Sam glances at her sidelong. “Why would I be looking for an apology?”
Fiona shrugs. “For what I did outside the theater. For dragging you into it. For being myself, I don’t know.” She sighs. “It felt good, to lose it on that guy like that. The adrenaline rush, all of it. It’s been a long time since I let myself do something like that.” She looks out at the water for a moment, watching the breakers. “Sometimes I wonder if that’s what it’s like to be an addict. If I was in recovery this whole time from, like . . . my own personality.”
“Taking it one day at a time?” he asks with a smile, but Fiona doesn’t laugh.
“I’m serious.”
Sam shakes his head. “There’s nothing wrong with your personality,” he tells her. “That guy was a dick.”
“Oh, I know he was,” she says immediately. “And I can grandstand all day long about, like, consent, or what you sign up for or don’t sign up for when you’re a kid in this business, or whatever. But the end result is the same.”
“The end result being?”
“That everybody who ever called me a crazy fucking train wreck can go to sleep feeling secure in their assessment this fine evening.”
“Okay.” Sam boosts himself off the hood of the car, turning to face her in the late afternoon sunlight. “I’m going to say something to you, and I don’t want it to go to your head, all right?”
Fiona lifts an eyebrow. “All right . . . ?”
“I think you’re kind of incredible.”
She laughs out loud, throwing her head back in apparent hilarity. “Okay,” she says, holding a hand up. “Look, Sam, just because we fooled around half a time doesn’t mean you have to, like—”
“Can you stop it?” Sam shakes his head, irritated. The truth is that the public side of his job has never bothered him—the opposite, actually. Sometimes he thinks he likes the attention more than he likes the acting itself. But he’s also never gotten anything even close to the kind of scrutiny Fiona did, and it’s starting to occur to him now that he never really stopped to think about what it must have been like for her—the grinding relentlessness of a million casual cruelties, everyone in America saying the same poisonous shit about her until finally there was nothing to do but believe it herself. The whole thing makes Sam feel like a complete and utter dickhead. “I do. I think you’re moody as all hell, and I have no idea what’s going on in your head most of the time, but you’re incredible. Smart and talented and beautiful and—” He breaks off, embarrassed. “Whatever. That’s what I think.” He raises his eyebrows. “And for what it’s worth, I don’t know what rubric you’re using, but we definitely fooled around a whole time.”
Fiona smiles at that, just faintly. “Okay,” she agrees. “A whole time.”
Sam climbs back onto the car beside her, leaning against the windshield so he’s staring up at the sky, the heat from the Plexiglas bleeding through the thin cotton of his T-shirt. It’s uncomfortable, but not uncomfortable enough for him to do anything about it. It doesn’t seem to bother Fiona at all.
“My mom is sick,” he hears himself tell her. He doesn’t even know he’s going to say it until the words are already out, loud and stark in the salty air. He hasn’t told anyone in LA, not even Erin. He thinks he had it in his head that if he could keep it contained safely in Wisconsin, thousands of miles away, that meant it wasn’t actually happening. “She has breast cancer.”
“Shit, Sam.” Fiona turns to face him, pulling one leg underneath her and pushing her sunglasses up into her hair. Her eyes are wide and serious. “Is it . . . I mean, is she going to be okay?”
“Probably not,” he admits. Saying the words out loud feels like getting a piece of popcorn stuck in his throat in a darkened movie theater, like he’s choking and also trying not to make any noise.
Fiona doesn’t reply for a moment, absorbing that information. “She gave me a maxi pad once,” she tells him finally. “At the callback for Birds. Do you remember that?”
“My mom giving you a maxi pad?”
Fiona makes a face. “The callback, dumbass.”
Sam does. He was sixteen at the time; he and his mom flew out from Milwaukee in the middle of January, slinging their heavy winter coats over their arms when they landed at LAX. The callback itself was like a middle school square dance or summer camp, a dozen kids in a rehearsal room playing theater games, all of them switching scene partners until finally it was just a few of them left. Fiona had dyed a hot pink streak in her hair, which he guesses is where Jamie got the idea for Riley. “Sure,” he says.
“I got my period right in the middle of it—like, for the first time, I mean. And Caroline was the one who’d driven me over and I was too embarrassed to tell her, so I’m just standing there in the ladies’ room trying to figure out what the fuck I’m going to do, and your mom came in and took one look at me and that was it. She fixed my pants with a Tide pen and sent me back out there, like the fairy godmother of feminine hygiene products.” Fiona smiles. “She always seemed like a good mom.”
“Yeah,” Sam agrees, scrubbing a hand through his hair. “She is. And I should be there with her, and instead I’m out here trying to be a movie star like some kind of joke.”
Fiona shakes her head. “That’s not what you are,” she says.
“No?” He laughs a little. “Then what am I?”
He’s fully expecting her to say a hot corpse but instead she seems to think about it, her bare knee just brushing his thigh through his jeans. “You’re a magician,” she says.
Sam looks at her in the golden pink twilight: her mouth and her eyelashes, her hair going a little frizzy now that it’s all-the-way dry. He wants to tell her he’s afraid of how much he likes her. He wants to tell her he’s afraid of being alone. He wants to tell her that he’s sorry, that he didn’t mean it last time when he said he wouldn’t bring the show up again but he means it this time, it’s finished. That it isn’t worth more to him than whatever this potentially is here with her.
“Come over,” is what comes out.
Fiona raises one eyebrow, the possibility of it unspooling between them like the first day of summer. “Are you going to promise not to put a move on me again?”
“No,” Sam says quietly.
Fiona gazes at him for a long minute. Then she nods. “Okay,” she says. She scoops her keys up off the hood of the car, metal glinting in the setting sun. “Let’s go.”
Chapter Thirteen
Fiona
Sam takes her hand as they climb the steps to his apartment, the skin all over her arms and back prickling at the contact, his thumb just grazing the underside of her wrist. She smells eucalyptus and jasmine and something else, a nighttime-in-Los-Angeles kind of smell that blows hot out of the desert. One of his neighbors is having a party and she can hear the sound of people laughing as Nancy Wilson caterwauls away.
“Do you want a drink?” he asks, once they’re inside.
Fiona shakes her head. As soon as they came in here she gravitated toward the bookcase, her back bumping gently against the shelves. “Not particularly,” she says.
Both of them are quiet for a minute. Fiona can hear the faucet dripping in the kitchen sink. She wants to say, I haven’t had sex with nearly as many people as everyone thinks I have. She wants to suggest they put on Wives with Knives.
Sam looks at her across the living room. “Shit,” he says, rubbing a hand over the back of his head and smiling a little sheepishly. “I don’t know why I’m nervous right now.”
Fiona shrugs. “It’s normal to be nervous your first time,” she manages.
Sam snorts. “Fuck you,” he says, “get over here,” only then he’s the one to close the distance between them and kiss her, and all at once Fiona forgets to be tense.
She wraps her arms around him, her fingertips working through the soft, dark hair at the nape of his neck. He’s starting to smell familiar, his soap and his shampoo and his skin. “Hi,” he mumbles against her mouth, his hands creeping up underneath her shirt as he turns them around and walks her backward down the narrow hallway.
“Hi yourself.” The bedroom is at the back of the apartment, a triptych of arty minimalist movie posters framed on the far wall and the dense branches of a fig tree visible through the window above the dresser. The wall behind the bed is painted a close, moody gray. “I’ve been thinking about your sheets for two days,” Fiona confesses, the backs of her knees bumping the edge of his bed.
“My sheets?” he asks, lifting his head to look at her. “That’s it?”