Chapter Two: Will
Kidnap My Heart
A/N: This used to be chapter four. Rearranging made it chapter two. If you're a new reader disregard this message! Just letting people who've already read the first draft know.
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Kidnap My Heart
Chapter 2: Will
âBabe, I gotta go,â I said, resisting the urge to roll my eyes. Jesus Christ. If this was how this girl acted in what was supposed to be a relationship with no strings attached, how would she act if Iâd done as she wanted and made her my girlfriend? I shuddered at the thought.
âWhy canât you stay a little longer?â Her pout had turned into a shrill, demanding tone, and when she spoke, she sat up, letting the sheet fall away from her body.
I donât know how I did it. To this day, I still donât know how I did it, but I somehow managed to ignore my hormones and say, âI just canât. Sorry, babe. Iâll call you sometime.â Keeping my gaze on her face was a struggle, but I knew if I looked downwards, Iâd fall into the temptation to sleep with her again.
âSometime?â Her shrill tone had now turned into a piercing screech, and I flinched at the sound. âWilly-Bear, I am tired of hearing âsometimeâ and âmaybe!â I want something concrete! I want something real!â
I was too focused on the atrocious nickname to realize what she was saying at first, to be honest. Willy-Bear? Come on! Of all the nicknames in the world. Why couldnât girls ever pick a manly nickname, like Big Daddy or Stud or Tank? No, I had it! Pimp Daddy. Why couldnât girls ever call me Pimp Daddy?
âWilly-Bear? Hello?â
Oh, God, how had I not noticed this before? I mean, Iâd been a victim to some of the worst pet names in the world, but Willy-Bear had to be one of the very worst. Among Willy-Bearâs top competitors were Snugglebunny, Honeybucket, Pookie, and Foofie Poops. That last one was understandably at the top of the list. Why a girl would choose a nickname involving what goes on in her toilet was beyond me.
âWill?â
I still didnât reply, too horrified by the prospect of being called Willy-Bear in public, or worse, in front of my brother, Eric. Heâd never let me live that one down.
âAre you even listening to me?â All of a sudden, she was right in my face, glaring down at me.
I quickly backed up, grabbing my jeans and shirt as I did. âListen, Natashaââ
âNatasha?â she cried, nearly falling over as she abruptly backed away. âMy name is Natalie!â
Shit. See? This was why I used pet names myself, although mine were a million times better than the ones girls gave me. I stuck with the simple ones: babe, baby, sweetheart. I wasnât sure why I made the mistake of attempting to remember her name. Maybe I subconsciously wanted to get her off my back. I couldnât blame myself; she was a nightmare.
âThatâs what I meant,â I said. âListen, Natalie. I donât think we should hang out anymore.â Hang out was the PG way to phrase what we were doing, if you know what I mean.
âWhat?â Her face fell. âIs this about my pushiness? Because if it is, Iâm sorry, Willy-Bear! I didnât meant to pressure you. Please forgive me!â
I shook my head. âI just need⦠space. Yeah, space.â Yeah, that sounded good. The space excuse was a great way to let someone down without getting kicked in the nuts. âSorry. Besides, you deserve a real relationship, not whatever this is.â Actually, I kind of thought she didnât. She was kind of a whore, and she was pretty annoying, but I wasnât going to be the one to tell her that. That wasnât the kind of thing you told a softball player who had all of her bats in the house.
âBut we could have a real relationship one day,â she insisted. âIâll wait for you!â
I almost made a face at her, but luckily, I stopped myself. âI donât think you want to wait that long. Youâll probably be old and wrinkly by then, and I wouldnât want you, anyways.â
This was, apparently, one of those things you donât say to a softball player. She scowled at me and jumped up, heading straight towards her closet. By the look on her face, I had a feeling she might have had a few bats stashed in there.
My eyes widened as I watched her, and I began to throw on my clothes as I talked. âEr, as fun as this little thing of ours has been, itâs over, and Iâm leaving. Later. No, not later. Bye.â
I shuffled out of there, buttoning my pants as fast as I could, quickly breaking out into a sprint when I heard her following me. I didnât even care that she was naked anymore. I had a feeling she was now trying to kill me, and Iâm sorry, but I wasnât the kind of guy who was turned on by homicidal tendencies.
âCall me!â she shrieked right before I slammed the door to her apartment shut.
Christ. Women these daysâ¦
I ran out of her apartment building, and I didnât stop running until I was in my car. Breathing a sigh of relief, I leaned my head against the back of the seat. Thank God Iâd escaped whatever that was before it had gotten out of hand. And then people wondered why I wasnât looking for a relationship and refused to be talked into one. Who would want to chain themselves to that? Relationships were like prison; you literally couldnât do anything without giving your girlfriend a detailed report of your plans for the day.
Girl: Baby, where are you? I miss you!
Me: Iâm hanging out with a friend. Iâll swing by later.
Girl: Is she prettier than me, you cheating ass? I hate you. Go to hell!
Girlfriends also tended to assume if you were anywhere but church, your parentsâ house, or out doing something to surprise her, you were cheating on her. Great logic, huh? That was usually my problem with girls; they were too clingy. If I wanted clingy, Iâd date a sheet of fabric softener.
I mean, it wasnât like commitment issues were this shocking rarity among guys. I didnât know why it was so hard to understand that I didnât do commitment. What was so wrong with wanting to date two girls at the same time?
Besides, if they didnât like it, why would they accept it and throw a jealous fit later on? It didnât make sense, and I hated jealous fits. They always caused a scene, and while I loved attention, that wasnât the kind of attention I had in mind. It kind of gave me a bad reputation. Not that that stopped girls from flocking to me. With my looks? Unlikely.
If their clinginess didnât chase me offâwhich it usually didâtheir personalities finished the job for them. Needy. Boring. Annoying. That was what I had to work with. How was I supposed to form a relationship from that? I guess it didnât help that I tended to go for girls because of their looks; they were probably used to getting by on their looks alone. If you were hot, most people didnât care if you had the personality of a stale piece of bread, but since I was pretty much hotter than all of the girls I dated, their looks only went so far.
I wasnât sure why, but even the interesting ones didnât keep my interest for long. Maybe they just lost the spunk they had. It didnât really bother me, though. I was only twenty. It wasnât like I had to settle down any time soon, and I wasnât interested in settling down for a long time. Iâd seen firsthand how they always ended. Relationships in general. My brother didnât have the same careless attitude I had. He didnât mind the idea of settling down, and when he dated, it wasnât to have a good time. It was to find his future wife, and he, in turn, always got hurt in the end. I couldnât even count the amount of times Iâd had to cheer the guy up after a breakup.
Iâd tried to convince him that my way of life was easier, but he wouldnât even hear me out. He was the spitting image of our mom: nice, caring, and hopelessly romantic. That was why our father liked Eric better than me; he reminded him of our mom.
I didnât like the path my thoughts were starting to take, so I put the car into gear and sped away without looking back.
Good riddance, Natasha. I hope you and your softball bat live happily ever after.
***
I walked into my room only to see my brother glued to my computer screen. Not literally, of course. That would hurt.
âWhat are you doing here?â I asked. âDonât you have your own computer?â I walked over to the computer and stared at the screen in shock. âYou installed cameras in her apartment?â
Eric didnât even sound ashamed when he answered. In fact, he didnât even look up. He just replied, âYes.â
âOh, my God,â I said, shaking my head in disbelief. âIâm official a creeper. No, weâre officially creepers. I never thought Iâd have to resort to this. If this gets out, this could ruin my reputation.â
I was going to kill my father. This was his fault. If it werenât for him, we wouldnât even be in this situation. I wouldnât be creeping on a girl Iâd never even met. One thing was looking at pictures of Emma van der Bilt. We had to know what she looked like, after all, and to be honest, she was pretty hot. I wouldnât mind getting involved with her, and she just so happened to live in an apartment with her equally hot best friend, Taylor. I obviously didnât mind looking through their pictures, but creeping on them like this? That was weird.
âTheyâre not even home yet. Iâll just close my eyes if they start to undress. Problem solved.â Eric shrugged nonchalantly, like this wasnât the single creepiest thing weâd ever done. How could he act so casual? This wasnât normal.
âThis is so wrong,â I continued, anxiously pacing up and down the room. âIâm William Knight. I donât need to stalk girls. They stalk me. Itâs a proven fact. Remember Elena, Massey, Bailee, and whatever the rest of their names were? They followed me around for weeks!â
Eric rolled his eyes. âAnd this is why youâre still single. Why does it even matter? Youâre not getting with this girl, anyway, or her friend, for that matter.â
âNo, Iâm still single because I choose to be,â I clarified with a scowl. It was my choice, but he made it sound like I was some forever-alone loser. âWhy couldnât I get with this girl? Or her friend?â I was actually offended. There was no doubt in my mind that I could get with these girls. Theyâd be in my bed before I could count to twenty.
âNo, youâre still single because youâre an ass,â Eric said with a laugh. âBesides, sleeping with them wasnât what we were told to do.â
âOf course. So obedient, as always.â
I didnât care if that wasnât what we were told to do. This wasnât something I wanted to do in the first place. I didnât know why Iâd ever agreed to it. I guess my father had just seemed so desperate, so unlike himself when heâd asked us to do this that Iâd given in. Why this was his go-to plan, I wasnât sure. If I ever went broke, my first idea wouldnât be to kidnap the daughter of a billionaire and hold her for ransom.
Eric didnât reply to my comment, so I went on. âIâm sure Pops wonât mind if we have some fun with this,â I said with a smirk. âThereâs nothing wrong with fooling around a little bit, is there?â
âYou wouldnât think so, would you? What makes you think sheâs going to want to fool around? After tonight, youâll have no chance with her.â
âMan, look at me,â I said, gesturing towards myself vainly. âOf course sheâs gonna wanna fool around. Her friend, too.â My brother, the peanut. How naïve he was to underestimate my charm. I couldnât help but shake my head at him and laugh.
By the time that girl was sent back home after having been rescued by her desperate father, she would be begging to stay with me. I wouldnât even have to do much, either. A bit of sweet talking, maybe a little bit of fooling around, some endearment, whatever. I knew how this worked. If I had to do this kidnapping thing, I may as well get a kick out of it. Besides, it was practically fate: she was hot, I was hot. It worked out perfectly.
Eric just muttered, âDoubt it.â
Whatever. Heâd see soon enough. I wasnât worried at all; that girl would be putty in my hands in no time. Maybe this whole kidnapping thing wouldnât be so bad after all.
***
I'm alive!
I know, I know, I suck. I realize this. But you all forgive me, right? I mean, it's William's POV..... I think I made up for it!
Anyhoo. I like writing in his POV, actually, even though I'm pretty sure I fail at a guy's perspective. But whatever.
Hope you guys liked it and let me know what you think!