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Neanderthal Marries Human

Neanderthal Marries Human (Knitting in the City #1.5)(47)
Author: Penny Reid

I guessed the number would be as fascinating as it was shocking, but likely not surprising.

When we stumbled into our hotel room, everyone gasped, myself included.

It was enormous.

It must’ve been one of the largest hotel rooms in the world. I wouldn’t know for certain until I’d measured the square footage.

The entrance opened to a waterfall behind glass that was lit from the ceiling. To the right was a huge bar with every type of liquor imaginable. To the left was a hallway. Behind the waterfall was a giant living room with four couches, seven chairs, and a panoramic view of Las Vegas as seen from the forty-ninth floor.

The suite reminded me a 1970s lounge, if everything in that lounge had been brand-new, lacked wood paneling, was oversized, red, orange, and gold, and felt like heaven.

The red couches were soft. The orange shag carpet was softer. The bearskin rug in front of the fireplace was even softer.

We spread out, looked around, and found eight bedrooms. Each had its own bathroom, and each bathtub was worthy of tubinn time (tub + Quinn).

“At some point I’m getting na**d on this rug,” Sandra said, rolling around on the bearskin. “I might even try to take it home with me in my suitcase.”

I sat in one of the large chairs, and Fiona handed me a bottle of water. “Keep hydrated,” she said, smiling.

“It won’t fit in your suitcase.” Ashley’s voice carried from where she was standing behind the bar, going through all the alcohol choices. “This place is off the chain. They have a bottle of Royal Salute up here.”

“Holy crap!” Marie walked over. “That’s like a thousand dollars.”

Elizabeth walked in, flopped into the chair across from mine. “What is Royal Salute?”

“It’s thirty-eight-year-old scotch,” Ashley responded, then whistled. “I’m not touching it. I don’t even have a thousand dollars in my savings account.”

“How many ounces is it?” I asked.

“It says seven hundred milliliters.”

I did the math in my head, converting milliliters to ounces and dividing the bottle cost by number of shots. “That’s sixty dollars a shot.”

“Well, hell. I can afford that.” Ashley grinned.

Elizabeth winked at me, and I smiled even though I was starting to feel a little unsettled. Maybe it was because the lemon drops were wearing off.

I glanced down at the huge antique ruby ring on my finger and, in my brain, I took a long look around me and thought about the last few hours—the room, the limo ride, the first class tickets—and realized that this was my life now.

I was marrying Quinn, but I was also marrying his bank account.

The thought didn’t fill me with excitement. It filled me with dread.

***

We caught a show that night. Then we gambled and drank and danced in the club on the top of the casino. Then we passed out. No one objected to sleeping late the next morning.

I crawled out of my room around 12:30 p.m. and was the third person up. Fiona and Ashley were also awake, and they’d already been to breakfast, the pool, shopping, and returned. Neither of them were typically big drinkers so it made sense that they didn’t have much of a hangover.

I didn’t have a hangover either, but sleeping in felt good. We’d gotten back to the hotel room after 3:00 a.m. and, without sleep, I was like a malfunctioning Internet search engine. You could ask me a question about moon phases, and I’d come back with information about how to make homemade marshmallows.

Everyone else joined the land of the living over the next half hour, at which point I was informed that we all had an afternoon and evening of bliss planned at the hotel spa. Again, the entire spa had been reserved. I felt a lot spoiled and a little irritated that I was the only one who seemed to be experiencing dissonance with the level of luxury.

I’d never been to a spa before. I’d never had a massage or a facial, and I’d certainly never been waxed anywhere. Sometimes I’d painted my own nails or given myself a pedicure. I usually thought of grooming as standard maintenance, like cleaning out and vacuuming your car. I supposed a day at the spa was like getting a tune-up or an oil change.

Regardless, this experience felt extreme and a little like being a piece of meat prepared for dinner. I was stripped, plucked, cleaned, tenderized, seasoned, boiled, and dressed.

When we arrived, we were told to take off everything but our underwear. The attendant gave us plush terry cloth bathrobes and slippers, lovely against the skin. Everyone was on a different schedule. I started with a ninety-minute massage. Next, I had a soak in a mud bath, a mineral bath, a body scrub, then eyebrow waxing and a facial.

I was disoriented and dizzy, a mixture of relaxed and overwhelmed, when I was shown into a large room and told to sit in a very official looking chair with a tub at my feet. I was glad to see that all the other girls were already there getting pedicures and wearing similarly dazed expressions.

Except Sandra.

She was beaming and talking animatedly. I caught the tail end of the conversation, “…article where they placed jewels around it. Jewels! Can you imagine? It’s called vagazzled.”

“That’s crazy.” Ashley was knitting while her feet were being pampered. “And stupid. Who would want jewels glued to their skin around their vagina?”

“Maybe some women have ugly vaginas,” Sandra shrugged, sipped her water.

We’d all been drinking water since over consuming the night before.

“To a heterosexual man, there is no such thing as an ugly vagina,” Elizabeth interjected. “Although I personally find them very strange looking.”

“Okay, show of hands, who here gets their junk waxed?” Sandra asked and raised her hand.

I glanced around, saw that Kat, Marie, and Elizabeth had also raised their hands.

Sandra squinted at Fiona. “Really? Greg doesn’t complain? He doesn’t want you to skin the peach?”

“Skin the peach?” Fiona lifted an eyebrow at the phrase.

“Yeah, skin the peach, peal the kiwi, groom the cat, mow the lawn, trim the topiary, clip the hedge, scale the tuna?” Sandra’s recitation of waxing euphemisms impressed us all.

“I prefer to say shearing the sheep,” Ashley said.

“That’s because you’re from Tennessee and like farming references.” Sandra, I knew, was purposefully trying to heckle Ashley. Ashley, of course, knew it too. She ignored the attempted heckle.

“No, it’s because it’s a knitting reference. Get it? Shearing the sheep? Carding the wool?”

“Oh! That’s a good one.” Elizabeth smiled and lifted her water bottle like she was toasting Ashley.

“What about defuzzing the sweater?” Kat added, looking thoughtful. “You know, when sweaters get those balls of fuzz.”

“Wouldn’t that be de-pilling the sweater?” Sandra asked.

Elizabeth shook her head. “Doesn’t have the same ring to it. I like defuzzing the sweater better.”

“I feel like Zamboni has a place in this conversation….” I said, trying to think of a good waxing euphemism including a Zamboni. “But I just can’t think of how it could be used.”

“De-icing the rink?” Marie offered.

Everyone shook their head then stared thoughtfully at nothing.

Then Kat broke the short silence and said, “Another way to say vagazzled is lighting the landing strip.”

“That’s good!” Sandra nodded enthusiastically, “I’m going to use that. Maybe figure out how to add the word cockpit to it.”

“What was your original point?” Fiona lifted her eyes to Sandra.

“Oh, I was saying, doesn’t Greg complain about your hairy-kari?”

Fiona shrugged. “When would I have the time or opportunity to worry about harvesting the wheat and leaving decorative crop circles? I have two kids. I’m lucky if I shave my legs.”

“Harvesting the wheat!” Marie gave Fiona a long distance high five then added, “Genius!”

“What about you, Janie?” Elizabeth narrowed her eyes at me. I didn’t know if she did this to see me better, try to be intimidating, or because she was still drunk from the night before.

“What about me?”

“Are you going to start vacuuming the carpet now that you’re getting married?”

I frowned, twisted my lips to the side, and considered the question.

I had no idea.

I hadn’t thought about it. Aside from my lust for sexy shoes, I was exceptionally low maintenance. I shaved, but had never considered waxing.

“Maybe. I’ll try anything once.” I shrugged at last.

“Anything?” Sandra’s smile paired with her eye squint made me nervous.

“Almost anything,” I amended.

Then she asked, “What about a sperm facial?”

“Sandra!” Fiona looked and sounded shocked.

“Is that what the kids are calling it?” Marie said, smirking.

Fiona wasn’t done. “Really, is that necessary?”

“No, really, it’s a real thing! I promise!” Sandra held her hands up, her eyes wide.

Then one of the lovely ladies giving us our pedicures spoke up. “It’s true. It’s a real thing. Heather Locklear gets them. We have them here. We use whale sperm.”

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