Faking with Benefits : Chapter 65
Faking with Benefits : A Friends to Lovers Reverse Harem Romance
After Layla leaves, I sit alone in the hotel room for almost two hours, watching the sky darken outside the windows. I donât remember the last time I felt so awful.
Eventually, I muster up the energy to pack up mine and Zackâs suitcases and order a taxi. Josh needs to be at the post-wedding breakfast tomorrow morning, and after a lot of deliberation, I leave him a quick note saying Zack was struggling, so weâve all gone home. I feel bad lying to him, but I know he wonât be able to leave before tomorrow afternoon, after everything has been cleared up. Thereâs no point putting extra stress on his shoulders. Laylaâs gone; he may as well enjoy the time with his family.
That night, I donât sleep. I canât. Laylaâs words keep running through my mind like a broken record.
You canât tell me you didnât know I was falling for you. You knew. You all knew.
Iâve been so stupid. I never shouldâve even kissed her, let alone slept with her. I shouldnât have held her in my arms at night, or invited her to a family function, or tied her to a bloody headboard. Sheâs absolutely right; weâve all been treating her like our girlfriends. We canât turn around now and say that none of it was real. It was.
We were supposed to be helping her find love. Instead, we strung her along, encouraged her to open up to us, and then broke her heart.
The only thing I can console myself with is that I nipped it in the bud when I did. If Iâd caved last night, and just grabbed her and kissed her like I wanted to, it would have hurt her so much more in the long run.
I canât be with Layla. And soon, sheâll see that. She doesnât want to be with some forty-year-old divorcee with commitment issues and a history of bad romantic choices. We did all of this so she can find someone else; someone suited to her.
So I donât know why I feel so bad about it.
Zack finally gets back to the flat at nine the next morning, just as Iâm giving up on sleep and heading into the kitchen for a coffee. Heâs a mess; his suit is crumpled and stained with dirt, and I can smell the sour scent of beer and sweat on him. He doesnât say a word to me, heading straight to his bedroom and locking the door. I make my drink and pull out my laptop, settling in for a day of work. I need something to distract me until Josh gets home.
Almost four hours later, Iâm halfway through a blog post about setting healthy boundaries when a massive clatter rocks the flat.
âIDIOT!â Zackâs muffled shout easily pierces through his bedroom wall. Thereâs another crash, like heâs kicked something over. âGODDAMN IDIOT! What the HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU?â
Alarmed, I shut the lid of my laptop, but before I can go check on him, Zack barges into the lounge. He looks half-mad; his eyes are wide and red, and heâs still in last nightâs suit.
âZack.â I stand. âAre you okay?â
He ignores me, storming into the kitchen and yanking open the cupboard under the sink. He starts rooting around inside, pushing out armfuls of cleaning supplies. Bottles of dish soap and grease remover clatter to the kitchen tile, bouncing and rolling under the cupboards.
I follow him, alarmed. âHey. Calm down. What is it?â I reach down to touch his shoulder, and he shoves me away.
âDONâT TOUCH ME!â He roars, standing and moving onto the next cupboard. He slams the door open so hard all the plates inside rattle. âGET THE HELL AWAY FROM ME!â He tugs out a pile of plates, dropping them onto the wooden counter. I hear the porcelain crack.
âZack.â I grab him by the shoulders, spinning him to face me. âWhatâs happening? Are you looking for something?â
He looks down at me. Heâs panting like a dog. His pupils are so dilated his eyes look black. âI canât find her ring,â he forces out, his voice rough.
It takes a few seconds for that to sink in. âEmilyâs ring?â I ask. âThe one you wear around your neck? When did you last see it?â
He runs his hands through his hair. âI donât know,â he snarls. âI donât know. I had it at the wedding. But now itâs gone. I lost it.â He kicks the dishwasher, slamming his foot into the door with an awful clang. âI FECKINâ LOST IT!â
Oh, Jesus. âZack. Stop. Weâll find it.â
âWhat if we donât?!â He kicks the dishwasher door again, denting the metal.
I grab him by the back of his jacket, pulling him away. âStop that. Go sit in the lounge, and weâll sort this out, okay?â
He makes a strangled noise, turning away from me and bracing himself against the counter. For a few seconds, heâs still, breathing hard. Then he grabs a mug from the draining board and throws it at the wall. It shatters into pieces.
I jump back from the shards. âZack, for Godâs sakeââ
He buries his face in his hands and starts to cry. I freeze as I watch tears drip down between his fingers, landing on the counter. âI donât have anything else from her,â he chokes out. âSheâs never gonna give me anything else. If itâs gone, sheâs gone, and Iâll never get any part of her back again.â He slumps against the counter, his breathing ragged. âSheâs gone. I lost her. I lost her.â
My chest hurts as I look at him.
Iâve never seen this side of Zack. He always seems so carefree. It was obvious that the booze and the girls and the crazy nights out were a distraction from something, but I didnât realise this was what he was running from. To my knowledge, Emily died twelve years ago. Sheâs been gone almost half his life.
Before I can work out what to say, the flatâs front door flies open. Josh strides in, his face like thunder. I barely have time to register whatâs happening before he grabs Zack by the collar of his shirt and shoves him backward, slamming him up against the kitchen wall.
âWhat the Hell did you do?â He snarls.