The Worst Kind of Promise: Chapter 1
The Worst Kind of Promise (Riverside Reapers Book 2)
I look up at the ominous storm clouds as they inch across the desolate sky, draping the night in everlasting darkness. The promise of rain is poised on the horizon, waiting to fall in tandem with my tears. The streetlamp beside me flickers precariously, a large beacon that shines down on me like Iâm a moth caught in a filth-covered flame. Cold air spills over my naked arms and legs, raising goose bumps on flesh, and the cement patch Iâve claimed as home for the time being has made my core temperature drop.
My dressâonce a thing of happy memoriesâhas been forever tainted. I canât feel my body. Itâs like it doesnât belong to me.
See, that already broken part of me has lost another crucial piece tonight, and I donât know if Iâll ever get it back.
I look at my phone and check the time. Ten minutes have passed since I called the only person I could trustâthe one I knew wouldnât ask questions and who just so happened to be in Pennsylvania visiting a friend.
I called Kit Langley.
Star left defenseman for the NHLâs Riverside Reapers. One of my brotherâs best friends. The guy Iâm secretly in love withâthe guy who looks at me like Iâm his kid sister.
Iâm sitting on the cold, hard gas station curb, wondering why I canât feel the rain penetrate my clothes when a Jeep Wrangler pulls haphazardly into one of the parking spaces, parking diagonally across two white-painted lines. The door swings open with enough force to jar me from my thoughts, and Kitâs behemoth frame lumbers out of the vehicle. The minute I meet his dark eyes, I feel mine surge with water, and despite my efforts to keep my emotions at bay, all of my tears flood out of me like a fast-rising tsunami.
Kit races over to me and yanks me up by the arms, pulling me into his large chest. His grip suffocates me, but I donât try to pull away. Heâs mumbling something into my hair, his hand cradling the back of my head, the rapid thundering of his heart a steady medium in my ears.
When his embrace loosens and he backpedals to look at me, his eyes are alight with worry, a muscle in his jaw flickering. âWhat happened?â he asks.
Iâm not alert enough to form a coherent sentence, but my voice box is vibrating before I have the chance to clamp my lips shut.
âIâ¦â My chest feels tight, like thereâs a thorn twisting in my sternum. Pair that with the tears wanting to make a quick getaway, and Iâm pretty much as useful as a push sign on a pull door.
âFaye, breathe. Youâre okay. Iâve got you,â Kit says, the softness in his tone wrapping around me like a gentle caress. His hands are still on my arms, and heâs craning his neck down to look at me.
A few sobs slip unbidden from my mouth as I inhale shakily, forcing my bloodshot gaze to focus. My vision is peppered with all sorts of ink blots, and my tongue feels like itâs swollen to twice its size.
Anger tears across his expression. âFaye, who hurt you?â
âHeâsâ¦Iâ¦â
Come on, Faye. Youâre safe. Youâre with Kit. Youâre not in danger anymore.
But was I ever in danger, or was it my past playing tricks on me?
The minute I stop trembling from nerves, I break down into a gigantic, blubbering mess, clinging to the back of Kitâs shirt. He hugs me with the same bone-crushing desperation, absorbing the weight of my pain, wringing every tear from me until Iâm nothing but a hollow shell.
He uses his thumb to brush away the moisture glistening on my cheek.
My stomach rolls with nausea. âMy date. H-heâI said noâ¦â I choke, the sweat on my brow now covering every bare inch of skin.
Kitâs eyes heat with understanding, and every muscle in his upper body ripples with iron-hot rage. The cords in his neck are taut, the veins in his forearms like individual rivers of power snaking up to bulging biceps.
âDid heââ
âNo,â I whisper. âIt wasnât his fault. I sent mixed signals.â
Iâd gone back to his place, weâd started kissing, and then heâd rolled on top of me, and that long ago night came rushing back with such ferocity that I froze. I couldnât speak, I couldnât move, and he took that as a sign to start undoing my dress. It felt like he was peeling off the tattered walls that protected my soul.
âThereâs no such thing as mixed signals. Either youâre into it or youâre not. And itâs pretty fucking clear when a chick isnât.â
âBut I was,â I whisper. âUntil I wasnât.â
Kit reaches out to, I donât know, maybe cup my cheek, and I flinch. He stops and lets out a litany of swears so harsh they feel like sandpaper grating against my skin.
âWhere. Is. He.â
Itâs not a question.
I trap the plumpness of my bottom lip between my teeth. âKit, stop.â
A guttural rumble stirs deep within his chest. âIâm going to kill that son of a bitch.â
âKitâ¦â I reach out to lightly touch his arm, and he seems to melt a little, but not much.
With a bracing breath, he rakes his hand through the front of his hair, looking about a second away from hitting whatever poor, helpless object is in the vicinity.
âIâm taking you to file a report.â
âNo,â I say, panicked. The last thing I want to do is explain this whole horrid, confusing story to another person.
âIâm not doing this with you right now, do you understand?â he snaps, gritting his teeth. âYouâre going to get in the car and go to the police station.â
I flinch at the bite in his tone, wrapping my arms around my midsection. âNothing happened.â
âWell, clearly something happened.â
Unable to maintain eye contact, I drop my watery gaze to stare at the middle of his chest. âNot tonight.â
âThen when?â
âA long time ago.â
âDoes Hayes know?â
At the idea of telling my brother the truth, panic whirls through me like a Category 5 hurricane, determined to bring me to my knees. âNo. And he canât know.â
In hindsight, I probably shouldnât have said that, because the lid that Kitâs already struggling to keep on his anger has completely blown off into the stratosphere.
âYouâre calling him.â He firmly grabs my wrist, urging me toward his car.
I plant my heels into the ground and pull back, managing to break free from his steel vise. Granted, it takes all my strength and a good amount of my breath.
âIf I go with you, we canât tell Hayes.â
âFayeâ¦â
Iâm thrown by his gentle protectiveness, the uncharacteristic softness I didnât think Kit was capable of, much less willing to show me. Kitâs callous. He isnât compassionate or particularly thoughtful, but itâs not because he actively chooses to be an asshole. He just isnât perceptive when it comes to othersâ emotions. But Iâve never seen him so distraught before.
âPlease, Kit. I canât bring Hayes into this. You know how reckless he can be. If he finds out, heâll lose it.â
Humorless laughter dances out of him. âOh, and you think Iâm super calm, cool, and collected right now?â
Even with my skittering pulse, thereâs enough fire inside of me to light a match. It scalds my insides, wanting to burn every weak part of me, wanting to turn that meek little girl still crying out for her mother into flakes of ash. âI donât need you to play hero! I just need you to be here for me. I called you becauseâ¦â
His eyebrows jerk together expectantly. âBecause?â
âBecause I trust you,â I finish.
Ever since Hayes joined the Riverside Reapersâa National Hockey League team born and bred in Riverside, CaliforniaâIâve had a crush on Kit. He and my brother have been friends for four years, and even though they donât always see eye to eye, theyâre always there for each other.
As much as I trust Kit, I donât think I could trust him with my heart.
Kit doesnât believe in strings, whether theyâre attached or not.
I know liking an unreformable womanizer is a disaster waiting to happen. Kit doesnât date. He never has. Heâs almost always pictured with a new girl, and each relationship lasts as long as a hockey game. If I wanted to get my heart broken, Iâd let Kit manhandle it all he wants. As much as I wish things could work out between us, Iâm smart enough to know that Kit canât give me what I needâhe canât give me stability or reassurance or unconditional love.
Like any well-adjusted young woman with a burning hatred for romance, my endless search for love is in part thanks to my absent father. When my mother died of cancer, my father abandoned his parental duties, leaving me and my brother to fend for ourselves. The only thing he was good for was the money he sent us.
I knew Kit was going to be in town this week. And a part of me wanted to reach out, to grab lunch with him, to just see him. But I knew better. So I was going to let him coast through Pennsylvania without so much as a text.
Not only would keeping my distance benefit me, but it would probably save Hayes from going into cardiac arrest. Hayes is aâ¦protectiveâ¦older brother. Heâs never approved of my previous boyfriends. He never thought they were good enough for me. If he found out I liked one of his best friends, his whole world would implode. Heâd probably ship me off to a nunnery overseas. After he castrates Kit.
Kitâs lips wrench into a frown, and I wish we were meeting under different circumstances. I wish he was disarming me with that million-dollar grin of his, the one that makes paper-thin wings flutter in the pit of my belly.
âIâm sorry for losing my cool.â He sighs, letting the knots of his muscles slacken, his voice returning to a lukewarm drawl. âYouâre scared. Flying off the handle isnât going to help either of us.â
Upon seeing me shiver, he glides his hands gingerly over my arms, generating a spark of heat within me.
âCome on. Letâs at least sit in the car while we talk things over.â
I nod through the debilitating lump in my throat, letting him guide me to the passenger door.
The minute I get into the safety of his Jeep, the roar of the outside world comes to an anticlimactic stop. All I can hear is the mingling of our breaths and the jittery whirring of the heater coming to life.
âWhat happened?â he asks, his hands white-knuckling the steering wheel.
I shift uncomfortably against the leather seat, a yawning hole of dread opening inside of me, threatening to drag me under and fill my lungs until they forget what crisp air feels like.
âI was on a date with a guy. Everything was going well. We went out to eat, then he invited me back to his place. It-it all happened so fast. We were in the living room, laughing about something stupid, indulging in glass after glass of wineâ¦and then he was on top of me. He was on top of me, and I couldnât scream, no matter how hard I tried. I tried saying no. I was frozen.â A string of words, almost all obstructed by the thickening saliva and errant tears in my mouth.
My head sloshes with the insuppressible memories, and my gut does a nosedive all the way to my toes.
âWhen I finally got the courage to move, I pushed him off me. He had no idea what was happening. I just freaked out. I was so embarrassed. I grabbed my things and ran like hell,â I supply, my hands shaking despite being planted safely in my lap.
This night has brought up a past trauma Iâve tried so hard to bury. Trauma thatâs haunted me for five years now. Itâs teleported me back to the night of my senior promâwhen I was raped by a man who claimed to be my friend. Ever since then, Iâve been wary to go on dates, to trust men. And yet, I went on this date voluntarily, thinking I could gain control over my trauma.
I was wrong.
Kit doesnât say anything for at least two minutes.
And then he loses it.
He curses so loudly that it echoes in my ears, and he punches the steering wheel, rocking the entire car in the process. Iâm surprised he doesnât break anything. His ivory-colored fists are strained, and his arms twitch with an ungodly amount of tension. I think heâs going to lash out again, but all he does is inhale deeply.
Kit rests his hands on the steering wheel, the surface of his knuckles throbbing with a crimson hue. âWhat do you want to do?â
The last thing I want to do is go home. Or be by myself. But I donât really have another option.
I want to stay with you.
âTake me home,â I finally decide, the weight of my solitude bearing down on my shoulders.
Kitâs leg bounces against the underside of the steering wheel. Heâs so large that he takes up the whole space, even with his seat pushed all the way back. His head is flush with the ceiling, his elbow eating up the entirety of the console between us.
He ponders me for a moment, swishing my weak words around in his mouth, then grimacing like he hates the taste of them.
He sticks the key in the ignition. âIâm not taking you home.â
I buckle my seat belt even as uncertainty courses through my veins. âThen where are you taking me?â
âTo my hotel room,â he says, looking over his shoulder as he backs out of his makeshift parking space.
With his arm right by my head, I get an intoxicating whiff of the bergamot cologne he always wears, which only lightly masks the heady musk of him. I covertly breathe him in, losing myself in his scent, the proximity, the safety of it all.
When I open my eyes, weâre barreling down an empty ribbon of road, vegetation flashing past my peripheral.
âI donât know if thatâs a good idea,â I tell him, worrying at the hem of my dress.
Kit slams down hard on the brakes, nearly making me face-plant into the glove compartment. My seat belt strains against my chest, squishing my boobs, and I recoil from the momentum.
He fully twists toward me, glaring. âWhat are you talking about?â
âUs. Being alone. In a hotel room together.â
The truth is the only place Iâd feel comfortable right now is in that goddamn hotel room.
âAre you afraid of me?â Kit asks, pained.
âNo. I know youâd never do anything to hurt me. Itâs justââ
Iâve never been in a room alone with you.
Seeing that this is apparently argument-worthy, Kit pulls to the side of the road, puts the car in park, and flips his hazards on. âYouâre out of school, right?â
âMy finals ended a month ago,â I admit, turtling in on myself.
âI just want to get you somewhere safe, okay? If youâre worried about missing work, tell them something came upâwhich it didâand that you need time off to be with family.â
Iâm not worried about my job as a teaching assistant. Iâm worried about having to confront my very real, very terrifying feelings for Kit. The good thing about Kit living all the way on the other side of the country is that I donât feel inclined to give in to my temptations. But right here, right now, I want to give in so badly, even after the night Iâve had. All I can think about is lying in bed with him and having him hold me until I fall asleep.
The look on Kitâs distractingly chiseled face would be butterfly inducing if it werenât for the hard lines marring his features. âI promised your brother Iâd look after you.â
I cross my arms over my chest, doing my best to look sure of myself. âI can look after myself.â
âClearly, you canât.â
I wince like heâd just physically burned me. Honestly, that would probably be less painful than whatever heart-squeezing sensation is erupting behind the cage of my ribs.
Kit registers what he said a second too late, regret immediately shadowing his eyes. âFuck, Faye. I didnât mean that.â
Tears sear the backs of my eyes, and I swallow down the vomit threatening to spray the floor of Kitâs car. âNo, you did. Youâre right. I need to handle this. Iâm not your problem.â I unbuckle my seat belt and reach for the door handle, but the little lock above it clicks down.
Kit knocks his head back against the headrest. âI didnâtâ¦thereâsâ¦this is all a lot to process,â he confesses. âI canât imagine how hard this is for you.â
All I do is nod, because now my mind is channel-surfing back to three hours ago when I thought Iâd end the night with a kiss goodbye. The buzz from both the alcohol and adrenaline are starting to wear off, meaning Iâll have to consciously try to weather this torrential storm.
I donât know what to say. Iâm paralyzed again.
I suddenly feel Kitâs hand squeeze my palm, and it jolts me back to the present. The warmth of the gesture brings a comfort I havenât known until now, not even when Iâve searched for it in other people.
âLook, Faye, when you called meâ¦Iâve never been so afraid in my entire life. I was worried something bad had happened to you, and I was right. I need to know Iâm keeping you safe, otherwise Iâm going to lose my mind.â Thereâs a brokenness to his words that impales that failing organ in my chest.
Lose his mind? Does he really feel that way?
His fingers tighten around mine, almost painful enough for me to acknowledge it.
âIf I go with you, you have to promise not to tell Hayes,â I murmur ashamedly, and I know Iâm in no position to negotiate, but I refuse to burden my brother with all this drama.
âYouâre seriously asking me to keep this big of a secret from your brother, whoâs one of my best friends, and who I also happen to live with?â His barb, sharp and stinging, clings to my side and burrows into flesh and muscle.
Heâs right: keeping a secret this catastrophic from my hotheaded brother isnât going to end well. But the alternative is possibly seeing my brother in handcuffs as heâs being taken away for aggravated battery.
Iâll get on my knees and beg this man if I have to. âPlease, Kit. He never has to find out about this. Heâll kill that guy on some crazy vengeance trip.â
âYouâre lucky Iâm not going to kill that guy,â Kit growls.
Oh, I am. Hayes might have enough rage to fuel a small village, but Kit beats his already impressive strength with a six-foot-five body of pure muscle.
âI appreciate it, I do. And now Iâm just asking you to keep a teensy, tiny secret.â
Kit sucks his teeth. âIâll contemplate it if you at least let me get you under a roof. Youâre half-soaked. The hotel is only ten minutes away.â
I have a feeling thatâs the closest to an agreement Iâm going to get from Kit, and considering he has the resolve and patience of a grizzly bear, Iâm not looking to argue with him for the rest of the night.
âOkay,â I acquiesce. âBut you have to promise to think about it.â
Kit holds his pinky out to me. âI promise.â
I hesitantly hook my pinky with his, letting myself get lost in the wilderness of his umber eyes. Thereâs warmth nestled in the inner rings, but with it comes a dash of concern.
Fuck, Faye! This couldâve all been avoided if you just focused on yourself, your career. If you stopped chasing after guys to fill that hole in your heart.
I pull back, severing our arrangement. âI shouldâve done something.â
âStop,â Kit snarls, the intensity behind the command alone shaking me to the core. âThis is not your fault. You need to understand that.â
Kit leans over the center console and hooks his forefinger under my chin, his thumb tracing the edge of my jawline. âThis is his fault, okay? This is all on him. He took advantage of you. This small-dicked asshole took your freedom, your choice, and heâll be paying for every second of it for the rest of his miserable life.â
âWhy do you care so much?â I blurt out before I can stop myself.
The first smile of the night surfaces over his extremely kissable lips. Extremely kissable, and extremely dangerous.
âBecause weâre friends.â
Friends? Iâve never hated one word so much in my entire life.