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Love & Ink by JD Hawkins (5)

5

Ash

Ordinarily, the meeting with Candace and Sean would linger in my mind for days like a bad meal repeating on me. Candace’s poison-tipped words just now starting to get deep into my bloodstream, to work at paralyzing and angering me from the inside. It’s her greatest skill—irritating me even when she’s not around.

But nothing seems quite ordinary anymore, not since Teo turned up in my life again. Everybody has their own kind of ordinary, and a few days ago my ordinary was a job that paid bills and drained souls, my non-existent love life way down on the priority list—somewhere between de-icing the freezer and making sure I didn’t run out of sugar. Ordinary was carrying around a half-filled heart, a future unlived, a missing limb—the knowledge of what I’d always dreamed could make me truly, profoundly happy, and the knowledge that it had disappeared the night he left.

Now there is no ordinary, now all the rules don’t count. I don’t know if this is going to be a second chance, an opportunity for the closure I’ve needed for years, or a final twist of the knife that was stuck into my gut seven years ago. The only thing I know is that I’ll stop at nothing to finally get my answer, whether I have to pull it out like a tooth or seduce it out of him—I’ll find out once and for all why he left. Maybe that’s all I need to truly move on.

“Ugh, too fancy,” I say to my reflection in the tight red dress. “It’s a rock show, not a gallery opening.”

My online search results were pretty short on ‘what to wear to a maybe-a-date-but-not-really-a-date with a guy you were madly in love with but haven’t seen in seven years’ advice. Jenny had pushed for over-the-top sexy, and I didn’t want to go that route either.

I end up settling on a pair of tight leather pants and a short black leather jacket, but I agonize over the red tank beneath it. Too much cleavage, I think, too easily interpreted as me wanting him to look—not that Teo ever needed much encouragement to undress me with his eyes. Maybe the leather pants are enough—Teo was always more of an ass guy. Then again, why am I even thinking about all of this, I’m not trying to jump him…not until I get to talk to him properly, anyway.

I’m half-squeezed into the leather pants when my phone rings. I pick it up with all the intention of letting it ring through, then see that it’s Grace, my sister. Getting to speak with her is rare, through no fault of her own—that’s just how it is when you’re mayor of a town.

“Hey!” I say, as I put the call on speakerphone and continue pulling on the pants.

“Hey sis!” Grace says with genuine happiness. “God I’m so sorry I haven’t been able to call in a while. I’ve just been so busy.”

“Don’t worry about it,” I say. “I understand.”

Grace sighs like she’s more relaxed now that I’m on the phone.

“It’s been so hectic over here,” she says, slipping out of her ‘mayor voice’ and into the one I grew up with. “Jared’s obsessed with closing this deal on a vacation property in Florida. Eliza’s getting ready to start at a new school for gifted kids—she’s so nervous, the poor thing, even though she’s excited to be going. Tim just got his license and is trying to wrangle a ridiculous sports car out of us, which I told him I’d pay for half of if he gets a job to pay for the other half, and I’m still trying to negotiate a peace between a local fracking initiative and the protesters.”

“Sounds like a nightmare,” I say, tousling my hair in the mirror. “How’s little Jane?”

“Oh, she’s as sweet and adorable as ever. She’s already onto three words now. She misses her Auntie Ash, though.”

“Just tell me when and I’ll come by.”

“We’re planning something soon, I’ll let you know. Anyway, how are you? How’s the job going? Father was asking about you.”

I ignore the job question, already getting defensive at the mention of our supposedly well-meaning but perennially overbearing dad. “Asking? Or preaching?”

“Oh, come on, Ash. You know he just worries about you.”

“Well, he should be glad to hear that I did just receive a promotion, and I’ve got a lovely new apartment as well. Tell him I’m not going to be begging for his help any time soon.”

“You should tell him yourself,” Grace says. “He misses you. And congrats on the promotion.”

“Thanks.” I sigh. “I guess we should all have dinner or something soon. Emphasis on all of us.”

“I’ll let you know,” Grace repeats, that ‘mayor voice’ slipping in a little. I groan a little as I check myself out in the mirror, the tight pants maybe a little too sexy after all. “What are you up to tonight?” Grace asks, politely changing the subject.

“Just getting ready to go out.”

“Ooh! Is my baby sister finally going to start dating again?” she teases.

“Hmm. Sort of. Not really.”

“Oh! That’s great! What is he? Someone from work?”

I roll my eyes.

“He’s not from work, but he is about ten minutes away,” I say, playfully. “So I might have to go at any moment.”

“I won’t keep you,” Grace says. “I should run off and get my statement for tomorrow ready anyway. I’ll talk to you soon. Good luck tonight. Love you, sis.”

“Love you too, Grace.”

She clicks off the phone and I continue to frown at my ass in the mirror. Eventually, I decide to scrap the sexy outfit and try a basic ripped jeans and t-shirt combo—something I assume most girls will be wearing, a default outfit that says nothing—better to play the opportunities of the night. Before I can get changed, however, the decision is made for me.

Teo arrives early. He doesn’t text or call, though. Instead, he revs the bike engine outside my apartment. Loud and eager, like a lion’s roar. I rush to the window, pull the curtains aside, already knowing that it’s him, the kind of gesture he would have made all those years ago, the kind of gesture I’m not surprised he hasn’t given up on.

He sees me come to the window, and a slight raise of the eyebrow is all the acknowledgement I get, and all I need. Grabbing the last of my things, I take one last glance at myself in the mirror, figure the low-cut top might not be such a bad idea after all, and go outside to meet him.

He looks good enough to lick, to bite, to eat. Black jeans packing the powerful muscles of his legs, astride the bike. Black boots on the ground. White t-shirt from which those tattooed arms extend toward the handlebars in a tense grip. Even the helmet looks good on him, drawing attention to that broad jaw and Roman nose. I almost feel like stopping to take a picture.

Instead I move toward him, feeling the heat prickle up my chest, across the back of my neck, skin suddenly ultra-sensitive to the chill in the air, the nervous, jittery energy of heading into the unknown.

“You look incredible,” Teo says, his voice the same low growl of the bike engine. His eyes move down my body with the slow gentleness of firm hands, just like I expected, and I try to remember how to speak.

“You’re early,” I tell him with a smile.

“Impatient,” he replies.

I take the extra helmet from him and put it on, then swing my leg over the seat. The broad muscles of his back are inches away from my face, the hardness of his ass between my thighs. I can smell the mixture of the hot engine and his rough skin, a dark musk that makes me think of danger. My nerves jangle with paralyzing excitement at his heavy, powerful presence, so close to me. A mixture of adrenaline and nostalgic lust racing through me.

Tentatively, I put my hands to his waist as he picks a foot up off the ground and revs the bike. Pressing gently, I feel the muscular twist of his body, fingers nesting in the line above his hip. It feels too much like the past, doing this. Too much like the dreams I had after he was gone, where he showed up like this and I clung tightly to him as he made everything ok again.

He turns his head to the side, showing me his profile, outlined in streetlamps.

“You’re gonna have to hold on tighter than that.”

At his command I push my hands across his front, fingers following the lines of his abdomen through the thin fabric of his shirt. I let my eyes close as I squeeze myself against him, press my chest tightly to his back, nipples so hard he can probably feel them through my jacket. Thighs against his, cheek to his shoulder. My whole being so sensitive, and his body so hard I feel every movement of his muscle, every thump of his heart, every shift of his balance.

He lifts his other foot, twists the accelerator, and takes me away.

By the time we get to the venue I feel like butter, hot and melted against him, so blissed out from the ride that it’d taken me a few seconds to remember where we were going, so comfortable holding him to me that I almost tell him to screw the gig and keep on riding.

But I don’t. Instead we pull up to a stop outside the gigantic converted warehouse that’s located downtown, right beside the L.A. River. A big brick structure that would probably look derelict if there weren’t crowds of people milling around outside it. By the light of the setting sun I can make out the coolness of the crowd. Half of them so detached and aloof that they look almost bored, the other half so intense they look like they’re ready to fight. It’s an edgy, hip crowd. Metal t-shirts and tons of mascara, combat boots and studded bracelets, red and black plaid and patterned tights. Strobing lights filter through the man-sized windows, and the rumble of a rock song emerging from inside makes people raise their voices to talk.

I get off the bike and feel suddenly awkward, suddenly aware of how long it’s been since I actually spent a night out. Then Teo takes my hand, and even though it makes the nerves disappear, I instinctively frown at him for the forward gesture.

He shoots me a humored half-smile, as if amused by my reaction.

“What?” he says. “Surprised that your hand still fits in mine?”

I laugh a little, some of the nerves escaping on it, and Teo starts to lead me through the crowd.

It doesn’t surprise me to see that Teo seems to know a lot of these people, and a lot of these people seem to know Teo. Guys call his name, hold out hands to clasp, break away from conversations to show their happiness at seeing him. Girls cast flirtatious, hungry eyes at him until they see me behind him and their looks turn curious or disinterested.

Teo leads me through a crowd that seems to go on forever. A mass of dancing bodies, jumping and moving to the driving bass that reverberates through the darkness, arms in the air, coaxing powerful roars from a searing guitar.

Just as I’m about to wonder where, exactly, he’s taking me, we’re attacked by a giant figure, who leaps out of the crowd to wrap long arms around both our necks.

“Guys! Oh my God! You came!”

The figure stands back and I see that she’s a tall, striking woman with haute couture cheekbones and Joni Mitchell bangs. She’s wearing black jeans and a denim shirt over a sailor shirt—but it may as well be a Margiela dress for how good she makes it look.

“Ash!” the girl squeals, almost hopping on those long legs, and I realize that I’m staring.

Suddenly I notice those round, intelligent eyes, that little dimple in the chin, the small gap in her teeth.

Isabel?

She screams again, and grabs me against her for round two of the bear hug. When we break apart this time I’ve got no doubt at all.

“No fucking way!” I laugh, full of incredulous shock. “Look at you! You look amazing!”

“Look at you! I didn’t think you could be any more gorgeous than you were in high school but you’re blowing my mind!”

“No, seriously,” I interrupt. “I didn’t even recognize you. Shit, Isabel!”

“I love your hair,” Isabel coos, shaking her head in disbelief.

“Have you been working out? You look like a dancer or something!”

“Girl, that’s from all the guitar-wrangling and the adrenaline and the cross-continental tour schedule,” Isabel laughs. “But I guess you could call that working out for sure. So how are you? What are you up to these days? I wanna know everything!”

“I’m gonna go get us some drinks,” Teo interjects. “Let you girls finish telling each other how hot you both are.”

“Ok, sure,” Isabel says, ushering me away and pointing in a direction. “We’ll be over here.”

Once Isabel gets me to a quieter part of the warehouse she leans in and through a semi-conspiratorial smile and says, “Ok Ash, you’ve got to fill me in. I feel like I’ve been away for far too long. What is going on with you guys? I thought after everything that happened…you know? Game over. And now this?”

Isabel was the only one of our friends I actually told about me and Teo, after the fact. That summer, after prom, before we both left our town to go away to college, I poured my heart out and told her everything. About our secret relationship, about our pact to show ourselves together at prom, about Teo’s sudden disappearance. Isabel even tried to help me figure it out. Where he’d gone, or what had happened on that last night. It makes a kind of sense that the first thing she’d ask me about when we saw each other again was what happened—especially considering I showed up here with him.

I shrug as I search for where to begin.

“Are you back together?” she prods.

“No.”

Her brow crinkles. “Did he finally get into contact with you, then?”

“No.”

“So…” She screws up her face in confusion. “How did all this come about? Did you find out what happened?”

“No.”

“Does he…”

“I don’t know,” I say with a shrug, pre-empting the question and unable to even hear it right now. Isabel frowns and I let out a sigh. “Honestly, I know as much about what’s going on between us as you do. I bumped into him by accident at the shop last week and this is the first time we’re seeing each other since that day. There’s still a lot we haven’t talked about.”

Isabel glances through the crowd to see if Teo’s coming, then turns back to me.

“Well, I don’t know anything either. About a month ago he commented on my band’s Instagram and then I wrote back on his and then we met for coffee, but when I asked him about you he didn’t say anything. Just clammed up…you know, Teo-style. I didn’t even think he’d come to the show. Then all of a sudden he sends me a message telling me he’s coming to the show with you. To be honest, I thought it was some autocorrect error when I read that.”

“Really? He didn’t say anything to you about

I stop myself when I see Teo emerge from the crowd carrying three beers. He hands us a couple and smiles as he takes a sip.

“You girls want me to leave so you can talk about me a bit more?”

“Oh please,” Isabel groans playfully, then looks at me. “What an ego.”

“Anyway,” I say. “Tell me what all this is about. You’re in a band? You’re recording an album here?”

“Yep.”

“What happened to studying fine art in Paris?”

Isabel shakes her head as she looks away, as if looking back at a memory.

“I dropped out in the second year. I mean, I loved art, but everyone around me was struggling to find work, taking a long time to get their foot in the door. Nobody’s really paying for art criticism, you know? Eventually I figured that if I was going to be unemployed and frustrated, I may as well be that way doing something I loved. And I love music—so I picked my guitar back up again and started jamming around with different people and finally met these guys and something just…clicked. We started playing shows, put out a demo, got some label attention. And now here I am.”

“Good for you,” Teo says. “Amazing things can happen when you decide to just go all-in and chase your dream.”

“Yeah,” I say. “That’s so great.”

“What about you?” Isabel says to me. “Are you tearing up the movie business?”

I laugh a little abashedly.

“I’m not actually in the movie business. Not yet, anyway.”

Isabel shoots me a confused look.

“Wait,” she says. “I thought your dad was going to hook you up with a job after college? Something in a big studio.”

“He was,” I say, feeling a little awkward noticing Teo staring at me with narrowed, focused eyes. The way he always does when he’s keen to hear what someone’s gonna say. “But I didn’t take it.”

“Seriously?” Isabel says.

“Yeah,” I nod. “I just…I wanted to make my own path, you know? I work in television right now, as a producer, but I’m not exactly where I wanna be just yet.”

Isabel squeezes my shoulder reassuringly. “You’ll get there. I know you will.”

I glance up at Teo, just enough to notice the upturn of his lip, a trace of a sad smile.

Suddenly there’s a unanimous roar from the crowd that draws our attention toward the stage, now empty but for the host walking up to the mic.

“Shit, that’s me,” Isabel says, shoving her beer at Teo and running backwards into the crowd. “Love you guys! See you after the show!”

“Make it a good one!” I shout after her as she disappears into the crowd.

She reappears with her bandmates on the stage, and they get their instruments ready as the audience whistles and shouts. Isabel steps up to the mic, eyes closed, and puts one hand on it, the other on her guitar. The drums tap a gentle rhythm, bass throbbing like a melodic heartbeat. The warehouse is getting packed as more people come in from outside, closing up the space until we’re all shoulder to shoulder. One solid mass, entranced by the hypnotizing figure of Isabel on stage. She starts to sing softly, like a half-whisper, and goosebumps run their way down my entire body.

“Pretty incredible, huh?” Teo says, leaning close so I can hear him.

“Yeah,” I say, our faces close enough to almost touch. I lean toward his ear, smell his cologne, and say, “Do you remember the Jawbreaker gig we went to in San Diego?”

When I pull back to see his face I can see he’s already grinning with the memory, already smiling just like he did back then when we were seventeen and shoved together in a moshpit, making out as the walls vibrated and people danced all around us.

“I love the way you dance,” he says, and in that single phrase it feels like we’re back there again. Not ‘danced,’ but present tense, as if I’m the same, he’s the same, this is the same. I know that now, if I don’t say something to stop this and pull us back into the present day, we may as well be back there all over again.

“You’ve got great taste in music,” I say instead—the same words I said to him back then, as if we’re reciting the old lines, an incantation that’ll bring us back to the past.

I force myself to turn back toward the band on stage, feeling Teo’s strong presence behind me. The song builds until it’s too tender, too achingly beautiful to carry itself. Until the crowd is almost begging for some resolution. That’s when Isabel clutches her guitar and the chords crash down like some satisfying explosion. The audience erupts into joyous shouts, arms in the air as they dance against each other in the cramped space. I lose myself in the darkness and its flashing lights, carried from moment to moment by the glorious shift of those chords, by Isabel’s soaring, powerful voice and the roar of the crowd singing along with her.

I look up over my shoulder at Teo, still standing there behind me, his body barely touching mine. As the song builds I look at him and laugh in disbelief at how good this is, and he smiles as if he’s enjoying my happiness.

Time seems to stop, catalyzed into one perfect moment of nothing but music and dancing. The drums possess me, the guitars send me into a trance of never-ending movement. Deeper and deeper I go, out of my mind and into my own body. The music shaking something deep in my core, rhythmically and primally.

It could be minutes, or it could be hours, until I feel his hands on my hips. Firm, tough hands that seem to know how to touch me. Fingers search under my tank top for skin, press inside the waistband of my pants against my abdomen as I gasp for air. I let Teo press me against him, against the big, hard front of his body. Both of our forms fitting together with a sensual satisfaction, moving against each other to the rhythm set by the bass.

I put my hand up behind my shoulder, where I know his face will be. I feel the grit of his stubble as I arch my shoulders backward into him, letting him take the weight of my body. He nuzzles my palm, bites at my finger, then tilts down to bury his face in my neck. His cool breath shivers against the sweat of my body, his lips brush against the soft spot behind my ear. A tease, he pulls away as I push into him. His hand still against my front, he pulls my swaying ass to his cock, straining against his pants. I smile as the music shifts, as I trace his bulge with the crease of my ass and make him growl, low and close, into my ear. The sound makes me wet.

“I love the way you move,” he whispers again, so close to my ear that his lips brush against it, so close that I can hear him even over the raucous music. My body feels electric, more full of energy and joy than it has in years. I remember this feeling, and it’s not just the music. It’s him.

My hand in his hair, my ass on his cock, his fingers under my shirt. We grind against each other until I feel like my body is about to explode, until even this closeness isn’t close enough. He must feel the same because he puts a hand on my throat, twists my jaw around to his waiting lips. In this moment, there’s nothing I want more than his tongue in my mouth.

Teo tastes like lust and aggression, alcohol-hot tongue writhing in my mouth. His stubble grates satisfying against my skin as he holds me captive against him. My body fills with the taste of him, with the sensation of his rough hands, with music, with the atmosphere, with the smell of his cologne. I feel like I could stay here forever, and yet I’m desperate for more, desperate to get rid of even the small obstacles between us—this club, our clothes, my inhibitions. I want him inside me.

His lips break from mine, leaving me lost, disoriented. I bring a hand to my forehead.

“I’m a little dizzy,” I laugh. He smiles back at me, then takes my hand and leads me back through the crowd. That tattooed arm leads me to the side of the warehouse. He pushes open a door and steers me outside, into a small alleyway. Out here, the air is cool and fresh. A single streetlamp out on the road and a half-filled moon reflect across puddles, just enough to exaggerate the darkness.

The door shuts behind us, turning the crashing guitars into a muffled monotone, suddenly distant. I turn to look at him, his narrowed eyes catching the light, the glint of his watch, his belt buckle.

He puts a hand on my cheek.

“You ok?” he says.

I take a deep breath and nod.

“I feel great,” I say. “Just got a little overheated.”

His eyes rove down my body and back up again. The heat between us is undeniable. For a split second the cool air stills us, until we crash into each other like animals, clawing at each other hungrily with hands and mouths. His hand reaches between my legs, rubbing me through my pants, and I grind into the delicious friction until I’m gasping for air. He pushes me back into the brickwork, and I’m ready to tear off his clothes, eager to put my mouth over every inch of his body.

His strong hands reach for my zipper, sliding it down as I grab fistfuls of his shirt, pulling him closer toward me. Every part of me thirsting for him, purposeful and untamed, so much I almost scare myself, almost forget who I am, forget who he is

He traces a finger down my slit and pushes it into my aching pussy, sliding it so deep. Our eyes lock and all of a sudden I remember who he is, what he’s done to me, and how close I am to letting it all happen again.

I shove him back onto the wall, push myself away from him, putting distance between us.

“Wait!” I say breathlessly, the word more instinct than thought. “I can’t…”

“What?” Teo says. “What’s wrong?”

He takes a step toward me and I take another step back, pulling my jacket tighter around me, closing it over my breasts, the air suddenly seeming cold and uncomfortable. My mouth goes dry, my head starting to spin without the music to orient me. I breathe long and deep, shuddering all the way.

“I can’t do this, Teo. I can’t just pretend like this is ok.”

“Who’s pretending?” Teo says, stepping toward me again, but I move away again and hold a palm up to stop him.

The air between us feels dry and brittle now, already crackling. I search for the right words, but all I can find are the simple ones, the self-evident truths. A wave of regret that I let myself get this far hits me, a sense of wrongness that I let it get to this point without even a second’s thought for my mental and emotional well-being. The things I didn’t say—at Mandala, at the Canyon, back in the club—bubble to the surface now, raw and powerful. I can’t pretend anymore. I can’t keep acting like it all doesn’t matter.

“You left me, Teo,” I say, almost choking on it. “Three years together, and we went through everything, my mom dying, you finding your way through your art, all the highs and lows. In love…and on the night you were supposed to prove it to everyone, you left.”

In the dim light I see his face go hard, his eyes look away.

“You just disappeared,” I say, shaking my head. The disbelief and despair I felt about it still fresh. “We were so happy. All the things we did, the things we said to each other…gone in a second. I still can’t understand…you lied. Did you think I’d forgotten? What happened to ‘us against the world,’ Teo? I gave you everything. We had a future.”

I hear him sigh heavily, angry and challenged. But he says nothing.

“Tell me,” I urge, “what happened?”

Teo’s boots shuffle on the ground, he folds his arms and looks around him. Like a cornered animal, prideful and trapped.

“Is that really how you remember it?” he says, finally directing an intense stare at me, lasering the words home on that stoic look.

Remember it?” I reply quickly. Despair turning to indignation. “I’ve remembered it every day since, Teo. I remember living my life like a half-conscious zombie for years afterwards, until I went numb to cope with the pain, to cope with the heart you stole from me.

“I remember staying up late every night for years afterwards, sure that tonight would be the night you called me, explained yourself, begged me to forgive you. I remember each and every time you told me that you loved me, and I remember trying to come up with reasons for why each one might not have been a lie. I fucking remember it all, Teo. You know, seven years isn’t a long time when you’re stuck trying to get over the past.”

“You know what I remember?” Teo says, voice firm and unfazed by my choking voice. “I remember asking you—over and over and over again—to leave with me. To leave that shitty town behind and build a life together. And I remember you laughing at the idea at first. Then changing the subject. Until eventually you just shut it down and said you didn’t want to talk about it anymore.”

“We were seventeen!” I say, loud enough for it to echo against the tight walls of the alley. “We had no money, Teo! No jobs! What were we going to do? Where were we going to go? You used to spend half the time complaining that you couldn’t even afford to put gas in your bike. About how much of a hard time it was finding work.”

“I couldn’t find work because to everybody in that fucking place, me and my dad may as well have been the same person.” Teo opens his arms wide with hopeless frustration. “Nobody wanted to hire my dad’s son. I didn’t stand a fucking chance there!”

“And you think skipping a state border or two would make things so much easier? For a couple of teens who hadn’t even graduated yet?”

“It would have been a clean slate. A fresh start. We could have made a new life together.”

I sigh heavily, feeling like he’s not getting it.

“A clean slate might have sounded great to you, Teo, but what about me? I’d just gotten a scholarship to Berkeley, I was about to follow my dreams. I had ambitions and I wanted to do something meaningful. I wanted more than to get some shitty job to pay for a crappy apartment in a place I hardly knew. I had friends, family—was I supposed to cut them all off? Throw all of that away?”

Teo lets the words linger in the alley, as if waiting for them to settle before he speaks again, his tone lower, faded, resigned.

“Well there’s your answer, Ash. That’s what happened to ‘us against the world’—you decided the rest of the world mattered more.”

I look away, pace a little to shake off the chill of the night, the emptiness left by the kiss.

“That’s unfair,” I say slowly. “Even if you felt like that—even if you hated me for it—you could have told me. Could have said something before you left. You know I wouldn’t have told anyone where you went. I deserved better, Teo.”

“You did,” Teo says, regret in his voice. “But I didn’t plan it out like that. It was…complicated.”

“Sure. Call it whatever makes you feel better. Complicated…difficult… You can’t call it right, though, can you?” I walk up to him now, close enough to see the hard, blank expression, but those blue eyes pained and broken. “You had seven years to explain, Teo. A phone call, a letter—that’s all it would have taken. But even now, even with me standing in front of you like this, you still can’t tell me the real reason why you left, can you?”

He rubs at his temples, the muscle in his jaw tensing. Then he fixes that icy glare on me, gazing straight into my soul. “Listen to me, Ash—there are some things better left in the past. Please trust me on this. Whatever happened that night, it’s nothing you need to know, and it would only hurt you—hurt us. It’ll do the kind of damage neither of us can repair.”

“Quit being cagey. Just tell me the fucking truth, Teo!”

I wait for him to speak, both of us aware that the only thing he can say now is the only thing he won’t. I wait until I can see the pain he carries holding it back, until I know for sure that Teo won’t ever tell me.

I look down, step away, and shake my head.

“Do you think that whole ‘tough guy who doesn’t care’ act works on me? Withdrawing into yourself, shutting down everybody else… You haven’t changed a bit. You’re still the same scared little boy who can’t take responsibility. Who runs away when things get tough. And now this…as if you can just step back into my life and hook up like none of it mattered.”

“Hey,” Teo says, “you’re the one who walked into my shop.”

I look at him and laugh in disbelief.

“You never give up, do you?” I say, holding palms up as I walk backwards, away from him. “Well, I do. I’m done trying to understand you. And you know what else? I deserve better. See you in another seven years, I guess.”

I turn around to face the street and turn the corner, feeling some slight sense of half-victory, of bittersweet conclusion—nothing like what I wanted, but maybe enough to survive.

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World of de Wolfe Pack: The Wolfe Match (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Kit Morgan

Cupid In Heels by Suzanne Halliday

Je Suis a Toi (Monsters in the Dark Book 4) by Pepper Winters

Stranded Temptation: A Flaming Romance by Milly Taiden

A Home at Honeysuckle Farm by Christie Barlow

The Viscount Finds Love (Fairy Tales Across Time Book 2) by Bess McBride

Billionaire's Secret Baby: An Older Man Younger Woman Pregnancy Romance by Cassandra Bloom

Maybe This Christmas by Jennifer Snow

Beauty in Winter by Alexa Riley

Untamed Lovers (Mountain Men of Bear Valley Book 2) by Chantel Seabrook, Frankie Love

SAVING GRACE: GODS OF CHAOS MC (BOOK SIX) by Honey Palomino

Tap That by Jennifer Blackwood, RC Boldt