“You’re going to regret giving this up,” Marcus said. “But that’s cool. I’ll handle the girls for you.”
Masiel claimed the seat Seven had vacated, giving him her sexiest hurt look.
“Enjoy.” Seven tipped his imaginary hat at Marcus in a mocking salute, then turned and left the bar.
He didn’t have a particular destination in mind. His only goal was to get away from Marcus and his poison so he could have some time to himself. To think. To just be. But as Seven climbed into the rental Lexus and drove away from the bar, he suddenly realized that what he wanted more than anything was to go for a swim. Although he’d been in Miami for four long days, he had yet to get in the water. It had been months since he’d been in the water, not since his trip to Jamaica last winter to visit his parents.
Even then, he’d spent most of his time helping his parents around the house—fixing, climbing, painting, all good and honest work that left a pleasant ache in his body and sharpened his hunger for the good food his mother always had in the kitchen. A pang of homesickness took him, and Seven stepped harder on the gas, pushing the car up Collins Avenue toward his new condo. Once there, he quickly parked, went upstairs to change into his swim trunks and a white jogging suit, then walked the two blocks to the beach.
It was dark. The beach was deserted except for the occasional passerby. Waves tumbled up on the sand, pale waves painting the sand dark as they capered up on the beach before retreating back into the ocean. Seven kicked off his sandals and pulled off his jogging suit. The water called him.
Chapter 4
Bailey didn’t realize she’d brought her phone up to the roof with her until it rang. She put down her Scotch—her third glass in the past two hours—to answer it. “Good evening, Bette.”
Her sister chuckled into the phone. “Hello, sister dear. Did you finally leave the office?”
“Yes. Thank you very much.”
Bette made a shocked noise. “It’s not even midnight.”
There had been many nights when Bette had called her as late as two in the morning to find Bailey still at the office, laboring over some account or other. Worthless things, her sister said, despite the fact that her clients were worth billions and she handled millions of dollars of their money.
“What happened to drag you out of your den?”
“Who says something happened?” But something in her tone must have warned Bette.
“Ooh,” her sister gasped, drawing out the exhalation like caramel. “Do tell!”
Bailey picked up her Scotch and brought it to her lips. “There’s nothing to tell.”
“Shut up with your lies, girl!”
Bailey was helpless to the slight smile that quirked her lips. An image of Seven came to her, his hand raised to lift the plastic cup of sparkling white grape juice to her mouth. His own mouth smiling.
“It’s nobody.”
“Well, if he made you leave the office at a reasonable hour, I want to meet this nobody.”
“He’s...” She felt the disappointment again. “He’s like our parents.”
“What...dead?”
Bailey hissed. Sometimes she wondered what was wrong with her sister. “No. He’s some sort of artsy type. He sculpts or something.”
“Not this again.” She could practically see her sister plop down on the nearest available surface, flip her long dreads over her shoulder with irritation and scowl into space. “The life we had with Mama and Daddy wasn’t so bad.”
“What are you talking about? There were months when we were damn near homeless.”
“But didn’t we have so much fun?” Bette stretched out the last word as if it was the most important part of their lives. Damn the unpaid bills and insecurity about the roof over their heads, or where their next meal was coming from, or the constant moving from place to place following one art residency or another. There were nights when Bailey had cried over the desperation of it. She hated that life. The thought of going back to something like it terrified her.
Bailey sighed and took a sip of her Scotch. It seared across her tongue in a wave of beautiful heat, flowed down her throat like liquid silk. She stood at the edge of the cordoned-off rooftop to look down on the trickle of evening traffic, the winking lights from the occasional passing car. Bette was talking, but she tuned her sister out. They could never agree on their life before Miami. It was as if they had lived different versions of the same story. For Bette, it had been a dream. For Bailey, it had brought nothing but nightmares.
A movement on the beach caught her attention. For a moment, she didn’t know what it was, but the shape coalesced into a masculine silhouette walking out from the water. A dark, muscled figure with long, lean legs and slim hips covered in tight white swim trunks.
“What?” Bette’s voice cracked at her through the phone.
“Huh?”
“Did you say something?” her sister asked.
Bailey cleared her throat. “No, I didn’t say a thing.”
“You weren’t listening to me, either, were you?”
She leaned over the balcony, trying to see the man more clearly. “Not really.”
“Typical.” Her sister made a noise of frustration. “I don’t even know—”
“There’s a really hot guy on the beach.”
“Really?” Bette asked, her irritation apparently forgotten. “What does he look like?”
The waves whispered like a siren in the quiet evening. On the sand, the man stood with his hands on his hips, staring into the dark water. There was something vaguely familiar about him, about the masculine perfection of his body close enough for her to see his sculpted back with its deeper shadows of muscle.
“I can’t really tell, but his body is ridiculous,” Bailey murmured as she leaned over the concrete barrier. It pressed into her ribs through her blouse.
She’d seen enough body-conscious gay men walking on the beach that she wasn’t easily impressed. This specimen below her was something else. A brief thought of the man who’d brought dinner to her office intruded. But she shoved it away. It was easier to be frivolous and giggly with her sister, someone who wouldn’t take her appreciation of a stranger’s body for anything other than what it was.
“Does he look like Tyrese?” Bette asked with a laugh. “Damn, maybe it is Tyrese.”
“No. This man looks much better.” Oh, my God, so much better. “I wish I had my binoculars.”
“Now you’re just being creepy.”
“No. Just appreciative.”
“And drunk, too, I expect.” Bette laughed, a low and happy sound that made Bailey smile. “I wish I could come over there and have some of what you’re sipping on. And check out that hottie for myself.”
“No one told you to move all the way to Fort Lauderdale. There’s nothing up there but old queens.”
“And me.”
Bailey made a rude noise. “How could I forget?” She leaned her hip against the stone railing, paying proper attention to her sister while keeping her eyes on the man on the beach.
“Speaking of queens, I’m coming down to Miami to do work for a Colette fashion show this week.” Bette made a flippant sound as if her being the makeup artist of choice for one of the biggest