A GREAT BIG WORLD HAS this song, âSay Somethingâ. Itâs supposed to be a love song, but for me, it would always be the song I cried to when I got on a bus from San Diego to Todos Santos, with my headphones plugged securely into my ears to silence the rest of the world after Theo threw the punch at me.
He hadnât meant it. I knew that. It must be horrific, being caged in that head of his. Things that came so easy to me were foreign and strange to him. But giving up on him just because he couldnât say it, the things he was feeling, was out of the question.
And I couldnât give up now.
Sunday did not go as Trent and I had planned.
After heâd spent the night sleeping in the waiting room while I went in and out of my motherâs hospital room, he drove home to take a shower and pick up Luna from Camilaâs and drop her off with his parents, whoâd gotten back into town from Vegas.
I used the opportunity to head home for a shower and a snack. My mother had come to in the middle of the night. She was awake, but hardly coherent. Weâd spoken while Trent waited outside. She told me how my father walked in, late Saturday afternoon and broke the news to her like he was delivering an obituary for a long-distance relative. How he didnât even care when the divorce papers heâd placed on the table in front of her were so wet with her tears, you couldnât read a sentence of them.
I took a long, scorching hot shower, slipped into a loose yellow summer dress, then ate a quiet, lonely breakfast at the kitchen table. Granola, yogurt, and coconut water.
My house was part of a gated community in an exclusive Todos Santos neighborhood called La Vista. In order to get in, you needed a code, or to know the sleepy guards at the gate. Thatâs why, at first, I didnât pay attention to the honking outside my house. I assumed it was a friend of the teenage boy across the road and cursed them inwardly for being so loud on a Sunday morning.
Beep, beep. Beeeeeeep.
I hated teenagers. I didnât even care that I was technically one of them. I dumped the bowl of yogurt into the sink, not feeling like washing it, but then thought the better of it. I could leave it for the housekeepers, but I was never that person. No matter how much my parents took them for granted. I started washing the bowl, feeling my body sagging with the weight of the world.
Beep, beeeeeeep, beeeeeeeeeeep.
Where the hell was Adrian, the guy who lived across the street? Usually, he all but jumped out of his second-story window to go out with his friends. I sulked quietly as I dried the bowl and the glass Iâd used, moving toward the door.
Beep, beep, beep, beep, beeeeeeeeeep, beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeep.
Reaching the end of my nerves, I flung the door open, my eyes already squeezed shut and the shriek leaving my mouth. âThis is a quiet neighborhood on a Sunday morning! Keep it down, will you?â
âNot a fucking chance. I have a reputation to live up to.â
I popped my eyes open, staring at Trent in his black Tesla, wearing a plain white T-shirt and a beanie that didnât look stupid at six oâclock in the morning, when the desert chill was still gripping. God, he was gorgeous.
âWhat are you doing here?â I blinked.
He threw his car into park, got out, and walked over to me, taking my hand. It looked foreign and dangerous, having him do that. So natural, but also so reckless. My father could still drop by to get something from the house. Not to mention my neighbors had big mouths and heâd probably gotten everyoneâs attention with his honking. If Trent was feeling like breaking our rules, he needed to talk to me about it first. Because I still had everything to lose.
I took a step back. âNo. Whatâs happening?â I frowned. âYou shouldnât be here.â
âI second that statement, and yet I am. Come with me.â
âI donât think thatâs a good idea. I need to go be with my mom.â
âItâs a brilliant idea,â he retorted. âYour mom is stable, and sheâll be sleeping for the majority of the morning, probably. I have a surprise.â
A surprise. It made my heart lift and twinge with guilt. He was trying to be nice to me, and Iâd pretty much admitted Iâd screw him over the minute heâd let me. I really was his Delilah. But the worst part was that in the end, it was Samson who had won. Not her. Because sneaky, shady people always end up losing the fight, even if they did win the small battles.
âTrentâ¦â
âI got you a visitation permit for Theo,â he cut in, hope sneaking into his hardened face. I blinked at him, perplexed. Iâd never seen him look like this. Like a buoyant kid.
âHâ¦how?â
âYour father is not the only person in the world with connections.â
âYou will need to elaborate.â
âSonya.â
Sonya. I immediately gave him a funny look, taking a step back. He rolled his eyes and grabbed me by the arm, ushering me to his car. I was lucky to have my Dr. Martens on, or else heâd probably have taken me barefoot.
âCalm your tits, Tide. She is Lunaâs therapist. She knows people who know people who make things happen. And she has a very big heart.â
âAnd big tits to match,â I couldnât help but bite out.
âThatâs true.â He chuckled, hurling me into the passenger seat like he loved doing so much. He slammed the door and rounded the car, starting it.
He drove out of Todos Santos toward San Diego, meaning he was going to accompany me on my visit to Theo. I didnât even have my purse with me. Just my phone and keys. The town flashed by, and neither of us said a word for a while, before I finally caved in.
âAre you still seeing her?â I asked.
He stared at the road, smirking to himself, like he took pleasure in watching me squirm. After a purposeful beat, he said, âWhatâs it to you?â
âYou asked me not to have sex with Bane anymore. Iâm trying to figure out how much of a hypocrite you are,â I answered honestly.
âIâm the mother of all hypocrites, Edie. If I wanted to fuck other people while I was fucking you, I would.â It felt like a punch straight to my heart, even when he added, âBut I donât. I havenât. Youâre the only one I want right now, and you keep me goddamn busy, so donât worry your pretty little head about that.â
âThat was the most backhanded compliment Iâve ever received.â I blew out air.
âWe both know you donât deserve more than that.â
It was true. I was after him.
We spent the rest of the drive in the silence I deserved and he loved so much to give.
âYou really donât have to come with me,â I mumbled, as Trent and I walked into the reception building of Big Heart Village. It looked warm, woody, cabin-like, only five hundred times bigger. The receptionist, Samantha, was a meaty woman in her early fifties with jazzy red curls and feline reading glasses with a jungle pattern. Her clothes were out of control weird like colorful tents. I loved it.
âEdie!â she exclaimed, standing up from her station and hugging me across the counter. I returned the hug, feeling my shoulders melting into relaxation. Trent was behind me. He still hadnât responded about staying at the reception while I visited Theo, but I was hoping heâd join us. I wasnât ashamed of my brother. Come to think of it, he was the only member of my immediate family I was actually proud of.
âWhat happened yesterday?â Samantha pushed her glasses up her nose, silently opening a bag of chips and offering me some. I shook my head, inhaling deeply before I answered.
âMy friend hereââI pointed at Trent, who slid off his beanie and looked around nonchalantlyââhad this barbecue thing, and his kid needed a babysitter, and soâ¦â I was stumbling over my words, making it painfully awkward again. Samantha ran her eyes over Trent, assessing him. She saw what I saw. What every woman in the world did.
âYour friend looks like trouble.â The corner of her lip twitched upward.
âTrust me.â He took a step forward, dumping his designer beanie onto the reception desk with a smirk. âYou have no idea. My acquaintance Sonya said we could visit Theodore real quick? Seeing as Edie wasnât able to yesterday.â He tilted his body toward her, and his muscular arm brushed mine. It sent a current of warmth to my lower belly and made me grin despite my best efforts.
âYes. We have written instructions from Mr. Van Der Zee that Theodore is not to be visited on any other day than Saturday, but considering his file hasnât been updated in two years, and seeing as Mr. Van Der Zee has failed to visit his son in this period of time, social services has decided to open a case on this minor at Sonyaâs request. I am actually quite grateful, Mrâ¦?â
âRexroth,â he provided, flashing her a cool, good-enough-for-porn grin.
âYes. The only person who seems to care about this kid is his sister. Big Heart Village firmly believes that the mental and physical health of its residents comes first. Iâm familiar with Sonya and was glad to hear she was able to pull a few strings. You will have to see him with a caretaker present, but thank the Lord, it is possible. Now, you take a seat. Gustav will be right here and take you to see Theo.â
We both walked over to the couches with the scratchy, yellow fabric and sat down. Trent was messing around on his phone, while I was trying hard not to cry at what heâd done for me. How could a person be so cruel and compassionate at the same time?
âThank you.â
He was still staring hard at his phone. âYouâve been there for Luna. Itâs only fair Iâd be there for Theo.â
âYes, but you donât have to physically stay with me. This is not your mess.â
âThatâs where youâre wrong.â
âWrong how?â I cleared my throat.
This time he looked up from his phone, something rather than ice and wrath swimming in his eyes. âI wish you werenât my mess, Van Der Zee. I really wish you were just a dirty little fuck.â
âEdie?â a voice called from above our heads. It was Gustav, the nice, Swedish caretaker who was assigned to Theo. He was waving at me, standing on the other end of the receptionânot the entrance, the exit to the picnic area, with the door open. âHe is waiting for you. Come on.â
The one thing I was worried about was that Trent wouldnât be able to understand Theo. His speech was slurred and slow, so you really had to pay attention to know what he was saying, but Trent and Theo clicked immediately.
Trent behaved as if Theo was just a normal twelve-year-old boy. We were sitting at a picnic table under the sun, with Gustav pretending like he wasnât watching the exchange and coloring a Harry Potter coloring book with a frown. Theo was wearing a Chicago Bears ball cap, a Ren and Stimpy T-shirt, and a smile.
âNo, man, no. You canât root for the Chicago Bears living in California. Thatâs just not acceptable.â Trent shook his head, leaning across the picnic table, talking animatedly to my brother.
âY-y-yes, I can. M-m-mike G-g-glennon is God.â Theo slammed the table with his open palm a little too roughly. Gustav and I were used to it, we knew better than to flinch, but the great thing was that Trent wasnât fazed by it, either. Trent waved his hand around impatiently, rolling his eyes and not doing the polite, whatever-you-say fake shit people usually did in front of Theo.
âJesus. No. Where is this coming from? Next thing, youâll tell me you like Tom Brady.â
Theo laughed. For all the love that weâd shared, I couldnât talk to him about boy stuff to save my life. And he didnât care about surfing, because he hardly ever saw the ocean, living in a group home for so long. The simple fact that Trent related to him had his face glowing.
âI, I, I like T-t-tom B-brady!â he exclaimed, ecstatic.
âYeah, well, I think itâs time for me to barf. Whereâs the bathroom around here?â Trent made a show of looking around, using his hand as a visor from the sun. He made it a point not to wear his Wayfarers while he was talking to my brother. He gave him eye contact. That was amazing.
Gustav pointed behind him, to one of the small cabins circling the picnic area. There were many families sitting at the tables with food and soda, talking and laughing. For the first time in years, we looked like one of those families. It wasnât just Theo and me. There was someone else, too. And it both killed and revived me.
When Trent left, Theoâs smile widened.
âW-who is he?â
I gave him a mean side-eye. Special or not, Theo was still my little brother, which meant he could still be a huge pain in the butt.
âHe works with Jordan. I babysit his daughter sometimes. Sheâs really cool. How are you doing, dude?â
Theo shrugged. âG-g-good. Y-you d-didnât come yesterday.â
Guilt choked me. I was ashamed to tell him the truth, but then, some people you couldnât lie to. He deserved better than the half-lies I spat on autopilot to my father.
âTrent asked me to help him with Luna. She doesnât really talk, so sometimes she needs reassuring company when she goes places.â
âA-a-always saving p-people.â My younger brother grinned, his blond hair and blue eyes reminding me of my motherâs ice queen features. I wondered how she could turn her back on someone who looked like a carbon copy of her. Theo was a little heavy from lack of activityâhe really hated working out, but other than that, he looked like Lydia Van Der Zeeâs mini-me.
Trent got back to the table ten minutes later, dumping what looked like a whole junk food aisle from Safeway onto the table.
âThey only had sandwiches and soda in the cafeteria, and no offense, Theo, but the food here looks like some sort of a medieval punishment, but Iâm hungry.â
âYeah, I could eat just about anything right now,â I said. Trent gave Gustav, Theo, and me our sandwiches and opened all of the bags of chips.
After lunch, they bickered more about football, then Trent and Theo arm-wrestled. Trent let him win once, and for that, I wanted to kiss him openly and wildly. Theo had a small meltdown when Gustav hinted at us having to leave, but once he settled and we said our goodbyes, we were out the door and walking to Trentâs car. I felt emotionally drained but also recharged and full at the same time.
We didnât speak until he reached the traffic light onto a road leading to downtown San Diego. His Wayfarers were on and he looked cool as a cucumber.
âSaint Johnâs?â he inquired, confirming the hospital was our next destination. I didnât get it. Why was he doing it? Standing by my side, like he could get something out of it.
âYes, please. But beforeâ¦can we stop somewhere else?â
âWhere?â he asked.
âAnywhere.â I scrunched my nose, my gaze dropping to my thighs. The only excuse for what I had in mind was that I was still a teenager, and Trent was still the hottest man Iâd ever seen. His face was casual, his posture blasé. One of his arms was draped against the steering wheel and he looked a lot like a James Dean picture come to life.
âWhy?â The laughter in his voice annoyed me, but also made me hotter for him. I rubbed my bare thighs under the summer dress, feeling my cotton panties already damp just from thinking about it. âYou know why.â
âYou need to refresh my memory. Iâm old, and I donât take all my Omega-3.â
I laughed, wetting my lips as I tilted my body to face him. âSunday, we were supposed to, umâ¦â I laughed, thinking about how ridiculous it looked and felt.
âThatâs not a sentence, Van Der Zee. You will need to finish that.â
Oh, my God. He was going to make me say it. Fine. Whatever. âYou were supposed to take me from behind.â I blushed.
The car stopped with a comic screech.
Where were we? I looked outside. A vineyard between Big Heart Village and San Diego. Other than the birds chirping and golden mountains, there was nothing but fat grapes and thin, wiry trees. I wish I could say I wanted him to take me from behind as a reward for how heâd been with my brother. But the truth was, I wanted him desperately. Like you do water in the desert, in desolate sands.
âWhat are you doing?â I asked.
âFucking up a hundred grand car, probably.â He glanced over his shoulder, reversing his car, his arm slung behind my seat, before driving straight into the vineyard. On the sand, and dust, and everything else a Tesla shouldnât be on.
The car jerked to a stop a few inches from a tree, and he got out, pulling me along with him.
âWhere to?â I asked breathlessly, following his footsteps. I could see what he saw in the distance, and sweat dripped down my neck. No way was I going to do this. There was a cabin at the end of the vineyard. Empty, most likely, since the windows were shattered and the door was wide open. It belonged to someone, and that someone wasnât us. I pulled him toward the car, but instead of fighting, he picked me up and slung me across his shoulder, sauntering confidently toward the hut.
âYouâre insane. Someone could be in there. Someone could catch us.â My hair was in my face and my panties were completely exposed, as one of his arms was pressed on my thighs, making my dress ride up. He bit the soft flesh of my ass in warning, his breath hot, his pulse quick under my leg.
âI meant we should do it sometime today, not right this second.â I giggled.
âYour panties say right this second. Theyâre fucking soaked and youâre rubbing against my shoulder like youâve never had a cock in your pussy before. But we both know thatâs not true, right, Edie?â
âRight,â I lamented, raking my fingernails down his back, feeling his goose bumps even through his shirt. âBane fucked me, too,â I teased.
To that, he responded as I wanted him to. With a loud smack to my ass. I moaned, feeling the familiar rush only Trent had ever given me, and spread my legs slightly while he continued making his journey to the cabin.
âHe never fucked you like I do, and we both know that.â
No truer words were ever spoken, and as he dumped me onto a stack of hay like a rag doll, towering over me, I inwardly prayed he would kiss me again, the way he had at Viciousâ. Like there was no one else in the world but us. Reminding me that we were alive and beautiful.
âKiss me,â I breathed, blinking. Please, my eyes begged. Now, they demanded.
It was stunning, watching the way he undressed from his anger for me, still fully clothed. How his knee bent in front of me, leaned forward, clasped the back of my head, and brought me to his face, pressing his lips sweetly onto mine. Like what we were doing made some sort of sense. Like this wasnât going to blow up in our faces as soon as he declared war on my father, or my father found out Iâd slept with him.
He opened his lips, his tongue pushing in to open my mouth. I tilted my head, giving him access, holding his stubbled cheekbones in my palms, feeling how alive he was under my fingertips. I kissed him deeper, hotter, leaving a piece of soul behind, making sure that itâd seep deeper into him so heâd never forget me.
He encircled his fingers around my sweaty neck, catching some stray locks of blonde hair that stuck to my skin, and squeezed softly as his tongue flicked against mine. He sucked my tongue hungrily. My eyes rolled back, and I clenched from the inside.
âI should get rid of your ass, Van Der Zee. Already, weâre treading past the point of no return.â
âGo ahead. Iâm not going to come begging.â I swallowed against the pressure of his hand, my eyes locked on his, but I could see him releasing his cock. I knew we would do it the way we both liked. Like animals. With our clothes still on, the dry hay sticking to our sweaty skin, hard slaps of skin against skin reminding us there was nothing pretty or elegant in how we wanted one another. We would have sex the way nature intended us to. With no dignity, or pride, or shame. We wouldnât make love. Weâd battle this down like everything else we did with each other.
âYou wonât beg,â he repeated, a growing smirk decorating his face. He taunted me, holding his cock in his hand and pressing it against my sex, still clothed with underwear. He drew delicious circles around my lips with his tip, teasing the hell out of me. Again, I found myself gulping down my lust for him.
âI wonât beg.â
âYou wonât beg,â he repeated, pushing his whole cock through my panties, penetrating me. The fabric of my underwear stretched along my inner thighs painfully, and I threw my head back, wincing.
I wanted more.
I wanted it harder.
I wanted everything.
I moaned, slipping my fingers into his denim and underwear and clutching his ass as I opened my legs wider for him. âWhat are we doing?â
âExactly what I promised myself Iâd never do again. Fucking without a condom.â
He chuckled, kissing my lips, then my cheek, then my forehead. His lips met my ear and whispered what I knew would be his last words for a long time, âRemember, Edie, donât beg.â
Then he flipped me over, my stomach pressed against the hay, my ass in the air. It was so quick, I didnât have time to fathom the fact he tore my panties off of my body. They ripped at the seam on one side, and I cried out at the sudden discomfort, clutching the stack of straw, trying to whip my head around and see what he was doing. He quickly grabbed my jaw and turned it so I faced the floor.
Then he shoved one, twoâ¦three fingers into my pussy, one after the other. He curled his middle finger, immediately hitting my G-spot. He thrust cruelly, making me squirm, every bone in my body screaming at me to get away.
Donât beg. Donât ask for more. I already wanted too much.
My spine was a candlewick, melting slowly and hotly. My first climax felt wild, unnatural. Like I was bursting at the seams, my body like a too-tight corset. Pop, pop, pop, muscles tensing, belly-clenching, toes curling, every organ in my bodyâhis. The warmth was unbearable. Too much and not enough. I was going to explode into little atoms, into minuscule cells, and the worst part was that with Trent, I knew he wouldnât put me back together afterwards.
Shaking like my body wasnât mine anymore, I came on his fingers, feeling myself dripping. He pulled out his hand, wiping all of my arousal on his cock, which he fisted in his palm.
With one flexed movement, he pulled me up on all fours, guiding his cock to my rectum. I flinched before it even got there.
âYouâre making me crazy,â he said.
âYouâre making me unhinged.â I grinned, my cheek pressed against the hay. I felt his bare tip poking at my backside and clenched on instinct. He brushed his finger against my puckered hole softly. âYouâre filthy.â
âRelax for me, Edie.â
I tried, feeling the head of his cock again. It was completely lubricated with my arousal. He coated it by stroking himself up and down. At first, it was just the tip. Then the pressure shot up to my lower back, but I bit down my lip and waited for the good part.
âYouâve ruined me,â I muttered, when another inch, and then another rolled into my burning hole. I didnât enjoy it. It felt horrible. Like he was going to rip me apart.
âYouâve fucked me up pretty good, too,â he retorted, pushing all the way in. He settled there, and I bit into the hay, feeling its bitterness bite back. My fingers clutched the dirt.
He kissed my ear, my cheek, licking a lone tear of pain away. âNext time you make a joke about someone else fucking you, just remember I own every single hole in your body, including the one Iâll leave in your heart when Iâm done.â
When he moved inside me at first, I thought he was pouring gasoline into my ass and lighting a match. But after six or seven thrusts, I relaxed, getting used to his big cock inside of me. Thatâs when he snaked his hand around me, pinching my clit softly, borrowing some of my wetness from my pussy and playing with it.
âAhh.â I closed my eyes, getting lost in his touch against my sweet spot.
He kicked my legs farther apart, making me open up as a result. He pounded into me, paying close attention to my clit now. My elbows were shaking. God, yes. It felt so much fuller, and intimate, and crazier than what Iâd ever experienced.
âShit, youâre tight. Iâm gonna come.â
It felt oddly comforting to have him filling me from behind. Especially as he had one of his hands all over my pussyâfilling me from both endsâand how he clutched my waist, squeezing it extra hard every time my legs quivered so bad I was about to fall down.
âFuck, fuck, fuck.â
âJesus,â I moaned, feeling a smile on my lips.
He yanked my hair, making me arch. My shoulders met his clothed torso and he bit at the tip of my ear. âI knew youâd beg. Youâre so weak for me, Edie. So fucking gone.â
âDo it,â I hissed.
He came inside me, and I came on his handâ¦
The drive to the hospital was littered with silence and my moving around to try to soothe my sore butt. No more words were spoken. In fact, the only gesture heâd made before I poured out of his car was squeezing my thigh with a hand that still smelled very much like me.
Trent nodded to me in assurance, and I scrunched my noseâbecause that was my thing.
âWe need to stop,â I said.
âSo stop.â He shrugged.
âI will,â I lied, getting out of his car. I couldnât miss his laughter. It rang in the air long before he drove off.