Between Never and Forever: Part 1 – Chapter 1
Between Never and Forever: Dex and Keelani’s Fake Engagement Story (Hardy Billionaires)
âIâm not screwing you against a tree in the woods, Kee.â Dex Hardyâs voice was restrained as he pulled back to glare at me. His piercing green gaze didnât waver even when I frowned at him.
âLive a little, Dex.â I ran a hand through my tousled waves and pouted in the moonlight. The cool breeze whipped between us, and he tightened his jacket over my long-sleeved dress.
âLive a little? You dragged me to this underage party in a dress thatâs two sizes too small for youââ
I looked down at the stretchy violet fabric that hugged every one of my curves. âYou donât like it?â
âYou know I like it. Too much. Itâs the only reason Iâm here tonight.â He grunted. âI donât need twenty guys also liking it and taking advantage of you when Iâm not around.â
I leaned against the trunk of the tree to stare up at him. âThen take advantage of me instead.â
âKee, Iâm not indulging in your recklessness tonight. Itâs not happening here.â His eyes were determined now, hardened dark emeralds shining brightly in his decision. Dex never wavered once he made up his mind.
âItâs better out here than somewhere someone might catch us.â
He sighed, and I saw how his muscles relaxed a bit under his dark T-shirt. âI donât really give a fuck if someone sees me with my girlfriend.â
The way he emphasized the label made the butterflies in my stomach flutter and then immediately scatter from the whoosh of fear I felt. âDonât call me that when you know we canât be together.â
He shook his head, his dark hair long enough that it fell over his forehead before he combed it back. âThen we shouldnât be out here in the woods.â
I crossed my arms. âYou agreed to keep us a secret while I figure things out with the record label, Dex.â
âItâs been a whole damn year, Kee. A year of me loving you, and a year of you wanting me to keep it a secret. For what?â The question flew from his mouth just as thunder rumbled in the distance. The clouds were rolling in for the night just as clouds were rolling in for our relationship too.
âTrinity Enterprises wants me to look like that all-American girl, okay?â Even as I said it, I hated the reason.
âIs Ethan the all-American guy?â He lifted a brow as he threw Ethanâs name in my face.
âHeâsâ¦â I didnât know what to say, honestly. Trinity Enterprises definitely wanted us to date. They had us perform together every chance they got. We attended award shows together, galas, magazine cover shoots, everything. âWe donât want each other. Itâs just for the press.â
His jaw ticked. âImagine seeing another woman on my arm.â
âI already have. Gabriella was all over you tonight.â My stomach twisted in knots, the butterflies in it now curdling with the acid of jealousy flowing through my veins.
âKee.â He turned away from me and stormed off. Then he spun back and strode up to me to point his finger in my face. âYou set us up. You wanted me to date her.â
I squeezed my eyes shut, trying so hard to find the strength to keep this charade up. âYouâre right. And you should be with her. Sheâs great.â She had long auburn hair, a nice smile, and she was a good friend to all of us. She wasnât messy like me, didnât come with a million pieces of baggage that Dex shouldnât have to deal with.
âI donât want anybody but you.â His dark eyebrows dipped low as he tipped my chin up and rubbed it with his thumb, back and forth, back and forth.
âYou can have me here,â I whispered. âJust not out there.â
âI want you every-fucking-where.â
âYou have me. Here. In private. Itâs just for now. Weâll have each other forever soon enough.â
He just shook his head at me and tucked his hands into the pockets of his jeans. âIn private. How is that supposed to be good enough? Especially when in public youâll have another man all over you?â
I took a shaky breath. âItâs only for a while.â
âRemind me. How long is your contract with Trinity, Kee?â He crossed his arms.
âThree more years.â I sighed.
âYeah.â His square jaw worked up and down. âExactly.â
âLook, just⦠Iâm not stopping you from being with others.â I tried to be fair, even though the words felt stilted as I said them.
His jaw worked again, over and over. He stared at me like he wanted me to understand this wasnât a good idea, like he was trying to see if I knew it wasnât. When I didnât show weakness, he said, âFine. You know what? Fine. Letâs go.â
We both stomped through the woods, branches under our boots cracking and breaking like I thought my heart might. We traveled back up the hill to our friendâs home. Her parents were out of town, but the white ranch house was lit up with life. We saw Gabriella and Dimitri, Dexâs younger brother and my best friend standing there.
Gabriella squealed as we approached them; sheâd obviously had more than one drink in the time I was gone as she screeched, âWhere were you?â
Sheâd been a good, longtime friend but one I kept at armâs length. No one had learned much about me in high school except Dimitri. Iâd been a loner, throwing my songs on social media and running around the neighborhood with Dimitri and Dex as a freshman. My junior year, though, Trinity Enterprises had caught a video of me and signed me as an artist.
Suddenly, everyone at school wanted to be my friend, but Dimitri and Dex were the only ones I trusted. They were the only ones whoâd been there before everyone else.
âDonât make it so damn obvious next time. Gabriellaâs been looking for you both for the past twenty minutes,â Dimitri whispered, âIâm not going to cover your asses just because youâre my best friend, Kee.â Yet, his glare was softer than Dexâs as he chastised meânicer, sweeter. Dimitri would always be there for me even if the dynamic had shifted when Iâd finally admitted to him that I had a crush on Dex.
Dexâs eyes locked on mine as Gabriella gave me a hug.
âOh, I was just taking a call from my agent,â I answered fast.
She leaned into Dex. âUgh. Isnât Keelani amazing? Iâm waiting for the day that I get a call from a freaking record label.â
I shook my head. âItâs not all rainbows and butterflies, Gabriella.â I might have been talking to her, but I held Dexâs gaze.
âRight.â She shrugged, and when the thunder rumbled again, she waved us all inside. We weaved through the crowded living room and found some space in the kitchen, where Gabriella continued on. âIt must be nice, though, Keelani. You donât have to hang out with us all the time. Instead, youâre hanging with celebrities like Ethan Phillipe.â
That comment had Dexâs neck flexing and the words in my throat catching. A silence that crackled with tension filled the space. Thankfully, Dimitri laughed right as Dexâs friend, Kyle, meandered up to us. His lopsided smile was full of delight as he lightly slapped Dex on the back. âSlumming it at home when youâre in college now, bro?â
âJust here to see my brother and apparently you.â Dex shrugged and then leaned against the island countertop even though his eyes were on me.
âAnd me!â Gabriella snuggled close to him, their hips side by side, her head against his chest, and her hand smoothing the T-shirt that I knew was thin enough for her to feel his six pack.
Dimitri swung an arm around me and then whispered, âYou need a drink.â
âI need four,â I grumbled and disappeared with Dimitri into the basement where I knew there was a whole bar.
Dex didnât follow me. I knew he wouldnât. I walked away from the love of my life as my friend hung on his arm like she belonged there.
That night, we all drank too much. I remember offering Dex drinks, but he continued to say no, continued to say that we should leave.
Instead, I turned back to the oak bar counter and hopped onto it. âWhoâs ready for a dance party?â
âYouâre being reckless again,â Dex growled as he stared up at me.
âIâm letting loose.â I swayed my hips and smirked down at him. âYou should try it.â
âWe need to leave,â he said, but I ignored him. âYouâve had too much to drink, Keelani.â
âI hate when you call me that,â I whispered to him because he knew it was my formal stage name and I didnât want to be that here. I didnât really want to be her anywhere. The label was suffocating, the responsibility was draining, and the rules were binding. The last thing I wanted was a lecture from him now.
But I needed one. I was too stirred up in my emotions and too immature to think of the repercussions.
I poured alcohol down everyoneâs throats, was the life of the party, and tried to enjoy myself so much so that I wouldnât have to consider the realities of my situation. When Dex had finally had enough, Kyle offered to drive us all home.
Laid-back Kyle whoâd drank just about as much as me. Kyle who was so sweet and genuine. Heâd wanted to help.
Dex said no. Even Dimitri looked wary, but Gabriella and I were too far gone to listen to reason. We ran through the freezing rain and folded into his car without looking back at Dimitri and Dex, laughing like we were getting away with not obeying a parent.
We just wanted to have fun, but it wasnât as fun when Dex followed me into that car, unwilling to let me go on my own and gave me a look about as stormy as the weather.
âItâll be fine,â I whispered to him because Gabriella was between us, giggling still.
Yet, the night was dark, the roads slippery, the rain heavy on the windshield.
How safe did you feel on a bridge in a vehicle going seventy on a highway in icy rain? Safe enough to text? To tell your friends in the back seat youâre fine, youâve got it under control?
âKyle. Youâve got to slow down,â Dex yelled right as Dimitri swore from the front seat.
But it was too late.
Kyleâs confidence that night cost him his life. When he looked up from his text, he was veering into oncoming traffic. He overcorrected, yanking the steering wheel straight towards the railing.
The vehicle crunched all around our bodies in a way I never expected.
I vaguely remember the sound of the collision into the siderail. It was deafening, so booming it rattled our bones as the front of the car scraped, metal on metal, against the side of the highway. It all happened so fast.
And so slowly.
The car almost seemed to halt. The air was pushed out of my lungs at the slicing pain of the seat belt. But the sound Iâd never forget was that of Gabriellaâs screams. They pierced through the air, filled with fear. She hadnât been wearing her seat belt, and the momentum carried her forward as we were jerked back.
The car flipped off the edge of the highway. Flipped over and over. The impact and her screams were loud, but the silence as the car fell and tipped upside down was louder.
Down, down, and down.
Into the dark depths of the water.
When we hit the lake, our fragile bodies jerked all around in the dark, and the lights of the car immediately went out.
It was probably only a second of us floating there, suspended on top of water before it began to sink, but it felt like forever before I heard Dexâs voice, pointed, direct, and determinedââDo not panic, Kee. You hear me? Donât fucking panic.ââbut it held fear.
We were too young. None of us knew what to do in a life-and-death situation.
âI canât⦠I canât swim well.â I wiggled as the blood rushed to my head. We were all hanging upside down by our seat belts as water crept toward our heads fast. I reached for the button but found it harder to press with the pressure of my body against it. âI canât getââ
He reached around me and undid my buckle as he yelled to his brother, âUnbuckle and get the hell out.â
I hit the roof of the car that was now sinking and the waterâs freezing temperature immediately made me gasp. Dex was there to catch my gaze.
âI got you, Kee. I got you, okay?â
I shook my head, trying to glance around and see where everyone was. I saw Dimitri struggling with a door, but Kyle wasnât moving. Dark liquid was dripping from his head. Was it water or blood? And then I saw the hole in the windshield.
So big that a body could have fit through it.
Shattered.
Water rushed in, and my eyes widened.
âKee.â Dexâs hands went to my face. âFocus. Youâre going to follow me, okay? I. Got. You.â
âNo. What?â I whispered before I screamed, âDonât get me. Get her! Get Gabriella! Where is she?â I tried to yank my face away in a panic, but he was pulling me forward. âWhere is she?â I think shock was taking over as I started to shake, my clothes soaking in the inky black liquid that was rising faster and faster. The car was sinking, which meant we were about to be under water, under a sheet of ice in the dark.
No one heard about people surviving car crashes in freezing water. They heard about the tragic results, and we were about to be one.
âFuck,â he swore over and over as he pushed at the door. It didnât budge. âGet ready to swim. Weâre going through the windshieldââ
And then his face disappeared as we went under. I donât remember taking a breath or grabbing back on to his hand. I donât remember how he and Dimitri somehow got the door open or if we went through the hole in the windshield once we were fully submerged by them pulling me through it.
I donât remember swimming out. I donât know if I even did. He probably dragged me the whole way. I saw how his eyes held so much determination, so much fear in that moment that he would have been propelled to do almost anything.
I put my life in their hands because a body shifts into survival mode and trusts who it must. Deep in my bones, I knew I could trust Dex.
He found the hole in the ice the car had broken through, and they maneuvered me up onto it. We were lucky it didnât break under our weight. Others werenât as lucky.
So fast a life could be taken.
So fast a person could become a hero, a victim, a survivor, or a villain.
Dimitri pulled me close as I shook from either the freezing temperature or the adrenaline coursing through my veins but he grabbed Dex with his other hand. âYouâre not going back in.â
âIâve got to find them.â Dexâs eyes were wild. âIâve got to.â
He dove back through that hole in the ice as I heard blood curdling screams all around us.
They were mine. Me, screaming for him to come back, screaming and crying and fighting Dimitri as he pulled me to safety and lifted me up to carry me away from the lake.
Lightning struck and thunder rumbled over the sound of sirens approaching. When the cops and ambulance got there, they had to sedate me.
I remember the icy rain on my face, the lightning in the sky, and the rumble of that thunder before I blacked out.
âKeelani.â My dadâs calloused hand was in mine as he took me home from the hospital the next day. I heard the disappointment in his voice. âIâm glad youâre okay but the local news is starting to trend.â
Right. He wasnât glad. No one sounded that dejected when they were happy. âLast night wasââ
âA complete tragedy. You shouldnât have beenâ¦â He took a deep breath and pulled his hand out of mine to turn into the driveway. He didnât move to get out once he shut off the ignition, and instead, his hands tightened on the steering wheel. He put his forehead against it before he looked up at me with his tired brown eyes. âYouâre so lucky to be alive, Kee.â
I glanced away when I saw the tears in his eyes. My father didnât cry much. He was too big of a man, too stoic in the collared shirts and flannel tees that he wore with his khakis every day. âI know Iâm lucky.â
âThe townâs reporting on you and Dex, though. I wonât ever be able to thank him enough for saving you, but the media is painting a picture of the two of you as a couple now. Heâs the hero who saved you, then went back for his brother and his friends. Your manager⦠Mitchell at Trinity Enterprises thinks the narrative will spread to national outlets and hinder your brand if they donât intervene.â
âDad,â I whispered, my eyes cutting to his fast. âYou canâtâ¦â
âYou all had a high blood alcohol levels. Kyle lost his life, and Gabriella is in a coma. If she comes out of it, she wonât be able to walk for months, Kee. She was dating Dex, but he saved you?â He asked the question like he already knew the answer. My heart beat rapidly as my mind scrambled for a response. He tsked. âYouâre a public figure. Youâre contractually obligated to be withâ¦â
It wasnât in writing, it was only a verbal instruction, but we all knew the truth. Trinity Enterprises wouldnât allow me to be with anyone other than Ethan.
Gabriella was supposed to be the one Dex saved. Not me. And because he did that, heâd outed us to the world. They painted him as a hero at first, as the boy who dragged the girl he loved out of that water to save her. They said he loved me, that he risked his life for mine.
âTrinity is working on changing the narrative,â my dad concluded.
âDad, what does that mean?â
âIt doesnât matter, Kee!â He smacked the steering wheel in frustration and then put his forehead against it. âThey get to do whatever damage control they want. And you need to agree because otherwise youâre in breach of a very big contract that we canât pay back.â
I stayed silent. The contract and record label were things I didnât want to work out, but I knew what the money meant for the family.
âI spoke with Mitchell.â Of course heâd spoken with my manager. âTheyâre willing to give us a bit of a bonus if you move to Nashvilleââ
âNashville?â I screeched. âDad, I canât leave you and Mom. What are you talking about?â
âIâll take the bonus and work on some things. Get you back here as soon as I get a bit more money.â He mulled over his options, but I knew what it would come down to. My dad always tried to save everything by going to visit the casino or by placing a bet with a bookie that never worked out.
âWhat if I just do more shows?â I asked even though I didnât want to do that.
He shook his head and looked out the window at our small house. âWe need this for your mom, Kee. The stroke she had⦠She canât work anymore, and with the bonus, I can get her some medical care.â
âDad,â I whispered, âplease donât make me go.â
âWeâve agreed that it would be best for you and your career. Youâre almost eighteen. Itâll be great. Your image will be safer there. Weâll have you paired up with the best in the industry. Youâll give us some breathing room too for Mom to heal.â
âBreathing room?â
âKeelani.â He turned to me now, his eyes hardened to make the point. âYou know the mental toll of all weâve been through? And then you were at a party drinking with men you shouldnât have been with.â His voice was cajoling but his words struck at my heart.
âMen? Theyâre my friends. Theyâre our neighbors, Dad. Dex and Dimitriââ
âThey donât know about our financial struggles or how much your job means to our family, do they?â He lifted a brow. âThey may be friends, but weâre family. We stick together. This bonus will help. I can make it work.â
His tone sounded so hopeful with that statement. Even though I knew time and time again that we lost money from his gambling, I still wished heâd win big one day, if only for the happiness it would bring for a moment. The times heâd come home with a few winnings this past year, heâd smiled so big. Yet, the rest of the year hadnât been so good.
âIâll get you back here in a few months if Nashville doesnât work out,â he promised as if he could. My father had lost his office job years ago but had somehow stretched our money out since my motherâs stroke. I knew heâd made some shady deals by just the looks of some of the men who now came around our house, but I didnât question it. We were family, just like Dad said.
âDad, I was going to go to college here,â I tried. âI really want to be close. Other kidsâ parents areââ
âIf this is the worst thing I do to you as a parent, you can thank me, Keelani,â my father cut me off, his tone hardening. âYou can take online courses.â
âThatâs not the point.â
âThe point is your plane leaves next week. Donât give a statement to anyone. Your new contract has an indemnity clause, which means you canât refute anything released from Trinity about this car wreck.â
Had I fucked up that much that he sounded so disheartened, so disappointed? I hated that. âDad, I just want this all to work out.â
âI know, Kee. I know. It will. Your mom will get better.â He said it with conviction, and I heard the love he had in his voice. âWe just have to do this for her. You understand?â
I nodded because he was my dad, and Iâd have done just about anything to take away the pain I was causing.
âAnd, Kee, if youâre sneaking around with that Dex who saved you, end it. End it now.â