The Worst Kind of Promise: Chapter 20
The Worst Kind of Promise (Riverside Reapers Book 2)
When Aeris and Lila asked me to accompany them on a girlsâ day out, it sounded like a great idea, especially since Iâve been imprisoned in a house full of hockey jocks and testosterone. But in hindsight, sitting in a poorly ventilated restaurant with sweat dripping down my back and Kitâs nagging words ringing in my mind, maybe a homemade peanut butter and jelly sandwich wouldâve sufficed. Donât get me wrong, Iâm happy that I get to spend time with them. I just wish the circumstances were a bit better.
I know they heard about my slip-up at the party. Everyone and their mother have heard about it by now. And yes, Hayes stuck by his promise to keep me locked in my room for the time beingâaside from Gageâs brilliant drinking game. Luckily, Kitâs rarely set foot in his room after that night. Itâs a good thing I didnât catch him, or I wouldâve thrown a lamp at him.
I canât get over the things he said to me. Heâs just a person. Heâs just a guy whoâs not entirely hideous and who has a knack for putting pucks into nets. Heâs not special, so I donât know why I let him have so much power over me. I was incensed at first, and even more so when he tried to talk to me during the game, but now Iâm just drained.
Iâve stopped feeling guilty, Iâve stopped pitying myself, Iâve stopped feeling angry. I donât have the energy to let him take over my life. And all of these secrets. Ugh, these fucking secrets! I donât want them anymore. I doâ
âFaye?â
I blink as the view of our waiter crispens, and everyone around the table stares at me, the young, probably fresh-out-of-high-school server waiting impatiently for me to order.
My gaze immediately locates the pasta subsection of the menu, because if Iâm going to get through this lunch without biting someoneâs head off, Iâm going to need sweet, sweet carbs. âSorry, Iâll have the tortellini,â I say, folding my menu and placing it in his outstretched hand.
He takes it from me with a blank expression. Then, like a light has been switched on, he plasters on the fakest smile Iâve ever seen. âWeâre so pasta-tively thrilled that you chose to dine with us this afternoon!â he exclaims cheerfully, then scurries off to the kitchen window.
âThat wasâ¦weird,â Lila comments, taking a sip from her water glass.
Aeris glances around the hole-in-the-wall restaurant, everywhere from the enlarged cartoon penne in a bikini to the random framed facts about pasta dating back to the thirteenth century. âYeah, the website made it look a lot more normal online.â
The restaurant has started to fill upâa surprise thereâand judging by the volume of people filtering in, our meals will likely be cold by the time they make it to our table. I hadnât realized how hungry Iâd actually gotten in the thirty minutes weâve been here.
Aeris folds and refolds her cloth napkin. Lila purses her lips as she takes in the outfits of the customers around us.
I sigh. âDonât you two want to ask me what youâve been dying to ask me since we sat down?â
âWhat? No, of course not. We-we have no idea what youâre talking about,â Aeris insists, nodding to Lila, who nods back just as vigorously.
I know when Aeris is lying. Everyone does. Sheâs a terrible liar.
Lila slips her manicured fingers between the gaps in her plaited braid, puffing up each individual section. âYeah, weâre just glad you didnât do cocaine. Thatâs the real hard shit.â
Aeris nudges her friendâs arm. âLila!â
âWhat? Iâm just being honest. And warning her. I did cocaine one time at a sorority exchange and was convinced I was going to die. I couldnât tell the head sister either because I wouldâve been dropped, so I locked myself in the bathroom for the rest of the night.â
I shift the weight on my hip bones, trying to ignore the shallow pool of sweat my backâs gathered on the hardwood seat. âSee! Molly isnât that bad. I donât get why everyoneâs treating me like a kid.â
âTheyâre just worried about you,â Aeris coos, her lips cracking into a sympathetic grimace.
She means well. The whole house does. Butâ¦I have a right to feel indignant, donât I? Iâm twenty-two. I donât need to be looked after all the time. And I know itâs immature to blame my own actions on someone else, but none of this wouldâve happened if it wasnât for Kit.
I run my nail through the condensation on my glass, eyes glued to the ring of water soaking into the varnished table. âCan we just talk about something else please?â
Lila catches on immediately, throwing herself into the ring with a wicked little grin. âIâm officially done with boys,â she announces.
Mid-drink, Aeris chokes on her water. âYouâre turning lesbian?â
âNo, but maybe down the road. I meant Iâm done with Bristol, specifically.â
My eyebrows lift with curiosity. âHold on. You and Bristol?â
She rolls her mascara-primed eyes, twirling her straw around. âYeah, ever since Hayesâ birthday party, but that clearly hasnât gone anywhere. Heâs so unsure of what he wants, but heâs sure enough that he doesnât want me,â she mutters, her tone shrouded in annoyance. âHe needs to make up his mind. Iâm not going to let him drag me along, you know? If he doesnât want the real thingâand that includes labelsâthen Iâm not going to give him the time.â
âMen suck,â I agree.
âIâll drink to that.â Lila throws her water back and finishes it in a few gulps like itâs a shot of tequila.
We both turn to Aeris, whoâs upgraded from folding her napkin to styling it into an unidentifiable animal shape.
âOh, yeah. Men suck balls. Death to the patriarchy!â she yells a little too loudly, attracting a side-eye from a granny a few tables away from us.
And the resentment that had momentarily left me is back, engulfing my heart in tendrils, a bunch of black conduits for the hateful poison seething in my bloodstream. Fuck Kit Langley. My life was better when he wasnât in it. And if I see his dumb face, Iâm going to punch him. In fact, maybe Iâll book a flight back to Pennsylvania to really show him.
Great. Now aside from being hot and hungry, Iâm pissed. Just when I said I wasnât going to give him any more power, here I am, handing it over to him. My temples throb, and dizziness wallops my nutrient-deprived brain. I somehow also feel dry and wet at the same time. The bare parts of my body are all crackly, but the clothed parts of my body are damper than they should be.
A waiter maneuvers through the three oâclock rush of incoming customers, carrying a tray of sliced fresh bread. Steam swirls like a thin brume from the doughy insides. The outside is crisped to perfection with flour sprinkled over top, and dried rosemary has been baked into the pristine, white craters, bringing an equally tempting scent to my nostrils.
My stomach rumbles angrily, and I press my hand to it, hoping that if I suck on an ice cube long enough, itâll just shut up.
Thereâs an elongated pause, then Aeris clears her throat. âSo, howâs school going?â
I stuff an ice cube into one side of my cheek. âItâs, uh, itâs fine. Finished finals with straight As, though my stats class was hell to get through. It was my first A-, and the teacher was terrible. Never explained anything, never provided study guides, included information on the midterms that we never learned.â
âA-? Thatâs impressive, Faye. I got a D in my Food Culture class. And half our grade was based on attendance,â Lila says, flashing a flirtatious smile at the waiter filling up her glass.
âDo you know what you want to do after graduation?â Aeris asks.
Iâm going into my junior year in the fall, so the post-graduation questions arenât new to me. But I hate thinking about them. Adulthood has more rigid schedules, but you have less control over everything. Iâm not ready for all of that. The only thing I know for certain is that Iâll work on my teaching credentials after college.
I swallow my melted ice. âKinda just going with the flow. You know, itâs impossible for kids right out of college to get jobs.â Deflect, Faye. Iâd rather not be reminded of the life I have waiting for me back in Pennsylvania.
âYou donât have to know,â Lila chimes in. âYour journey is your journey. No point in rushing through it if youâre headed to the same place in the end.â
Aeris nods. âI didnât get a job until months later. I actually remember going to all the stores downtown andââ
Thereâs a scream. A high-pitched, bone-chilling scream. And itâs coming from the blond across from me. I donât know how I didnât clock it as soon as it happened, but a passing server mustâve tripped by our table, because the plate he was carryingâwhich mustâve been Spaghetti Bologneseâis splashed all over Lilaâs designer shirt.
I freeze. The whole restaurant freezes. The waiter mightâve shit his pants, who knows.
Lilaâs in hysterics as Aeris slowly scoots out of her seat and escorts her to the bathroom. Now, instead of my friends sitting across from me, thereâs a mess of tomato sauce and chunky meatballs dripping off the table. Noodles the consistency of puke are sprawled in a brown mush on the floor. Lovely.
Honestly, if nobody was watching the disaster that just took place, I mightâve licked the table clean. Iâve gone from hungry to ravenous in minutes. With a sigh, I dig around in my purse for some sustenance, but then I remember I took my emergency Junior Mints out when I had a late-night cry session the other day. Thanks to Kit. All thanks to Kit.
A few waiters have been deployed to remedy the pasta explosion at the table, and they all scrub furiously like theyâll lose their jobs on the spot if they donât have the wood looking clean enough to eat off. And once their crew disperses with some mumbled apologies here and there, none other than Kit motherfucking Langley sits down in Aerisâ abandoned seat.
âWhat are you doing here?â I growl, my headache growing tenfold.
âI needed to talk to you.â Heâs dressed in a tank top, delicious tattoos on display, big lips in a slight pout, and just the right amount of perspiration condensing on his hairline.
Hold up. Did he follow me here? Did he place an AirTag on the bottom of my shoe or something? How did he know where I was?
âWhat, Kit? About what? Thereâs nothing to talk about.â
I have no idea when the girls are going to get back, but they canât see me and Kit talking. And Aeris seems like the kind of person who has those Tide to Go sticks on her at all times.
âWe have everything to talk about, Faye. I havenât been able to stop thinking about what I said to you at the party. I was out of line. I wasnât thinking about how my words would affect you. I started spewing anything I could think of to push you away. And none of it was true. None of it.â
My teeth nick the skin on my lower lip, and I taste copper. I lean back in my chair with my arms crossed over my chest. âGuiltâs a bitch, isnât it?â
Kitâs face twists in pain, his jaw clenched, the muscles in his arm wrung impossibly tight. âI know youâre mad,â he mumbles softly, using that same voice someone uses when theyâre approaching a cornered dog.
âMad? Iâm crushed. You broke my heart and my trust. You let me open up to you when you were planning on dumping me like one of your conquests.â
âFaye, please. Iâm trying here.â
âSo I should give you an award because you tried to apologize to me?â
I donât know if my heart will ever recover. Sure, it still beats how it was intended, and yes, I can still love with it, but the fissure inside of it will never fully closeâwill never fully heal.
Iâm sorry. I never meant to lead you on, Faye.
This was never going to work.
You were just so blinded by something you could never have.
On repeat. Every minute of every day since he said them.
âI fucked up. I know I did. I shouldnât have been so harsh. You didnât deserve any of it, and if Iâd found out someone else had ever treated you the way I did, I wouldâve killed them. I was trying to make things easier for me, but it only made things harder for you in the process. I made that choice. I was the selfish asshole who ruined the only good thing I had in my life.â
As much as I hate looking at him, I can see the regret in the strained lines of his face, in the blue-black smudges under his eyes.
Tears prick the backs of my eyes. My rage has liquified into sadness, and I can feel my body melting alongside it. âWhat am I supposed to say, Kit? I canât do this back and forth with you.â
âI donât expect you to forgive me, okay? I just needed you to know the truth. I needed you to know how I felt.â His stare never wavers, the gentle tone of his voice like susurrations through a grove of trees. I feel it brush my skin, and my body betrays me by wanting to go to him, to burrow into those strong arms of his.
âIf you give me the time, Iâll prove to you how much you mean to me. I promise. No more back and forth. The real thing.â
âThe real thing?â I squeak out, my elbow knocking into my silverware by accident as I layer my hands on the table. Theyâre inches away from Kitâs. Iâve waited four years for the real thing with him.
âWhatever you want. Coffee dates or hand-holding in the dark. Goodnight kisses or walks in the park. Me trying to impress you with my shitty cooking, us watching movies in bed together. Iâm willing to give you whatever you want, Faye, becauseâ¦â
âBecause?â
Iâm mad at him. Iâm mad at him. Iâmâ¦tired of being mad at him. A second chance. Thatâs all heâs asking for. And I know Kitâs a good person. What if I was the one asking for a second chance? Iâd want him to consider, right? Everyone makes mistakes. I would know; Iâve made plenty.
He brushes a wayward tear off my face, his touch fracturing my thoughts. No matter what narrative I give himâif heâs the hero or the villain of my storyâhis touch will always light up my heart. Rays of sun that shine from the inside out, through the barrier of my skin, into the world as a blinding display of color.
He inhales shakily, unsure if he should continue with his train of thought. The anticipation is making me sick. I canât read the emotion welling in his eyes.
Before Iâm given the chance to say anything, seven words stop my heart. Seven words that now take priority over the mindless excuses he gave me at the party. Seven words that drop all the way to my soul, scaring the darkness away, casting a soft afterglow in every corner of my body.
âBecause you mean the world to me.â
I donât know what to say.
His hand covers my own, a nonverbal message that tells me he means it with every fiber of his being.
I thought I knew what he was going to say. I thought it mightâve been an L-word gesture, but it wasnât. I mean, I guess Iâm not that surprised. Love is complicated. Love requires trust and the ability to be vulnerable. Iâve been vulnerable before, and it left scars soul deep.
If I give him a second chance, this is a no U-turn kind of street. Once I career down this road, I canât go back. Iâll hit a dead end. Am I willing to risk it all for Kit? Risk my heart again?
âI miss you. So much.â Authenticity hangs off every word. Itâs there in the deep brown of his eyes, a window to a mind Iâve wanted to live inside for years.
âI miss you too,â I whisper, my eyes refilling with tears, my chest aching from the sobs trying to escape.
Kitâs thumb brushes my knuckles. âIf you let me, I want to earn your trust back.â
âI donât know.â
âPlease, Princess. Please let me make things right. I canât stand what Iâve done to you. Fuck, I deserve to wallow in my own self-hatred, but you shouldnât have to question how much you mean to me. You want me to chew through my goddamn leash to get to you? I will. You want me to get on my knees and beg? I will. You want me to come clean to Hayes and take the blame for all of this? I will.â
I stare at a fleck of spaghetti sauce that the cleaning team missed in their tornado of towels and wipes, closemouthed.
âI donât care how long it takes. Make me work for it. I played hockey for eleven years before making it to the NHL. Iâm willing to wait even longer for you, because youâre a far better prize than going pro. You can hate me all you want, but what I wonât have is you questioning how amazing you are just because I fucked up.â
âIââ
Our original waiter has somehow materialized right next to me, unfazed by the fact that the two girls at the table have been replaced with a giant man in a skimpy tank top. âWeâre so sorry. Your dishes should be out within twenty minutes. There was a hiccup with our presiding chef.â
âIs everything okay?â I ask, exchanging a worried glance with Kit.
âYes. Heâs quite alright. His finger has been successfully located, and heâs on his way to the hospital as we speak,â the spindly teenager says, smiling at me like he didnât just use the word âfingerâ in a sentence regarding food. He shuffles off before I can shake him down for more answers.
Kit and I speak at the same time.
âDid he just say âfingerâ?â
âYou havenât eaten yet?â
âItâs fine,â I say dismissively, just as my stomach expels a growl loud enough to be heard over the chatter of the restaurant.
He gives me one of his judgy little looks. âSure it is. And I didnât just have a one-sided conversation with your stomach.â
Embarrassment rushes to my cheeks.
Kit reaches into the pocket of his shorts, pulls out a miniature box of Junior Mints, and slides them over to me.
It takes everything in my power not to snatch them up like some greedy bridge troll. âYou were carrying a box of Junior Mints with you?â
âI thought I should start to since we were hanging out so often,â he explains, watching as Iâgracefullyâpop the lid open and pour a handful of those delicious chocolate melts into my palm. I toss them into my mouthâa little less gracefullyâand muffle a moan when the sweetness hits my tongue.
âPlus, you get really stabby when youâre hangry.â
I flick a piece of candy at him, but it bounces off him like a tiny pebble. âI donât get hangry.â
He picks up the mint, tosses it into the air, and catches it in his mouth. âUh-huh. Then what do you call that time we were momentarily trapped in Ikea and you threatened to disembowel me with a blender blade if you didnât get a plate of meatballs?â
âThat wasnât my proudest moment,â I admit with a wry grin.
Kit leans back against the seat, chuckling under his breath, a perfect picture of the male specimen. The surly, famous NHL defenseman whoâs willing to do everything to win me backâ¦is all mine.
âButâ¦thank you. Nobodyâs ever done anything like that for me before.â
âIâd do anything for you, Princess.â
Princess. Iâve missed hearing that name, and itâs never sounded better.
Kitâs eyes duck to my lips, lingering, one bad decision away from pressing his mouth to mine. The crippling need to kiss him pulses in my lower abdomen, journeying all the way to my cunt, where desire throbs even harder and faster behind my cotton-clothed center. My hunger for food is long forgotten. All I can focus on is him. The way heâs looking at me right now, leaning in like heâs about toâ
And then I hear feminine laughter from around the corner, growing in volume along with the click-clack of heels.
âTheyâre coming! Hide!â I hiss, making a shooing motion with my arm.
Kit glances around the space frantically. âHide?â
âOr leave! I donât know! If they see you, theyâll know something is up.â
âSo, you still want to keep us a secret?â
âFor now, yes. Hayes is already livid over the party. I donât think now is the time for him to indirectly find out about us. Now go!â
Kit wastes no time making a beeline for the exit, his freakish hockey speed allowing him to slip undetected out of the door before Aeris and Lila can possibly catch sight of his retreating figure.
The two reclaim their seats, looking a lot calmer than they were before. The burgundy stain on Lilaâs blouse has faded to a light pink, only noticeable if one was a witness to the spaghetti catastrophe.
âYou guys got it out,â I observe, suddenly very aware of the fact that Kit and I almost got caught. That was way too close for comfort. And yeah, I couldâve lied and said that he was just dropping by to say hi, but that wouldnât have explained why no other member of the team was with him. Hayes for sure wouldâve stopped by to see Aeris.
Aeris pockets her stain stick. âOh, yeah. That was a tough-ass stain. But her shirt looks brand-new, right? Well, not brand-new. Just donât look at it too closely. Or smell it.â
Lila squints her evergreen eyes, curiosity scoring the lines of her face. âWhereâd you get that box of Junior Mints?â
Oh, crap. I totally forgot to hide those. I flatten down the lid tabs and stuff the box in my purse, my heart throbbing in my chest and affection accelerating through my veins. Kit was hanging onto themâ¦for me. Even though he said things that werenât true, his feelings for me never changed.
âI guess I had them with me all along,â I say, curbing a smile, mentally counting down the minutes until I get to see him again.