: Chapter 6
The Do-Over (The Miles High Club Book 4)
I watch her walk off as she disappears through the crowd.
One.
One . . . how is it one? Nobody is one.
My tongue swipes over my bottom lip. Itâs still buzzing from that hot fucking kiss.
Hmm . . .
That was unexpected. She isnât even my type.
âChristo,â I hear someone call.
I turn to see Bernadette. Her arms are wide as she rushes for me. âYou didnât kiss me yet, darling.â She slides her arms around my behind as she pretends to hug me. âItâs the full moon.â
Ugh, this woman is like a rash.
âYou werenât near me.â I fake a smile as I peel her hands off my behind.
Go away.
âThat doesnât matter.â She laughs as she leans in for a kiss . . . I lean back and glance over to see Hayden being led to the dance floor by some guy.
Sheâs laughing, and he spins her around.
What?
âKiss me.â Bernadette smiles dreamily up at me.
For fuckâs sake . . . not now, woman.
âNo, no, no,â I reply. âWeâre roommates,â I tell her. âNo hanky-panky.â
I crane my neck to see what Hayden is doing. The guy is talking to her, and sheâs laughing as she listens attentively in return.
Hmm . . .
Bernadette goes up on her toes and leans in for the kiss. âStop.â I wince, annoyed. I push her off me and march toward the dance floor. I fake a smile to the guy and lean in to Hayden. âCan I have a word?â
âWhat about?â she says loudly, so the guy can hear.
Great.
âBernadette, our roommate, has gone completely mad, and I need you over here for a moment to talk sense into her.â
âOh . . .â Her face falls.
âIâll wait here for you,â the guy says.
âThat wonât be necessary,â I reply. I drag her to the bar.
She begins to look around. âWell, where is she?â
âOh, look, sheâs better now. Listen,â I blurt in a rush. âWe have other things to discuss.â
She frowns.
âThat kiss . . . now, that was unexpectedly hot, and we need to do it again so that I can fully gauge the situation.â
âSo Bernadette hasnât gone completely mad?â She frowns.
âWho gives a fuck? Listen . . . ,â I continue. âAbout that one-lover thing . . .â
âAre you serious?â she snaps.
âDeadly.â I put my arms around her and pull her close.
âStop it.â She pushes me away. âI donât want to kiss you.â
âWhat?â I gasp. âWhy not?â
âEw . . . youâre not my type.â
âEw?â I widen my eyes. How rude. âWhat are you talking about? Iâm everybodyâs type.â
âNot mine.â
âYou donât even know your type yet. There was only one. Here, Iâll show you.â I reach for her again.
âI like blond, skinny, and sensitive.â She bats her eyelids to be a smart-ass.
The exact opposite of me.
I canât help myself. I retaliate. âWe do have some things in common. I like blonde, skinny, and horny.â
Ugh . . . stop talking, fool.
âGood for you.â She holds her arms out to the crowd. âThere are plenty of them here. Go get one.â
What is this woman doing? Nobody has ever knocked me back before.
âDonât you think we should explore that kiss a little further, do some investigative research?â I ask her.
âNo.â
âWhy not?â
âI didnât like it.â
âWhat?â I gasp. âThat kiss was fucking hot, Grumps. What are you talking about?â
âNot for me. It was a bit sloppy, if Iâm honest.â
I stare at her, horrified.
What do you mean?
âWell . . . that was all your fault,â I splutter. âYou threw in the number one thing right before, and I was shell shocked, thatâs all. I can do better.â I grab for her. âIâll show you now.â
âGoodbye, Christopher.â She turns and walks back to that guy on the dance floor.
I stand still, outraged, my hands firmly planted on my hips.
Ha . . . what an idiot. She doesnât know what sheâs missing.
I walk over to the side of the dance floor and size up the guy sheâs talking to.
Blond and skinny . . . boring looking. I watch them for a while, and Hayden seems very interested in everything the fucker says . . . I canât even imagine what dreary shit heâs talking about.
Screw this.
I march off to the bar.
âOh, Christo.â Bernadette runs after me.
Fucking hell, this woman is killing me.
I need some rat bait.
An hour later Iâm standing talking to a group of people, and I catch sight of the kid who works here. Heâs walking around and collecting glasses. I watch him for a while: so young to be in an environment like this. He seems totally unfazed and getting on with the job.
âWhere are you from, Christo?â a woman asks me.
âNew York, originally. I live in the UK now.â
âOh, I live in the UK. Where are you?â She smiles.
Thereâs a group of guys to the left of the dance floor, rolling blind drunk and being obnoxious. I sip my beer as I watch them. Iâm not sure where they come from, but they are speaking French. One of them steps back and bangs into the kid. He knocks the glasses out of his hands.
âRegardez ou vous marchez, putain lâidiot!â he yells at him. (Translation: Watch where youâre walking, you fucking idiot.)
The kid bends down to pick up the dropped plastic glasses. He glances up, but itâs obvious he doesnât understand the language.
âMâas-tu entendu?â the guy yells as he stands over him. (Translation: Did you hear me?)
I pass my beer to the girl on my left and make my way over.
âReponds-moi espece de putain de cochon grossier.â (Translation: Answer me, you fucking rude pig.)
Adrenaline surges through me, and I stand in front of the kid. âRecule la merde.â (Translation: Back the fuck up.)
HAYDEN
The music is loud, and the laughter is endless. This is the best night of my life. Iâve never had so much fun. I catch sight of Christopher on the other side of the dance floor, walking over to a group of men. His stance tells me something is off.
I stop dancing and watch him. Whatâs he doing? Without thinking, I begin to make my way over.
âSâexcuser,â I hear Christopher say. (Translation: Apologize.)
âVa au diable.â (Translation: Go to hell.)
I frown as I walk closer. Theyâre speaking another language. Let me rephrase that: theyâre fighting in another language.
Christopher is angry, and he pushes a young boy out of the way. Whoâs he?
Huh?
Whatâs going on here?
âHayden.â Someone laughs. âGot you.â Iâm lifted up and playfully thrown over someoneâs shoulder.
âAhh, put me down.â
âMake me.â He laughs, thinking Iâm joking. He runs me across the room, and as Iâm trying to get out of his grip, I see Christopher push the guy in the chest. The guy stumbles back.
What the hell?
Next minute, all hell breaks loose.
Thereâs an all-out brawl.
Men, all-out fighting. Everyone is stepping in, and I have no idea whoâs on whose side. But I see Basil and Bodie in there fighting alongside Christopher too.
What the hell?
The music stops, and the lights go on. Security guards grab the troublemakers and struggle outside with them. The guy Christopher was fighting seems super drunk, and heâs yelling something. Christopher is yelling back at him in another language as they get pushed outside.
Bernadette comes and stands beside me as we watch them get ushered outside.
I glance over at her, and sheâs smiling goofily after them. âWhat?â I frown.
âHe speaks French.â
I roll my eyes. âYou mean fights in French.â
âThatâs even hotter.â
I smirk, because sheâs right . . . not that Iâll ever admit it.
The music starts, and she grabs my hand and pulls me to the dance floor, and we laugh as we twirl, the drama all but forgotten.
Still having the best night of my life.
Iâm woken by the sound of hysterical laughter, men laughing like hyenas as they fumble and try to unlock the door.
I screw up my face. God, no . . . go away.
I roll over and snuggle back into my blanket in my bottom bunk. This is the first night Iâve actually been able to sleep all week. The three hundred drinks I had at the full moon party are responsible, no doubt.
The door busts open, and someone falls through it onto the carpet to deep belly laughter. It echoes down the quiet corridor. âShh.â
âShh.â They all giggle. âShh, you noisy fucks.â
I screw up my face as I try to open my eyes. The sun is peeking through the blinds. Itâs early morning.
More hysterical laughter.
What could possibly be so fucking funny at this godforsaken hour?
âDo it, do it,â Bodie slurs.
Itâs the boys. Theyâre back from wherever theyâve been.
They line up in a row and start singing words that I canât understand. âAh, Macarena.â They all jump to the left and start doing the Macarena dance.
âThey all want me. They canât have me,â they sing.
Oh god . . .
Christopher and Basil have no shirts on. Bodie is missing his shorts and wearing underpants with his shirt open, and Christopher has a traffic cone on his head.
âWhat the hell?â I moan. Oh no . . . my head. Itâs broken.
âAh, Macarena.â They jump to the right and keep doing the dance.
âWeâre fucking good at this,â Christopher says as they sing. âWe should be strippers.â
âI know, right?â Bodie agrees.
They keep dancing to their off-tune singing, and I smile into my pillow as I keep dozing.
âAh, Macarena,â they call as they jump to the left.
âShut up!â I throw a pillow at them. I look up to the top bunk, and Bernadette is out cold. How is she sleeping through this?
âAh . . . my number one favorite grump waited up for me,â Christopher slurs. He holds one finger up and raises his eyebrow. âNumber one.â He drops to his hands and knees and crawls toward me until heâs millimeters away from my face. âSee what I did there?â
I stare at him deadpan.
âOne.â He widens his eyes as if making a great joke. âGet it?â
âI get it,â I snap. âAnd youâre going to get it if you donât go to sleep immediately.â
He chuckles and then flops down, his face resting on my mattress, his body on the floor beside my bed. His eyes close in exhaustion. His traffic cone digs into my pillow, and I take it off him and hurl it at the other two fools who are still doing the Macarena. âWhere are your pants?â I bark at Bodie.
âThey got caught on the fence.â
âThe fence?â
âThe kebab man chased me, and I had to jump over the fence.â
I sit up onto my elbows. âWhy did the kebab man chase you?â
âHe stole his sauce bottle.â Basil hiccups. âFucking funniest night in history.â
Christopher stirs, and I push his head back down hard. âGo back to sleep, you.â
âGo to sleep,â I tell the two Macarenas.
With more singing and lots of grumbles, they finally undress and get into their beds, and ten minutes later the room falls silent as they drift off.
The morning light is just creeping through now, and in the filtered light I can really look at him without anyone knowing.
A secret-spy kind of mission . . .
I stare at the face beside me, his body on the floor, his face on my pillow. He has dark wavy hair and stubble thatâs nearly a beard. Big red lips and perfect olive skin. My eyes roam down over his shoulders and muscular back. His long dark lashes fan across his face. His forearm is strong with thick veins that course up onto the backs of his hands. They have a dusting of dark hair in all the right places. Just his close proximity swirls something in my stomach.
Heâs a beautiful specimen of man; thereâs no denying it. Large, virile, and playful.
I get what they see in him.
Even after seven hundred drinks, a traffic cone, and kebab-sauce thieving, he still smells good. How, I donât know.
âHmm,â he rumbles with his eyes closed. I smile as I watch him.
Pity heâs such a dick.
Iâm just too tired to wake him to move him back to his bed. Heâs harmless there and isnât hurting anyone.
I close my eyes and begin to relax.
âOh no. Oh no . . . oh. No.â A soft moan sounds through the room. âMy head.â
âFuck my life,â Bernadette whispers.
âWaaaattttttteeeeer,â someone whispers in a husky-dry-voice kind of way. âI need water.â
I smile with my eyes still closed. Hell. What a night.
Hungover doesnât come close.
âItâs so hot, like an oven. Someone open a fucking window or something,â Bodie whispers. âIâm being cooked alive here, man.â
My heavy eyelids slowly open, and the first thing I see is Christopher propped up on his elbow, watching me from his place on the floor. He gives me a cheeky smile. âMorning, Grumps.â
I frown. âWhat are you doing?â
âYou know.â He smirks. âJust admiring the view.â
Who knows what I look like, but it canât be good.
âI need a swim,â I whisper.
âYep. Iâm coming.â He sits up and then frowns. âWhy did I sleep on the floor?â
âYou didnât make it to your bed.â
He frowns as he looks around the room. âWhy is there a traffic cone in my bed?â
âYou were wearing it as a hat.â
âHmm.â He looks around as he assesses the damage. âGood night.â He stands and looks down at me. âLetâs go, Grumps.â
âCan you stop calling me Grumps?â
âItâs a term of endearment.â
I roll my eyes. âI have to get changed.â He takes my hands and pulls me up to my feet.
âIâm coming,â Bernadette says.
âMe too,â Bodie chips in. He gets up and hits Basil. âWake up, weâre going to the beach.â
âOh fuck.â Basil whimpers as he puts the back of his arm over his face. âI canât face peopling today.â
âTough. Youâll feel better once you eat.â
I pull my T-shirt down over my boxer shorts, suddenly feeling exposed. âI need to get my things from my locker.â
âYeah, me too. Come on.â
I look down at myself. âI canât walk out into the corridor like this.â
âNobodyâs eyeballs can even focus today. Youâre safe.â
âGood point.â
We walk out to the corridor and down to the lockers. âHow come our room doesnât have our lockers in it?â
âFossils donât need clothes, apparently,â he mutters dryly as he undoes his bag and rummages through it. âIâm buying a big towel today. I donât care if I have to throw it out tonightâI am not taking that pissant towel to the beach. I hate the fucker.â
I smirk. âIf you hate that damn towel so much, why did you buy it?â
âThe wanker from the outdoor store said it was a must-have.â
âI have one, too, although it doesnât bother me like yours does,â I reply.
âYeah, well . . .â He keeps looking through his bag. âMy particulars are bigger than yours. I need more material.â
I smile. Particulars . . . Where does he come up with this stuff?
Two guys walk down the corridor, and one turns to face me as he walks past, doing a full circle.
âKeep walking,â Christopher mutters dryly.
âBe nice,â I whisper. âMy particulars need attention, too, you know.â
He fakes a smile, and then his face drops instantly as he throws a T-shirt back in his bag. âGet dressed.â
I exhale heavily and lean up against my locker. âI really donât have the energy to even get my bag out.â
âFuckâs sake, woman, whereâs your bag?â
I point to my locker.
âOpen it.â
I press in my code, and he drags my backpack out and unzips it. âWhat are you wearing?â He begins to look through my things. âWhy is this bag so messy?â
âI donât know.â I bend and push him out of the way. âIâm a backpacker. Itâs supposed to be messy. Move.â
He stands and leans his head back onto my locker. âIâm fucking dehydrated.â He holds his arms out to look at his veins. They are in full glory and popping out everywhere.
âI wonder why.â I roll my eyes. âWhereâs my swimsuit?â I keep looking.
âSeriously,â he whispers angrily. âHurry the fuck up.â
âYou donât have to wait for me, you know?â
âI actually do. Youâre wearing nana pajamas, and they are probably going to kick you out of here.â
âProbably a good thing,â I huff. âSeriously, Iâm going to kill Monica.â
âWhoâs Monica?â
âMy best friend back home. She took some of my clothes out of my packed suitcase and snuck in ho wear.â I hold up the tiny black bikini. âSeriously, what would this even cover?â
He shrugs. âWorks for me.â
I screw up my face. âShut up.â I push my bag back in and march past him into the bathroom, too tired to look for a decent swimming costume for one minute longer.
I put the bikini on and look down at myself.
What the fuck?
This is obscene. I canât wear this in public.
I hear Kimberlyâs voice as she talks to someone. I like her; we clicked last night. I open the cubicle door.
âHey, Hazy.â She smiles.
âDoes this look ridiculous?â I whisper.
âWhat?â
I hold my arms out. âThis bikini, itâs . . .â I widen my eyes as I search for the right word.
âHot.â She looks me up and down. âTurn around.â
I do a 360.
âPerfect, you could eat cheese off your ass.â
I screw up my face. âThatâs not a saying.â
âYeah, it is. You know, you could eat cheese off her ass.â
âIâve never heard of that in my life.â I frown. âYou want to come to the beach?â
âYou going now?â
âYeah.â I peer down at my boobs as they nearly fall out. I try to stretch the fabric to cover more.
âOkay. Give me five minutes.â
âMeet by the front doors?â I ask her.
âOkay.â
I walk out to see Christopher walking out of the bathrooms at the same time. He looks me up and down, and his eyebrows flick up as if heâs surprised. âHot . . . Grumps.â He readjusts his dick. âYouâve given me a semi in that bikini.â
I curl my lip in disgust. We begin to walk back to our room. âWhat is it with you and semi anyway?â I ask.
âWhat do you mean?â He frowns.
âSemikissed me, semidick . . . you seem to have a lot of semi going on.â
âYou couldnât handle the lot.â
âI wouldnât want to.â I widen my eyes.
âGood.â He squares his shoulders. âBecause youâll never have the chance.â
âI wouldnât want it.â
âGood.â We walk into the room, and everyone is ready to go.
âLetâs go.â
The beach is hot, and the ocean is cold.
Perfection.
We lie on our towels, the six of us. Weâve eaten lunch and spent nearly the entire day here. Itâs weird. I donât know these people, but I feel super comfortable already.
âWhat are everyoneâs travel plans?â Bernadette asks.
âWell . . .â I shrug. âMy plan is to stay at a central base in each country for a month. That way, I can get a job for a few days a week and travel around for the rest of the time. If I donât work at least two shifts a week somewhere, I wonât have enough money to stay for the entire twelve months that I want to.â
Christopher sits up, his interest piqued. âWhere do you want to go?â
âWell, I started in Spain,â I tell them. âI think Iâll go to Italy next. I want to do Prague. Greece. Switzerland. Germany, maybe?â
âHmm.â He thinks for a moment. âThat sounds like a plan. Iâm coming.â
âWhat?â I frown.
âThat actually is a good plan,â Kimberly says. âI need to start working a few days a week too. Mind if I come along?â
I shrug. âI . . . no. Guess not.â
âYeah, Iâm in,â Basil says.
âIâm not being left out,â Bernadette says.
We all look to Bodie. He shrugs. âCan we go to Portugal?â
âI guess.â I shrug. âIâm not set where I go. I just need to work a few days. Thatâs why I need a base. Totally flexible with where we go.â
Christopher looks between us. âTwelve months . . . twelve countries?â
Everyone smiles as a weird kind of excitement runs between us.
âDeal.â