355 500 произведений, 25 200 авторов.

Электронная библиотека книг » Anie Michaels » The Absence of Olivia » Текст книги (страница 3)
The Absence of Olivia
  • Текст добавлен: 20 сентября 2016, 19:21

Текст книги "The Absence of Olivia"


Автор книги: Anie Michaels



сообщить о нарушении

Текущая страница: 3 (всего у книги 18 страниц)

   I saw determination in his eyes and again, couldn’t tell if it was his will to carry her all the way to our dorm, or his need to get through to her. I figured it was probably a lot of both.

   We were silent for the rest of the walk to our dorm, which was fine with me. I didn’t want to talk about imaginary walls or how just having Liv in his arms, he was literally and figuratively closer to her than anyone else she’d been with in years. She looked good in his arms and he looked good holding her. I tried to ignore the small part of my gut that ached with that realization.

   We made it silently up to our room and I watched as Devon laid Liv down with ease, gentleness, and care on her bed. He had beads of sweat on his brow and his biceps were flushed red under the sheen of the fluorescent lights. He pulled her covers up over her body and then pulled our tiny wastebasket to sit right on the floor next to her head. Thoughtful. I watched as his eyes roamed around our room and then he moved to her desk, grabbing the water bottle she usually took to the gym, and then disappeared into the hall. He returned just a minute later, the water bottle full from the drinking fountain. He placed it next to the wastebasket, and then turned to me.

   “Do you have any pain killers?”

   I opened my desk drawer and pulled out my generic bottle of Tylenol. I handed it to him and he placed it on the floor next to the water bottle.

   “Make sure she takes the pills and drinks the water whenever she’s conscious enough.”

   “Do you think she has alcohol poisoning?”

   “No. She didn’t drink enough for that. She’s just passed out. Hopefully, if she gets sick, it’ll make it in the garbage.”

   I scrunched up my nose, making a mental note about how I wasn’t going to clean up her vomit.

   “You’re a good friend,” Devon said, pulling my eyes from Liv back to him.

   I shrugged. “I just carried her flip flop.”

   “No. You left the party, and Elliot, to help your friend.” His voiced steeled a little at the mention of Elliot’s name.

   “She’d do the same for me,” I said.

   “I hope so, but I’m not entirely sure.” A silence fell between us again and I wasn’t sure what to say. I knew it was time for him to go, but I couldn’t find the will to send him on his way. “Listen,” he finally said as he pushed his hands into the pockets of his jeans. “Elliot’s an okay guy. I don’t have anything bad to say about him to try to steer you away, but something just doesn’t feel right about it.”

   “We were just hanging out,” I said quietly, suddenly feeling like I had to defend myself.

   Devon held up his hand, palm out, to stop my words. His face was contorted as if he were in pain. “I don’t want to know what you were doing with him.”

   “Okay,” I whispered.

   “Just…” he started to say, but his words tapered off. “Just promise me you’ll be careful.”

   I nodded at his words and whispered again, “All right.”

   He nodded and then turned, walking to the door. Just before he walked out of it, he turned to me, gave me the saddest, weakest smile I’d ever seen, and then closed the door behind him as he left. I heard his heavy footsteps until he got to the stairs, and then I released the biggest breath I’d ever held. I grabbed my nightgown, locked the door, then proceeded to get ready for bed, trying desperately not to think about Devon, his face when he pictured me with another guy, and the way my entire body filled with butterflies at his reaction.


Chapter Four

Present Day

   “Great. Perfect. Now, tilt your head just a little to the left. Right there.”

   My finger hit the shutter button furiously as I snapped the picture I’d been trying to create all morning. The light was battling me at first, then the wind, but finally, I was able to capture the perfect image. Or so I thought, anyway. My model, a woman I’d worked with more times than I could count, knew what I was looking for, and gave me gorgeous shot after gorgeous shot. My adrenaline was pumping, knowing I’d found my little pot of gold.

   After a few minutes of my suggesting poses and Shelby, my model, doing beautiful work, we both paused as a cloud shrouded the sun. Usually, losing light in the middle of a good round would piss me off, but I knew I’d already gotten the shot I wanted, so I could do nothing but smile furiously.

   “That was amazing, Shelby. Thank you. I think we got it.” She smiled at me and came to look at my camera over my shoulder as I showed her the images I’d captured.

   “You’re brilliant,” she said, her voice full of wonder, as she looked at the screen on the camera.

   “Well, you’re pretty damned amazing yourself.” She laughed and we both got to work cleaning up our supplies. Shelby was a great model, but what made her even better was that she was a licensed cosmetologist, so I never had to hire a make-up artist. She was a twofer. I loved it, and sometimes even used her to do make-up when I wasn’t photographing her. She’d been with me for a few years and we definitely didn’t have a strictly professional relationship. As many women tended to do, when we worked together, we talked about our personal lives. I knew about her husband, and their troubles getting pregnant, and she knew all about the hardships I’d faced in the last few years.

   “How’s Devon doing?” she asked as she slipped a hooded sweatshirt over her head, covering up the sweeping lace dress she’d worn for the shoot.

   I shrugged. “I guess he’s doing fine. Although, we don’t really talk about Liv often. I’m usually only there to get the kids ready for school and then in the evenings until he comes home.”

   “And the kids?”

   “Better every day,” I said with a small smile. “They miss her, obviously. Some days are harder than others, but the sadness is lessening, and they’re having more good days than bad, I think. I hope.”

   “And how are you?” This question was asked with even more gentleness than the others, her voice soft and full of genuine concern.

   I sighed, zipped up my camera bag, and then looked at her. “I’m all right, I think.”

   “That was the least convincing of all your answers,” Shelby said, cocking her hip out to one side, resting her hand on it, waiting for me to elaborate.

   “I don’t know. I’ve been so focused on keeping her family together, I haven’t really been able to mourn her.” I shook my head at myself, feeling guilty for even uttering the words. “As soon as she passed, I immediately wanted to help her family, like she asked me to. But it almost feels like I’m stepping in for her while she’s away on business or something. Especially, with Devon.” I paused, trying to put my thoughts together. “Every day he expects me to be there and I am, and I don’t mind. But he hasn’t fully tried to live life without her, because I’m always there, pretending right along with him, that everything is fine. That this is all normal.”

   “Have you talked to him about it? Explained how you feel?”

   My hands fell limp at my sides, tears threatening. “I couldn’t say that to him. He just lost his wife. He doesn’t need her emotional friend making things harder for him.”

   “You’re not just her emotional friend,” she said, using her fingers to make quotation marks in the air. “You were her best friend, Evelyn. You’re those kids’ honorary auntie. You’re a part of their family.”

   Trying desperately not to let my voice crack, feeling the pinch of sobs in the back of my throat, I responded, “My link to that family died. I’ve got no claim on them anymore.” From day to day, the worst part of losing Liv changed. At first, I was sad because I’d lost my best friend. Then I was sad because she was so young and the tragedy was too much to handle. Then I’d think about her children and how devastating it was that they’d lost the chance to be raised by their mother, the one person in the world who loved them the most. But today, the saddest part of losing my best friend was that, with losing her, I lost her family too; lost my link to them, my connection. My head dropped into my hands as I tried to fight off the cries wanting to rip free from me.

   “Evelyn.” Her voice was soft and full of worry. I didn’t want her pity. I hadn’t lost a mother or a wife. The sadness I felt was almost as bad as the guilt it caused. “It’s okay for you to mourn her, to feel the loss. You lost her too.” I felt her hand come to my shoulder and I tried not to shy away from it, knew she was just trying to comfort me.

   “It’s just hard,” I said with finality, even though the hardness – the wake in my world caused by the disruption of her death – was never final. It felt like it would last forever. I would be feeling her loss forever.

   When the pinching in my throat had lessened and my breathing was under control again, I moved to continue packing up my gear. I kept my gaze from Shelby, but sensed she’d moved away to pack as well. Minutes later, after everything was picked up, I raised my head to see Shelby loading up her car. I walked hesitantly toward her, biting my lower lip, not wanting to have another breakdown in front of her.

   “Hey,” I said as I approached. She turned to me as she pulled the trunk of her car closed.

   “Hey.” She smiled and it was friendly. It shouldn’t surprise me, we were friends, but it did.

   “Thanks for listening and trying to help.”

   “Anytime.”

   “Okay. Well, I’ll call you when I’ve got the proofs,” I said, motioning to my camera.

   “Sounds good, but Evelyn, you can call me anytime, for any reason.”

   “I’ll remember that. And thank you.” We both smiled at each other, and then I turned toward my car, glad the exchange was over and I’d made it out without shedding any more tears. Once I was seated behind the steering wheel, I reached into the center console to get my phone. I tried never to keep it on me during a shoot because it was distracting. I noticed I had a text from Devon.

**I’ve been called into a last minute dinner meeting. Is there any way you can pick Jax up from school and stay with the kids until I get home? I’m really sorry, Evie.**

   I sighed. I hated this conflict; wanting to be supportive, to help him in any way I could, but knowing my help was enabling him, making it impossible for him to heal entirely.

**Sure. I’ll be there when Ruby gets off the bus then pick Jaxy up from school.**

   It wasn’t even ten seconds before I got a reply.

**You’re the best.**

   I couldn’t find a response to that, besides my mind yelling loudly that I wasn’t the best. Not even close. The best for him and his children had died, leaving me to pick up the pieces.

   Ruby had come home from school announcing she had a project due the next day, which she hadn’t started. So, even if I had planned a quiet evening at Devon’s house, I didn’t get one. What I got was a rambunctious Jax and a bossy, temperamental Ruby, stressed out about how she was going to make a mummy for her report on ancient Egypt.

   After we’d eaten a quick dinner of hot dogs and macaroni and cheese, I sent Jax to watch his favorite cartoon, while Ruby and I molded the shape of a small person out of newspaper.

   “Auntie Evie, this isn’t going to work.” Ruby was turning into a tiny pessimist.

   “Ruby, a positive attitude is much more attractive than being a whiner.”

   “I’m not whining.”

   “If I looked up the word whiner in the dictionary, it would have a picture of you right next to the definition.”

   Her mouth fell open in offense, which only caused me to laugh.

   “Tell you what. I’ll finish building the mummy and get the goop ready for the papier-mâché. Why don’t you take your bath and get ready for bed? Once you’re all pajama’d up, we’ll finish this together.”

   “Promise you won’t start gooping him up without me?”

   “Promise.”

   “Okay.” I watched her hop down from the dining room table and run through the living room, then listened to her footsteps go all the way up the stairs. I took just a moment to pop my head into the family room to check on Jax, only to find him passed out on the couch, sleeping the way only children and drunk adults could, oblivious to the world around him. I decided to leave him to sleep, planning to transfer him to his bed after our mummy adventure was over.

   The shower ran and I finished building a small person made of crumpled up newspaper, then dug in the cupboards for the flour. I pulled out a large bowl and got to work mixing a little bit of water with the flour, trying to get the right consistency. I heard the front door open and close, figured Devon had come home, and kept working. I heard his footsteps come closer to the kitchen and just when I opened my mouth to utter a greeting, my heart stalled and my pulse paused.

   I felt his hand before I saw it, starting at my hip, squeezing gently, and then sliding over my stomach. His front pressed into my back and his lips brushed gently over my temple. It was just one and a half seconds of my life, but it exploded in my mind, grew to infinite proportions and I knew whatever axis my world had been spinning on three seconds before, it was now careening in a new direction. My hands came to grip the counter in front of me, holding me up because my legs were useless.

   “Devon,” I whispered, clearly shocked. At my voice, I felt his entire body still; he went positively cold.

   “Shit,” he said, stepping away from me as if I’d just burst into flame. “Shit,” he repeated.

   I slowly turned, my face clearly showing my confusion. I could feel my eyebrows were very nearly into my hairline. I still wasn’t breathing normally, still hadn’t found the regular beat of my heart.

   “I’m so sorry, Evie,” he said, running a hand down his face. “I came home and saw you there, where Liv used to always be… and your blonde hair…”

   He’d seen me and thought I was her. He’d forgotten his wife had died and he’d wrapped his arm around me like I was her. He held me for just a moment like he held the woman he loved. I was cracking on the outside. He could see it. He watched as I started to fall apart, but whatever he could see on the outside was only a small fraction of the destruction going on within me.

   A part of me had wondered what his hands felt like. For years. Ever since the day we’d met. Now I knew. Now I knew they were incredible.

   “I have to go,” I said quickly, turning and reaching for my purse on the table. “It’s two parts flour to three parts water.”

   “What?” he asked, confused.

   “The papier-mâché for Ruby’s mummy. Two parts flour to three parts water. Just dip the newspaper strips in the goop and cover the mummy. I have to go.” I fled the kitchen like a murderer escaping from the scene of a crime. I absolutely could not think about anything besides Devon’s hand covering my womb.

   I’d made it half way down the front porch steps when I heard his voice call out my name.

   “Evelyn, wait!”

   My feet stopped moving like the traitors they were. I stopped, but I did not turn around, could not see his face as he processed that he’d touched the wrong woman. The heat coming from his body alerted me that he was just inches away, this time on purpose.

   “Evie,” he whispered. I waited a beat, giving him a second to get his thoughts together, but when no more words came from him, I spoke.

   “It’s okay,” I said, my voice sounding so much stronger than I actually was. Inside I was crumbling.

   “No, it’s not. Please, don’t leave like this.”

   “It’s not a big deal.”

   “It is a big deal.”

   “It was a mistake. An accident.” It was true, but it didn’t make me feel any better.

   “The first time I kiss you shouldn’t be a mistake.” His voice was so quiet, the whisper barely even audible, but I heard it and I tucked it deep inside of me, hoping it was buried deep enough that it would never surface again.

   I made my feet press forward, made each foot step in front of the other until I made it to my car. Then I got in and I drove away.

   It was hours before I made it home. I’d spent the late evening driving as far from my town as I could get, trying to escape the feeling of my spirit being crushed, but after driving for two hours, I realized the feeling wasn’t attached to the town; it was attached to me. I turned around, stopped for gas, and pulled into my driveway around midnight.

   When I finally made it to bed, I couldn’t sleep. I lay there all night wondering what in the hell I was going to do, how I was going to proceed. I could pretend as if nothing had happened, but it had. I could pretend as though it meant nothing to me, but it meant everything. I could laugh about it, pretend like it was amusing, when actually it was devastating. The only thing clear after a night of tossing and turning was I would be doing a lot of pretending.

   However, that wasn’t something new for me.


Chapter Five

The Next Day – College

   “Why are you moving so quickly?” Liv groaned from her bed, the first intelligible words I’d heard from her all morning. Up until then, all I’d heard were groans and possible swear words. In the middle of the night, I’d woken her up enough to give her the water and the pain pills, but she seemed to be coming around now.

   “I’m meeting Elliot for breakfast in twenty minutes.”

   “What time is it?” She was speaking, but she wasn’t moving.

   “Nearly ten.”

   Another loud groan came from her bed.

   “Just go back to sleep. I’ll be back later.” I sat down on my bed, pulling on my ankle boots.

   “How’d I get back here anyway?”

   “Devon carried you,” I said, my snarky tone implying I didn’t approve of the method, still remembering the way his biceps were twitching by the time we got to our dorm. The way his arms were wrapped around her.

   “He carried me?”

   “Yeah, you were passed out.” I stood up and walked to the large mirror, which hung on the inside of my armoire. It wasn’t full-length, but it did a good enough job. I turned from one side to another, trying to inspect my outfit from all possible angles. I was wearing a cotton skirt that flowed down to my knees with a tank top. I pulled on my worn-soft jean jacket, knowing it wouldn’t be too warm outside yet. I flipped my blonde hair from the collar as I turned back to Liv. “Go back to sleep, Liv. You’re still drunk.”

   “You’re probably right,” she said from under her covers.

   “I’ll be back eventually. Then we seriously need to pack if we’re going to be ready to leave tomorrow morning.” Her groan was all the response I needed. I grabbed my purse and headed down the stairs to wait for Elliot. I’d been sitting on the bench in front of my dorm for what seemed like forever, about ready to call it quits and go back upstairs, when a big red pickup truck parked in front of the lawn. I watched as the window rolled down, Elliot’s face appearing from inside the cab, smile shining brightly.

   I couldn’t help the way my lips tipped up at his smile, and I didn’t try to stop it. It felt natural. As I walked toward his truck, I saw him come around the bed, looking just as cute as I remembered him.

   “Hey,” he said easily as he opened the passenger door for me. I looked up hesitantly, and then looked down at my skirt.

   “I didn’t dress for mountain climbing.” His truck was big.

   “Just step on the rail there and you should be fine.”

   “Oh,” I said, just noticing the little step seemingly made for situations just like the one I was in. “How convenient.”

   “If you’re gonna drive a truck this big, gotta make it skirt friendly,” he said with a wink. I couldn’t help but roll my eyes, laughing all the while. He shut my door then climbed up into the driver’s seat, started the truck, and pulled out onto the street.

   “How’s your roommate this morning?” he asked once we’d made it back onto the main road.

   “She’s as well as can be expected. Devon carried her the entire way home last night and she didn’t wake up once.”

   “That’s rough. Should we bring her back some greasy food?” He turned to look at me, waiting for my response, his expression soft and expectant. I felt the tiniest flutter of wings in my belly at his thoughtful gesture.

   “I’m sure she’d be really grateful,” I managed.

   We made small talk about classes and finals until he pulled into the parking lot of what looked like it might have been an abandoned building.

   “It doesn’t look like much, but this place has the best food in town. No one talks about it though because we don’t want the secret to get out.” His words were tumbling out of his mouth, right past the beautiful smile he’d been wearing since he picked me up and my cheeks heated with a blush as I thought about how good looking he was. He wasn’t rugged and he wasn’t tall or dark, but he was the typical All American, Boy Next Door, cute. I watched as he walked around the front of the truck, opened my door, then gasped a little as his hands grasped my waist, gently lifting me from the truck and depositing me safely on the ground.

   “Thank you,” I managed to whisper.

   “I’ll help you out of my truck any day, Evelyn.” I thought I’d reached the pinnacle of my blushing’s capabilities, but when his hand reached down and wrapped around mine, my face heated even more. Something about the way he was upfront with his feelings for me was undeniably attractive. He was so easy with me, so open. It was just as refreshing as it was unusual. I was used to guys playing cool and not paying me too much attention, which was frustrating. Elliot seemed to be transparent, which I couldn’t deny was attractive.

   We entered the restaurant and I was pleasantly surprised to find the outside did not reflect the inside. The interior was straight-up country diner, with red checkered tablecloths and everything. Cute little salt and pepper shakers adorned each table, along with red and yellow squeezy bottles for ketchup and mustard. It was clean, adorable, and the waitress who approached us was all smiles.

   “Elliot, didn’t think you’d be around after classes let out.” She was a round woman in her mid-forties, wearing a waitress uniform you’d imagine someone in a movie wearing: blue dress, white ruffled apron, and a pad of paper and pen sticking out of its pocket.

   “Well, I promised Evelyn here a breakfast date before we both left town.”

   The waitress, whose nametag read Marianne, turned her attention to me and said, “Lucky girl,” with what sounded like affection. She grabbed two menus and we followed her to a booth where Elliot and I sat across from each other. After we’d ordered our drinks and Marianne left us, I attempted to make small talk.

   “So, why does the waitress know your name?”

   He smiled and then responded. “The frat house can be a hard place to study. It gets loud and the guys aren’t always willing to quiet down so I can cram for a test.” He shrugged. “It’s just part of frat life. Anyway, this place is open twenty-four hours and they’re really cool about letting me study here, you know, as long as I order some food and stuff.”

   “So, you’re here a lot.”

   “You could say that. Plus, you can’t get biscuits and gravy like theirs anywhere else. In fact, I’m gonna miss this place over the summer.” He smiled again, and then laughed softly. “I’m not sure who I’m kidding; I’ll probably drive down once or twice just for the food.”

   “How far away do you live?” I asked, curious about him.

   “I’m about two hours north of here, in Bakersfield. What about you? Where are you headed tomorrow?”

   “Liv and I are from Portsmouth, about three hours east.”

   “Well, that’s good news.”

   “What is?” I asked, confused.

   “That you’re not getting on a plane or going somewhere really far away.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out his cell phone, typing furiously with this thumbs. Finally, he held his phone up, screen pointing at me, and I saw what looked to be a page from Google Maps. “See, look. If I take the bypass it’s only a three hour and forty-five minute drive to your town.”

   My cheeks blushed at the thought of Elliot driving nearly four hours to see me. No one had ever made such an effort. “Don’t you have some girl back home waiting for you?” I couldn’t imagine someone as charming and courteous as Elliot without a band of girls vying for his attention. He gave a small cough at my question; apparently, I’d struck a nerve.

   “No one’s waiting for me, no. My high school girl friend will probably be home for summer, but we haven’t been together in over two years. She’s moved on, so have I. But, we have the same friends, so I’m sure I’ll be seeing her.”

   “Elliot, I was kidding. You don’t owe me any explanations.”

   At my words he reached across the table and took my hand in his, gently squeezing it. “I might not owe you an explanation, but I want to give it to you anyway.” Then he shrugged and laced his fingers with mine. “Last night wasn’t just some hook up. I’ve wanted to ask you out for weeks. I totally understand if you want to just say goodbye today, and maybe see each other in the fall, but I’m kind of hoping I can see you this summer.”

   I swallowed thickly, a little caught off guard by his declaration. “I’d like that.”

   A gorgeous smile spread slowly across his face, his brilliantly white teeth showing, eyes sparkling. “Great,” he said confidently. I couldn’t help but smile back at him, it was impossible to resist.

   The rest of our breakfast date was effortless and comfortable. We ate, laughed, shared about our families, and talked about plans for the summer. He was genuinely interested in whatever it was I had to say. He listened with rapt attention, laughing when appropriate, smiling, and nodding. Listening. Aside from Liv, I’d never felt so comfortable talking to someone.

   We sat at our table for hours, Marianne never making us feel like we had to leave, even though we took up a table for the entire lunch rush. Elliot never stopped touching me. When we ate, his foot pressed up against mine under the table. When we talked, his hand was holding mine, his thumb making soft circles on the inside of my wrist. His touch slowly built a fire inside of me, and by the time we decided to leave the diner, I could hardly wait to be alone with him in the privacy of the cab of his truck.

   We took a to-go order for Liv, which I still thought was incredibly sweet of him, and he helped me into the passenger side of his truck. I placed Liv’s food on the bench seat nearest my door, and scooted more toward the middle. I watched as Elliot opened his door, reaching in, grasping the steering wheel, the muscles in his forearm rippling. Then, suddenly, he was next to me. Strong biceps pressed into my shoulder. The hand that had just been gripping the wheel landed softly on my leg just above my knee.

   My eyes darted to where his hand made contact, and then slowly made their way to meet his gaze.

   “Thank you for breakfast,” I said, as my sight wandered to his lips.

   “It was more like brunch,” he said, his lips lifting into another beautiful smile.

   “Thank you for brunch,” I acquiesced. He nodded slightly, and then I saw his free hand rise. He pushed some wayward hair behind my ear, and then his large hand slid around to the back of my neck, gripping me there softly, but with just enough force to take my breath away completely.

   “I’m going to kiss you now.” His voice was low, his smile had disappeared, and in its place was a serious expression, one of longing.

   “Okay,” was all I could manage before his impossibly soft lips touched mine.

   I breathed in his kiss, taking everything from him in that moment. My hands pressed against his chest, slowly folding my fingers around the soft cotton of his shirt, pulling myself as close to him as I could. The night before, our kisses had been passionate and new, exciting and hurried. But in that moment, with hours of conversation and laughter between us, we were connecting on another level.

   His hand slid slowly up from my knee, smoothing over the bare skin beneath my skirt, but only came to grip the fleshiest part of my thigh, inches below the elastic of my panties. I didn’t want to go any further, sitting in a restaurant parking lot at a diner, but a large part of me wanted to know what it would feel like to have his hands all over me, his fingers inside of me. A flash of heat climbed through me at the thought of him being inside of me at all, and I pulled him closer.

   When we finally pulled away from each other, we were both panting. He rested his forehead against mine and his hand came back up to frame my face.

   “I foresee myself coming to visit you a lot this summer.”

   I smiled, and then pressed a small kiss against his lips. “I foresee myself enjoying that a lot.”

   “I hate to even tear myself away from you, but I think we should get going. Another kiss like that, and I’ll lose my mind.”

   Laughing, I disentangled myself from him, sliding carefully toward the center of the bench, but before I got too far, his hand was back on my leg. This time, though, his fingers were higher up and just barely under the hem of my skirt. Just the sight sent shivers up my spine and goose bumps along my thigh. Whether or not he noticed, I’d never know, but his thumb grazed the sensitive skin all the way back to my dorm.

   When he pulled up to my dorm, a wave of sadness washed over me. Why had he waited so long to make his move? Now it was summer and we were both headed in different directions. The excitement of new romance was being squashed by our separation.

   “Elliot, why did you wait so long to ask me out? I mean,” I said nervously, tucking my hair behind my ear. “I’m glad you did, but, now it’ll be really hard to see each other. We could have been doing this for weeks by now.”

   He turned the ignition off and turned to face me on the bench seat. “Can I ask you a question before I answer you?”

   I shrugged. “Sure.”

   “What’s your history with Devon?”

   His question caught me off guard and my head pulled back as my face contorted into a look of confusion. “What?”

   “Don’t get upset. It doesn’t matter to me, I’m just curious.”

   “I don’t have a history with Devon. He’s my best friend’s boyfriend.”


    Ваша оценка произведения:

Популярные книги за неделю