Broken Knight: Chapter 17
Broken Knight (All Saints High Book 2)
IÂ spent the cab drive from Charlotte to Boon drinking mini bottles of whatever the fuck alcohol I could find at the airport and popping a couple Xanax pills. The fake ID, paired with the fact I was running on zero sleep, made me look way older than eighteen. Unfortunately, I was past the stage where a few shots of Johnny made a difference. I was on edge. Agitated. Rubbing my knuckles back and forth against my jaw. Iâd busted them open last night punching the treehouse tree trunk. Just for old timesâ sake.
âYou good?â The driver shifted in his seat, glancing at me in the rearview mirror.
âFine,â I clipped, tapping an unlit joint on my muscular thigh.
You know you have a problem when, before you meet the driver waiting for you at the airport, you meet a local drug dealer to get a fresh stash.
There was a brief silence as we zipped past green rolling hills, the backdrop of a cloudless blue sky and Charlotteâs towers twinkling in the distance. So this was the place that stole Moonshine from me. Already I hated it.
When the driver pulled up at Boon, I slapped a few bills in his hand and wheeled my suitcase down the cobblestone path. A red-bricked, Colonial building the size of a hotel stood before me, framed with lush, trimmed lawns from both sides. A herd of church-mice-looking girls in matching pastel cardigans and ironed hair poured from the double doors of the college. They stopped and eyed me curiously, exchanging looks and hugging their textbooks to their chests.
âCan I help you?â One of them cleared her throat, pushing her glasses up the bridge of her nose.
Was it that obvious I wasnât cut out for higher education? Maybe because I smelled like a liquor store and a dodgy one-night stand.
âCan you?â I flashed my lazy, lopsided smirk that put women in a spell even I couldnât fully understand.
Their frowns liquefied in an instant.
âIâm looking for the dorms.â
âMenâs or womenâs?â
I stared at her blandly. âTheyâre not coed?â
âItâs a Catholic college.â The revelation was followed by a headshake.
âWomenâs,â I clipped.
Shit just got a whole lot more complicated, as shit tended to where my life was concerned.
The girl pointed at a sign with white wooden arrows directing visitors to different sections of the campus. Her fingernails were colorless, thoroughly chewed. âYou take a right and walk until you see the building with the pink flag.â
âHow misogynist.â I bit down a smile, wondering how Luna had felt about that.
She hated wearing anything pink or girly, the exact opposite of Daria.
The girl flushed, drawing circles on the ground with her toes. âThank you for saying that.â
âHuh?â
âThanks for knowing itâs kind of offensive. Beautiful menâ¦I mean, handsome men like yourself areâ¦â she started, but her friends jerked her away, giggling and heading toward the cafeteria.
Are ?
When I got to the lobby of the girlsâ dorm, there was a man about two thousand years old behind the front desk, with a Ron Weasley-orange toupee, flipping a local newspaper that lay flat in front of him. His brows were high as he read a fascinating article about the fish prices in Asheville.
âWrong dorm,â he said without looking up from his paper.
Instead of gracing him with a response, I dropped my designer backpack on his desk with a thud, fishing my wallet from my back pocket, plucking a few bills, and throwing them his way like confetti.
He didnât look up from the paper. âDo you understand English?â he grumbled.
âOnly when it suits me. Whatâs your price?â
âWhy must there be a price tag on rules? Why canât we just follow them blindly?â He licked the tip of his index finger, flicking a page.
An impatient smirk tugged at my lips. He was still staring at his paper.
âBecause humans are corrupt, and rules are boring.â
âSpeak for yourself, young man.â
With an exasperated sigh, I took out a few more Benjamins, boomeranging them across his desk. There was maybe a couple grand in total covering the surface before he finally looked up.
âWhatâs her name?â
âRexroth. Luna Rexroth.â
âAnd your intentions?â
âSheâs my girlfriend,â I lied, unblinking. âI came to visit her from California. I want to surprise her in her room.â
I could see his gaze drifting to the row of spare keys under his counter. I didnât dare breathe.
He didnât budge. I took my wallet out and emptied it on his desk, the remainder of my cash raining in front of his eyes. I didnât break eye contact.
âHow do I know youâre telling the truth?â he asked.
âDo you know her?â
âYes.â
Casually, I unlocked my phone and threw it into his hands. My screensaver was a picture of me hugging her and kissing her cheek while she smiled into the camera. It was pretty obvious we knew each other and liked each other. He lifted his bushy, white eyebrows, examining the picture before handing my phone back to me.
Finally, he lowered himself to the wall of keys, searching for her name.
âIâll need you to leave your ID here.â
I slid my driverâs license over the counter.
âNo spending the night on the premises. No loitering. Straight to room 601. And if I see you getting anywhere near girls who are not her, Iâm calling the cops.â
âI need one more favor,â I said.
He looked up at me, Lunaâs room key dangling between his meaty fingers.
âNamely, one more set of keysâ¦and a lemon.â
Iâd found the note under my pillowâwhere I kept the book I was reading that weekâlike a tooth, forgotten by the tooth fairy. A wish. A promise. Knight knew Iâd lift the pillow, because he knew me. Knew us.
Knight was at Boon.
At my college.
In my dorm.
He wanted me to meet him at the water tower.
He was away from his mother.
His friends.
His school.
Away from his .
That alone shouldâve made me run into his arms. Iâd made a promise to Rosie. But only after she wasnât here anymore. I didnât have to put my heart on the line just yet. I wanted my heart to be free a little longer.
Before I moved to Boon, I used to organize my time in accordance with Knightâs life. When it was football season, Iâd crammed activities into my schedule to make time move faster. Iâd volunteered more, taken longer bike rides, and read entire fantasy series back to back. When he was free, I dropped said activities in favor of being with himâeven when heâd flirted with other girls, when the rumors about his lothario ways had cut me open and made me bleed green with jealousy.
When Iâd left for Boon, Iâd needed to fill my life with distractions. I had done so by mimicking life as I saw it worn by other people. To my surprise, I was a pretty good actressâa miserable one without Knight, but decent nonetheless.
I munched on the straw of my fruity cocktail, my legs folded as I sat in the nightclub next to April, Josh, and Ryan. I flipped my phone to watch for the time.
I couldnât make it in time even if I wanted to.
The music pounded so loudly, it felt like it was coming from inside my head. I squeezed my eyes shut and tried to remove the vision of Knight waiting for me on the top of the water tower, in the cold.
It felt a little redundant not to use real words with my friends, now that I spoke them to Knight, Edie, and Dad, but I was still thankful to have people in my life who liked the old me. This was where I belonged. With my new, genuine friends Iâd made on my own, not because our parents were best friends.
I checked my phone again.
It took about twenty minutes to get to the water tower by foot. Probably ten with my bike, which I didnât have with me. What was he doing here, anyway? There was only one way to find out, and I wasnât dumb enough to risk crumbling in front of him and opening my legs again.
Josh and Ryan stood up to get us more drinks. April leaned forward and slapped my knee, scowling.
âThatâs it,â she whisper-shouted over the music. âIâm staging a one-person intervention. Youâre the most awful datee ever.â
?
I spelled out each letter. April was pretty good at making up words.
âPerson you date.â April rolled her eyes and exhaled, sending a lock of her colorful hair flying.
I signed.
Josh and April had presented this outing as hanging out. Since there was nothing romantic about strangers grinding against each other on a dance floor, Iâd believed them. Plus, I didnât want to stay in the dorm in case Knight showed up. I still hadnât told April he was here, but I figured tonight, Iâd have to come clean about plenty of things to my roommate.
April was so understanding, she didnât even care that Iâd lied to her about my relationship with Knight and told her he used to be my boyfriend.
âCome on, dude.â April patted my thigh.
I was wearing ripped boyfriend jeans and a hoodie, a stark contrast to my friendâs purple mini-dress.
âThe guy is legit in love with you. If youâre not going to let him screw your brains out again, at least have the decency to tell him now.â
I signed.
In the letter I gave Josh, Iâd explained I just wanted to be friends.
âWell, then stop dangling yourself in front of him like a shiny prize. He had a taste once, and now Iâm sure he wants a rerun.â April barked out a good-natured laugh.
Suddenly, I remembered something very importantâIâd never told April I slept with Josh. My jaw dropped.
I arched an eyebrow.
The only people who knew about Josh and me were my family, as Knight had so generously offered the information at Thanksgiving dinner, and Josh and me.
April waved her hand, laughing more awkwardly now. âItâs not a big deal.â
âGuys talk.â
âWell, Ryan is, and Iâm his girlfriend, so he told me. Itâs not like the entire school knows. Or cares. Just a few of our friends. Jesus, Luna, youâre not five. You think your alcoholic, scumbag crush whoâs screwing someone else to get back at you is better than Josh?â
I slammed my empty drink on the table.
I understood fully that April was on my side, but I hated that she spoke badly of Knight without really understanding where he came from or what he was going through.
âWhy not? He wasnât even your boyfriend. Youâd never protect Josh like this, and heâs been nothing but nice to you.â
.â I narrowed my eyes at her.
Really, what Iâd meant to say was .
I flipped my phone again mid-argument. Ten past ten. My heart hiccupped.
âOf course not.â She gave me a sarcastic smile, leaning back in the leather booth. âHe doesnât treat you like shit, and therefore, is an awful candidate as a boyfriend.â
âYouâre right. That would imply that he is treating you at all, wouldnât it?â
Her words stung so much, I physically coiled.
âBecause.â She took a deep breath. âYouâre hurting yourself, and you need to open your eyes and see the situation for what it is. You will always be poor Saint Luna because you insist on taking the mutt over and over again.â
âHe screwed another girl.â
He did. I realized it now.
April ran her gaze over me, her eyes sad and disappointed.
April was trying to help meâbut that didnât make her right. Iâd portrayed Knight as the villain, when really, he was a misunderstood prince. I hadnât agreed with all of his decisions, but he didnât want to hurt me. Not truly. He wanted to stop hurting, and he sometimes ran over people in the process.
I darted up, helplessly searching the bar with my eyes. Josh and Ryan were leaning against it, laughing between themselves. Ryan said something that made Josh shake his head, pretending to finger-shoot his temple. I felt my fury rising from my toes to my head.
I looked back to April, smiling now, mustering every ounce of self-control I had in me.
âYou know,â I spoke, my voice dark and smoky, coming from the depths of my soul.
Her eyes widened in disbelief, her cocktail glassâblue liquid, like the tips of her hairâslipping from between her fingers and crashing on the floor.
âI take full responsibility for everything that happened this entire semester. The whole Knight debacle. The thing with Josh. I didnât handle it well, did I?â
I could see the confusion flashing in her face as it reddened, her pupils dilating like ink.
âBut donât assume you know the entire story from where youâre standing. I have so much to explain to youâif youâre willing to listenâbut know this, April: Youâve helped me. Helped me in ways I could never repay you for. Thank you.â
âWhat the fuck, Luna?!â Aprilâs eyes glistened as she stood.
Wordlessly, she slapped me across the face. I felt the burn crawling from my cheek to my neck, spreading, pinking my ears with embarrassment she couldnât see because of the tan hue of my skin and the dim light of the club.
I lifted my head and stared at her. Every muscle in her face was shaking. Her expression told me I revolted her. In truth, I repulsed myself, too. She thought I was a liar now, and she had every right to feel embarrassed and betrayed.
I shouldâve told her the truthâall of it.
I shouldâve stood up for myself long ago.
I shouldâve been more stern with Josh when he ignored my rejections.
I shouldnât have accepted Knightâs half-hearted fumbles while he was with another girl.
I was worth more. I deserved more.
âGood luck getting yourself out of this one.â She looked hurt more than anything else, and I knew she had every right to be.
A firm tap on my shoulder made me turn around. I donât know why I expected to see Knight. There was no reason for him to be here, other than the fact that, true to his name, he had the tendency to save my day.
It was Josh. His dark eyes were like two globes of misery, the weight of all the heartbreak in the world seemingly dimming his light. Seeing him hurt felt like a punch straight to the gut.
âIâm sorry,â I whispered. âItâs not that I spoke before thisâ¦â I licked my lips, looking around helplessly.
God, he didnât deserve it. Any of this. How difficult was it to not-break a heart? Iâd always been so mad at Knight for doing this to me. Maybe he hadnât meant to, either. Maybe hearts were like carefully tended flowers. Sometimes they just wilted, no matter what you did.
Josh took a step back, shaking his head in disbelief. His hands trembled as he signed to me.
,â he said.
I nodded. I felt ashamed talking to him. Not that it was bad. Not that my breakthrough didnât make me proud. But the fact that Iâd hidden it from all of them for so long⦠Iâd hidden a lot of things from my friends, and it was payback time.
he motioned, too stunned to show any negative or positive emotion.
âSinceâ¦a few weeks ago.â
He shook his head, without saying anything.
he asked.
was what I would have said, but I knew my honesty would rip him to shreds.
âFamily crisis,â I answered.
The tears blinded me. Somehow, I could still see the melted figures of my friends through them, looking like clouds through a rain-stained window. April stood next to Ryan, and now they both faced me. Josh was starting to retreat, walking backward out of the club, out of my life.
Then he stopped. Smiled. It looked genuine. I could tell, even in the darkness of the club.
I couldnât even form a response.
I didnât know if he meant about loving Knight, or about my talking.
âI lost the ability to speak freely when I was a baby,â I tried to explain to them, even though they looked more hurt about my lashing out at April and hiding a secret from them than anything else. âItâs not like I ever spoke in public orâ¦â
I stopped, clamping my mouth shut on the lie. Iâd spoken at the New Yearâs party Daria dragged me to. I was changing. I could no longer afford the comfort of being quiet and different. People were done cutting me slack.
I squeezed my eyes shut to rid myself of the tears so I could see Josh better. He signed again.
He wasnât mean. He was truthful. He knew it was something in California that had caused my breakthrough. Or so he thought. But if I hadnât known themâApril, Ryan, and JoshâI would never have stood up to Knight. Maybe I wouldnât have had my breakthrough. Who knows.
âI never meant to hurt you,â I told him.
âI donât want anything to change,â I almost begged.
April was the one to answer.
âLuna, we always wanted you to win. We just didnât know we werenât on your team.â
Before I slipped out of the club, Ryan clutched my arm in a bruising grip.
âWe thought you were different, not just another rich, spoiled, holier-than-thou Todos Santos bitch. Turns out, youâre exactly like the stigma. Self-absorbed, beautiful, and a liar. Itâs over for you, Rexroth. Boonâs over for you.â
âRyan!â April jerked him away, pushing him back.
Josh signed. â
He was right.
He was right, and Knight was here. At Boon.
I planted a soft kiss on Joshâs cheek, then my legs carried me outside on autopilot. I tumbled over a stair, righted myself against the wall, and lurched forward, like there was an invisible line, pulling me.
I didnât want to waste any time calling an Uber. I started for the water tower, tears stinging my eyes.
I was going to tell Knight I wanted everything.
Every single drop of him. No Poppy. No Arabella. No clingy girls he threw crumbs of attention to. I wanted to devour every single bite of the Knight Cole cake, and I wasnât going to settle for less.
The water tower was across Boonâs football field. I jogged through the dewy grass, flinging myself over the towerâs ladder, not even bothering to check the time. How late was I? An hour? Probably more. Maybe he wasnât even here anymore.
With every trembling move of my feet, my hands choking the cold, rusty metal bars, I became more aware of the abyss beneath me. The water tower was three stories tall. I could fall. But instead of fear, I was filled with determination.
No, this was like the treehouse.
Thatâs what we did.
We met high. In the sky.
Above everything.
And everyone.
I climbed up with careful precision and slid through the white metal bannisters surrounding the water tank. The surface beneath me was all rusty metal, cold and damp. I flung myself over the railing, out of breath. Panting. I closed my eyes, too chicken to see if he was still here. Silence cocooned me. I exhaled a shaky breath.
But then I felt our invisible rope, loose around my neck, and knew, without even opening my eyes. He was no longer tugging.
âRemember this game?â Knightâs husky, gritty voice boomed in the air.
My eyes snapped open. The planes of his deity-like face registered, and, like all the other times Iâd seen him, my heart flipped in my chest, nosediving to my stomach like an Olympic diver.
He was sitting with his long legs crossed, a lemon cut in half between us. I looked down at it, realization sinking in. I smiled.
âFair warning: I practiced all day.â Knight grinned, his eyes raking up my body until they met mine.
I tried to swallow the ball of excitement in my throat. He was so beautiful. And so . I wanted to ask him a thousand questions: Why he here? When had he landed? When was he going back? What about Poppy?
But all I could do was shrug.
âI have a good track record of winning. What are we betting on?â
We used to play this all the time when we were kids. There was always a bet involved. Heâd always let me winâa mischievous smile playing on his lips as I shoved the victory in his face. He was going to let me win this one, too.
Knight stroked his chin thoughtfully.
âIf you win, I promise to leave you alone,â he said gravely, holding my gaze, letting his words sink in.
âAnd if I lose?â I croaked, ignoring the pain dull in my chest.
âIf you loseâ¦â A boyish, devastating grin found his pink, full lips, making my knees stutter, bones hitting bones. âI fuck you.â
Lethal silence. I didnât know what to say. Thatâs what heâd come here for? To screw me?
Distress, anger, and lust warred inside me. I opened my mouth, choosing my next words carefully, reminding myself this was Knight. That he had a special flair for self-destruction, and when he felt wounded, he fought back. I reminded myself that Knight always let me win this game, despite his poker face.
âAre you still with Poppy?â I asked.
âNo.â His eyes didnât waver from mine.
I let out a shaky breath. âNo?â
He shook his head slowly.
âShe finally dumped you,â I tested the waters.
He gave me an exasperated look. âSure. Thatâs what happened.â
âIf we sleep together, will you tell people?â
His facial muscles didnât move an inch. âNot even gonna answer that question.â
For all his foul play, Knight wasnât like Josh. He never kissed and told people about it. Never confirmed his Casanova status. And, until mere weeks ago, he had remained a virgin. For me.
âI would like to negotiate the terms of my win.â I cleared my throat.
âIâm listening.â
âIf I winâ¦â I bit my lower lip. It was impossible to say this without sounding patronizing. âIf I win, you stop drinking and start attending AA meetings.â
He didnât even blink. âI agree to your terms.â
âIâm not some prize,â I added, scoffing as an afterthought.
âYou are to me,â he said frankly, his tone void of emotion.
âAnd Iâm not a whore.â
âIâm well aware. Iâm not buying you, Luna. Iâm merely making a point.â
âWhat is the point?â
âThat once youâre with me, you wonât be able to touch anyone else. Want anyone else. Feel for anyone else.â
I took a deep breath, leaning forward and snatching one half of the lemon. It was cut precisely in the middle. He always played fair. Knight took his lemon. Our eyes met, and we shared an identical beam.
I couldnât believe I was doing this. A quiet, tiny part of me wanted to lose, but my competitive streak wouldnât let me. And Knight would protect me by losing, anyway. Not to mention, heâd make love to me if I asked him to, bet lost or won.
âWhoever flinches first, loses. Ready?â He tapped my nose.
âReady.â
We bit into our lemons at the same time. The bitter, sour juices exploded in my mouth, making my eyes water, but I schooled my facial expression as best I could, my eyes roaming Knightâs face as he nonchalantly took bite after bite of the lemonâs flesh, his eyes dead on mine, as if he were eating an apple.
I took another tentative bite from the lemon, panic trickling into my gut along with the sour tang of the fruit. He should start making a face right about now. He always made a face. Then heâd secretly eat the entire thing, unflinching, after I did my victory dance.
Knight took another bite, his entire demeanor teetering on the verge of indifference.
What was he doing? Why wasnât he wincing? The rule was, if neither of us recoiled, whoever ate the lemon more quickly and thoroughly won. Knight had only won one time, when heâd wanted to take me to prom and Iâd insisted I didnât want to go. Heâd cared so much about giving me this high school experience that he hadnât allowed me to win. This, I was beginning to understand, was his second strike.
I was officially in trouble.
On my third bite, I began to gag. My tongue burned. I felt my brows furrowing.
I flinched.
Crap, I lost.
The lemon rolled from between my fingers, knocking Knightâs knee. He picked it up and threw it over the side of the water tower gate, into the abyss, offering me his hand. I took it, realizing I was shaking. My whole body trembled with adrenaline, anticipation, and the winter chill. He yanked me to sit in his lap, cupping one of my cheeks and looking into my eyes. The tension between us made my insides liquefy. Drowning in his gorgeous aquamarine eyes, I struggled to breathe.
âYou didnât let me win,â I whimpered, understanding for the first time the consequences, and what was about to happen.
We never backed down from bets. We always followed through when the other person challenged us.
âWhy didnât you let me win?â
âYouâre equal to meânot the same Moonshine who left Todos Santos.â His warm, lemony breath tickled my cheek as he lowered his face to mine. âBut whoever you are, I will crack you, too.â
His mouth slanted on mine, and our bodies molded into one. I deepened the kiss, sliding my tongue between his lips and letting our tongues play together, flicking his piercing and feeling his primal groan vibrate from his stomach and into mine. We kissed like starved, angry animals, with a passion that burned the sky above us.
His hand slid into my hoodie, cupped one of my breasts, and pinched my nipple. I moaned into his mouth. He did it again. The third time he did it, instead of releasing the pressure, he flipped my hoodie up and sucked my nipple into his mouth, keeping his eyes on mine as he grazed his straight teeth over it. I shuddered so violently, I thought Iâd come from that simple touch alone.
It was freezing outside, but I was scorching hot, my blood rioting at an unnatural temperature. I let my head drop back, my entire body following suit, as I lay down, fumbling out of my jeans, kicking them off. Suddenly, I wanted nothing more than to have him inside me. He chuckled at my eagerness.
âA bet is a bet,â I muttered.
Knight slid his index fingers to the sides of my underwear and took them off. I flushed even more, not knowing it to be possible.
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â I panted.
âBecause,â he paused, swallowing, âI want to remember the moment you officially became mine.â
I was so dazed, I hadnât even noticed he was naked at this point. Completely naked and fully sheathed. He mustâve put the condom on while kissing me into my mini-climax. Iâd been rocking back and forth, chasing his touch.
His tan, strong body was like crushed silk wrapped over steel as we lay down on the rusty metal. Soft, light curls peppered his chest, and I ran my fingers through them, mesmerized. He took my wrist and lowered my hand to his penis, wrapping my fingers around the shaft.
âYouâre mine,â he stated. âAlways fucking have been, Luna. Say it.â
âIâve only ever been yours, Knight.â
âThe last year didnât happen,â he choked on his words.
I nodded at first, accepting the denial. But then I stopped. I didnât want to acknowledge some parts of it, either. But it had happened. It had happened, and yet weâd somehow still ended up here together.
âIt did happen, though.â
âI know.â
With that, he eased into me, slowly, kissing my nose, my cheeks, my lips, my forehead. Even though I was wet and ready for him, it still hurt a little at first, but then he stopped, letting me stretch around his girth, before he began to make sweet, agonizing love to me. He moved in and out of me like he was giving me something so much greater than an orgasm. Slid into me to mark me. Agonizing, liquid heat began to gather under my navel, and my thighs trembled around his waist.
âOh, Knight.â I ran my fingers through his hair. Why had I fought this all this time? Why had I rejected his advances when he was everything I ever wanted?
âIâ¦Iâ¦â
He shut me up with a dirty kiss full of tongue and stubble. He didnât, I realized, want this connection we had diluted by words. Weâd never needed words. Our relationship thrived, even when Iâd given him no words at all.
This was really happening. I was having sex with Knight.
Knight Jameson Cole: Quarterback. Prom King. The best looking jackass in town.
But also, Knight Jameson Cole: Closeted alcoholic. Adopted son. Gentle soul. And the most pure-hearted man Iâd ever known.
I started panting hard, burying my fingernails in the muscles of his shoulders. I knew I was going to scream, and there was no way to stop it. The orgasm was just too much. Too strong. Too full of emotions.
âCome for me, Moonshine. Come all over my cock.â
I exploded, shattering between his arms, seeing stars in different colors and sizes and shapes, at the exact same time he jerked into me one last time, emptying inside me. My cry pierced the air surrounding the water tower.
After that, we just lay there, him still on top of me, slowly softening inside of me. We breathed each other, the scent of sex intoxicating both of us into heavy-lidded smirks.
âThank you,â he whispered, kissing the tip of my nose, looking skittish all of a suddenâalmost endearing. âFor a perfect first time.â
I smiled sadly. âYou donât have to pretend, Knight. I appreciate you sparing my feelings, but I saw you with Poppy. I understand.â
âNo, you donât,â he said flatly.
My eyebrows shot up in surprise. âBut I saw⦠I came to the treehouse andâ¦â
âFigured as much. I couldnât go through with it.â He pulled out of me slowly, rolling away from me and gathering me in his arms. The chill began to pool around us, like a blanket, frosting our bodies. We shivered against one another. âI couldnât let both of us waste our first time.â
âBut how do you know mine was a waste?â I asked honestly.
Knight chewed on his tongue piercing, looking elsewhere. I realized it still hurt him. That it always would.
âThe morning after I snuck into your room, I saw the letter you wrote to FUCKING JOSH. I didnât open it. Just held it toward the sun so I could read whatever I could get from it. You said you loved him. After I left, I spent all this time dissecting what you said, and I realized you never told him youâre love with him. You choose words so carefully and intelligently, Luna. I knew this wasnât a mistake. You understand the meaning of words. Thatâs why you donât use them lightly. That meant I still had a chance. And I figured, Iâm losing my mom. Iâm not ready to lose my best friend, too. Iâm not going down without a fight, Luna. Iâll take whatever youâre willing to give me. If itâs friendshipâso be it.â
âI donât want to be your friend anymore,â I said, pulling away to catch his gaze.
His face hardened, his lips thinning in pain. Only this time, the invincible mask didnât harden around his face, like clay. I could see the full range of his emotions. Hurt. Terror. Anger. Annoyance.
My beautiful best friend. From whom I kept a secret. A secret about his mother.
âI see.â He frowned, trying not to sulk. âThatâs cool.â
But it wasnât cool. We were never just cool. When we were togetherâwe were blazing hot.
âI want to be your .â