking if anything was wrong. After saying no several times, she asked, carefully, “Should there be? I mean … is there something you think …?” She’d trailed off.
After dinner, they’d gone back to her parents’ house, empty for the weekend. He didn’t know what was bothering her, but he thought he knew how to make it better. Mitch had gotten romantic, drawn her into his arms, and begun kissing her in that way—their way, the way that usually led to lovemaking.
Not so much. “Mitch,” she’d murmured, pulling away. “I can’t. Stop.”
“But we’re finally alone,” he’d countered, hurt and surprised.
She hung her head, then looked up at him with pursed lips. “I know. But … I just … I’d rather not. Not tonight.”
Scared, Mitch coaxed: “Baby, we’ve barely seen each other. We’ve waited so long to be alone together. What’s wrong? Whatever it is, I can fix it. You know that.”
Leonora began to sob. “I’m sorry, Mitch. I’m so, so sorry.”
He never did find out what she was sorry about. She fled into her room and locked the door. He lay on the couch. And then Katie called.
Harper
Harper awoke the next morning sick to her stomach. Her head killed, her body throbbed and ached. But there was something more, something else that felt sour, and painful. It had happened last night, during the party. But what was it? She tried to sit up, but her head was too heavy for her body. She couldn’t raise it off the pillow.
Her cell phone rang—damn, had she set it on “Blast”? Without checking the caller ID, she managed to reach out and hit the “Silence” button. That movement was all it took to set her stomach to churning, and she knew she’d better move. Fast.
Harper barely made it to the bathroom. After washing herself off, she braved the mirror—which set her stomach in motion again, forcing her once again to kneel by the toilet and heave. When she felt sure there was nothing left inside her, she brushed her teeth and washed up again. Suddenly, the freakin’ roar of a motorcycle engine revved up right outside the bathroom. What the—?
She flung the door open.
There was Katie, cute-as-you-please, running a vacuum cleaner along the hallway.
Snap! Everything came back to her, played out in her head like a video set on rewind. She saw the shock in her own eyes, felt the horrible hurt as Katie spat that vile thing about pussy trumping poetry. She saw her “friends,” Ali and company, rush to her; remembered the metallic taste of the tequila, hot down her throat, drink after drink until it obliterated everything. All she remembered from the devastating humiliation of what had happened afterward was a purple-and-white-striped shirt that Joss had used to clean her up, his warm jacket, his pitying face.
“Harper, are you okay?” Katie asked tremulously. “I feel so awful, I never meant—”
Oh, she’d meant it all right. Every sickening word of it. That Luke had dumped Harper because he wanted to have sex with someone else. Worse, that someone else turned out to be Katie’s best friend, Lily McCoy, a stupid, superficial, self-absorbed slut.
Because of Luke, Lily had abandoned Katie—left her stranded this summer.
Because of Luke, Harper had abandoned Boston—and ended up stranded with devious, mean Katie this summer.
It really sucks when you’re the I in irony.
Harper got right in Katie’s face. The only thing left inside her was bile; she managed to spit it at Katie.
Mandy
Mandy was p.o.’ed. Why was everyone in the house so freaked? By the time she returned on Monday morning, the place was sparkling. Spanking clean; looked better than it ever had. The floors shined, the counters gleamed; the rugs had been shampooed—dude, even the bathrooms had been good and disinfected. Place looked better than when they’d moved in, f’crissakes.
She expected no less of Saint Mitch, who was born with a PhD in TCB: taking care of business. Even as a kid, he was all Mr. Responsible. For his sister, Beverly, his mother, Dora, and sometimes, going way back, for Sarah herself.
So a bunch of random rich kids had gotten arrested. Big deal. Not one of them had. As far as she could tell, Ali, Katie, and Harper had eluded the cops. Joss hadn’t even been there.
As for Mitch, guess what? Queen Leonora’s well-connected daddy had come to the rescue. It just proved it was all who you know, not what you know. Daddy Leonora had made a call to the Hyannis police, and poof! No arrest, no record for Mitchell Considine. Homeboy was off the hook.
So what was with the scowling, the stomping around, the flying accusations, and, from Mitch to her, the scolding. All she’d done was enjoy herself, accent on the j-o-y. She’d had a blast at the party, and thanks to the fat cow Ali, had been introduced to the man of her dreams: one Timothy Johnson—Timmy-Cakes, to her—who ran with the showbiz crowd; worked as a best boy on movies and TV shows filmed on the Cape. Who, ta da!, right now, after their weekend of fun, fun, fun, was back on the job with Skinny Dipping, the movie starring Jude Law and Scarlett Johannson, being filmed on Martha’s Vineyard.
Tim knew everyone. He lived right here in Hyannis—partied with the Kennedys, even—but, more important, stud-boy was tight with directors, agents, producers. He hadn’t introduced her to anyone yet; Mandy was working on it, using her personal powers of persuasion. Soon, he’d be at her beck and call and she’d be on her way. Woo-fuckin’-hoo! Mandy was feeling so generous, she even resolved to clean the frickin’ bathroom next time it was her turn.
Heal, Harper, Heal!
Harper removed the plastic bowl from the fridge, gently lifted the lid, and sniffed. Ewww. Nooo, tabouli salad did not last forever, contrary to popular myth. Holding it at arm’s length, she dumped the whole concoction in the garbage, plastic container and all. Bad Harper, she chastised herself for her un-eco (antirecyclable) action. She couldn’t drum up enough feeling to care. She hunted through the messy cabinet and, finding a bag of wheat pasta, put up a pot of water to boil.
It was around seven on Saturday night, and, clad in her worn flannel pj’s, she’d decided to scrounge up some dinner and curl up with her journal, fairly sure she had the place to herself.
Katie, who’d rebounded seamlessly from the Brian boot-off—quelle shockeroo!—had claimed her next victim. Nate Graham was another young, rich, and restless hotel guest. Although, Harper thought, astoundingly raffish for conservo-Barbie. But they’d been out every night this week, including tonight. Nate and Kate. Out on a date. Flirt, Katie, flirt. Retch, Harper, retch.
To be sure, her righteous roommate kept trying to apologize for her vicious, humiliating outburst during the party. But ya know what, Harper thought, pouring Katie’s beloved orange juice down the drain—oooh, too bad, all gone—screw her. Except when a verbal exchange was absolutely necessary—mostly at camp—she was all stony silence toward Katie.
Harper ripped open the bag of pasta and dumped it into the now boiling water. She found the wooden spoon in the sink, rinsed it, and began stirring.
The post-party doldrums pervaded the house; everyone was either “in a mood” or not around. Even happy-go-slobby Ali was mopey, blaming herself for the disastrous turn the night had taken. Her friends, especially Jeremy—who was definitely into her—were taking her out tonight to lift her spirits.
Mandy pretty much slept the days away, and never alone. The guy she’d attached herself to at the party seemed to have moved into her room.
Just as Mitch, for all intents and purposes, had practically moved out. His gig at Chelsea House, he’d explained, had gotten more intense: He was now giving weekend and evening tennis lessons. After work, he generally saw Leonora, running every time she snapped her betraying bling-fingers.
How could Mitch not see what was going on? She wanted to shake him. Guilt, guilt, guilt! It was out of guilt! she wanted to scream at Mitch. Your beloved is sleepin
g with someone else, someone married! And dig, no doubt girlfriend was walking on eggshells, wondering if Harper would tell. But Harper hadn’t had the heart.
But how blind could Mitch be?
How blind had she been? She never saw Luke’s betrayal coming either. Had no clue he’d leave her for “Katie-Lite”: that thimble-brained slut, Lily.
That arsenic-laced diatribe Katie had thrown about “putting out”? It was just wrong. Luke wasn’t like other guys. That’s why she’d fallen for him. They’d opened up to each other in ways far deeper than sex. Luke had said so!
Whatever. Harper lifted her chin. Making the same mistake twice was not gonna happen.
“Harper …?”
She whirled. Joss was pointing at the stove.
Joss. Oh God, she’d been avoiding him. What was he doing here? He was supposed to be at work.
“Turn the water off. You’re boiling over.”
“I am?” Harper repeated, confused. She looked at the stove. “Crap-damnit!” Bubbling waves of white-hot pasta foam erupted like lava spilling from mini-volcanoes, covering the pot, seeping into the burner, over the counter, heading for the floor.
She quickly killed the heat just as Joss went to remove the pot from the stove.
“Don’t!” Harper grabbed his arm to stop him. “You’ll get burned. Wait—I’ll get a dish towel.”
Chagrined, he gave her a loopy smile. “Yeah. Good idea.”
Harper blushed, and got to work mopping the mess of soggy spaghetti and water. She didn’t know if she was more embarrassed or ashamed. Twice now, Joss had seen her make a fool of herself. Once, she’d been half naked. He’d been gentleman enough to not bring it up. She’d been the coward—never even thanked him.