Resonance of Stars (Greenstone Security #5) - Anne Malcom Page 0,22
let me go and I stepped back, right into Duke.
My body jolted and I tried to scuttle away but he grasped my hips firmly and yanked my back to his front. My body reacted violently to this, heat crawling up my cheeks. His body was hard, all muscle. But I molded into it perfectly. Like we were made to stand like this. But of course not. This was an act. Less than five minutes and I was already forgetting that.
He began playing with my hair. My nerve endings were about fried with so much human contact…and authenticity. It was like culture shock after being immersed in Hollywood for so long. I’d faked almost every single gesture of love and intimacy in the book, all with an audience of directors, producers, writers, cameramen, assistants and countless others. I’d engaged in cold, casual sex with strangers and not felt an ounce of embarrassment or shyness. And yet I was damn near falling apart with Duke playing with my hair.
“It’s nice to meet you both,” I said, recovering ever so slightly, despite gritting my teeth against my reaction to Duke’s affection.
He’s acting, I reminded myself.
“I can’t believe you’re dating a movie star and instead of flying us to Hollywood land and taking us to the Oscars, you bring her here,” someone yelled from the porch.
The owner of the voice was a woman older than Anna, by my guess, her mother since the resemblance between the two was uncanny. Except where Anna’s long hair was mostly blonde, her mother’s was all gray and its wild curls were flying around her shoulders as she moved quickly down the porch steps.
Unlike her daughter, she wasn’t wearing a kickass female rancher outfit. She was just wearing a plain kickass outfit—a Rolling Stones tee I suspected she wasn’t wearing how the youth shopping at Forever 21 did. It had rhinestones on it and was tucked into ripped jeans. She was wearing bright red Chucks.
Her arms were stacked with bracelets and her lips were painted the same red as her sneakers.
She looked like the most interesting rock ‘n’ roll grandma I’d ever seen. I immediately wanted to be her when I grew up.
She stopped in front of us, grinning with youth and beauty. She pointed to Duke, brows furrowed. “I’m mad at you. Not mad enough to take you out of my will, but mad enough to refuse you a hug until I’ve had my first drink.” She looked to me. “You drink?”
I laughed at the question, then I realized that could be construed as rude so I quickly composed myself. “Yeah, I drink.”
“Great.” She locked her arm with mine and all but yanked me toward the house. “I made margaritas.” She turned her head. “Duke, you’ll get the bags, won’t you? And if there isn’t an expensive jar of face cream in there somewhere I will be taking you out of my will.” She grinned to me. “Welcome to the family, dollface.”
4
“Here you go, sweetheart, this will straight-up change your darn life,” Harriet, Duke’s batshit crazy—read fucking awesome—grandmother said to me.
I looked down at the gigantic slice of pie, smothered in vanilla ice cream that was already melting lazily over the crust.
My mouth watered at the smell alone before my brain shut it down. I hadn’t let myself crave food in years. It was just another thing about my life I’d accepted. Another thing I wouldn’t have. Another sacrifice. It wasn’t something that was difficult in my life. Not with my trainers and chefs I paid for. When I went to dinner parties, they were thrown by the Hollywood elite, who served food in miniscule portions and didn’t expect anyone to finish them.
I’d never really inspected my relationship with food closely, because I knew it was fucked up—and because it was part of the circus that was my life. Something always in my control. Now, with all the trappings of fame gone, it seemed utterly ridiculous that a slice of pie could cause so much panic. Be so confronting. Outside of my control.
I glanced up, awkwardly. I didn’t want to offend these people, these warm, funny, and genuine people. That feeling itself was foreign. Itchy under my skin. I’d never had to worry about such things. I hated it. I grasped the Anastasia Edwards I’d been for decades, who was somehow slipping away after a couple of hours on a ranch in Montana. “I’m fine, thank you.”
Harriet blinked, once. Then looked to Duke, then back to me. I