Undeniably Enemies: Chapter 8
Undeniably Enemies: A Brother’s Best Friend, Age Gap Romance (Boston’s Irresistible Billionaires Book 5)
âHowâs your rotation going in the emergency department?â my adviser Joe asks, perched on the corner of his desk, giving me the intense look he always does.
âItâs going well,â I tell him. âI love the ER, and the intern Iâve been assigned to is great.â
âIâm glad to hear that. That hasnât necessarily been the case with some of your peers so it sounds like you got a good one.â
I pause at that. Then I remember Jack hates me and wouldnât intentionally give me a good intern. It has to be random as I initially thought. Right?
âWhat about your attending physician?â he continues as if reading my mind.
Heâs a beautiful bastard who I wish worked anywhere but there so I wouldnât have to see him every damn day. âHeâs fine.â
âWhich one were you assigned to again?â He turns to search his paperwork, but I make it easy for him.
âJack Kincaid.â
He nods. âGood. Good. Heâs an excellent doctor, and weâve only had good reports about him, unlike a few of the others.â
That gets my attention.
âIs there someone I should steer clear of?â
He chuckles. âIâm not allowed to say anything, Wren.â
âBut Iâm your favorite.â
âYou are.â He sighs. âThis is between us, but Iâm glad youâre with Dr. Kincaid and not Dr. Marshall. He⦠has a tendency to take a special interest in some of his female students. Thatâs all Iâm saying, and weâll leave it there.â
Callan and Layla both subtly mentioned this about him, and thatâs another reason Callan put me with Jack. Itâs also already been noted by me. There are men in this world who automatically set off your creep meter, and Dr. Marshall is one of them. He hasnât tried anything, but he thinks about it and doesnât bother hiding it.
âGot it. Dr. Kincaid is fine as a supervisor.â
There must be something in my tone because Joe grins as if heâs onto me. âAttendings are meant to be tough. Itâs how doctors learn best.â
Considering like eighty-five percent of my family are doctors or in the medical field, I already know this. He knows I know this.
âOf course,â I go with.
âAre you still set on trying to match here in Boston?â
âAbsolutely.â
âAnd is MGH still your first pick?â
It was. When I first moved back here for med school, it was what I had my heart and mind set on. That sentiment only grew after what happened to me with Theo. Then Jack moved back home and started working there, and now there are rumors that Callan is stepping down as chief, so Iâm not sure anymore.
But for now, I say, âI think so.â
His smile grows. âExcellent. I donât think youâll have a problem getting into the program you want. Your grades are top-tier, and as you know your family name carries a lot of weight in this city. Not to mention a stellar recommendation from your adviser.â He winks.
âThank you.â
âItâs my pleasure, Wren. Being your adviser these years has been a treat. You are one of the more gifted students Iâve had the pleasure of working with, and Iâm excited to see where your career will go.â
I stand and give him a hug. The man is like a second grandfather to me. âThank you, Joe. I appreciate all youâve done for me here.â
âAnytime. You know that.â He rolls his wrist to check his watch. âWe didnât have our full hour together. Is there anything else you need to discuss?â
âNo, Iâm good. I have somewhere I have to be that I donât want to be late for.â
âSure. Text or email if you change your mind, and as you know, my door is always open. Iâll check up on you near the end of your rotation.â
I throw him a wave as I head for the door. âBye, Joe. Have a good rest of your week.â
Every Tuesday at four, I have my mixed martial arts class, and I havenât missed one yet. Sometimes I run on the treadmill after. Sometimes I just go home. But I donât miss my Tuesday nights here. I hop in my car and hit up my favorite coffee spot. Armed with caffeine, I drive down to the gym and sit in my car while I drink my coffee and scroll through my phone.
Tinsley texts me, and we go back and forth for a bit. She asks me about how today was with Jack, and I tell her an abbreviated version. But after I hit send, I flip over to the text chat I had the other night with my mystery guy. Iâve resisted the urge to text him again. I donât even know why Iâm still curious. Itâs likely just a guy I met one night in college, probably at a party or in one of my classes, and it didnât go anywhere.
Still, I like that he kind of flirted with me. I also like that he remembered me even if I didnât remember him. It was fun to text him because heâs not in front of me. Heâs not here. It was easier to let go a little when I was alone and safe in my apartment. I havenât been able to have a relationship since Theo, and sex has been a mess. I wasnât sexually assaulted, but my trust factor is zero and I havenât been able to resurrect it. I never bring anyone home. I never go to their place either.
Boys in high school only got close to me because I was a Fritz, and my best friends were Tinsley Monroe and Mason Reyes. Mason comes from football royalty and Tinsley music royalty. Money and fame. I had that, and thatâs all those boys saw. In college, a drunk frat boy tried to win a bet and take my virginity. He didnât care that I said no, but thankfully a friend came in and stopped it before he could succeed.
Then Jack broke my heart.
It took me a long time after him to seek anything beyond a meaningless fling. A very long time. Then I met Theo. He was a fellow medical student, and I liked him instantly. He had no idea what being a Fritz meant. He was from a small town in the South and had family money of his own, and he wanted me. No lies. No manipulation. No regret or rejection.
He asked me out, and that was that.
For a year, everything was amazing. We moved in together, and my friends loved him. Even Owen and my dad loved him, which is saying something considering how overprotective they can be.
Then, little by little, things started to change. Unravel. He wasnât doing well in school, and I was. He didnât like me going out with my friends if he wasnât around and often accused me of cheating or flirting with other guys. I even found him checking my call and text logs to try to prove this. A month or two after things started getting bad, his dad died unexpectedly, and he refused to go to the funeral, claiming he couldnât miss class. Heâd grow angry and defensive anytime I asked about it, even to the point where he pushed me into a wall and yelled before he stormed out.
Thatâs when I had Vander start to do some digging for me.
It turned out his father had left everything to his brother and sister and nothing to him. I discovered he hadnât spoken to his parents in over three years, and they had disowned him after a violent incident with his little sister that nearly cost her her life. He had no money and was surviving on student loans, credit cards, and some money he had stolen from his family before he left and never looked back.
I packed up my belongings and ended things with him that night. He didnât do well with that and would call and text me at all hours of the day and night, and even though he stopped going to classes, heâd still show up outside of them to try to talk to me. That went on for a few weeks until I threatened to go to the police and get a restraining order if he didnât back off.
He did, and I thought the nightmare with him was over.
For two months, I didnât hear anything from him, and as far as I knew from Vander, heâd left Boston and moved to New York. I was out jogging along the Charles River one evening when someone jumped me at knifepoint. He dragged me over to a set of bushes, knocked me to the ground, forced his weight on me from behind, and locked my wrists above my head to hold me in place. Things got worse from there, but I fought and fought and fought.
But despite my best efforts, he had me until I managed to free my keys and sound my panic button on my keychain. An off-duty cop happened to be nearby jogging and saved me. I spent two days in the hospital and swore my family and the people who knew to secrecy. I didnât want it on the news. I didnât want it to spread to my ten thousand uncles, aunts, and cousins. And definitely not to my grandparents, Bostonâs reigning king and queen.
I survived, but more than that, I became a survivor.
One with the peace of mind of knowing I no longer have to worry about my attacker and that he canât hurt me again.
Still, I learned that no matter how good of a person I thought I was, no matter how hard I tried to be the person I wanted everyone to see me as, no matter how many stories I fed everyone, my internal compass was broken. It wasnât leading me true north. I was askew and off-kilter, often feeling like a ghost in a crowded room. Learning to trust ourselves and simply be after a trauma might be the hardest thing in the world. But itâs also the most important.
That and not blaming ourselves for the actions of others.
Therapy started me off, but when therapy wasnât helping anymore, or maybe just not enough, I started these classes and never looked back. Itâs been life-changing and transformative. Itâs given me a sense of control and empowered me not to live in fear. Do I have setbacks? Absolutely. Do I have a touch of OCD? Yep, but thatâs also part of my control factor, and I donât hate it. Have I had healthy sex or a relationship since? Nope, but Iâm not there yet. And I think thatâs okay. I think everyone heals and does things in their own time and way. I donât have time for a relationship right now anyway, nor do I want one.
So for now, it works.
I hop out of my car, toss my cup in a nearby trashcan, and head into the gym.
The smell of rubber mats, bleach, and sweat hits me, and I smile the same smile I do every time I walk in here and go to the back where the private studios are.
âHey, Wren,â Margot, the head nurse from the ER, greets me. Sheâs the one who turned me on to this class and is a survivor herself. I was brought to the ER at MGH that night, and Margot was there along with Callan and Layla. They saved me. They protected my privacy. Itâs why MGH was my first choice of hospitals and trauma centers. Being there on the other side and able to save people the way I was saved is all Iâve wanted.
Now Iâm not sure what to do with that, but thatâs a thought for another day.
âHey!â I come over to where sheâs standing with a few other women weâre in this class with. For a few minutes, we do a check-in. Itâs our way of talking about anything thatâs plaguing us or anything we want to work through with people who get it. Itâs a support network we all share, but then our sensei arrives.
âAre we ready, ladies?â
After that, itâs all work and no chat for a solid hour. By the time I leave the gym, Iâm sore, sweaty, and exhausted but feel like a million bucks. That is until I make the grave mistake of deciding to pick up dinner from a salad and bowl place around the corner for a change instead of making dinner at home tonight. I get in line along with the rush hour crew and stare up at the menu thatâs displayed on a large flatscreen high above the counter.
âThe tuna poke bowl is very good, as is the autumn harvest bowl, but Iâd get that one without beets.â
His breath brushes against the back of my exposed neck, and immediately my eyes close and my breath stalls in my chest. I shudder ever so slightly, but itâs not in fear or revulsion despite the fact that heâs behind me. Maybe itâs because he smells so freaking good or because heâs not actually touching me.
âWhy no beets?â I ask, refusing to turn around.
âDo you like beets?â
âIâm indifferent.â
âThey taste like dirt.â
My lips twitch. âSo? Whatâs your objection to dirt?â
âOther than I donât enjoy my food tasting like it, nothing. The quinoa in that bowl is excellent, but the spicy sauce on the tuna is something else.â
âI was thinking of going with the tofu pesto wrap.â Iâm not. I just want to hear his reaction, and he doesnât disappoint.
âItâs nut-free pesto and vegan mozzarella on that. Since I know youâre not vegan or even vegetarian with a nut allergy, I have to assume one of two things.â
âAnd what are those?â The line shuffles up a person, and we follow. His body is close. I can feel him behind me. Not quite touching, but so close it feels like he is. It makes my heart race. Again, not in fear, which is a bit of a trip, but Iâm not afraid of Jack. No, my heartâs beating similarly to how it did this morning in the ER kitchen when I stupidly told him how hot I think he is and drank from his cup. Oh, and I touched him. I mean, our fingers touched, but that counts, right?
Working around Jack is already miserable. Iâve actively been trying not to think about him. Or fantasize about him. That last one is key. Nothing worse than trying to get yourself off, and youâre on a tangent of mental porn, and your asshole boss, who you hate because he once broke your heart pops in.
âOne, youâre a poor, misguided fool who actually likes vegan food without being vegan, or two, youâre a glutton for pain and punishment.â
âThatâs very judgmental of you.â
âMaybe. I do kind of like tofu on occasion. So which is it?â
âThe latter.â
He presses into me with that, and I feel him against my back, his breath by my ear. Now my pulse quickens at a different pace as my panic starts to rise. I count backward by fours, and it helps.
âI hoped youâd say that.â
âWhyâs that?â I sink my teeth into my lip to squelch the tension churning like corrosive acid through my gut. I donât want him to know Iâm reacting to him in this position.
âSomething about you made me think youâd love being punished under the right circumstances.â
My breath catches, and my eyes shoot open, staring unseeingly at the dude in the floor-length puffy peacoat in front of me. My elbow jabs back, landing straight in the center of Jackâs gut. He oomphs but chuckles because it wasnât a hard hit. Not like the ones I was landing earlier at the gym. Jackâs not dangerous, just an asshole.
âNext!â the woman behind the counter sings out, and I step up.
âSheâll have the wasabi salmon bowl, hold the onions, extra dressing, and edamame and carrots, please,â Jack orders for me.
I gasp and spin around. âHow did you know?â
His blue eyes are right there, expectant and amused yet tinted with a hint of mischief. And that smirk? I canât even with it. My world would be a lot better if Jack Kincaid didnât look this good. And if the sweater heâs wearing didnât show off his delicious arm muscles to perfection.
âWe ordered from here a few months ago when we were hanging out at Masonâs, and thatâs what you got.â
It makes my breath shutter that he remembers.
âKeeping close tabs on me, are you there, Jack?â I smart.
Refusing to answer, he speaks over my head. âIâll have the fall harvest bowl with chicken and no beets, please. On the same bill,â he tells the person.
I squint. âYouâre not buying me dinner.â
His gaze snaps back down to mine, and he gives me a crooked smirk. âOkay, Wren. Iâll just put my card down, and you wonât, and magically youâll have your food.â
âYou donât get to boss me around.â
His face dips until heâs inches from me. âBut Iâm your boss. Isnât that my job?â His fingers tickle up the column of my exposed neck, his eyes following their trail before theyâre gone just as quickly. âGood night, my pretty Cinderella. Iâll see you tomorrow. Enjoy your dinner.â He takes a step around me before he spins back toward me. âOh, and just so you know, since you told me you think Iâm scary hot. Youâre fucking gorgeous. Makeup, no makeup, whatever.â
And like that, heâs gone. Food paid for, a meal in my hand, his warmth and breath gone. He just said that. With like ten people around us who are now all staring at me.
âDamn. I wish my boyfriend would say that to me,â A woman behind me says, but I donât reply. Jack isnât my boyfriend. He never will be. He likely said that to get a reaction from me.
I have to ignore him. From now on, I have to. Because if I start to give in to this incredible itch⦠Iâll never want to stop scratching.