Chapter 12
The Dare (Briar U Book 4)
I canât get a read on Taylor. Outside the bar I thought we had a connection. I might be a fucking idiot sometimes, but I know when a girl is kissing me back. She definitely felt something. But the moment we stopped, she shut down again, slammed a door in my face, and now Iâm driving her home with the distinct impression sheâs mad at me again.
I canât figure out what she wants from me. Iâd leave her alone, stay out of her life, if I believed thatâs what Taylor really wanted, but I donât think thatâs the case.
âDid I make a mistake kissing you?â I ask, glancing over at the passenger side.
She put her sweater back on, which is a damn shame. The silky top she had on before was hot as hell. My dick is still aching for her.
Sheâs silent for a long time, looking out the window like she canât get far enough away from me. Finally, she spares me a quick look and says, âIt was a nice kiss.â
Nice?
Well, fuck me. Thatâs the most lukewarm response to a kiss Iâve ever received. And Iâm not sure it answers my question.
âThen whatâs wrong?â I press.
âItâs justâ¦â She lets out a sigh. âI mean, think about all those people at the bar looking at us.â
Frankly, I didnât even notice anyone else. When Iâm with her, Iâm only watching Taylor. Someone about her reels me in, and itâs not just the fact that my body is primed for her. Yes, Iâd love to bang her brains out, but thatâs not the reason I showed up at the diner uninvited earlier.
Taylor Marsh has no idea how cool she is, and thatâs a fucking shame.
âIâm sorry if I embarrassed you,â I say gruffly. âThat wasnât my intention.â
âNo, I know. But come on, you have to know what people would say about someone like you with someone like me.â
âIâm not sure what you mean.â
âDamn it, Conor, donât act like it isnât obvious. I get it, youâre trying to make me feel better and thatâs sweet, but letâs be real. People see us and they think, what is he doing with her? Weâre a punchline.â
âBullshit. I donât believe that.â
âOh my God, you heard it yourself at the banquet! You heard all the shit Abigail and her douche army were saying about us.â
âSo what? I donât give a shit what other people think.â I donât live my life on the basis of other peopleâs opinions or to please anyone but myself. If sheâd just fucking let me, Iâd like to try pleasing Taylor, too.
âWell, maybe you should. Because I can assure you, theyâre not thinking nice things about us.â
Thereâs ice in her voice that Iâve never heard from her before. Hatred, even. Itâs not directed at me, but Iâm starting to get a sense of how deep her insecurities go.
My next breath comes out ragged, frustrated. âIâll keep saying this until it sinks in, but thereâs nothing wrong with you, Taylor. There isnât some arbitrary hierarchy between us. I want you. Iâve wanted you since the moment I watched you cross the room at that party.â
Her turquoise eyes widen slightly.
âI mean it,â I say. âI have a thousand filthy thoughts about you a day. That night in my room when you were running your fingers through my hair, I had half a hard-on just lying there.â
I pull up outside Taylorâs apartment building and throw the Jeep in park. I angle my body so Iâm facing her, but her eyes remain fixed forward.
The frustration builds again. âI get it. You have body issues. Whatever youâve experienced in your life, itâs made you hate the way you look and hide yourself in leggings and baggy sweaters.â
Finally she turns her head. âYou have no idea what itâs like to be me,â she says flatly.
âI donât. But I think if you tried, just a little, to accept yourself, you might figure out that everyone else has their own insecurities too. And maybe youâll believe a guy when he tells you heâs wildly attracted to you.â I shrug. âWear whatever the hell you want, Taylor. But your body is incredible and you should be able to flaunt it, not live your life in a paper bag.â
She abruptly rips off her seatbelt and grabs the door handle.
âTaylorââ
âGoodnight, Conor. Thanks for the ride.â
Then sheâs gone, slamming the door.
The fuck did I do?
I want to hop out and run after her, but I recognize the internal voice thatâs urging me to do that. Itâs that voice in the back of my head where all my really dumb ideas come from. The self-destructive, self-deprecating jackass who takes anything good and easy and pure and just fucking starts tearing at it with his teeth.
Truth is, Taylor doesnât actually know me at all. She has no idea the shithead I was back in LA or the shit I did to fit in. She has no idea that most of the time I still donât fitâhere, there, or anywhere at all. That for years Iâve been trying on masks until Iâve almost forgotten what I look like underneath. Never satisfied with the result.
I keep trying to convince Taylor to go easy on herself, appreciate her body and who she is, but I canât even convince myself. So what the hell am I doing getting wrapped up with a girl like herâa good person who doesnât need my bullshitâwhen I havenât even gotten myself figured out?
Sighing, I reach for the gearshift. Instead of running after Taylor, I drive home. And I tell myself itâs for the best.