“Since you saved me.”
“Saved you?” I didn’t remember much saving.
“The… rapists, in the alley,” she cautiously reminded me. “I was going to be assaulted and probably left for dead, but you found me… you came for me, and you rescued me from them.”
I faintly remembered something like that, but it was incredibly faint. Did I? I flexed my knuckles, feeling them ache. It was the kind of ache from battering them against the skulls of predatory, low-life scum.
“Are you okay?” I asked her.
Riley smiled softly. It was maybe the first genuine, sincere smile that I’d seen out of her. “Yeah. I think I’m pretty great.”
“Fantastic to hear, love,” I smiled back.
“Listen… how long are you going to be in America?” Riley asked me, hovering near the edge of my bed. She looked pensive, tentatively awaiting my answer.
“You know, I’m not quite sure… weeks, probably. I can’t stay too long, the season starts back up in a month and a half… and I’m going to have to keep in shape, regardless of where I am.”
“Oh. I see.” She looked crestfallen.
“Listen, a month and a half, that’s a long time, right?” I replied, sensing her withdraw back into herself. Dammit, it took this long to get her to retreat out of that shell… the last thing I need is to lose her now.
“Well, not really, when you think about it,” Riley told me. “I’d actually say that it’s not a whole lot of time at all.”
“I want to see more of you,” I blurted out, surprised by myself. Riley was apparently startled as well, as she looked at me curiously and with a rather analytical gaze.
“Do you?”
“Yeah,” I reiterated. “Only if you think you can handle it.”
“I can handle myself,” she retorted, “with the notable exception of last night. Call that the exception that proves the rule.”
“You know… I like you,” I confessed. “The other night was fantastic, and I hope to experience more of those… And less nights that end in a hospital bed…”
Riley hesitated, looking at me with a clear conflict of emotions in her head. Finally, she looked me in the eyes with a startlingly vulnerable gaze, and she spoke: “…Yeah.” Adding a nod, she continued: “I think I’d like that.”
I nodded back, letting a small grin curve up the corners of my lips. “I think I’d like that too.”
The door popped open not five seconds later, and a very flustered Jess was upon me like wildfire.
“Lex, what the fuck? Can I not leave you alone for fookin’ five goddamn minutes without you disappearing on me? And this time… this time, you’re in the hospital?”
“It was for a worthy cause,” I replied, taking Riley’s hand. Her fingers flinched, but she kept her hand in mine.
Jess glanced back and forth between us. “So… are one of you going to start talking about why my friend is in a hospital bed right now, or am I going to have to threaten to beat him halfway to death with a brick to get answers?”
“Riley was cornered by a spot of trouble,” I answered simply. “I took care of it. Might have gotten a few scrapes in the process.”
“He’s being modest,” Riley elaborated.
“Am I… am I hearing that right?” Jess laughed as she turned back to me, almost in hysterics. “Modest? You? Do you even know how to be modest? You couldn’t even find it in a dictionary, yeah?”
“I was dragged into an alley,” Riley told her with complete conviction. “There were two of them, and I couldn’t fight them off. Lex found me and fought them off. If he’d been fifteen seconds later…”
Jess went completely silent, staring at me. She looked a very compelling mixture of shocked, appalled, and downright horrified.
“Lex… is this… is this true?”
“More or less,” I shrugged.
“Cor blimey,” she muttered, holding her head in her hand. “I’m gonna need a stiff pint after hearing that…” She turned to Riley again, looking at her as if for the first time.
I had to remind myself that, besides a fleeting occasion, it was the first time.
“You look like hell,” Jess finally told her. “You look like you haven’t had a good night’s sleep in… a day? Two? What, have you been here the entire time?”
Riley nodded. “Yeah.”
“What? Why?”
“Because I didn’t know how to reach you, I don’t know where he’s staying, and I didn’t think he had anyone else nearby who could care for him. Besides… he’d just saved my life.”
Jess tried to hide it, but I could see how she beamed. She couldn’t resist making quick, fleeting eye contact with me.
“Listen, I know that it’s been a rough couple of days for you… Riley,” she started. “But I thought my only friend in this country was laying dead in a ditch somewhere. If it’s not too much, can I have a couple of minutes alone with him?”
Riley turned to me. I halfway expected her to be indignant, but she looked somewhat relieved. “I could use a bathroom and some coffee. Do you need anything from out there?”
“I think I’m good.”
“Alright. I’ll be back in ten.”
She nodded cordially to Jess as she left us in the room alone. As soon as the door clicked, I tossed the bedding off and made my way towards the connected bathroom.
“This is perfect,” Jess commented over the sound of my filled bladder of piss hitting water. “She adores you now. Not hard to see why.”
“Why do you sound so pleased with yourself?” I asked warily, washing my hands in the sink.
“You saved her life, Lex. This is exactly the kind of publicity we need you to have. I’m already writing the bylines now… maybe I can whip up something to send over to the boys tonight…”
I popped the door open and began walking uneasily back across the room to my clothes. “Absolutely not.”
Jess reacted as if she were a behaving child, and I’d just ripped her favourite toy from her and slipped it well out of reach. “But why not? Surely there’s a police report or something, I don’t even really need to ask her anything else. She just told me everything I needed to know to finish your write-up…”
“You’re not exploiting what happened to her in order to make me look better,” I explained sternly.
“But nothing happened, thanks to your timely and heroic intervention,” Jess protested. “And besides, where the fuck is this Lex coming from? Used to be that you’d take anything that made you look better.”
“I don’t follow,” I replied, slipping some of my possessions into my blazer and slacks pockets.
“The Patrovo Corporation contract, you ruddy idiot,” Jess hissed. She nodded towards the door. “You need shit like this to make you look better in their eyes. Has Alistair Pritch ever saved anyone from rape? Who knows! But now Lightning Lex Lambert has! All of a sudden, you’re right at the top of the pile, where we both know you deserve to be.”
“Not like this,” I reprimanded her. “Absolutely not like this. I forbid it.”
“You forbid it?”
“I do,” I snarled, stepping closer to her. “You are not to exploit this woman to further your agenda of representing me.”
“For God’s sake, exploiting her is why I told you to go find her again! You pay me to do this,” Jess retorted. “The agenda feeds me. That agenda. The agenda that keeps the British public pleased with you. Did you forget that you’re a loose cannon? You need me to pick up after you, Lex! Without me doing my job, you’d never get that sponsorship in your wildest dreams!”
“I am not telling you to not do your job,” I hissed, practically dribbling acid around my lips. “I am telling you that you leave Riley Ricketts out of it. Are we clear?”
“You’ve got it bad for this one, don’t you?” Jess asked. I could see some revelation unfolding in her eyes.
“I’m not letting anyone – you included – take this traumatic thing she’s experienced and force h
er to live it publicly, going through it again and again,” I told her. “It’s not the right thing to do.”