Free Read Novels Online Home

Of Smoke & Cinnamon: A Christmas Story by Ace Gray (10)

 

 

 

“Unsteady” X Ambassadors

 

If picturing Cam in the shower had messed with me, then watching her shake it in a painted on get up is going to kill me. I picture peeling those clothes off and doing all sorts of completely filthy things to what lies underneath.

And for the first time in years—maybe because of Mom’s words, maybe because of the puppy ghost of Christmas past, maybe because of her friggin’ smile—I indulge myself.

Even though every inch of her skin is covered except for where she’s shoved her shirt up to her elbows, she’s fucking sexy. Her little wrists appear even more delicate but snow gear makes her look a little tougher than her city facade has let her in a few days.

Trigg catches me staring once or twice. Her eyebrows ask me what’s up but there’s no way to communicate that I’ve softened. Things look different because of her words, vanilla ice cream, even the dog I’d dropped at the shelter. They’d made me look at the past from a different angle. Like maybe I’d been upside down on a park bench for far too long.

When we finally leave the bar, I’m tempted to pick a seat right next to her, I think about offering up my lap, but everyone is watching. Their thoughts are written plain for both of us to see. Each and every one of them is wondering how we could have gotten that close, that electric, over top of the bar. Hell, I’m wondering.

But the way she looked back at me makes me think she might be reconsidering the past thirteen years too.

If I did in fact break her heart, if I’ve been loathing myself rather than the one that got away, if this new version of the story were true, then the way she looked at me tonight erased everything. No, obliterated it.

There was forgiveness, sweetness, sass, and moreover, want, but I couldn’t tell for what.

God, I want to ask her. But I decide to keep my mouth shut for the moment, not wanting to pop this perfect bubble of a night.

So I watch her, study the way her head tilts, the way her lips move, and the way her face brightens when she laughs. It’s so different and yet so completely the same. I can’t keep my eyes off her when she barrels out of the bar arm in arm with Trigg’s girlfriend. Trigg was terrified to introduce her to everyone, small towns equaling small minds so often, but Cam isn’t fazed. Even when Cass smacks her ass, she just laughs heartily and slides into Bobby’s truck.

And her big, wide open heart makes me fall for Cam all over again as if I haven’t tumbled enough.

Bobby and Darren’s trucks are time machines. Somehow sixteen of us pile into cabs, beds, laps, opening all the windows so we fit. It’s bigger, stronger, and sometimes beer bellied versions of the people that did this years ago. We pass around flasks, still ducking to take shots when we pass intersections notorious for cops. Though Officer Pritchers is on duty tonight and I’m pretty sure Tony will just laugh and maybe break long enough to join us.

The college hill is a huge, steep hill built up to accommodate the division three stadium that sits behind it. It’s longer than the field itself so only half is bathed in streetlights until exactly midnight. Then the lights go out allowing magic and mayhem to really begin.

We all scramble from the cars when we park, a group of obnoxious Fireball clowns more than anything, and laughter dances on the wind until White Christmas replaces it.

The voice singing belongs to a siren, and not just one sent to doom me. Besides science, Cam was only ever really into choir. She had the voice of an angel, won most solos in show choir and would practice until her throat went raw so her nerves wouldn’t get the best of her. Those nights, the ones when she sang on the wind, were some of the most soothing ones of my life. She sang when my dad was diagnosed. I dreamt about it when he died.

And now she’s singing her favorite Christmas carol for us all to hear, emboldened by cinnamon whiskey.

I stutter step and try not to lose my footing. When she breaks free of Cass and Trigg and throws her hands out to the sides, whirling like the cool wind, my heart—among other things—swells.

All too soon, Mike interrupts her, swooping in, scooping her up and throwing her over his shoulder, shouting something slightly coherent about her eating shit in the snow. He’s right, but I’m pissed she didn’t finish the song. And that I didn’t grab her first.

Tasting the cherry of her bourbon on my lips, I make up my mind. I won’t let that opportunity slip by again. Judgement and pasts be damned.

We toss sleds at the top of the hill, they bump and jostle around, smacking into each other. Inevitably one is hit hard enough that it starts sliding down the hill without a passenger. Jake runs part of the way down the hill to catch it, but whether booze or gravity, forces conspire against him and he topples head first then comes to a stop. Boisterous laughter and teasing all around echoes against the night sky.

Mike sets down Cam but he’s staying close, preparing a toboggan so she can sit in front of him. The idea of her notched between his thighs makes a primal snarl vibrate my chest. Without hesitating, I grab a tube by the handle and stride purposefully toward her. I don’t ask, I don’t pause, I just throw the tube down, plop in and pull her into my lap in one swift movement.

Cam squeals but she folds without complaint and nestles into my chest. I shove off before either of us has a chance to look around. The wind whips past us stinging cheeks and eyes but only enough to feel alive. Certainly nothing her heart beating against mine and giddy laughter can’t warm against.

The tube flies far once we hit the flats of the practice field below the hill, rubber on the slick snow rocketing farther than the other sleds usually reach. We spin and spiral across far enough to see everyone rolling down behind us.

“Oh, AJ…” Cam can barely get my name out between laughs and short breaths. “…I forgot what this was like.” She sounds surprised and relieved all at once.

I let the tube peter itself out before wrapping my hands around her hips and pushing her to standing. She’s not even remotely unsteady but she cups her hand over mine as if to find her balance all the same.

“Thank you.” She turns when she’s decided she’s stable and reaches out to me.

Honestly, I’m concerned that she’ll topple if I grab her, but I can’t resist. She braces against my weight with a strength I didn’t think her slight frame had. She tugs hard enough that I’m pulled up, over and off balance. We’re going down and it’s all I can do to get an arm around her and brace for impact.

We land nose to nose with me pressed firmly against her chest. I got my hand down fast enough to soften the blow and when the crunch of the snow beneath us silences, she’s laughing softly and making zero effort to move. Her hand comes to my chest but it doesn’t push, it caresses then curls into my jacket.

“Cam’s natural grace is contagious apparently,” Mike says roughly from behind, or rather, above me. Her hand releases from my jacket.

His voice has punctured the moment and it’s lost, forever gone. Everyone surrounds us and I push up and away. She pushes to her feet but does so gently. I snatch the tube from the snow and try not to stomp off toward the hill. Particularly because everyone else is laughing and telling jokes and stories and filling the air with the sound of youth. Sounds that ruin the quiet moment between Cam and I.

“Hey, don’t walk so fast.” Cam’s voice is crystal clear even through the ruckus. It pulls me up short and she almost smacks into me.

When I turn to look at her, she’s smiling shyly. I stare into her beautiful eyes and they seem illuminated from somewhere deep within. When I stare a little too long, she looks away, suddenly interested in the foot tracks we’ve crunched through the snow. I want to grab her chin and turn her toward me. I want to tell her that those little displays of emotion may well keep me alive for the next thirteen years. But everyone is closing in so I just start walking.

Somehow Cam manages in the snow and her wedge boots. Selfishly I’m glad she’s wearing them. When I let her pass in front of me, the way they make her calves and ass flex should be illegal. I can’t help but imagine her bare legs balanced on top of scandalous stilettos.

Cass and Trigg steal her next. Maria after that. Mike does in fact grab her, too. I can’t help but beam when she refuses to sit between his knees and instead opts for behind him, holding the toboggan reins.

The city lights go out at midnight and the moon shines silver down on the snow. Everything looks like glitter, the magical kind. The shadows are blue and black where they fall across the landscape and my friends.

I take a swig off one of the flasks that we’ve been passing around, then Derrick swipes it and shoots off down the hill. I laugh loudly—Fireball loud—and there is a matching peel of shimmering laughter from the other side of where Derrick was.

Cam.

I look around and somehow, we’ve managed to become the only two people left standing on top of the hill. Everyone else is in varying stages of descent. When Cam notices, she crosses the small divide between us. For a split second, she looks so deeply into my eyes, she sees my heart, but then she turns to watch everyone tumbling down the hill.

“I never got a chance to say sorry about your dad. I only found out the other night.” She leans her head on my shoulder.

It’s the first time I haven’t been angry when someone said they’re sorry.

“Is that why you looked like the world was ending at the hockey game?” I can’t help but wrap my arm around her, resting it at her hip.

“Yeah.” She turns and contours her body to mine. I’ve gotten stronger, more muscled since high school, and she seems smaller, more delicate, but somehow, we still fit together. Even through bulky winter coats.

“Despite everything, I wanted to call.”

“Whatever’s happened between us, I would have come.” She nuzzles against me.

And I can’t help myself. “What did happen between us?” I barely breathe the words that have been rolling through my head since yesterday morning.

“What do you mean, what happened?” she asks as if I should know but she doesn’t pull her body from mine.

“I thought I knew, but…”

“You guys are no fun,” Mike yells as he bolts up the hill.

And he’s angry, not just teasing. He’s been angling at Cam since he walked in the bar with her the other night. Now that he’s seen us back like us, he’s reacting like the prick he was in high school. He tosses the toboggan only meaning to release frustration but I see it for what it is.

A Cam bomb.

It’s heading for her knees. I try to get her out of the way but only manage to turn her so the sled can collide with the back of her legs. She’s teetering immediately, her hands clutching for me—for anything—but she’d been leaning against my body, not latched on.

She tumbles. Onto the sled. Her hip hits first, and hard, then she twists trying to catch herself and hits her head.

“Cam!” I bellow just as the damn sled starts down the hill with a battered little body on top.

Everyone is skittering, tumbling, bolting down the hill after her. After a few yards, she rolls off and her hands move to cup her eye. I’ve never run so fast in my life, even folding my back leg and sliding to her like she’s home base.

“Cam,” I cry out as I skid past her, then scramble back to collect her body in my arms. “Cam, are you okay?” I can feel her shoulders shaking with unshed tears.

Feet and bodies and voices surround us but none of them register. I need the little form in my arms to say something. My world hinges on it.

“Lamb…” Her nickname is a slip that everyone catches, and I don’t give a damn. “Lamb, are you, okay?”

She rolls into my chest and wordlessly lets her hand drop from her eye.

“Shit. Derrick, get the car.”

Blood is streaming down her face from a deep gash above her eyebrow. I’ve seen Cam bleed enough to know two things. One, her body makes it abundantly clear when it needs stitches. Two, it will always terrify me.

This time is no different.

Effortlessly, I scoop her up and bolt behind Derrick to the car. Trigg, Cass, and Mike are closest behind. It takes everything in me not to tell them to fuck off as we speed the three blocks to the ER.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Leslie North, Frankie Love, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Bella Forrest, Mia Ford, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Piper Davenport, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Breaking Her (Love is War #2) by R. K. Lilley

Kiss Me Like You Mean It: A Novel by J. R. Rogue

Honest Love (Broken Hearts duet Book 1) by Lauren K. McKellar

Made for You by Cheyenne McCray

Forgiving History (Freehope Book 1) by Jenni M Rose

by Erin West, Nicole Kelley

Knight Defense (Rise of the Wolf Nation Book 2) by Sydney Addae

Protecting his Witness: A HERO Force Novel by Amy Gamet

Obsession: Feral 1 by Nora Ash

Dragon's Desire: A SciFi Alien Romance (Red Planet Dragons of Tajss Book 8) by Miranda Martin

Fake True Love (The Billionaire Parker Brothers Book 1) by Kayla C. Oliver

Winter on the Mersey by Annie Groves

Casey: A Family Saga Reunion Romance (The Buckhorn Brothers) by Lori Foster

Find Me by Laurelin Paige

Special Forces: Operation Alpha: Head Over SEAL (Kindle Worlds Novella) (Uncharted SEALs Book 11) by Delilah Devlin

A Corruption Dark & Deadly (A Dark & Deadly Series Book 3) by Heather C. Myers

BAIT by Kira Fox

I Think I Love You by Layne, Lauren

Beauty: Learning to Live (Devil's Blaze MC Book 6) by Jordan Marie

Memories with The Breakfast Club: A Way with You (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Lane Hayes