“Crap, right. Will you have the best time for me?”
“That I can do.” I smile.
“Will you steal me a souvenir?”
“On it.”
“Something expensive?”
“Probably not.”
“Make me proud.”
“Of the souvenir?”
“No,of you. And tell Jordy if he earns himself a strike, he’s answering to me after filming.”
“I’m sure he’ll be terrified.”
“Oh, he should be.”
My backpack—a sixty-five-liter monstrosity with lime green straps—rolls into view. I dart forward to collect it, and my neighbor—who still hasn’t received his—shoots me a bitter glance. With a sweet smile, I say goodbye to Chloe forthe last time in a long time, and head off to meet the person assigned to collect me.
My flight from Zurich, Switzerland, to Loreux, Chalonne, took off at 11:05 this morning and landed at 11:58. This, according to the producer organizing my trip, is not at all an exorbitant waste of money that could be better spent in a hundred other ways.
At least they didn’t send a helicopter to collect me, like the producer initially suggested when he found out how close I was, I suppose. Although itispossible he was being sarcastic. It’s quite hard to tell by email.
Leaving the ugly carpet of the luggage collection behind, I cross onto glossy black tiles among a crowd of suit-clad business commuters and head toward the escalator. Just as I reach it, however, my phone begins to buzz in my pocket, so I pull over to one side to answer the call.
“Hey, you.” Jordy’s voice is warm and bright, and I can’t resist the smile that touches my lips when I hear it. “Welcome to Chalonne. You’ve landed, right?”
“All of twenty minutes ago,” I say, leaning my backpack against the barrier to relieve myself of its weight for a few moments. “I’m just about to leave the airport.”
“I can’t believe you’re really here.” Jordy lets out a breathless, exhilarated chuckle. “It’s starting to feel real.”
“Isn’t it, though? Are you nervous?”
“Uhh. More excited than nervous. I’m excited to see you.”
A fluttering in the pit of my stomach reminds me that, unlike Jordy, I amquitenervous. A feeling that’s increased exponentially at the idea of him sitting in a hotel room, counting down the minutes until we see each other again.
“But, uhh, there’s a reason I’m calling,” Jordy says. “Other than to hear your voice, I mean.”
I frown and shift my backpack higher. “And what might that be?”
“Actually, I wanted to give you a heads-up about something. A warning, I guess.”
“You want to warn me about something the second I step off the plane in a foreign country?” I ask. If my voice is somewhat shrill, I suppose it’s because I feel somewhat shrill.
“Do you remember my ex-girlfriend Maya?”
“I guess. I remember her name?”
“Cool, well, she’s going to be there.”
“As it happens, this doesn’t come as a shock to me, Jordy. I do know the show I signed up for.”
“Right… but I’m not sure you signed up for Maya Bailey.”