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Lies Unspoken
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Текст книги "Lies Unspoken "


Автор книги: Lisa DeJong



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Текущая страница: 1 (всего у книги 19 страниц)

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright

dedication

Prologue

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Acknowledgements

Copyright © 2014 by Lisa De Jong

Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the above author of this book.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

Edited by Madison Seidler

Cover by Mae I Design

Formatting by Kassi’s Kandids Formatting

AS A LITTLE GIRL I’D ALWAYS dreamed of the day I would get to put on that white dress—the one with the ballroom skirt and strapless fitted bodice. I dreamed of my daddy walking me down the aisle in a nice black tuxedo, proudly giving me away to the perfect guy—the one I’d waited for my whole life.

And during high school, I met Derek. He was my dream come true. We were together our junior and senior year, and when he was offered a baseball scholarship to UCLA, he’d asked me to follow him.

This might sound crazy, but I knew pretty early on that he was the one. I couldn’t even think about spending a day apart from him, so when he proposed the weekend we graduated college, I said yes. It was the best night of my life.

But as the wedding approached, I felt a slight distance between us. I thought it was the stress of planning a wedding for three hundred people, or the pressure he was under trying to get a spot on a minor league team. We didn’t see each other much, and when we did, things weren’t as natural as it used to be.

I thought we’d be okay. I loved him, and he loved me. I couldn’t imagine being with anyone else. He was my life.

And then one day I realized I might be wrong . . . about everything.

It just happened to be the same day I had my last fitting for my wedding dress. He’d offered to pick me up at my house after, and I thought he was going to take me to dinner.

What I saw as I climbed in the passenger seat would forever be burned so deep into my memory that the scars may never fade. It was the way he looked at me. Right at me. His eyes told me everything yet nothing at all.

“What’s wrong?” I asked, pulling the door closed behind me. He hadn’t said anything, but I could tell. I knew practically everything when it came to him.

His long fingers danced along his square jaw. His dark brown eyes were so vacant . . . of everything. A pit lodged itself in my stomach. “I can’t do this,” he finally said.

“Can’t do what?”

“Us,” he replied quietly.

The pit became a boulder, crashing into the cage that was supposed to keep my heart safe. “You mean the wedding? Are you saying you want to postpone it?”

All oxygen must have been sucked out of his car because I couldn’t breathe. Hours could have gone by, watching him stare out his stupid windshield, and the whole time, I couldn’t breathe.

“Derek,” I pled, holding back tears.

He finally faced me, eyes glistening with his own unshed tears. “Lila, I love you, but it’s not the type of love that’s going to keep us together forever.”

I braced myself against the leather seat. As if the whole world flipped upside down, time slowly suffocated me.

He continued, even though I didn’t want to hear more, “I didn’t want things to end this way, but I can’t let them go on any longer either.”

“Is it the stress of the wedding? We can fix it. I mean . . . I mean, we could do something small. Maybe a beach wedding with our close family.” The words poured out before I had much time to process what he really meant . . . what it meant for me.

“Lila,” he whispered, leaning across the seat to cradle my face in his hands. “I never wanted to hurt you. I never wanted to think about a second of my life without you in it, but the fact that I’ve been able to says something. We were so young, and I think we’ve grown up and grown apart. I’m sorry.”

I shook my head, not able to find the right words.

My soul was torn. My heart was broken. How the hell could this be happening? I’d tried to convince myself it was just a bad dream, that I was seeing something that wasn’t real. But no matter how many times I blinked my eyes, he was still there staring at me.

“Why? I mean . . . everything was fine this morning.”

I looked into his eyes. It was like watching a drop form on the spout of a faucet. Slowly growing bigger. And then it fell, leaving a wet trail down his cheek.

“I’m sorry,” he repeated. “I never wanted something so bad, but I can’t. No matter how hard I try, I can’t make myself want this anymore. Not like I should.”

I thought about asking if there was any way I could change his mind. I wanted him to love me the way he used to. I wanted to go back and patch all the holes that were punctured in our relationship—the ones that drained it to this point. In the end, I knew in my heart that there was no changing this.

“So this is it?” I asked.

He pulled back, letting his hands drop away from me. “It has to be.”

Tears fell quickly down my cheeks. By far, the worst moment of my life. But that was what unexpected heartbreak would do to you.

“I guess I have to learn how to not love you,” I said before quickly opening the door and running back toward my house.

Something so beautiful turned ugly in a matter of minutes. I was wrong about so many things. Were there signs I missed, things that were right in front of me?

The tears fell down my cheeks, leaving a path of black mascara as I tore up the sidewalk.

I was almost there when I heard him yell my name. I didn’t turn around; I just kept going. I thought about everything I’d lost and everything I’d never have. I’d trusted my heart to him, and he left it in a million pieces.

I said goodbye to my happily ever after.

THEY SAY RUNNING WON’T solve your problems, but it certainly helps mask them.

Ignorance is bliss.

What I don’t see won’t bother me.

The things I can’t hear won’t eat me up inside.

Call me a coward, or maybe I’ve just been temporarily weakened by circumstance. Either way, the only way to escape it is to get away from here.

As I slowly board the plane, a whirling mixture of excitement and sadness fills me. I’ve lived in the same place all my life, and now I’m going to leave behind all the comfort that’s had me wrapped up tight for over twenty-four years.

I’m also leaving the bad memories. Those constant reminders everywhere I look: places Derek and I went on dates, people we hung out with together. All our firsts and lasts happened in the same small town, and this is the only way I’m ever going to make the memories fade.

I follow the line of people, taking my seat ten rows back, right next to the window. With any luck, the person who sits next to me will be the quiet business-type who checks emails the entire flight or, better yet, a sleeper. Sleepers and suits are my favorite, but I brought my headphones just in case it doesn’t end up that way.

After tucking my oversized handbag under the seat, I sit back, resting my forehead against the cool window while waiting for the rest of the plane to board. November in the Midwest is unpredictable as far as snow goes, but the cold is always guaranteed.

Surrounding the Omaha Airport are miles and miles of fields, a serene view I’m leaving behind for my chance in the big city. Skyscrapers. City lights. Trains and taxicabs. I’m looking forward to all of it.

A fresh start.

A new beginning.

A life I’m creating for myself.

Four months ago, I thought I knew everything about love and happiness, but I realize I didn’t know a damn thing. I’d always assumed that time bound two people together. I was naïve. I’ve learned that people can fall out of love just as quickly as they fall into it.

I can’t imagine hurting anyone the way Derek hurt me, and I’ve asked myself every day if I could have done something different to change the way our story was written. Some days I wonder if there was something I could’ve said to make him stay . . . to make him fall back in love with me.

But love doesn’t work that way.

We met up a few days after our breakup to return things to each other. I’d had time to think about everything, and looking at him made me sick. I pretty much dropped a cardboard box at his feet with a Fuck You note lying on top. He hurt me in ways I will never be able to explain—not to him anyway.

Now, he’s living out our dreams all on his own.

He sleeps in the bed we’d purchased to put in the house we never bought.

He finally got the baseball contract he’d been waiting for but couldn’t get his fingers on when I was his girl.

I hate him for all of it. He’s able to move forward, and I’m left trying to figure out where it all went wrong. It’s a question I could spend a lifetime asking myself.

“Saying goodbye can be rough,” A smooth male voice floats from my right, pulling me out of the ocean of misery I’d been swimming in. It’s deep and smoky . . . in a different state of mind I might even classify it as sexy.

“Not as hard as it might seem,” I chide back, chancing a look. He’s a vision in a gray pinstripe suit, tailored to fit his strong, muscular body perfectly. His dark hair is just the right length to wave a little at the ends. A shadow of facial hair peppers his jawline.

“Is Chicago home for you?” he asks, a slight smirk pulling at his full lips. They’re a shade of dark pink—distractingly beautiful, really.

When I don’t respond right away, he clears his throat, pulling me back to reality. Only then does it dawn on me that he asked a question, and I haven’t bothered to look up into his eyes. When I finally do, I realize his lips were nothing but an appetizer to something better. Those eyes—dark green on the outside and fading to a dull gray inside.

“Long day, then?” he asks, reminding me it’s my turn to speak.

“Sorry,” I mumble, shaking my head. “I’m moving to Chicago, and yes, it’s been a very long day of packing.”

“Are you from here?”

I shift in my seat, checking again to make sure my seatbelt is secure. The flight attendant stands at the front, going through all the safety instructions I’ve heard so many times before. “I’m from a small town about thirty miles north of here. You?”

“I live in Chicago. I’m here on business.”

“What do you do?”

He smiles. Perfect teeth, go figure. “I’m an architect. I design hotels all over the country.”

I nod, suddenly at a loss for words. I’m two years out of college, and, until three days ago, I’d been working in a furniture store. If I had to guess, I’d say this guy is in his early-thirties, at the most, and he’s designing freaking hotels. The universe is proving to me loud and clear how much of an underachiever I am.

“What do you plan on doing in Chicago?” he asks, eyeing me carefully.

I suddenly feel underdressed next to him, and I wish I’d covered myself in something nicer than ripped blue jeans, a T-shirt, and an oversized cardigan. “I have a degree in design, but I’ll probably end up waitressing for a while . . . until I can find something more permanent.”

He nods, bringing a water bottle to his lips. “What type of design?”

“Interior,” I say, watching him take another slow sip.

“Well, do you have a copy of your resume?”

I shake my head. “No.”

I watch as he pulls his black leather briefcase from under the seat and unlatches it. It’s full of perfectly organized files, not that I expected anything else. “Here’s my card. Send me your resume, and we can talk.”

Grabbing it from between his fingers, I glance down at the name. Pierce Stanley, President, Stanley Development. “I don’t have a lot of experience yet,” I admit.

He laughs. “I’m not putting you in charge of the design team. We have over fifty design positions, interns to assistants to designers.”

“Okay,” I say, tracing my fingers along the card’s edges. It would be the beginning of my dream, but everything that’s happened has shaken my confidence. I don’t know if I’m in a place, emotionally, to succeed. Not yet.

“Why don’t you write down your information so I can contact you, just in case.”

It could turn out to be a really good opportunity for me, but this man is going to forget about me five minutes after getting off this plane. He’ll take phone calls and attend important meetings. I’ll entertain it anyway.

“Do you have a piece of paper and a pen?”

He hands me a small notebook and a pen that probably costs more than the sweater I’m wearing. “Name, email, and phone number should do.”

I scribble everything he asked for, taking enough care to make sure it’s readable. I hand the pad of paper back to him, watching his lips curl again. “Lila? That’s a pretty name for a beautiful woman.”

“If I’d done more than roll out of bed this morning, I might believe you.”

He smiles. “Believe it or not, Lila, I don’t have to lie to please a woman. You’re beautiful . . . don’t let anyone tell you differently.”

There’s no way to hide my blush, even with only the night sky out my window. “Thank you.”

“Sorry, that probably comes across as pretty forward.”

“Something tells me you know exactly what to say and when to say it. You didn’t get to where you are in your career without that kind of skill.”

“You’re right, but I didn’t get to where I am by lying either.”

“Touché.”

Crossing my arms over my chest, I stare back out the window. I rest my head against the glass, my mind drifting to a million different things until I see Chicago in the distance—tall, lit up buildings coming closer and closer.

In just a few minutes, I’ll officially be a city girl. I’m not dreading it by any means because I’ll be surrounded by coffee shops, clothing boutiques, and art. I’m ready to be swallowed into a sea of people where nobody knows who I am.

Glancing to my right, I take in the amused stranger. “How am I going to survive in this city? I’m used to being able to cross town in less than two minutes.”

He rests his head back against the seat. “I moved here from a small town almost twelve years ago. It takes a little getting used to, but you’ll do just fine.”

“You? A small town boy?” I ask, lifting a brow.

“We all have to start somewhere.” He smiles. If nothing else, Mr. Stanley is easy to warm up to.

We’re both quiet as the plane begins to descend on Chicago’s O’Hare Airport. The sky has turned from gray to black and the city lights illuminate the night for as far as I can see. I never thought anything would beat the serenity of the country, but this might just be it. It’s peaceful . . . in a different way.

I wonder where my new apartment is in the vast city. I know it’s a ways from downtown, but from my view, Chicago looks like nothing but a complex maze of lights. My moving here worked out perfectly because my college friend, Mallory, has a place she was looking to rent. She’s studying in Europe for a few months, finishing her Master’s Degree. And to sweeten the deal, she offered it to me practically rent-free. It’ll buy me some time to find a steady job, and then I can find a place of my own.

“Do you need a ride somewhere?” Pierce asks, tearing my eyes from the cityscape. It’s a question with an easy answer, but yet I still somehow ponder it.

“No, I’ve got one figured out,” I reply, bending to pick up my handbag from the floor.

“It wouldn’t happen to be a yellow cab, would it?”

I bite back a smile. This guy is annoyingly perceptive. “Probably.”

“I’d be happy to give you a lift.”

“I’ll be fine, but thank you. I need to get used to Chicago cabbies anyway.”

He nods, standing to pull his carry on from the overhead. “You have my number. Don’t hesitate to call me if you need anything, Lila.” My name rolls off his tongue slowly with a hint of deliberate sexiness.

“It was nice talking to you, Pierce.” With one last smirk he saunters down the narrow walkway. My eyes are trained on his retreating form, but I don’t take a step to follow him.

“Excuse me, miss?” I shake my head, realizing I’m holding up the plane.

My fresh beginning is already looking up.

CATCHING A CAB WAS EASIER than I thought it would be, but sitting in a dark car alone with the driver is proving to be the opposite. His English is broken, and when I ask him if he can turn up the heat, he mumbles some nonsense about putting on my coat. The interior smells like a mixture of sweat and fast food. And to make matters worse, when I slid across the leather seat, my fingers pressed into something sticky.

I make a mental note to find a job close to my apartment so I don’t have to worry about transportation. This is a part of the city I may never get used to.

As I attempt to relax in my seat, I reflect on the day . . . on the road that led me here.

Chicago is about me. I’m going to be the person I always intended to be, do what I want to do. To be happy, content, and live a purposeful life. I deserve better than Derek . . . better than the way we ended things. I deserve a second chance.

When the cab finally pulls alongside the curb in front of an old brick building, I breathe a sigh of relief. It’s three stories, maybe four, depending if you count the half windows that stick out above the ground floor. It’s hard to make out much else in the darkness.

“This is me?” He could drop me off miles from where I need to be, and I wouldn’t have a clue.

The driver doesn’t turn, but I see him looking at me in the rearview mirror. An amount flashes on his meter: thirty-seven dollars.

I dig through the side pocket of my purse and hand him forty-five. I came here without a job lined up and only a few thousand dollars to my name; every penny spent is going to give me anxiety until I have work lined up. “Keep the change.”

He nods, and his expression lightens. “You need help, miss?”

“Sure,” I answer, curling my fingers around the door handle. As I open it, he opens his, meeting me at the trunk to pull my suitcases out.

“You have good night,” he says as he sets the second piece of luggage on the curb. He wastes no time climbing in his little yellow car and disappearing down the street until all I see are his bright red taillights.

This is it, I think to myself as I look down the barren street.

I inhale a deep breath and spin around, getting a closer look at my new home. The street is lined with buildings that are just like it: brick, with simple glass doors and dim light shining through. It’s a far cry from the historical, wooden two stories that make up my hometown.

After picking up my overstuffed suitcases, I start the short walk to my front door. It’s not long before I have to set them back down to pull the key card from my pocket. Mallory sent it in a care package, along with a key to her apartment shortly before she left. It was the day I decided there was no turning back; I’m going to do this no matter how much it scares me.

I take one flight of stairs then another, my fingers aching from the weight of the suitcases. By the time I reach the third floor, I’m praying that Mallory has a bathtub and a bottle of red wine. There’s no other way to end a long, exhausting day.

To my relief, the key turns easily, giving me a full view of the tiny apartment. A small kitchen sits right inside the door, opening to a tiny dining and living area—one just big enough for a futon, beanbag, and a small wooden coffee table. There are two doors off the living room—one on each side. The first one opens to a bedroom, which looks like someone took a dresser full of clothes and scattered them across the floor. In the corner is an easel with paint supplies strewn all over, making it look much like a preschool classroom. It’s definitely not Mallory’s.

I step back, carefully closing the door behind me. The other door has to open to a more organized setup, or I’m definitely in the wrong apartment. Mallory was borderline obsessive compulsive in school. She was the one straightening the bathroom after each of us was done, and her wardrobe and desk were meticulously orderly . . . annoying really.

I wrap one hand around the knob while the other searches for the light switch. I close my eyes like the special guest at a surprise party waiting for the big reveal. When I open them, not a doubt lingers that this apartment belongs to Mallory. A simple mahogany four-poster bed sits in the center, covered with a white down comforter and bright blue pillows. The dark wood floors are partially covered with a white shag rug, and three colorful abstract paintings cover her walls. Maybe she picked up art as a hobby since the last time I saw her; that would explain the other bedroom.

I run back into the entryway to grab my luggage and double check the deadbolt. Living in the city is going to be a huge adjustment for me. Sirens. Trains. Tiny little apartments. It’s not what I’m used to.

Once I’m back in the bedroom, I throw the first of my suitcases on the bed and quickly start unpacking.

I lift the second suitcase onto the bed, and as I’m unzipping it, I hear the door to the apartment creak.

My heart races. My mind flashes through all the episodes of 48 Hours I’ve watched over the years, hoping in the end I only think I heard it. Maybe it was my tired mind playing tricks on me like a psychological Houdini.

That hope is crushed when I hear footsteps. My eyes lock on the bedroom door, and every muscle in my body tenses. There’s nowhere to go unless I can magically escape out the window, and there’s no way to make that happen without drawing attention to myself.

If this is it . . . if this is how I’m going to die . . .

“Who the fuck are you?” a shadowy figure asks, sounding more irritated than anything else.

I step back again, my legs hitting the bed. My brain cells abandon me, and my ability to speak goes right along with them. Scanning the room, I search for anything that could be used to render him unconscious long enough to make my escape, but my flighty mind can’t concentrate.

“You have two fucking seconds to answer me, or I’m going to pick your ass up and throw you out!”

I inhale then exhale, trying to calm my jittery nerves. Please let this be part of one of those God-awful reality shows, like What Would You Do? or something. “Lila. My name’s Lila,” I answer quietly.

He steps forward, until the light of the bedroom gives me the first glimpse of his face. I didn’t know scary could be so easy on the eyes. “And what the hell are you doing in my apartment, Lila?”

Shaking my head, I try to get a grip. If I had anywhere to run, I would. I’d like to get as far away from here as possible.

“I thought . . . I thought this was my friend Mallory’s apartment. The key worked and—”

“Wait, Mallory knows you’re here?”

Unable to stand on my shaky knees any longer, I fall back on the bed. I think my dreams of a hot bubble bath and glass of wine just went out the window. “Yeah, she’s letting me stay here until I find a place of my own. Who are you?”

“Her brother,” he bites back. A few more steps and he’s fully in my view. Gorgeous, not in the magazine cover way, but the kind that makes you drool because there’s no way you can take him home to Mom on Christmas. He’s the type of guy a girl wants to be with for one night just to see how good it could be, to fuck away every bad sexual experience she’s ever had in her life. Dark blond hair, partially covered by a gray beanie. A light sprinkling of facial hair along his jaw. Black leather jacket. Faded blue jeans. Black motorcycle boots. And from what I’ve heard so far, a dirty mouth to match.

“What are you doing here?” I ask, crossing my arms over my chest.

His eyes scan my breasts before meeting mine again. The muscle in his jaw ticks as he scrubs his hand over his face. “I live here.”

My eyes widen. “What do you mean live here?”

He raises an eyebrow, giving me a glassy stare. Those sapphire eyes could end me, but I’m not going to let them. “As in this is where my mail comes.”

“Shit,” I mumble under my breath. This is never going to work. A couple minutes in the same room, and I already know that much.

“Let me guess, perfect Mallory didn’t mention that when she handed you a key to this place.” His voice drips with heavy sarcasm.

I swallow, trying to dislodge the huge lump in my throat. “No.”

He laughs, covering his hips with his paint-stained hands. “That’s typical. How long are you planning to stay? A few days?”

“A few months probably. Mallory’s not coming back until spring, and she said to stay as long as I need.”

“That’s just fucking great,” he groans, and, without another word, walks out of my room. A door slams, and the whole apartment goes quiet as I lie back on my new bed. I have an asshole as a roommate. A sexy asshole, and the only thing that’s keeping me from pounding on his door is the exhaustion that’s taken over my body. All I want to do is fall asleep—to forget most of this day even happened.

I reach for my purse, rummaging through it until I find my phone. I don’t care what time it is in Spain; Mallory owes me an explanation.

After three rings, I’m fuming. Four rings means voicemail, and I’m not in the mood to wait.

“Hello,” she answers, sleepily.

“Mallory,” I groan, skipping pleasantries.

The sound of blankets shifting comes through the phone. “Oh God. You met him, didn’t you?”

“Mallory, I swear—”

“Look, I didn’t think he’d be home tonight. He’s going through one of his phases where he usually disappears for a few days to paint and sort his shit out.”

I sigh, rubbing my fingers over my forehead. “So when exactly were you going to tell me?”

“Tomorrow, or maybe the next day . . . after you got all settled.”

“I can’t live with him,” I say, honestly.

“Look, just give it a few days, okay? He’s not home often so you won’t even know he’s there,” she pleads.

“I hate men.”

“I know,” she mumbles, sounding tired again.

“I’m going to kill you the next time I see you.”

“I know.” She’s drifting off. Her voice is fading.

“What’s his name?”

She yawns. “Blake. Can I go back to sleep now? It’s four in the freaking morning, Lila.”

“Fine, but I hope the bed bugs bite.”

“Love you, too,” she whispers.

“You’re lucky there’s an ocean between us,” I add. I don’t feel like all the pissed off energy has evaporated yet.

“Night.”

“Night,” I answer back, throwing my phone across the bed.


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