At the rooftop pool, I say to Farrow, “Remember the tour bus days when they were in each other’s face?” Feels like eons ago. It’s been over a year.
“If you mean Charlie getting in Maximoff’s face, then yeah, I remember that.”
It’s not complete revisionist history.
I don’t always defend Charlie—he provokes on purpose, especially Farrow’s husband which puts me and my friend in hard spots. But back then, I know Maximoff’s short-fuse didn’t help. Being Charlie’s bodyguard lets me see his perspective better than most ever could.
“Speaking of the Husband,” I say as Maximoff enters with a volleyball and his sixth-month-old propped on his waist. Ripley has a happy-go-lucky smile in his papa’s arms, sun hat shading his fair Irish skin. We all celebrated Ripley’s adoption at the lake house last week, and I’ve never seen the Hales, Meadows, and Cobalt parents cry so much at once.
Joy is a feeling I live for, and my joyful ass cried too.
Farrow smiles wider. “Miss me, wolf scout?”
“Who?” Maximoff feigns confusion, tossing the volleyball to Sulli, then stepping into the pool with the baby. His tattoo on his bicep is in full view. Farrow’s name. He got Farrow’s name tattooed on his arm. Almost couldn’t believe it when I saw it. But then again, yeah I can. He’s really in love with my best friend.
“Hey, Hale,” I cut in before they launch into five-minute flirty insults. “Did Charlie tell you the reason he wants a docuseries filmed about his life?” Now that they’re chit-chatting around bodies of water without one pushing the other in, maybe my client could’ve dropped a hint to his cousin.
“Other than what you said—how Charlie’s setting you and Jack up to kill the Oslie rumor—no,” Maximoff tells me while Ripley slaps the water ecstatically.
When I told Maximoff about the “set up”, I made sure to leave out the part about Charlie calling me lonely.
“But honest-to-God,” Maximoff continues, “I think it’s more than that. I know my cousin, and this colossal undertaking—being filmed day-to-day for who knows how long—doesn’t sound like something he’d do just to squash a rumor.”
“Oui,” Jane Cobalt says, swimming closer since she overheard us talking about her brother. Cat-eye sunglasses cover her blue eyes, and she adjusts the straps of her pastel purple tankini. “Charlie has other motives, most surely.”
“As Charlie’s bodyguard, I agree with that assessment,” I say with the sip of my beer.
Farrow makes an uncertain face. “He could just be 5D chess-ing this show into his version of The Bachelor.”
“It is his favorite show,” Jane muses.
Charlie is a bunch of contradictions. Whatever moves he is making, they’ll be what he said: selfish and selfless. Oxymorons to the tenth degree.
My phone buzzes, and my pulse jolts with too much fucking excitement. I grab my phone.
“Da-da,” Ripley giggles, trying to swim to Farrow who plays peek-a-boo, using his inked hand to shield his face. Maximoff has their son loosely in his hold, but the baby can already float too well.
I read the text.
K. See you tomorrow at 8 am. – Highland
Curt.
To the point. No compliments or ego boosts. Definitely not Jack. But I’m not dumb enough to think he had his friend or little brother message me on his behalf. He’s just responding in the same cold tone.
I stifle a dismal groan.
Estou morrendo de saudade.
“He’s reupholstering the limo, Moffy,” Jane says, more hushed but audible. “He just replaced the interior last year. I’m telling you my dad knows that Thatcher and I had sex in the backseat.”
Cobalt drama is like a Cool Ranch Dorito. It makes me happy inside, and I’ll gladly take anything right now. Especially Thatcher, my lead, fucking his fiancée in his future father-in-law’s limo. Look, I’d pay good money to see Connor Cobalt’s reaction.
“Your dad can’t know that, Janie,” Maximoff refutes. “He wasn’t there, and none of us would’ve said a damn thing.”
“Hey guys,” Sulli calls over, breaking up some good harmless drama. “You all wanna play?”
I sit out.
Not feeling the “team sports” spirit today.
And I crack open my book while Quinn, Luna, and Maximoff face off Akara, Sulli, and Banks. I place a bet with Donnelly and put a twenty on Sulli’s team.
Music pumps, an “SFO” playlist. We all added songs, and right now, Cher’s “Believe” blasts which is causing Farrow to grimace.
Cher was my addition.
I grin.
And ten minutes through, I look up and slowly turn a page.
“I got it,” Sulli calls out, competitive because the volleyball is soaring towards six-foot-seven Banks. He spikes the ball as she slams into his chest. “Oh, fuck—sorry, sorry.”
“It’s alright.” He combs back his wet hair. Her eyes fall down Moretti’s body, and the volleyball sails back on their side. Somehow poor, poor Sullivan Meadows ends up elbowing Akara in the abs. He buckles, and she apologies profusely.
“I’m okay, Sul.”
I watch the dumpster fire for another five minutes. Sulli keeps running into Banks and Akara’s wet bare chests, bodies and limbs colliding left and right, and the more they do, the more flustered she’s becoming. Her breath looks shortened, and I’d bet a crisp hundred it’s not from physical activity.