: Chapter 13
Birthday Girl
I pull into the driveway, my body jostling from side to side as the headlights fall on the closed garage ahead. Pressing in the clutch, I hit the brake and park, turning off the engine.
The bar cleared out early, Shel and a couple of the other girls staying to close up, so I got out well before two tonight. Pike only left an hour ago, but heâs undoubtedly in bed by now. Heâs not a night owl.
I look over, seeing Coleâs Challenger parked in the next spot. Heâs home.
I knit my brow, apprehension suddenly hitting me.
The distance between us is growing, and I feel like heâs miles away these days. The need he seemed to have for me a couple weeks ago is almost non-existent now, and I wonder why Iâm still here.
But I have an idea.
Guilt winds its way through my gut as I remember what happened in the shower the other day, and how my brain took a completely different turn than I wanted. Or didnât know I wanted.
It was just the stress. The moment got away from me, and Pike was a focal point. Heâs been nice and caring, and Iâve been starved for a little attention, and I zoned in on him. Thatâs it.
At this point, though, I have almost no reason to stay here, but still, even with Coleâs and my problems, I hate the idea of leaving. This house has become familiar and warm. A home. And even though Pike can certainly be an invasive ass sometimes, I do like him. He cares. He doesnât express his concerns very eloquently, of course, but I know his intentions are in the right place. Itâs nice to have someone looking out for me and giving a damn about what I do.
And I hate to admit it, but I like the way he makes me feel. The way his eyes look at me like Iâm the only thing in the world.
Climbing out of the truck, I grab my bag with the corset in it. I changed into a T-shirt before I left the bar, and while I felt pretty exposed all night with a few more pairs of eyes on me than Iâm used to, I quirk a smile to myself, thinking of the wad of tips in my pocket right now. Itâs not nearly what Cam makes or what I could make bartending at The Hook, but itâs more than I normally earn in a week, soâ¦
And I canât lie. I kind of liked the attention. I knew the moment his eyes were on me tonight when he walked in and I was at the juke box. I could see him out of the corner of my eye when I walked to the bar, too, and I know that look. Possessive.
I lock the truck door, my heart thudding again as I head for the house.
I need to talk to Cole. I need to look into his eyes and take his hand in mine, look down at our matching little scars and see if I still feel this going anywhere. A few months ago, he always had his arm around me. Now I canât remember the last time heâs touched me.
Entering the house, I close the door, drop my bag, and slip off my flats. I curl my toes, the ache in my feet shooting up my calves.
The living room is shrouded in shadow, and I walk to the dark staircase and stop, listening. No noise comes from upstairs, so Pike and Cole are probably both asleep. Trying to be as quiet as possible, I tiptoe into the kitchen and take a glass from the cupboard, pressing it under the water dispenser on the fridge.
But when I glance up, I see Cole in the back yard and freeze.
I drop my hand from the dispenser, the glass upending and the water in it splattering all over the wooden floor. Heat courses up my neck, my lungs empty, and I canât look away. Everything hits me at once, and I feel like Iâm outside myself, watching me watch him.
Cole.
I swallow twice, barely able to wet my throat. Elena Barros is in the pool with him, her elbows resting behind her on the edge, while he leans down into her, his forehead pressed to hers like he does with me. Her naked body glistens with water and moves in a wave, matching his rhythm as he grips her ass and fucks her, her breasts grazing his chest again and again.
Absently, I take a step, coming to the sink, and continue to try to process what Iâm seeing. Cole would never do this to me. Heâs not my ex. Heâs not my parents.
My chest caves, too heavy to take in more air. Nausea rolls through my stomach, and bile rises up my throat.
He cups her face, kissing her, his body moving steady and strong, and they hold each otherâs eyes as he enters her again and again. I canât hear her moans, but I know sheâs enjoying it.
Tears fill my eyes, I tighten my fist around the glass, and I clench my teeth. Iâm angry with myself more than him. I shouldâve been the one to end it when we got evicted from our apartment. I knew he only wanted me because he didnât want to be alone. I could feel it then.
But now here we are, and heâs had the last word, hasnât he?
My chin trembles, and the tears still over. My mom, Jay, Coleâ¦. I am forever the most pathetic fucking person I know. I keep wishing the lousiest people wanted me. Why?
âHey,â someone says, but the voice sounds distant. âHome early, huh? Glad youâre not wearing the corset. Did you burn it for me?â
The fridge opens, and the light pours out as someone digs in and pulls something out, but I keep staring out the window, something cold and thick slowly coating my stomach like syrup.
I can change the moment I decide.
âJordan?â I hear Pike say. âAre you okay?â
I finally realize heâs standing next to me. The fridge door closes, and I turn to look at him, tears still wet on my cheeks.
His hazel eyes, looking amber right now, immediately narrow, concerned. But then his gaze flashes to the window, and all color drains from his face.
âOh, Jesus,â he growls and grabs my arm, pulling me away.
I lose my composure and start gasping, drawing in heavy, shallow breaths as he veers around me and storms out the back door. I wipe the tears from my face, because Iâm upset and hurt but mostly just pissed. And not entirely with Cole, either. I did this to myself. I always do this to myself.
âWhat the hell are you doing?â I hear Pike bark.
I hear a slosh of water, surprised voices, and a gasp.
âShit!â Cole exclaims. âI thought you were asleep.â
âNo oneâs fucking asleep!â
âWhat?â Cole says.
No one. I think he just realized Iâm home, too.
Drying my eyes, I walk across the kitchen and let my legs do the thinking.
Pushing through the back door, I descend the wooden stairs and see Elena hiding her naked body behind Cole who is still waist deep in the water.
âWhat is the matter with you?â Pike stalks over, picking up the towels and throwing them at his son.
He catches them and Elena snatches one, quickly covering herself as half the towel hits the water around her. She cast me scared glances.
âI thought she was at work until two,â Cole tells him, sounding guilty and speaking to his father as if Iâm not here. His head is bowed, and heâs not meeting anyoneâs eyes.
âSo doing it behind her back is okay?â
âNo, I justââ
âI can handle this,â I cut them both off, stepping up.
I surprise myself by how calm my tone is and how Iâm not crying. I donât mind crying in front of Cole, but Iâm not tearing up in front of her.
Pike looks over at me, hesitating for several seconds. Finally, he turns around, and I hear the screen door shut.
As soon as heâs gone, Elena quickly runs out of the pool, tightening the towel around her as she grabs her clothes from the lawn chair.
âIâm going to go,â she says, an apologetic look on her face as her eyes dart between Cole and me. âIâm really sorry, Jordan.â
She ducks her head and rushes past me, toward the house and probably straight to the bathroom, so she can change.
I turn my eyes back on Cole. His blond hair is slicked back, and he looks at me with the same eyes he had right before he told me that Nick didnât make it.
I wish I was angrier with him.
Mostly, Iâm just disappointed.
âItâs been going on a while?â I ask.
His eyes fall, and he nods solemnly. âSince your birthday party.â
You mean the one I didnât attend?
He takes a deep breath and squares his shoulders, stepping out of the pool and wrapping the towel around his waist.
âIâve known you a long time,â he says, âand we both needed each other a lot when this started, but you were always going to move on. You know that.â
âSo why did I come here at all?â I ask him. âWhy keep me around?â
I could ask myself the same questions. We were both weak, hanging on to the only good thing we each had. And we ignored how by staying together we were ruining it.
I love him. Heâs my friend. How could he humiliate me like this?
âYou werenât supposed to be like him,â I told him, tears pooling again.
He looks up, knowing exactly who Iâm talking about. Jay was a piece of shit. Not Cole. Cole knew what I went through. Was he trying to hurt me?
âYou were my friend first,â I go on. A friend is supposed to be good to you.
But he doesnât say anything. Thereâs nothing to say. Itâs not his fault it ended. Itâs just his fault it ended so badly.
âIn our bed, too?â I ask him. âOn the nights I was working?â
His silence tells me Iâm right, and a wave of anger suddenly hits me. Did Pike know that Cole had her over? Or maybe other girls over?
But noâI stop myself, the knots in my stomach unwinding a little. He seemed as shocked as me just now.
I nod, also realizing Cole didnât meet Elena out alone, either. He met up with her at parties, no doubt. âAnd all your friends knew,â I say, the betrayal becoming perfectly clear.
Iâm on my own now. Aside from Cam and the ladies at the bar, Iâd lost my last friend.
He approaches, stopping in front of me. âIâm going to stay with Elena for a while,â he says. âYou stay here until you canââ
âFuck you.â I raise my eyes, saying it with the same indifference as âyouâre welcome.â
Heading back into the house, I donât stop to see if Elena is gone or if sheâs waiting out by Coleâs car. I pick up my bag and head to the bedroom, pulling out my cell phone and sliding down to the floor against the closed door.
I dial, the line picks up on the fourth ring, and I swipe away a silent tear as I harden my voice. âHey, Dad.â
The next day, I stare at Coleâs and my bedroom, his stuff discarded where he left it and every last item of mine finally packed up and in the car.
I guess Iâm glad I didnât bring much. Most of my clothes fit in the two suitcases I haveâone belonging to Cam that I brought when I thought I was going to leave a couple weeks ago.
But then Pike Lawson built me a garden, and it just goes to show, no man has had to do much to get me to come running back.
I laugh at myself under my breath. I will miss the garden, though.
I carry the last box through the living room, resisting the urge to take a last look at the garden through the kitchen window, and walk out the front door, seeing Pikeâs truck pulling in from work.
My heart starts thumping harder. Dammit. I wish I couldâve gotten out of here before he got home. Itâs not even five yet. I cut out of the lunch shift early, so I could get packed up and out of here in time, too. Whatâs he doing home already?
âWhat are you doing?â He follows me around the truck.
I shove the box into my backseat, on top of another one, and the car is just big enough to hold everything I came with. It all fits in two suitcases and three boxes. Everything else is in storage. And I donât see me getting it out anytime soon, either. My fatherâs âhouseâ doesnât have room for a drafting table any more than my bedroom here.
âThank you for everything,â I tell him, knowing he knows exactly what Iâm doing. âYouâve been really amazing.â
âYouâre leaving?â He looks confused.
I close the car door and turn to him, my stomach rolling as I swallow the lump in my throat.
âWith Cole gone, and us broken up, itâs not right for me to stay,â I say. âYou never had any obligation to help me, but you did, and I canât thank you enough. I really do appreciate everything.â And then I canât help but force a little smile for both our sakes. âEspecially my cassette tapes.â
I stare at his troubled eyes, the green in the irises seeming to grow darker, and an ache hits my chest. I turn away, pretending to make sure the doorâs closed to have a second to collect myself.
âMy dad is letting me come home for a while.â I turn and tell him. âIâll be okay.â
âButâ¦â
âOh, I forgot my purse.â I run my fingers through the top of my hair and bolt for the house, not letting him finish as I rush away.
I donât want to argue with him, and Iâm afraid if he says anything else, Iâll start crying.
I donât want to leave, but I know I have no right to be here anymore, and maybe heâll come into the bar from time to time to visit, right? Maybe Iâll see him around more now that I know him, and Iâd recognize him.
Of course, Iâm upset about Cole, too. Iâve spoken to him practically every day for the last three years.
But I want to be away from him. I donât really like leaving Pike.
Whoâs going to make him converse with people, and whoâs going to sneak in the vanilla extract and cinnamon he doesnât realize he likes in his coffee now?
I blink away the sting in my eyes, growling at myself. Heâll be fine. He survived thirty-eight years without me, didnât he?
Plucking my purse off the couch, I open it, doing a visual inventory: cards, keys, wallet, phoneâ¦. And I close it, doing a mental check and making sure I grabbed my phone charger, my razor and shampoo from the shower, and any remaining laundry in the washer and dryer.
Shit. I forgot to replace his loofah, didnât I? Oh, wellâ¦
I finally take a deep breath, realizing I have everything, I guess.
Walking back outside, I fix a half-smile on my face and straighten my spine. To the left, Kyle Cramer trails inside his house with a couple kids who I assume are his, but I donât make eye contact. I donât want the neighbors getting nosy.
âJordanâ¦â Pike starts in one me.
But I cut him off. âThank you so much again. For everything.â
I head to the driverâs side and open the door, my stomach knotting into a thousand little balls, each one getting tighter and tighter.
âJordan,â he calls again. âThat carâs not ready to go. Itâll stall every time you stop.â
I give him a shaky smile. âIâll deal with it. Really, Iâm all panicked out. I donât think much will upset me anymore. Iâll be fine.â
Pulling out my keys, I climb in. âThanks for all the work you did on it already. You definitely didnât need to do all that.â
âWait,â he blurts out, sounding urgent.
I stop, unable to look at him, but I feel him take a step forward. He hesitates like heâs searching for words.
I glance up.
âJustâ¦â He shakes his head, looking exasperated. âMove the stuff into the back of my truck. Iâll take you.â
I open my mouth to argue, but he cuts me off.
âI need to finish the VW,â he says. âIt needs to stay here for a couple more days. And donât give me attitude about it. Can you all of a sudden afford a mechanic?â