The next month bled by in a string of miserable mornings and starless nights.
Blake tracked the passing of time, not with a calendar but with the shards of his heart. One day, one piece added to the worldâs most fucked-up hourglass, until he had nothing left to give.
His life had fallen apart yet again, and without Farrahâs light, all that seeped through the cracks was an ugly dark ooze. It contained everything Blake hated about himselfâhis deepest fears, his worst memories, his most selfish acts and shameful thoughts.
When heâd returned from Texas, heâd had two choices: tell Farrah the truth about Cleoâs pregnancy, including the fact that heâd never actually cheated on her, or let her go.
The first was the one heâd been so tempted to take. But it was also the selfish choice because even if Blake hadnât cheated on Farrah, heâd never deserved her in the first place.
Plus, Cleoâs father had been right. Blake did screw up peopleâs lives. He hurt the people he loved, even when he didnât want to.
His mom. His sister. Farrah. Cleo. Even his dad, if his dad could hurt.
If Blake stayed with Farrah, heâd hurt her again. It was inevitable, his curse.
So heâd let her goâeven if it meant losing himself in the process.
âHey, man. Congrats on the opening.â Landon strode up to Blake, dressed in a black Hugo Boss jacket and jeans. The dress code for LNYâs opening night was dressy casual, and the guests had followed it to a tee. âThis party is killer.â
âThanks.â Blake slapped on a smile because that was what everyone expected from him. There was no room for darkness tonight, only the lights that blazed throughout the bar and the stars in attendance. Socialites, celebrities, and business moguls alike drifted through Legends, and judging by their laughs and chatter, LNY was a massive hitâthree stories of entertainment and escape that had already generated so much buzz they couldnât keep up with the media requests.
The first floor was classic Legends: a sports bar swathed in the same upscale, down-home decor that made the brand such a hit in other cities. Antler chandeliers swayed over oak tables with leather booths, and huge flat-screen TVs lined the paneled walls, broadcasting every type of competitive sports game you could think of. The gigantic projection screen and eight rows of stadium-style seating in the corner that were reserved for the biggest sports events: NBA playoffs, the Super Bowl, the World Cup, and the Olympics.
If someone would rather play than watch games, they could immerse themselves in the rec room heaven that was the second floor, which boasted pool tables, Ping-Pong tables, dartboards, Air Hockey, foosball, beer pong, shuffleboard, board games, and even a miniature bowling alley.
The third floor was a step upâliterally and figurativelyâin terms of luxury, featuring a craft cocktail bar that morphed into a nightclub after 11 p.m. It boasted the hottest DJs, the best alcohol, and a 15-foot-tall champagne tower.
LNY was everything Blake had dreamed of. It marked the transition of Legends from your typical sports bar chain to a sports bar and nightlife franchise that took the company and brand to a whole other level.
Tonight was the VIP opening; tomorrow was the grand public opening, and itâd be even bigger. But Blake couldnât summon the rush he usually got when he saw his visions come to life.
Instead, all he could focus on was Cleoâs voice, echoing in his head in a nightmare.
âWe never had sex. You were wasted, and I brought you to one of the hotel suites to sleep it off. But I was too drunk to drive home myself and all the other rooms were full, so I stayed the night. We didnât do anything. But you didnât remember what happened when you woke up, and I was so angry with you I lied.â
âYou were one of my oldest friends. Iâd been in love with you since we were fifteen, and you broke my heart. You ran off to Shanghai and left me behind. You humiliated me! To make matters worse, you went and fell in love with some girl youâd known for only a few months. You picked her over me. Me. The person whoâs been there for you your entire life. I waited for you. I waited and waited, until you were finally there, and you did the most unforgivable thing you couldâve done: you gave me hope.â
âYou never shouldâve dated me, Blake. I wouldâve gotten over you, eventually. But you brought me flowers, and you kissed me, and you told me you loved me. You made me fall so hard for you I couldnât get up, and then you left me there. Alone. Thatâs why I was angry at you. Even if I said I was ok with us being just friends, I wasnât. But it was the only way I could keep you in my life, so I lied.â
Blood rushed in Blakeâs ears. A familiar cocktail of emotions oozed through his veinsâfury, guilt, shame, shock, remorse. All present and accounted for, like perfect students that never missed a class or an opportunity to torture him.
âYou okay?â Landonâs brow furrowed with concern. âYouâve been acting strange since you returned from Texas.â
âIâm fine.â Blake sucked down the rest of his whiskey and grinned his thanks at a TV actress who congratulated him as she passed by. âJust tired.â
He shouldâve been an actor. He could give Nate Reynolds a run for his money.
âI went to a bar that night. I was still so pissed at you, and seeing youâ¦anyway, I had too much to drink again, and I slept with a guy I met at the bar. I donât remember if we used protectionâI wasnât on the pill anymoreâbut a few months later, I found out I was pregnant.â Cleoâs lower lip trembled. âIt had to be his. He was the only person I slept with after you left for Shanghai. But I didnât even know his name, and I couldnât tell my parents that. Itâs bad enough I had sex before marriage. If they found out I had a one-night stand and got pregnant by some guy I didnât know, they would disown me.â
Blakeâs hands tightened around his empty glass.
He wanted to hate Cleo. He had hated her for the rest of that weekend, when the tension from his outburst at his fatherâs party hung heavy in the Ryan household and heâd retreated into his thoughts instead of dealing with the fallout. Heâd had to mourn his son all over again, only this time, heâd been mourning the loss of what he thought had been his. Something heâd held as truth, that had defined his life for half a decade, upended in minutes.
Would Cleo have told Blake the truth had the baby been born? Did it matter?
âYou made sense. At least we knew each other. We grew up together, and we dated. Everyone thought weâd end up together, anyway.â Tears tracked down Cleoâs face. âIâm so sorry. I was young and stupid and panicked. The secret has been tearing me apart for the past five years, but I had no idea how to tell you. It didnât seem right to do this over the phone, or that was the excuse I gave myself. But when I ran into you earlier today, I saw that as a sign.â
âI hope you can forgive me one day, and that we can have closure. I said it before, and Iâll say it againâI donât blame you for my miscarriage. It devastated meâusâbut it wasnât your fault. It was an accident. This isnât to guilt you into forgiving me, but hopefully, itâll give you the peace you need. Weâve both been through so much. I think itâs time we finally let go of our past and move on.â
As much as Blake wanted to continue hating Cleo, he couldnât. Partly because theyâd both been at faultâhim with the accident, her with the deceitâand partly because heâd been relieved. The scales had evened a bit (though it still tipped heavier on his side), and he hadnât cheated on Farrah. It may have seemed like a small detail in the grand scheme of things, but not to him.
But Farrah would never know because his need to save her from himself outweighed his relief.
âWhereâs Farrah?â It was like Landon read his mind, except he didnât know about Blake and Farrahâs split or what happened in Texas. Blake had been too busy and too miserable to hash out the details with his best friend or anyone else. âI havenât seen her all night.â
âShe couldnât make it.â Blakeâs smile hurt. That was the thing about fakenessâit made everyone around you feel better but ate at you on the inside.
âShe okay?â Landonâs worried expression didnât budge. âShe wouldnât miss a big night like this.â
No, she wouldnât.
Not unless Blake forced her to.
âAs far as I know.â Blake was dying for another drink.
Heâd done the right thing, letting Farrah go before she got in too deep with him again. It didnât matter that it destroyed him to do so; all that mattered was doing the unselfish thing, for once.
âIs it just me, or is it really fucking hot in here?â Sweat beaded on Blakeâs forehead. The air thickened, choking him. He needed to get out of here, but it was his party. He couldnât leave.
His head pounded in rhythm with his pulse.
Thud. Thud. Thud.
âThere are a ton of people here.â The concern on Landonâs face escalated. âMaybe you shouldââ He stopped short. âWhoa. Is that who I think it is?â
âYeah, Pat spoke to her publicist, and she agreed toââ
âNo, itâs not a celebrity. Blake. Look.â Landonâs eyes gleamed with a strange excitement.
Blake looked.
And looked again.
His jaw dropped.
What the hell were they doing here?
âBlake!â Joy waved at him and pushed her way through the crowd, channeling Tinkerbell with her green dress and blonde waves. âSurprise!â
Behind her trailed Blakeâs mother, looking star struck by all the celebrities surrounding her, and a man Blake never thought heâd see step foot in one of his bars: Joe Ryan. His father.