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The Not-Outcast Page 8


  Chad: You sent me to those seats because you wanted to grab the number from your Friday bang. It’s Deek’s daughter. You remember. She’s vile, man. Stay away from her. There’s a reason I basically lived with you guys our junior year. It was her. She was at my house instead. Mom and Deek didn’t want us around her, she’s that bad. Just stay away from her. Trust me.

  I never responded to his last text, and I deleted the whole conversation now.

  It didn’t feel right having that in my phone.

  Actually, none of this felt right.

  10

  Cheyenne

  Cut wanted to do dinner on Thursday.

  Cut wanted an explanation.

  Cut was going to look at me like I was crazy, because well…technically speaking, I was. And boy, that was going to be a depressing conversation, so yeah. Not looking forward to dinner or the date, but I really was—but wasn’t at the same time.

  I went to work the next day and I was a ball of nerves. That was really not a good thing for me.

  “Yo!”

  “Heehaw!”

  That was my go-to startled reaction/scream. Do not make fun of me for it, and I rounded on Dean, giving him the stink eye because I hadn’t even taken two steps inside Come Our Way before he popped out of his office.

  He was used to my heehaw by now, and he frowned for a split second before his entire body joined him in the hallway. It’d just been his head, and now I was the one frowning at his tie. He was wearing a Mustangs logo tie with his little hockey sticks cufflinks.

  I made no comment, because this was the adorable five-year-old side of Dean. He truly was a fanboy of the team.

  “So, we’re down a volunteer.”

  I sighed. Dean was carrying a whole file of paperwork. And he was waiting for me, that meant he was going to follow me into my office, sit there, and not move until we’d talked about everything he needed us to talk about.

  I changed courses, heading into the kitchen first. I was going to need coffee for this, a lot of coffee.

  “Cheyenne-the-eye-of-the-tiger!” came from behind the grill, and our main chef lifted up one of his beefy hands, booming his normal greeting to me. He told us to call him Boomer, and well, judging by his greeting, you can see why. He kicked his head back and flashed me some pearly whites. “How’s it hanging with my especially fabulous-looking girl today?”

  I gave him a smile back, but I didn’t try to keep anything from Boomer. He had the inherent ability of seeing everything, and I mean everything. If you had been anxious about something three days ago, he’d ask how that was going. Boomer and I shared something that Dean never would. We had both shared time on the streets, and there was a vibe we got from the other.

  I thought those days were long behind me, like way, way behind me, but one look from Boomer and he understood. I wish I could look at him and know what he was feeling, but Boomer liked to remind everyone that he was our All-Knowing, All-Wise, All-Black Maestro. His words. I overheard him introduce himself that way to the new volunteer last week, and even she seemed transfixed with him.

  “Boom, I need—”

  He turned back to the cutting board but pointed to the coffee area. “Already got you covered.”

  “Thank you, thank you, thank you.” I breezed past him, grabbing a mug asap.

  I hoped Dean would step back, give me a breather for a minute.

  Nope.

  I got my coffee, turned back, and there he was. Still waiting, readjusting his Mustangs’ tie. Those cufflinks flashed again, and for some reason, that settled me. I grinned at him. “You going to get through the next dos dias? Need a fresca? A bebida?”

  He frowned, twisting his tie the other way. “I don’t know what any of that means.” He lifted up the papers. “But I want to hash all this out before the first Mustangs get here.” His gaze dropped to my coffee where I was still pouring creamer into it.

  I was a cream type of girl.

  “You done yet? Want some coffee with your creamer?”

  My grin spread, all slow like. “And there you are, thinking you can write the manual for office sexual harassment. You go, boy. You lead from example.”

  He blinked at me. “Huh?”

  “Never mind.” The moment was gone. I led the way to my office, and once inside, my purse was dropped on the floor. Coffee set on the desk. I dug out my phone and booted up my computer. First things first, right?

  I grabbed for my coffee, and leaned back, taking a big whiff. This was my porn.

  “Okay, Deano. Let’s do this.”

  He just rolled his eyes at his nickname and pulled out the first sheet. “Cut Ryder was taken off the volunteer schedule for today. He might get in tomorrow, but they’re not sure.”

  Well, there went that porn-inspired coffee-creamer mood.

  I tried to ignore the shrinking on the stomach lining. “Why? I mean, did they say how come?”

  He shook his head. “Said something about PT, but since they’re sending the entire team, I think we can still use them for our social media marketing. And if he doesn’t come tomorrow, I’ll reach out and see if we can get him to come alone on another time. This might work in our benefit.” Second sheet was pulled out. “And we need to talk about changing our distributors—”

  I mentally checked out.

  I was trying not to think about Cut, about what PT he’d need, about everything that had nothing to do with Come Our Way. I was still looking at Dean, and he thought I was paying attention. I could tell because I was simultaneously monitoring his word efficiency, speed, tone, and volume frequency.

  But I was thinking about Cut.

  He was in PT.

  Probably because of his fight. He’d had two in two games.

  And he was being used to cover two lines.

  He was fatigued by the end, and I’d wanted to text him, ask if he was all right, but I was also more of a chickenshit at the same time.

  Dean’s speech hadn’t changed. He thought I was paying attention…but there was Cut.

  He wasn’t coming today.

  That was good.

  Right?

  Maybe it wasn’t.

  No, no. It was good.

  Even if he came tomorrow, it was business. And I’d be hiding in the office, and that made me remember—“Wait, I’m not coming in tomorrow.”

  Dean stopped, his mouth open and in mid-sentence. “What?”

  “I have a thing tomorrow.”

  “A thing? We need you. It’s our biggest social media day.”

  I shook my head at the same time my mind was buzzing, so was my blood. I was whirling. Winding up. He had no clue what he was asking of me, but nada. I couldn’t do it. “No comprendo.”

  “That means you don’t understand.” Dean huffed. “I had a photo op planned for tomorrow, especially if Cut Ryder is coming. We need you—”

  “No, you don’t.” Blood, calm down. Mind, pause. One thing at a time.

  Thoughts… I was mentally watching them. They were wheezing by. I could almost feel the breeze from them.

  Slow. Down.

  They slowed.

  I turned the thoughts into words. Words I could read.

  I read one at a time. One word at a time, and as I did this, knowing Dean was now focused on talking me into coming tomorrow, it was working. I was calming down.

  I could tune in, pick up what he was saying, and he was saying, “—I never know what Boomer is going to make if you’re not here. He loves you. Worships you. He’ll make everything great and something worthy of a magazine spread, but if you’re not here, he gets all adventurous, starts thinking our budget is ostrich egg and lamb chops, and we don’t ever have the budget for that.”

  He was right. Our grant was good, but not that good. We allocated most of it to education, recruiting, and general resources for everyone. Not to mention, the food. Food was expensive, but we tried to maintain a healthy standard, and it helped land us in multiple magazines, even a television show interviewed us
, including Boomer.

  Boomer got a kick out of Dean getting a kick out of that.

  Me. I hated it. That’d been an extra bad day on paying attention. The reporter had been extra extra on everything. Extra smiles. Extra flirting with Dean. Extra perfume. Extra makeup. Extra loudness in her voice. Extra jewelry. All that went away the second the camera came on, and that whole segment showed me sucking in air like I’d been dying in a desert.

  Not my best moment, but really, there was a whole long list of them, and maybe that wasn’t too bad after all.

  “Cheyenne!”

  Crap.

  He got me.

  I’d been slipping and I was saying something. I had no clue. I recognized my voice and my own tone. Okay. That was convincing. Dean would be convinced I was paying attention, but I had to be adamant. “I’m not coming tomorrow. You know I don’t always come to these days. And I can’t. Sasha needs me.”

  He snorted. “What does Sasha need you for? Writing a grant for new stripper poles or something.”

  I frowned. Could I do that? Was there a grant for that?

  “Stop.” He leaned forward, planting his hand on the desk. “I can tell you’re struggling right now.”

  I thought I’d been so sly. Crappers.

  He kept on, “You think I can’t tell, but I can. And like right now,” he raised his tone, “You’re starting to drift—”

  “This is why I can’t be here tomorrow! It’s too much. I just can’t—” Dean didn’t know about my history, or my medical file, or any of it. He didn’t even know I’d been homeless at times. “Dean. Do not push me on this.”

  Cold sweat was forming on my forehead, and I felt it on my top lip, but my words were spoken quietly, and slow, and that meant they’d come across as clear and articulate to him. But also beseeching, almost begging, and who could say no to that?

  Well. Most people, but Dean had a soft spot for me. I wrote the magic and he knew it. I knew it.

  He was quiet.

  Now was my chance, and I shoved all the distracting background thoughts and noise to the far reaches of my mind and I pounced. “Boomer can bring Gail.” He was quiet again, pensive. I recognized that look on his face and added, “You know that everyone loves Gail, and everyone adores Boomer and his wife being the duo they are in the kitchen.”

  He mashed his mouth together. “We don’t know if Gail can do it—” Score! Because that meant he was open to that idea. “—and I still think you should be here tomorrow.”

  I was so not needed, and I was gone again.

  I was doing cartwheels. I mean, I was sitting, but the inside of my body was fully doing somersaults, and I was a gymnast and flying in the air, and none of this would make sense to a normal person.

  Sigh.

  Because I wasn’t normal.

  I tuned back in for the rest of what Dean needed to talk about, and we only agreed on one out of the eight items, but all the while I started replying to emails. Dean was used to this. It was how I worked. He knew I needed to do two things, sometimes three if I was really distracted, in order to actually pay attention. A while back he asked me what was wrong, why I always had to be busy, and I just answered, “I have a really hungry brain.”

  I knew it wouldn’t make any sense to him, but I’d long given up hope that some people would understand.

  Some did. Most didn’t.

  11

  Cheyenne

  Sasha called when I was getting off work, said she was heading to Melanie’s for a pit stop, so I went to meet her. Dino’s Beans was a cute hipster coffee bar downtown that Melanie worked at not far from where Come Our Way was. Because of this, it wasn’t uncommon for me to see a few of the same guys there who came for meals at Come Our Way. Some of them had enough coinage to grab a coffee. Some didn’t and knew Melanie had a soft heart, and she gave it out for free, but only if they came in with a good attitude and had recently showered. The ones who hadn’t, she still didn’t refuse them and had them sit outside with their coffee.

  I wasn’t surprised when I saw a couple of our regulars.

  Petey. Moira. Dwayne. All saw me. All raised their hands. All sent me mumbled greetings, but they knew this was my friend’s place, so they didn’t come over to talk any more than that.

  Sasha was already sitting down when I got to the counter. Melanie was watching her, standing behind the counter with her hands on her hips and her head tilted to the side. Her hair was pulled high and wound in a tight bun on top of her head, like right on top of her head. Red lipstick. Dangling earrings. Her shirt was pressed and the collar was folded over, cinched in with a pearl button.

  My girl was dressed to work.

  Without looking in my direction, she knew it was me and lifted her chin up toward Sasha. “She’s down.”

  I looked over.

  Sasha was sitting in a booth, thumbing through a magazine and her own lips were pressed together. She seemed almost bored, but then I caught how she closed her eyes for longer than a blink. It was brief, but she closed them, and her chest bent down in a sigh at the same time.

  Mels was right. Sasha was down, but she was here, and she’d called me, so that was giving us the clues that she needed us to pick her up. I looked back, met Melanie’s gaze, and both of us raised up an eyebrow at the same time.

  “Hmmm-mmm,” she hmmmed right back at me, though I hadn’t said a word. She was on the mental wave train right with me.

  I asked, “Bar?”

  She shook her head. “I’m thinking club judging by the way she’s dressed.”

  I looked back and gave it some thought.

  Sasha was wearing a black tank top that was tied around her neck, and when she shifted in her seat, I saw it was backless. It only covered her front, from high on her neck to her stomach, but the back was held together by two more strings, both looking as if they were tied together. One time a drunk guy thought he could slip the knot and that the top would fall free enough for him to see some boobs. Little did he know, the knots in the back were merely for decorations. They were sturdy motherfuckers, and the guy instead caused Sasha to swing at him with a firm right-hand hook. When the cops showed up, they weren’t sure who to haul off because the guy’s entire face was busted up. Sasha hadn’t stopped with that one punch. There’d been a left, another right, and maybe a knee.

  Yeah, she was serious about whatever was going on with that top on.

  Then her jeans.

  They weren’t jeans at all.

  She had slicked-on leather pants.

  Oh yes. Club it was, but I said to Melanie, “We need to go hardcore tonight.”

  “Got it.” Succinct and to the point. We were on a mission.

  Her coworker walked out from the back at that point.

  “Hey, Chey—”

  When Melanie decided something, she moved fast. She interrupted, “My girl needs a girls’ night. Can you cover for me the rest of the night?”

  Her coworker braked, opened her mouth, stopped and took both of us in. We both had full game-on expressions… we were set and determined to go. Consider these expressions our warpaint. And she closed her mouth. “Okie-dokie.”

  Melanie pulled her barista apron off, closed out the till, and grabbed her purse. We were off.

  “Have fun tonight.”

  Melanie’s response was a grunt, her laser eyes never moving from Sasha.

  I gave a smile and wave, but never missed a beat.

  Sasha knew something was up when she saw us coming, noting Melanie’s purse, and my empty hand. “No coffee?”

  No words were needed.

  I grabbed Sasha’s purse and Melanie grabbed Sasha. Or, she took her hand, and pulled her from the booth. “Let’s go.” And Melanie was off, leading this charge.

  Sasha looked over her shoulder at me, her eyebrows raised, but I just gave her a stern look. She knew better.

  As if reading my mind, she sighed again, the first time in deep thought at the table all alone, but this time in surrender.r />
  She knew what we were doing.

  “Thanks, guys.”

  Melanie’s hand tightened over Sasha’s and I dipped my head down to hers.

  We were always here for the other, no matter what.

  Melanie was not fucking around, her words when we asked where we were going.

  We went to Bresko’s.

  No one knew who owned Bresko. Rumors were that the mob owned it. Others said the cartel, but weren’t they really the mob, too? I never understood the difference. Still, other rumors said big time CEOs of Fortune 500 tech companies had their hand in it. A few rumors were that relatives of Marilyn Monroe’s owned it. I was thinking that last one was far-fetched, but whoever owned it was making a killing.

  It wasn’t even in Kansas City. It was the outskirts, like, in the middle of nowhere. For real. There was nothing around it for miles, and when you approached you had to get your car approved to go through a gate. A long, winding, gravel driveway was next, and it always felt like a full mile you had to travel before you came to a parking lot. If they were really busy, and you were in your own car, you got a pager from a guy at the front of the lot. Then you were directed to a parking spot, and you waited for an indeterminate amount of time. When your pager lit up, you got the green light to go to the waiting line.

  But this place was always busy, so when we stopped at the pager guy, no one was shocked when he gave us one and indicated where to go for our parking spot.

  I didn’t go to Bresko’s on a regular basis, like maybe four times in three years.

  We never had to wait long once we got to the waiting line outside, thankfully.

  And I knew once Melanie parked, she was going to pounce.

  She did.

  She turned the engine off and twisted in her seat to face Sasha, who was in the front passenger seat. “What gives. We’re here for you. You know we’re your girls, but we gotta know the basic layout of what we’re working with here.”

  I loved when Melanie was like this. I had to do nothing except slip into Happy Cheyenne-Land, and right now, I was so down for that.