No, it can’t be Andy. Not now…
Her nervous system performed the inebriated version of snap-alert panic and simultaneously displaced the entire repertoire of her motor skills. She was struck speechless and inert.
“Makedde! I thought it was you,” declared the man who was either Andy, or the most convincing hallucination she had ever seen.
She stared.
“I thought I saw you in the corner, but I wasn’t sure. I thought you didn’t drink?” He paused when she didn’t respond. She was frozen in embarrassed horror. “What? Have you joined the SS or something?” He gently brought her arm down to her side. “Hey, are you okay?”
Mortified. Absolutely mortified.
So much for spotting him first. So much for being calm, cool and collected.
He was the same as she remembered, his scent, his presence. The same chiselled jaw and compellingly imperfect nose. The same little scar on his chin, the same dark, short-cropped hair. And his eyes. His gorgeous green eyes. She really wished she was sober.
“I think I need to sit down,” she managed to say. She felt ill. Andy stopped asking questions and mercifully led her away from the big glass windows of the Sports Bar.
Hours later, Makedde woke up on stiff hotel sheets. There was stucco on the ceiling above her, and the weak smell of old cigarettes and deodoriser.
She felt absolutely awful. Horrible. Her throat felt sore and her head felt like it was trapped in an airtight bubble. Instinctively, she opened her jaw as wide as she could so her ears would pop. She was depressingly sober, and plagued with a deep, gnawing, unnamed
dread. There was something she was unhappy about, but she wasn’t awake enough to remember what.
Where am I? What time is it?
An empty glass and the crust off a piece of toast sat on a room service platter on a nearby bench. She’d eaten a bit to make herself feel better after drinking way too much. Someone had suggested it. That someone had been the man she’d come to this hotel to see.
Andy. Oh no…
He was sitting on the lounge a few feet away. He flashed her a lazy smile when their eyes met. Her first instinct was to look down at herself. She was relieved to find she was still dressed. The feeling of dread decreased a fraction.
“How are you feeling now?” he asked her.
Bloody hell. This wasn’t how I planned it.
“Um, how am I feeling? Been better,” she admitted, and laughed.
“Would you like some more toast? Some water?”
“No, really, I’m okay.”
The hotel room was quiet for a while. She looked around for the digital alarm clock. There was one on the far bedside table, declaring the late hour in neon-red.
Three am.
“It’s late,” he said.
She nodded.
“Definitely late, and a school night.”
Was it too late for them? She couldn’t decide
whether he felt like a stranger, or like a man who had kept her company every night in her dreams for the past year. Dreams and nightmares, of course.
She studied his face in silence.
“May I come over?” he asked, and she responded by nodding.
He stood up from the lounge and walked over to sit on the corner of the bed where she was tucked in, fully dressed in her now wrinkled shirt and pants. She noticed her shoes and socks lying a few feet away. She imagined him pulling them off while she was in God knows what kind of state.
“It’s good to see you. I was surprised,” Andy said.
“So was I. I was in the area and I thought…” She trailed off and then shook her head. “No, that’s crap. I wanted to see how you were. You sounded a bit funny on the phone. All that business about needing to talk to me, and then I thought I’d drop in and say hello, you know, nothing major, just say hi and that kinda thing…”
“You’re even more beautiful than I remember.”
Oh no.
“You don’t have to say that.”
Please don’t say that.
He shifted closer. “I’ve missed you.”
She wanted to kiss him. Damn, she wanted to kiss him. He was close, his lips so close.
“Can I borrow your toothpaste?” He sat up straight. “Yeah, sure. Whatever you like. Use my toothbrush if you want.”
Makedde nodded and struggled out of the bed. She found herself wondering why hotels tuck their sheets in so tightly. She likened it to being shoved into a little envelope that you have to rip open to get out of, and wondered how Andy even managed to get her into the bed like that.
Mak managed to get both feet on the floor and push herself up. She stood, but her brain didn’t cooperate. A head-rush caught her and she stayed perfectly still waiting for it to pass. “I’m fine, I’m fine,” she mumbled, sensing Andy’s attention as she walked over to the bathroom with her shirt somehow tucked up under her bra strap.
The mirror wasn’t kind.
Makedde’s hair was a mess. Her mascara had held up pretty well, though. A bit smudgy on the lower lids. She brushed her teeth.
Ah, that’s better.
She performed what little grooming she could manage, annoyed that she should care what he thought. When she’d checked herself over—no drool, no streaks of make-up—she came out to join Andy on the corner of the bed.
She hadn’t been anywhere near a bed with a man in a year, and the last time it had been with a murderer. The man now sitting beside her had saved her that night. She couldn’t stand that thought, it made her feel vulnerable and weak. She felt like she owed him something. She hated that more than anything.
She looked Andy in the eye. “I didn’t know if I wanted to see you.”
He said nothing, just took the comment.
“It’s a bit…” She didn’t complete her sentence, and he didn’t urge her to.
It’s a bit what? A bit awkward? A bit spooky? A bit of both?
They sat close to each other, unmoving.
“We’d better get you to sleep,” he said, and stood up.
He was avoiding intimacy with her.
A good policy,
she thought.
“I’ll take the couch,” he went on. “You can borrow one of my T-shirts to sleep in if you’d be more comfortable.”
“Oh no. I should probably get back. I can hardly sleep in my own bed, much less here, knowing I’m making you sleep on the couch. No way.”
“What do you mean, you can’t sleep in your own bed? Is anything wrong? Why aren’t you sleeping?”
Mak closed her eyes. He wasn’t really supposed to pick up on that. It was just an off-hand remark. “I’m fine, honestly.”
“Are you going to be okay?” Those green eyes were staring directly into hers now, and the intensity made her uncomfortable.
“Yes, of course. I’m always okay, remember?”
“That’s
not
how I remember it.”
Fuck you, Andy.
That comment stung. She felt like he was holding it over her…he had saved her life.
Makedde felt a wall go up around her. She crossed her arms. “Okay, so what was it that you wanted to talk to me about?” she asked. “I’m right here, so what is it?”
He smirked and then looked down. When his face was turned away like that she couldn’t read his features. What was the smirk about?
When he raised his head again he looked genuinely distressed, and Makedde felt herself panic.
I can’t read him right now…why can’t I read him?
“What on earth is it?”
He swallowed and stood to face her. She watched his Adam’s apple move up and down. He didn’t look happy. What was it that she was afraid he would say? I love you? Come back to Australia with me? What?
“Mak, I don’t think this is the right moment to discuss this.”
“Why the hell not?”
“Just…trust me. Now is not the time.”
“You said you wanted to see me and discuss something, and you even suggested we see each other tonight, and now I’m here and—”
“God, I missed your temper.” He smiled and moved towards her.
“Oh honestly, that is so condescending, Andy.” She stood up, fuming.
Now they were standing side by side, too close, and he was so tall, so beautifully tall beside her.
Damn.
Why did she have to find him so attractive?
“I should be going,” she said firmly.
“Your shoes are right there.”
“I see them. Thanks for taking care of me.”
Again. God I hate that.
“I’m glad you came to see me.”
I’m not.
She dusted herself off and headed for the door. “See ya.” She was at the elevators before she realised she’d forgotten her purse.
Damn.
And it was such a good exit, too. She walked back towards his room, her sudden charge of confidence waning a little. He opened the door before she reached it, and passed her the purse.
“Good night.”
“Good
morning
. I’ll talk to you later.”
“Okay, Mak, your turn.”
“Gotcha.” She readied herself and looked at the man in the puffy suit. “Hiya,” she said to him.
She thought she heard him say a muffled, “Hiya” back at her through his mask.
“Mind if I attack you now?” she asked politely.
Was that a growl I just heard?
The man ran at her with his arms outstretched but as soon as he got close enough, she blocked him and forced his arms to one side, striking him in the face with the palm of her hand. The padding of his mask felt soft under her fingers. She followed it up with a knee to the groin for good measure, but before she had got far with that standard manoeuvre he was turning and grabbing at her throat tight with both hands. “Oh, fuck you then…” she said as she tucked her chin down and put her hands together, as if in prayer, and attempted to shove her fingers underneath his…
Damn that’s hurting me…
“No, Mak,” Jaqui Reeves was yelling at her. “Won’t work. Come on…” Mak could barely hear for the adrenalin pumping in her head.
I’m rusty…Damn, what do I do again?
By now it was really starting to hurt her throat. She considered putting a hand up in defeat, but no.
Makedde screamed, “Nooooooooooo!” as she grabbed the man’s wrists and fell backwards, pulling him with her. His resistance softened her fall, and the moment her butt hit the mat she raised up her feet and kicked him hard in the face, like a kangaroo does when it rests back on its tail. He went sailing backwards and she jumped to her feet, panting.
“Okay, that’s it for now,” Jaqui said, holding her hands up.
The masked man stopped dead in his tracks and pulled his padded head off. Jason was looking a little sweaty under that thing. He shook his head to orient himself.
“You’re a little rusty there, Mak,” Jaqui scolded.
“Thanks for pointing that out,” Mak replied. “You could have let me keep going, you know. I was just starting to have fun.”
One of the girls in the class raised an eyebrow and let out a caustic chuckle at her comment.
Mak turned to her. “I learned this neat trick where you can pull a person’s skeleton out through their nose. Wanna see?”
The girl wasn’t sure whether to laugh or run. She smiled timidly and scurried away. Jaqui shook her head.
When Mak had showered and changed into her favourite pair of Bettina Liano jeans and a black turtleneck pullover, she waited outside, leaning against the brickwork of the old church building that Jaqui Reeves used for her classes. The space also catered to acting classes, jazz dance and the odd spot of children’s ballet.
Makedde had attended the first two lectures at the conference that morning before going to the self-defence class. She was only waiting a few minutes before Jaqui came out to join her. “Caper’s?”
“Caper’s,” Mak agreed.
Caper’s Natural Food Market and café was only a few blocks away, and the two women walked there briskly, stomachs growling.
They had first met when Mak attended one of Jaqui’s classes as a teenager, and had been friends ever since. Jaqui Reeves was born in Vancouver and she was a true west-coast girl—tall and buff, with platinum-blonde hair to her waist. She tended to wear clothes that showed off her impressive, bulging biceps, and in particular, the intricate Celtic dogs tattoo that encircled one of them. She had a few others on her back, and another one on her ankle that meant peace.
But she was not trained for a peaceful world. She kept a folding knife in her bra at all times, affectionately called her “Booby Trap”, and she was a kick-ass self-defence instructor. Hard-core. Like Mak, Jaqui carried pepper spray wherever she went, and she had a certain double standard when it came to Canada’s tight gun laws. She wanted the laws to be tight, she didn’t want her country to end up with America’s gun problems, but that didn’t stop her from owning an illegal weapon or two.
When Makedde had returned from her disastrous “incident” in Sydney, Jaqui got her an illegal Saturday Night Special, and promised her free self-defence classes until the end of time.
“It’s good to see you again,” Jaqui said.
“You too. Sorry I’ve been so slack, there’s been a lot going on lately.”
“I want to—” Jaqui began, but paused as she swerved around an old lady with a walker. They glanced back to make sure the woman was okay. She was. “I want to hear all about it. No editing.”
“I never edit with you, Jaqui. That’s the beauty of our friendship.”
They’d almost reached Caper’s. It was a popular hang-out, frequented by everyone from university students to hippies, young trendies and seasoned locals. It was fast-service, not fast-food, vegetarian and organic, and always popular in health-conscious Vancouver.
“I don’t think Jennifer will be coming back,” Jaqui said, speaking of the girl who had chuckled at Makedde.
Mak shrugged. “I didn’t mean it like that, honest.”
“Yeah, right. How did you like the class?”
They moved up to the glass display of the deli section and simultaneously began to salivate.
“It was great, Jax. You’re teaching some new stuff.”
“Oh, look at that!” Jaqui pointed at an enormous puffed-up apple pie. It looked like it was a foot high and overflowing off the tin pie sheet. “Save room for dessert. We’re going halfers,” she said eagerly.