Walsh got up
to refresh their drinks, and suddenly Alex was alone with Mercy, the two of
them seated across from each other.
Mercy stared
at him a moment, mouth unsmiling for the first time all evening, eyes black and
flat as a shark’s. Then he shook out a cigarette and lit it with slow,
deliberate movements.
Alex had
never cared for cigarettes. He’d coughed on a few as a kid, and had one as an
adult, occasionally, after sex, after a night of drinking, but he didn’t want
to stink like them, or grow addicted to them. So it wasn’t the need for a smoke
that made him shift forward and half-reach across the table. “Can I bum one of
those?” He didn’t ask if Emmie was okay with them smoking in her dining room;
he figured Mercy knew it was allowable.
Mercy
hesitated, glancing up through his lashes, then slid the pack and lighter
across the table with a scrape that sounded too-loud in the otherwise quiet
room.
“Thanks.” He
lit one up, and slid the pack back over.
Mercy left it
sitting by his plate and folded one arm across his middle, settling back in his
chair, taking a long, contemplative drag. “You’re really doing it, huh?”
Alex wondered
why the hell it was taking Walsh so long to get those drinks. He could hear the
low murmur of the girls’ voices in the kitchen and wondered if they were coming
back. “Doing what?”
“Blowing up
your career.”
“I’m…if it
comes to it, then yeah. I’m here to help,” he said, firmly. “If that blows up
my career, so be it.”
Mercy smiled,
slow and sharply-curled at the ends. It didn’t touch his eyes. “Good to know.”
Walsh
returned, silent, a chambray-clad wraith toting all three glasses in one hand,
fingers pinching the rims together. In his other hand, he carried two bottles,
long necks crossed. Smirnoff and Johnnie Walker Red. He set the glasses down at
their places, and thumped the Scotch down between them. “Figured I’d save
myself a future trip.”
Alex looked
at Mercy, surprised, and Mercy lifted his brows in return. Apparently, they
both liked Johnnie Walker Red.
“Hmph,” Walsh
snorted into his glass.
Mercy made a go
ahead gesture with the hand holding the cigarette. “Guests first.”
“Nah. I’m
good.” But Mercy stared at him until he bit back a sigh and reached for the
bottle.
Thank you 😊
ReplyDeleteMercy-sigh. Cannot wait for this
ReplyDeleteI am loving Alex. I really need this book.
ReplyDelete