Dazed (Connections, #2.5)(7)



River and Dahlia met Jagger when they were on their honeymoon in Paris and he was visiting his mother. What brought him to LA we haven’t gotten to yet. But I have learned he is fluent in French, and since I took four years of it in high school, we conversed a little in the language of love. Well, to be honest, very little—my French is really rusty.

Dahlia stands up. “I’m going to make some coffee, and Aerie I bought a new flavor of tea for you.”

I smile and then look at her hand mitted in thick white bandages. “Let me do it.”

River rises. “No, let me. This could be fun. I see a lot of trading in our future,” he says grinning at his wife.

When she steps into him, she’s almost as tall as he is. She wraps her arm around his neck and whispers into his ear. The grin that slides across his face does not leave me wondering what was said. When she drops her hold, her voice takes on a seductive tone. “Come on, lover boy.”

He nips at her lip and I swear he growls as he circles around her. “Your wish is my command.”

Jagger lazily stretches back in his chair, throwing his arms behind his head in a way that places his long, lean body even more on display. He doesn’t comment on the abundance of cuteness shown by those two, so he must be immune to it, just like me.

The dishes are scattered around the table in front of us and I start to gather them. His hand reaches for mine and a slight laugh escapes his mouth. “Sit down. Let’s have dessert and then we’ll clean up. Do you think you can do that?”

I stare openmouthed at him. Then, raising a brow, I answer, “Yes, I can do that.”

“Good,” he says.

“So you’re a chef?”

He laughs. “No. I can cook maybe three dishes well. All compliments of watching my grandmother in her kitchen.”

“So what do you do?”

He brings his arms to the table and leans his elbows on it. “I’ve been modeling.”

My mouth falls open again. So I wasn’t wrong. Because he’s gorgeous, and of course a man with looks and a stance like his is a model. I can just tell he has to have a natural ease in front of the camera.

“Have you always modeled? Since both of your parents worked in fashion?”

“Fuck, no. I stayed as far away from their world as I could when I was growing up.”

“So how did you become a model?”

He slides his chair closer to mine and my pulse starts throbbing again. “The opportunity just kind of fell into my lap. I went to the New York School of Film thinking someday I’d move to California and work for a movie studio. Then after I graduated college I was waiting tables in the city trying to figure out what I should do—stay in New York or move to LA—when a woman I was serving asked me if I had ever thought about being a model. I laughed. But she was serious and asked if she could snap a few pictures of me. I figured what the hell. Why not? She left me her card. I glanced at it and tossed it away—I didn’t think I’d ever hear from her again.”

“But you did I take it. Who was she?”

He shrugs with a hint of a smile. “She was an agent for Witham Modeling Agency. She submitted the test shots she took of me into their male search competition. And wouldn’t you know—I won. That year I appeared on the cover of E Magazine, shot by none other than Lourdes Madrid.”

“Lourdes Madrid? Wow, she’s a legend.”

“I know. I got really lucky. She saw something in me and for whatever reason took me under her wing. Everything just catapulted from there. One minute I was learning how to do quarter turns toward the camera, the next I was in a Calvin Klein ad, and then before I knew it I was walking the runway in Paris at Fashion Week.”

“So you came to LA to model?”

“Well, actually no. I decided family connections might not be so bad, so I asked my dad to see what he could do to get me in touch with Tom Ford himself. He pulled a few strings and before I knew it I had a small part in his film project A Single Man.”

My mouth drops. “You’re in that movie? It was nominated for an Oscar.”

He laughs. “They cut me before it hit the screen. But it paved my way to hopefully play some good parts in the future.”

“Here we go,” Dahlia says, opening up the glass doors for River, who’s carrying a tray in his hands.

Jagger bobs his chin toward River. “I don’t know if it’s cute that you’re so domestic, or if you look like the barista at Starbucks.”

“Fuck you, man,” River responds instantly setting the tray down.

“No f*ck you, twice,” Jagger says.

The two of them go at it and I look at Dahlia who just rolls her eyes. She places a teacup in front of me. “These two hit it off from the minute they were introduced. You would never know they just met a few months ago and that they haven’t been friends their whole lives.”

“That’s kind of sweet,” I say.

“Yes, it is,” she answers, pouring something in my cup from her cute clear teapot. “Chocolate Chai,” she announces, and the scent makes my stomach curl. Dahlia is definitely adventurous. She’ll try anything—new coffee creamer flavors, new drinks at Starbucks, new entrees at our favorite restaurant in Laguna. Me, I stick with what I know I like—chamomile teas and grilled salmon.

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