Unexpected - EJ Blaise
Unexpected - EJ Blaise
Unexpected - EJ Blaise
The book is a work of fiction. The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to
real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
CONTENTS
Content Note
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Epilogue
Thank You For Reading
Acknowledgments
About the Author
For Hannah
I cannot imagine my life without you in it or this book without your
influence.
Thank you
CONTENT NOTE
This story contains explicit sexual content, profanity, loss of a loved one,
and mild violence.
GOD, I am so fucked.
An unseasonably cold wind whips at the stray pieces of paper peeking
out from my chemistry textbook, mocking me mercilessly as it sends the
pages fluttering to the ground. With a frustrated groan, I drop to my knees
and grab at them frantically, barely resisting the urge to stick out my tongue
at the invisible, elemental prankster trying to make me more fucked than I
already am.
The one time I needed it not to, class ran later than usual. Some fool
decided today was the day for him to attempt to juggle test tubes. Test tubes
that happened to contain some not-so-fun chemicals.
Needless to say, it did not end well.
A pile of broken glass, some mild chemical burns, and a rather
impressive ass-chewing from my chemistry professor later, we were finally
released—a mere twenty minutes late. Which is how I’ve ended up
sprinting across campus, cursing at the wind, and praying my boss won’t
fire me. Punctuality is one of his ‘lines,’ as he likes to call them. Cross one
and you’re done, and I’ve crossed more than a couple lately.
Stuffing the hopefully not important runaway loose sheets into my coat
pocket, I haul ass across the courtyard, ignoring my legs as they scream in
protest and hoping my grossly heavy backpack doesn’t do permanent
damage.
Taking a shift that gives me barely thirty minutes of breathing room
after my last class is my own fault but I couldn’t resist. The lucrative Friday
night shift is too good to pass up, with students practically teleporting from
class to the bar, ready to blow their meager budgets on copious amounts of
alcohol to drown out an undoubtedly shitty week. It’s what I would be
doing, if not for work.
By some grace of God, I slip in the back door of The Green Dragon
with a whole three minutes to spare, only slightly breathless but so red in
the face, I practically blend in with my hair. Flopping down on the lumpy
couch decorating the minuscule staff room, I waste a precious minute
regaining my breath, eyes shut and pants heavy as my head hits the wall.
“You’re late.”
I groan as I crack open an eye and lift my head, pouting at the pretty
blonde suddenly looming in the doorway. “My class ran late.”
Luna Evans pouts right back as she crosses the room to flop down
beside me, blowing out a heavy breath of her own. “I’ve had to deal with
the masses on my own.”
Patting her thigh in apology, I assure her, “I’ll be out in two minutes.”
Pale blue eyes flick downwards to survey my outfit, a brow crooking.
“You’re not dressed.”
“In two minutes, I will be.”
With a roll of her eyes, Luna reluctantly clambers to her feet, making
sure to tap the watch adorning her wrist pointedly before leaving the room,
leaving me chuckling in her wake. Anyone who knows my best friend
knows damn well ‘dealing with the masses’ is something she could do in
her sleep. Especially if the masses are men, considering her uncanny ability
to bend them to her will. It’s the being alone thing she’s not so great at. Or,
more specifically, the being without a gossip buddy for any length of time
longer than twenty minutes.
I’ll admit it; it takes me marginally longer than two minutes to shuck off
my outfit and slip into my uniform, but barely. Like a fraction of a second.
Not long enough for my needy friend to come looking for me again, so I
call that a win.
As I try to tame my curls—the wind combined with the rush has left the
neat braid I fashioned this morning in a state of disarray—I sigh deeply at
my reflection in the shitty mirror hanging on the staff room wall. Little lion,
I can practically hear my dad quipping at the sight of the red mane framing
my face wildly.
“Mils, come on. Your section is overflowing.” A head peeks around the
door, and I sigh again at Luna’s sleek ponytail, the polar opposite of my
disastrous one, not a hair out of place. Even in our work uniform—jeans a
tank top adorned with Greenies’ logo—the girl looks like a runway model.
Honestly, she could wear a trash bag and still look photo-shoot ready.
If I didn’t love her so much, I would hate her.
Catching the apron and notepad she tosses my way, I follow Luna out
the door, internally cringing at the wave of noise and heat that immediately
hits me. As I suspected and as Luna complained, the bar is packed. Not that
it takes much for it to get full, with it being roughly the size of a matchbox,
but we’re truly at full capacity tonight. I have to shove my way past a horde
of already drunk students to get to the back, where the bar suddenly
becomes a restaurant. Of sorts. A diner, really, but God forbid anyone calls
it what it is. “Diners are tacky,” Tim, my boss, says a million times a day.
Looking around the small space, I swallow a laugh.
Yeah. Because nothing says ‘classy’ like underage college students
doing sneaky shots under the table.
“Is Tim here?” I ask Luna as she leads me through the throng
“He left already.” She casts me a pointed look over her shoulder. “I told
him you had a doctor’s appointment.”
Earlier statement amended; I am no longer fucked. “You’re an angel.”
Perfectly manicured fingers pinch my bare arm. “Do some work, suck
up.”
“Yes, ma’am.” I blow my friend a dramatic kiss before parting ways,
heading towards my section of the definitely-not-a-diner.
Luna wasn’t lying; my section is overflowing. It’s only four tables and a
small outdoor area but, jeez, do they manage to squeeze themselves in. One
of the booths has eight people crammed into it; granted, two of them are
girls perched on the laps of the guys they’re with, but still. Quite the feat.
Spotting the myriad of empty glasses decorating their table, I walk, no,
slide over to them, courtesy of the alcohol-slick floors. With my customer-
friendly smile slapped in place, I poise my pen and notepad to take what I
can guess is an order consisting of beer, beer, and more beer. “What can I
get you?”
Eight pairs of glassy eyes slide towards me, and I shift under the sudden
onslaught of attention. Specifically, the male attention. Two of them are
smiling politely, clearly the poster-children nice guys of the group. Another
few are finding the v-shaped dip in my tank a hell of a lot more interesting
than my face, and I’m resisting the urge to snap my fingers and pull a ‘my
eyes are up here, buddy’ move. And one is… unnerving.
No expression graces his face as he stares at me, eyes cutting through to
my freaking soul with their intensity. Pretty eyes, a golden color, almost
glittering in the shitty diner lighting. Those eyes bore into me like he knows
me, which is weird because he definitely doesn’t. God knows I’d remember
if I befriended this man because, Jesus Christ, is he hot. Really fucking hot.
Most notably, someone in my life would probably have an issue with
me being friends with someone I instantly label as really fucking hot, and
that person would not quietly endorse said friendship.
I’m still—completely objectively and not at all lustfully—marveling at
the stranger’s hotness when he plants his elbows on the table. Dark, curly
hair falling over his forehead as he leans towards me, eyes the color of
honey scanning me slowly, the smirking tilt to full lips screaming trouble.
When he speaks in a low, raspy voice, his words are slightly slurred, a tell-
tale sign he’s been here way longer than I have. “Are you even old enough
to be here?”
And just like that, his hotness is forgotten.
God dammit. It’s always the hot ones.
“Are you?” I retort, cocking my head. “I’m afraid I’ll need to see some
ID.”
That smirk vanishes quicker than free alcohol at a kegger. The chuckles
that had begun to ring out around the table die down too, quickly replaced
by the sounds of protesting grumbles and the rummaging through pockets
and purses. I’m rocking a Cheshire Cat grin as almost all of them hand over
slivers of plastic for me to inspect, including Mr. Smart Ass, who does so
with less scowling than expected. <More of an intrigued sneer.
I barely look at the coughed-up IDs—likely fake—before handing them
back. I’m more focus on the three unlucky, empty-handed souls. “Sorry
guys.”
The girls glare at me with narrowed eyes, presumably plotting my death
since I’ve effectively ruined their chances with their delightful companions.
Smiling innocently, I shrug my shoulders in a ‘hey, what can you do?’ kind
of manner. My third victim, a baby-faced kid who barely looks old enough
to drive, pleads with wide eyes, “Come on, I swear I’m twenty-one. Aren’t
you in one of my classes?”
I bite my lip to stop a burgeoning smile. “Nice try, kid.”
Blame your big-mouthed buddy. Maybe now he’ll learn not to be rude to
waiters.
Impatiently tapping my pen against my notepad, I wait for the trio to
reluctantly slide from the booth. As they slope off, tossing daggers over
their shoulders, I wave them off and my smile up a notch until I’m
practically glowing.
When I turn back to the remnants of the group, I don’t even care that I
might’ve robbed myself of a tip because ha ha. “Now, what can I get you?”
THE SUN SET AN HOUR AGO, the night is young, yet the unfamiliar
two-story house before me is already swarming with people. Empty beer
cans and drunk students are scattered across the lawn, the smell of sweat
and alcohol permeating the night air. I grimace as a guy stumbles past me
and the stench becomes overwhelming, making my head spin a little.
I already hate this.
Girlfriend guilt got the better of me, as it so often does, which is how
I’ve ended up standing in front of a random house wearing crappy devil
horns and a red dress, an angel and a cat flanking me.
“This was a terrible idea,” the cat laments, her disgust for our current
situation mercifully matching mine. I glance over my shoulder at the
costume-clad girl dithering beside me, a matching grimace on her pretty
face. Like me and my horns, she’s made the minimum effort tonight.
Slapping on a pair of equally cheap cat ears and digging a black two-piece
out of her closet, she called it a day, dodging Luna like she had the plague
when she tried to paint whiskers on her. White-blonde braids spill down her
back, a stark contrast against her dark skin, a similar shade to her deep
brown eyes.They turn sympathetic when they meet mine, and we share a
tired sigh.
Kate Butcher was the first person I met when I moved to California. She
took one look at me, wide-eyed and terrified on my first day in a brand new
high school in a brand new town, and took me under her wing. Or more like
she shoved me under her wing. Not that I was complaining; I needed a
friend and I guess she sensed that because a friend, I got. A best friend. We
graduated together, got into the University of California, Sun Valley
together, and, by some stroke of luck, got put into the same dorm our
freshman year where we met Luna, the missing piece to our puzzle.
A year later, our little trio snagged a decent apartment near campus.
Granted, it’s small and Kate’s bedroom is little more than a renovated office
and we’re almost certain our neighbors are drug dealers—although, their
dodgy possible profession is counteracted by one of them being the spitting
image of Pitbull—but it’s ours. It’s home.
And I would much rather be snuggled up on our tiny sofa right now
than about to enter the depths of what I strongly consider hell.
Of my two beloved best friends, Kate was the one who at least tried to
take my anti-party side. She knows I hate these kinds of things, especially
when a certain undoubtedly drunk boyfriend is concerned. Drunk Dylan is a
walking advert for PDA. Drunk Amelia, and sober Amelia, are not. It’s not
that I’m against it. It’s more that I can’t stomach the way Dylan totes me
around like a prize he’s won, kissing me without even looking at me.
This isn’t Kate’s idea of a perfect night either but, alas, we were
overruled. All it took was Luna hearing the word ‘party’ and any arguments
became null and void and her one-track mind took over.
And, let me tell you, Luna Evans is not an easy person to say ‘no’ to.
“Suck it up.” A sharp elbow catches both Kate and me in the side, a
sharper gaze shooting us a warning glare. “Complain again and you don’t
get McDonald's on the way home.”
Oh, and, Kate and I are extremely susceptible to bribery.
Miming zipping out mouths shut, Kate and I fake smiles for out friend
who, on the complete opposite end of the spectrum, takes Halloween very
seriously. Luna is always gorgeous but right now, wearing a tight, white
ensemble she spent hours painstakingly picking out with glitter sprinkled on
her tan skin, flimsy white wings strapped to her back, and a halo nestled in
her perfectly curled hair, she’s downright ethereal.
Angel is not quite the name I’d attach to her costume. Goddess is more
accurate.
A third grimace in a matter of minutes creases my face as I glance down
at my outfit, the cute red dress I’d thought looked cute before we left the
apartment suddenly seeming way too plain. I complained my ass off earlier
when Luna cornered me, armed with an arsenal of makeup and a pair of
heels that made my feet hurt just looking at them, but now, I’m grateful she
made me up so I don’t look quite as… frumpy next to her and Kate. In an
odd turn of events, I’m especially grateful for the heels because for once,
I’m somewhere within the realm of being an average height.
“It’ll be fun, okay?” Luna slips an arm through the crook of mine, doing
the same thing to Kate, and tugging us both towards the house. “We’ll
drink, we’ll dance, we’ll find me a delectable baseball player to rub up
against,” Kate and I snort in unison, “and if you still hate your life in an
hour, we’ll re-assess.” Her slender body sways from side to side, bumping
each of our hips. “Deal?”
Leaning forward to sneak a look at Kate, both of us adopt reluctant
grins. “Deal.”
A wave of obliterating heat hits us the second we step in the front door,
knocking the air out of me and instantly making me sweatier than I was a
moment ago. Music pulses around us, so loud I feel like I’m vibrating, and
it’s practically impossible to move without brushing up against an equally
sweaty, writhing body.
Unlinking herself from the trio, Luna steps in front of us, intending to
use herself as a battering ram since she’s the tallest. She needn’t have
bothered; the crowd parts for her like they’re a curtain and she’s freaking
daylight. I resist the urge to laugh at the many, many, many male gazes
swinging her way as she struts past with us in her wake.
May the odds be ever in your favor, I silently tell them all.
We shuffle our way into the kitchen, making it there in half the time it
would’ve taken without Luna’s magic powers. She barely steps a heeled
foot on the tiled kitchen floor before we’re surrounded, every flavor of boy
begging for her attention. Shaking my head with a laugh, I elbow my way
out of the panting throng, leaving Luna in the capable hands of herself and
making my way to the kitchen island. It’s laden with drinks, everything
from wine to soda to tequila available for my drinking pleasure. I retch
internally at the sight of the latter; Amelia and tequila are not friends.
Before I can make my decision, Kate appears at my side and pushes a
cup full of dark liquid into my hand. “Your favorite,” she sings in my ear,
clinking her own full cup against mine.
A pleased hum escapes me at the first mouthful, warmth spreading
under my skin as the sweet taste of rum and cola fills my mouth. My
favorite, indeed. I lift my cup in a silent thank you, about verbalize the
statement when a thick arm winds its way around my thought, cutting me
off as it yanks me roughly against a hard chest. “You came, baby.”
Tilting my head back, I smile cautiously up at a red-faced, clearly
intoxicated Dylan. “I did.”
He drops a kiss on my forehead, the smell of whiskey and smoke
invading my senses, and I will my nose not to wrinkle in disgust. I hate
smoking, detest it wholeheartedly, but I know better than to nag. Nagging
annoys him. I think it spurs him on to do it more, honestly. So, I keep my
mouth shut. Especially since it seems like Dylan is in a good mood. Happy
Drunk Dylan rarely makes an appearance; most of the time, whiskey has the
opposite effect on him. So, I’m going to savor it.
I’m savoring it as I let Dylan cradle me tightly to his chest, let him press
soft kisses to my neck as we dance and mingle and drink. Heavy on the
latter. I’m savoring it when he whispers in my ear that we should go
somewhere quieter, as he corrals me upstairs into an empty bathroom, hoists
me onto a counter, and kisses me hard. I’m savoring it when he unzips his
jeans and I press him closer to me because fuck it. We’re drunk and we’re
happy and he rarely wants to touch me lately, in private, at least. Why not
have a little fun?
I’m clinging onto that little thread of happy hope so tightly, I don’t even
mind when it’s an… unsatisfying encounter, nor when he abandons me
pretty much the second he disposes of the condom, leaving me with my
dress around my thighs and my panties around my ankles. I keep clinging
as I clean myself up, head back downstairs alone, and mingle and dance and
drink again except this time, I do it all sans my boyfriend. I distract myself
with all the mingling and the dancing and the drinking until an hour passes
and I can’t distract myself anymore. Until my overthinking gene regains
control and I notice, hey, I haven’t seen that clingy boyfriend of mine in a
while.
Half-listening to whatever the group around me is chatting about, I rise
on my tiptoes, craning my neck to peer over the crowd as best as I can to try
to find him. A couple of minutes of fruitless searching pass before I hit the
jackpot; a familiar tuft of dirty blond hair and a broad back clad with a t-
shirt I bought him sneaking upstairs. Excusing myself from the group, I
make a beeline for the stairs, my calls of his name drowned out by the
oppressive music.
It takes a solid ten minutes to wrestle my way through the crowd,
another five before I can even make it up the stairs, due to the congregation
of people who’ve chosen the bottom step as their designated conversation
zone. I’m out of breath by the time I make it upstairs, huffing a little as I
frown at the long stretch of empty hallway before me. Weird. Maybe he’s
looking for a bathroom or something.
Stumbling slightly because heels and rum are a dangerous combination,
I reach the first door, lifting a hand to wrap my knuckles against the wood.
My fingers freeze mid-air when, all of a sudden, the unmistakable sound of
moans fills the hallway.
“Dylan.”
I’m lurking in the kitchen, regretting my life choices and hiding from the
hook-up I left behind in the bathroom when I spot a familiar face shoving
her way through the mob of dancing students. It’s not the face I’m looking
for but it catches my attention all the same.
Not-Blondie—I need to learn her name—sighs as she comes to a stop in
front of me, an expression of concern twisting her face.
“Lost her again?” I ask, slightly amused that Red keeps giving everyone
the slip. Wild little thing.
My new unnamed friend sighs again and nods.
“And the other one?”
“Ask your roommate.”
Alright. Good for you, cowboy.
“I’ll take upstairs again,” I call over my shoulder as I head for the
staircase again with a parting salute, hoping I don’t find anything close to
resembling earlier’s scene. Thankfully, the hallway is empty, all doors
firmly shut bar one. My bedroom door, I realize.
If someone’s fucking in my bed, I’ll lose it.
Relief hits me like a goddamn truck when I find my room as empty as
the hallway, exactly how I left it except for the pair of heels dropped outside
the ensuite door.
Red heels.
Crossing the room in record time, I gently push the ajar door open,
rapping my knuckles against the wood before peering around the edge. Lo
and behold, as I expected, there she is. Sitting on the tiles with her back
against the tiled wall, knees tucked up to her chest and causing her dress to
pool in her lap, flashing a glimpse of matching panties.
Fucking hell.
“Hey, trouble.”
Red starts at the sound of my voice, her head snapping up fast enough to
give herself whiplash. She frowns at me for a moment, rubbing at her eyes
and smearing black stuff everywhere. “I’m looking for my friends,” is all
she says in a voice so soft and soothing, I could probably fall asleep to it.
Bracing a shoulder against the door jamb, I cock a brow. “One of your
friends happen to be a cat?”
Her frowning increases tenfold, head tilting to the side in an assessing
way. Slowly, her head dips in a nod, a leisurely smile curving her lips, and
damn if the room doesn’t get a little brighter.
Taking a careful step forward, I reach out a hand towards her, a silent
offer to help her up that she accepts. And good fucking thing too because
the girl wobbles like a newborn deer taking its first steps as she clambers to
her feet. She grips my hand with both of hers, an action that draws my
attention to the growing bruise on her wrist. Various shades of purple and
yellow, it wraps around her wrist like a nauseating bracelet, and I have to
look away before the urge to murder Dylan fucking Wells becomes too
strong not to give into.
Dropping my hands as soon as she’s steady enough, I take a step back,
creating a space for her to slip through. She does just that, wobbling out the
door, leaning down as she goes to clumsily scoop up her heels and flashing
me again in the process. I stifle a groan as I become particularly familiar
with the birthmark marring her left ass cheek and wonder what exactly I did
in a past life to deserve this torture.
“Do you want me to find your-” I don’t manage to get my question out
because, as though summoned by her prospective mention, Not-Blondie
miraculously appears in the doorway, her worried expression melting away
when she catches sight of her wily friend.
“Kitty Kate!” Red squeals and throws herself into her friend’s arms.
Not-Blondie, Kate, stumbles as she catches her, her quiet laugh filling the
air. For the first time in my presence, Kate smiles.
“I’ve been looking everywhere for you, Amelia.”
Amelia. Finally. A pretty name for a pretty girl.
A cough grabs my attention, drawing it to Ben lurking nearby too, a
shit-eating grin on his face. “Amelia,” he mouths, and I can just hear his
would-be teasing tone.
I oh-so-discreetly use my middle finger to scratch my cheek, not-
discreetly-at-all scowling at the little shit. Ben only laughs, the noise
alerting the subject of his mockery to his presence. Head tilting again,
Amelia rocks on the balls of her feet as she scans Ben thoroughly.
I scowl harder.
Slowly, she leans into Kate until they’re practically nose-to-nose. “Your
friend is very pretty,” she states in an overly loud whisper, and Ben’s
expression erupts with amusement.
“Sorry to disappoint, beautiful, but I’m afraid we have one too many
things in common.”
Amelia blinks at him cluelessly, too drunk to get the joke. Rolling her
eyes, Kate pokes her friend playfully in the ribs. “He’s gay, Mils.”
Mouth opening in a perfect ‘o,’ she makes an accompanying sound
before breaking out in a smile and poking her friend back. “Like you.”
“Sure, sweetie.”
“Such a shame,” Amelia sighs and clicks her tongue. “I’m on the hunt
for a rebound.”
Well, if that little line doesn’t steal my attention.
“I’m sorry, what?” Kate questions, grabbing her friend by the shoulders
in a useless quest for her fleeting attention. “You and Dylan broke up?”
A hum is the only response she receives, Amelia’s drunken mind
already wandering to what she deems more interesting topics—namely Ben.
She’s back to assessing him, her lips pursed, a finger tapping against the
slightly fuller bottom one.
It’s like a light bulb flickers to life above her head as she has a eureka
moment, recognition flashing in her gaze, a grin brightening her features,
“Baby face!”
Ben’s amusement mingles with bewilderment as slender fingers probe
his face, poking and pinching his cheeks playfully. “Excuse me?”
“I kicked you out of Greenies the other day,” she slurs in explanation
through bouts of giggled laughter. “You were lying about your age, right? I
knew you were lying.”
“Because I have a baby face?”
She snaps her fingers. “Exactly.”
“That’s because he is a baby,” I mumble beneath my breath.
Remembering my presence, at last, Amelia spins towards me. After a
moment of assessment, an accusing finger jabs my way. “You!”
A lazy grin pulls at my lips. “Me?”
“You were rude to me.”
She remembers me, is all my twisted brain gets out of that exclamation.
“You got my friends kicked out.”
“No, you got your friends kicked out by being rude to me.”
She’s yelling but she might as well be whispering sweet nothings with
the way I’m gazing at her. Drinking in the sight of her. She looks exactly
like she did that day. Hands on her hips, hair unruly, those fucking eyes
pinning me in place. Intoxicating, dark green eyes, the color of an evergreen
forest seconds before the sun goes down. My hands itch for my camera,
longing to snap a picture of her but I highly doubt she’d be okay with that.
One day, maybe.
For now, I’ll settle for committing that glower to memory
I’m almost disappointed when the glowering ceases and she turns back
to Kate with a tired sigh, that fire of hers extinguished in the blink of an
eye. “Where’s Luna?” she asks through a yawn.
Kate chuckles as she jerks her head towards the room across the hall.
Jackson’s room. If that didn’t tell me everything I needed to know, the look
of pride on Ben’s face does. God, the guy’s going to be insufferable
tomorrow.
“Go, Luna.” Tiredly, she pumps a fist in the air, jaw stretching in
another yawn as she stumbles into the hall, managing a grand total of three
steps before tripping over her own feet, prompting me to swoop in and stop
her pretty face from meeting the hard floor. “I wanna dance.”
“Maybe you should sit down for a minute.” My kind suggestion earns
me not one but two glares, a glower from the girl I’m holding upright and a
scowl from her friend. The latter nudges me aside and takes my place,
guiding Amelia’s pale arms around her neck, and it’s a good thing Amelia is
so small she all but flops in Kate’s grip.
Despite her obvious distrust for me and that ever-present scowl, Kate
takes my advice and leads her friend to my bed. “Can you get her some
water?”
The gentlemanly thing to do would be to leave the room in search of the
requested beverage.
I don’t move except to shoot a pointed look in Ben’s direction.
Hey, I never claimed to be a gentleman.
“You know, I see you around the diner a lot.”
I jump at the unexpected voice interrupting the rummaging I’m doing
through Cass’ bathroom cabinets in search of a spare toothbrush because I
know the guy keeps a stash in here. Turns out, I’m more of a gentleman
than previously anticipated. They must’ve been buried deep down, those
gentlemanly instincts, inspired to arise at the sight of a drunk girl sprawled
on my bed and her friend cursing and swearing as she tried to get an Uber.
“You can stay here,” I found myself saying before I knew it. “If you
want. I’ll take the couch.”
Kate seemed as surprised at my offer as I was, and I swear I almost earn
a smile.
Any chance of pleasantries dissipate, though, when I mention and third
—absent tonight—roommate’s stash of spare toiletries in his bathroom.
What Kate gets from that, noting with a poignant huff and a meaningful
look, is that my roommate is kinder to his overnight guests than I am.
“I know you,” she remarks suddenly, surveying me from the doorway of
Cass’ ensuite as I crouch on my haunches and dig around in his cabinet.
An unopened toothbrush clasped in my fist, I get to my feet. “What?”
“The diner.” Long fingers tap against crossed arms. “You’re there a lot.”
“So?”
“No one loves diner food that much.”
“Maybe I do.”
Dark brows shoot up, an all-too-knowing glimmer in her darker eyes.
“Really?”
“The booze is cheap.”
“Uh-huh.”
“It’s close to college.”
“And the view is great, hm?”
My eyes narrow, my quips momentarily drying up. If I didn’t know any
better, I would think Kitty Kate has been conspiring with my friends.
“Jackson thinks so.”
She hums, assessing me for a moment longer before turning on her heel
and crossing the hall back towards my bedroom, towards the drunk, sleepy
girl curled up amongst my pillows.
I huff out a breath, raking a hand over my face before following. “You
want some clothes?”
Although she looks less than inclined to spend a night in my clothes,
Kate nods stiffly. I keep my gaze averted from Amelia as I head for my
closet; that outfit of hers leaves little to the imagination when she’s upright
but horizontal, it’s nothing but trouble. I utter a silent thank you to my past
self for doing laundry yesterday as I fish out a couple of clean t-shirts and
accompanying sweats. “Gonna be big but-”
“What the fuck is this?”
Whirling around at the shouted, panicked question, I’m met with fiery
rage and accusing eyes, and the cause isn’t hard to find. In her quest for a
comfortable position, Amelia wriggled around so much her dress has ridden
up. But, remarkably, it’s not the red panties holding my attention.
It’s the ugly bruise spanning her hip, identical to the one on her wrist in
color and rage-inducing tendencies.
My hands fly up in a display of innocence but it only takes one real look
at Kate to note her fury isn’t directed at me. No, something about the look
on her face tells me she knows exactly who’s responsible. And if it didn’t,
the next words out of her mouth do. “I’m gonna fucking kill him.”
Join the queue, sweetheart.
“I found them up here a couple hours ago,” I explain carefully, quietly,
with the finesse of a man defusing a bomb. “I think she walked in on him
with someone else or something. They were yelling at each other and he…”
Lacking words, I gesture at the bruises, seeing the exact moment where
Kate notices the second one marring her friend’s wrist. “I kicked him out
and stayed with her until you found her.”
Kate’s face softens with something akin to gratefulness. She’s silent as
she carefully fixes Amelia’s skirt, stroking her palms over her hair and
murmuring something I don’t catch. Without a word, I set the to-be-
borrowed clothes on the nightstand beside them, next to the glass of water
and the aspirin Ben must have brought up here at some point. Those
gentlemanly instincts of mine flare again as I head for the door, intending
on making myself scarce. My hand’s on the door knob when a soft mumble
stops me in my tracks.
“He hurt me again.”
It’s so quiet, I wonder momentarily if I imagined it. I hope I did. But as
the words ring in my ears like a damn siren, I know I didn’t.
Kate doesn’t reply. When I glance over my shoulder, I find her perched
on the edge of the bed with clenched fists and a ramrod straight back. I
can’t see her face but I’m willing to bet it's painted with murderous
intentions.
Oblivious to the reaction her words have caused, Amelia sighs sleepily.
Eyes closed, she reaches blindly for Kate’s hand, tangling their fingers
together. “Love you, Kate.”
Kate’s expression cracks, tight lips melting into a soft smile. Leaning
down, she kisses her friend on the forehead and suddenly, I feel like I’m
intruding. “And I love you.”
The floorboards creak as I move to leave and glossy eyes flit my way,
Kate’s thoughtful yet heartbroken expression affecting me way more than it
should. “She’s never said it out loud before.”
Again. Before.
It’s becoming more and more obvious what happened tonight wasn’t an
accident nor a one-time thing, and my chest tightens inexplicably at the
thought.
A long moment passes of us staring at each other silently, something
tangible passing between us, before Kate tears her gaze away, breaking the
odd connection. I take my cue, ducking out of the room and closing the
door quietly behind me. I shake my head as I trudge downstairs, trying very,
very hard not to think about the complicated woman curled up in my sheets.
5
AMELIA
Heavy footsteps follow me through the diner and out the front door. They
come to a stop when I do, as I lean against a wall just around the corner, far
away enough from prying eyes and ears, close enough to yell for rescue if
needed. Arms crossed protectively over my chest, I hold my head up high.
“What do you want?”
For someone so intent on talking a moment ago, Dylan is silent for a
long minute, his narrowed gaze fixed on my clothes. “What are you
wearing?”
I hug myself a little tighter. “Clothes.”
Dylan’s jaw clenches. “Who’s?”
Nick’s hoodie, Ben’s sweats, but he doesn’t need to know that. “Is this
seriously what you wanted to talk about?”
“It’s a fucking question, Amelia,” he snaps, and I force myself not to
flinch, to remain steady. “I’m allowed to ask questions when my girlfriend’s
wearing another man’s clothes.”
As I rake my hands over my face in frustration, a chorus of my friend’s
voice rings in my ears. “Ex-girlfriend.”
“C’mon, Amelia.” He reaches out to take my hands but I jerk away,
keeping them steadfastly fisted at my side. “You don’t mean that.”
“Yes, Dylan, I really do.”
“Amelia,” Dylan groans my name like I’m annoying him, like I’m the
problem here. “You’re gonna throw a year away over one little mistake?”
I can’t help but laugh. One little mistake. God, we have different
definitions of ‘little.’ “You fucked another girl, Dylan.”
“It was one time.”
Because that makes it so much better. “We’re done,” I state firmly,
finally. “ Leave me alone.”
“Amelia!”
I try to leave but I’m halted by a hand around my bicep, a hand I never
want to touch me again. Ripping my arm from his grasp, I whirl around,
palms meeting a hard chest as I shove him away with all of my might.
“Don’t fucking touch me.”
“You’re being dramatic.”
“Dramatic?” Shaking my head, I roll up my sleeve, thrusting my bruised
wrist, the dark purple imprint of his fingers on my pale skin, in his face.
“You fucking hurt me, Dylan. You bruised me.”
He swats my hand away without looking, dismissing me with a wave
and a handful of words. “That was an accident.”
An accident. It’s always an accident. “Stay away from me.”
Dylan’s nostrils flare in unison with his temper as he steps forward, red
creeping up his neck and encroaching on his jaw. “You’re a fucking
hypocrite. Giving me shit while you’re strutting around in another man’s
clothes? Cozying up to him at breakfast?”
“I wasn’t-”
“Brother,” he scoffs, distrust written all over his tense features. “Do I
look stupid?”
“Yeah,” a deep, accented voice drawls. “You do.”
I glance aside as Nick rounds the corner, casual in tone and stance,
entirely un-casual in expression. That strong jaw of his looks fit to shatter at
any moment, he’s clenching it so hard. His smirk is tight, forced, not the
easy going one I’ve become familiar with. And his eyes… they’re burning.
Like golden flames. Furious, golden flames firmly fixed on Dylan.
Dylan snickers sarcastically. “Good one, Silva.”
It didn’t click before, Dylan using Nick’s last name, but it does this
time. The familiarity in the way he uses it, the venom behind his tone, it
registers with me this time. “You two know each other?”
Neither man answers; they’re too busy glowering at each other. I’m
beginning to feel a little ignored, honestly, when Nick finally tears his eyes
off my ex just long enough to check me over quickly. “You okay?”
“She’s fine,” Dylan answers for me.
“I wasn’t talking to you.”
“Mind your own fucking business.”
Jesus Christ.
Before they have a chance to whip their dicks out and start measuring, I
clear my throat. “I’m going back inside.” Dylan opens his mouth to argue
but I cut him off like he so often does to me. “Don’t follow me. Don’t call
me. Don’t talk to me ever again. Stay away from me,” I repeat. “I’m done.”
Dylan scoffs and splutters, no actual words coming from his mouth as
he gapes at me. I can practically see his tiny brain whirring, searching for a
viable argument, but I walk away before he can find one.
I half expect him to follow me as I head back inside but he doesn’t; of
his own volition or because a certain inexplicably angry man is holding him
off, I’m not sure, but either way, I’m grateful. I’m grateful for the crowded
diner too because the sea of people means no one notices my re-entry so
I’m free to take a detour. Cutting across the room, I make for the hallway
housing the bathrooms, seeking a second of privacy before I’m bombarded
with questions.
The second I’m out of anyone’s line of sight, I sag against the wall, the
fire that fuelled me when giving Dylan the boot abruptly fizzling out. It’s
the first moment I’ve had to myself all day, the first semblance of quiet, the
first second to think, and it’s like everything catches up with me all at once.
My boyfriend cheated on me.
My boyfriend hurt me.
I no longer have a boyfriend.
I hate him, I genuinely hate him, and I have no rational explanation for
the sudden burning behind my eyes because I shouldn’t be crying. I can’t
cry over him. I’m not allowed to cry over him, according to the rule I made
about thirty seconds ago, yet still, wet eyes become wet cheeks as salty
tears escape and track paths down my cheeks. My wrist aches as I dig the
heels of my hand into my leaking eyes, an attempt to stem the stream but it
only makes it worse. Within seconds, it’s a full-on sob fest, embarrassing
sounds escaping me, my body shaking as I cry over someone who doesn’t
deserve it.
I jump when fingers graze my arm suddenly, recoiling from the mystery
touch. A croaked, incomprehensible but undeniably panicked noise leaves
me.
“Shit.” Nick snatches his hand away, my visceral reaction making him
back up a step. “Fuck, sorry. I didn’t mean to scare you. I said your name
but…”
“It’s fine.” Sniffling, I dry my face as best I can with the sleeve of my
hoodie. Crap, no. Not my hoodie. His hoodie. I got my tears and snot all
over Nick’s damn hoodie. Fuck. “Sorry.”
“It’s fine,” he parrots my assurance. Ensuring a safe distance between
us, he leans against the wall opposite me, so careful as he regards me. He
doesn’t say anything else, not a word, but I see the silent question on his
face.
With a sigh, I swipe at my eyes again, sucking in a steadying breath
before employing what seems to be my new favorite phrase. “I’m fine,” I
insist. “Really. I don’t even know why I’m crying.”
Nick’s silence continues, seemingly content with surveying me, and I
shift under the attention. I’ve never been one for silence, particularly those
of the awkward variety, which is probably why I break it by blurting out,
“Thanks for the save. Again.”
“My pleasure,” he says like he means it. I’m tempted to why he came
after me, why he swooped in once again. But that has its downfalls.
Potential embarrassment when he reveals it to be accidental—he happened
to stumble upon us. Definite pity because poor little Amelia. And more
embarrassment, again because of poor little Amelia, so backboneless being
pushed around by a man, so weak being constantly saved by another. So,
yeah. No. I keep quiet, and silence settles between us, only permeated by
my occasional sniffling and the odd post-sob hiccup.
“So about that rebound you mentioned last night,” Nick suddenly says,
and I jerk in a mixture of surprise and disgust for my past, drunken self.
“Anyone in mind?”
“What?”
“Because I’d be more than willing,”
“Nick!”
“What?” He mimics my tone and the wide-eyed look I’m giving him.
“I’m hot. I’m good in bed. I come with no strings attached. I’m perfect.”
“And modest.”
“Honest,” he corrects.
Choking on a disbelieving breath, I’m incapable of doing anything but
blinking at him in confusion for a long moment before my tongue untangles
itself. “Are you seriously hitting on me right now?”
“Is it making you feel better?”
Is a hot man propositioning me making me feel better? “A little.”
“Then, yeah.” Perfect white teeth glint in the shitty diner lighting as full
lips stretch in a self-satisfied smile. “I am.”
“You are unbelievable.” Practically able to see the dirty joke forming on
his lips, I cut him off before he can say it. “No. Thank you,” yeah, Amelia,
thank the man for offering to pity-fuck you, “but no.”
Nick is unfazed by the rejection. He simply shrugs his broad shoulders,
his smile never faltering as he makes his exit. “If you change your mind,
you know where to find me.”
“I won’t,” I call after his retreating form, a smile on my face that
definitely wasn’t there a couple of minutes ago, and I wonder if that was his
intention all along.
8
AMELIA
It’s the middle of the night when my bedroom door creaks open, light
spilling in the crack along with two shadows. Ordinarily, a girl would be
worried at the sudden intrusion. And I probably would be.
If one of the shadows wasn’t wearing a pink satin nightgown and bunny
slippers, the other clad in the t-shirt I’ve been looking for for a month.
Pausing the movie I was half-watching, I set my laptop on the
nightstand as they creep towards me, jostling each other and shushing each
other, trying to be quiet and failing miserably. Without a word but with a
heavy sigh, I shove down my duvet so they can crawl beneath, a body
curling up on either side of me.
“I’m sorry.” A lithe arm wraps around my middle, a bunny slipper
poking my foot. “I didn’t mean to push.”
“I know.” Luna never does. I learned very soon in our relationship that
in Lu’s mind, boundaries are made to be pushed. And push, she does.
Frequently.
With the best of intentions, of course, a fact that’s proven when she
whispers, “I’m worried about you.”
That, I know too.
I set a hand on her arm, my palm coasting up and down the smooth skin.
“I wanna forget about it, okay? I don’t wanna talk about him.”
The satin hair wrap Kate wears to bed at night is soft against my skin as
she tucks her head into the crook of my neck, a third arm joining our pile as
she wraps her fingers around mine and squeezes gently. “It might help.”
It’s not often that I disagree with Kate, mostly because the girl is always
right, but this is one of those rare occasions. I don’t feel like it’ll help. I feel
like talking about him, about it, will only make it worse. Make me worse.
“Can we talk about something else please?”
Two sighs sound, one more of a disapproving huff, the other
disappointed. “Fine.” Luna relents, and I almost wish she hadn’t because
the playful grin lighting up her face as she props herself up on her elbow
and peers down at me is undoubtedly worse than discussing my past
relationship would’ve been. “How about you tell us what’s going on with
you and Nicolas Silva?”
I choke on a laugh of disbelief. “Excuse me?”
“There was a vibe,” my delusional friend sings, fair brows waggling
suggestively.
“There was no vibe!”
Husky laughter harmonizes with Luna’s evil cackle. “Oh, there
absolutely was.”
“Kate!” God, do I hate when they gang up on me like this.
Shrugging, her lips curl up at the corners. “Just saying.”
Like I said, delusional. Both of them. The only vibe between Nick and I
was discomfort. Awkwardness. Intense, consuming embarrassment. A hint
of kindness I wasn’t expecting but I was grateful for all the same. Unless
the girls happened to witness our bathroom encounter—which I still
maintain was born out of pity—nothing akin to the vibe they’re hinting at
existed between Nick and I.
Luna makes a humming noise as she stretches out beside me, still
grinning. “He’s a total player, you know.”
I didn’t know that. I suspected it, definitely; the guy looks like
heartbreak wrapped up in a perfectly sculpted package. He looks like the
kind of guy to ruin a girl’s life, honestly, with one wink of those pretty
golden eyes.
“But he seems nice.”
Kate elbows me, lips pursed in a sorry attempt to hide her smile. “He
does.”
“And he’s hot.”
I grunt a non-answer, careful not to give Luna what she’s not-so-
discreetly poking around for. Unsurprisingly, my silence does nothing to
deter her. “Excellent in bed, too.”
Side-eying her, I quirk a brow. “You know that from experience?” I
know the answer before Luna provides it; if she’d brought Nick home
before, I definitely would’ve noticed. And if she’d been in that house before
last night, we would’ve known about it; Luna is a lot of things, and shy is
not one of them. Her exploits are a regular breakfast topic between the three
of us and a guy like Nick undoubtedly would’ve been breaking news.
Knowing all this, I still feel oddly relieved at the shake of her head. For
the sake of Jackson, obviously. Nice guys never like sharing.”
“People talk,” Luna explains with a nonchalant wave. “Particularly
drunk girls lamenting over the boy who ghosted them. They talk a lot.”
My nose wrinkles. Sure, Kate, Luna, and I share the intimate details of
our hookups on a regular basis. Or at least, Kate and Luna do; I’ve never
had much to share. But that’s done privately. Quietly. Whispered or giggled
over a cup of coffee while hunched over a table tucked away in the corner
of whatever cafe we stumble in.
Yelling that information for everyone around to hear? I’m not a fan. I
value my privacy. I couldn’t imagine having my sex life broadcasted around
campus for all to comment on.
“Is there a point to your rambling?”
“Is there ever?” Kate quips, earning her a pink bunny slipper to the face.
Luna glares at Kate momentarily before returning her attention to me.
“You know what they say.” At my blank stare, Luna continues, “The best
way to get over someone is to get under someone new.”
“That is terrible advice.” Kate groans, the slapping sound of her face-
palming ringing in my ears. “Please, do not take relationship advice from
her.”
“Hey, I’m very wise.” Playing offended, Luna scoffs, mouth gaping as
she flattens a hand against her chest. The charade only lasts a moment
before she breaks, a smile splitting her face once again as she nudges me.
“He asked for your number.”
Suspicion, and something else I can’t put a name to, tickles my spine.
“When?”
“Like, an hour ago. Nick asked Jackson to ask me for it. Cass slapped
him.”
I snort. Sounds about right. “Did you give it to him?”
My friend feigns offense once again. “Excuse me, no. Girl code.” Like
before, it takes no time for her grin to slip out again. “Do you want me to?”
Dark fingers flick her on the forehead. “Hey, how about we let her be
single for longer than ten seconds before tryna shuck her off on another
man?”
Luna flops onto her back with a huff. “You’re so boring.”
“It’s called being sensible,” Kate retorts. “You should try it some time.”
“Like I said. Boring.”
9
NICK
I’m two hours deep into destroying a punching bag when music drifts
towards me.
No. Not drifts. Stampedes.
My eardrums are assaulted by heavy, brooding, really fucking loud
music. Too loud for a weekday evening, especially with the slight hangover
I’m nursing from last night’s failed hook-up attempt. So loud it fucks with
my concentration, my glove skimming the sack of leather suspended before
me completely.
“Merda,” I curse as I shuck off my glove, leaving my hands wrapped
because hopefully, it won’t take too long to rip the head off whatever filho
da puta is ignoring gym etiquette. Irritation prickling the back of my neck, I
stride towards the source of the music; one of the studios plastered wall-to-
wall with mirrors. My fist raises to pound on the ajar door, intending on
grabbing the attention of whoever’s disturbing the peace. However, my
hand rapidly falls when the first knock pushes the door more open,
revealing the culprit.
I expected to walk in on a vigorous workout. I thought there’d be some
chick in here smashing out a pilates routine because that’s what this room is
usually used for. I didn’t expect to intrude on a girl spread-eagled on the
floor.
But there she is. Lying on her back in the center of the room, limbs
akimbo and eyes closed, is Amelia. Concern grips me for a split second, my
mind instantly conjuring up the worst, until I note the prominent rise and
fall of her chest and her fingers tapping the beat of the music against the
wooden floor.
She’s not injured, then. Taking a break. Or experiencing some kind of a
breakdown. Maybe carrying out a personal therapy session. Whatever’s
happening here, I should back away quietly. Pretend I was never there and
didn’t see a thing and keep up my perfect record of avoidance.
Instead, I stand there watching her like every bit the stalker Ben claims I
am.
Goddamn, she really is beautiful.
Despite the godawful thumping music, she looks peaceful lying there.
Serene. Her expression is as carefree as I’ve ever seen it, completely placid.
Nothing but tight black shorts and a matching sports bra cover that trim
body, baring so much creamy, pale skin for my viewing pleasure,
showcasing the constellations of freckles dotted all over her.
I’m so fucking entranced, it takes a solid couple of seconds for me to
realize the music has stopped, only a voice filling the unexpected silence
jerking me from my reverie. “You gonna stand there all day or would you
prefer to take a picture?”
God, you have no idea.
My gaze flits upwards to meet the green one laser-focused on me. A
minute ago, despite the godawful thumping music, she looked peaceful
lying there. Serene. Her expression was as carefree as I’ve ever seen it, void
of a crumpled brow or narrowed eyes, or worried lips. Now, it’s contorted
in a combination of all three aimed directly at me and my creeping self.
Shit.
Clearing my throat, I aim for nonchalance as I lean against the doorway,
crossing my arms over my chest. “Heard the noise. Came to investigate,” I
explain, copying the arched brow she’s sporting. “Needed a nap?”
“I was warming down,” Amelia snaps as she clambers upright. Fuck, is
that nickname of hers apt. She really is tiny, and not just height-wise. She’s
short, yeah, but she’s slight too. Frail. Like she must snap under too much
pressure. Not quite the frame of the strong, exceptional dancer Cass’
described more than once.
An irritated noise has my gaze rising again, settling on the pink lips
pouting indignantly at me. “Did you need something? Other than to stare at
my boobs?”
“I wasn’t staring at your tits.” My own lips curl upwards in a lazy grin.
“I can if you want me to.”
Amelia huffs in annoyance as she flounces away from me, stomping her
way to the other side of the room where a green tote bag sits next to a pair
of battered sneakers. When she bends at the waist to pull on a pair of socks
and hoist up her bag, I choke on a groan. She didn’t want me staring at her
tits so I’m sure the ass is off-limits too but fuck. I couldn’t look away if I
tried. It’s a perfect view, and I have the sudden urge to weep when I’m
deprived of it as she straightens, shoves her feet into her shoes, and whirls
to face me again. “Seriously, Nick,” she sighs, fiddling with the strap of her
tote as she slings it over her shoulder. “What do you want?”
I cock my head at her, mimicking the way she’s staring at me.
“Someone’s in a mood.”
“Maybe I’m just not in the mood for you.”
Someone woke up on the snarky side of the bed. A good look on her but
a concerning one. “Hey.” I move to block her way when she tries to slip
past me, hating how she flinches at the small movement. “Did something
happen?”
Did that little shit do something again? is what I want to ask but I’m
shooting for subtlety.
Amelia sighs again, an unsteady noise, before shaking her head. “No.”
The tension holding my shoulders taut eases. “Are you okay?”
A tired attempt at a smile lights up her pretty face. “Getting kinda sick
of you asking me that.”
“Getting kinda sick of asking it.”
“I’m fine.” Her favorite response. “Bad mood.”
The delusional section of my brain is disappointed she doesn’t offer up
more. It whines at me to dig deeper but I slap it away, holding off on the
urge. Instead, I let her slip out of the room, following close behind and
gently, non-threateningly looping my fingers around the crook of her elbow
when she makes for the exit. “Wanna blow off some steam?” When she
scoffs and shoots me a look of disbelief, I laugh. “That wasn’t a line.” My
free hand gestures toward the row of punching bags lined up neatly in the
corner. “I meant that.”
“Boxing?” The freckles on her nose clump together as she wrinkles it,
gaze flitting between me and the suspended leather sacks. “You box?”
I hum a yes, something in my belly pulsing when I see a flash of interest
in those alluring eyes. “Do you fight competitively?” she asks, head tilted in
that curious, assessing way I find entirely too endearing. In a way that
exposes the slope of her neck and makes me want to trace the curve with
my fingers to see how silky the skin there is, to test for soft spots.
I’m so absorbed in, obsessed with, her fucking neck, I almost forget to
answer her question. “Nah,” I force out the word. It’s always been a hobby
for me. My version of therapy. Beating the shit out of other people—and
getting the shit beat of me—for a living never appealed to me. Nor did it
appeal to my mother; I came home after a sparring session once with a
black eye and she cried for two days. “You wanna try it?”
I see it on the tip of her tongue. The ‘yes’ she wants to say if only to
curb her curiosity. I see it die too, get swallowed down as she shakes her
head. “No, thanks.”
I shrug to hide my disappointment. “If you change your mind, you
know where I live. Knowing a little self-defense can’t hurt.”
Amelia’s spine straightens, the physical embodiment of her guard flying
up, and I instantly know I’ve said the wrong thing. “If you want,” I add
quickly. “Or, like I said, if you wanna blow off some steam.”
Drop the defenses, querida. I’m not tryna take care of you. Tryna help
you take care of yourself.
Dainty fingers fiddle with the strap of her bag, straight white teeth
chewing on her bottom lip thoughtfully. “Maybe,” she muses slowly,
quietly. “Some other time.”
A grin tugs at my mouth. Better than an out-and-out no. “I’ll hold you
to that.”
Green eyes roll. “Bye, Nicolas.”
This time, when she tries to leave, I let her. I keep my hands to myself
as she strides away but when she glances over her shoulder, the smallest
upward tilt to her lips, and waggles her finger in a wave, I just can’t fucking
help myself. “Need a ride?”
Laughter, real, genuine, laughter, floats towards me, and fuck if I don’t
smile a little harder. “I’d rather walk.”
10
AMELIA
TWO WEEKS HAVE PASSED since the Great Halloween Incident when
Cass struts into Greenies, causing me to pause the tedious task of marrying
ketchup bottles. Suspicion narrows my eyes at the sight of him.
Not because he’s at Greenies; his presence here has become a regular
thing during my shifts since I got his ban expunged. All it cost me was
spending every weekend for probably the rest of my life in this shithole.
No, it’s the smirk on his face, screaming of trouble, and the way he’s
swaggering towards the counter that has a groan bubbling up in my throat.
He’s got his phone pressed to his ear, humming into the receiver as he slides
onto a stool across from me. “I’m with her right now.”
“Who’s that?” I mouth, leaning over the counter to try to get a peek at
the caller ID, yelping when I’m unceremoniously shoved away by a palm to
the forehead. “Hey!”
Ignoring me, Cass holds up a single finger in the universal,
condescending as fuck symbol for ‘just a minute.’ I pout as he uhms and
ahs into the phone, giving me one-sided dribs and drabs of a conversation,
clearly taking sick pleasure in my obvious impatience. “Okay, I’m putting
you on speaker.” Stabbing a thumb at the screen, Cass finally holds the
phone out between us and sings, “Say hello to your second favorite child,
Patrick.”
Patrick? “Dad?”
The voice that replies sparks a lonely pang in my chest. “Hey, sweetie.”
“Hi,” I reply slowly, eyeballing Cass with no small amount of confusion
and suspicion. “How did you get his number?”
“He called me!” Cass’ free hand rises, his fingers forming the scout’s
salute. Funny, because he was never a scout and his honor is questionable.
The quirk of his lip proves it. “This time.”
There’s no time to question why my dad rang Cass instead of me; I’m
too busy internally groaning at the renewed friendship that, God, drove me
freaking mad over the years. It’s only fair, I suppose. It’s not like I haven’t
been sharing almost-daily phone calls with Cass’ mom. Hell, I talk to the
woman more than I talk to Dad.
Our first conversation in almost four years was little more than sobs and
unintelligible wept words. For so many years, Lynn Morgan was my parent.
The only mother I ever really knew. And I was her daughter, her only
daughter. I missed her, I always missed her, but the weight of it didn’t truly
hit me until that first call connected and a hesitant but oh-so-comforting
voice murmured my name, and the tears just erupted.
Like Cass’ visit to my workplace, his mother’s calls quickly became the
norm. Brief check-ins that always leave me feeling a little guilty because I
wonder if she’s calling only to check I haven’t disappeared again.
That disheartening thought doesn’t have long to linger; it’s elbowed
aside by the playful groan echoing through the phone. “I can’t tell if I’m
happy or terrified that you two found each other again.”
Cass and I share a grin. Lynn shared a similar sentiment earlier this
week; she’d added our time apart was the universe’s way of balancing out
the chaos we caused over the decade we spent joined at the hip. Admittedly,
we were menaces in our younger years. Always trolling for trouble, always
causing our parents all kinds of grief, and always proud of it. Sometimes, I
wonder if, buried deep, they were a little glad for the break.
“You two burn anything down yet?” Dad continues in a droll tone.
“Not yet.” Cass’ waggling brows are audible in his teasing tone. “But
the night is young.”
The two men share a laugh, and my face can’t decide whether to grin or
grimace. “Did you call just to make fun of us?”
With a clearing of his throat, Dad sombers, and my gut tells me exactly
what he’s going to say. “I’ve got some bad news, sweetie.”
I have to work for Thanksgiving.
I say the words in my head in unison with Dad as he utters them aloud.
My eyes flutter closed momentarily, puffing out a disappointed but
unsurprised sigh. I should’ve expected it. I spent the last two alone—why
would this year be any different?
I’ve never resented my dad for his hectic work schedule when I was
younger. After the Morgans entered my life—or, rather, after I crashed into
theirs—the many, many hours without him were wholly occupied by them.
I barely noticed if I’m being brutally honest. But after the move, when it
was just me and him, that’s when his absence became glaringly obvious.
That’s when the resentment began to creep in, an emotion I’m capable of
keeping at bay because, hey, such is the life of a surgeon’s daughter. I
always lose my grip a little around the holidays, though.
“It’s fine.” God, I’ve said that word more over the past couple of weeks
than I have in my entire life.
“I’m sorry. I know I promised.”
A soft touch caresses the back of my hand. Opening my eyes, I return
Cass’ sad, sympathetic smile. “Seriously, Dad. Don’t worry about it.”
“Silver lining,” Cass chimes in, squeezing my hand tightly. “You can
spend Thanksgiving with us.”
A weird tingle of excitement swirls in my belly as nerves stutter my
speech. “Really?”
Cass hums an enthusiastic yes. “It was Mom’s idea. I’m under strict
instructions to kidnap you if you say no.”
A snort leaves me even as apprehension settles in my gut. It’s a
tempting offer. So damn tempting. I want to—I don’t know if I can. I’m not
sure I can do it, physically or mentally. In the three years since I left, I’ve
never once had the urge to go back. My chest tightens at the mere thought.
My palms get clammy. A phantom, metallic taste fills my mouth. A dull,
non-existent ache emanates from my long-since healed kneecap. I… “I
don’t know.”
“I think it’s a good idea, Mils,” Dad says gently. “It’d make me feel
better, knowing you’re not alone.”
“Mom said the same.”
Bastards. Guilt-tripping bastards.
The fingers not being held hostage by Cass drum rapidly against the
counter in an off-beat rhythm as I contemplate my choices. Granted, being
alone on Thanksgiving fucking sucks. And while it might’ve been a while,
Lynn’s Thanksgiving dinners are ingrained in my memory; my mouth
waters at the prospect of them. And, beneath the unease and the guilt, I
want to see the Morgans again. But I’m worried about what seeing them
will lead to, worried the things I’ve worked hard to bury deep will arise.
Plain and simple; I’m scared.
“Hey,” Cass’ voice pulls me from the worry wormhole I’m dangerously
close to falling into. Phone nowhere to be seen—he must’ve said goodbye
without me noticing—he wraps both my hands in his and leans in close,
uncaring that I’m at work and we’re surrounded by a fuck ton of people. It’s
only him and I as he murmurs, “We don’t have to leave the house. We don’t
have to see anyone. We can just chill.”
We can just chill. Him and I and the family.
Slowly, hesitantly, half-regretting it as soon as I do, I nod. “Yeah.
Okay.”
I’m soothed more than a little by the great, whopping beam threatening
to split Cass’s face in two. “Great,” he says, eyes the richest brown as they
twinkle at me. “Cuz I already made you a roadtrip playlist.”
“You are such a little shit.”
“You love me.”
I do. Ordinarily, I do. However, I love him a little less when, still
grinning, he props his chin in his hand and blinks innocently at me. “So,
you know the Silvas spend Thanksgiving with us, right?”
Oh, fuck my life.
Heavy panting breaths tickle my cheek as hands hold my hips firmly, a hard
front presses flush against my sweat-soaked back. “Another one,” a husky
voice commands and I shiver despite my elevated temperature.
“I can’t,” I groan, every inch of my body aching.
“Come on, querida,” my torturer coos. “You can do one more.”
“You’re trying to kill me.”
Even without looking, I know he’s adopted that infuriating smirk. “You
asked for it.”
Of all the scenarios I imagined as Nick led me out of the pub—carefully
avoiding our friends because we knew they’d kick up a fuss no matter what
we told them - this wasn’t one of them. I didn’t expect to be breathless and
sweaty and plastered against an equally breathless and sweaty Nick with the
clock steadily ticking towards midnight. I didn’t think his big idea would
involve whisking me away to Sun Valley Fitness Centre and introducing me
to the punishing world of boxing.
I can’t feel my arms. Genuinely, if I couldn’t see them poised in front of
me, weighted down by the gloves protecting my hands, I’d think they’d
fallen off. My whole body feels numb, ready to buckle, yet somehow, I
have enough energy to tense when Nick’s hand moves from my hip to my
stomach.
“You’re holding too much tension here,” he murmurs, tapping the bare
strip of stomach between my tank and the shorts I borrowed from him.
Unsurprisingly, they don’t fit. I secured them at the back with a hair tie but
I’ve long since stopped worrying about them potentially falling down; I’m
more worried about me falling down, period.
“You’ve gotta loosen up,” Nick continues, and if my breath was capable
of catching right, it would. I should be used to him handling me by now; it’s
been hours of him using gentle touches to guide me. Yet every time, he
elicits a physical reaction from me. “Use your whole body, not just your
arms.”
“I’m not tense,” I protest. “I’m exhausted.”
His chuckle has the hair on the back of my neck standing to attention.
“One more. Then we can stop.”
I groan. I grumble. I consider expelling my last shreds of energy by
socking Nick in the gut but I don’t. Instead, when he backs up and calls out
a combination I’m beginning to feel familiar with, I do it.
And despite my complaining, despite the aching burning emanating
from my freaking bones, I like it. I really, really like it. A stiff wind might
be able to flatten me right now but regardless, I feel strong. Powerful.
Simultaneously shattered beyond belief and brimming with adrenaline.
I was hesitant when we first got here. Hesitance nagged at me, even as
Nick’s intentions became clear when he tossed me a change of pants and
started wrapping some kind of soft material around his hands. He did the
same to me, thumbs brushing my racing pulse as he secured fabric around
my wrists, thumbs, and palms. To ensure I don’t sprain anything, he
explained. Then, without giving me a second to question it, he slipped a
pair of boxing gloves over my hands, laced them up, and gently nudged me
towards one of the heavy leather bags suspended from the ceiling.
“Just punch,” he murmured. “Don’t think, just punch.”
So, I did.
And I kept punching.
For hours, we’ve alternated between him demonstrating and me
copying. He’s put me through my paces, teaching me a billion combinations
and yelling me through a series of his favorite workouts, and while I really
want to punch him, I kind of want to kiss him too.
Platonically, of course.
Because I didn’t realize how much I needed an outlet like this until the
sweat started flowing.
I want to burst into grateful, relieved tears as I finish my final
combination and all but collapse on the floor, landing on my ass with a
thump. Bracing my forearms against my knees, my head flops forward, my
forehead sticking to my gloves as I try and fail to breathe. “I think I’m
dying.”
“You’re fine.” The little shit who did this to me snickers. I hear him
plop down in front of me, another groan ripping from my throat when
strong hands wrap around my ankles and yank me a couple of inches closer
until I’m nestled between his legs.
I’m literally trapped between his thighs, my feet basically tucked
beneath his ass, but I can’t find it in me to give a crap when I have bigger
things to worry about. “I’m never gonna be able to breath again.”
More deep laughter contradicts my excessive groans as he pries my
arms away from me, extending them so he can can unlace my gloves and
yank them off. He takes his time unwrapping my hands, his attention
lingering on one wrist in particular. The pad of his thumb smoothes over the
purple imperfection doing its best to last. “Does it hurt?”
“Nope.” It pangs every so often but I’m so hopped up on endorphins,
I’ve barely noticed. Tomorrow, it’ll probably ache a little. I don’t
particularly care.
With a jerky nod, Nick drops my hands, leaning back on his palms and
honestly, fuck him for looking so attractive right now. He’s as sweaty and
flushed and disheveled as I am yet he pulls it off. I look like I’ve been
dragged backward through a hedge. He looks like he’s about to pose for
Men’s Health. I’m fighting for my life. He’s grinning like he could go
another couple of rounds.
“I think I hate you.”
“You mean ‘thank you so much, Nicolas’?”
Knocking my knees against the inner thighs cocooning me, I fix him
with a glare. It only lasts a second, though, before softening. “Thank you,
Nicolas.”
“Anytime, querida.”
12
NICK
I’m sauntering out of the gym, freshly showered and riding the adrenaline-
induced high of winning a fight, when my phone buzzes in my pocket. I’m
half-tempted to ignore; I’ve got a gut feeling that whatever it is will mess
with my carefully curated plan of heading straight to the nearest bar and
finding a pretty girl to celebrate my win with. But it might be Ma—she
always texts me after a fight—and if I don’t reply, her mind will conjure up
the worst possible scenario.
With a resigned sigh, I fish out my phone. Sure enough, ‘mamãe’ lights
up my screen, her text a blunt question; você ganhou? Snickering, I type an
equally blunt sim before scrolling through the rest of my unread messages,
all from Cass. One asking where I am, another detailing an address I don’t
recognize, a request for wine coolers—that coaxes a snort out of me—and
about a dozen variations of misspelled please’s and hurry up’s.
Why? I tap out quickly. The reply dings as I’m slipping behind the
steering wheel of my truck. Clicking on it, a picture floods my screen, a
handful of people visible but my brain only seems to focus on one. My
attention goes right to the beautiful redhead hiding in the right rear corner;
curls a wild mess, eyes squinted shut, mouth cracked in a mid-laugh beam
that I subconsciously copy. I’m so busy gawking at her like a fool, it takes a
moment to notice the half-empty pint bottle of cider clutched in her grasp, a
metal straw sticking out the top. Quickly scanning the rest of them and
noting an array of droopy eyes and flushed cheeks, I chuckle; they look
drunk off their asses.
And they sound even drunker when, twenty minutes later, I rap my
knuckles against what I’m assuming is the girls’ front door and a
cacophony of loud voices and off-key singing seeps through the wood.
It takes four tries until the banging of my fist is heard over the noise, a
round of husking and quiet giggles breaking out. Another minute passes
before the door swings open to reveal the smile I broke several speed limits
to see up close.
It’s a shame it disappears as soon as Amelia realizes it’s me darkening
her doorway, balancing a case of wine coolers, a six-pack of cola, and a
bottle of rum in my arms. “What’re you doing here?”
Not exactly the warm reception I was hoping for. “Ouch.”
“Sorry.” Hazy eyes blink rapidly. “I just wasn’t expecting you.”
“Cass told me to come.” Suddenly feeling awkward, I shift from one
foot to the other, my brow knitted in a frown. “Is that not… okay?”
Shit, maybe it wasn’t. We parted ways on an awkward note yesterday
but I didn’t think it would carry over. “Same time tomorrow?” she’d asked
me, the physical embodiment of a ray of sunshine as she graced me with an
effervescent beam.
“I can’t.” Something in my chest had ached when her face dropped. “I
have plans.”
Granted, I could’ve been more specific. I could’ve clarified that I’d had
a fight scheduled for weeks. But I didn’t and it created this weird moment
of… I don’t know, friction? Distance? Whatever it was, I didn’t like it, and I
was relieved when it dissipated almost as quickly as it formed.
“No!” Amelia all but yells. “I mean yes. Yeah, it’s okay. Sorry.” Pretty
pink lips curl upwards in a sheepish smile. “I’m kinda drunk.”
I tamp down on the sarcastic ‘noooo’ perched on the tip of my tongue.
Adjusting the alcohol in my arms getting heavier by the second, I quirk a
brow. “Can I come in, then? Because it’s fucking freezing out here.”
Amelia’s gaze pinballs, darting from my wet hair to my full arms to my
lack of a jacket, and she seems to snap out of whatever funk she’s in. “God,
sorry.” She steps aside and ushers me inside. “Come in.”
I do as she says, only making it two steps in the door before a shriek
makes me cringe, warm fingertips suddenly grazing my throbbing
cheekbone. Oh, right; I almost forgot my opponent managed to get a single
hit in. “What the fuck? Did you get beat up?”
I snort. “Barely.”
Face crumpled with concern, Amelia leans in, her voice a comically
loud whisper. “Did your date do that?”
“My what?”
“Your date,” she repeats louder. “Cass said you had a hot date.”
“He did, huh?” Jaw clenched, my head swivels towards the shithead
lounging on a sofa three sizes too small for his lanky body and looking way
too proud of himself.
The innocent way he holds up his hands is completely contradicted by
his roguish snicker. “Hey, you and another man fondling each other for an
hour sounds like a hot date to me.”
Not even sparing him the energy it would take me to flip him off, I
glance at a still-frowning Amelia. “I had a fight. Like a boxing fight,” I
clarify when her confusion lingers.
A long, drawn out ‘ohhhh’ sounds before a tiny fist whacks my bicep.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” she demands. “I would’ve gone.”
She would’ve? “Really?”
The indignant, slightly lopsided ‘duh’ look she shoots me says it all.
“Okay.” Fuck me, I’m smiling like a loser. “Next time.”
“C’mon.” Fingers loop around my wrist and shake. “I’ve got Arnica in
the kitchen.”
Before letting her drag me to the kitchen, I make a pit stop to drop off
Cass’ fucking wine coolers, slapping him upside the head for his meddling
and doing the same to Ben, just because. Jackson, I steer clear of; the guy’s
too busy mooning over the blonde in his lap to notice my arrival anyway.
“What was that about?” I murmur once we reach the relative privacy of
the kitchen.
Amelia glances over her shoulder fleetingly as she attempts to scale the
kitchen counter, a precarious wobble to her movements. “Hm?”
I nod towards the front door as I nudge her aside, following her
grumbled directions and snagging the first aid kit from the top cabinet,
nestled in a basket right at the back of the first shelf. When she gestures for
me to sit at one of the stools lining the counter, I oblige, leaning down so
my face is within her range. “The cold front.”
“Oh.” She keeps her gaze downcast, focusing on unscrewing the half-
empty tube and depositing a dollop of the thick, white cream on the pad of
her index finger. “I told you, I wasn’t expecting you.”
“Amelia,” I coo her name, my tone making her glance up warily. “You
can tell me the truth.”
Emerald eyes narrow in suspicion. “I am.”
I wait until she’s smoothed Arnica evenly across my bruised cheekbone
before smirking. “You were jealous of my imaginary hot date, weren’t
you?”
“No.” Slender fingers flick my forehead. “Jesus Christ. I’m surprised
your head fits through doorways, you know.”
“It’s okay,” I croon, her hair silky soft beneath my palms as I pat her
head. “It’s only natural. I know I’m hard to share.”
She’s wondering if she can chuck the Arnica tube at my head and get
away with it, I can tell, but she can’t hide the upwards twitch of her lips. “I
really don’t like you.”
Yeah. I really don’t like her either.
13
NICK
“NO.”
The young face peering at me from the doorway pouts. “Please?”
“Absolutely not.”
A remarkably dog-like whining noise escapes Ben as he stomps into my
room like a disgruntled child. One thing I learned very quickly about the
kid; ‘no’ is not in his vocabulary. “But it’s your birthday.”
“Exactly.” With a grunt, I tear my gaze from the book I’m attempting to
read for class so I can glare at the youngest and most annoying of my
roommates. “It’s my birthday. And I don’t wanna do anything.”
“But that’s boring.”
“Yeah, well.” If not filling my house with a fuck ton of messy, drunk
students—half of whom I probably won’t even know, some of whom are
still teenagers, and most of whom consider twenty-four to be ancient in
their worlds—makes me boring, then so be it. I learned my lesson after
Halloween; the house was a fucking disaster and inexplicably, I was
delegated most of the clean-up. And as much as I was raised in an
environment that uses birthdays as an excuse for elaborate family affairs,
when you don’t have a myriad of friends and cousins and cousins of cousins
of cousins to help clean up, it’s not worth it.
Ben, unsurprisingly, wholeheartedly disagrees. “But it’ll be fun.”
I huff a noise of disagreement that’s no deterrent to Ben. With a
dramatic sigh, he flops on the foot of my bed. I resist the urge to boot him
off as he stretches out sideways, propping his head up on his fist and
sighing again. “The girls are gonna be so disappointed.”
Paper crinkles as I pause mid-page turn. “What?”
“Cass already invited them.” Fuck me, the kid might be some kind of
baseball prodigy but he’s godawful at acting; his attempt at nonchalance is
almost laughable. “They sounded so excited. Oh well.”
Slowly, and regretting it before I even do it, I lower my book and offer
Ben my full attention, knowing precisely what he’s fishing for yet still
asking, “What girls?”
“Oh, you know. Kate, Luna,” he smirks, “Amelia.”
Another thing he’s shit at; subtlety.
“Whatever you’re thinking,” I drawl slowly, my foot itching with the
urge to kick. “Stop it.”
“I’m just saying.” His innocent blink is anything but. “Now they have
no reason to come here.”
Manipulation. I’m being manipulated by a fucking seventeen-year-old.
And the worst part; it’s fucking working. The mention of Amelia’s
name has my ears pricking up like a fucking dog and it’s fucking pathetic.
An errant thought floats through my head, convincing me maybe a party
wouldn’t be too bad if Amelia was there. Sure, we’d see each other anyway
at the gym. But maybe a house full of relative strangers would be better
than the fucking soft porn our workouts have quickly turned into. And
maybe, finally, an opportunity to get laid would arise, as much as that
thought makes an inexplicable, uncomfortable knot settle in my gut.
“If you wanna throw a party,” I word carefully, casually, my eyes firmly
focused on the book I long since stopped reading. “Throw a party, I don’t
give a shit. Don't do it on my account.”
If I paid attention for a second longer, I would’ve caught the slightly
rabid, wholly chaotic, catastrophically mischievous expression contorting
Ben’s face the moment those words left my mouth.
Alas, hindsight.
Never in my life have I found it as hard to get out of bed as I did this
morning. Honest to God I wanted to weep when I opened my eyes after a
pitiful amount of rest and a peaceful sleep—probably the best I’ve ever had
—faded into a reality that involved every inch of my body screaming in
agony. However, all that pain seemed to dissipate when my vision focused
and I clocked the mane of red hair my face was buried in.
We were holding hands. We were cuddling in bed, close as can be, with
our fingers intertwined and clasped to her chest and the first thought that
popped into my head was damn. I wouldn’t mind waking up like this every
morning.
The second thought? Fuck me, am I in trouble.
I’m no stranger to fleeing a bed after spending the night with a girl to
avoid the awkward morning-after conversation but this morning was the
first time I fled in a state of borderline panic. Honestly, I’ve been in that
state since last night. It’s hard to pinpoint the source; it might be the
residual effects of watching her get berated and belittled and manhandled
and being able to do jack-shit about it; or maybe it’s because Luna’s words
are still ringing in my ears and it’s killing me not knowing the specifics,
knowing it’s not my place to ask. I have a sneaky feeling, though, that it has
everything to do with the steadily creeping realization that I’m way more
than just intrigued by Amelia and I have no idea how to handle that.
I thought getting out of the house, forcing some distance between us,
before anyone else woke up and ruining this collegiate year’s almost
imperfect attendance record would give me some respite but no. Now, I’m
stuck in a lecture hall not paying a single iota of attention to anything my
professor is saying, my mind wholly occupied wondering whether or not
Amelia is still in my bed.
More than one gaze swung my way when I strolled in later, a wave of
hushed murmurs breaking out. I ignored the nosy motherfuckers as I
slumped into a seat near the back, yanking my baseball cap further down to
cover more of my busted face and hoping my glare would properly convey
my lower tolerance for conversation and bullshit gossip.
Alas, the dark cloud hovering above my head isn’t formidable enough.
“Some party last night, Nick.”
Before I even glance at the unwelcome speaker, I’m stifling a groan. His
name is a mystery to me—John something, maybe—and the irony isn’t lost
on me, considering he was allegedly one of the people celebrating my
birthday last night. But I do know him. Or more like I know his mouth; we
have more than a couple of classes in common this semester and I’ve
already heard enough of his shit-talk.
I grunt a non-response and face forward again, pretending to be
engrossed in the lecturer’s presentation on Mark Twain’s ‘A Connecticut
Yankee in King Arthur’s Court’ as if I don’t have my dad’s old, detailed
notes burning a hole in my copy of the novel; he started practicing his
lectures on me when I was six and Twain was a frequent favorite.
Either Maybe-John doesn’t clock my disinterest or he isn’t phased by it.
“Looks like you got your birthday beatings,” he snickers. “Rumor has it
Wells beat the shit out of you because you fucked his girlfriend.”
I snort. The only punch Dylan landed was a cheap shot. It was his three
little shit friends who ambushed me. “Rumor has it I beat the shit out of him
first.”
“Right. Fuck, you know he looks worse than you?”
And if that doesn’t perk up my morning; I almost get the urge to smile.
Maybe-John kills that urge pretty quickly by opening his mouth.
“And that little Amelia helped.” I tense at the mention of her name, his
tone as he says it. My hands ball into fists when he lets out a long, low
whistle. “Fuck, man, she was hot before but watching her sock him one?
Permanent place in my spank bank.”
Do not start a fight in class, my common sense chastises.
But I want to, my sketchy impulse control whines.
To my dismay, common sense wins out. As much as I want to—and
fuck, I want to—knocking this guy’s lights out would only earn fleeting
satisfaction and possibly an expulsion, Plus, one more punch and I think my
knuckles might give out.
So, itching with the urge to do more, I kiss my teeth and slowly turn to
face whoever the fuck this guy is, hoping the full extent of my scowl can
pierce the asshole’s thick skull. “You don’t talk about her,” I warn, my
voice low and threatening and so deadly fucking serious. “You don’t look at
her. You don’t even think about her. If you do, fucking trust me, I will make
what I did to Dylan last night look like a fucking spa treatment. Okay?”
It must be obvious that I mean every word I say because John’s smug
expression falls flat. “I was kidding.”
“Don’t,” I spit. “Stay the fuck away from her.”
Laughing nervously, John shifts in his seat, expression a lame attempt at
unbothered. “She your girlfriend or something, Silva?”
I don’t take my eyes off him, don’t relax, as I reply. “Or something.”
17
AMELIA
HE’S DRUNK.
Belligerently drunk, more whiskey running through his veins than
blood.
The smell of it overwhelms me as I haul my boyfriend into the car,
almost crushing myself in the process, sighing in relief when I get him
situated and shut the passenger door behind him. I hate driving but tonight,
I’m glad I took on the role of designated driver; Dylan has a habit of not
recognizing his own intoxication and he doesn’t like to be told no.
Muttering a few choice words about brainless, childish boyfriends who
can’t hold their liquor, I dash to the driver’s side and slip into the car, my
hands shaking as I fumble to fit the keys into the ignition. It’s colder than it
usually is this time of year, a chill in the air that my minuscule outfit doesn’t
agree with; the short dress with very little material Dylan begged me to
wear does nothing to ward off the cold.
A suit jacket tucked around my shoulders would’ve made all the
difference but alas, add thoughtless to my long list of grievances with my
boyfriend tonight. I should know by now that chivalry is off the cards when
he’s wasted.
I should know by now that chivalry is off the cards when he’s sober most
of the time.
The drunk oaf occupying the seat beside me slaps my hand away when I
try to turn the radio on so the drive to his place passes in relative silence, a
weird tension in the air. We were supposed to stay in mine tonight, and I
prefer that a million times more than spending the night surrounded by
Dylan’s stand-offish roommates, but there’s no way I’m subjecting Luna and
Kate to his drunkenness—bad roommate etiquette.
“You need help getting inside, babe?” I ask softly as I pull into his
drive, reaching over to rest a hand on one of his hunched shoulders. The
minute I make contact, he’s shucking me off. Hazy, unfocused blue eyes
snap to mine, an anger in them that matches the scowl contorting his
features, and I recoil at the ferocity. “What’s wrong?”
“I saw how you were looking at him,” he snaps, the words slurred and
senseless.
“What?”
“Don’t act stupid.” In one jerky movement, he undoes his seatbelt and
turns awkwardly to face me, leaning in too close. “You were flirting with
him all night and you know it.”
My head snaps back in shock, the crown smacking against the window
behind me. Dylan wastes no time filling the space I created between us, his
large frame suffocating my smaller one even in a car with not much room
for intimidation. “Dylan, I wasn’t flirting with anyone.”
“Bullshit.” He’s seething, face red for reasons beyond alcohol levels. “I
take you somewhere nice, treat you well, and this is how you repay me?”
Somewhere nice.
The circumstances don’t call for it yet still, I resist the urge to laugh.
Dylan’s definition of ‘somewhere nice’ greatly differs from mine. His
version involves a function organized by one of his lecturers as a way to
meet potential employers. His ‘somewhere nice’ was a stuffy room filled
with stuffier people, none of whom I knew, not the romantic date night his
accusations make it sound.
“Babe,” I keep my voice calm and steady, knowing how he gets when
he’s drunk. “I have no idea what you’re talking about. The only person I
talked to tonight was you.”
Even that’s a stretch; I neglect to mention that most of my night was
spent lurking on the sidelines watching him schmooze and charm. Any
talking I did wasn’t talking at all. It was smiling and looking pretty and
letting myself be toted around like a trophy wife. The closest thing to
stimulating conversation I had was with the waiter who dropped off our
flavorless food.
His disbelief as evident as his anger, Dylan scoffs and draws away,
clumsily opening the passenger door before slamming it shut behind him.
“Dyl, come on.” With a sigh, I elbow open my door and start to get out too.
He’s in a mood, I tell myself. He’ll get over it in the morning.
I’m halfway out of the car, hovering in an awkward half-standing
position when my vision suddenly goes black. Searing pain ricochets
through the side of my face, confusion clouding my senses as I totter
unsteadily on too-high heels. It feels like forever passes before I realize that
the sharp sting, the hot stickiness dripping from what I assume is a gash on
my temple, is a result of the car door slamming into me, catching me at a
weird angle and biting into my skin. I’ve barely come to that conclusion
before it happens again, harder this time, hard enough to knock me off-
balance and cause the bank of my head to rebound off the roof of the car.
Stars float behind my eyes, robbing me of my sight and the ability to think.
Blinking rapidly, the dark spots in my vision recede enough so I can
make out Dylan standing in front of me, one large hand gripping the car
door so tightly his knuckles turning white, his face hard and uncaring. With
a shaky hand, I touch the throbbing spot on the crown of my head, staring
in disbelief at my fingertips when they come away bloody. “Did you…” I
start and finish, my throat tight. “Was that an accident?”
Dylan doesn’t respond. All he does is stare, not a single regretful
thought or emotion behind clear blue eyes, before spinning on his feet and
storming into his apartment complex without another word.
I’m numb, working on autopilot as I shakily climb back into my car. I’m
not sure how I make it back to my apartment in one piece, eyes blurring and
the sickeningly familiar metallic taste of blood filling my mouth, but I do.
It’s not until I stumble inside my apartment, until I’m greeted by the worried
shrieks of my roommates, that it starts to sink in what the fuck just
happened.
The second I pull up to the curb outside my mother’s house, the front door
swings open. Long, dark curls fly messily around Ma’s head as she sprints
down the driveway with the energy of a woman half her age, impatience
oozing from her as she waits for me to turn off the car and exit the vehicle
before throwing herself at me. “Meu Nico,” she murmurs against my chest,
patting my back affectionately. “Eu estava com saudades!”
“I miss-” My attempt at returning the sentiment falters when Ma pulls
back to assess me in that motherly way only for her affectionate smile to
fade, replaced by shock and irritation. When a weak backhand strikes my
bicep, I exclaim, “Que diabos?”
“Nicolas Cauã Silva, o que aconteceu com seu rosto?” The woman
shrieks at a decibel only audible to canines. Utter horror lines her features
as she delicately pokes at the scabs and bruises marring my face.
“Mamãe, I’m fine.”
“Fine!” Throwing her hands in the air, she murmurs a few choice
expletives beneath her breath. “Is this from one of your fights?” I barely
manage to rein in a wince when she pokes the bruise spanning most of my
left rib cage; if my face warrants this level of freakout, I can only imagine
what reaction the rest of me would garner. “Nico, I told you I don’t like all
the fighting.”
“It wasn’t from a fight.” I shut the car door behind me, noting Cass and
Amelia haven’t moved, the former openly watching with a shit-eating grin
on his face while the latter looks exceptionally uncomfortable. “Well, not
that kind of fight.”
Beady golden eyes burn a hole in my face “What kind of fight was it?”
“One I didn’t start.”
Ma’s huff proves she doesn’t like my answer. “At least tell me you
won.”
With a snort, I nod; like I told Amelia a couple of days ago, I’m the one
who spent the night with her in my bed. I win, hands down.
Only slightly mollified, Ma splutters and fusses, oblivious for now to
our audience as she works herself into a state, a red hue tinting her bronze
skin. Skin the same shade as mine, if not a touch darker. I’ve always been
told I’m the spitting image of my mother, the differences between us few
and far between. It’s a long-running family joke that our baby pictures are
impossible to tell apart. The Harrison genes—my dad’s side of the family—
were no match for the Silva ones. The only things I inherited from my dad
are his love of literature and his height. And his smile, Ma likes to say.
I fix that smile into place as I tuck my apoplectic mother beneath my
arm, my free hand gesturing for our spectators to join us. Cass is the first to
reach us, ‘I told you so’ written all over his face. “Don’t look at me like
that,” Ma warns, smacking away his attempts at a hug. “I know you had
something to do with this.”
“Me?” Cass mocks indignation, expression the picture of scandalized. “I
am innocent. I know nothing. Your son is a menace to society all on his
own.”
“You are a dipshit.”
A barrage of spat Portuguese chastising me for my language comes to
an abrupt end when a car door opens and closes for the third time, drawing
my mother’s attention. The scowl slips off her face and I swear to God, her
ears prick up like a dog who’s spotted their new favorite toy.
In a millisecond, Cass and I are forgotten, literally shoved aside as Ma
makes a beeline for the redhead shyly approaching us. Amelia changed
before we left our last stop, swapping her pajamas out for a pair of denim
overalls that shouldn’t be hot but on her, they are, over a white sweater, the
collar of which she tugs on nervously. I should’ve reassured her that any
nerves would be unfounded; Ma’s never met a person she didn’t like and
she quickly proves Amelia is no exception.
“You must be Amelia!” Ma gushes, wrapping Amelia up in a tight hug
faster than the girl can blink. “I’ve heard so much about you.”
I’m not going to dwell on how Ma looks right at me when she says that,
a glint in her eyes that promises trouble.
Amelia is wide-eyed, clearly surprised by Ma’s display of affection but
she returns it and the sight sparks a bone-deep level of satisfaction within
me. “It’s nice to meet you too, Mrs Silva.”
“Please.” Ma pulls away, regarding Amelia warmly as her palms cup
her shoulders. “Call me Ana.”
The hesitance in Amelia’s smile fades as she nods, returning my
mother’s amiability. Ma accepts it greedily, practically glowing as she hugs
her again—we’re a hugging family, I should’ve warned her—before
releasing her. Internally, I groan when she sets her sights on me next,
grabbing me and dragging me the short distance towards the Morgans’
place. “Sofia’s next door. She’s been helping Lynn cook for two days,” she
tells me, purposely and suspiciously loud. Casting a glance over her
shoulder, she yanks me down to her level, voice hushed even though she
speaks in a language only her and I understand, “Amelia é muito linda.”
I keep my mouth shut; I know a trap when I hear one.
Undeterred, Ma persists. “Is that your hoodie?” She peeks over her
shoulder again and I don’t have to see it to know she’s smirking. “You two
must be close.”
I side-eye my meddling mother. “We’re friends.”
Ma hums, grinning as though I’ve cracked the funniest of jokes. I don’t
like how she’s ogling me, examining me like she knows something I don’t
know, inciting alarm bells to go off in my head. With a quiet groan, I check
that Amelia and Cass are out of earshot—they’re still grabbing their shit
from the car—before narrowing my eyes at Ma. “Did someone tell you
something?”
“Is there something to tell?” she counters.
“No.”
Ma snorts. “Mentiroso. You’re blushing, Nico.”
“Não estou!”
“Don’t lie to your mother, Nicolas,” she chastises, patting my cheek
playfully before sneaking a peek over her shoulder again. “I like her.”
Shit, why does that make me itch? “You just met her.”
“I have very good intuition,” Ma claims. “You like her too.”
“Your intuition tell you that?”
“No.” The back of her hand wallops me in the chest as she grins up at
me, dark brows wiggling. “You and your googly eyes did.”
19
AMELIA
The rest of the day passes in a whirlwind of barely restrained emotions and
words left unsaid.
I’m a mess as Lynn steers me towards the living room, a stiff wind away
from crumpling when what Nick told me the night of his birthday rings true
—the pictures of me scattered around the Morgans’ house have gone
nowhere. With a breakdown imminent, I’m grateful when Cass’ dad, Tom,
swoops in and snatches my attention, hugging me in that way only a dad
can and whispering more sweet sentiments.
We don’t talk about it. The elephant in the room. The big why. It’s like
we all make an unconscious, unanimous decision to ignore it. We don’t talk
about the missing years either, treating it like a gateway drug. Like if we
reminisce on the time we lost, the reason we lost it will inevitably come up.
I don’t know about anyone else but I’m content with that decision, despite
the palpable weight of it.
One weekend, one normal weekend with my family, is all I want and
I’m going to do everything in my power to get it.
Well, with my family and Nick’s. Not that that’s a hardship; I freaking
love Ana. She’s the type of person who instantly makes you feel welcome
and comfortable and wanted—my favorite type of person. And Sofia, his
little sister, is adorable. A mini version of her mother, pint-sized yet larger
than life, zipping around and filling the whole house with tangible positive
energy.
She attached herself to me pretty promptly, sitting next to me at dinner
and snuggling beside me during the movie we all watched together and
dragging me upstairs after, insisting she had to see my bedroom before they
left. The spare room, technically, but it was always treated as mine, and it
seems it still is. The same lilac comforter adorns the bed, the same
ridiculously extravagant vanity that Tom built me for Christmas one year is
still tucked in the corner, the same slightly wonky flowers Lynn and I spent
an afternoon painting decorate the pastel walls. Perched on the edge of the
bed, I trace them absently as the inquisitive eight-year-old pokes around at
her leisure.
“Is Cass your boyfriend?” she asks at one point in that random way kids
do.
I can’t help but snicker. “No. More like my brother.”
“I have a brother,” she states like I don’t already know, like I don’t
spend a healthy chunk of my waking hours with the man. Not that she
knows that. It’s cute, how she proudly puffs her chest out as she mentions
Nick, her face aglow with unmistakable admiration. The same admiration
he clearly has for her.
Honest to God, it could do a girl in, watching Nicolas Silva interact
with children.
Sofia abandons the stack of books holding her attention—I was a Meg
Cabot girl back in the day—and joins me on the bed, butt bouncing
excitedly on the mattress. With eyes the same shade as her brother’s, she
blinks up at me, so deceivingly innocent. “Is my brother your boyfriend?”
I choke on my next breath, spluttering a squeaky, “No!”
“Why not?”
Out of a hundred reasons, I lamely settle on, “We’re friends.”
Sofia hits me a look way too pointed, too wise and all-knowing, for a
child. “My mom says my dad was her best friend.”
“That’s…” God, how do I respond to that? “Nice?”
“And they were in love. So-”
Before Sofia can spout whatever childlike logic that makes perfect
sense to her, an overly loud cough interrupts us. I straighten up at the sight
of Nick lazily leaning against the doorway, hands shoved in his pockets,
simmering with amusement. “Minha anjinha,” he drawls and Sofia perks
up. “Time to go.”
The little girl pins her brother with a wide-eyed, pouty-lipped
expression I recognize as one I used to use on my brothers when trying to
get my way. “Can’t I stay here?”
“Not tonight.” In anticipation of the protests brewing, he adds,
“Tomorrow.”
I was pre-warned that the Silva’s tend to spend the night on
Thanksgiving—I’ve yet to consider the reality of that.
Huffing, Sofia reluctantly stands, and I jolt in surprise when she throws
her arms around my neck. The Silvas are a hugging family, I’ve learned.
“Night, Tiny,” she sings in my ear before skipping out the door, Nick
ruffling her hair as she passes.
“You coming?” she yells from the hallway when her brother fails to
immediately follow her.
“Right behind you,” is his rumbled reply.
Her little footsteps thunder downstairs, punctuated by the sound of
everyone issuing drawn-out goodbyes, and still, Nick doesn’t move. Well,
he does—in the wrong direction. He enters my room, bringing with him the
thick tension that seems to permanently exist between us, always out to
make my heart thump a beat faster, my stomach tight, my hands clammy. I
can’t put a name to it, or at least not one I want to admit it. It’s just there.
Always. Alive and pulsating.
My eyelids feel heavy as I track his wandering, making like his sister
and studying every inch of my old room. His lips quirk at the pile of teddies
nestled among my old, frilly pillows, the shrine to the heartthrobs of my
youth decorating a wall, the cactus sitting on the vanity that someone
must’ve kept thriving over the years. All the obvious indications that I
inhabited this room for a decade. “Makes sense,” he mutters beneath his
breath, and I frown.
“What?”
“Your room at my house,” he starts to explain, jerking his head towards
the place that oddly served as a home for both of us. “I remember thinking
it didn’t look lived in. Because you lived here?”
The house next door was only my home by a technicality; I spent more
days, more nights, here by a mile. But it feels like a betrayal to admit that.
Like I’m doing my dad dirty, implying he was negligent when he wasn’t, he
was busy.
Nick accepts my silence as an answer, fingers drumming against the
solid white wood of the vanity. When they lift, aiming for the array of faded
polaroids tucked in the frame of the mirror, I tense. And when he reaches
for one in particular—I know what it is by placement alone, that’s how long
I once spent starting at it, at the face immortalised in film yet painfully
mortal in reality—I’m on my feet before I know it, across the room and
gripping his wrist to halt his movements. “Don’t.”
Nick’s hand stills but his eyes don’t. They flick to the tiny bordered
photo that causes bile to rise in my throat from thought alone. I can’t bare to
look but I know what he sees; a red-haired teenager clinging to a boy with
dirty blond hair, both of them smiling wide, so young and innocent and
unaware. “Who is it?”
My grip tightens, his pulse fluttering beneath my fingertips. “Someone
I’d rather not talk about.”
And that’s all I have to say. The only reason I need to give for him to
drop it, to avert his gaze and move on. That’s one of the things I like most
about Nick, I think; when it matters most, he doesn’t push.
As smoothly as he does most things in life, Nick changes the subject.
He shakes me off so he can toy with the drawstrings of the hoodie I’ve long
since claimed as my own. Even if no matter how many times I wash it,
something distinctly Nick still lingers. “You sleep in this or something?”
My poor cheeks can’t catch a damn break. “Or something.”
A huffed laugh is hot as it wafts over my skin. Nick tugs on the string
tangled around his index finger and the action draws me closer, just an inch
but an inch is everything considering how close we already are. Always so
close, like personal space becomes a distant memory the moment I’m in his
vicinity.
At this proximity, his six-foot-four frame—I don’t know how Luna
garnered that specific information, and I didn’t ask—challenges me, forcing
me to crank my neck back to peer up at him, the opposite of how he dips his
chin downward. “Thanks for letting Sofia hang out.”
“I didn’t mind,” I assure him, my pulse bordering on rapturous when his
smile grows. “She’s a sweet kid.”
Nick hums his agreement. “You have a good day?”
Again, I answer. “I did.”
“Good.” With a satisfied nod that does weird things to my lower belly,
Nick tugs one last time before releasing me, leaving me oddly bereft as he
moves toward the door. “See you tomorrow, querida.”
I pray to every higher power in existence that when I issue my own
goodbye, it isn’t actually as breathy as it sounds to my own ears, “Night,
Nick.”
20
AMELIA
IT’S funny how you forget what home feels like until you’re surrounded by
it.
And it’s even funnier how that feeling hits not when we’re gathered
around the dining room table, ready to eat the elaborate Thanksgiving meal
Lynn and Ana cooked—a freaking delectable combination of American and
Brazilian food. Or when we crowd into the living room to snuggle beneath
the threadbare blankets Lynn made during her crocheting phase and watch a
cheesy Hallmark movie.
Apparently, I feel most at home when perched on the kitchen counter
with James whipping up yet another jug of one of his infamous college-era
cocktails. I have no clue what’s in it, nor do I want to know. The only
important thing is it’s doing what’s intended; getting me shit-faced drunk.
Hysterical laughter bounces around the kitchen as James regales story
after story of his beloved time in college. He graduated a couple of years
ago but the way he’s telling them, you’d swear he was an old man
reminiscing on his youth.
“You did not do that,” I shriek amidst bouts of giggles, my blood
alcohol levels ensuring I find everything and anything he says the epitome
of hilarious.
“Swear on my life. Stark naked except for a horse mask, running across
campus with a very angry security guard on my tail.”
An easy enough picture to conjure up, especially if you know James,
but I don’t even try. Mostly because I have no interest, and a slight sense of
disgust towards anything involving him naked.
James doesn’t linger on any particular story, shooting them at me rapid-
fire until I’m on the verge of passing out, too much laughter inhibiting my
breathing capabilities.
By the time our duo becomes a party of four, I’m on the verge of tears.
“We could hear you from outside,” Cass quips as he strolls into the kitchen,
Nick not far behind. Whilst James and I got a head start, they drove their
parents to a friend of theirs’ place for a Friendsgiving sort of a thing.
Meaning we have the house to ourselves for the night, hence the alcohol.
I flip Cass off a little too vigorously, the sudden movement costing me
my balance and causing me to almost pitch off the counter. Lucky for me,
strong hands catch me before I can, steadying me by the hips and lingering
for a moment longer than necessary. Blinking away the bleariness in my
gaze, I’m dizzy for reasons beyond alcohol as I pat Nick on the shoulder.
“Always saving me, hm?”
His laughter is as warming as any liquor. “Stop needing to be saved.”
I aim a knee at his thigh but it never makes contact. His grip shifts, palm
encasing the entire joint, his hand so large his fingers stretch up my thigh.
They tap against the limb, coincidentally mimicking the exact thump thump
thump of the erratic organ in my chest. “Nice try.” He smirks. “Too slow.”
“Blame my coach. He’s kinda old. A little sluggish.”
“You’re talking a lot of shit for a girl who can’t even sit up straight.”
It’s like a steel rod slams into my spine, that’s how phenomenal my
posture suddenly becomes. Narrowing my eyes, I scoff a telepathic ‘ha.’
“Well,” an amused drawl sounds from beside us, “this is very
interesting.”
Like every other time we’ve been interrupted, Nick’s affection
dissipates abruptly, indifference overcoming his expression as he scuttles
away until his back hits the counter opposite me. “What?”
“Whatever is going on here,” James gestures between Nick and I, “I like
it. Cass won’t like it but I do.”
Trepidation overrides my drunkenness as I twist to locate Cass and
determine whether or not he’s within earshot. Luckily, he’s not; on the other
side of the kitchen, he’s got his head in the fridge, his full attention devoted
to scarfing leftovers. Scowling at James, I hiss, “There’s nothing going on.”
Which is the truth. There is nothing going on. The occasional playful
flirt or errant touch or the odd little moment when kissing seems an entirely
possible concept don’t count as anything. Thinking Nick is hot doesn’t
count as anything. Seeing him at least once a day and not getting sick of
him doesn’t count as anything. Being almost completely positive that if the
opportunity presented itself, I would hop into bed with him doesn’t count as
anything. Not at all.
The uh-huh James snorts reeks of disbelief. “Brother’s best friend.” He
pokes me in the thigh. “Very cliché, Tiny.”
“Shut up.” Clearly, I didn’t learn my mimimize-movements-when-drunk
lesson; when I reach out to cuff James, I once again tempt a face-first
encounter with the floor.
I shouldn’t be surprised when someone rights me quickly, huffed
foreign words brushing the top of my head as I’m steadied, not by the hips
but by the safer territory of my shoulders. There’s no lingering this time
either. As soon as a face plant is no longer imminent, Nick lets me go,
mumbling something about needing water and practically fleeing our little
corner of the kitchen.
He’s barely turned his back before there’s a death grip on my thigh and
I’m yanked down the counter, sandwiched between the marble and James.
“Cough it up. You two are banging, right?”
Would you look at that; I’m suddenly completely sober. “No!”
“Why the fuck not?”
“Because we’re not!”
“But you want to.”
“I did not say that.”
“You didn’t say you don’t.”
With a moan, my head topples forward. “You’re hurting my brain.”
“What’s hurting your brain?”
A shriek lodges itself in my throat at the sudden intrusion of Cass’
voice, and I jump about a foot in the air when I turn to find him right beside
us, frowning. “Alcohol,” I answer quickly before James can cause any shit
like I know he wants to, shooting the eldest of my brothers a glare that only
makes him smile wider. Desperate to redirect the attention away from me, I
flick the collar of Cass’ neatly ironed shirt. “Why’re you all dressed up?”
“I told you, I’m going out with the guys.”
Right. I remember now, he did tell me that. Or asked for my permission,
more like; he was very clear that if I wasn’t okay with it, he’d flake on the
guys and keep me company.
“You coming?” Cass clamps his hands over James’ shoulders, giving
our brother a shake whilst casting a look of irritated disappointment in
Nick’s direction. “I need a wingman. Nick was supposed to but-”
“I’ll come.” Nick’s gruff interruption is punctuated by the clinking
sound of him setting a glass of water on the counter, sliding it my way. I try
to thank him but the words dry up, a frown creasing my forehead when I
notice he’s making a very pointed effort not to look at me. Weird.
Suspicion laces Cass’ tone as he says, “You just said you wanted to stay
here.”
Jaw ticking with irritation, Nick grits his teeth. “I changed my mind.”
In two seconds flat, Cass morphs from pissed to pleased, whooping and
hollering as he claps his friend on the back. “Fuck, yeah. Coming out of
retirement?”
Retirement?
“Fuck off.”
“I’ll give you twenty bucks if you break your dry spell.”
Dry spell. Retirement.
Ah.
I feel ill as a slow smirk—one I haven’t seen in a while, one I didn’t
react to all that well the last time I saw it—twists Nick’s lips. “Make it
thirty and we have a deal.”
Why does the idea of Nick breaking his apparent dry spell make me feel
so fucking sick?
Either I hide the sudden wave of nausea washing over me better than I
think or everyone simply attributes it to my overt alcohol consumption
because no one bats an eye when I crumple like a pathetic, trampled flower.
Or maybe Cass is too delighted over the resurgence of his wingman that
everything else is small potatoes. “You wanna come?”
I don’t even think before declining because hell no. For multiple
reasons. Sitting pretty near the top of the list; I’d rather carve my eyeballs
out with a dull-edged spoon than witness Nick coming out of retirement.
Head down, I’m committed to staring at my feet until the boys leave,
pretending I don’t feel James’ careful gaze inspecting me. “I’m gonna stay
in,” he says through a blatantly faked yawn. A warm palm lands on the
small of my back, patting gently. “Tiny and I have some catching up to do.”
I don’t insist he go. I don’t want to. The last thing I want, right now or
ever, is to be left alone with only my rambling thoughts to keep me
company.
“Suit yourself.” Cass drops a kiss atop my head, promising to be back
soon, insisting if I change my mind, all I have to do is call and he’ll come
running. Not that I will; God knows what I’d be interrupting.
I don’t look up, not once, as the freaking dream team leaves the room in
a flurry of heavy steps and excited chatter from Cass, a deep chuckle that
doesn’t sound quite right to my ears leaving his other half.
When their voices recede completely, James gently nudges me. “C’mon.
I know where Mom keeps the good shit.”
“Marry him.”
My groan echoes around the living room. “Luna.”
“He teaches you self-defense. He beat up Dylan. He brings you coffee.
He works in a bookstore.” She flicks a finger up with each sentence, her
voice becoming squealier and squealier as she counts all the reasons why I
simply must become the next Mrs. Silva. “He’s fucking perfect.”
From the opposite end of the sofa, Kate hums a noise of agreement.
“And he made you come.”
“Yeah.” Luna snaps her fingers, shooting Kate an approving look, the
antithesis to the scowl I send her. “That too. Top of the list.”
“Both of you, stop it.”
“Look me in the eyes and tell me you didn’t have scandalous, angry sex
after you finished yelling at each other last night.”
“I just told you that we didn’t!”
“And how are we to trust you,” Luna tuts, “after you waited an entire
week to tell us about your Thanksgiving shenanigans?”
“Jesus Christ.” My head hits the back of the sofa with a thud as I slump
against the cushions, wishing they’d swallow me whole. I knew spilling the
beans about what happened would incur a bombardment of teasing
commentary. That’s why I kept my mouth shut. Even before anything
happened between us, mocking quips weren’t uncommon and suspicion was
rife, particularly from the blonde portion of our trio; Luna couldn’t, and
clearly still can’t, wrap her head around the concept of us just being friends
—something about ‘the way he looks at me’ or something silly like that.
Kate, as always, played her cards a little closer to her chest, kept her
analysis of Nick and I’s relationship to herself, but now that the cat is out of
the bag, everything else is pouring out with it.
“Oh, come on, Mils,” she sighs, swishing a hand through the air. “You
know he likes you.”
“No, I don’t, actually.”
“And you like him.”
“No, I don’t, actually,” I repeat, kissing my teeth in annoyance when my
friends chuckle. “I don’t!”
Not a lot, anyway. A perfectly normal amount that barely, barely, breaks
the boundary of how much you like a good friend.
Whatever amount equates to letting him eat me out on a kitchen
counter.
While Kate huffs her belief, Luna sighs dreamily, her temple knocking
against mine as dramatically pats beneath her completely dry eyes. “I can’t
believe our Mils is gonna be the one to tame Nicolas Silva. I might cry.”
“Oh, shut up.” I shove the little drama queen away, and she flops onto
Kate with a squeal. “If anyone’s been tamed, it’s you.”
Pale eyes narrow. “Take that back.”
“Don’t worry.” Kate abdicates from the Amelia Torment Campaign and
hops aboard the Ridicule Luna Bandwagon. “Girlfriend looks good on
you.”
Luna groans, hiding behind her hands but not quick to conceal a
glimpse of a smile and a definite blush. Suffice to say, we got the shock of
our lives when Luna arrived back from Thanksgiving break toting the very
thing she’d always sworn against; a boyfriend. And not just any; she bagged
the man made of the most boyfriend material in all of Sun Valley—Oscar
Jackson. I’m not particularly close to the guy—we haven’t had many
opportunities to bond considering his lips are usually occupied attacking
Luna’s—but I know he’s nice. And not nice in the dismissive compliment
kind of way you assign to someone you barely know or when you’re trying
to be polite, but the text-book definition of the word you use for a genuinely
good guy. Just short of shy but quiet, for sure. And an undeniably safe
choice.
Not one of those words would be the first you used to describe Luna but
they work, weirdly, and they’re happy, clearly, so aside from the odd dose
of gentle ribbing my friend definitely deserves, I’m free from objections.
I’m not going to lie though; after she broke the news, I escaped to the
privacy of my shower and spent an hour half-laughing, half-crying as I
compared the oh-so-drastic outcomes of our holiday weekends.
I’m about to continue the heckling when the doorbell rings, and all three
of us turn in unison to frown at the front door. Two subtle kicks to my thigh
urge me to answer—I’m the closest, that’s our rule—and I rise with a sigh,
throwing a question over my shoulder as I cross the room. “Did we order
food and forget about it again?”
A husky chuckle I’d know anywhere greets me as I open the door. “Not
sure you can find me on DoorDash, querida, but thank you for implying
I’m good enough to eat.”
Yeah, I most definitely did not order a six-foot-four Brazilian man
equipped with a smirk and a plastic bag stamped with the logo of our local
Chinese takeout, but I did forget about it. Kind of. I partly forgot, partly
assumed he wouldn’t show up again, at least not tonight.
Unlike the other times Nick has been here, he doesn’t wait for an
invitation to come in; he simply barges past me and heads for the kitchen,
sparing the girls a wave before bumbling around like he owns the place.
It takes me a second to reboot. Another to close the door, and one more
to turn around and gape at the man snagging cutlery from drawer, and
stacking up an impressive amount of foil takeout containers. My gaze
swings from him to my friends, and I stifle an embarrassed groan at their
reactions to this unexpected situation.
Luna’s risen up on her knees to get a better view of the show, her hands
cupping her cheeks and her mouth pursed as she holds in what I’m sure is
an ear-splitting squeal. Kate’s adopted a similar position but she looks like
she can’t decide whether to be amused or confused or concerned. She
settles on the former as she gets to her feet, yanking Luna up with her.
“We’ll be in our rooms if you need us.”
Nick quirks a brow, waving a hand at the mountain of Chinese food. “I
brought enough for everyone.”
A tiny noise escapes Luna, like the sound of a whisper of air leaving a
balloon, and I watch as she subtly waggles five fingers in my direction,
another thing added to her list. “Well-”
“We’re fine,” Kate cuts her off with another hard yank. “Thank you,
though.”
Nick lifts his chin at them as they scuttle from the room—one a hell of a
lot more reluctantly than the other—and then, we’re alone.
I feel like, at this point, I should be beyond feeling awkward around
Nick. Yet here I am, dithering like a loser, unsure of where to look or how
to act. Clearing my throat, I pad toward him, my fingers curling around the
edge of the tiny island separating the kitchen from the living room. “What
is this?”
“Food,” the smart-ass replies.
I offer him a deadpan look. “Why, Nick?”
“I told you I was coming back over.” Cracking the lid of what looks like
sweet and sour eggplant, he slides it toward me, following it up with a
portion of stir-fried broccoli—one day, I’m going to ask how this man
knows all of my orders to a T. “And I thought you’d be more agreeable on a
full stomach. Less likely to flee.”
Despite myself, I laugh. When he offers me a fork, I take it, and we both
dig in.
I manage a grand total of six bites before the suspense gets me. “So?”
Nick pauses shoveling beef noodles into his mouth. Chewing
thoughtfully, he swallows and sighs. “I shouldn’t have said it wasn’t a big
deal. I get that it was a dickhead thing to say but you were clearly panicking
and I wanted to calm you down.”
“I wasn’t-”
“Yes, you were,” he stops my lie before it can fully form. “And that’s
okay, I get it. It was out of nowhere and it was a lot but it happened and you
didn’t have to run away. You didn’t have to avoid me all week either.”
Nick rounds the counter, intimidating as he stalks toward me but not in
a scary way—in a way that sends tingles of anticipation down my spin.
Coming to a stop, his hand curves over my waist, the other resting on the
slope of my neck—his favorite spot—and he uses the grip to tug me closer.
“Here’s the thing, Amelia. I like what we did. I wanna do it again, among
other things. And I think you wanna too but you’re letting that pretty little
head get in the way.”
“It’s complicated, Nick.” So freaking complicated for so many reasons,
none of which I can properly recall as lips brush my fluttering pulse.
“Uncomplicate it.”
“Cass-” Nick’s groan cuts me off, and he retreats from kissing my neck,
displeasure evident in his gaze. “I can’t lie to him.”
“It’s not lying if he doesn’t ask.” Soft lips kiss forehead in a surprisingly
tender move. “We’ll be careful.”
Careful; code for sneaking around. It should infuriate me, the
implication that whatever’s between us will be a secret but in an odd twist,
the thought relaxes me. Takes the pressure off. Makes the somewhat
preposterous idea of me and him a little less…daunting.
And, if I’m honest, it sounds fucking fun.
I swallow hard, my breath stuttering as all the contact starts to go to my
head. “I don’t want a boyfriend.”
A soft chuckle tickles my cheek. “I’m not trying to be your boyfriend. I
just think it would be a waste.”
“What would?”
“I’m attracted to you,” he states like the fact is common knowledge and
doesn’t scramble my insides as much as his mouth brushing the corner of
mine does. “You’re attracted to me.” The opposite corner tingles as it
receives the same treatment. “What’s the harm in having a little fun?”
God, he’s making it all sound so easy. “So, we would be…”
“Whatever you want to be, querida.”
I’m not sure what that is, not until it comes flying out of my mouth like
some gut instinct desperate to be heard. “I want a distraction.”
A pause. A shared breath loaded with hesitation and anticipation as he
scans every inch of my face before finally, his lips touch mine. “Whatever
you want.”
24
AMELIA
IT TAKES LESS than two days for me to realize that maybe I’m not cut
out for a casual, secret, distracting, friends-with-benefits relationship.
I’m not a jealous person. Really, I’m not—when I’m with someone, I
trust them unless given a reason not to. However, I’ve never been with
someone like Nick who attracts women like flies to freaking honey. We’re
in the library, for God’s sake, and no less than four girls have sauntered up
to him in the span of a single hour. I’m so distracted by it, I haven’t
absorbed a word of the textbook sprawled in front of me—studying is a
foreign concept right now. All I’m capable of is excessively clicking the top
of my pen while trying to put a leash on the weird, unfamiliar green
monster writhing in my gut.
“You know,” a voice murmurs in my ear as a pen jabs me in the ribs. “If
you wanna keep your little experiment a secret, you’re gonna have to
practice the whole subtle thing.”
I slide Kate a glare. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Almost as soon as I told the girls about the newest development in my
life, I regretted it. Not that I actually told them; Nick and I’d barely sealed
the deal before they were barging into the room, blurting false apologies for
interrupting us. Well, one of them did; the other shrieked “I fucking knew it”
whilst doing a little dance on the spot and making lewd noises.
No prizes for guessing who that was.
It makes my life a little easier, them knowing, since it means I don’t
have to sneak around in my own home but on the contrary, it makes it a
helluva lot harder to lie.
“Relax.” Kate nudges me, discreetly jerking her head toward where
Nick sits on the opposite side of the wide library table, Cass by his side.
“He’s not doing anything.”
Which is true. He isn’t. In an utterly un-Nick fashion, he’s not sparing
the entourage crowded around him more than a polite smile. In fact, I’m
pretty sure he’s directing them to Cass. I’m wracking my brain trying to
recount a time when he’s turned someone down, and apart from that girl
who got real familiar with my ribcage, I’m coming up empty. My rational
mind can acknowledge that, and appreciate it.
The irrational part, however, is a different story. It insists on reminding
me that the exact parameters of our… situationship have yet to be defined.
For all I know, he could be allowed to do whatever he wants with other
women. I could be allowed to do whatever I want with other men. I am
hopelessly out of my depth here and it’s throwing me off.
Clicking my tongue, I flop back in my chair. “You’re supposed to be on
my side.”
“I side with the facts, baby,” Kate coos, patting my thigh. “And your
guy is too busy mooning over you to entertain anyone else.”
Ignoring the mushy feeling her reassurance incites, I grumble, “He’s not
my guy.”
Kate snorts, re-directs her gaze toward Nick, and snorts again. “He sure
as fuck isn’t anyone else’s guy.”
“What’re we gossiping about?”
We both jump as Ben plops himself in the empty seat on my other side,
the book he was searching for hitting the table with a loud thump.
“Nothing,” we answer too quickly.
Pale green eyes narrow and flit between us, droll sarcasm tingeing his
tone as he drawls, “That wasn’t suspicious at all.”
“You find what you were looking for?” Kate, God bless her, smoothly
changes the subject, easily distracting the kid by tossing a pack of Red
Vines his way. That’s the thing about Ben; he’s the human equivalent of a
golden retriever puppy. Inquisitive, persistent, and you wave a treat in his
face and everything else is forgotten. Every time, it works like a charm, and
now is no exception—snagging a handful of red licorice ropes, he eagerly
goes off on a tangent about his newest assignment.
Ben’s major makes perfect sense to me. Something about the perfectly
windswept blond hair, the cocksure attitude, and the ripped jeans, colorful
Converse, oversized shirt combination he favors simply screams ‘yup, I’m a
musical prodigy.’ Just last night as we gathered in the guys’ living room for
an impromptu pizza-and-movie night, he’d whipped out his ukulele—a
battered old thing covered in Sharpie-scribbled lyrics and faded stickers—
and added to the illusion, serenading us with at least half of Harry Styles’
discography. It felt like we were in some cliche coming-of-age movie about
the importance of friendship and Ben’s melodic voice was the soundtrack.
While I likened his voice to a lullaby mere hours ago, and as much as
I’ve grown to love the kid because I really have, I’d cut out his vocal cords
if it meant he stopped repeatedly humming the exact same notes. Well, to
my ears, they sound the same. According to Ben, they’re entirely different,
and Kate and I have got to choose what sounds better or else it’ll be our
fault when he fails his final composition of the semester.
“Stop making that noise,” I beg, gesturing to the Red Vine he’s gnawing
on, “or I’m seriously going to ram that down your throat.”
I shouldn’t be surprised when Ben finds unintended dirtiness in that
threat. “Don’t tease me, Tiny.” He winks, waving the long piece of candy
like a lasso. “You know I’m working on my gag reflex.”
God, my own damn gag reflex is triggered by the image that evokes.
Ben snickers as Kate and I shiver and dry-heave dramatically, but all
three of us sober up when a shadow falls over our section of the table. A
yelp escapes Ben as a hand lands on the back of his chair and yanks so it’s
teetering on the back two legs, attempting to tip him off but he holds on
tight. Dropping his head back, he scowls. “Can I help you?”
Nick wiggles the chair again, another attempt to dethrone Ben. “Scram,
kid.”
“Excuse me.”
Ignoring the indignant screech, Nick waves an A4 notepad in my
direction, quirking a smile that’s far from innocent. “Need a proofreader.”
Ben tries to swipe the notepad, pouting when Nick evades him. “I can
read too, you know.”
“You can?” Nick drawls sarcastically, proving the third time’s the
charm when he angles the chair again and Ben finally tumbles out. Waving
a dismissive hand at the kid mumbling profanities and discreetly waving a
middle finger his way, Nick claims the recently vacated seat. “I’ll keep that
in mind next time I need a nursery rhyme corrected.”
The laugh in my throat dies when Nick shifts to face me. I don’t like the
look on his face at all; it’s not the look of a guy who’s simply wandering
over to ask for help on an essay. It’s way too freaking smug for my liking.
Nick tosses his notepad on the table but neither of us is paying attention
to it, both well aware that it was a ploy. As he did with Ben, he grabs my
chair too but he doesn’t chuck me out of it. He hooks a hand around a leg
and carefully drags me closer until we’re basically thigh to thigh. Glancing
around nervously, a relieved puff of air escapes me; Cass has wandered off
somewhere, none the wiser when Nick slinks an arm around the back of my
seat, not quite touching me but dangerously close to it.
I swallow hard when fingers lightly brush my shoulder, burning through
the material of my sweatshirt. “Not gonna lie, Amelia,” he twirls a strand of
hair around his finger and tugs, “you’re hot when you’re jealous.”
“I’m not jealous.” I’m very aware that I should shrug him off, that we’re
too close for public observation, yet I’m powerless to do anything but titter
awkwardly. “You can do whatever you want.”
Nick makes a noise deep in his throat as his tongue runs over his teeth.
“Can I?”
My first instinct has me opening my mouth to deliver a snapped ‘yup,’
but at the last second, I think better of it. Quietly, I admit, “I don’t know.”
Like I said, I’m entirely out of my depth here. “Maybe we should, uh, set
some rules? Like boundaries or whatever? So it doesn’t get… messy.”
Even messier than it already has the potential to be, I should say.
“Rules,” Nick muses absentmindedly, still fiddling with my hair. He
likes doing that, I’ve noticed, and I have no objection. In general, he’s a lot
more touchy-feely than I expected—I have no objections to that either. “I
can do that.”
Okay. Great. Right direction.
Testing our luck more than he already is, Nick leans closer until it’s
impossible to see anything but him and that freaking dimple-popping smirk.
“You gonna tell me what these rules are or do I have to read your mind?”
Rolling my eyes, I playfully shove him away, and it’s right on time too;
Cass saunters over, squinting at our proximity, and I get that feeling you get
when you’re a kid and you’re caught doing something naughty. “Your
mother never teach you about personal space, Nicolas?”
“Your mother never teach you about paranoia?” Nick retorts, slumping
casually in his seat. To everyone else, it looks as though his arms simply
drop to his side; no one else can see his hand as it clamps on my thigh.
“Relax, Cass,” he croons, and I don’t know how the hell my brother misses
the sly wink he aims my way. “She’s helping me with something.
Apparently, I need to brush up on my grammar rules.”
I’m aiming for confident as I stride into The Paper Trail later that day,
clutching a paper takeout bag from Greenies and armed with a newfound
sense of clarity.
Somewhere between pretending to study whilst being discreetly pawed
beneath the table and slogging through a work shift with an inexplicable
case of the jitters, I came to a conclusion; I’m in control here. Whatever I
want, that’s what Nick said. The rules, our boundaries, they’re up to me.
He’s handing over the reins, and I should take them instead of being
awkward and nervous and constantly doubting everything when he’s yet to
give me a reason to. I want to go back to how it was between us before the
fateful kitchen incident because I was comfortable then and that was fun,
and it’s supposed to be fun, this thing between us. A welcome distraction.
It’d be a crying shame if I wasted it because I can’t get out of my damn
head.
It struck me as I finished up work that Nick is always the one dropping
in on me, catching me off guard, and that doesn’t feel fair. It probably adds
to the skittish energy I’ve been adopting in his presence lately. So, I’m
balancing the scales a little.
Guided by the coworker behind the register, I find Nick tucked away at
the back of the store. He’s at the far end of an aisle, sandwiched between
two towering walls of books, a stack balanced in the crook of his arm that
he’s working on depositing amongst the shelves. He’s utterly absorbed in
what he’s doing, pausing every so often to skim a blurb or flip through a
couple of pages, and briefly, I linger. I’ve remarked many a time on how
Nick is a man worth admiring, and apparently, rings true even when he’s
doing something as mundane as working.
And as I stare, I find myself thinking WWLED; What Would Luna
Evans Do?
Whistle.
I freaking wolf whistle in the middle of a bookstore.
An immediate cringe follows the noise but I hide it as Nick’s surprised
gaze snaps upward, his expression melting into an ear-to-ear grin that’s
entirely too amused and freaking twinkly for my liking.
Depositing the remaining books on a random shelf, he closes the
distance between us in a couple of long strides, his hands settling on my
waist the moment he’s within reach. “Did you just whistle at me?”
You’re a dipshit, I silently reprimand myself as I contemplate whether or
not the bookshelves are light enough for me to topple but heavy enough to
crush me and put me out of my misery. “Maybe.”
An internal groan echoes around my silly mind as the freaking dimples
come out to play. “Are you drunk?”
“Shut up,” I mumble, my face screwing up in embarrassment.
Chuckling, Nick pries my hands away when I try to hide behind them,
holding them firm as he leans in and kisses me too gently for my brain to
handle. “It was cute.”
This is what fucks with me, I realize. The softness. When he’s sweet to
me—and only me, through his own admission. That’s what throws me off
the most, what causes the flip to switch to awkward. I can the handle flirty
player version of Nick—if that Nick fucked me over, I’d survive it. But this
Nick? The one a girl could get attached to? I’m not so sure.
Kate would say I’m catastrophizing. Lu would chastise me because
‘expect the worst, get the worst’ is her mindset. In a rare twist, I listen to
them both. Pushing any worrisome thoughts aside, I re-bolster myself,
mentally pump up my confidence, and I groan. “I wasn’t aiming for cute.”
If Luna had done it, no way would it have been cute.
However, I quickly decide cute is perfectly okay when Nick kisses me
again with the same sweet reverence. It doesn’t last long, though, before
I’m spun and pressed up against a bookshelf, moaning a stifled noise when
Nick deepens the kiss with a lash of his tongue.
In a matter of seconds, I’m wrecked, gasping for air as my knees
wobble and my head spins and the bundle of nerves between my legs aches
for attention, every graze of the seam of my jeans against it as Nick’s hips
rock into mine damn near maddening. The bag of food in my hands drops to
the ground as they scramble for purchase on the large body pinning me in
place, finding it in his hair—I have to rise on the very tip of my toes to
reach, and Nick assists me with an oh-so-helpful palm on my ass balancing
me, kneading the soft flesh through my jeans. He’s doing exactly what our
agreement entails, he’s distracting me, but now is one of those rare times I
need a clear head.
Nick groans as I wrench myself away, keeping him somewhat at bay
with a hand planted high on his chest. “We have to talk.”
I bite my lip to stop a laugh when the grown-ass man pouts. The action
backfires, though, because it draws his attention to the very place I’m trying
to avert it from. Groaning again, Nick dips his head, grazing the corner of
my mouth before trailing to my jaw and peppering kisses that make me
sigh. “So talk, querida. I’m listening, I promise.”
I wrack my brain for the list I carefully curated earlier but with him
sucking on the sensitive skin where my neck meets my hair, I’m having a
helluva lot of trouble conjuring it up. “No sleepovers,” I eventually manage
to grind out, punctuated by a whimper as teeth nip my ear lobe.
“Veto,” he grunts, the hand not on my ass drifting to the waistband of
my jeans, fingers toying with the top button. “Try kicking me out of your
bed at night, querida. I dare you.”
What was I saying earlier about control? Yeah. I have it. Sure. Uh-huh.
I try again. “We don’t tell anyone.”
“We already covered that one.” He makes his way back up to my mouth
at the same time his hand drifts south. My breath catches as slowly, he
unbuttons my jeans, drags down the zip, and when he finds no objections,
slips his hand inside the stiff denim.
You’re in public, rationale screams, yet nowhere in me can I find it to
care.
Neither I nor the thin fabric of my panties put up a fight as Nick gently
nudges brushes a knuckle against my throbbing clit. “What else?”
Good question. God, he’s really blowing my plan to shit, all my focus
diverting to his hand cupping my pussy. “No sex.”
The golden rule. I’m not going to kid myself and pretend that sex won’t
lead to me getting attached; it will. I freaking know it will. I’m a chronic
monogamist and if I don’t have one hard boundary, I’ll crumble. It’s non-
negotiable and I brace myself for…maybe not an argument, but definitely a
complaint.
It doesn’t come.
“Okay,” Nick agrees way easier than I would’ve expected, even
rewarding me with a hard press of his thumb. “Next?”
“No dates.”
Aside from the no-sex rule, that’s the one most steadfast; dates imply
dating, and that’s a confusion my impressionable mind can live without.
I didn’t think that would be the rule to cause Nick hesitation but it does;
infuriatingly, he pauses everything, drawing back slightly to peer down at
me. “What’re we counting as a date, Amelia?”
I squirm, trying to grind against his hand, but he’s unrelenting. A moan-
sigh-groan hybrid leaves me. “I don’t know.” Believe it or not, I’m not a
dating connoisseur. “Dinner. Movies. That kind of stuff.”
Nick contemplates that for a too-long, exasperating moment. I almost
fall to the floor in relief when he kisses his teeth, almost out of frustration,
and starts tracing my clit in slow, tight circles, gaining speed the more I
moan and writhe.
It’s a short-lived relief; right as I reach the edge I’m quickly guided to,
Nick slows his pace and reduces the pressure, enough so I’m still hovering
but I can’t quite get there.
“Bringing you dinner?” he asks, his voice rougher, breathier, than usual.
“Does that count?”
“No.” I’m hardly going to object to hand-delivered food, especially
considering there’s a burger from Greenies at our feet with his name on it.
Through the pounding of blood in my ears, I swear I hear a muffled ‘thank
fuck’ in response.
“And boxing?” When I shake my head, I’m rewarded with a harsh kiss,
a harsher, toe-tingling touch. “Coffee?” My head shakes again and doesn’t
stop when his final question is, “This?” and his pleased hum spreads
warmth through my chest.
“Good to know.” I mewl when a hand twines in my hair and yanks my
head back slightly so my gaze can collide with a fiery gold one. “I like
doing all of that, querida,” Nick all but growls, “but if I wanna take you
out, I’m gonna. Makes my cock hard imagining you getting all dressed up
for me.”
Oh, God.
“Someone could see us,” I protest but it’s weak, and I use the same
excuse as earlier because it’s all my muddled brain can come up with. “It’s
too messy.”
“Someone could see us right now.” Mouth pressed to my temple, Nick
slips two fingers inside of me. “And I like messy.”
Choking on a scream, I bury my face in his neck, nodding frantically,
agreeing to God knows what, but I don’t care. I think we’re done, I think
I’ve remembered all those goddamn rules that have turned out to be
pointless, I think the tight coil in my lower belly is finally going to be
allowed to snap.
And then Nick issues a directive of his own.
“No one else,” he murmurs, the scissoring of his fingers inside of me
almost frantic. “Just me and you, querida.”
He waits for my jerky, frantic nod, before crooking his fingers and
smashing his thumb against my clit, and finally, I explode, my cries muffled
by the palm that cements itself over my mouth.
Nick barely gives me a chance to catch my breath before stealing it all
away again. Looking all too proud of himself, he leans back, a wholly
indecent glint in his eyes as he licks his fingers clean. “Thanks for dinner.”
25
NICK
My fingers hover over the screen as something hot and unfamiliar curls
in my chest. Obviously, her going out without me isn’t a big deal. We’re a
week into December and despite the fact we’ve both been rammed with
busy schedules, I’m yet to spend a single winter’s night without her, so it’s
probably healthy to spend one apart. Normal, or whatever. There’s probably
something in her little rulebook about that.
I don’t like it, though. It makes me antsy. Uneasy. It irrationally casts
my mind back to all the other times she’s gone out recently and it hasn’t
gone very well on account of a deranged ex. And yeah, it makes me a tiny
bit pathetically jealous of whoever’s occupying her time.
While I’m mulling over a response that doesn’t make me sound like a
freak, three little dots pop back up.
The two words are accompanied by a picture, and just like that, my bad
mood dissipates. Amelia grins at me through a photo, Kate and Luna on
either side of her pulling faces at the camera. They’ve got some kind of blue
face mask shit smeared on their faces, hiding my favorite freckles. In plain
sight, though, is the dark purplish-red mark my teeth left on her neck a
couple of nights ago, peeking out from behind the collar of her pajama top.
My dipshit-level smile quickly fades when Ben plops down beside me,
the bat in his hand clattering loudly to the ground. “What’re you grinning
at?”
Quickly clicking my phone off, I slide it into my pocket with a shrug.
“Nothing.”
Ben doesn’t miss a beat before accusing, “Liar.”
I ignore his goading tone in favor of snatching a beer from the six-pack
Cass left by my feet, using the heel of my hand and the lip of the bleacher
to pop the top off because the genius didn’t bring a churchkey. Ben follows
suit but after a single failed attempt, he tips the bottle toward me with
puppy-dog eyes. I sigh and do it for him.
You’d think that would earn me a bit of a reprieve from the
interrogation brewing—it doesn’t. Beer spills down my chin as a
surprisingly powerful elbow to the ribs knocks me askew. “Someone didn’t
come home last night.”
God, he’s like a cross between an annoying little brother and an
overbearing mother. “Mind your own business.”
Unsurprisingly, Ben does no such thing. “And when someone did come
home this morning, someone was wearing the same clothes they left in
yesterday.”
“Do you have a point?”
“All I’m saying is Amelia’s never gonna fall in love with you if you
keep fucking around.”
I almost spit out my damn beer, that word all but triggering my gag
reflex. “Do you have a head injury I don’t know about? Or are you naturally
deluded?”
“I have a theory.”
“I don’t care.”
“I think you’re in love,” Ben sings, and once again, bile rises in my
throat. It’s a helluva exaggeration. I’m not in love. Fuck me, I could barely
admit I liked the girl until recently—that’s a feat in itself.
And I genuinely fucking like her, which is why it ticks me off when
Cass and Jackson wander over, the former crooking a disbelieving brow.
“Who’s in love?”
When Ben jerks his head toward me, Cass barks a laugh. “Fat fucking
chance,” he says, and I bristle. “Pretty sure you have to have a heart to fall
in love.”
It’s not a new joke. I’ve heard it before; I’ve made it before, laughed at
it before. But for some reason, it hits a little sour. And oddly, I’m not the
only one who feels it.
Sucking in a hissed breath through gritted teeth, Jackson grimaces.
“That’s kinda harsh, Cass.”
“I’m harsh?” Cass blinks at us in bewilderment, stabbing an accusatory
finger my way. “Omega Chi have a picture of you taped over the dartboard
in their living room because you fucked and ducked so many of them. A
girl egged your car because she asked you out and you laughed. You
banged a girl on her birthday, and then you banged her sister twenty
minutes later.”
“Fuck off,” I cut off his deprecating rant, “you know that last one wasn’t
on me.” I was trashed—I thought they were the same person.
“All I’m saying,” Cass continues, hands raised in a display of false
innocence, “is you’re not exactly the type of guy you bring home to
mother.”
“And you are?”
“I don’t run scared at the first whiff of commitment.”
My jaw clenches as I scramble for an argument and come up empty.
Cass isn’t wrong—everything he’s saying is back up by cold, hard facts,
and for the first time, I resent this reputation I’ve earned. How it makes
people see me. Fuck, Amelia sees me like that, right? Probably, and I can’t
even blame her.
As I sit there listening to Cass joke and gripe about how I’d be the last
person he’d let near his sister, I’m wondering how the hell I can prove to
him, and to her, that she’s the last person I want to hurt.
As hard as I try, I can’t pinpoint the exact specifics of how I went from
shivering at the batting cages to shivering on the ground outside a bar.
Alcohol was involved, that much I know for sure—when a six-pack of beer
proved insufficient in drowning out the erratic thoughts buzzing around in
my head, I moved on, and I convinced the guys to move with me. But I
think I might’ve moved too far—I’ve drunk myself into a state even I can
admit is excessive.
Yet even now, my brain won’t turn off.
Amelia this, Amelia that. Amelia, Amelia, A-fucking-melia, it wouldn’t,
it won’t, stop. It’s like the drunker I am, the worse it gets. I keep finding
myself thinking about silly shit, like how I need to start buying oat milk
because it’s the only kind she likes. And how I should probably start
stocking the kitchen with a fuck ton of sugar because she goes through that
shit in her coffee like crack. And shampoo, I need to find out what shampoo
she uses, and conditioner, so I can keep some in my bathroom. And I truly
go down a dark hole when I start panicking about what the fuck to get her
for Christmas, if I’m even supposed to. I want to but I don’t know if that’s
against the rules and fuck me, I don’t know the first thing about buying shit
for girls who aren’t related to me.
I can only be grateful that when it got to the point of me wanting to
articulate those thoughts, I had enough clarity left in me to barrel out of the
bar like a bat out of hell—if sober thoughts are drunken words, God knows
what trouble drunken thoughts would cause, and I wasn’t willing to find out
amongst the present company.
Obviously, the better option is mumbling aimlessly to myself while
collapsed on the dirty sidewalk with my head between my legs mere feet
from the front entrance teeming with life. At one point, I swear I hear
someone call out for me but I firmly ignore it, writing it off as a rum-
induced hallucination. But then I hear it again, definite this time, a feminine
voice crooning my name, and I bristle.
“Not happening,” I mutter beneath my breath, an honest to God hiss
escaping me when a hand lands on my arm. I jerk upright, ready to snap
until I see a cloud of red hair and green eyes tight with concern, and I melt
like a fucking ice cream on a summer day.
Contentment settles in my chest as I sigh her name. Reaching up, I
swipe a thumb down the bridge of a freckled nose, grazing downturned lips
before sloppily cupping her jaw. “Beautiful girl.”
When Amelia frowns, it takes me a second to realize I’m not speaking
English. And when I repeat the sentiment in the language we both
understand, pale cheeks redden. I grin, goofy as fuck, but I don’t care. I
fucking love that blush, and I love it even more when I’m the reason for it.
Eyelids falling to half-mast, I loll toward her as dainty fingers sift
through my hair, her soft, sighed breath grazing my skin. “What’re you
doing out here?”
“Thinking.”
Amelia hums low and quiet, a corner of her mouth twitching. “It’s cold
out here, Nick.”
My eyes go wide. Shit. She’s right. Hurriedly scrambling to my feet, I
shrug off my jacket—a beat-up old leather thing that used to be my dad’s.
As I scan her outfit, a pained groan echoes through the night air. “What the
fuck are you wearing?” I whine needlessly because I can see exactly what
she’s wearing; I just wish I couldn’t.
Fucking pajamas. Thin, white pajamas with tiny little hearts printed all
over them.
Never thought I’d simultaneously find something cute and sexy as well,
yet here she is.
“I was asleep when Cass called.” Amelia begrudgingly accepts my
offered jacket. Not that I give her much of a choice—I bundle her up before
she can object. “I didn’t exactly have time to change.”
My face scrunches. “Cass called you?”
“Said you guys needed a ride.” Looking me up and down, she dryly
adds, “I can’t imagine why.”
A noise I’ve never made before escapes me—a goddamn chortle—and I
would be embarrassed if I wasn’t so fucking drunk, and if it didn’t earn me
the best laugh in the world.
Hands itching to touch her, they slip beneath my jacket to grip her sides
and drag her closer. I huff when she weakly protests, one pretty eye
twitching as she nervously darts a glance toward the people milling around.
We’re shrouded in the dark where we are, and even if we weren’t, no one’s
paying attention to us. And even if they were, I wouldn’t give a shit. Amelia
does, though, either way, and I hope my lips brushing hers will distract her
enough.
It does—for a too-short second and then she’s using a hand on my chest
to gently push me away. “You taste like a distillery.”
She tastes like salty, buttery popcorn and sugar, an odd combination that
I want more of, but she denies me. Instead, she frowns and cocks her head
in that way she does when she’s thinking hard about something, and it
makes my mind race.
“I didn’t do anything.” I nuzzle the side of her face in an attempt to ease
the tiny kernel of panic sprouting in my chest. “Promise.”
When I pull back, that frown has only deepened. “I wasn’t thinking
that.”
I exhale my relief. That’s good. Part of the reason I fled outside was I
got so panicked about the girls flocking around us—all of them discreetly
but speedily diverted in Cass’ direction. I was paranoid that someone would
see and get the wrong end of the stick and it would somehow get back to
Amelia and I’d be screwed.
“And,” I remember to add, because it’s been fucking bugging me, “I’m
not gonna bang your sister.”
There’s a long pause before Amelia coughs. “What?”
“And please don’t egg my car.” I sigh, remembering that mess. “That
really sucks.”
It’s hard to read her expression—I’m not sure if it’s actually tough to
decipher or if I’m too drunk to do it—but I think it might be amused. Or it’s
confused. Irritated, maybe? Whatever it is, her tone is soft and genuine as
she assures me, “I wasn’t planning on it.”
“Good.” Satisfied I haven’t accidentally ruined everything, I try for a
kiss again, pouting and whining like a fucking child when she evades.
“I have to get the others,” she explains gently before turning on her heel
and heading towards the bar entrance.
I stop her before she can even make it two steps, an arm looping around
her waist and hoisting her back. “Please,” I dip my head to mumble into the
crook of her neck, “don’t go in there like that.”
Amelia twists around in my grip, tipping her head back to glare at me
defiantly. “Why not?”
Tugging on the hem of shorts that barely cover her fucking ass, I answer
honestly. “I’m too drunk to get in a fight.”
Almost on instinct, she adopts an argumentative stance, but when she
opens her mouth, it’s a surprised laugh that comes out. “You’re gonna fight
someone for staring at my ass?”
“Querida, I wanna fight people for staring at your face.”
Amelia’s face scrunches up as she futilely tries to hide a smile. She
spins out of my grip, not giving me any time to grumble before she grabs
my hand, tugging me after her as she heads for her car parked on the other
side of the street. “That’s a little dramatic. I can’t control how people look
at me, Nicolas.”
Yeah, well. I think I’ve proven she makes me a little fucking dramatic.
Shoving me into the back seat—a wise choice considering if I was in
the front next to her, I wouldn’t be able to keep my hands to myself—
Amelia clutches the door, leaning down to peer in at me. “I thought all
those boxing lessons were so I could fight for myself, hm?”
“Yeah.” I clumsily hook an ankle around hers, essentially tripping her
into my awaiting grip. She catches herself before our heads clunk together,
two palms braced against my chest. Whatever reprimand she prepares dies
on her tongue when I lean forward and admit, “And so I could spend time
with you.”
26
AMELIA
The sun has barely risen and I’m already in danger of thoroughly
embarrassing myself. You don’t have to be a frequent gym-goer to know
popping a boner mid-workout is frowned upon, and I’m teetering on the
edge of breaking the unspoken rule. It’s not my fault, though.
All the culpability lies with the barely clothed redhead vigorously
attacking a man donning focus mitts.
She’s killing me, for fuck’s sake. Teeny tiny shorts hidden by a
billowing t-shirt—my t-shirt. Dripping in sweat. Hair in a state of disarray,
partially because I’ve put us through our paces this morning but you can bet
your ass I mussed it up good and well before we rolled out of bed.
It’s all payback for waking her up early, I think. Usually, I’m better at
sneaking out for my early morning workouts—I’ve been training twice a
day this month—but my stealth faltered this morning. I made it up to her,
obviously, but I reckon she’s going to keep torturing me and throwing me
side-eyed daggers until I get at least three coffees in her.
“You don’t have to join me,” I’d assured her as she rolled out of bed
with a barrage of curses.
“Lying in bed alone doesn’t sound very appealing,” she’d snapped back,
such a fucking grump but I couldn’t help but smile.
Moody or not, I’m glad she’s here. I like when she’s here. I like
watching her do something I love, watching her start to love it too. She’s
gotten good—it’s selfish but it puts me at ease knowing she can throw a
decent punch if she, God for-fucking-bid, ever needed to. Again.
She looks stronger than she did when we first met. Less frail, less
angular. More confident too—she stands a little straighter, doesn’t hold
herself like she’s waiting for the right moment to disappear. Bit by bit, the
protective shell she keeps herself tightly wound up in is melting away, and I
have no idea what’s happening exactly to thaw it, but I’m not tempting fate
by asking. And I’m sure as fuck not making any sudden movements lest it
shoot back up again.
I thought watching her come apart on my fingers, on my tongue, was
the hottest thing in the world but I’ve been proven wrong. Watching her
slowly, achingly slowly, trust me is far superior.
It’s as exhilarating as it is terrifying.
It’s a struggle to focus on my own workout—skipping doesn’t compare
to watching Amelia attack a man at least three times her size—but I manage
it. And then I have to wait another agonizing few minutes while Amelia
finishes raining calculated punches down on Luka. A fellow punching-bag
fanatic but while I box for fun, Luka’s on his way to being Sun Valley’s
very own heavyweight success story.
He’s a nice guy, for the most part. A bit of an arrogant prick but I
suppose it comes with the territory. His reputation with women would give
mine a run for its money but he’s all business with Amelia, nothing but
respectful as he barks out combinations and corrections. When they’re
done, he bops her on the shoulder before helping her undo her gloves, all
smiles as he mutters something that makes Amelia smile bright in return.
“Your girl’s not bad,” he tells me with a wink when I wander over.
Slinging an arm lazily around Amelia’s sweaty shoulders, I ignore how
she tenses slightly, and I ignore how she opens her mouth to correct Luka,
cutting her off before she can. “What can I say, she’s got a good teacher.”
Her lips clamp shut, quirking upwards as she rolls her eyes playfully.
They’re mid-roll when they suddenly redirect, narrowing into slits zoned in
on me when Luka asks, “Excited to see him in action this weekend?”
Ah, shit.
I know I’m in trouble even before Amelia questions in a meticulously
neutral tone, “What’s this weekend?”
“He has a fight.” Luka finds way too much satisfaction in Amelia’s
cluelessness and the death glare I fix on him. “You didn’t tell her, Silva?”
I ignore him as I tug Amelia gently. “C’mere for a sec.”
Sparing Luka a wave goodbye, she’s just short of willing as she follows
me into the locker room, her expression too blank to be natural as I sit her
down on a bench. “It’s fine.” She clears her throat, doing a shit job of acting
unbothered. “If you don’t want me to come, it’s fine.”
“I do,” I rush to answer, jerking open my locker and fishing around until
I find what I’m looking for. I got her tickets weeks ago—I’ve been chicken-
shit about handing them over. I know she said before that she wanted to
come to my next fight but a lot has changed. For one, I’ve become the king
of overthinking.
“It’s not a big deal or anything,” I explain over a tight throat as I hand
her the tickets. No one actually comes to these things to see me—my part is
some amateur exhibition shit, like the amuse-bouche before the main course
—and her expecting anything else would be fucking embarrassing. “But
there’s an open bar and the guys are coming so it might be fun.”
I can’t read her expression, her face dropped to stare at the tickets.
“Four?”
“In case Luna, Kate, and Sydney wanna come.” I figured Luna wouldn’t
be able to bear a night away from Jackson, and I doubt Kate would miss an
opportunity to watch me cop a punch.
The quietest sigh leaves Amelia, her head shaking almost imperceptibly,
and I’ve never wished I could read her mind more. Tipping her face up to
me, she reveals a soft smile. “That’s really sweet. Thank you.”
I sag with relief. “So you wanna come?”
“Yeah.” Amelia smiles, standing and looping her arms around my waist.
“I really do.”
28
NICK
IT’S a testament to the volume my friends are capable of reaching, the fact
that I’m able to hear their arrival over the loud music threatening to burst
my eardrums.
Tugging off my headphones, I turn as they tumble into the locker room,
a tornado of excited, intoxicated energy—looks like they’ve already taken
advantage of the open bar, as they do every time they come to one of these
things.
“There he is!” Cass hoots, leading the guys in a messy chant of my
name, and I can’t tell whether I’m amused or horrified by the attention.
Hands slap my shoulders and aim fake punches at my ribs while voices chat
my ear off but I barely register their presence. Like a magnet, my attention
slams to the woman swaying in the doorway looking unsure as to whether
she’s welcome.
When I summon her over with a jerk of my head, Amelia wobbles in
my direction, her lopsided smile tipsy and bordering on shy. “You came.” I
feign surprise, pretending I didn’t see her mere hours ago, that I didn’t
watch her try on what felt like a hundred pieces of clothing before settling
on her current outfit—a knee-length dress such a dark shade of green, it’s
nearly black in a shiny material that’s almost as soft and silky as her skin.
The chunky black boots on her feet mean that when she comes to a stop—
about half a foot too far away—she barely reaches my chin instead of
barely reaching my shoulders.
Some of her timidness drips away when, discreetly so the guys don’t
notice, I close the gap between us, brushing my hand against hers. Her
pinky hooks around mine, squeezing quickly before releasing. “The girls
are here too. They say good luck.”
“Nicolas Silva doesn’t need luck,” Cass scoffs playfully, hooking an
arm around my neck and giving me a shake. “You’re gonna kill him.”
I roll my eyes but I make no attempt to shove him off. I’m in a good
mood, pumped full of adrenaline, and even Ben’s yippy voice can’t pierce
it. He’s flitting around like an over-excited puppy—the annoying kind, a
little ankle-biter—and cooing over the small arena housing the event,
fawning over the other boxer, assuring me not to worry because I’m still his
favorite, and I must be high as fuck on pre-fight jitters because I laugh at
his antics.
“How much have they drank?” I mutter to Jackson, the only other sober
person in the room.
A wince is the only answer I get.
“Don’t worry, I’ll make sure they don’t break anything.” Jackson’s gaze
flits from the guys to Amelia and back to me, the corners of his eyes
crinkling as his lips turn up. “I’ll keep an eye on her too.”
I don’t trust myself not to say something incriminating—even a thanks
feels like it could drop me in hot water—so I keep my mouth shut. A short
hum of acknowledgment is all I offer before I shift my attention to
Tweedledum and Tweedledee, resisting the urge to let it fall back to Amelia
because suddenly, I’m overly aware of prying, inquisitive eyes.
Only when I hear a throat clear, quiet but pointed, do I risk a sideways
glance and meet a curious green gaze. “What was that?” Amelia murmurs
under her breath, jerking her head toward Jackson who’s currently trying to
referee a mock fight between the tipsy menaces we call friends.
My hands itch to smooth out the furrow in her brow but I resist. “No
idea.”
“Did you tell him?”
I quell the tiny spark of irritation brought on by her narrow-eyed
accusation. “No.”
“I think he knows.”
“Yeah, well,” I shrug, ignoring the way my chest pangs at her blatant
disapproval—I have no right to be hurt, we both more than willingly agreed
to the secrecy. “Like Kate says, we’re not actually masters of subtlety.”
Frown falling, Amelia lets out a conflicted groan. “I don’t know how I
feel about you and her suddenly being best friends.”
I snort. Far from it—we’ve simply come to an understanding. Formed a
mutually symbiotic relationship founded on the knowledge that we both
have Amelia’s best interests at heart. She’s an easy person to get along with
—a wicked dry sense of humor, an admirable protective streak, and a
slightly terrifying intuition—but like her best friend, it takes effort to get
there.
“If you’re so worried about people finding out,” God, I hope her alcohol
consumption has dulled her senses so she doesn’t catch the minor note of
bitterness, “why did you come back here?”
“I wanted to wish you luck.” It’s pathetic that a fucking pinky finger
gets my blood pumping but as it wraps tightly around mine again in the
only contact she’s willing to risk, it does. She’s not exactly stingy with her
affection—I think it isn’t something that comes easy to her. Like she’s not
used to such displays, like it was something she was reprimanded for
before. Shit, a couple of months ago, I wasn’t used to it, it didn’t come easy
to me, and now I can’t keep my hands off her. And when that energy is
returned, I revel in it.
Amelia smiles sweetly up at me but a brief flash of concern crosses her
features, her gaze flitting over my face and bare chest. “Be careful, okay?
You just got pretty again.”
God, I fucking hate my friends and their insistence on being here. And I
hate our fucking secrecy pact too. All I want is to kiss the concern right out
of Amelia, taste whatever’s softening her disposition but I can’t. All I can
do is hang onto that single finger, and I hate that too.
“SORRY I’M LATE,” I breathe the apology as I rush into class, shooting the
lecturer an apologetic glance as I flop into the seat my friends have saved
for me.
I knew I wasn’t going to make it on time the second I waltzed into the
bookstore an hour ago, my totally pure intentions of dropping off lunch and
having an innocent rifle through the shelves dashed as soon as golden eyes
landed on me. I swear, every time I go there, I never mean to stay yet every
time, I find some frivolous reason to, and today was no exception. I got
delayed by… things. Actions that belong on the pages of deceitfully
innocent books and that should not happen in between the shelves during
broad freaking daylight.
By the time I managed to pry myself away, the class I intended to use as
my excuse to leave had already started, and then I got flustered and decided
I needed a real excuse for being late other than ‘sorry, I was sucking dick,’
so I took an unnecessary detour and snagged coffees and pastries for me,
the girls, and our lecturer who is thankfully a saint. It’s a miracle, really,
that the one class the three of us happen to share is led by the most chill
faculty member in this whole university.
Although, as two beady gazes fixate on me, I start to wish we had a
grouchy old battleaxe opposed to chit-chat.
Kate and Luna share matching knowing smirks as I hand over the goods
that maybe double as a bribe in exchange for their silence. I should’ve
known it wouldn’t work. Chewing thoughtfully on the useless white
chocolate brownie I smuggled her, Kate muses, “You look a little…
ruffled.”
At least she attempts subtlety.
Luna, the little shit that she is, brandishes lipgloss the same shade as the
one I wore before it was smudged beyond repair. “You’ve got blowjob
lips.”
“Luna,” I hiss, snatching the gloss and praying her voice isn’t as loud to
everyone else’s ears as it is to mine.
“Happens to the best of us, baby.” She waves off my embarrassment
with a toothy grin, ripping into the cinnamon roll I wish I had chucked in
the bin with gusto. “Now that you’ve deigned to join us, I’ve been
thinking-”
“That’s dangerous.” My well-deserved quip earns me a pinch on the
thigh, and I jolt so hard I almost drop my pastry on the floor. Rude—you
don’t mess with a girl’s caramel pecan swirl. “That wasn’t very holiday
spirit of you.”
“Like I was saying,” Luna ignores me, “I was thinking we should go on
a trip.”
Kate and I exchange rightfully wary glances. “A trip?”
“A road trip,” she clarifies. “Us, the boys, Sydney. It would be fun.
Jackson’s grandparents have a place up at Big Bear so we could take a
couple of days off and make it a long weekend.” She blurts out her proposal
in one, rushed breath with too many hand gestures and gaze suspiciously
dipped to the peppermint hot chocolate warming her palm.
I narrow my eyes at her shady behavior. “Sounds like you put a lot of
thought into this.”
Just as I thought, she folds at the mere thought of an interrogation.
“Fine,” she sighs. Her head rolls to the side as the puppy dog eyes come out
to play, long lashes batting and her bottom lip jutting out. “Jackson and I
wanna head up there for Valentine’s Day but his grandparents don’t want us
being there alone.”
“So we’re your sex buffers?” Kate snickers. “And here I thought you
wanted some quality time with your friends.”
With a broken sigh, I clutch at my chest dramatically. “I’m wounded,
Lu.”
A whining noise escapes our friend. “Please, please, please, please,” she
whimpers, hands clasped beneath her chin. “Jackson showed me the house
and it looks so fucking beautiful and it’s huge so, really, it’ll be like staying
in a hotel for free and he said he never goes there because he doesn’t like
his grandparents but he wants to take me and it’s my first Valentine’s day
with a boyfriend and-”
“Oh my God, if we agree will you shut up?”
Luna perks up at Kate’s half-joked question, making a dramatic display
of fake zipping her lips shut and throwing away an imaginary key.
“Fine,” Kate relents, but I’m positive a big chunk of her reluctance is
faked—she’s a romantic at heart, and a weekend away with her girlfriend is
hardly a hardship. “As long as you’re sure Jackson will still hold your
interest by then. Two months is, like, a decade in your little head.”
“I resent that.” Luna tugs one of Kate’s braids—she’s swapped the stark
white for an umber shade the same color as her natural hair—with a scowl
before setting her sights on me. “And you, little one?”
Oh, I’m a hard yes. Getting off campus for a few days with my favorite
people? What the hell kind of argument am I going to have against that?
Being trapped in the same house as Cass and Nick might prove to be a
challenge but I’m working on my optimism.
At my nod, Luna squeals as quietly as she’s capable of, whipping out
her phone at the speed of light. A handful of seconds later, my phone
vibrates in my pocket.
Luna: clear your calendars, ladies. Valentine’s weekend, Big Bear road trip,
presence mandatory
Ben: is this some kind of orgy proposition? because if so I’m totally in. begs
first crack at nicky
Nick: In your dreams, kid. Blonds aren’t my type.
Me: cute couple alert
Ben: right?!?!? that’s what I’ve been saying
Nick: Jealous, querida?
Me: in your dreams, nicolas
Cassie: stop flirting with my sister
Ben: fight fight fight
Kate: compare dick sizes later, boys.
Luna: yeah put them away. Who’s in?
Contrary to Kate’s belief, I don’t ‘get it’ when we arrive home to find Nick
waiting outside our apartment. Unless the ‘it’ she was referring to involves
him kissing me sweetly, offering my friends a friendly greeting salute, and
striding inside the moment the door’s open, beelining for the kitchen.
“I’m cooking tonight,” he tells us, plopping a bag of groceries on the
counter before rooting around in the cabinets and I swear, sexual orientation
or relationship status be damned, the three of us swoon. None of us excel in
the culinary department—I have four recipes that I rotate regularly, and one
of those is pancakes—and, in case it isn’t abundantly clear already, the way
to our hearts is undoubtedly through our stomachs. “Everyone okay with
feijoada?”
I have no idea what that is but I’m guessing it’s Brazilian and therefore
—if I learned anything from the treats Ana whipped up at Thanksgiving—
it’s probably freaking delicious, so my nod is more than eager. The girls
mimic me and, with a happy squeal, Luna bounds toward Nick, peppering
him with questions and offering her assistance, and I can only hope he
clocks me and Kate’s matching winces. If not, he’ll realize very, very
quickly that a kitchen becomes a million times more deadly when Luna
Evans is in it.
There’s a dual sigh of relief when, clever boy that he is, Nick slides a
tower of tinned black beans Luna’s way, instructing her to drain and rinse
them, a task even she can’t make dangerous. Proving his smarts again, he
keeps one eye on her as he fries off bacon and sausage, explaining that he’s
making a cheat version that would send his mother to an early grave, and
the joke would earn him a laugh if I wasn’t entirely focused on resisting the
urge to break our golden rule.
Gray sweats, curls damp like he’s fresh from the shower, and he’s
cooking? Not freaking fair.
Beside me, Kate sighs. “He’s full of surprises, hm?”
I hum a strained noise. Understatement of the century.
“Not very friends-with-benefits behavior.”
I keep my mouth shut, scared of what might come out.
“Never thought I’d say this but he’d make a great-”
“Don’t,” I plead. Don’t verbalize the first thought that springs to mind
any time he does something nice because it’s making what’s supposed to be
fun and easy so much more complicated.
My inner turmoil must be written all over my face because Kate drops
the subject. Patting me on the shoulder, she squeezes into the kitchen too,
quickly getting assigned a job as well. The trio more than fills the small
space but none of them look particularly put out by the close proximity, and
soon, a comfortable buzz of conversation rolls over the small apartment and
makes my heart freaking ache because it looks so damn right.
Well aware that having a breakdown every time my friends and Nick
interact isn’t normal, I suck in a steadying breath and join them. The tight
quarters give me no choice but to cozy up behind Nick, my arms sliding
around his waist, my cheek flat against his back. “If you’re trying to deter
me from teasing, you’re going about it the wrong way.”
That husky laugh I adore too much vibrates through me. “I figured you
were sick of takeout.”
Hands slipping beneath his top, I drum my fingers against the hard
stomach I’m met with. “An hour ago you were all ‘me caveman, no touch
my woman.’ Where’d that energy go?”
Nick turns in my grip, shifting so he’s leaning against the counter next
to the stove and not at risk of burning his perfect ass to a crisp. A slow, slick
smile lifts his lips. “Did you just call yourself my woman?”
From somewhere behind me, snickering erupts. “She definitely did.”
I cast a glare over my shoulder at my smirking friends before refocusing
on my, no, the, smirking man. “That was not the point.”
Heat scorches through my clothes as Nick trails his touch downward,
palms curving over my ass with little regard for our audience as he dips his
head. “I’m saving it,” comes his drawled whisper, too quiet for
eavesdropping but loud enough to seize my attention in a vice-like throttle.
“What better way to show Clay you’re off limits than having him listen to
you screaming my name all night?”
Good freaking God.
“First off,” I cough out the words, painfully aware of my red cheeks
giving away just how much of an effect his words have on me, “you know
his name is Jay.” The shit-eating grin on his face proves so. “Secondly,
there will be no screaming. There’s gonna be a lot of people around.” And
ample chances for us to get caught, I finish silently.
I don’t articulate a ‘thirdly,’ though I certainly think it. It’s hard not to
dwell on the notion that these grand plans are months away; who knows if
this will still be happening. And it’s odd my brain didn’t immediately catch
on the moment the plans were proposed, that I assumed we’d still be… us.
There’s no opportunity to overanalyze; a strong pat on my ass cheek
keeps my mind firmly set in reality, as does Nick’s roguish grin. “We can
practice being quiet this week.”
My head flops back with a groan. God, I’ve barely thought about the
upcoming undoubtedly challenging few days ahead; Christmas with our
families. We literally leave for Calton in the morning yet it’s barely crossed
my mind, I’ve been so busy with school and work and, well, Nick. My
suitcase lies unzipped on my bedroom floor, random clothes haphazardly
chucked in because any and all attempts I’ve made to pack have been
thwarted by a needy, handsy giant baby of a man.
“Are you nervous?”
About creeping around for days protecting yet another destructive
secret? “No,” I lie.
“I am.” I must not hide my surprise very well because Nick chuckles. “I
gotta meet your dad, querida.”
Great. I didn’t even think about that. “He’ll like you.”
“You think?” At my nod, Nick hums—a little thoughtful, a lot roguish.
“As long as he doesn’t find out I’ve been knuckle-deep in his daughter.”
31
AMELIA
THE ONLY TIME of year I ever voluntarily wake up early is when the
Christmas holidays roll around.
It’s favorite time of year, the happiest time, and I like soaking up every
available minute. The past few years have been a little different, a little less
shiny with holiday spirit, but things are back to normal. This year, I’m up
with the sun, perched on the steps of the Morgans’ back porch, mind
wandering aimlessly as I gaze at the oak tree strung with twinkling lights.
“Hey, stranger.” At the sound of a blessedly familiar voice, I glance up,
a grin damn near splitting my face at who I find looming over me.
At first glance, my dad and I look nothing alike. All the standout
physical features, like my hair and my eyes, I, unfortunately, inherited from
my mother. But the wide smile, the slightly upturned nose, the creamy skin;
that’s all my dad.
“Hey.” I accept the offered steaming mug of coffee held in his
outstretched hand, enjoying the warmth as it awakens my chilled fingers,
and pat the space beside me. When he plops down, I rearrange the blanket
draped over my legs so it covers us both. When he slips an arm around my
shoulders and drags me into a tight sideways hug, I sink into him with a
sigh. Five months apart and I didn’t realize how much I needed a good dad
hug until now. “When did you get here?”
“Late last night.” A hand cups the side of my head as he drops a kiss on
my temple. “You were dead to the world.”
My face scrunches in a silent apology. In my defense, I had a busy
Christmas Eve-Eve; somehow, I got roped into helping with all the cooking
necessary to prepare us for the subsequent chaotic days, and trust me, a day
spent in the kitchen with Lynn and Ana is pretty much equivalent to a day
spent completing a freaking triathlon. I passed out the moment my head hit
the pillow. Not even Cass crawling into my bed at some point in the night
woke me up—he sacrificed his room and bunked up with me so Dad could
stay here instead of in a hotel. This morning, his monster-truck-esque
snoring did jolt me from an otherwise peaceful sleep.
“I met Nicolas.”
Do not blush. Compose yourself. Deep breath. Then speak. “Yeah?”
Dad hums. “Nice boy. You two are close?”
Despite the alarms going off in my head, the corner of my mouth lifts.
“We are.”
“Does he have anything to do with you and Dylan breaking up?”
“What?” I choke on a mouthful of coffee. “No!” Spitting the word
frantically, my brow pulls in a frown; I’m almost positive my break-up has
yet to come up in conversation. “Who told you?”
Honestly, I know the answer before Dad admits my eldest brother is the
culprit.
Of course. I shouldn’t be surprised James has already found time to
snitch on me; he’s a loud-mouthed gossip with a serious lack of a filter. He
and Luna would be a force to be reckoned with.
“When did that happen?”
“Uh,” I run my thumb over the rim of my mug nervously, “Halloween.”
“Forgot to tell me?”
“Slipped my mind.”
“Amelia.”
Swallowing a huff, I drag my gaze up to meet his. Very rarely does
Patrick Hanlon get to whip out the infamous fatherly ‘I’m not impressed
with you, young lady’ expression so when he does, he makes it extra fierce.
I sigh. “I’m sorry. It…” was a giant, embarrassing clusterfuck, “didn’t end
very well and I kinda hate talking about it.”
“What do you-”
“Good morning, beautiful.” Look at that; saved by the very Morgan
who dropped me in shit in the first place. “And good morning to you too,
Tiny.”
Dad snorts at James’ silly joke as the big snitch plops down beside me.
Stealing the mug from my hands, he takes a loud, noisy slurp. “Jesus, Mils,
do you want some coffee with your sugar?”
I snatch my beverage back, throwing a sharp elbow at his stomach. “If
you don’t like it, don’t drink it.”
“Someone’s crabby this morning,” the eldest Morgan coos. “Cassie’s
dysfunctional nose keep you up all night?”
“Sleep next to a buffalo, see if you wake up in a good mood.”
“I heard that,” Cass grumbles as the back door swings open once again
and he joins us on the rapidly crowding steps. He slaps us both upside the
head before stealing my poor coffee, my cries of protest going disregarded.
“Get your own,” I hiss and grab it back, scowling at the lukewarm
dregs.
Fucking brothers.
Smushed amongst three bickering siblings, Dad sighs, his face twisted
in half a nostalgic smile, half a grimace. “Feels so good to be home.”
People have been arriving for hours yet the traffic shows no signs of
slowing down; Lynn Morgan’s Christmas Eve extravaganza is the
neighborhood equivalent of The Oscars.
Every time someone new arrives—which is every four freaking seconds
—I’m inevitably met with surprised squeals and exaggerated exclamations
of my name. If it wasn’t so painful, it would be hilarious; I’m almost
positive I’ve never spoken to half the people claiming it’s so good to see me
again and lamenting over how much they missed me.
However, the sympathetic, knowing glances they try and fail to hide kill
any and all chances of humor. No one says anything directly but the blatant
pity in their voices is unmaskable. And the longer the night drags on, the
more people I reacquaint myself with who’ve witnessed me at rock bottom,
and the more anxious I become. The guys do their best to offer me relief but
I’m reluctant to accept their help; they’re having a great time and I don’t
want to ruin it. Besides, it’s hard to keep track of them in the hubbub; the
last I checked, Cass was on a mission for ice, James was flirting with
anything breathing, and, most worryingly of all, Nick and Dad were
engaging in a conversation that looked dangerously akin to bonding.
So, I save myself. Slipping out the front door and into the quiet,
peaceful night, I plonk myself on the porch steps with a blanket stolen from
the living room, mimicking the way I started the day. I’m nursing a much-
needed, very strong rum cocktail when the glass almost slips from my hand,
a timid voice sending shivers down my spine. “Amy?”
My suddenly burning eyes open and close in a series of slow, confused
blinks as I try to determine whether or not the man hovering in the
driveway is really there. He’s looking at me like he’s seen a ghost, and I’m
looking at him the same way.
Light brown hair.
Blue eyes.
An easy smile that used to make my heart flutter something fierce.
Sam.
For a brief, impossible second, I swear it’s him. And then, my brain
kicks into gear and the man calling me by a nickname I haven’t heard in
years comes into focus.
His hair isn’t long like Sam’s was, and he doesn’t have the sun-bleached
streaks. His eyes are the same but also not; they look older, older than Sam
ever got. And that’s not his smile either. Close, but so different. “Hi, Zach.”
I have to force the words out.
My throat doesn’t want to speak. It wants to scream and cry and beg for
forgiveness I don’t deserve.
As though he knows, Zach’s tone is gentle. “It’s been a while.”
Four years, give or take.
“It’s good to see you.” Liar. “I didn’t know you’d be here.”
I smile weakly. “Cass invited me.” Obviously.
“I didn’t know you two were in touch again.”
My shaky shoulders rise. “Long story.”
Zach nods slowly, and my vision blurs again because God, he looks so
much like him. “How’ve you been?” I cringe before the question even fully
leaves his mouth and surprisingly, Zach does too. “Sorry. I hate that
question, I don’t know why I asked it.”
“It’s okay.” I laugh but it does nothing to ease the tension gripping my
body. He’s being kind, too kind, and I’m waiting for the other shoe to drop.
I’m waiting for him to mention the accident. His brother. Waiting for him to
blow up. But he doesn’t; he smiles and chats nonchalantly about mundane
things, never once broaching the subject that hangs over us like a dark
cloud and makes my chest feel like it’s about to explode.
He’s dead because of me, I want to yell, and the words cut me like
knives, accompanied by vivid memories of a boy who once meant
everything to me.
Bumping into him at school, embarrassingly flustered by the older boy
paying attention to me. Cass teasing me for having a crush on one of his
friends. A clumsy but perfect first kiss. Screaming until my voice gave out
at endless baseball games. The license he was so proud of getting, his car,
driving…
“Amelia?” Warm fingertips brushing my cheek break me out of my
nightmarish reverie. Concerned golden eyes snap me back to reality with a
jerk. A calloused thumb brushes underneath my eyes and comes away wet
with tears I didn’t realize I’d spilled. Shit.
Nick perches beside me, concern written all over his face, and my
stomach plummets. Over his shoulder, I spot Zach, looking as guilty and
forlorn as I feel. “I’m sorry, Amy, I didn’t-”
“It’s okay,” I interrupt, my voice cracking. “I’m okay.” Even to my own
ears, I don’t sound convincing, and Nick must agree because he doesn’t
move a muscle other than to clasp my shaking hands tightly in one of his.
I can’t find it in me to pull away, not even when Zach’s gaze flits
between the two of us, piecing something together, and the guilt doubles in
a nauseating way. “Zach-”
“You look good, Amy.” It’s his turn to interrupt, his words
heartbreakingly genuine. “I’m happy for you.”
I don’t even have time to reply. In a blink, he’s gone, disappearing into
the night, his whirlwind arrival and departure giving me emotional
whiplash. If not for Nick sitting quietly beside me, staring at the spot he
vacated, I would’ve wondered if he was ever there at all.
“Do you want to talk about it?”
Words can’t describe how much his soft tone, inquisitive but not
demanding, settle me. “Not tonight.” Not tomorrow, either. Not ever, if I had
my way.
Soft lips brush my temple. “Do you want me to get Cass?”
I scrunch my nose as I shake my head. God, no. He’d take one look at
my puffy eyes and the mascara undoubtedly streaming down my face and
descend into panic. I wonder if he knew Zach was coming tonight. Probably
not, or he would’ve warned me. And been glued to my side like a guard dog
all night.
Silence surrounds Nick and me, interrupted only by the sounds of the
party bleeding into the night air, and the longer we sit, the more my
thoughts begin to contradict themselves.
I want to tell him.
Not everything. Just something. Enough to explain what he saw. He’s so
freaking honest with me all the time, and I like how that makes me feel. I
want him to feel like that. Before I can talk myself out of it, the words spill
out. “His name’s Zach.”
Nick’s hand tightens around mine. “You don’t have to tell me.”
“I know.” That right there, those six words, are why I want to tell him.
“I was… involved with his brother.” I cringe at my own wording. Involved
is not the right word to describe what Sam and I were, it doesn’t even come
close, but the other ones, the ones that really detail how I felt about him,
refuse to come out. “He’s not around anymore.”
It’s another vague understatement but the way Nick stiffens tells me he
understands. Snaking an arm around my shoulder, he drags me close,
chasing the empty, cold ache in my bones away with his presence.. “Thank
you for telling me.”
It’s right then, with those words warming my cheek, that I realize the
idea of telling him what happened all those years ago doesn’t terrify me
quite as much as the fact that I want to tell him.
32
AMELIA
The tree in the Morgans’ backyard wasn't only used for slightly
dangerous, bruise-creating recreational activities; it was something of a
haven to a young me. If I sat at the right angle, the thick trunk hid me from
the view of both houses, leaving me to sulk in privacy over silly things, like
my older brothers got my new clothes dirty or they cheated at a game.
Right now, my reason for sulking doesn’t feel so trivial.
The ground beneath me is freezing cold, as is the air against my bare
skin, but I don’t mind. The privacy is worth it, being able to float into
thoughtless oblivion is worth it.
It doesn’t last very long, though.
My eyes crack open at the sound of dead grass crunching beneath heavy
footsteps, and I’m greeted by the sight of Nick bathed in wintery sunlight.
There’s something to say about the fact that, even in dire circumstances, I
can’t help but admire him. Concern suits him, I’ve learned. “Cass said to
give you space."
"Looks like you didn't listen."
“I told you.” Dropping to the ground beside me, he leaves a healthy
distance between us. Letting me come to him. “I’m a terrible listener.”
I breathe an amused noise. Liar.
In spite of his wry tone, Nick’s gaze is all serious as it burns the side of
my face. His hands fidget where they rest on his lap, his whole body
twitching slightly, actually. Only when I reach out and link our hands does
the surprisingly soft-centered man settle, a sigh of utter relief escaping him.
In a single, strong tug, I’m on his lap, my forehead pressed to the slope of
his neck as he buries his face in my hair. Hands rub my back soothingly,
silently, providing comfort whilst I struggle finding adequate words to
describe how I feel.
“Fourteen years,” I croak, and arms tighten around me. “There were so
many times in fourteen years when I might’ve needed her and she picks
now to show up. I don’t get it. Why?”
It’s a rhetorical question and Nick knows it. Nothing I say is meant to be
replied to, none of my ranting and raving, and he knows that too. Without a
word, he listens as I spill every thought that clogs my brain, recall the
limited memories I have of that woman, very few of which are happy
because the only time she ever really paid attention to me was when she
was scolding me simply for being a fucking child.
No, darling, you'll get your dress dirty.
Girls don't play rough like that.
That's not very ladylike.
Fuck, if she saw the way I grew up she'd probably have an aneurysm.
The best memory I have of her—possibly the only positive one—is
when she left me crying on the driveway. Because by doing that, she
consequently left me in Lynn Morgan’s care. Lynn, the woman who brought
me to dance classes and collected me from my school and gossiped with me
about boys and coached me through my first period. My mother left me and
I found my mom.
The world really does work in mysterious, fucked up ways.
“You should talk to her.”
My head snaps up so quick I narrowly avoid clocking Nick in the chin.
“Why would I do that?”
“You have questions, querida,” he says like it’s obvious. “Ask them.”
Not quite sure I’m hearing things correctly, I clamber to my feet, gaping
down at him, wide-eyed and open-mouthed. “Are you serious?”
Apparently, he is; rising too, he nods.
“I don't have questions, Nick,” I spit, forcing myself not to yell because
while the tree might hide us from view, it does nothing to quell our voices.
“I have complaints. I have anger. I have violent tendencies that involve
wanting to break her nose for everything she put my dad through."
“Amelia,” Nick frowns when I dodge his attempts to draw me close,
“I’m just trying to help.”
"Well, don't.” Anger burns in my chest, begging to be released. It
doesn’t matter that most of it is brewing for Diane; Nick is about to be the
hapless victim, and I don’t think I could stop it if I wanted to.
Wrong place, wrong time, wrong decision to push.
Nick doesn’t know shit about what I’m feeling. He didn’t watch that
woman walk away, completely uncaring about the crying child at her feet.
He didn’t listen to my dad cry himself to sleep every night for a month or
watch him walk around like a zombie for much longer or overhear the
heartbroken conversations he had with Cass’ parents.
I’m allowed to be angry. I don’t owe her anything, not even a measly
conversation.
So, I snap.
“You're not my brother, you're not my dad, and you're sure as shit not
my boyfriend so back the fuck off. I don't need you.”
Nick does what I tell him, literally. Stumbling back a step, his head reels
as though I slapped him clean across the cheek, and I wonder if that
would’ve hurt both of us less. Because the distraught look on his face hurts,
it physically makes my chest ache, so bad I have to drop my gaze to the
ground because I can’t bear feeling guilty right now on top of everything
else.
When he sucks in a breath, I don’t stick around long enough to hear
what he has to say.
34
NICK
SHE LEFT.
Packed up her shit and hopped on a flight before the dust had even
settled without a word of goodbye.
I didn’t even know she was gone until Cass brought it up. According to
him, she went back to San Francisco with her dad. And that means she’s
with Kate too, since her family’s place is nearby. That knowledge is of little
comfort to me; at least I know she’s not sitting in her apartment alone
letting her own brain destroy her but it would be a whole lot better if she’d
answer her fucking phone and let me know she’s okay herself.
Amelia is ignoring me. For a little bit, I convinced myself that it wasn’t
just my calls she was screening, that she was shutting everyone else out too.
That fantasy died when I saw her name flash on Cass’ phone and I had to
listen to their hushed conversation, fists clenched and chest tight as I stifled
the urge to snatch his phone and beg her to speak to me.
It’s taking everything in me not to blow up her phone with a million
texts and calls but I won’t. I can’t. He did that and fuck if I’m ever giving
her a reason to compare me to that asshole. I’ve resorted to begging Kate
for updates, each one less reassuring than the last.
She's fine. She's okay. All good.
I don’t know if it’s under Amelia’s orders or if it’s Kate being Kate but
the most detailed information I’ve pried from her is that they flew back to
Sun Valley this morning, and the ambiguity is fucking killing me.
Whatever the case, Amelia is making her point perfectly clear; she
doesn’t need me.
Fuck, that hurt.
I keep trying to convince myself that she didn’t mean it. That she was
angry. That I simply picked the wrong time to offer advice and she snapped.
All of the above are true but the look in her eyes… something in there was
serious.
I knew I shouldn't have pushed. One look at her sitting under the tree,
steam practically coming out of her ears, and I fucking knew. But I did
anyway because she was sitting in my lap, looking and sounding so broken,
and if there was something I could possibly say to fix it, I was going to.
Wrong call, clearly.
But still, I don’t think I deserved that. Her snapping at me like that for
trying to help. It was shitty timing, I should’ve let her stew longer, but I
thought that talking to Diane, asking her all the questions she was quietly
asking herself, might help. Be healing or some shit.
You would've thought I asked her to forgive the woman and let her
move back in the way she went from zero to sixty so fast, and I can’t help
but wonder if it’s partly because she can’t handle the fact that I care enough
to want to help.
Every time I think we're getting somewhere, she pushes me away.
Actually, she shoves me away. Kicks me. Punches me right in the gut. And
then she turns on her tail and sprints in the opposite direction. The night of
Christmas Eve, on the front porch, I genuinely thought I was getting
somewhere. That maybe she was finally understanding she's not just a
distraction to me, that she was finally trusting me.
And then her mother shows up and back in her head she goes.
I want to pummel whoever messed her up so bad she can't let me in, and
since I assume decking her mother would be frowned upon, I'm going to
have to settle with smashing Dylan's face in again the next time the rat pops
up.
“Nico, are you even listening to me?” My sister’s indignant voice snaps
me from my thoughts, little feet kicking at my shins from the opposite side
of the table, and I cast her an apologetic glance.
When I offered to take Ma and Sofia for lunch, it selfishly had
everything to do with needing to get the hell out of the house before I
cracked up. Everywhere I look, whether the home has Morgan or Silva on
the lease, I see her.
“Desculpa, minha anjinha.” Pasting on a smile, I focus on my family.
“What were you saying?”
Satisfied by my attention, Sofia launches into a spiel again, chattering
excitedly about things I hate that I can’t concentrate on properly. I try, I
really do try, but if my one-track, Amelia-oriented mind was bad before, it’s
only worsened tenfold. And, apparently, as much as I act like I’m listening,
nodding along and chiming in with vague additions when appropriate, it’s
clear I’m not fooling anyone.
“Você falou com ela?” Sofia whines as Ma switches the conversation to
our native tongue; my little sister’s Portuguese is pretty good but she’s
nowhere near fluent enough to keep up with the speed at which we talk. I
have a feeling that's the exact reason for the change.
"Quem?" I feign ignorance, faking a sudden interest in my greasy diner
breakfast.
"Não se faça de bobo, Nicolas," Ma tuts. “Querida,” she drags out the
word mockingly, a faint amused smile playing across her lips as she arches
a brow.
That fucking nickname. I should’ve known it would get me in trouble.
With Amelia, ignorance is truly bliss; she has no clue what the term of
endearment means or if she does, she doesn’t care. Ma, however, knows.
She knows intimately what it means because it’s what my dad used to call
her.
I didn’t do it on purpose, I swear to God. It just came out and it stuck
and it’s screwed me over royally because the second my mother heard it,
she heard wedding bells too. And when she heard about the book… Fuck,
I’m surprised she hasn’t given me her goddamn ring.
Shrugging in a vain attempt at nonchalance, I act like the answer to
Ma’s question doesn’t feel like a punch in the gut. “Não.”
“Você a chamou?”
“Obviamente.”
Golden eyes narrow at my snapped tone but there’s sympathy lurking in
my mother’s gaze. “Você deveria ter ido com ela.”
I scoff at her declaration. “Ela não precisa de mim.” She told me as
much herself.
“Você é um tolo.”
While Sofia covers her mouth and giggles, clearly picking up the
meaning of that last declaration, I gape at Ma in disbelief. How am I the
fool in this situation? I’m doing exactly what she told me to, I’m backing
the fuck off, yet when I tell Ma as much, she scoffs, expression rife with
indignance. “Ela estava brava.”
“Estava tentando ajudar!”
“Ela não queria ajuda!” Ma whisper-yells, clearly exasperated. Shaking
her head with a huff, she softens her tone before continuing in English,
“She didn’t want advice or pity. Nico. She just needed comfort.”
I slump defeatedly in my seat. I thought I was comforting her. Ma,
sensing my turmoil, leans across the table to slip her hand into mine. “Just
because you would jump at the chance to talk to your father again doesn't
mean she would do the same for Diane.”
And just like that, it clicks.
I compared the two. Used my own experience with my dad and assumed
Amelia would feel the same. Forgot momentarily that Dad didn't choose to
leave us like that awful woman chose to leave Patrick and Amelia.
Shit.
Ma sits back slowly, turning her attention back to Sofia who’s been
entertaining herself with a mess of sugar packets. But when I fish my phone
out of my pocket and fire off a quick text asking Cass if he wants to leave
sooner than planned, I don’t miss her triumphant smile.
I’m deep in a pit of wallowing when my bedroom door creaks open and a
head peeks around the edge. However, it’s not any of the heads I’d expect.
“Hey.” Jackson smiles softly, a little awkwardly. “Can I come in?”
Smoothing away my instinctive frown, I nod—Gilmore Girls reruns can
wait a couple of minutes. Jackson inches into my room, leaving the door
ajar behind him before stiffly taking the seat at my desk.
I fidget as I scoot upright, equal parts intrigued and concerned at his
sudden want for a private conversation. He’s a great guy and definitely a
good friend—he proved that yesterday when he admitted to keeping his
mouth shut about me and Nick—don’t get me wrong, and practically a
roommate at this point, but it’s not like we talk. Except for now, apparently.
“You know my mom left when I was a kid too, right?”
Well, shit.
I’m not sure what I was expecting but it definitely wasn’t that. “No, I
didn’t know that.”
“Oh.” Jackson fiddles with the ends of his long hair, and my gut tells me
he assumed a certain rowdy blonde spilled the beans. “Well, she did. When
I was twelve. My dad wasn’t around either so my younger sisters and I got
dumped with our grandparents.”
“Shit, Jackson, I had no idea.” God, I can’t even imagine what that
must’ve been like; at least I was young enough to not really remember the
woman who left me, and I always had my dad. I never had younger siblings
to worry about. Judging by his tone when he mentions his grandparents, it
doesn’t sound like Jackson really had anyone.
“It’s okay.” He waves off my concern. “I’m over it. Only good thing
that woman ever did was leave.”
Yeah, I know the feeling.
“I, uh, wanted to tell you. In case you need someone to talk to who gets
it, you know.”
Okay. Yeah. If I were Luna, I’d give up my wild ways for this man too.
“Thank you, Jackson. Seriously.”
Jackson shrugs—clearly his favorite form of communication—off my
thanks, standing and heading for the door, silently conveying that the swift
conversation is over.
My fingers hover over the keys of my laptop, ready to hit play as soon
as Jackson vacates the room. Except, he doesn’t.
Because at the last minute, I break. “Hey, have you talked to Nick?”
Jackson stops in his track, and something about the look on his face sends
dread plummeting in my stomach. He looks like he’s been caught in a lie, in
a secret, and he doesn’t need to say a thing. “He didn’t come home last
night, did he?”
The shake of his head only confirms what I already know.
“Oh.” The single utterance is pathetically dejected, even to my own
ears. “And the night before?”
“I’m sorry, Mils, I haven’t seen him since I got back.”
“Has anyone?” Because I’m starting to panic a little, beyond the selfish
fear that he might’ve spent a night in a bed other than his own or mine. A
day without anyone hearing from him? That’s cause for concern, right?
As if sensing my rising anxiety, Jackson’s brown eyes go wide, a frantic
hand going to his pocket and whipping out his phone. “He probably crashed
at a friend’s place. I’ll ask Ben.”
Right. Crashed at a friend’s place. God, sometimes I forget that people
outside our friend group exist.
They’re embarrassingly agonizing, the few minutes that pass where the
only sound is my heavy breathing. My heart jumps into my throat when a
text tone sounds. Jackson’s sigh of relief is like music to my ears. “He’s
home.”
Thank fuck.
I huff my own breath of relief, a sheepish snicker escaping. However, it
gets caught in my throat when I notice Jackson frowning at his phone, the
screen not-so-discreetly turned away from me.
My gaze darts between him and whatever he’s doing a crap job at hiding
from me. “What?”
“Nothing,” is his too-quick reply.
Sighing, I cock my head at him. “You really want me to get Luna in
here?”
As suspected, he folds like a cheap lawn chair. A wince crinkling his
features, he reluctantly hands his phone over.
Ben: Yeah, he’s here. Rolled in an hour ago looking thoroughly fucked.
Back to his old habits I guess :(
God knows how long later, I stumble upstairs, a feat that takes a helluva
lot longer than it should since my limbs stopped cooperating about two
drinks ago. It turns out there was something I could do; I could get
disgustingly inebriated until I didn’t have to fight the urge to seek out Nick
in the crowd because my vision became too blurry to see anything.
The downfall to that; jealousy feeds off alcohol, and I provided it with a
feast.
I don’t know if it’s the not-so-little green monster making me nauseous
or the mix of spirits sitting heavy in my gut but either way, my spinning
head urges me to take a break from the festivities. From the eyes assessing
me carefully. From pretending to have fun to appease those eyes and not
ruin their night like I ruin everything else.
Staggering down the hallway, I blindly twist the first doorknob my
shaky hands find, and I don’t know if it’s fate or karma that sends me
tripping into Nick’s room. It’s like instinct brought me here. An internal
GPS programmed to eternally point me in his direction.
Fun.
It’s empty, thankfully—I wouldn’t be able to handle anything else—and
I relish the relative silence when I shut the door behind me, letting my gaze
drift around a room I’m not all that familiar with despite how intimately
familiar I am with the man who occupies it.
Our sleepovers occur in the sanctity of my room. The only times I’ve
been in here were tainted by dramatic events and too much booze—now
included, I guess. I’ve never had the chance to properly take in the
bookshelf stuffed to the brim, the desk overflowing with stuff, the large,
neatly-made bed.
Choosing the lesser of all evils—or so I think—I collapse into the desk
chair, slumping with a heavy exhale. When my gaze snags on the stack of
recently developed photos, the only tidy portion of his desk, that exhale gets
caught in my throat. I know I shouldn’t snoop but is it really snooping if the
first photo is of me?
And the second.
And the third.
The fourth is a sweet, blurry shot of Kate and Sydney, the next a drunk
Ben doing a cartwheel in the middle of the street, an event I remember
vividly since the kid almost broke his neck and got run over in one fell
swoop. All of my friends, our friends, feature but as I carefully flick
through, more often than not, it’s my own face staring back at me. My
permanently smiling face, eyes bright but never quite looking straight at the
lens, always more focused on something slightly above it.
Melancholy settles in my bones, makes my entire body throb painfully.
Forcing myself to my feet, I trudge into the bathroom where I know there’s
a stash of aspirin. I crouch down, opening the cabinet under the sink and
rifling for what my aching head demands.
What I’m met with knocks me flat on my ass.
A fully stocked basket of toiletries hides near the back. At first glance,
there’s nothing extraordinary about it. The only reason it catches my eye is
because, honestly, I wouldn’t expect Nick to keep amenities for his
overnight guests—surely that would rack up quite the bill over time—but it
makes sense, I guess.
Like a hotel leaving mints on pillows, I snark silently, liquor making me
petty.
When I delve a deeper, unable to help myself, my throat goes dry.
Everything is brand new and unopened. Shampoo, conditioner, curl
cream, not only the same brand I use but the exact scent. A miniature bottle
of the perfume I favor tucked in beside a box of tampons. A broken laugh
escapes me when I spot a toothbrush and Denman brush, both the same
shade of dark green.
The first tear burns as it falls, origin unknown. Whether it’s happy or
sad one or utterly distraught is a mystery, although it’s more than likely all
of the above and more. It’s not alone for long because soon, I’m sobbing so
hard, I swear I can be heard over the music thumping downstairs.
I needn’t have worried about Nick breaking my heart. I did it to myself.
Hot, thick steam floods the bathroom as gentle hands carefully work the
knots out of my hair. Nick really did a number on my curls last night; I did
a double take when I spotted myself in the mirror, horrified at the mess atop
my head. Luckily, he was more than willing to fix the damage he caused,
and I wasn’t going to say no to a free head massage.
I almost burst into tears again when he cracked into the stash of
toiletries beneath his sink, and I’m still stifling them as the scent of
products he bought solely for me surrounds us.
“I love your hair,” Nick murmurs so quietly I almost don’t hear him
over the din of hot water pelting down on us. “That was the first thing I
noticed about you.”
I say nothing, too entranced by the way he’s stroking my scalp softly,
lulling me into an almost dream-like state despite the fact I’ve slept most of
the day away.
“It was longer then.” A hand travels from my head to the slope of my
waist and back up to my collarbone, where he presses a kiss. “I like it
short.”
So do I. Dylan didn’t; anywhere close to my shoulders and he said I
looked too ‘manly,’ according to him. When I cut it to my collarbones at the
end of last semester, he threw an Oscar-award winning tantrum.
Dipshit.
Pushing my ex from my mind and focusing on the wonderful man
behind me, I tilt my chin so he can see my raised brows. “Exactly when was
that?”
I don’t expect him to really answer; I anticipate an eye roll and a
sarcastic comment. So when he utters the following words, it’s enough to
jolt me back to full consciousness. “July, I think.”
“July?” Months before we met. Eyes wide, I gape at him, mind reeling
trying to figure out how he noticed me yet, before he opened his big mouth,
I never noticed him.
Hands snaking around my waist to rest on my stomach, Nick drops his
head to my shoulder, his soft smile palpable against my skin. “I was at
Greenies with Jackson. You were working. He was drooling over Luna and
I couldn’t keep my eyes off the little redhead cursing out the old man who
kept trying to cop a feel.”
My barked laugh drowns out the roar of the shower. “I remember that
day.”
“I’m sure he does too. You poured hot coffee in his lap.”
Damn right, I did; the old creep pinched my ass. My outburst earned me
a month of the dreaded weekend shift but it was so worth it.
With his confession, everything falls into place. Everything suddenly
makes sense. His slightly panicked reaction when he found out who I was,
what I meant to Cass, and why Cass was a little weird. How he knew how I
take my coffee. All the little quips and jokes Ben consistently makes but I
never quite get.
With a smirk that rivals Nick’s infamous one, I turn in his arms, looping
mine around his neck. “You've been pining for me.”
Now, I get the eyeroll I was expecting before. “No.”
Shrugging me off, Nick shuts off the water and steps out of the shower.
I shiver immediately at the loss of heat, both from the running water and the
human radiator of a man, but I’m not cold for long; Nick tugs me after him,
engulfing me in a large, fluffy towel. “Oh, come on! Admit it!”
Ignoring me, Nick wraps a towel around his waist and heads for the
bedroom. I move to follow him but my reflection in the slightly foggy
mirror catches my eye. Downright startles me, actually.
I can't get over how utterly content I look. Bright eyes, skin glowing, an
embarrassingly wide smile. Somehow, despite the dark circles underneath
my eyes from lack of sleep and the dripping wet messy hair, I look better
than I have in months. More alive. Why the hell did I try to run from this
man again?
The bruises peppering my skin catch my eye too, and it astounds me
how different they make me feel compared to the bruises I had the last time
I was here. Those ones stemmed from anger and jealousy and bitterness.
These ones are the opposite. These ones only remind me of a man who
makes me feel safe and comfortable and....
Loved.
What a terrifying concept.
Smiling like a fool, I practically skip back into Nick's bedroom. "You
know,” I lower my voice now we’re not shielded by the sound of the
shower, eyeing him greedily as he tugs underwear up thick thighs, “if you'd
spoken to me instead of stalking me, maybe I would've been pining too.”
A grunt and clothes being chucked in my face is the only response I
get.
Snickering to myself, I dry off and dress. I’m using a spare t-shirt to dry
my hair when a loud exhale sounds.
“Fine,” Nick admits, husky and sweet and worthy of all the affection he
lavishes me with. "I was pining a little.”
39
AMELIA
As soon as my shift ends, I sprint out the door, leaving Leery and Dopey
to lock up. I’m not entirely sure they know how, considering they share
about three brain cells between them, but that’s not my problem; I’m
focused on going home, indulging in a long ass shower, and begging my
boyfriend to fuck me despite the fact I’m a massive coward.
I barely make it five steps out the door before someone barks my name,
scaring the ever-loving shit out of me. My high-pitched screech echoes
down the street, keys brandished like a weapon as I spin to face my
potential attacker.
“It’s just me, Mils.”
It’s just me, Dylan says.
Just me, said so casually like the prospect of him posing a threat is
unthinkable.
My ex-boyfriend—otherwise known as the man I could go my entire
life without seeing again and be perfectly content—frowns in genuine,
laughable confusion when I don’t relax, my keys still ready to gouge his eye
out if he so much as breathes wrong. The universe is clearly working
against me today; I’m not taking any chances.
When Dylan steps forward, I step back, and his frown morphs into an
icy glower. “I want to talk.”
“No, thanks.”
His jaw ticks, a silent warning. “You’ve been busy, babe.”
I cringe. “Don’t call me that.”
“Why?” He spits. “Only Silva allowed give you nicknames now?”
Dylan’s climbing fury is a palpable thing, and what little self-
preservation instincts I have urge me to get the hell out of here but I can’t.
I’m frozen in place like I so often am when I’m the frequent victim of his
rage. And something in my gut tells me that running for my car right now
would be akin to running from a hungry predator; a really fucking foolish
move.
“I gotta say, I’m surprised he’s not bored of you yet. Not like you’re
anything special.”
“Is that why you won’t leave me the fuck alone?” I snap before I can
think better of it; while my legs might’ve ceased functioning, my mouth
clearly hasn’t. “Because I’m nothing special?”
It’s the wrong move and I know it.
In the blink of an eye, a hand locks around my arm, and as I realize not
a soul besides us lingers on the dark street, it dawns on me how fucked I
am. Bravado eviscerated by his painful grip, it’s replaced by the
overwhelming need to flee because something is so very wrong. God knows
I’ve seen Dylan angry before, irate like he is right now but there’s an eerie
calm about him too. And it’s the calculated composure that truly terrifies
me. “Please,” I beg, hating myself for it. “You’re hurting me.”
“I don’t fucking care.”
Sharp pain emanates from the back of my head, shooting down my
spine in the most sickeningly uncomfortable way, and it takes a moment to
register he’s slammed me against the wall of one of the many buildings
lining the street. Hard, jagged concrete digs into my back as I blink away
the dark spots dancing in my vision, overly aware of a sticky substance
dripping down the nape of my neck.
“I treated you well, Amelia, and this is how you repay me?” He’s not
shouting, and I wish he would because this sinister poise is worse. “You’re
a worthless, broken, pathetic little slut.”
For the second time tonight, I make the wrong decision.
“Bullshit.” One tiny word is shocking enough to catch us both off guard.
Dylan’s grip slackens and I take advantage of it, shoving him away as hard
as I can. “You treated me like shit. You cheated on me. You fucking abused
me, Dylan. If anyone is pathetic here, it’s you.”
I don’t see his fist coming.
I just feel it slamming into the side of my face, my cheek exploding in
pain. The force of it senses me tumbling to the ground, the skin of my hands
and knees splitting as I hit the uneven sidewalk hard. Pain shoots up my left
knee, the one I injured all those years ago, and the almost nostalgic agony
makes my eyes burn. I’m only down for a split second before a hand drags
me upright my hair, before I’m shoved against the wall again.
“You need to stop fucking talking, baby,” Dylan sneers, “and I’m gonna
make you.”
He descends on me and, for some reason, it’s his tongue trying to tangle
with mine that really ignites my fight or flight, something in my brain
registering that unless I make him, he’s not going to stop.
With all of my might, I raise a knee and slam it into his groin using as
much power and fury as he doled out on me. A sick thrill rushes through me
when Dylan crumbles to the floor with a wounded wail, but I don’t stop to
revel in my handiwork. I sprint toward my car, a sob of relief escaping me
when I realize that somehow, I managed to keep hold of my keys. Throwing
myself inside, I slam and lock the door, my hands trembling and my eyes
unfocused as I ignite the ignition and peel away without a backward glance.
Drive, I tell myself when my brain gets fuzzy, when the feel of
something warm and wet dripping down my cheek becomes unignorable,
when I glance down and see my jeans ripped and bloody at the knees and
red streaks smeared across the steering wheel from my stinging palms. Just
drive.
I don’t know where I’m going until I get there, until some of the tension
eases from my shoulders and I slump against the steering wheel, the word
safe echoing in my brain. Safe yet I can’t bring myself to move.
I have no idea how long I sit in my car—time isn't measured in minutes
in here, it's measured by the increasingly painful throbbing in my face, my
hands, my knees, my lungs, my fucking brain—and I have no idea how long
passes until knuckles tapping gently against the window make me jump in
my seat, my hands flying instinctively to the door to check the door is still
locked.
“Querida?” A sob builds in my throat. “What’re you doing here?”
He sounds so happy to see me and I hate that I’m about to ruin it. When
I unlock the door, I hate that I flinch when he opens it. I hate that I drop my
head to use my hair to shield my face, covering the rips in my jeans with
my hands. And most of all, I hate that when I start to cry, burning hot tears
of pure fucking shame because I can't believe I let this happen to me again.
Over the sound of my own wailing, I hear Nick ask what’s wrong and it
only makes me cry harder. The emotions I try so hard to rein in explode in a
series of anguished sobs that wrack my body from head to toe. In between
whimpers are strangled words, my attempts to explain but they’re
completely unintelligible.
"Amelia,” Nick utters name and it sounds like a plea, it makes me cry
harder. “Meu amor, I can’t understand you.”
When I lift a hand, exposing my torn knees, and tuck my hair behind
my ear, exposing my bleeding, probably bruised cheek, Nick chokes on a
gasp. When I turn to him, his eyes widen in shock, gaze trained on my
cheek. All it takes is three barely audible words for shock to turn to fury.
"He hit me."
42
NICK
Me: Amelia's at the house, had a run-in with Dylan. I've got her.
By the time I toss my phone on my desk, the rush of running water has
stopped. I give it another few hellish minutes before gently knocking,
rasping her name.
The door swings open and there she is, ruined work clothes discarded,
hair damp and scraped back from a freshly cleaned face. I was right about
the cut; definitely no need for stitches, thank fuck. Her palms, too, the blood
was definitely making them look worse. God, but her legs though. The skin
of her knees is torn to shreds, and when she crosses the room to clamber
onto my bed, I notice she’s limping a little, favoring her left leg—I mentally
add that to the list of reasons why she needs to see a damn doctor.
Cautiously, I creep toward her, crouching at the foot of the bed with the
first aid kit beside me, excruciatingly aware when she flinches or tenses at
my every movement, loathing how numbly she watches me dig through the
first aid kit.
I find some solace in Amelia closing the distance between us of her own
volition, however slowly and skittishly she may do it. Scooching until her
legs hang over the side of the bed, she rests her hands on her thighs, fingers
drumming an erratic rhythm.
“Can I?” I question softly, holding up a cotton ball soaked in antiseptic
solution. Again, her small nod is a minor consolation. As tenderly as I
possibly can, I get to work making sure her cuts are clean, unnerved by how
soundless and still Amelia remains the whole time.
I can’t help but remember when she did this for me. How there was
underlying solemnity in the room but it was also rife with electric tension,
so much raw energy floating between us, a promise of what was to come.
Now, it’s all dull. Dimmed. It’s fucking sad, that’s the only word for it,
and I’d give anything to make it better.
“He showed up after work.”
My movements still as a tiny voice pierces the silence. Not wanting to
scare her back into that horrible, unresponsive shell, I work to keep my face
impassive, to not shout no matter how much the mention of him makes me
want to roar and yell and tear some shit up. “What happened?”
Not until I’m finished cleaning her up does she answer.
Amelia crumples, physically and emotionally, as she recounts what
happened through heaved breathes and heart wrenching sobs. Everything he
said to her, every hand he lay on her, everything. By the time she finishes,
we’re both trembling—her with fear, me with pure, unadulterated rage.
Hands balled into fists, I stand slowly, shaking with the need to flatten
that fucking monster. Blazing hot fury clouds my senses and I have to work
hard to stay still, to not fly out the door because if I do, I really, really think
I’m going to kill him.
One glance at Amelia sucks the rage right out of me.
She’s shaking like a leaf, a bruised, trampled leaf, and more than
anything, I want to comfort her. I want to make it better, even a little bit.
Breathing hard, I sit beside her, leaving a too large gap between us and
mentally chatting a continuous reminder that I have to let her come to me.
I almost burst into fucking tears when she does.
My arms wrap around her without hesitation when she crawls onto my
lap and buries her face in my neck, her hot tears scorching my skin. “Please
don’t do anything reckless,” she whimpers. “He’s not worth it.”
No, he isn’t. But she is.
Giving her all the time in the world to pull away, I gingerly cup her
uninjured cheek, an honest to God fucking whine of relief ripping from my
throat when she not only lets me, but leans into me. “Look at what he did
you to.” The anguished whisper hurts my throat.
Amelia presses closer to me. “I’m so tired, Nick.”
Somehow, I know it’s not physical fatigue she’s talking about.
It’s him.
And if something doesn’t change, it’s always going to be him.
“Where are we going?” I ask for the hundredth time, struggling to keep
the childish whine from my voice.
Nick’s only reply is a sly grin and a kiss brushed against my knuckles,
the same as it has been for as long as we’ve been driving. For the first hour,
I hounded him relentlessly like an impatient child, even resorting to
begging. When that didn’t work, I gave up, sulking silently and scouring the
road signs whizzing past us for hints. When the sun began to set and
darkness engulfed everything in sight, I forfeited all efforts and nodded off,
soothed by the warm hand in mine even if I was annoyed as hell at the
owner.
Now, however, I’m wide awake and ready for interrogation round two.
“Nick.” I tug on his hand to get his attention.
He takes his eyes off the road for a split second. “Yes, meu amor?”
“Where are we going?”
“It’s a surprise.”
“I hate surprises.” Not entirely true—more like I’ve had enough
surprises to last me a while.
Unperturbed, Nick’s lips curl at the edges, giving me a perfect view of
those damn dimples that almost make me forget anything else. “You’ll like
this one.”
With a huff, I slump in my seat, ripping my hand from his so I can cross
my arms over my chest, and Nick only chuckles, settling a hand on my
thigh. Ten, twenty, thirty minutes pass, our silence only broken by the
crackle of music coming from the radio.
I hate to admit it but I feel more settled than I have all week. Yeah, I’m
still annoyed at Nick for his recent distant behavior and his current secretive
kidnapping act, and confused about the sudden total attitude change, but I
can’t deny that being around him, alone with him at last, has me feeling
calm as hell.
Silently cursing my lack of control, I rest my hand on top of his, letting
him twine our fingers together. The comforting motion of his thumb
stroking my hand has me drifting off to sleep again, head lolling against the
window. I don’t even notice the cars come to a halt until Nick murmurs,
“We’re here.”
Blinking rapidly to clear the sleepy haze, I lean forward to squint out
the windscreen, eager to discover where they hell Nick has taken me. A
quaint building looms before us, illuminated by the soft glow of porch
lights, a sign hanging over the door. Monterey Bay Inn.
“Monterey?” God, no wonder it felt like we were driving forever;
driving here is almost equivalent to our road trips back home for the
holidays. “What’re we doing here?” Confused, I shift in my seat to face
Nick only to find him already gazing at me.
“I know I’ve been distant this week,” he starts, hand holding mine
tightly, “and I’m sorry. I didn’t want to make you uncomfortable and I was
trying to give you space. But I realize that was the wrong call so…”
Trailing off, he gestures at the building before us. “Here’s Plan B.”
Before explaining further, Nick hops out of the truck and darts around to
wrench my door open, unbuckling my seatbelt and lifting me out. Fingers
nervously fidgeting with the ends of my hair, he blurts out in a single
rushed breath, “You’re not fine, Amelia. You’re hurt but I think you’re too
scared to be or you don’t want people to see you like that so I booked a
room here for a few days. No one knows you’re here, I told them you went
to your dad’s place, so no one’s gonna bother you. If you want, I’ll stay but
if you wanna be alone, that’s okay too. I’ll go home and collect you at the
end of the week. It’s completely up to you but I think you need to stay and
just hurt for a little.”
Silence follows Nick’s lengthy speech, a silence I’m incapable of
piercing because I can’t do anything but stare at him, stunned.
He…
He’s right.
As much as I hate to admit it, he’s right.
God, I’m so damn sick of crying but my body has yet to get the memo
because here I am, teary-eyed, nose burning, swallowing down yet another
lump in my throat.
Peace and quiet is what I’ve been begging for all week, and peace and
quiet is what he’s given me.
All of my annoyance, my frustration, everything suffocating me is
suddenly wiped clear by the salty tang in the air, by the sound of gently
lapping waves hidden by the dark, by for a little while, I’m free from heavy
gazes and stifling concern.
My heart swells as I glance between Nick and the inn, melting at the
sincerity written all over his face. I know without a shadow of a doubt, he’d
suffer through another couple of long, lonely road trips without any
complaints if it made me happy.
And that’s exactly why I loop my arms around his neck and shrug with
false indifference. “I guess you can stay.”
A brilliant, heart-race-increasing beam lights up Nick’s face. Hands
slide down my back, leaving warm sparks in their wake, and dip into the
back pockets of my jeans, urging me closer. “Thank fuck.”
For the second time today, I’m cut off by lips meeting mine. Nick
swallows my impending laughter, kissing me with less caution, as though
he’s been longing for me this past week as much as I’ve been for him.
Every part of me relaxes into him. I swear my whole body sighs in relief
as though it knows I’m safe and secure and something else that I don’t let
my mind settle on for too long because it’s an emotion that inspires fear in
me as much as it does comfort, an emotion that I’m not sure I’m completely
ready for.
It helps, though. The way he makes me feel, the way he looks at me,
makes everything else fade away and seem insignificant. He helps.
Conflictingly, that fear-mongering emotion in his eyes helps.
44
AMELIA
“I HATE YOU.”
Nick's laughter echoes around our home for the next few days, his lips
twitching into a smirk as he pulls a beanie down over my head. “Stop
whining.”
“It's the middle of the night.”
“Amelia, it's 6AM.”
“It's dark outside,” I hiss through pouted lips, batting away Nick's hands
when he attempts to wrap a scarf around my neck, bundling me in yet
another layer. Not only am I awake hours before I’d prefer, I'm wearing
enough clothes to comfortably walk around outside in freaking Antarctica.
When I asked why I needed to wake up at the crack of dawn and spend the
day looking like the Michelin Man, Nick silenced me with another
insufferable 'it's a surprise.'
It's a good thing he's handsome. And that he came prepared with
copious amounts of strong, sweet coffee and pastries when he woke me up.
The birds have barely begun chirping when Nick drags my yawning
form outside, his camera swinging around his neck and a disposition that's
way too cheery for this hour. A chilly wind tickles my cheeks and despite
my contempt for his merriment, I huddle closer to Nick, and when it hits me
that we’re strolling hand-in-hand in public without a care in the world, my
mood suddenly lights. With a relenting huff, my grumpiness ebbs and I
wrap my free hand around his arm, resting my head on his shoulder, letting
myself revel in the fact we’re acting like the couple we are for once.
It's so ridiculous that something so normal can make me feel like I'm
floating. I don't even care that I have no idea where we're going; I’m
enjoying strolling with my boyfriend without feeling the need to glance
over my shoulder every two seconds.
As the sun begins to rise, it bathes everything around us in soft, golden
light, finally allowing me to see beyond the dimly lit path we're following.
Waves crash gently against the rocks below us, the soothing sound
accompanied by the screech of seagulls flying above us. The ocean is dotted
with the shadows of early morning surfers scoping out the first icy waves of
the day, the sunrise making the whole image so unbelievably picturesque.
Just like that, my aversion to waking up at the crack of dawn is
cancelled out completely as I'm struck by how peaceful, how pretty all of
this is. How it’s exactly what I needed.
I'm so busy gazing out to sea that I barely notice Nick coming to a halt.
Not until he nudges me to grab my attention do I realize we’ve reached our
destination. Dozens of boats occupy the marina we've come to a stop
before, swaying gently in the wind and waves.
Side-eyeing Nick, I raise a brow. “Please tell me we're not going
fishing.” It would be kind of funny if, for all his observancy, he failed to
notice I'm a vegetarian.
“No, meu amor,” he rolls his eyes, huffing a sarcastic noise as he herds
me toward one of the boats looming close to us, a stark white vessel on the
smaller side with the words, ‘Monterey Bay Whale Watching’ painted across
the hull, “we are not going fishing.”
“Whale watching?” I glance at Nick, his apprehensive smile warming
me more than any layer could.
“Whale watching,” he confirms as he wraps his arms around my waist.
“Thought the fresh air would be good for your head, and it's pretty peaceful
out there. Plus,” he clears his throat in the most adorably nervous way, “I
thought it was about time I took you on a date.”
Heart beating thunderously, something foolishly happy grips me by the
throat. “A date, huh?”
Nick hums, leaning forward to brush his nose—perfectly warm because,
like I’ve said before, the man is a living furnace—against mine. “We’ve got
a lunch reservation too.”
“Oh,” I sigh. “You really should’ve lead with that. Then I would’ve
been so grumpy.”
“You’re cute when you’re grumpy.” Tossing me a wink, Nick grabs my
hand and together, we clamber onto the boat. The people already onboard
greet us excitedly, all looking relaxed and jovial and, making me wonder if
I'm the only non-morning person in the whole bay.
It doesn’t take long before we get going; after a quick welcome spiel
and before I know it, the coast is becoming a faint dot in the distance. The
further out we sail, the stronger and icier the wind gets and I'm
begrudgingly grateful for Nick's obsessive bundling, as grateful as I am for
him standing flush behind me, acting like another layer. Chin resting on
head, his hands sneak around my waist and join mine where they're stuffed
in my coat pockets, fingers lacing with mine like a living pair of gloves.
I’m ashamed to admit we don’t even attempt to make small talk with the
other people on the boat. We’re wholly occupied with each other. Not in an
indecent or obnoxious way, though.
Well, maybe a little.
“I like kissing you in public,” Nick murmurs in my ear, and my cheeks
redden for reasons beyond the biting wind. Slight embarrassment aside—
Nick truly has zero inhibitions when it comes to PDA—I can't help but
agree. Something about being able to kiss him freely after hiding for so
long is downright exhilarating.
As Nick dips his head to add substance to his claim once again, my
attention is suddenly drawn elsewhere, toward a round of excited shouting.
“Look!” One of the crew members hollers loudly, gesturing at a random
spot in the ocean. Following his pointed finger, I can't help but gasp at the
group of dark blobs dipping beneath waves sparkling in the sunlight.
Half a dozen whales, I think, swim a stone's throw away from the boat.
God, they're huge. Sleek and streamlined as they glide through the water
effortlessly. Majestic, that's the word that comes to mind.
Feeling like a giddy child, I break out of Nick’s grasp and hurry to the
railing where everyone is congregating, gripping the frigid metal tightly and
bouncing on the balls of my feet, genuinely awestruck as I watch the whales
sporadically break the surface. I tear my gaze away only to check if Nick is
enjoying this as much as I am, glancing over my shoulder as the camera
pointed in my direction snaps a picture with a definite click. Groaning with
a cringe, I cover my face, not even daring to imagine how awful I look, all
flushed and disheveled with my hair probably flying in a million directions.
Tutting his disapproval, Nick drops his camera, letting it hang around
his neck as he pries my hands away. “My fucking beautiful girl,” he
whispers way too loudly for my liking before leaning in for yet another
public display of affection.
Despite my self-consciousness, I freaking simper. “You are
unbelievably sappy today.”
“You love it.”
“Yeah.” I let my head fall back against his chest when he spins us to
face the ocean again, his lips lavishing my cheek with affection. “I really
do.”
Releasing a tired but happy sigh, I tilt my face towards the sun, basking
in the warm rays as they thaw my chilled bones. A few hours out on the
open sea have me shivering despite the layers, but it was so damn worth it.
God, I really loved that.
My gaze shifts to the man strolling alongside me, and I sigh again. After
our morning adventure, Nick made good on his promise of lunch, leading
me to a cute pub right by the ocean and treating me to the best meal I’ve
had in a while. And a handful of drinks. With the combination of a full
belly and a clear, slightly intoxicated mind, I already know I'm going to
sleep well tonight.
As we walk back to the inn, taking the same ocean path as this morning,
I take advantage of him being entranced by the view and thoroughly,
unashamedly check him out. God, he's hot. Scruffier than usual, which I
think is only adding to the hotness. He's got a whole beard thing going on
lately, and his hair is a little longer than normal too, dark curls peeking out
from underneath his beanie, and I’m loving it.
Sensing my gaze, he turns to me with the smile I’ve learned is reserved
only for me, the light catching his honey eyes so perfectly it makes me sigh
a third time.
So pretty. And all mine.
“You’re staring,” he teases, coasting one hand down my arm while the
other pushes open the front door of the inn.
Since there’s no point denying it, I shrug, shouldering past him and
dashing for our room, already anticipating how good hot water battering my
cold skin is going to feel. The moment the door closes and locks behind us,
I’m stripping off, leaving my abundance of clothes scattered on the floor as
I bolt for the bathroom. When I get down to my underwear, I glance back at
Nick, whatever I was going to say abruptly getting caught in my throat.
He’s staring at me intently, hungrily, in the way I freaking crave. But the
moment he realizes he’s been caught, her averts his gaze and clears his
throat, pretending to be busy messing around with his camera.
A wicked idea springs to mind. “Nick?”
He hums a nondescript reply, still fiddling with his camera, still
avoiding looking at me.
“Nick,” I repeat more assertively. Painfully slowly, Nick raises his gaze,
throat bobbing in a hard swallow as he tries and fails not to blatantly check
out my almost naked body. “Are you going to join me?”
“I don't think that's a good idea.”
Taking a small step toward him, I cross my arms over my chest,
subsequently drawing his attention to the lacy bralette doing little to hide
anything. “Why not?”
“Amelia…” he warns quietly but it’s not me he’s warning; it’s himself. I
know what he’s thinking; it’s written all over his face. He doesn't want to
push me or make me uncomfortable, and I appreciate that more than words
can convey.
But it’s been too long since he touched me in any way other than gentle.
And I love gentle, I do, but I’m so sick of it.
I want him to touch me like he wants me.
Breathing his name for a third time, I close the distance between us, his
skin scorchingly warm beneath my palms as I slide them along the curve of
his neck. To my delight, he doesn’t hesitate in greedily palming my barely
covered ass, groaning as he kneads my flesh. “I need you.” Molten gold
irises flash dangerously at my proclamation. “So, will you stop treating me
with kid gloves and just fuck me already?”
In the blink of an eye, I'm upside down, thrown over Nick's shoulder
like a sack of flour. A low groan rumbles deep in his chest as I wriggle in
anticipation, a surprised squeal spilling from my lips when a stinging slap
cracks across my ass cheek.
Fucking finally.
Blood rushes to my head as I’m placed back on my feet, and I feel as
giddy as I did earlier as the sound of running water fills the bathroom, as I
watch him strip away his clothes and the rest of mine with hasty eagerness.
When we both stand naked in front of each other, Nick exhales deeply,
gaze reverent as it sweeps over me. “Are you sure?”
“Yes.”
One word is all it takes for his lips to smash against mine with
unbridled, desperate power. His hands are everywhere, all over me, all at
once, touching and teasing and persuading moans from my lips as he leads
me under the hot spray, twirling me so my back is crushed against his front.
Nick makes quick work of coaxing a first orgasm out of me. With his
hand between my thighs, I almost buckle as the pleasure I’ve been deprived
of for too long washes over me. So long, too long, without him touching
me, without me touching him. A handful of thrusts have me melting against
him, begging for more, my hands reaching up so I can bury them in his hair.
"Do you want to come, meu amor?" His breath tickling my neck only
heightens the sensation, as does his teeth nipping my earlobe.
My mind gets fuzzy as I get dangerously close to the edge, my thoughts
completely consumed by Nick. "What about your rule?" Shut up, Amelia.
Holy fuck, shut up.
The pressure of his fingers inside me increases as Nick growls, “Fuck
that. I wanna hear you scream my name."
And I do. Fuck, I do. I scream his name so loudly that if I wasn't so lost
in ecstasy, I'd probably feel bad for the other inhabitants of the inn,
probably be a little embarrassed.
But I can't bring myself to give a shit.
The orgasm rips through my body, prolonged by teeth scraping my
neck, one hand massaging my breast, the other rubbing furiously between
my legs until my knees truly give out and the only thing holding me up is
the arm hooked around my waist. Blood pounds in my ears, drowning out
the sound of our ragged breathing and running water. Fuck, I missed that.
I whine in protest as Nick lets me go and moves to get out of the
shower, grabbing his arm and pulling him back to me. “What're you
doing?”
“Getting a condom, querida.”
“I'm on birth control.” I blurt out the words without even thinking, an
obvious invitation laced within them. Nick freezes in place, eyes wide and
undoubtedly dark, filled with barely controlled lust. My words float in the
air between us, palpable and loaded, like a physical line we're about to
cross.
I've never had sex without a condom before, never trusted anyone
enough, and something about the way Nick's looking at me tells me same
goes for him. But I trust Nick. Completely, unequivocally, scarily.
"Are you sure?" He asks that question again, voice husky and low and
trembling. I can't tell if the shaky voice is because he's nervous or if it's
from the effort of holding back.
Something tonight has me feeling bold, probably a mixture of my
overwhelming need to be close to him and the way he's looking at me like
I'm the only thing in the world that matters. Moving until our chests are
flush, I wrap my arms around his neck. "Don't you want to come inside me,
Nick?"
The words barely leave my mouth before I'm attacked with a kiss and
plucked off the ground, my legs immediately wrapping around his waist. In
one swift movement, my back hits the shower wall, his hand sliding
between my head and the hard marble to act as a cushion as he buries
himself inside me. "Merda, I missed being inside of you."
The feeling is most definitely mutual.
He slams into me relentlessly, both of us moaning each other's names
and muttering curse after curse until I can't distinguish between my voice
and Nick's. I move my hips against him, kissing him with everything I have.
He tastes like the hot chocolate we drank on the way home and the salty
ocean wind we spent the morning swaying in and I can't fucking get
enough, I don't think I'll ever get enough.
His thrusts get harder, deeper, and I can't help but let my head fall to his
shoulder with a cry. The second I do, he stops abruptly, coming to a
standstill inside me. The hand cupping my head moves to my neck, thumb
stroking my jaw in a tender move that completely contradicts the hold he
has on me. "Eyes, Amelia."
Panting heavily, I lift my head and nod, gazing at him through lidded
eyes. Satisfied, he starts to move again, picking up speed until I can't breath,
until all I know is the way he feels inside me, hitting the same mind-
numbing spot again and again.
Not long passes before the coil in my lower belly tightens again and I
explode around him, nails digging into his shoulder as my mouth drops
open, my moans getting stuck in my throat.
He doesn't stop, not for a second. If anything, his movements get more
furious. His grip on me tightens, fingers digging into my ass as he fucks me
relentlessly, his breathing getting more and more erratic, his thrusts getting
sloppier. "Come with me, querida."
"I can't," I moan, barely able to get my eyes open anymore. I'm spent,
thoroughly spent, but he's not having it.
"You will."
The hand encircling my neck slides between us, moving down and
down until it settles on the sensitive, throbbing bundle of nerves. I thrash in
his grasp as he rubs agonizing, constant circles, the line between pain and
pleasure blurring in the best way possible.
We unravel together, chanting each other’s names like a prayer as he
spills into me with a groan. I collapse against him, my legs threatening to
slip from his waist as I lose all control over my limbs, only kept in place by
his strong arms. We stay like that for a moment, breathing rapidly, two wet,
exhausted bodies stuck together in every way possible.
I hiss quietly as Nick pulls out of me, the dull throbbing between my
legs suddenly becoming apparent. Kissing my shoulder softly, he sets me
down on shaky legs only to immediately pick me up again when my legs
crumble beneath me. "I think you broke me."
Nick laughs huskily, securing one arm around my waist to hold me up,
using the other to smooth my wet hair back from my face. His smile morphs
into a more serious expression as his intense gaze darts around my face,
taking in every flushed detail before settling on my eyes. "You are the best
fucking thing that's ever happened to me."
If I wasn't already a melted mess, I definitely would've become a puddle
on the floor and disappeared down the drain. With a dopey smile on my
face, I kiss him again, pouring every emotion I'm too scared to express
verbally into it
He is perfect.
Legitimately perfect.
The best person I've ever known.
Slumping against him, I intertwine my fingers with his and bring them
to my lips, kissing his knuckles quickly, my voice trembling as I admit,
“You're the best thing that's ever happened to me too.”
45
NICK
“Well, that was fun while it lasted,” Amelia laments with a wistful sigh,
casting me a half-hearted smile as we reluctantly scale the stairs of her
apartment building.
“Say the word and we can go back,” I say, only half joking. It puts me
on edge, being back, as inevitable as our return was. I’m fucking terrified
that Amelia is going to revert into that awful shell of a girl she was before
we left, drifting like a ghost. Barely speaking, barely eating, barely fucking
moving. It physically hurt to see her like that, and I don't think I could take
it happening again. I don’t think either of us could.
A stilted laugh leaving her, Amelia brings our clasped hands to her lips,
kissing the back of my mine as she mutters, “I wish.”
The closer we get to her apartment, the slower her steps become. As
much as I was dreading coming home, she was tenfold. The whole drive,
she was fretting about whether or not the others will still be intent on
tiptoeing around her, whether they’ll be mad at her for running away, that
latter worry remaining no matter how many times I corrected her;
technically, I kidnapped her.
“Hey,” I call softly when we reach her front door, tugging on her hand
until she faces me, apprehension darkening her pretty face. “It’ll be okay,
querida. Be honest with them. You didn't like how they were treating you,
so tell them."
Despite her obvious anxiety, Amelia croons wryly, “So old and wise,”
“Brat,” I mutter, kissing the side of her head, waiting for her nod of
approval before opening the front door.
I shouldn’t be surprised that a mere step across the threshold is all the
girls are willing to wait before whisking Amelia into their arms. “You’re
home!” Luna squeals from somewhere within the tangle of three women.
They separate, Lu and Kate each gripping one of Amelia’s shoulder, both
wearing matching expressions of concern. “We were worried about you.”
Amelia stiffens. Throat bobbing as she takes a deep breath, she adopts a
determined expression. “Can I talk to you guys?”
The girls nod, mine casting me a sweet smile, before disappearing down
the hall. Only when I hear a door shut do I let myself breathe. And only
then do I realize The Tiny Effect has been working full force since I entered
the apartment; until now, I didn’t even notice Jackson stretched out on the
sofa, smirking at me in a sly way that completely contradicts his quiet
nature. With a sigh, I flop down next to him. “Spit it out.”
He doesn't hesitate. “You really love her.”
I don’t bother denying it. “I do.”
“You tell her?”
“Not yet.”
“What're you waiting for?”
If I felt like being honest, I would tell him it’s because I’m scared
shitless. Scared because I’ve never said it to someone before, not like this.
Scared because I’ve never felt it before, not like this. Scared because I’m
almost completely positive that the moment I let those three words fly, she’s
going to run.
Shrugging, I settle on the easy answer like the coward I am. “Figure I
should probably tell Cass I’m dating his sister first.”
“Uh-huh,” a single utterance convinces me that Jackson doesn’t believe
a word out of my mouth, and if it didn’t, his next words would, “keep
telling yourself that.”
Ignoring the obvious taunt, I turn the conversation back on him. “How’s
it going with Lu?”
Five words is all it takes for my friend’s face to light up with what I can
only describe as elation. “Couldn’t be better,” he sighs happily. “She met
my sisters.”
I whistle, long and low. I knew it was serious between them but shit.
Big step. Jackson’s sisters are like royalty to him—I've known the guy for
years and I can count the times I've met those girls on one hand. "Did it go
okay?"
“Think they love her more than they love me,” Jackson muses, shaking
his head with a dopey smile smile. Huffing a laugh, he knocks me with his
elbow. “Both got the girl, hey?”
“Yeah.” It’s my turn to smile like a fool. “Guess we did.”
We’re chatting idly about mundane shit when the girls finally reappear.
“She’s all yours, lover boy,” Luna sings as she saunters toward us,
smiling stiffly in an obvious effort to draw attention away from glassy blue
eyes but there’s no hiding her sniffling as she settles beside Jackson,
melting into the man.
Kate’s not far behind, looking as afflicted as her blonde friend as she
flops in the armchair tucked in the corner. When I frown inquisitively, she
shakes her head and mouths, “don’t worry.”
I don’t realize how wound up I am until Amelia appears and my body
goes slack. I shift, making room for her to squeeze onto the sofa, an air of
confident determination around her as she curls up beside me. Her
expression is unnervingly peaceful, a stark contrast to the tears threatening
to fall.
Slinging an arm around her shoulder, I urge her closer, hauling her onto
my lap. “You okay?”
Amelia nods, exchanging indecipherable looks with her friends before
clearing her throat. “Can you do me a favor?”
I swipe away the warm drops dampening her undereyes. “Anything,
meu amor.”
“Will you come with me to file a restraining order?”
“PLEASE, SAM.”
“Baby, I can't.” The deafening noise of the party fades as I stumble out
the front door, allowing me to hear the resigned sigh coming from my phone
clearly. A couple people wave hello as I pass, and I catch sight of the
birthday girl cowering near the bushes, her sixteenth birthday sash caked in
vomit. Yuck.
“Please.” My tongue, loosened by alcohol, trips over the plea in unison
with my feet tripping down the driveway.
“Amy,” Sam groans, and I can just picture his face scrunched up in the
cute little frown that I love. “I've had a beer and I have practice at the
crack of dawn. I can't.”
I huff and mumble something incoherent that even I can't fully
understand, earning another frustrated sigh. Kicking at the grass under my
feet in frustration, I scowl at the few specks of dirt that dare ruin the white
fabric of my favorite Converse. “When did you get so boring?” I whine into
the phone, hiccuping loudly, sounding like a spoiled child but I don’t care;
I’m drunk, cold, and I want to see my hot boyfriend. “Amy, how drunk are
you?”
My heart flutters at the concern in his voice, a small smile replacing my
scowl. “Come find out.”
I swear I hear the slightest laugh through the phone despite Sam's
attempts to cover it with a cough. “My mom will freak, babe.” I roll my eyes
at that—such a momma's boy. “Is Cass there? I thought he was designated
driver tonight.”
Scoffing, I glance over my shoulder in time to see Cass finish chugging
his umpteenth beer—he must be hitting double digits by now—and let out a
victory cry as he wins his latest round of beer pong.When he spots me
through the window, he grins widely, quickly tapping his knuckles against
his cheek and throwing me a wink. I return the gesture before replying to
Sam, “He's drunker than I am.”
“You and your brother are a menace to society, you know that, right?”
I grin, eyes still trained on my brother as he switches from beer pong to
dancing like a fool with a bunch of the boys. They all have practice in the
morning too. Of course, I had to choose the only responsible guy on the
team to go out with.
“Menace to society,” I repeat thoughtfully, chewing on my lip. “I want
that written on my gravestone.”
Sam can't hide his laugh this time. “I'll carve it on there myself.”
I giggle at his joke before I remember I'm mad at him and my lips fall
back into a pout. “So you're not gonna come get me?” I don't need him to
come get me, not really. One of my friends is bound to be playing DD
tonight since a couple of them have gotten their licences recently and
they're dying to show them off. I just want to see Sam. I've barely seen him
outside of school all week because of freaking practice.
I miss my damn boyfriend. Sue me.
“No, baby,” Sam says softly, his voice quiet and apologetic, and I
almost feel bad for the move I'm about to pull.
Almost.
“Fine.” I feign a contemplative sigh and amble further down the drive
until the party noise completely fades away. “I'll walk home.” I hold my
breath, bottom lip between my teeth. There's the briefest of pauses before
Sam lets out a defeated laugh and I hear the tell-tale sound of keys jingling.
“I'm on my way.”
Swallowing a squeal, I plop down on the sidewalk and smile at my feet.
“I love you.”
“I love you too, baby.”
Twenty minutes later and I’m still in the same position.
It shouldn't take this long. He lives ten minutes away, tops, and it's the
middle of the night—even his piece of crap car can get here in less time
than that when there's no traffic.
I'm two minutes away from stomping back inside in a huff, convinced he
ditched me, when I hear the rumble of an engine and I'm momentarily
blinded by a pair of headlights. I shield my eyes as a door slams and a tall
figure rounds the front of the car, a handsome face playfully glaring at me.
“We're in big shit with my mom, young lady,” Sam scolds as he pulls me to
my feet, a gleam in his eyes that assures he's not really mad.
Batting my eyelashes, I flash him puppy-dog eyes, popping my bottom
lip. “I'm sorry.”
Immune to my charms after all this time, Sam snickers. "No, you're not."
“Yeah you're right, I'm really not,” I agree, wrapping my arms around
his neck. “I'll grovel to your mom tomorrow about stealing her favourite
son away,” I promise before pressing my lips to his.
He kisses me back for a brief moment before pulling away and making a
face. “Since when do you drink beer?”
“Since your buddies on the baseball team decided to give it out for
free.”
Sam shakes his head, muttering something under his breath about
teammates getting their asses kicked in the morning before pecking me
again. Hands slipping down my back, Sam pats my ass before nudging me
towards his car. “C’mon, my little wild child. Let’s get you home.”
I bat at his chest as he slips an arm around my waist, letting me use him
as support for my wobbly limbs. “I am not a child. Or little!”
“Hey, I'm not the one who calls you Tiny.”
I glare at him as he opens the passenger door and ushers me inside.
“Cass is sixteen too, you don't call him a child.”
Sam grins cheekily and wiggles his eyebrows. “I don't call Cass a lot of
the things that I call you.”
Huffing a laugh, I punch his arm lightly, ducking my head to hide my
blush. His lips ghost the bare skin of my shoulder before he closes the door,
and I wince at the screeching sound the hinges make. This thing is a
freaking hazard on wheels but Sam adores it and I adore him, therefore I
tolerate the pile of crap.
Sam slips into the driver’s seat and said pile of crap starts up with a
bang. As we leave the party in our rear-view mirror, I shoot Cass a quick
text letting him know I'm safe before tossing my phone in the glovebox.
“So,” Sam glances at me quickly and quirks a brow, “good night, I'm
assuming?”
“Would've been better if you were there.”
Sam rolls his eyes. “Excuse me for being dedicated to the game.”
“Cass is dedicated,” I point out. “He still finds time for fun.”
“Cass is a freak of nature.”
Well, I can’t exactly disagree with that—Cass has more natural talent in
his pinky finger than I have in my entire body, than the team has combined.
He could play an entire game drunk and he'd probably still wipe the floor
with everyone.
A comfortable silence settles between Sam and I. He hums along with
the radio under his breath, tapping his fingers against the steering wheel as
he focuses on the road ahead, ever the diligent driver as he always is when
I'm in the car.
My head falls against the headrest as I watch him silently, admiring
him. God, he's so pretty it hurts. He really filled out this year, his borderline
lanky limbs thickening, becoming more defined. He let his hair grow out
too, and I freaking love it. There's a couple stray light brown curls falling in
his face, and my hands itch to reach out and tuck it behind his ear but I fear
my arms won't cooperate. I'd probably bop him in the eye and send the car
into a tailspin by accident.
Blue eyes shine at me as Sam side-eyes, a sly smirk lifting the corner of
his mouth. “Stop looking at me like that, Amy.”
“Like what?”
“Like you want me to sneak you into my room.”
I drop my head, again trying to hide a blush, wiggling in my seat as a
thrill of excitement pools in my stomach. We had sex the first time a few
weeks ago, and now every time he looks at me the way he's looking at me
right now I get all... flustered.
“Why don't you?” I coo as sexily as I can, cringing internally as I slur
my words and silently cursing Cass for learning the recipe to one of James'
godforsaken alcoholic concoctions. I swear, a junior in college and all my
eldest brother has learned is how to make severe hangover inducing
beverages.
Sam groans, one hand leaving the wheel to rake through his hair.
“Because you're drunk, babe.”
“I'm tipsy,” I correct with a wag of my finger. Sam opens his mouth,
probably to argue further but he doesn’t get a chance; my abrupt squeal
cuts him off. My fingers find the volume control of the radio and crank it all
the way up, a familiar song booming throughout the car. “It's our song,
Sammy.”
Is it borderline embarrassing that I’ve christened Maroon 5’s ‘She Will
Be Loved’ as our song purely because it was in movie we watched on our
first date? Absolutely.
Do I care? Absolutely not.
I belt the words as loud as possible, dance in my seat as hard as the
confines of my seatbelt will let me, beaming when Sam goes along with it.
He always does. He says it’s because he loves me but I know the truth; it’s
the song he loves. I give him until the second chorus before his tone-deaf
voice drowns out mine.
It all happens so fast.
One second, we're singing at the top of our lungs.
The next, Sam's yelling my name, the arm closest to me flying out and
crushing me back against my seat. There's an awful screeching sound as the
car stammers to a halt, and a motorbike whizzes past, coming dangerously
close to smashing right into us.
“Fucking hell,” Sam swears loudly after a tense moment, reaching out
to turn down the radio.“What a dipshit.”
I exhale shakily, my hands clinging to the arm still banded across my
chest. When he goes to start the car again, I let go of him reluctantly, noting
he’s trembling as bad as I am. “You okay?” I nod quickly, asking the same
question and receiving the same answer. “Shit, that was scary.”
Sam grips my thigh reassuringly as we start up again, his driving even
more cautious than he was before. Blue eyes meet mine again momentarily,
offering comfort as he opens his mouth to speak but whatever he says is
drowned out by his name leaving my lips on a scream.
It’s like the world slows down.
Glass shatters, metal crunches, my head flies forward and smacks
against the dashboard. It feels like we’re flying or flipping, I’m not sure,
and I don't how long it lasts but eventually, the world becomes still.
Vaguely, I recognize we’re upside down.
Blood.
There's so much blood.
I can taste it on my tongue, smell the metallic scent in the air, feel it
dripping down my forehead and flooding my eyes. A nagging voice in my
head whispers that the blood isn’t mine. I think it’s right. I don’t hurt yet I’m
covered in red.
Sam.
My neck screams in pain as I turn to look for him, relief flooding me
when I find him still sitting beside me. I say his name, weak as hell, too
weak I think because he doesn’t hear it. He doesn’t react. He stares at me,
wide-eyed and terrified. I think I scream and still, he doesn’t react. I reach
for him but it feels like I'm underwater, or moving through mud, and black
spots flood my vision with the exertion.
I blink rapidly, fighting against my eyelids as they fall shut but it’s futile.
The blackness spreads until there’s nothing but darkness.
As I drift towards unconsciousness, all I can think of is the beautiful,
pale boy, looking but not seeing.
My brother is crying.
That's the sound and image that greets me when I wake up.
There's beeping too, a whole lot of beeping. Too bright lights buzzing
loudly. Hushed voices coming from a TV, I think. And I hurt. I hurt really
bad, one of my legs and my head throbbing in equal measure. But it's the
quiet sobs that I zone in on, the ones coming from the boy curled in a
plastic chair that only fits half his lanky body.
“Cassie?” His name scratches my dry throat, making me cough.
Cass sits up so quickly he almost falls to the floor. Wild, watery eyes
land on me and widen, almost in disbelief. He's at my side in an instant, the
legs of his chair scraping the tiled ground and making me wince. “Holy
shit.” His arms engulf me, trapping him against his chest as he hugs me
hard, probably too hard for someone in a hospital bed.
Why the hell am I in a hospital bed?
A pang shoots through my head as he pulls away abruptly, gaze raking
over me as he holds me at arm’s length, his face and tone equally fierce.
“Don’t you ever do that again.”
Confused, I rub the back of my head, frowning at the needle in my hand.
“What happened?” No sooner have I asked the question than the memories
come flooding back.
Accident. We were in an accident.
I feel the blood drain from my face as I squeeze my eyes closed. My
hands tremble as I'm hit with a million images, only one of them managing
to push their way to the forefront. “Where's Sam?”
Silence. Deafening, terrifying silence.
Streams of tears wet Cass’ cheeks, flowing like a river, and he doesn’t
even try to wipe them away. I’ve never see him cry before. Not once. Not
even when we broke our wrists, not even when we broke our wrists ice-
skating; I cried like a baby, he laughed through the pain.
A sinking feeling turns my stomach. “Cassie, where is he?”
His sob is all the answer I need yet he provides me with words anyway.
“I’m so sorry, Amelia. He’s gone.”
My head jerks back like he's slapped me. Bile rises in my throat as two
little words obliterate my entire world. “That’s not funny.”
He's not laughing.
Blue eyes. Looking but not seeing.
“No.” One word, said with such determination that Cass visibly
flinches. There's no way. It's impossible. He wouldn't leave me, he would
never leave me, not like this.
There is no way.
Except Cass is crying and Cass doesn't cry, and Cass doesn't lie either,
not to me.
“No,” I repeat, again and again until it's no longer a word. It's a cry, a
plea, a hysterical scream that has more people rushing into the room in a
panic. I make out James' face among the crowd and the word dies on my
lips because suddenly, I know.
Cass crying is cause for concern.
James crying is devastating.
A body slides between me and the pillows at my back, tucking me
against a hard chest as James pulls me into his grasp, careful not to jostle
my bandaged leg but it wouldn’t matter if he did; I can’t feel a thing. His
other arm wraps around Cass, tugging him closer, and our brother holds us
as we sob, his smooth voice breaking as he whispers words of consolation.
Empty words, because I can't be consoled.
I don't deserve to be consoled.
My boyfriend is dead and it’s my fault.
47
NICK
NEVER AGAIN.
I am never drinking fucking wine again.
My head is pounding, my throat is dry and scratchy, my eyelids might
actually be glued shut, and I feel nauseous as fuck.
Never fucking again.
I roll over with a groan and reach for Amelia only to be met by an
empty, cold spot. Squinting against the offensive light seeping in through
the ugly as fuck curtains framing huge windows, I lift my head off the
pillow and glance around the room, letting out an embarrassingly whiney
sound and pouting like a child when my girl is nowhere in sight.
She was here when I fell asleep; not much about last night is clear—like
how I went from chugging beers with the guys to sipping Savignon Blanc
with fucking Luna—but I definitely remember her crawling into bed beside
me. I remember her closing the door too, in case Cass stumbled home, but
it’s ajar now. A mouth-watering smell wafts through the opening, erasing
the lingering cloying stench of wine and… nail polish? A glance downward
reveals my nails painted a particularly horrendous shade of vomit green.
Great.
Massaging my thumping head, I force myself out of bed. I stumble
around the room, picking up whatever clothes of mine are scattered on the
floor, before trudging downstairs in search of whatever smells so fucking
good.
God, am I greeted by a sight for sore eyes.
Amelia stands over the stove, wrapped in a fluffy robe, swaying to
faintly playing music as she flips pancakes. Quickly checking no one is
around, I sneak up behind her, wrapping my arms around her waist as I kiss
her cheek. She jolts in surprise, her lips quickly tipping upward when she
realizes it’s me. “Morning,” she sings loud enough to draw a wince out of
me. Judging by her expression, that was exactly her intention.
Her good mood does not rub off on me. “I don’t like waking up alone,”
I grumble against her cheek, trying for a real kiss and pouting when she
evades.
“You're supposed to say 'thank you for breakfast, my wonderful
girlfriend'.”
“Thank you for breakfast, minha namorada maravilhosa,” I oblige,
burying my face in her hair and inhaling her fucking intoxicating scent.
A small hand pats mine where it rests on her stomach. “You speak
Portuguese when you're drunk.”
“I do?”
“Mmmhmm,” she hums with an abundance of mirth. “A lot. We tried to
Google Translate but even that couldn’t understand you.”
Well, thank fuck for that. God knows what I was spouting.
I grunt, leaning in for a kiss to sooth my embarrassment only to be
pushed away, a freckled nose wrinkled in disgust. “Shower first, kiss later.
You reek of wine.”
I grumble unhappily but do as she says. I rush through getting ready and
when I hurry back downstairs—teeth brushed, body washed, and clothes
changed—I’m ready for my reward. Unfortunately, we’re no longer alone;
everyone else has emerged from their rooms and Amelia’s doling out food
like it’s a school cafeteria in here.
I beeline for Cass and Ben. The former is practically passed out in his
food while the latter strongly resembles a dead animal—Luna hooked him
on her wine agenda and the poor kid is clearly paying the price for
overindulgence. Coming up behind the pair, I sling an arm around each of
their shoulders. “Fun night?”
“Great night,” an unwelcome voice chirps out of nowhere, wiping the
smug expression right off my face. “You should’ve come,” Jay adds, clearly
addressing Amelia, and I stiffen.
Crossing my arms over my chest, my jaw ticks with barely concealed
annoyance. “What are you doing here?”
“Heard there was breakfast,” the intruder replies, practically drops to his
knees in thanks when Amelia shoves a plate of food in his direction.
A plate slides my way too, along with a warning look, narrowed eyes,
and a mouthed ‘behave.’
Begrudgingly sitting beside a barely alive Cass, I mouth back ‘I will if
he does.’
Scowling at the counter because I can't openly scowl at Jay, I tune out
his constant babbling. Cass comes alive when he gets some food in him and
starts droning on about the hot girls he met last night, so I tune him out too,
focusing all my attention on the breakfast my girl made.
I jolt when I feel a pinch on my arm and Cass becomes the new victim
of my scowl. A skeptical brow raised, he questions, “You okay?”
“Yup.” I stab at a piece of bacon. “Just tired.”
He eyes my bright nails mockingly. “Long night of pampering?”
“Fuck off. You try saying no to Luna.”
Cass grimaces, opening his mouth to reply but it’s not his voice I hear
say, “She’s fucking scary, right?”
I eye the dipshit who’s once again unwelcomingly butted in and resist
the urge to stab my fork into the back of his hand next. “Watch your
mouth.”
Wide-eyed, Jay holds his hand up in innocence. “I was—”
“Don’t.”
“Nick-”
“Did you want something, Jay?” Cass interrupts, shooting me a weird
look.
Averting his gaze from me, Jay leans his elbows against the counter,
ducking his head and lowering his voice. “Is Amelia single?”
“Yeah,” Cass answers aloud.
Not in the fucking slightest, I bark in my head.
“Can I have her number?”
Cass’ spine snaps straight, expression turning stoic. “Why?”
“I wanna ask her out,” Jay explains slowly, like it should be obvious.
“How the fuck are you gonna ask her out if you don’t even have the
balls to get her number?” Cass quips.
I fight back a triumphant sneer. Ha.
As much as I’d love to stick around and relish in Jay’s bumbling
protests, I remove myself from the situation before I do something foolish.
And because, from the other side of the kitchen, the very topic of
conversation is subtly beckoning me over with a raise of her coffee mug.
“That guy is pissing me off,” I complain quietly, reaching for the coffee
pot she’s standing in front of. Not because I want coffee—entirely because
it’s an excellent cover for being close to her.
“Really?” Amelia drones dryly. “I couldn’t tell.” She watches as I pour
myself a mug, topping up hers too and adding the mandatory three
teaspoons of sugar. “He’s harmless.”
I snort. Harmless. Yeah, right.
Risking scrutiny, Amelia flattens a hand against my chest, patting
reassuringly. “Stand down, big guy. I’m not interested.”
“Of course, you’re not,” I deadpan, lips twitching as I rake a hand
through my hair. “I’m your boyfriend.”
By the time I’ve cracked open a third beer, Amelia still hasn’t
reappeared.
I assumed she’d shower and slink back downstairs discreetly but I don’t
blame her for choosing not to; as expected, things are getting rowdier and
rowdier with each downed round. Jay, in particular, is really indulging;
nursing his poor, pathetic broken heart, I hope.
I bide my time, waiting until it gets late enough or these fools get drunk
enough for me to excuse myself without suspicion. When words become
more slurred than spoken, I decide to take my chances. “I’m gonna head up
for the night.”
Cass catches me by the arm as I stand. “Check in on Tiny for me?”
I nod stiffly, dropping my head to avoid a host of silent heckles. Ben,
unsurprisingly, is not so silent but his loud guffaw dissolves into a howl of
pain when I kick his shin discreetly as I pass. Taking the stairs two at a
time, I burst into my room, shoulders slumping when I find it empty.
It's fucking freezing in here, though, and I trace the source to the
balcony doors being wide open. A peek around the doorway and Amelia
comes into sight, curled up on the outdoor lounger underneath a pile of
blankets, head tilted up to the sky. I stare at her for a long moment, simply
taking in how fucking beautiful my girl is, how lucky I am to even get to
call her that, before I murmur her name softly and walk outside.
Amelia smiles when she sees me, shuffling upright so I can slot behind
her, humming happily when I kiss her neck tenderly. “Everything okay?”
She nods, eyes still trained on the sky. “Got distracted.”
Following her gaze, I can see why. The stars are incredible here, bright
and mesmerizing as they wink at us. But the look on Amelia's face as she
gazes skyward has the stars themselves beat. “It's so pretty,” she remarks
happily, entwining our hands.
“Yeah, it is.”
When she catches me still peering down at her, she groans playfully.
“Smooth.”
“I mean it.”
Rolling her eyes, she changes the subject like she always does when
someone deigns to compliment her. “How do you say star in Portuguese?”
“Estrela.”
Amelia repeats the word, tongue tripping over it slightly. I correct her
and she tries again, perfect this time, beaming up at me proudly. My
suspicions were correct; hearing her speak Portuguese, even one little word,
is hot as fuck.
“When was the last time you went to Brazil?”
“Just after my dad died.” Her grip on my hand tightens, her gaze
softening. “We stayed in Salvador for a couple of months so my mom could
be with her family."
“What's it like there?”
“Loud.” Even after living in New York, the hustle and bustle of the city
my mom grew up in still always catches me by surprise with how vibrant
and busy and alive it is. “And so fucking beautiful. I lost count of how
many rolls of film I went through.” Noting how Amelia’s gaze brightens
with curiosity as I reminisce, I promise, “I’ll take you there someday.”
“Really?”
Fuck, her hopeful excitement kills me. “You'd fit right in.”
“Because I'm loud?”
“And beautiful,” I bend down to kiss her pouting lips.
“Charmer.” The hand not holding mine slaps my thigh before settling
there, squeezing gently. “I'd like that a lot.”
“So would I.” So fucking much. Picturing her there is easy. Meeting all
my family, totally overwhelmed but fucking loving it. Happily rattling off
broken Portuguese. Throwing herself into every situation wholeheartedly,
no matter how new and unfamiliar. Fuck, the photos I could take of her.
It hits me that even beyond that, imagining her in my life is effortless.
Imagining her not is impossible.
I can’t, no matter how hard I try, conjure up a future without her in it.
“Amelia?”
“Hm?” She continues gazing at the sky, absentmindedly stroking my
thigh.
“I love you.”
50
AMELIA
I FREEZE.
I hate to say it but I freeze.
Stop moving, stop breathing, stop thinking, drowning in the honeyed
gaze, so brutally honest and overwhelming, that pins me in place.
Three words have rendered me incapable of doing anything but stare,
wide-eyed. Three words hang in the air like bombs waiting to go off.
Dangerous, all-consuming bombs with no failsafe, waiting to wreck me.
And then he says my name quietly and those bombs go off, the weight
of those words hitting me full force, smacking me out of my stupor.
I sit up so fast my forehead narrowly avoids colliding with Nick’s chin.
Pure panic bubbles up in my chest as I scramble up and away from him.
The freezing metal railing of the balcony grounds me, lets me think clearly
in a way that Nick’s presence doesn’t. I am completely positive that if you
compared my face right now to a picture of a deer in headlights, they’d be
impossible to tell apart.
“You what?” I finally manage to squeak out after what feels like a
lifetime. Maybe I heard him wrong. Maybe he was talking about the stars.
Or Brazil. Or, fuck I don’t know, my hair, I know he loves my hair.
Except when Nick repeats it, he’s looking right at me, peering into my
freaking soul. “I love you,” he says calmly, slowly, the way you’d talk to a
skittish feral cat.
I keep gaping at him, head tilted and brow furrowed, a wave of
confusion washing away the panic and causing me to blurt out, “Why?
Nick arches a dark brow, a hint of amusement dancing within his gaze.
“Why the fuck wouldn’t I?”
Off the top of my head, I can think of a thousand reasons. Number one
of that list; men who claim to love me tend to die. Or lie and become awful,
unhinged versions of themselves. Add in the fact that I’m selfish and
traumatized and a little emotionally unstable and so not good enough for
him…. I can’t comprehend it.
“Amelia,” Nick reaches for me, and it’s the plea in his utterance of my
name that has me letting him guide me to stand between his legs. “I love
you. And every reason you’re conjuring up for why you think I don’t only
makes me love you more.” His complete sincerity knocks me back a step
but Nick doesn’t let me go far, hands locked around my thighs holding me
in place.
I force myself to look at him. Force myself to gaze into those golden
eyes that shine with so much fucking love it makes me weak at the knees. A
look I’ve seen a hundred times but could never quite place.
And now I can.
And it makes my heart flutter and my pulse pound and every part of me
fucking ache with happiness but I can’t even enjoy it because intrusive
thoughts hit me like a freight train, knocking me from my high before it
even hits.
I hate it but I can’t stop thinking about the other guys who’ve told me
they love me. One died literally right in front of my eyes, my first love
ripped from me in a second. And then the other was Dylan. Both ruined me
wholly. Both left me with automatic negative associations with the emotion.
Both made me terrified to hear it from anyone again, let alone to feel it or
say.
Neither had as much of a hold on me as Nick does. If someone goes
wrong with him, if this love ruins me… God, I don’t think I could take that.
No, I know I couldn’t take that, and since ruin is nothing short of inevitable
in my life…
A hand settling on my cheek guides my panicked eyes back to his
serene ones. “Relax,” he murmurs, the pad of his thumb stroking my
cheekbone. “It doesn’t have to change anything. You don’t need to say it
back. I just wanted to tell you.”
Every swipe of his thumb erases some worry, helps me to relax into his
touch, and painfully slowly, my thoughts begin to rationalize.
He is so fucking perfect.
So patient with me always. Kind but firm. Sweet yet so fucking nasty at
the same time. Loving. He listens to me. He knows me. He loves me.
I don’t deserve him, I really don’t. I don’t deserve to love him, but fuck
I do.
I’m scared.
I am so fucking tired of being scared.
Which is why I interlock my fingers with the ones caressing my cheek,
feeling Nick’s breath hitch as I press my other hand to his chest, seeing that
look in his eyes intensify as my lips part and I bite the fucking bullet. “I
love you.”
It’s his turn to freeze, his turn to look unsure. Surprise flickers across his
face, like the possibility of me saying it back never even crossed his mind. I
think he would’ve been less surprised if I leapt off the balcony and fled.
It makes me sad that he doesn’t think I love him. It makes me annoyed
at myself that I haven’t done enough to prove I do, ashamed because all
he’s ever done is prove himself and I have the nerve to doubt him.
I inch closer, brushing my lips against his palm as he tilts his head to
look up at me. “I love you, Nicolas.”
In a moment that I don’t think I’ll ever forget as long as I live, Nick
breaks out in the most breathtaking smile I’ve ever seen. “Thank fucking
God.”
He holds out his arms and I dive-bomb into his lap, wrapping my limbs
around him and showering his face with a flurry of kisses, murmuring those
three words again and again. We’re both laughing, both smiling like fools
and I sit back to get the full scope of that dazzling beam, dimples and all.
“Say it again?” He requests softly, and my heart squeezes in my chest at
the pure vulnerability on his face.
I trace the contours of his face, wiping away his worry like he did for
me, whispering against the corner of his mouth. “I love you.”
He looks so fucking happy that it makes me happy because I’m the one
making him smile like that. I’m the reason his eyes are lit up like two
golden stars. He loves me, he fucking loves me, and I love him.
We’re both in a state of euphoria and it incites an air of determination in
me.
Rain, hail, or shine, the second we get home, I’m telling Cass. Fuck, I’m
telling everyone.
Because I will do anything to keep that smile on his face.
Valentine’s Day has never been my favorite holiday.
Today, however, is perfect.
Absolutely perfect because I wake up in the strong, muscly arms of the
man I love, the man who loves me.
“Feliz Dia dos Namorados, meu amor.” A husky whisper tickles my
neck, soft lips caressing the sensitive skin beneath my ear. I let out a happy
sigh and snuggle further into his embrace.
Meu amor.
He always calls me that but it feels different now. More powerful.
Makes my whole body buzz and come to life. I turn in his arms and bury
my face in his chest, kissing the taut tattooed skin, murmuring ‘I love you’
for what must be the millionth time yet it’s still not enough.
A rough hand tilts my chin upwards and his lips descend on my mouth,
whispering the same words back to me with a smile.
I am so fucking happy it hurts.
His hands travel to my back, slipping under my t-shirt to trail up and
down my bare skin lightly. I shiver at the contact, my back arching on its
own accord. A giggle slips from me when he coasts further down to palm
my ass hungrily, rolling my hips into his so I can feel how much he loves
me.
Unfortunately, I can hear people stirring in the house and I’m not sure
our luck will hold up two days in a row. Extremely reluctantly, I sit up and
bat Nick away. “I need to go back to my room.”
He groans loudly and paws my ass again, grumbling his protests in my
ear. It takes some pleading, a couple dirty promises and many
proclamations of love before he lets me out of his grasp and I scamper from
the room, checking both ways before I sneak across the hall.
The door swings open before I even touch the handle, revealing a very
hungover Ben. “You look great,” I praise sarcastically, earning a middle
finger and a muttered ‘shut the fuck up.’
“What was that?” I cup my hand to my ear, arching a brow. “You don’t
want breakfast this morning?”
Instantly, his demeanor changes. Out come the puppy dog eyes, a
sheepish smile playing across his lips. “I said ‘good morning, beautiful, tiny
woman who I love very much?’”
Another door creaks open down the hall and Cass’ head peeks out.
“You’re making breakfast?”
Amazing, really, how he can hear Ben and I whispering about breakfast
through a closed door but was oblivious to his best friend fucking the life
out of me last night next door. Selective hearing at its finest.
With a resigned sigh, I nod. “Give me twenty minutes.” Ben smacks a
kiss on my cheek as he bounds down the hall, suddenly a lot more lively
than he was a moment ago.
I get ready as quickly as I can, changing my clothes and giving my teeth
a quick brush before tackling my hair. I stroll out of the bathroom, hands
mid-working my hair into a ponytail but they drop to my side when I’m met
with the sight of Nick perched on my bed, a proud smirk on his face. On the
nightstand next to him sits a ridiculously beautiful bouquet of flowers in a
crystal vase surely nabbed from Jackson’s kitchen.
“For me?” I gasp, inspecting them with a soft smile. Girassóis para o
meu raio de sol is scrawled on the note attached to a bunch of sunflowers,
attached by a scrap of yellow lace, and while I have no idea what I means, I
still freaking melt.
“No, for Ben,” is Nick’s cheeky response. Standing, he grabs my waist
and yanks me to him. “I got you a real present,” he adds, “but it’s not
something you want your brother to see.”
Interesting.
“You didn’t need to get me anything.” Linking my hands behind his
neck, I pull his face down to mine. “But thank you. I love you.”
“Eu te amo.”
“Eu te amo,” I repeat, and I’m rewarded with that smile and a chaste
kiss that quickly turns rough, relentless. A gasp parts my lips and his tongue
slips into my mouth, a deep groan rumbling in his chest. I pull away
hesitantly, chest heaving as I catch my breath. “The boys are waiting for me
downstairs.”
His eyes glimmer dangerously as his hands find my ass again. “We’ll be
quick.”
Yeah, right.
Loving, taunting touches caress my body, easily working me into a
wriggling frenzy. Heat pools between my legs, my breath gets caught in my
throat, a groan rips from his. Clothes are ripped off and thrown across the
room until we’re both stark naked. His hard cock presses eagerly against
my belly, talented fingers alternating between tugging at my peaked nipples
and swiping between my legs.
I cling to him as he picks me up and pushes me against the wall, the
wood cool against my hot skin. One powerful thrust and he’s inside of me,
the rough way he’s pounding into me contrasted by the gentle way he kisses
me, my moans and mewls disappearing into his mouth.
When he hits that spot that makes me want to scream, I bite down on his
lip and his hands grip me hard enough to leave marks. Teeth scraping my
nipples send me over the edge, my entire body shaking uncontrollably as I
come around him. My orgasm triggers his, a growl-like noise escaping him
as he thrusts a final time. Aftershocks wrack my body, triggered by the
feeling of him twitching inside me, filling me up, coating my thighs, so
fucking dirty and primal.
I slump against him as he walks us to the shower, setting me on my feet
as the hot spray rains down on us. I lean my weight on the shower wall as
he cleans me up, worshipping my body as he kisses every inch. Fondling
my breasts, swishing his tongue across my belly, stroking between my
thighs until I’m quivering and moaning again, all while whispering those
three words.
He’s rock-hard again by the time he’s finished. I reach between us to
stroke him, thumb swiping at his tip, his head dropping to my shoulder as I
tug, hard. In the blink of an eye, I’m wrapped around his waist again. His
fist tangles in my hair to tug my head back to stare up at him.
This time, when he slips inside of me, it’s not fucking. It’s not even sex.
It’s pure love.
And damn if it isn’t the best high I’ve ever reached.
“Will you tell us where we’re going now?”
“Nope,” all four boys answer firmly at once. Watching as Jackson kisses
the pout from Luna’s lips and zips up her jacket. I have to look away from
the easy public display of affection as jealousy bubbles in my chest.
One more day, and then it’s all out in the open.
The boys herd us out of the house, shooing us down the steps and
towards the small town by the lake. Their excitement is odd, kind of
infectious, and we’re more than a little curious and skeptical about what
they have planned— I think it makes us all a little nervous that our group
Valentine’s festivities have been left in the hands of the boys.
They walk in front of us, obscuring our view of whatever they’re
leading us towards. As though practiced, they part in synchronicity. “Ta-
da,” Ben sings, wiggling his fingers at the… outdoor ice rink?
Yeah. It’s a freaking ice rink. Sparkling in the sunlight, mostly empty
except for a few lingering couples skating around.
I have to admit; I’m impressed. We were expecting a bar or a trap or
something silly and boyish, not a genuinely sweet gesture. And—aw—it
makes it even better, seeing how damn proud the boys look of themselves.
Luna is the first to take off, squealing excitedly as she links arms with
Jackson and he guides her to the shack renting skates. The other couple
wander towards a nearby stall selling hot drinks, calling over their
shoulders that they’ll meet us on the ice.
“Come on, Tiny Dancer.” Cass slings a heavy arm around my shoulders.
“You’ll be a natural.”
I guess his logic makes sense—ice skating is like dancing on ice, right?
Following in Kate and Luna’s footsteps, we grab skates in our size and
lace up before trudging awkwardly toward the rink. Cass steps onto the ice
first, holding a hand out to steady me as I follow. I cling to him as he leads
me around, essentially dragging me behind him. He’s good at it, obviously
because he’s annoyingly good at everything. After a few warm-up laps, he
carefully extracts his hand from mine, a proud smile lighting up his face
when I manage to stay upright. “See! Natural!”
Laughing shakily, I shuffle forward a few painfully ungraceful steps.
Natural, my ass.
I almost get knocked on said-ass when Luna whips by me, gliding
around elegantly, easily mistaken for a professional—she’s honed her skills
over years spent at The Rink At Rockefeller Center—and Ben is hot on her
trail because, like my brother, he’s good at everything.
Kate and Syd cheer us on from the sidelines, cradling disposable coffee
cups in their gloved hands, hooting loudly and clapping their
encouragement. Their gazes shift to something behind me and suddenly
they burst out laughing.
Frowning, I follow their line of sight. A grin stretches my lips when I
see Jackson and Nick huddled close to the railing, clutching each other for
dear life.
“Hey, Lu!” I call and skate towards her. Blonde hair flies around her
face as her head whips around to look at me, ice spraying everywhere as she
skids to a halt. I jerk my head in the boys’ direction and she starts cackling
loudly. “We’ve been replaced.”
Luna slips her arm through mine and we skate towards them together,
whistling loudly as we pass. They scowl and let go of each other
immediately, almost falling on their faces as they stagger and stumble
wildly like large, clunky newborn deers.
In the end, Cass was right; I do get the hang of it quickly. I even manage
to skate backwards, under Luna’s guidance. A yelp escapes me as I skate
right into a hard body. Warm hands settle on my hips to steady me, sending
sparks shooting up my sides. Tilting my head back, I find Nick smirking
down at me. “Careful, querida,” he warns, voice throaty and gruff.
“Wouldn’t want to bruise that perfect fucking ass of yours. That's my job.”
And then he skates away without another word, wobbling his way over
to Kate and Sydney, leaving me hot and bothered and squirming on my
skates. Bastard.
THE DRIVE HOME feels so much longer than the drive here did.
I spend most of it trying to call Amelia so I can steer her thoughts back
on track, to resolve some of the guilt I know she’s drowning in, to remind
her the blame doesn’t fall on her alone. After all, I pursued her. At first, I
wanted to keep everything a secret too. It’s because of me that Cass found
out this way. This mess is as much my fault as it is hers.
I get her voicemail every time.
When I give up—briefly—I slump in the seat of Jackson’s car, ignoring
his pointed glances. I don’t want to talk about it; I want to stew in anger.
Anger at Cass for how crass he made my relationship sound. For making
demands. For looking at me like being in love with his sister was a fucking
crime, as though it’s worse than me just fucking her. For leaving Amelia
crumpled on the driveway, crushed beyond belief, without so much as a
backward glance.
I last half an hour before my twitching fingers reach for my phone
again. Relief floods me when my umpteenth attempt at a call finally
connects but it quickly turns to disappointment when it’s not Amelia who
greets me. “Hey,” Kate whispers.
“Is she okay?”
A brief pause is followed by a sigh. “Not really. She’s kind of out of it.”
“Can I come over?”
“No,” is her immediate, firm answer. “I think she needs a little space.
You know what she's like when she's upset, I don't want her lashing out and
saying something she regrets.”
Her suggestion makes sense, I know it does, but that doesn’t mean I’m
happy about it. It’s hard to stay away when I know she's hurting, when
every instinct is screaming to ease her pain. “Okay,” I agree reluctantly as,
after what feels like forever, our house comes into view, along with a
familiar car that makes my temper flare. “We’re home. Cass’ car is here.”
“I’ll let her know.” Another small pause. “You okay?”
“I’m good,” I lie, somewhat unconvincingly but unwilling to divulge
right now. “Tell her I love her, okay?”
“I will. Please don't beat up Cass.”
No promises.
The call drops as Jackson parks in the driveway. We sit in silence for a
moment, like we’re mentally preparing for the shitstorm undoubtedly
ahead. When I reach for the handle, my friend shoots me a tight-lipped
grimace. “You ready for this?”
I respond by getting out of the car and slamming the door loudly behind
me.
We find Cass standing in the middle of the living room staring blankly
at his phone. There's a bag at his feet, bigger than the one he brought to Big
Bear and stuffed to the brim, his baseball gloves lying on top of it. I'm a
little surprised to see him, to be honest; I thought he'd be upstairs stewing in
his room.
Or waiting in mine with a gun.
Cass doesn't look up at us as we walk in, his shoulders tensing the only
sign he registers our arrival. “I just got off the phone with my mom.”
Fuck.
Slowly, he lifts his head, jaw ticking. “Imagine my fucking surprise
when she tells me she knew about this too.”
“Cass-”
“What the fuck is wrong with you?” he interrupts with a humorless
laugh. “Did you think if you got my family's approval first I'd be okay with
this? Was telling them part of a sick little game or something?”
“We didn't tell anyone anything.”
“You are so full of shit,” he spits, advancing a threatening step.
A rush of exasperated annoyance straightening my spine. His fucking
righteous, holier-than-thou tone is pissing me off. Acting like he knows
anything about Amelia and me when he refuses to fucking listen.
“We didn't tell anyone anything,” I articulate slowly, trying so damn
hard to be diplomatic and failing miserably, “because they figured it out by
themselves. Ask anyone—we weren't subtle. Maybe if you weren't so
fucking hellbent on convincing yourself I'm a piece of shit you would've
figured it out too.”
Another step shortens the distance between us to a couple of feet, close
enough for Cass to stab a finger into my chest. “That’s not fair,” he seethes.
“I know you, Nick. You fuck around. You don't take girls seriously, you
don't take anything seriously.”
“I'm serious about her.”
A scornful noise leaves him. “Yeah, hiding her away from everyone
seems real serious. You didn't tell anyone because then it's easier to fuck her
over and pretend she doesn't exist. Like you always do.”
“I wanted to tell you.” Frustration fuels my yell. “She was the one who
wanted to keep it a secret. She was fucking terrified of how you'd react!”
Cass jerks his head back as if I've punched him, exhibiting the briefest flash
of guilt, but I don't stop. “This, this fucking tantrum, is exactly why she
didn't tell you. She knew you would freak out. She was scared and she was
fucking right because look what you did. You wouldn't even talk to her.”
My temper gets the best of me and I shove him harder than I should,
adopting as menacing a glare as I can muster. “You say I'm bad for her but
I'm not the one who left her fucking sobbing on the driveway.”
Just like her mom did.
Cass lunges, fist swinging in a sloppy arc toward my face, and I resist
the urge to sigh as I catch it easily. Using his momentum against him, I slam
him into the wall, my forearm locked across his throat so he doesn’t try that
shit again. “Fucking calm down.”
If looks could kill, I’d be six feet under but I don’t relent. “I get that I
don’t have the best track record with women, okay, but I love Amelia.
Frankly, I don’t give a shit if you don’t believe me. It doesn’t change
anything. But for her sake, please let us fucking explain.”
“I told you not to fuck up her being back in my life,” Cass spits in
reply.
“I know.” It was the first thing he said to me the day they reunited,
when we discovered the girl from the diner the boys relentlessly teased me
about and his sister were one and the same. I promised I wouldn’t then, and
I promise the same now.
Except now, Cass doesn’t believe me. “When you break her heart,”
when, not if, “she’ll run again. And I’ll never fucking forgive you.”
I could tell him that’s not going to happen. I could tell him that she’s so
much fucking more than someone I love. But he doesn’t want to hear that.
He won’t hear it, not in this angry state of betrayal. While he’s like this, I
don’t think there’s anything I can do to convince him.
I let him go. I back up, watching as he shakes himself off, as his
expression shifts to something cold and impassive. He doesn’t say another
word as he snatches up his bag and storms to the door, knocking his
shoulder against mine violently on his way past.
“Cass,” I call out just before he disappears out the door. “I’m not the
one messing with her being in your life right now.”
The only response he spares is a hard look and a slamming door.
THE SHRILL SOUND of a doorbell startles Kate and me, pulling our
attention away from the television and towards the front door. We exchange
confused glances, reaching for our phones to check the time. Past 11PM; a
little late for surprise guests.
Reluctantly, Kate rises. “You think Luna forgot her key?”
I snort. “As if she's coming home tonight.” Our missing roommate tore
out of the apartment about an hour ago after a brief, apparently flustering
phone call like a woman on a mission. Specifically, like a woman on a
mission for late-night sex.
Peering quizzically through the peephole, Kate’s face scrunches in
confusion. “Did you order food?”
“No, why?”
In answer, Kate opens the door and reveals a delivery guy laden with
food. And I mean laden; he's got like three bags in each hand, each one
adorned with the logo of my go-to takeout spot. What the hell?
“Uh,” Kate gapes at the sheer volume of food, “I think you have the
wrong address?”
With an entirely unnecessary eye roll, the delivery guy glances at the
receipt and recites our address in a bored tone.
“That's us, but we didn't order anything.”
“It's for a..." He squints at the lengthy piece of paper. “Querida?”
Shrugging, he regards us with a blank, unbothered expression.
“Everything’s paid for. You want it or not?”
Despite his butchering of my favorite word, my heart melts. Of course,
it’s from Nick.
Abandoning my seat on the sofa, I scurry toward Kate and help her
accept the food, kicking the door shut before staggering to the kitchen.
When takeout containers cover every inch of kitchen space, Kate and I
stare, wordlessly wondering how the hell we're even going to make a dent
in everything. “I can’t tell if this is really sweet or super ridiculous.”
My laugh is uneasy, set off balance by the guilt swirling in my stomach.
I’ve been neglecting Nick, I know that. The part of me that has been hoping
Cass would acknowledge one of my million messages and show up, ready
to talk, was nervous that if Nick was here, he’d scare him off. Never mind
the fact all I want is for Nick to be here.
And because I’m a massive hypocrite, him not contacting me either has
that voice in my head convincing me he’s not simply giving me the space I
asked for; he’s finally realized I’m so not worth the headache.
Then, like always, he does something sweet—but definitely ridiculous
—like deliver me my body weight in food to affirm that I am, in fact,
unhinged.
“How are we gonna-” Kate’s question morphs into a surprised screech
that I echo when the front door suddenly bangs open and a whirlwind of
fury storms inside.
Luna flails her arms around wildly as she screeches unintelligibly, her
rage so all-consuming that she doesn’t notice Kate and I watching her with
dropped jaws and eyes wide.
Three sheepish men trail in behind her, cowering under her glower.
“What's going on?”
Four pairs of eyes snap in my direction, a beloved pair brightening
when they land on me. “Meu amor,” Nick bounds over, smacking an
obnoxious kiss on my lips, “did you get the food?”
Nodding jerkily, I frown when Nick cups my face and something sticky
and wet coats my skin. Swatting his hand away and wiping my cheek, I
splutter in disbelief at the sight of my fingertips stained red, gasping when I
spot Nick’s bloody knuckles. “What happened?” Gripping his chin gently, I
tilt his face from side to side, checking for injuries and finding nothing but a
smug smirk.
“These buffoons,” Luna shrieks, “got in a fight.”
My head whips towards her lightning-fast. “A fight? What fight?”
Kissing her teeth, Luna holds up a hand in a gesture that screams, ‘oh,
just you wait.’ “They got in a fight,” she repeats, slow with maximum
venom. “At Greenies. Where. We. Work.” Each word, she punctuates with a
punch to Jackson’s arm. Unbothered, the man simply catches her flailing
fist and brings it to his lips, kissing her knuckles. When she whacks him
with the other hand, he does the same thing, and she rips them both away
with a scowl.
“Dopey Dan was working and recognized this fool,” she tells me,
jerking a thumb at her boyfriend. “He called me to pick them up because
not only did they start a fucking brawl, they decided to drink themselves
into the gutter after.”
Ah. So that's what that smell is. Something heady and sweet—like rum
—mixed with the distinct metallic scent of blood and subtle undertones of
Chinese food.
The Yankee Candle of my dreams.
“My co-worker ringing me to pick up my boyfriend,” Luna mumbles,
pinching the bridge of her nose. “Jesus fucking Christ.”
“Trust me, baby.” Ignoring her resistance, Jackson tugs Luna into his
arms, planting a possessive kiss on the curve of her neck. “He deserved it,”
“Who deserved it?”
The boys all freeze at my question, their proud leering suddenly wiped
away. Pulling me into his side, Nick peers down at me apprehensively, like
he’s afraid whatever he’s about to say will piss me off. Throat bobbing as he
swallows, he squeezes my hip and utters a single word. “Dylan.”
A heavy silence settles and lasts all of two seconds before Luna hollers
a victory roar. “You should’ve led with that!” Skipping around the room,
she doles out high-fives to each of the guys, following up with a slap upside
the head and an admonishment for not ensuring she was there to witness the
glorious event. “I want details.”
Ben indulges her, brandishing his bruised knuckles like a trophy.
Snatching his hand to check the damage, Kate feigns a stern look that
barely conceals her Cheshire Cat grin. “About time,” I hear her mutter.
While my friends celebrate, I process silently. Yeah, I’m over the moon
Dylan finally got his ass kicked like he rightly deserves. But I also know
what he’s like; volatile as fuck.
My cheek aches with the memory of his favourite form of
repercussions.
A hand sneaks into my hair, tugging lightly and directing my gaze
upwards to meet a knowing gaze. “I'm bleeding on your floor.”
I glance down at the scarlet droplets collecting on the wood under my
feet. “Shit.”
Nick holds his bleeding knuckles up, adopting a pathetically adorable
helpless expression. “Help me clean up?”
I slip out of bed as stealthily as I’m capable of, not wanting to wake the
peacefully snoozing man still curled up on my mattress. I’d much prefer to
stay wrapped up in the warm cocoon Nick always creates but I have class.
Considering how my studies took a nosedive last semester—chaos and
drama drama don’t lend themselves to a great working environment—I
can’t afford to skip.
So, like the responsible adult I’m aiming to be, I get my ass out of bed.
Well, I try.
I’m barely upright before I’m yanked back down, cradled against a
warm chest again, a husky grumble sending a shiver down my spine. “Don’t
even think about it, querida.”
Grunting unattractively, I whine an objection. “I have class.”
In one swift movement, Nick rolls us both so I'm sprawled on top of
him. One large hand settles on my ass, the other on the small of my back,
both securing me in place. “I don't give a shit,” he mutters, cracking open
an eye. Dimples winking, he dips his head to trail teasing kisses along my
jaw. “What did I say about waking up alone?”
“Nick.” His name comes out as a whimper when his tongue lashes the
sensitive spot just below my ear. “I have to go.”
“You have two days to make up for.” His grin is roguish when I first sit
up, my knees digging into the mattress as I straddle him, but any mirth
disappears when our gazes lock. Grip shifting to my waist, he squeezes
gently, thumbs tracing my hip bones absently. “You’ve been ignoring me.”
My teeth catch my bottom lip, chewing nervously. “Not on purpose.”
I’ve been so wrapped up in trying to contact Cass, I’ve neglected
everything else. Those two absent days have been a constant cycle of
dialing his number, leaving a voicemail, and redialing, the gaps in between
filled with nervous pacing and obsessing over every little thing I did wrong.
I explain it all to Nick and when I’m done, he brushes his swollen
knuckles across my cheek, guiding my gaze back to his. “You said you’d let
me help," he reminds me quietly.
“There's not really much you can do. This is my mess.”
“Our mess,” he corrects. “He’s mad at me too. Actually, he's madder at
me,” he grumbles the latter beneath his breath, shifting in a sudden bout of
irritation, and at my questioning stare, he relays his conversation with Cass
from the other day. I assumed that, same as me, he hadn’t seen Cass since
Big Bear, and anger and sadness flood me in equal measure when I hear
how Cass spoke to him, so dismissive and plain rude.
The hands on my waist pinch my skin lightly. “You're being too hard on
yourself. I'm at fault here too, and Cass isn't being fair by not even giving
us the chance to explain.”
“I get it though.” I lift a shoulder weakly. “He’s hurt. I wouldn’t want to
hear my excuses either. But,” sighing, my fingers coast upward, sprawling
on either side of his neck, “I wish he was taking his anger out on me instead
of you. I don't like the way he's bashing you constantly."
“I deserve some of it.”
“No, you don't.” I stoop to kiss him. “Best thing that ever happened to
me, remember?”
I don’t get the smile I’m fishing for; I get a thoughtfully creased
forehead and a tiny, vulnerable question that makes my heart break. “What
if he makes you choose? Between me and him.”
“He wouldn’t.” That, I’m positive about. Cass might not like Nick and I
being together but he'd never issue an ultimatum. We weren’t raised like
that.
Reactive and stubborn, yes.
Selfish and uncompromising, never.
“But if he did, then that's not the person I grew up with.” That is a
person who’d get his ass kicked by a very disappointed mother. “I wouldn't
want someone like that in my life.”
A playful, weak grin breaks through. “So, you’d pick me?”
“I wouldn’t pick at all.” I poke his chest, rolling my eyes when he pouts.
“If he would rather cut me out than see me happy with the man I love, then
that's his choice, not mine. But, like I said, he wouldn't do that.”
Twining my hair around his fingers, Nick tugs me down until we’re a
breath apart. “That was a really good answer.”
I grin. “I’ve had two days to think about it.”
54
AMELIA
We’re okay.
I think we’re okay.
We're laughing and joking and catching up on everything we missed in
each other's lives; he’s been bouncing around from one teammate’s place to
another and spending all his time at the batting cages and bars a town over
so he wouldn’t run into anyone.
We’re teetering on a rocky edge, toeing a dangerous line.
A line that I might break with a single request.
Because God knows I love pushing my luck.
“I hate to ruin the moment,” I start tentatively, earning a pained look
from Cass as he cracks open another beer. “You need to apologize to Nick."
Cass pauses mid-drink, narrowing his eyes at me but I soldier on. “The shit
you said to him wasn't okay. He doesn't deserve you making out like he's
using me or taking advantage of me or something. Honestly, if anything it
was the other way around.”
Cass fakes a gag. “I did not need to know that.”
Ignoring his horror, I fix him with a determined stare. “Please.”
He huffs, suddenly fascinated by his beer.
“Cassie,” I whine, turning to my trusty trio of pouting, puppy-dog eyes,
and childhood nicknames. Three things that always had him relenting with
a sigh, and it appears they still work like a charm.
“I will. Just gimme some time.”
Now, doesn't that sound familiar?
Like sister, like brother.
“I saw Dylan on campus.”
“Oh yeah?” For once, the mention of my ex’s name doesn’t cause me to
stiffen and shrink. Instead, I smile, because something about Cass’
expression tells me something very specific about Dylan’s features caught
his eye. Namely, the bruises covering every square inch of his face.
I saw him on campus for a fleeting second and God, in the weirdest turn
of events, it brightened my day.
Apparently, if his shit-eating grin is anything to go by, it had the same
effect on Cass. “Guessing that was Nick's handiwork?”
“Technically, it was Jackson's. A little bit of Ben's, too. I don't think you
ever wanna get close enough to see the bruises Nick left.”
Cass grunts a laugh, the delight on his face morphing with a pouty
grimace. “Why do I always miss the good shit?”
“You were too busy throwing a tantrum,” I mutter under my breath, but
he hears me. He shoots me a glare, I smile innocently back. “Too soon?” An
annoyed grunt rumbles in his chest but he dips his head to hide a smile, the
sight sending a flood of relief through me.
I notice Cass' throat bob as he swallows, scratching the back of his head
nervously. “I think it's my turn to ruin the moment.”
The same as he did earlier, I groan in protest, slumping forward so my
elbows hit my knees, beer bottle dangling from my fingertips.
“Your dad mentioned you saw Diane.”
The mere mention of her name has my lips curling up in a sneer, my
blood boiling, the most intense feelings of hatred I've ever experienced
flushing my skin.
“I'm sorry I wasn't there for you,” Cass apologizes sincerely. “If you
need to talk about it…”
“I don't,” I interrupt. I really, really don’t. I’m done, I’m so freaking
done with that woman, and if I never see her again, it’ll be too soon. I have
too many absences to mourn to spend another second thinking about her.
Cass gets it, like I suspected he would. Slumping beside me, he clinks
his beer bottle against mine, and we sip in unison.
For the first time in weeks, I feel settled. Unbothered. Unburdened. At
ease with myself and my life.
God only knows how long that’ll last.
56
NICK
“SLEEP WELL?” Ma pounces the moment I slope into the kitchen, a grin
on her face as she sips her coffee. A wry, knowing grin as though she
suspects her question has a salacious answer.
Jesus Christ.
“Sim, mamãe. We slept very well.” Literally all Amelia and I did last
night was talk and sleep; I wasn't going to fuck her with my mother and
sister sleeping soundly down the hall, able to hear every moan and
whimper.
I'm waiting until they leave for the day. Like a gentleman.
“Onde está Amelia?”
“Showering.” Mid-rummage through the refrigerator, I glance over my
shoulder and catch my mom pouting at my girlfriend’s absence. Honestly,
same; it takes a special kind of willpower to leave a beautiful, naked
woman alone in your room.
Or a special kind of inanity.
“Everything is okay?” Standing, Ma rounds the counter to set her mug
in the sink, brushing a hand over my shoulder.
With Amelia? Perfect.
With Cass? Not so much.
There's an undeniable strain between us. Every move I make, he
scrutinizes. Every time I so much as brush against Amelia, he notes. He
always has this warning, cautious look in his eyes like he's daring me to
fuck up, waiting for me to do something wrong.
When I explain as much to Ma, she clicks her tongue and waves off my
comments dismissively. “He is a good brother.” I scoff and she fixes me
with a knowing stare. “Put yourself in his shoes, Nico. Imagine you were
watching a man drape himself over Sofia constantly.”
My face twists—the thought alone of someone getting handsy with her
in the future makes me simultaneously nauseous and angry.
She's right, and I don't like it.
A frustrated huff escapes me as I slam the fridge shut and slump against
it. This whole situation is shit. Everyone has their reasons for feeling the
way they do. Everyone's reasons are valid, in one way or another. There's
no bad guy in the situation—just shit timing and a string of unfortunate
circumstances.
“Tudo ficará bem, Nico,” Ma croons, patting my cheek comfortingly.
“You are a good man. Cass knows this. Give it time.”
Time.
Give it time.
For fuck’s sake, the man has been sulking for a month.
Ma doesn’t hang around long after dropping that nugget of wisdom. She
has to take Sofia to soccer practice, and while my little sister is distraught
that me and Amelia aren’t coming to watch, she’s easily soothed by the
promise of ice-cream and a movie later. I get a kiss on each cheek and then
they’re gone, taking their noise and chaos with them.
The house settles with their absence, the only sound coming from the
shower running upstairs and the quiet music coming from the radio. I hum
along to a random song as I start on breakfast, quickly filling a mug with
fresh coffee when I hear light footsteps creeping downstairs. “You want
pancakes, meu amor?”
Amelia lingers in the doorway, shifting on her feet. Mussed hair, flushed
cheeks, one of my hoodies hanging down to her knees. “Where is
everyone?” Something inexplicably sultry lingers in her tone, her gaze
jumping around the room checking if we're alone.
“They're out,” I answer slowly, turning off the stove and finishing the
heaping pancake stack.
Her expression turns downright devious. My brows shoot up as she
smiles slowly, long lashes fluttering. “I found something.”
“Oh?” I rack my brain for what she could have found that has her
prowling towards me, looking like the fucking devil in disguise. Toying
with the hem of her—my—hoodie, she draws my attention to the fabric
skimming her thighs. In one swift movement, she lifts it up and over her
head, tossing it aside.
The spatula in my hand drops to the floor with a clatter, my jaw not far
behind.
Fuck me.
I swallow hard, my fingers curling around the countertop in an attempt
to stop myself from dropping to my knees like a fool.
Fuck me, fuck me, fuck me.
Amelia smoothes a hand down her front, caressing her almost naked
skin teasingly. “Do I want to know why you brought this to your mother's
house?”
Fuck knows. Foolish hope, maybe. God, am I glad I did though.
“Valentine's Day present,” is all I manage to stammer out.
Honestly, it's more my present than hers. Her simpering coyly in front
of me, covered in strips of lace and green satin, creamy skin and pert rosy
nipples visible through the thin material... Fuck.
She huffs a breathy laugh, toying with the sheer fabric hugging her hips.
“Yeah, I get why you didn't want Cass to see this.”
Brazen as anything, she saunters towards me. She jerks in surprise when
I halt her movements. “Stay right fucking there,” I growl as I sprint past her
and upstairs.
As much as I love her current attire, it's not complete.
A handful of seconds rummaging through my bag and I'm thundering
back downstairs. Amelia shoots me a 'what the fuck?' look as I stalk her
way, twirling a finger in a spinning motion. “Turn around.”
She obeys immediately. Sweeping her hair away from her neck, I
produce the dainty necklace hidden in my hand—her real present. She
gasps softly as I clip it around her neck, her fingers reaching up to examine
it eagerly, and I try not to let my eyes dip to her lace-covered chest when
she spins back around.
A simple gold chain with two charms slides between her fingers. Her
thumb brushes a sparkling emerald. “It was my mom's,” I tell her softly.
Eyes the same color as the pendant shoot to me, wide with surprise, and I
silence the protests I know are coming with a kiss.
Ma insisted—literally forced the thing into my hands—the moment she
realized something serious was going on between Amelia and I. Dad gave it
to her mere months after they met, and it's one of the many things my
mother can't bear to look at it without tearing up and clutching her chest but
equally, she can’t bring herself to throw it away like it’s meaningless.
Amelia snorts as she fingers the charm I added, a simple gold letter. “An
'N'? Very possessive of you.”
Purposefully, my gaze rakes down her body. “Can you fucking blame
me?” I spent months—mostly—silently and—sometimes—discreetly
fending off horny motherfuckers. Sue me for being a little territorial.
“Where's your 'A?'” Amelia pouts in jest. “Seems unfair.”
“I'll tattoo your fucking name on my forehead if you want me to.”
Scrunching her nose in playful distaste, she shakes her head. “Please,
don’t do that.”
Capturing her stifled laughter with my lips, the light sound morphs into
a soft moan as her tongue tangles with mine. Her greedy hands work
quickly, stripping me of my t-shirt, while mine hook under thighs and lift
her onto the counter. Lithe legs wrap around my waist, urging me to her,
and I groan as her hard nipples graze my chest.
Amelia frantically tugs at my sweats, pulling them and my boxers over
my ass and down my thighs. I curse loudly as she grinds her hips against
me, the scrap of lacey material between us doing nothing to hide how much
she wants me already.
“As much as I love this,” I finger the strap of her bra, smoothing it
down her shoulder and nipping at her bare skin as my other hand dips
between her thighs, eliciting a moan out of her. She throws her head back,
chest heaving as she pants, when I shove aside her panties and slip a teasing
finger inside her, thumb massaging her clit, “I’m gonna love ripping it off
so much fucking more.”
I’m about to. I’m fisting the material, ready to tear it away and thrust
home.
And then, the worst possible thing happens.
A high-pitched scream rings out. We whirl toward the origin, toward the
kitchen doorway, where we find a horrified Cass with a hand clamped over
his eyes.
Fuck my life.
Amelia falls off the counter.
She drops to the floor with a shriek, cowering behind the island, eyes
squeezed shut like if she can’t see Cass, then Cass can’t see her—and her
state of undress.
I instantly move to cover my raging boner, ducking slightly to hide too,
and desperately averting my gaze from the girl on her knees dangerously
fucking close to my throbbing cock. “What the fuck?”
“The door was unlocked!” Cass screeches. Peeking through his fingers
cautiously, he spots the discarded hoodie on the floor. With his thumb and
forefinger, he picks it up and tosses it our way.
I snatch it from the air and hand it to Amelia. She looks like she's about
to burst into flames, either from the embarrassment of being caught or from
the anger of being denied an orgasm—both are feasible. In a flash, she
covers herself, mutters something under her breath about the roof looking
appealing right now, before literally fleeing the kitchen.
Her and Cass don't even look at each other as she scoots past. They do,
however, share a revolted shiver.
If I thought there was awkward tension between me and Cass before,
that was fucking nothing compared to right now.
He stares intently at the kitchen counter, blinking rapidly. “I am never
going to be able to unsee that.”
“What’re you doing here?” Despite my best efforts, I can't hide the
irritation from my voice.
I was so fucking close to being buried inside her.
Now, there's a beautiful, horny girl in fucking lingerie hiding in my
room, in my bed, while I'm stuck talking to her brother.
Cass coughs. “Can you please put your pants on? I'm not having this
conversation with your dick out.”
Oh, fuck.
“Right,” I grumble awkwardly, quickly fixing myself. Dick covered, I
round the island, gazing forlornly at the stack of still-warm pancakes.
Sex and pancakes. So close.
I speedily banish any thoughts of sex and the various things I could've
done with syrup and whipped cream from my mind before my semi
becomes a full hard-on again. “Cass, look-”
“I need to apologize,” he interrupts. I frown—not what I expected. “I
was a dick to you.”
Yeah, you were, I silently agree.
Shifting uncomfortably from one foot to the other, Cass forces himself
to look me in the eye. “Using your past, uh, habits against you was a dick
move. I was being an ass and a hypocrite, and I'm sorry.”
“Okay,” is my short reply. “I appreciate it.”
Cass nods stiffly, shoving his hands in his pockets.
“I'm sorry too,” I say slowly. “Not for falling in love with her but for
how it all played out.”
Another nod, and Cass offers me a small, uncomfortable smile.
A beat of awkward silence passes, the two of us looking everywhere but
at each other, before I clear my throat. “So we're good?”
“I’m not saying I’m okay with that,” he gestures toward the counter
with a gag, “but I believe you when you say you love her. And I trust you
with her. Consider this my blessing, or whatever.”
Honestly, I could fucking cry. Not for myself, for Amelia—I know Cass'
blessing, or whatever, means the fucking world to her.
“So,” Cass coughs. “Yeah. That’s it. I’m gonna go.” He turns for the
door, another shiver wracking his lanky body. “And I’m gonna try very
fucking hard not to think about what’s gonna happen when I leave.”
Despite the situation, I laugh, dropping my head and coughing loudly to
cover it when Cass glares. At least it’s a somewhat impish glare, a hint of a
smile lingering beneath.
Progress.
57
AMELIA
SOMETHING'S WRONG.
The house is too quiet. I'm not used to the quiet.
Cass headed out not long after we got home, wanting to get some
practice in at the batting cages. We're okay, or as okay as we can be less
than a week after he saw me almost balls deep in his sister. On the drive
from her place to ours, I got the big brother speech I'd been waiting for and
he's probably been waiting to give me. The one I would've gotten if Amelia
and I hadn't started out in such a complicated way.
Don't break her heart, don't get her pregnant, etcetera, etcetera.
I assured him that neither would be happening. The former, never. The
latter, not any time soon.
Now, I've got a rare moment alone, and I'm not sure I like it. After the
week I had, the silence should be a welcome reprieve, but it's the opposite.
It feels unnatural, and I weirdly long for Sofia's constant chattering, Mom's
inquisitions, Amelia's soft laughter.
Sighing, I decide to use this opportunity to catch up on school work.
Exams and deadlines are fast approaching, and I've fallen behind due to
being preoccupied with a certain redhead and her sulking brother.
I don't even get an hour of peace before I'm jolted out of the essay-hole
I fell into by my phone ringing loudly and persistently. I fish it out of my
pocket, gut churning at the caller ID belonging to someone who tends to
only call when something's wrong. “Hey, you guys home?”
Kate ignores my greeting completely, cutting me off before I even finish
speaking. “Have you seen Amelia?”
Panicked is not an emotion I’m used to hearing from Kate, and it makes
me sit up straighter, sends alarm bells ringing in my head. “Isn't she
supposed to be with you?”
There's a brief beat of silence before Kate continues, a tremor in her
voice, “She didn't show, and she's not answering her phone.”
A chill goes up my shine but I shake it off, trying to be rational. “She
probably fell asleep or something.” A reasonable suggestion—that girl lives
for naps. Sleeps like the dead too. I'm always the one shutting off her alarm
in the morning.
Shoving away my forgotten essay, I stand and reach for my car keys.
“I'll come get you guys.”
“No, don't,” Kate dismisses me quickly. “We'll get an Uber. Can you go
check on her?” A shaky sigh sounds and it’s close to the worst noise I’ve
ever heard. “I’ve got a really bad feeling, Nick.”
Fuck.
I agree quickly—I know better than to argue with her, mostly because
she's always right. For once though, I fucking pray she isn't.
My hands shake as I race to my truck. I force myself to imagine
Amelia's face when she inevitably answers the door in a few minutes,
sleepy and confused from a nap, and annoyed that we all descend into a
blind panic when she does something as simple as not answer her phone.
Despite my rationalization, I still break every speed limit in a rush to
her apartment. Her car's not parked outside, I notice as I sprint upstairs, and
I can’t tell if that’s a good or a bad thing.
No one answers when I knock.
I knock a little harder and still nothing, so I go harder again until I’m
pounding on the door and there's no possible way she could sleep through
the ruckus.
I jolt when the door at the end of the hall flies open and a furious figure
appears. Amelia's neighbour’s—the one they call Pitbull—angry gaze lands
on me, morphing to confusion for a split second before he folds his arms
calmly and smiles sheepishly. “Sorry, man. I thought you were the other
guy."
Alarm bells. So many fucking alarm bells. “Other guy?”
“Blonde hair, blue eyes, complete jackass,” the guy explains and my
heart fucking drops. “Damian or something.”
Dylan.
“He was here?” My voice breaks, a little from worry, a little from fear,
and a whole lot from pure fucking anger. Not even a beating and a fucking
restraining order are enough to get through his thick skull that Amelia
doesn't want him.
The guy nods, his expression shifting to annoyance. “Almost broke the
damn door down.”
One second I’m outside her apartment, the next I’m in my truck. The
road ahead of me seems endless as I drive aimlessly, no fucking clue where
I'm going, no fucking clue where she is. A hospital? I dismiss the thought
quickly; last time Cass and I had to practically drag her there kicking and
screaming, that's not the first place she'd go. My house, maybe? That's
where she went last time. Unless Dylan fucking kidnapped her or
something. Did Dylan ever see her? Did they leave together?
My fist hits the steering wheel, a flurry of shouted expletives flying out
of my mouth. Why the fuck didn't I stick around and get the whole story?
The more I drive, the worse that gut feeling gets, the one screaming at
me that she's not okay. Something is so fucking wrong, I know it.
I try to stem the panic growing inside me like a weed as I frantically dial
Cass’ number. I don’t give a chance to speak when the call connects,
blurting out the same thing Kate asked me as I turn a corner. “Have you
seen Amelia?”
I don’t hear his reply.
I’m too focused on the chaos playing out before me.
Flashing lights.
Blaring sirens.
An ambulance.
Men in uniform sprinting around an overturned car in the middle of the
road.
Her car.
I can't fucking breathe.
“Nick? What the fuck is going on?” Cass' shouts are drowned out by the
sound of tires squealing as I abruptly stop the truck, stumbling out the door
and sprinting towards the wreck. Her name floats through the air in a
scream, and it takes a moment to realize it's me screaming.
Her car is a wreck. A ball of crushed metal. The driver's side is a gaping
hole, the door frame warped and in a heap on the ground, surrounded by
broken glass and splatters of something dark and rust-colored. I can't see
her, I can't see her anywhere, in the car, on the ground, nowhere.
An officer catches me around the waist, stopping me before I can get to
what used to be a vehicle, before I get to her.
Movement in my peripheral catches my eye, and I turn just in time to
see a stretcher being loaded onto an ambulance. A glimpse of red hair and
pale skin stained red is all I see before the ambulance doors slam shut and
the vehicle drives off.
No.
I turn to shove the officer off me, but my attention lands on something
else. There's another car, one with a destroyed hood and a deployed airbag
on the driver's side. My eyes flit around the scene until they land on a
second ambulance.
A disgustingly familiar man perches on the back, hiding underneath a
blanket, looking guilty as fucking sin.
Unharmed.
Not a scratch on him, not a single drop of his blood shed.
Pure rage engulfs me as I wipe away the wetness on my cheeks and
force myself to walk calmly in his direction.
His eyes land on me and widen dramatically. Bloodshot eyes. Drunk
eyes. I spot the handcuffs suffocating his wrists and everything snaps into
place, everything I already suspected rings true. I snap, lunging for Dylan
with a roar. "What the fuck did you do?"
My fingers barely brush him before I'm yanked backward, away from
him, a man in uniform on either side of me with their hands wrapped
around my arms. I struggle against them, yelling at the top of my lungs,
promising the one thing in this world he actually deserves, the one thing
he's earned. "I'll fucking kill you."
He looks terrified and I love it. I thrive off that look in his eyes, the one
that tells me he believes me, that he knows if I wasn't being held back I'd be
wringing his fucking neck with my bare hands.
Voices urge me to calm down but I ignore them, thrashing against the
restricting hands with everything I'm worth. I want to hurt him, I want to
hurt him so fucking bad. Do every single sickening thing he did to Amelia
but a million times worse. My arms are numb by the time someone carts
him away, shoving him in the back of a police car, hidden from my
murderous gaze.
As soon as he disappears from sight, the fight leaves me. My legs shake,
threatening to give out, so I sink down to rest on my haunches. Just for a
second. Just until I get myself together. My chest heaves with deep breaths,
the heels of my palms digging into my eyes in an attempt to rip the sight of
this fucking mess out of them and stem the hot liquid burning them.
Fucking get it together, Nick.
Sucking in cold air, I straighten up, wiping my hands off my jeans. I feel
like I'm working on autopilot as I find someone, anyone, who can tell me
what hospital she's going to.
My whole body shakes as I get back into my truck. I'm not sure if it's
smart for me to drive, but I know that I fucking need to. I need to get to her.
Cass' voice is still echoing around the interior of the truck, reminding
me that he's still on the phone, snapping me back to reality slightly. “Nick,
fucking answer me!”
“Cass,” he goes silent at the sound of my trembling voice, “there was an
accident.”
VOICES.
So many voices thunder around me.
All familiar, all so loud. I want to tell them to shut up, to stop arguing,
but my mouth won't move.
One is louder than the others, angrier, hiding fear behind a wall of rage.
“Why the hell isn’t she waking up?”
“I don't know,” a calmer voice, one I can’t place, replies.
“You said she was okay!”
“I said she was stable,” the calm one amends. It says something else but
I lose track of the words. They get muddled in my brain, a string of useless
letters that I can't decipher.
Someone else is talking too. A serene, lilting tone that makes my heart
thud. They’re right beside me, so close I can feel their breath, whispering
foreign words I can’t understand but I recognize the desperation instilled in
them, the pleading and the hopelessness.
“Querida,” they rasp, sending prickles down my spine because I know
that word, I know it so damn well. I yearn to open my eyes, to reply, but my
body won’t obey. “I need you to wake up now.”
I'm trying, I want to yell. I'm really trying.
“I need you to tell the bright white light to fuck off, okay?” The voice is
trembling, so full of pain that it hurts me because I somehow know that I'm
the source of it. I feel pressure against my forehead, hot wet droplets
burning my skin. “Please, Amelia. I need you. Please come back to me.”
I'm trying.
Everything hurts.
Pain radiates throughout my body, from the top of my head to the tip of
my toes. I swear, even my eyelids and my fingernails ache.
With a hundred times more effort than it should take, I peel one eye
open, then the other, only to swiftly close both with a mangled whine when
bright, offensive light pummels me.
Try again, an inner voice urges.
Another inhuman noise scratches my throat as I force my eyes to re-
open, blinking rapidly to clear the groggy film blanketing my senses.
A white-tiled ceiling greets me. A beeping noise rings in my ears like an
insufferable alarm. Something heavy sits on my leg, weighing me down,
while something cold pinches my hand. I’m in a hospital, that much I know,
but everything is terrifyingly unfamiliar, confusing to the point of hysteria,
but when my head flops to the side, a wave of comforting calm washes over
me.
Passed out in the uncomfortable-looking armchair poised beside my
bed, his hand clutching mine, is Cass. Scruffy and exhausted, he looks like
he’s had a falling out with his bed and his shower. I almost feel bad for
waking him but my need to know what the hell is going on wins out.
I try to squeeze his hand but my weak one won't cooperate so I croak his
name instead. It’s barely audible yet still, he jolts awake. Sleepy
disorientation clears the moment his gaze lands on me. “Holy shit,” he
exclaims, shooting upright. “You’re awake.”
A choked cough comes out instead of the reply I intended. Instantly,
Cass helps me sit up, snatching up a plastic cup from the bedside table. My
parched throat screams in relief as I greedily chug blissfully cold water.
When I’m done, I slump back onto the bed again, my body spent from even
the simplest of movements.
“Where’s Nick?” I successfully manage to croak out. I know he was
here before; I heard him, I felt him.
“He just left,” Cass informs me softly. “Your dad is here too, he stepped
out to speak to the doctor.”
My dad's here? Why is my dad here? Did I know my dad was here? A
million questions run through my mind, each of them met with a black hole
of oblivion. “What happened?”
Cass stiffens, frowning slightly and avoiding eye contact. “You don't
remember?”
The second the question leaves his lips, it all comes flooding back.
Dylan, Atlas, getting in my car, someone following me. I remember the
song, and then the blaring sound of a horn.
And then, nothing.
“Car crash?” I weakly seek clarification. Cass nods solemnly and my
throat tightens. “Is the other person hurt?”
In the blink of an eye, Cass' expression turns dark. Devious. Downright
scary. “I fucking wish.” The venom in his voice confuses me until he
continues, “It was Dylan.”
Another hazy detail comes back to me, the moment I recognized the car,
that I suspected it was him. “Oh.”
Fear seizes my body as the sick reality that I am never going to escape
him sets in. He's going to follow me around for the rest of my life, a dark
foreboding presence never allowing me to be happy or safe. Even a
restraining order can't keep him away.
When I start writhing in panic, Cass clutches my shoulder to still me.
“You don’t have to worry about him anymore.” I try to argue but he shushes
me, continuing with an explanation that freezes me completely, “Amelia, he
hit you on purpose. They have witnesses and evidence. That on top of
violating a restraining order and drunk driving…” He trails off but his point
is clear.
I don't have to worry about him anymore.
The permanent knot of terror sitting heavy in my stomach eases but a
tiny shred of doubt and disbelief refuses to be banished. “What kind of
evidence?”
“There were some texts.” Cass sits back in his seat, hands clenched
tightly in his lap as he recites the threats that someone I once thought I
loved, someone I once thought loved me, made.
That bitch is gonna pay.
If I can't have her, no one can.
I'm gonna make the whore bleed.
I wince at the crude words.
God, I spent a year of my life with an unhinged man.
“And witnesses?”
Cass rattles off a list—a long list. Some pedestrians who saw him speed
up and run a red light. The houseful of people who saw him drag me onto
the guys' front lawn all those months ago and raise a hand to me. All my
friends who saw the aftermath of his rage, heard his threats. The medical
staff who treated me, both times. Even my neighbor, Atlas, provided a
statement.
My head falls back against the pillow as I let it all sink in. He's gone.
For real this time. Or at least, he's on track to being gone. Hopefully, for a
long, long time.
And just like that, the dark cloud dissipates, leaving nothing but solace.
And a million questions.
“How long have I been out?”
“A couple of days.” Cass swallows hard, scrubbing a hand over his face,
an attempt to hide the vulnerability written across it. Dropping his gaze to
our joined hands, his admission summons burning tears. “I really thought
you were weren’t gonna wake up.”
In unison, we erupt into sobs.
I know we’re both remembering the last time we were in a hospital
together, the last time we held each other and cried in a hospital bed, the last
time we almost lost each other forever. Clutching each other tightly, we
silently relive our trauma, old and new.
My chest heaves, jostling my pained ribs, as hot tears aggravate cuts
and scrapes I can’t see. But when I try to rein them in, one look at Cass’ wet
cheeks and somber gaze has me crying harder.
“Stop crying,” I demand through wails.
A strangled noise escapes him, a cross between an indignant scoff and a
sob. “You stop crying!”
“You started it!”
We're sobbing hysterically now, hints of strangled laughter mixed into
the awful sounds escaping us. Like two cats dying. Two very loud, slightly
unstable cats.
Loud enough to be heard through a closed door, apparently, because it
suddenly flies open and a barrage of panicked people pile in. My dad is at
the front of the crowd, eyes wildly flitting around the room. His worried
expression drops when he spots Cass and I clinging to each other.
Confusion, surprise, and pure joy flicker across his face as he rushes to
my side. “You’e awake,” he mutters, stooping to kiss my forehead. “How
long have you been awake?” I don't miss the pointed look he shoots Cass
that screams 'you're in trouble.’
Unfazed, Cass swipes beneath his eyes and slumps back in his seat, still
grasping my hand. “Not long.”
“You should've gotten someone,” Dad scolds, brushing tears away from
my face while simultaneously scanning my injuries.
“I was about to!”
Dad scoffs and returns his attention to me. “How're you feeling?”
“Sore.”
"That's normal," Dad assures me before he starts to check my injuries
thoroughly. That is until one of the actual hospital staff still lingering in the
doorway coughs pointedly and he's forced to step aside, crossing his arms
and all but stomping his foot like a scolded child.
The doctor and the nurses descend on me, asking a million questions,
shining lights in my eyes, poking and prodding my tender skin under I'm
ready to slap their hands away. I shoot Cass a desperate 'save me' look but
he shrugs, too busy tapping away rapidly at his phone.
After what feels like forever, I get the all-clear. Well, almost. They tell
me I still have to stay for a couple of nights for observation. Apparently, I
hit my head pretty hard and I had some internal bleeding that they're still
worried about. Dad kisses my forehead and offers me an apologetic smile
before following the doctor out of the room, both of them talking in low
voices, leaving me and Cass alone again.
“Great,” I grumble, irritated because I'm dying to get out of here. I hate
hospitals. Too many bad memories, and now I have one more to add to the
pile. I want to shower and sleep in my own bed, preferably with a muscular
Brazilian man as a pillow.
“He'll be here soon,” Cass promises with a grumble when I ask for the
umpteenth time where my boyfriend is. “God, he's going to murder me.”
“Why?”
“I made him go home.” Cass grimaces through a mouthful of Jello. The
Jello one of the nurses brought for me. “Told him nothing was going to
happen if he left for an hour. You have impeccable timing, you know. The
first time he leaves and you happen to wake up.”
A small smile stretches my lips for a moment before they flip
downward. “Wait, what do you mean the first time he left?”
“Hasn't left your side once, Tiny,” he confesses, adding that the nurses
took one look at his tear-stained face and relented. “He's a mess. Barely
eating or sleeping. I had to tackle him into the shower.” Cass nods his head
towards the other door in the room, presumably leading to a bathroom.
God, I didn’t think it was possible to feel more awful than I already do.
I need to see him, I need to see him so bad, and by the time a
commotion erupts in the hallway, when I hear a gruff voice cursing
someone out in a foreign tongue, I’m practically vibrating with impatience.
When the door flies open and a ragged, wild-eyed man bursts into the
room and freezes at the sight of me, I burst into tears all over again.
In the blink of an eye, he's at my side, a hand gently cupping my cheek
as he rakes his eyes over me. Scooting over slightly, I grab his arm and pull
him down. Cautiously, he perches on the edge of the hospital bed, never
once taking his eyes off me. For a moment, he stares at me intensely,
fingers roaming my face like he's checking I'm really here. Eventually, he
lets out an uneven breath, and the tension in his body ebbs. “Cass said to
come quick,” he rasps. “I thought…”
“I’m okay,” I assure him, side-eying my brother with a glare.
He simply blinks innocently. “You wanted him here quickly.”
Nick ignores him. Gently running his hand through my hair, he cups the
back of my head with a featherlight touch, the warmth of his palm soothing
my headache. “I was so fucking scared.”
“I'm okay,” I repeat.
An awkwardly clearing throat draws our attention sideways to Cass.
Getting to his feet, he jerks his thumb toward the door. “I’m gonna go call
Mom.” He and Nick make eye contact, some kind of silent conversation
transpiring before they both nod and Cass leaves.
Immediately, Nick's attention returns to me. “Are you in pain?”
“Not really.” The nurses hopped me up on painkillers before they left,
and Nick being here is the best anodyne of all.
Nick's gaze runs rampant over my face, wincing at every cut and bruise.
He runs a thumb over my cheek where a nasty cut sits, presumably the
result of broken shards of glass from my car window nicking my face. “I'm
so fucking sorry,” he whispers. “I shouldn't have aggravated him, this
wouldn't have-”
“It's not your fault.” The senseless guilt in his voice breaks my heart. “It
was the restraining order.” My action was the one that sent him over the
edge.
Shifting closer, Nick cradles me carefully, lips ghosting my ear. “It’s not
your fault either.”
“I know.” And I do.
Finally, I do.
Three days pass cooped up in a hospital room until finally, I’m allowed
leave under strict instructions that I get lots of rest and don’t indulge in any
strenuous activity. I scoffed at that—like I can do anything strenuous with a
cast weighing down my leg and my ribs aching like a bitch.
I feel better. Banged up to all hell, but better. There’s still an underlying
ache everywhere but I don’t want to cry or scream every time I move or
breathe any more, and I’m getting pretty handy with the crutches. Not that I
need them; Nick has developed quite the habit of carrying me around.
Yesterday, I made it a meager two steps toward the shower before he
scooped me up, letting all the hard work fall on his shoulders.
I love being in his arms, don’t get me wrong, but there’s only so much
staring a girl can take, a six-foot-four hulk of a man carrying a girl bridal-
style definitely warrants some gawking.
If I hadn’t threatened to beat him with my crutches, he’d have carried
me to his truck, probably kept me on his lap while he drove us home.
Part of me wishes he had.
The drive was agonizing. The moment he shut the door behind me,
something snapped. My excitement at being free was overwhelmed by
anxiety as memories of the last time I was in a car flooded my mind.
When I first woke up, I didn't remember it all. Only the bare minimum,
and the rest was filled in by everyone else. It wasn't until I fell asleep that
first night that every horrifying moment came flooding back to me. The
screaming. The windows shattering and ripping me apart. The awful stench
of blood and gasoline mingling in the air. The door collapsing inward and
crushing my leg. The airbag deploying and slamming into my chest.
I thought I was going to die. No, I was convinced that I was going to die
because there was too much blood and not enough pain. I knew I was hurt, I
could see that I was hurt but I couldn't feel it.
It took Nick hours to soothe me back to sleep after I woke up screaming
and thrashing like a wild animal, almost undoing all the hard work the
doctors had done stitching me back together.
And as the truck rolls to a stop, signaling our arrival home, I feel wild
panic brewing again.
The hand holding mine disappears only to reappear moments later as
Nick wrenches the passenger door open and gently tugs me to the edge of
the seat.
“Breathe,” he whispers, smoothing his hands along my arms. His nose
nudges mine as he leans forward, pressing the lightest of kisses against the
corner of my mouth before dropping his head to press another on the skin
above my pounding heart.
I link my hands around his neck to pull him closer, his simple touch
doing a world of good in calming me. Resting my cheek against the top of
his head, I smooth my hands down his back, fisting his t-shirt tightly like a
freaking baby clutching a security blanket.
It takes longer than I care to admit but eventually, my heart stops racing.
The nightmarish memories recede to the darkest corners of my mind.
Pulling back, Nick rests his forehead against mine. “Better?”
I nod, craning my neck to press my lips against his, savoring the quick
kiss he offers me. Blowing out a deep breath, I twist to grab my crutches,
barely grazing the handle before I’m abruptly ripped away from them,
scooped up and cradled against a hard chest. My squeal of surprise rings
around the parking lot. “Put me down!” I protest futilely. “I can walk!”
“I know you can.” Nick smirks down at me, the mischief dancing in his
gaze a stark contrast from the concern and fatigue that's been plaguing him
lately. “I prefer this.”
“What about what I prefer?” Which, despite my complaints, is
definitely this.
His smirk grows. “Doesn't matter.”
“Brat.”
A hearty laugh rumbles in his chest, a sound I haven't heard in days, as
he bends to kiss me again. Soft and slow, his lips caress mine, drawing out a
smile and a rib-aching giggle when they move from my mouth to the rest of
my face, scattering a dozen kisses wherever they can reach.
Somehow, he manages to keep his hold on me while reaching into the
backseat for my bag. Shutting the door with his hip, he slings the bag over
his shoulder and carries me upstairs, careful not to bump into anything.
Despite having his hands full, he manages to jostle my apartment door
open, kicking it with his boot-clad foot.
An ear-splittingly loud cacophony of noise welcomes us home.
“She's alive!” Luna screeches dramatically, pinching Nick until he
carefully sets me down. A steadying hand settles on the small of my back as
Luna throws herself at me, hugging me fiercely yet surprisingly gently by
Lu standards. Kate joins our hug, slipping her arm across my shoulders to
help hold me up.
Over their shoulders, the guys smile at me widely, repose heavy in the
air. Cass has a grip on the collar of Ben's shirt, like he's holding him back
from joining. As soon as the girls retreat, my young friend slaps Cass’ hand
away and races me for me like an eager puppy, reacting like one too when
brother and boyfriend simultaneously bark at him to be careful.
My friends’ greetings are happy and greedy and completely dramatic
considering they saw me during visiting hours this morning.
My hospital room has been a revolving door of visitors, each of them
offering their own little slice of entertainment. Nick was a permanent
fixture, somehow convincing the nurses to let him stay pretty much 24/7—
it's amazing what an alluring accent and a handsome face can accomplish.
Cass was there almost as often as Nick, lounging in the seat beside me as
we FaceTimed our mom.
Kate brought calmness, the eye amongst the storm. Luna indulged me
with gossip while her slender fingers fixed my matted hair. Ben usually
brought his ukulele and got yelled at by the nurses for making too much
noise but somehow always charmed them into letting him stay.
Jackson perched quietly at the end of my bed, decorating my cast. It's
covered in various signatures and scribbles, but he did proper drawings, real
artwork. The incredibly detailed faces of my friends stared up at me, kept
me company when they were inevitably forced out. It's kind of pretty,
really. I might actually miss it when they saw it off in a couple months.
Nick helps me limp to the sofa and sits me down, resting my casted leg
on the coffee table and propping a pillow beneath it. He plops down on one
side of me, Cass on the other
“I propose a toast,” Luna announces, appearing in front of us,
brandishing a bottle of Fireball that she got from God knows where,
evoking simultaneous groans from everyone. Her other hand clutches a
tower of shot glasses that she spreads out and quickly fills.
I'm about to protest that drinking probably isn't a good idea for me right
now, considering the host of painkillers I'm doped up on, but she beats me
to it. My glass is filled with plain old water, and she hands it to me with a
wink.
“To a helluva shitshow of a year.” She raises her glass. Before anyone
can knock it back, she holds up her hand to stop us. “To finding love in
unexpected places,” her gaze flits to Jackson, “and to finding strength in
hard ones,” she continues quietly, her gaze landing on me as a watery smile
stretches her lips, and I wonder if I’m about to see Luna Evans cry for the
first time. “I think I speak for everyone when I say I am really fucking glad
you are still here, and I love you.”
There's a round of agreeable murmurs, tears of my own brimming as
each of my friends raise a glass to me, followed by a brief moment of
silence. It's broken by Cass clearing his throat. He nudges me gently with
his elbow before stretching his glass towards mine. “To Tiny.”
Grinning at him through teary eyes, a small laugh escaping me, I clink
his glass before knocking back my shot of water, a chuckle escaping me
when everyone else in the room winces as cinnamon-flavored whiskey
burns their throats.
As the splutters turn into laughter and chatter, I sit back and simply gaze
around the room at my friends. My family.
After living so long with a gaping hole in my chest, I am whole. The
friends in this room, the man gripping my thigh and the brother with an arm
slung across my shoulders filled the gap without even knowing it.
I'm complete.
Battered and bruised but no longer broken.
60
AMELIA
LIGHT SPILLS in from the large window beside me, the warm June sun
heating my skin. I tilt my head towards the warmth, basking in it like the
plants lining the windowsill while admiring the amazing view this spacious
office offers.
I can see the ocean from here, and I swear it's calling to me, begging me
to dip a toe in its chilly depths. I probably will, later.
Right now, my time belongs to the professionally dressed woman sitting
across from me.
There's a faint smile on the woman's face as she peers at me over her
glasses, assessing me clinically like she always does. “You look good,
Amelia.”
Her words summon a smile of my own. “I feel good.”
Gaze flickering to the notepad on her desk, the pen in her hand posies to
write. “How would you describe your mood today?”
“Happy,” is my simple answer. I learned quickly that straightforward
honesty answers are best and easiest.
“You've been sleeping?”
I nod, fidgeting in my seat slightly.
“Any more nightmares?”
“None.” My answers evoke a pleased hum from Dr. Resnick, the sound
of scribbling filling the air as she jots down notes.
It's been a whole month since my last nightmare. Night terrors, I think
they're technically called, the kind where you wake up coated in sweat and
whimpering, swearing up and down that what you just experienced was
real. Technically, it was real. At one point.
I was a victim of an abusive relationship.
And I was in an accident that almost killed me as a direct result of that
relationship.
They got better after Dylan was convicted, when I knew for sure that he
wasn't going to show up at my apartment in the middle of the night or attack
me in the middle of a work shift.
“Have you made plans for the summer?”
I nod again, the question evoking a flurry of nervous butterflies in my
stomach. I'm going back to Carlton for the entire summer. Three whole
months in the town I ran from, surrounded by people who know exactly
why I ran.
“And how are you feeling about that?”
“Good,” I answer unconvincingly, my fingers toying with the hem of
my dress. A few seconds of feeling Dr. Resnick's intense stare is all it takes
for me to sigh and elaborate further. “Nervous. A little scared. But good.”
The fact that I'll be surrounded by family helps combat my apprehension. I
feel settled with family, with Nick and Cass and Dad and the rest of the
Morgans. If they're by my side, I can live with the inevitable staring and
whispers that I'm sure are to come, like they’ve come every other time I’ve
gone back.
“That's understandable.” Resnick scribbles some more, pausing briefly
before continuing her questioning. “And how is the driving progressing?”
she asks carefully, slowly, anticipating my tense reaction.
I stiffen slightly, eyes drifting to my bare legs. A jagged, healing scar
catches my attention, where a hunk of metal from my destroyed car lodged
itself in my thigh. There's another on my calf, where my tibia snapped and
pierced my skin. Permanent reminders of what happened to me, in case my
memory ever fails, to accompany the faint one I already had, all on the
same leg which makes me feel weirdly unbalanced.
Absentmindedly, I rub my recently-freed limb. I only got the cast off a
week ago, and I'm not used to being without it yet. I still find myself
favoring my other leg, limping a little, more out of habit than need or pain. I
wonder if I'll ever break that habit, or if it's another permanent alteration.
Dr. Resnick says my name softly, reminding me that she asked a
question. I meet kind eyes when I look up, patient eyes. I went through two
other therapists, useless pushy women who I'm positive spent more time
judging me than trying to help me before I found her. Resnick never pushes,
only encourages. She... I don't know, she gets it.
“It's... ” I struggle for the right words. “I can get in a car without crying,
if that's progress.”
In the months since the accident, I haven't been able to bring myself to
drive. It took me weeks to even be able to be in a car without losing it.
Getting behind the wheel is the next goal we're working towards, and it's
proving to be harder than anticipated. Harder than banishing the nightmares
and overcoming my mountain of guilt, which says a lot.
I find it funny how the accident with Sam never had this effect on me—
sure, I didn’t particularly like driving after the first accident but it never
instilled a deep-rooted fear of driving. Resnick didn't find it funny; she
found it to be a wealth of traumatic information. She says it's because I
experienced a loss so great, it drowned out the fear, and that the guilt caused
by that loss drowned out any concern for my own life.
Why would I fear driving if I didn't fear getting hurt?
“How was the drive here today?”
“It was fine,” I shrug. “Nick drove me.”
“Ah.” The corner of Resnick's mouth quirks upwards. “The handsome
man who camps out in my waiting room every week?”
Automatically, I finger the chain looped around my neck, fiddling with
the charms as I bite down on a brewing grin. “That's the one.”
Every session, every week, he waits patiently for me. Even if he's not
the one to drive me here, he's always here to collect me. After the first
couple of sessions, I was a mess and he had to practically carry me out; the
one-hour appointment often stretched into several hours cowering in Nick's
car, trauma-induced tears soaking his shirt as he held me tight to his chest.
Resnick likes him. She says it's good to have a solid support system in
place, and he's the figurehead of mine, unsurprisingly.
Though, I don't think what I have could be called a support system. I
have people coming out of my ears. I have a village. I have more than I
need a lot of the time but I'm grateful all the same because I can't begin to
imagine what this would be like if I had no one.
The hour passes quickly. Resnick gives me some new exercises to do to
help with my newest biggest fear. She's big on journaling; I've filled almost
four in the couple of months I've been seeing her, and I have a feeling I'm
about to fill a fifth with all the reasons why I'm terrified to get behind the
wheel of a car again.
Dreams, nightmares, every bout of anxiety, everything is recorded on
those creamy lined pages. It took me a while, but I get why she does it. It
helps to look back, to see how far I've come.
When the hour is up and I leave her office, I barely take a couple of
steps before I spot him. Slouched in a chair, flipping through a magazine,
looking effortlessly hot and completely oblivious to how the receptionist is
drooling over him right now.
I didn't think it was possible, but somehow he's gotten even hotter in the
last few months. I think it's the sun, to be honest. I swear to God, it favors
him. He's all extra golden and extra bronzed and extra annoyingly perfect.
And all mine.
The love of my fucking life.
His eyes flicker up to meet mine when he senses me approaching. A
slow smile spreads across his face as he stands, grabbing for me the second
I get within reach and pressing a short, sweet kiss to my lips. I have to resist
the urge to smile triumphantly at the receptionist, maybe offer a tissue to
wipe up the drool off her computer.
Nick wraps an arm around my waist as we leave the office building, his
fingers skimming the tops of my thighs as he toys with the hem of my
dress. “Everything okay, querida?”
Grinning, I stretch my neck to kiss his shoulder, the closest I can reach
without practically having to climb the mountain of a man. “Everything is
perfect.”
“We're here!” Cass hollers as he shoulders open the front door, his voice
ricocheting around the house.
The sound of chairs scraping against the floor greets us as we wander
through the hallway, a crowd of smiling faces welcoming us into the
kitchen.
“Hi, sweetie.” Dad approaches me with open arms, hugging me tightly.
I hug him back before stepping back and gesturing to my cast-free leg,
wiggling it triumphantly. The last time he saw me, I was still bandaged up
and suffering an intense array of cuts and bruises.
Instantly, he switches from Dad to Dr. Hanlon, prodding and pawing at
my leg, interrogating me about my pain level. Rolling my eyes, I kick him
away right as I’m swept up in another pair of arms.
“How's my girl?” Lynn murmurs, her voice rife with emotion as she
holds me close. Since the accident, we've indulged in numerous lengthy
phone calls, way more often than we used to, but they don't nearly match up
to seeing her in person.
Her hands sweep lightly over my cheeks, a slight wince overcoming her
features. Luckily, the gashes on my face healed a lot better than the ones on
my legs. They're barely visible now, but of course, Lynn manages to spot
them. A sheen develops in her eyes as she cradles my face. “I'm glad you're
home, honey.”
The sound of a throat clearing interrupts our reunion. Our attention is
drawn to Cass standing beside us, eyes narrowed, a playfully wounded
expression on his face. “Your girl is fine. Your boy, however, is feeling
neglected.”
Lynn rolls her eyes, muttering something about needy men under her
breath before giving me one last squeeze and moving to greet her son. Over
their shoulders, I spot Nick lurking in the corner with his family, clearly
attempting to give us some space.
Sofia catches my eye and her face splits in a grin before she's tearing
over to me. The young girl pounces, almost knocking me over as she hugs
me. She only loosens her grip when both her brother and her mother chide
her gently.
“Tenha ciudado, minja anjinha.” Nick grips his sister by the shoulders,
a teasing tone to his voice. "Carga preciosa.”
“Peste,” I fire back my favorite insult.
Ana laughs as she pulls me into a quick but warm hug, kissing each of
my cheeks before steering her chattering daughter out of the room.
Mischief glimmers in Nick's eyes as his hands skim up my arms,
tugging me to him by the straps of my dress. “Have I mentioned you
speaking Portuguese is really fucking hot?”
I bite down on my bottom lip, blinking up at him innocently. "Uma ou
duas vezes."
His eyes darken a shade, but whatever he was about to say is drowned
out by my squeal as a pair of arms wrap around me from behind and yank
me away from Nick. James engulfs me in a bear hug, smacking a big kiss
on the top of my head. “For someone who almost died a few months ago,
you look fucking great.”
“James!” Several people exclaim at once.
My eldest brother grins and circles around to face me, eyes roaming as
he gives me a quick once over. Something strangely forlorn flickers across
his face at the sight of the new additions gracing my leg, but he quickly
covers it up with his signature grin. “Damn, Tiny. Kind of badass.” He
whistles long and low, gently poking at my thigh. “Almost as bad as what
Nicky boy did to you last time.”
“Jesus Christ.” Lynn and I groan in unison, the former slapping her son
upside the head.
Nick's hand lands on my ass, squeezing sneakily as his chest shakes
with barely contained laughter. Cass can't decide whether to scowl at James
or Nick, so he settles for punching them both. I shove James away, but he
doesn't go very far. Instead, he bumps Nick out of the way and slings an
arm around my shoulder. “Where's your dad?” I ask him.
“Work. He'll be home soon. Wouldn't dare miss the miraculous return of
the Prodigal daughter.”
I roll my eyes at his dramatics, poking his stomach.
Catching my hand and peering down at me, a more serious expression
overcomes James, his grip on me morphing into something protectively
tight as he murmurs, “Glad you’re okay, kiddo.”
Throat tight, I knock my hip against his. “Careful. Your feelings are
showing.”
“What can I say, near-death experiences bring out my sentimental side.”
He pecks my temple. “Love you, Tiny.”
I gaze up at James, studying his sincere, protective expression. It's
always been Cass and me with the unbreakable sibling bond. My
relationship with James was always a lot more playful, a lot more casual,
not as close-knit but he was my brother all the same.
The one who settled countless silly quarrels between Cass and me, the
one who protected me when Cass wasn't there, the one who comforted both
of us when we were lost in grief. I seldom think about what it was like for
him to watch his two younger siblings completely disintegrate into shells of
themselves, yet be unable to do so himself. He knew and liked Sam too but
he always put us first.
Resting my head against him, I wrap my arms around his waist. “Love
you too.”
Sam Davis
Loving son, brother, and friend
The song in our hearts
DEAR SAM,
Hi.
This is weird.
Writing letters to a dead man. Or boy, I guess. Seventeen isn't really a
man.
Anyways.
Dr. Resnick suggested I do this. Your anniversary was last week and I
kind of broke down. Five whole years without you. You've officially been
dead longer than we knew each other. It’s difficult for me to wrap my head
around that. I think that's why it hit me so hard this year. It's so weird for
me to remember a time in my life when you weren't in it. It hurts. It kind of
feels like I've lost something or like I've run out of time. I don't know. It's
hard to explain.
Resnick thought it would be a good idea to do this. As a coping
mechanism, I guess. Nick agreed with her but Nick agrees with everything
she says. Probably because she's as enamored with him as everyone else is,
and most of her advice works in his favor.
He comes with me sometimes. To therapy. When I'm having bad days
and don't want to go, he comes and he sits with me and he's there. He's
always there.
Anyway, I agree with her too, now that I'm doing it. I think I need it. We
all know I'm pretty shit at coping. Like right now; I've barely written
anything and I'm crying.
I guess this is my goodbye, kind of. Or goodbyes. I don't know. I don't
know how many of these there will be. However many I feel like writing, I
guess. I want to talk to you. Not my boyfriend Sam, but my best friend Sam.
That's another thing; Resnick says I mourned the love I lost but I never
mourned the friend. So that's what I'm doing, I guess. Saying goodbye to my
friend. So goodbye. For now.
Amy.
Dear Sam,
I watched my brother graduate today. And the love of my life, but Cass
is next to me as I write this and if I don’t mention him first, this letter might
end up having bloodstains on it. He says hi, by the way. He misses you. We
both do.
I'm so fucking proud of him. Of both of them. I swear to God, James and
I were the loudest, most embarrassing pair in the crowd. Except for Ben,
but that's not surprising. God, you would love Ben. He reminds me so much
of you sometimes. Loud and cocky, the epitome of a class clown, but so
fucking sweet. A massive dipshit too. But he's our dipshit.
We find out if Cass is getting drafted next month. Well, not if. He will get
drafted. It's just a matter of where. It's gonna be weird not seeing him every
day but we'll manage. We always manage.
I thought of you a lot today. I wondered what you would have looked
like up there. Probably like a big, grinning fool trying to trip up Cass. Oh,
and your brother came. He sat beside James and me and pretended he
didn't know us. We all cried. He met Nick and he agreed that you guys
would have liked each other. When you weren't fighting over me, he joked. I
punched him.
The weather forecast said there'd be rain but the sun was shining bright
all day. I like to think that was your touch, so thanks.
Amy.
Hi, Sammy,
It's been a while. Over a year. Sorry about that. I woke up today feeling
like I needed to talk to you, so, hi.
I graduated three months ago. Nick and I spent the summer in Brazil
with his family. It was loud and hectic and the best time of my life. I love
him so fucking much. It feels weird, telling you that, but I think you'd
understand. I think you’d be happy for me.
We're back in Redmond now. I'm at your grave, actually. I like leaving
your letters here. They're always gone when I come back, and I know,
realistically, that it was the caretaker cleaning them up or the wind blowing
them away but I like to pretend they've disappeared off to wherever you
are.
I saw your parents yesterday. First time since you died. They look good,
Sam. They look happy. We all went for dinner, my family, Nick's family and
yours, and it was nice. We talked about you and no one cried, so I call that
a win.
We all miss you, though. We left a chair empty at the table for you.
Amy.
Sam,
I'm an aunt.
My best friend had a baby.
God, I feel like such an adult yet so fucking young at the same time.
He is the sweetest little thing. The perfect combination of his parents.
So, of course, he's beautiful. Kid's got the lushest hair and these big eyes
that I swear to God make my womb ache. He gives me baby fever but not as
bad as Nick. Jesus Christ. I swear he's hormonal or having a quarter-life
crisis or something.
Anyway. I'm an aunt. And I love it. Auntie Mils.
I swear to God if I end up being Auntie Tiny, I'm gonna scream.
Amy.
Sammy,
I had a bad day today.
I almost got into a car crash because, apparently, the third time's the
fucking charm. I'm okay. It brought back a whole heap of memories I've
been working to forget. I basically shut down, and I haven't done that in a
while. I sat in a Target parking lot for an hour because I couldn't calm
down. I cried because I miss you. I cried because I miss Cass because he's
always somewhere I'm not. I miss Nick too. Him, Jackson and Ben are
visiting Cass in New York, a boy's holiday. I don't want to ruin it because
I'm incapable of dealing with my emotions. I think I'm gonna call Resnick.
Or my mom.
Amy.
Sam,
It's been a while. Like, quite a while. Life got busy. I got a real, adult
job. I've been visiting Cass while he's trotting all over the country. Nick
started his job and has a million high school students mooning over him.
Spoiler alert; having a hot as fuck partner who gets drooled over daily
never really gets easier. Such a hard life, I know.
Oh, and maybe the ring on my finger weighing me down has hindered
my writing capabilities.
Yup. I'm engaged.
I'm gonna be somebody's wife. Well, not somebody's wife. Nick's wife.
Amelia Silva.
I'm taking his last name, no doubt. He offered to take mine—his dad
took his mom's name, after all—but Nick Hanlon just isn't as sexy as
Nicolas Silva. I would never deprive the world of Nicolas Silva. Besides, I
want to be a Silva.
I cannot fucking wait to be a Silva.
Amy.
Sam,
I'm a Silva.
We did it. We went to the courthouse, Nick and I and our families. We
were going to do the whole big fancy wedding but it didn't feel like us.
Neither of us were keen on having a huge audience on the best, most
intimate day of our life.
Besides, something else happened that would've significantly hindered
my ability to fit in a wedding dress.
Not only am I a Silva but I made a Silva. A perfect little baby girl Silva.
Aurora Cassandra Silva.
Rory.
Cass calls her Cassie, of course, the conceited bastard. She loves it,
though. She loves him. I'm almost positive her first word is gonna be Cass,
and I don't think Nick nor I are ready for the power trip that's gonna send
my brother on.
She is so fucking perfect, Sam. Looks just like her daddy. Figures,
doesn't it, that I lug her around for months yet she comes out all Silva. I
don't mind though, not really. She's a lucky girl. Is it bad that I'm jealous of
how pretty my baby is? Because she is so pretty.
This is probably my last letter. My entire life revolves around a three-
month-old now. I wish you could've met her. I still miss you a lot sometimes.
I still love you a lot. But it doesn't hurt anymore to think of you. So I think
I'm done.
I loved you so much, Sammy. I loved you with my whole heart. And now
I love Nick, not with just my heart, but with my entire being. There isn't a
part of me that doesn't love that man. I wish you could've experienced love
like this because I don't think that's what we had. I don't think I was it for
you.
Nick is it for me.
But I do have you to thank because if I hadn't loved you, I don't think I
would've been able to love Nick the way I do. And then I wouldn't have
Rory. I didn't think it was possible but I love her even more than I love him.
I need to let you go so that little part of me that still belongs to you can
belong to them.
Bye, Sam.
I lied.
That wasn't my last letter. I have to tell you something.
I have a baby boy now.
We were going to stop after our second, Reese, but I wanted a boy so
bad. And I think Nick might've been drowning in estrogen from us three
girls. So we tried again, and we got what we wanted because Silvas always
get what they want.
Matthias Samuel Silva.
Cass thought it was weird naming him after you but he wanted to name
his first kid Cass The Second so he clearly knows jackshit.
Your brother met him the last time we went back to Redmond. He cried
and we hugged and then we went to see your mom and she cried too.
Matthias was probably so confused, my poor boy. Oh, and Zach has a kid
now too. You're an uncle.
Kinda morbid, but I brought Matthias to your grave. I wanted him to
meet his namesake. He's so like his dad but I swear to God, Sam, there's a
bit of you in there.
I needed to tell you about him. This is my final letter, for real this time.
Bye, Sammy.
Amelia.
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