Page 35 of Fake As Puck

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“Hungry?” he asks during what must be the third explosion scene.

“Yeah, actually.”

“Pizza?”

“Obviously.” I smile.

He heats up the leftover pizza and brings it over on plates, along with the honey mustard that he remembered I like.

“You don’t have to keep doing this,” I say, taking the plate.

“Doing what?”

“Taking care of me. Remembering what I like. Acting like...”

“Like what?”

“Like this is real.”

He’s quiet for a moment, and I can feel him looking at me.

“Maybe that’s what makes it convincing,” he says finally.

We eat in comfortable silence, and I realize this is the first time all day that I haven’t felt like we’re performing for each other. We’re just two people eating pizza and watching a bad movie, and it feels normal.

Easy.

Like we could do this every night if we wanted to.

Which is exactly the problem.

“I should probably get some sleep,” I say when the movie ends.

“Yeah. Good idea.”

“Thanks for today. The shopping, the practice, booking the flight.”

“Thanks for being a good sport about it.”

“I’m being paid to be a good sport.”

“Right,” he says, and something flickers across his face.

I head to my room and take a long shower, trying to wash away the feeling of his arm around me and the way he looked at me when he thought I wasn’t paying attention.

This is just a job. For money. He’s paying me. I need to remember that.

I wake up to the sound of sizzling bacon and the smell of coffee, and for a moment I forget where I am again.

Today is the wedding.

I walk out in my pajamas, my cotton shorts and an oversized t-shirt that definitely isn’t meant for public consumption. I find West at the stove, fully dressed and looking like he’s been awake for hours.

“Morning,” I say, heading for the coffee pot.

“Morning,” he says without turning around, but I can see his shoulders tense.

I pour myself coffee and lean against the counter, watching him flip bacon.