Inevitable: Chapter 10
Inevitable: A Billionaire Second Chance Romance (Stonewood Billionaire Brothers Series)
The restaurant that night dimly lit every face in the room and showed that no one was a stranger. Stonewood Enterprises made it very clear to the bouncers outside who could attend.
My parents mingled along with my brothers, and I made my rounds quickly enough. I found myself within listening distance of the one woman I couldnât take my eyes off of since Iâd arrived at my brotherâs graduation.
Her friends surrounded her like she was their queen on a chess board, like she was the most important, and she probably was in that group. Sheâd always had the uncanny ability to bring people together. I imagined that group wasnât any different.
I watched how she captured their attention and wondered if everyone was as blinded by her radiance as me. She glowed with her dark auburn hair and bright eyes looking as proud as ever when she watched my brother graduate.
Happiness looked good on her. It made me wonder how she looked when she felt every other emotion now. I used to know her every look, and I wasnât happy to admit that I wanted to know all of them again.
There were days I confessed to myself I missed her and I regretted how Iâd left. Most days though, I reminded myself it was for the best.
I tried to tell myself that very thing as I eavesdropped on her and her friends.
I listened to Vickâher blonde viper of a friendâask, âAre these people made of porcelain?â
To which Katie, Aubreyâs oldestâand still probably her craziestâfriend snorted, âThese people probably had makeup artists in their cars on their drive over redoing everything.â
Aubrey shushed them and reminded them they were all there for Jay.
I smiled a little to myself at seeing her mind her manners like always. Katie followed up with the truth. âJay is as ready to go as we are. Thereâs probably a hundred parties going on right now celebrating their graduation. You think he wants to be chumming it up with that?â She made a face and pointed to Jay and an older heavyset man that held his belly while he laughed at whatever Jay said.
Aubrey sighed and let a little smile slip. âShould we save him?â
âHeâs an actor, isnât he?â Rome said. âLetâs see how long he can keep up that interested face.â
Katie chimed in, âTwo bucks says he ditches the conversation in another minute.â
âYou guys! Weâre being rude,â Aubrey tried again.
Vick blurted, âI give him longer than three minutes and up the stakes to ten bucks.â
Aubreyâs eyes met Romeâs and he raised his eyebrows as if challenging her. âSixty seconds and heâs done.â
She pursed her lips as she looked at him and thatâs when I made the decision to walk over. The longer she looked at him, the more uncomfortable I felt.
Aubrey glanced at Jay, and I knew she had it figured out as I walked up and saw her tilt her head to say, âHeâs done in three, two, one.â
Katie mumbled, âUnbelievable.â
Vick smiled even bigger and clapped her hands. âHe literally walked at that exact second!â
Rome didnât say a word because his ass was looking at me approaching.
âThe bet isnât in your favor if the winner knows the subject as long as Aubrey has known Jay,â I interjected.
Katie balked right away. âIâve known him just as long as Brey.â
âPleasure, Katie. Itâs been a long time.â I offered a hand knowing she wouldnât take it.
She stared as Aubrey nudged her, trying to prompt Katie to take my hand. That little devil didnât care about manners though. âThe pleasure is not mutual.â
I let my hand drop. âFair enough.â I turned back to Aubrey. âCome to the bar for a drink with me.â
Her feet were already stepping forward to obey but I saw the second Romanâs hand slid around her waist. âShe just had a drink, but thanks, man.â
His dismissal was meant to frustrate me. I knew and still couldnât shake the feeling I had when I saw his hands on her. I ran my tongue over my teeth, trying to settle or ready myself for a fight. I wasnât sure.
Aubrey cleared her throat and stepped toward me though, like she knew she had to diffuse my anger.
âI could use a water, Rome.â
I stared at his grip on her waist, saw it tighten and took a step forward. Aubrey turned to him and whispered, âStand down.â
He whispered back, âOne wrong move, Brey â¦â
She rubbed his chest and looked at him with what I could swear was love in her eyes. âI know. I know.â
She spun toward me, and I almost wished for that same look to be directed my way.
Her green eyes were dead and empty though.
I didnât say anything to change that. Without a word to each other, we moved to the bar. I ordered an old-fashioned and water for her.
We both waited, not willing to be the first to start any more conversation. She probably did it to grate on my nerves. I did it to gauge hers.
When drinks were set in front of us, I finally remarked, âInteresting friends, Whitfield.â
âTheyâre the best kind of friends, Jaxon.â
âYou look the part. Nice and pretty. I havenât seen you since Jayâs last movie premiere.â
She glared. âYouâre here in your normal attire, wearing a tux as always, but I âlook the partâ? Whatâs that supposed to mean?â
âYou donât normally wear so much makeup, do you?â
âMaybe, I do,â she huffed out. âDo you normally dress like youâre on the job?â
Sheâd never been good at lying, and I was embarrassed at how proud I was of myself for being able to read her emotions. I leaned a little nearer to her. âYouâre lying.â
Her doe eyes narrowed, but I didnât elaborate. She stood there stiff in front of me. Iâd seen her comfort drain as weâd made our way over the bar. She was as polite with me as she was with her father. Her mannerisms, her stiffness, even her voice.
I wanted to shake her, kiss her, scream at her, and comfort her all at once. Iâd known her better than anyone once, and she couldnât hide behind formalities forever.
âExcuse me?â she whispered.
âIâve never seen you with that much makeup on.â I shrugged. âSo, youâre lying.â
She cleared her throat, glancing around to see if she could sneak away. âYou donât see much of me, Jax.â
âThatâs true. But Iâve seen you in passing over the years with Jay.â Why I was admitting it to her, I didnât know. âAnd, I seem to rememberââ
Her glass clanged when she slammed it down. She tried to smooth the napkin on the bar to cover it. âI seem to remember a lot of things, Jax.â
I smiled and her eyes widened like sheâd been caught. âWell, itâs good our memories havenât failed us yet.â
âYes, well, if memory serves me right, you left me high and dry six years ago. Didnât return a call or text. Didnât even send a postcard letting me know we were over. So, forgive me if I donât want to exchange niceties about what you remember about me.â
I was surprised she faced the night head-on with me. Normally, people would have danced around it. And she was even more reserved than most. âYou want to talk about that night?â
âI never want to talk about that night again.â She practically spit the words. âYou brought me over here. So, what do you want?â
âWell, I figure weâre going to be seeing a little more of each other, so we should clear the air.â It was the right thing to do. It might have been the reason I took her to the bar with me or it may have had something to do with her friend or âsomething like thatâ being near her.
âThereâs nothing to clear. You had nothing to share with me when you left, and Iâm guessing you have nothing to share now.â
Her eyes were vivid with determination, and I knew, even without her saying so, she was pushing me to share things about visiting her father.
âIf youâre looking for an apologyââ I started.
She cut me off with a harsh laugh. âIâd never expect an apology from you.â Her voice rose before she grabbed her water and gulped some down. âYouâre trying to get a rise out of me.â
I didnât say anything because I wasnât sure if I was or not. For the first time in a long time, I was on unstable ground with someone.
Her face flushed like sheâd disappointed herself. âItâs Jayâs night. Letâs just forget about us and be cordial.â
âFormalities were never my strong suit, Peaches.â
She sighed and her bottom lip pulped out just a little. âWell, lesson number one. It isnât formal to call someone by a childhood nickname at a social function when you havenât talked to them in years. Brey is fine.â
âI donât think I ever called you that.â I consciously made the effort not to flex my jaw.
She turned toward the crowd but I caught her little smirk. I turned with her to find my brother and her friends trying to act like they werenât watching us like we were their favorite guilty-pleasure TV show. Someone may as well have brought them popcorn.
She leaned her elbows back on the bar as she cradled her drink, and I watched her chest push out just a little. Her strapless dress was barely decent. Damn it, she couldnât have worn a fucking turtleneck? Then again, Iâd have found that indecent too. Sheâd filled out everywhere, and even though most women in the room were showing a lot more skin than her, I wanted to cover her up.
âWell, everyone calls me that now, Jax.â She may not have meant it as an insult but her grouping me in with everyone else felt like a sucker punch to the gut. I wasnât supposed to be everyone. I was supposed to be the only one.
As she stared at her friends, I saw her smile at Roman. He watched our movements like a hawk, never taking his eyes off her unless he was staring me down. I stared back, letting him know my place.
What he didnât understand about me was Iâd been there before him, and I was starting to think Iâd be there after.
Even if Aubrey wanted nothing to do with me.
Even if I told myself I didnât need to have anything to do with her. Being in her proximity showed me otherwise.
I didnât come here expecting anything with us. The plans Iâd made were to come to this town and support my brother while looking into my app launch. If I got to explore the remnants of our relationship in the meantime, that was a bonus. And I needed to make sure sheâd be fine through the shit I was about to stir up with her father.
Weâd grown apart, Iâd hurt her and sheâd moved on. Iâd moved on. And we were fine. Everything would stay just damn fine too, once I got all this shit straightened out over the summer.
Aubrey was right, we should be cordial. Nothing more, nothing less.
If I decided to fuck her in between to scratch the itch we both had for one another, then it would be nothing more and nothing less.
So, I convinced myself what I was feeling wasnât jealousy when I looked at Roman glaring.
The pain in my chest was just from gulping down the rest of my drink too quickly.
âWell, Brey,â I emphasized her name as I slid my empty tumbler onto the bar. She looked surprised and then somewhat pleased that sheâd gotten me to listen. âLetâs get you back to your friends, shall we?â
With that, I nudged the small of her back through the crowd and watched the goose bumps spread across her nape.
I smiled to myself.
We both had an itch to scratch, all right.