: Chapter 28
The Risk (Briar U)
âWhere have you been?â
I jump like a spooked horse when Dad suddenly appears behind me. I was at the kitchen counter waiting for my coffee to brew, and I hadnât even heard him come in.
I turn to find him frowning at me. I frown back. âI texted you last night that I was staying with a friend in Boston.â
âAnd when I asked what friend, you didnât text back.â
âBecause you didnât need to know more. You knew I was safe.â
âIs that a joke? Just because you stayed with a friend doesnât mean you were safe. Who was this friend? Was it the boy who was here last week?â
I sigh. âYou promised you werenât going to do this anymore.â
âAnd you promised you werenât going to be reckless.â
âHow am I being reckless? Yes, sometimes I drink with my friends or go dancing. Sometimes I partyâwith your players, by the way.â
âAs if that makes it better?â Anger flashes in his eyes. âThe last time you went out with a hockey player, you almost destroyed your life.â
I experience a jolt of guilt. Dad would go apocalyptic if he knew I was helping Eric last night. Turning my back to him, I open the cupboard and grab a mug. âThat was a long time ago, Dad. Five years, to be exact.â
âAnd yet youâre still sneaking around and staying out all night.â
âDad.â I spin around. âLook at me.â I wave my hands up and down my body. âIâm in one piece. Iâm alive. Iâm not even hungover, because I didnât drink last night. I stayed in Boston because of the storm and the power outages. I didnât feel comfortable being out on the roads.â I slam the mug down in the middle of the counter. âI did the responsible thing and Iâm getting shit for it. Do you to realize how ridiculous that is?â
âReally? So you were acting responsibly when you drove to Westlynn in the aforementioned storm and power outages to rescue Eric Royce from a crackhouse?â
I freeze. How the hell does he know about that?
As guilt climbs up my throat, I inhale slowly and remind myself that I have nothing to feel guilty about. Iâm not obligated to tell my father every detail of my life.
He waits for me to say something. When I donât, he spits out an expletive. âLouisa Royce called me last night. She didnât have your cell phone number, and she wanted to thank you again for getting her son home safe. And here you are telling me youâre not doing anything reckless. Why are you seeing him again, Brenna? Heâs trouble.â
âIâm not seeing him. He was in trouble and I went to help him.â
âWhy? He doesnât deserve your help. He doesnât deserve shit.â The raw hatred in his voice is terrifying. Dad isnât a Care Bear. Heâs never going to shower you with kisses and compassion. But heâs also not coldhearted.
âDad. Come on. Ericâs not an evil person. Heâs just in a bad place.â
âAnd itâs not your duty to rescue him from that place.â He drags both hands over his scalp. His gaze is a little wild. âDo you know how worried I was after I got off the phone with his mother? Not knowing if you were all right?â
âYou knew I was all right. I told you I was staying with a friend.â
âWhat friend?â he demands again.
âIt doesnât matter. But you know it wasnât Eric, because Louisa wouldnât have called to speak to me if Iâd spent the night there. So please, just relax.â
âYou want me to relax,â he mutters. âWe have a crucial matchup this weekend, and instead of preparing for it, Iâm worrying about whether or not my daughter is placing herself in danger.â
âIâm not placing myself in danger.â My throat tightens in frustration. I want to stomp my foot like a little kid, because I donât understand him. Dad has two modes: heâs either ignoring me and completely disinterested in my life, or heâs screaming at me for shit that didnât even happen.
Iâm trembling as I pour my coffee. âIâm only going to tell you this once,â I say, and my voice is as shaky as my hands. âI am not involved with Eric again, and I never will be. He still calls me sometimes, usually to hit me up for money.â
I turn to face my father. His expression is harder than stone.
âI gave him money, one time,â I admit. âAnd then I realized it would become a habit, so I never did it again. He doesnât phone that much anymore, maybe a couple times a year. Last night when he called me up, crying and scared because he didnât know where he wasâ¦forgive me if it makes me a reckless fool that I didnât want somebody I used to love to die in the fucking street.â
âBrenna,â Dad starts gruffly.
âWhat?â
âJustâ¦â He blows out a ragged breath. âTell me who youâre staying with next time youâre out all night. Donât make me worry like that again.â
Then he leaves the kitchen.
JAKE: You ok?
ME: Yes and no. Dadâs gone back to ignoring me, so I assume heâs gotten over it. Heading to Summerâs now for girls night.
JAKE: Fuck ya. Film it for me.
ME: What do you think happens at girls night?
JAKE: Naked stuff, obviously. Pillow fights. Kissing practice. Actually, wait, forget that. Weâre in college. Youâre teaching each other how to eat pussy.
ME: Yes thatâs exactly what we do. Youâre such a pervert.
JAKE: Yup. Anyway, Iâll call you later.
ME: You donât have to do that.
JAKE: I know I donât have to. I want to.
I bite my lip to stop from smiling at my phone. But I canât stop the warm, fuzzy sensation in my belly. Last night started out so awful, and ended up soâ¦not awful.
I still canât believe I slept with Jake. Figuratively and literally. I had sex with him and then I fell asleep wrapped up in his strong arms. Iâm in trouble. I think I really like this guy, and I donât know who I can talk to about it. Summer would tell Fitz in a heartbeat, and Audrey and Elisa suck at keeping secrets.
As Iâm approaching Summerâs house, my landlord Wendy sends an update about the basement.
WENDY: Basementâs still not ready. Maybe another week, possibly less. We found mold growth in the utility room, and weâre working to contain it. For now, I need you to send me a complete inventory of what you lost in the flood. Weâre filing the insurance claim this week.
ME: Iâll send it later. And please tell the mold guys to hurry up! I canât live with my dad anymore.
WENDY: LOL the idea of living with my parents again makes me want to die.
ME: Exactly. Hurry!
WENDY: Weâll do our best ð
I put my phone away and enter the house without knocking. The high-pitched giggles in the living room tell me that the girls are already here. I find Summer on the couch with Audrey. Summerâs friend Daphne is curled up in the armchair, and rounding out the group is a face I havenât seen since the morning at the diner. Rupi Miller. AKA, Hollisâs stalker-slash-girlfriend.
âBrenna!â Rupi says happily. Sheâs on the floor lounging on an oversized pillow and wearing a similar outfit to what she had on at the diner. A light-blue, A-line dress with a lacy collar, black tights, and two sparkly barrettes in her raven hair. She looks cute and prim, and the blue shade of her dress goes amazing with her skin tone.
âCome sit with me,â she urges. âAlso, you look gorgeous! Guys, how gorgeous does she look? I canât believe your skinâitâs so luminous. What do you use for it? On mine I use a homemade mask that my mom told me about. Thatâs how I get my pinkish hue. Itâsââ
âIâm going to grab a drink,â I interrupt.
Rupi is still chattering as I leave the room. I donât even know who sheâs talking to anymore. Maybe herself?
Summer trails after me into the kitchen. âHoly moly, Bee, that girl can talk. And I thought I was a blabbermouth.â
âYou are and so is she. Two blabbermouths can exist in the same realm, babes. Itâs not like Highlander.â
âWhatâs Highlander? I havenât seen it. Is that the one where the woman travels back in time?â
âNo, thatâs Outlander. Which, by the way, we absolutely need to watch because the leading man is smoking hot.â
âOooh! All right. Letâs do it after the semester ends.â
âDone.â
As I pour myself a glass of water, Summer raises her eyebrows. âItâs girlsâ night,â she reminds me. âWeâre drinking margaritas.â
âIâm hydrating first. Iâve barely had anything to drink today. I was holed up in my room working on my final paper for Comm Theory.â
When we wander back into the living room, Rupi is still gushing about her homemade face mask. âItâs just chickpea flour and yogurt, and I swear it is the best exfoliant ever. Youâll be glowing after.â
Audrey and Daphne are hanging on her every word. âIâm officially intrigued,â Daphne says. âIâm always on the hunt for a good exfoliator. My skin is garbage lately.â
âWe should do it now,â Audrey suggests. âDo you have chickpea flour and yogurt?â
Summer dons a blank look. âI have no idea.â
âLetâs go check.â Rupi races toward the kitchen with Audrey and Daphne hot on her heels.
I watch them go. âDid they just become best friends?â
âI think they did.â
âAre she and Hollis actually a thing?â I ask as I steal Daphneâs spot. I settle in the armchair and curl my legs under me.
âI have no idea. Itâs the strangest relationship Iâve ever seen.â Summer lowers her voice. âSheâs either screaming at him or heâs screaming at her. Otherwise, theyâre making out.â
I bite my lip to keep from laughing. âIf you think about it, thatâs exactly the kind of relationship I would expect Hollis to be in.â
âMe too. But itâs so weird.â
âExactly, like him.â
Summer smirks. âSays the person who made out with him.â
âSo? Youâve never made out with a weirdo before?â
âYou made out with Mike?â Rupi appears in the doorway, jaw agape.
Uh-oh.
For a second, I debate lying to the girl, until I realize how ridiculous that is. Who cares if I kissed Hollis? Besides, itâs not like he cheated on her with me. âI did,â I confirm. âBut you donât need toââ
âHa!â she interrupts, her brown eyes twinkling. âI totally knew! Mike tells me everything.â
He does?
âAnd donât worry, Iâm not mad at you,â Rupi assures me.
âI wouldnât have cared if you were.â
âHa, youâre so funny.â She giggles, then asks Summer a yogurt-related question before darting into the kitchen.
âI wasnât joking,â I tell Summer. âI wouldnât have given a shit if she was mad.â
She snorts. âI know.â
My phone vibrates, and I commit a girlsâ night faux pas by checking it.
JAKE: Howâs it goinâ over there? Have you had a girl-on-girl orgasm yet?
ME: Not yet. So bummed.
JAKE: Not as bummed as I am.
Detective Di Laurentis is instantly on the case. âWho are you texting with?â
âNobody.â
âDonât say nobody. You literally just texted somebody.â Her green eyes light up. âAre you still secretly dating that Harvard guy?â
I almost blurt out how did you know before I realize sheâs referring to McCarthy, not Jake.
âWe were never dating,â I answer with a shrug. âWe just hooked up a few times.â I hurry on when I see her opening her mouth. âThat was Nate, okay? Relax.â
âUgh. Say hi to him.â She looks disappointed that she hadnât stumbled upon a major scoop.
If she only knew.
The other girls come back. Rupi is holding a plastic bowl full of a beige-colored mixture. She quickly teaches everyone how to put it on. âAre you wearing any makeup?â she asks me.
âNo.â
Daphne glares at me. âAre you messing with us? Youâre really not wearing makeup? Not even concealer?â
âNope.â
âHow does your skin look so good?â
âGenetics?â I offer.
âI hate you,â Daphne says frankly.
Under Rupiâs sharp eye, we all start slathering the weird yogurt concoction on our faces. âHow long do we leave it on for?â Summer asks.
âUntil it dries. No longer than ten minutes, though.â Rupi flops down on her pillow throne near my feet.
From the armchair, I grin down at her. âSo whatâs the deal with you and Hollis? Are you together now?â
âOf course we are.â She stares at me like Iâm from a different planet. âWe were together after our first date.â
âDoes he know that?â Summer asks in amusement.
âOf course he does.â
I truly canât figure out if this girl is delusional orâ
Actually, thereâs no âor.â I think she might be delusional, period.
âItâs been ages. Weâre pretty much an old married couple now.â The freshman beams at me. âThatâs why I donât care about you guys hooking up. You werenât serious about him, anyway.â
I needle her just because. âMaybe I wasâ¦â
âNo.â Her confidence is astounding. âHeâs not your type.â
âWhat makes you say that?â
âBecause heâs a puppy dog.â
âWhoâs a puppy dog?â asks a male voice, and then the puppy dog himself bounds into the room. He yelps when he notices our faces. âWhy the fuck are your faces covered with glue?â
âOf all the things you couldâve picked, why glue?â Summer asks in exasperation. âWhy the hell would it be glue?â
âI donât know.â He scans the seating situation, as if he actually has a choice about where to sit.
Rupi pats the pillow next to her.
I swallow my laughter.
Hollis lowers his big body onto the floor. Puppy dog, indeed. Heâs wearing basketball shorts and a blue T-shirt that brings out the blue of his eyes. The shirt also hugs his impressive muscles, a sight thatâs always a bit jarring for me. Mike Hollis is like an obnoxious kid in a hot guyâs body.
He slings an arm around Rupiâs tiny shoulders. âYo,â he says.
I hide a smile. I swear, heâs so into her.
âSee, youâre a puppy dog,â she informs him. âSo silly and lovable.â
âIâm not silly and lovable,â he argues.
âYes, you are.â
âNo, Iâm not. You canât compare me to a puppy. You gotta pick something good. Like a stallion.â
âYou canât be a stallion unless youâre super hung,â I crack.
Audrey snorts.
Rupi glances at me in horror. âBrenna! You canât make disparaging comments about a boyâs penis. Itâs damaging to the ego. Just because Mike doesnât have a stallion penis doesnât meanââ
âWhy are you talking about my dong?â Hollis interrupts. âWhich you havenât even seen, by the way.â
âIâve touched it,â she says smugly, before patting his knee. âI was just telling everyone that our anniversary is coming up.â
Confusion washes over his face. âWe have an anniversary?â
âYes. Our one-month anniversary.â
âIt hasnât been a month.â
âWell, itâs been almost a monthââ
âTwo weeks!â
âTwenty days! Thatâs almost three weeks.â Rupi studies his face. âWhen is our anniversary, Mike?â
âWhat?â
I lean back in my chair and enjoy the show.
âWhen was our first date?â she pushes.
âWhy would I know that?â
âBecause you were there!â Rupi flies up to her feet and plants both hands on her hips. âYou didnât write down the date? Whatâs wrong with you?â
âWhatâs wrong with me? Whatâs wrong with you? Who writes down the date of a date?â
âIt was our first date. Are you telling me it wasnât worth remembering?â
Hollis stands too. At six-one, he towers over five-foot Rupi. And yet any bystander can see who really wields the power.
âYou showed up here and dragged me to dinner,â he reminds her. âI didnât even know who the fuck you were.â
âI really wish you wouldnât curse at me.â
âWell, if wishes were horses weâd all be equestrians.â
âHa!â Summer lets out a high-pitched laugh.
Daphne looks utterly fascinated. âWhat on earth does that mean?â
âThatâs not a real saying,â I inform him.
âItâs a real saying,â Hollis growls. âMy father uses it all the time.â
Summer grins broadly. âOh my gosh, Mike, your father is as incomprehensible as you are.â
I glance over at her. âWhere do you think he learned it from?â
Rupi doesnât appreciate the digression. She takes an angry step toward him, and now the two of them are in each otherâs faces. Hers is covered with that gunk, and his is bright red from frustration.
âI canât believe you donât care about our anniversary.â Rupi spins on her heel. âI need to reflect on this,â she declares over her shoulder. A moment later, we hear her stomping up the stairs.
Hollis turns to me and Summer. âWhy did you do this to me?â he asks miserably.
âWe like her,â Summer announces.
âOf course you do. Of course you fucking do.â He stalks out, too.
Thereâs a beat of silence.
âDo you think we can wash our faces now?â Daphne asks, grinning.
âProbably?â Audrey answers.
We pile into the hall bathroom where we take turns ridding ourselves of the mask. After I pat my face dry, I canât deny that my skin feels insanely smooth.
âRupi said you have to apply moisturizer immediately,â Daphne instructs.
âLemme grab something.â As Summer disappears, the rest of us admire ourselves in the mirror.
âOh my gosh, I really do have a pinkish hue,â Daphne raves.
âMy skin feels amazing,â Audrey gushes. âWe should package and sell this stuff.â
âWe can call it Face Glue,â I suggest.
Daphne snickers.
Summer returns with moisturizer, and our skin routine is back in business. Even though theyâre all the way upstairs, we can hear Rupi and Hollis yelling at each other. I really wish theyâd come downstairs and do it in front of us. Itâs such good entertainment.
Instead, weâre provided with entertainment in the form of Hunter arriving home. He looks sexier than usual. Maybe because his dark hair is rumpled and thereâs a seductive gleam in his eyes.
Heâs exuding so much swagger, I have to ask, âGot laid?â
âA gentleman doesnât kiss and tell.â He winks before heading for the kitchen.
âCould you grab the yellow pitcher from the fridge, please and thank you?â Summer calls after him. âWe need refills!â
âSure thing, Blondie.â
âHuh.â I look at Summer. âYou two seem better.â
âWe are,â she confirms. âI think itâs all the sex heâs having. The endorphins are making him warm and fuzzy.â
Hunter reappears and sets the plastic margarita pitcher on the coffee table.
âSo who was the lucky lady tonight?â I tease.
âNo one you know. Some girl at a bar in Boston.â
âClassy,â Audrey says.
He rolls his eyes. âWe didnât fuck in the bar.â
âDoes bar girl have a name?â Summer asks as she tops off everyoneâs glasses.
âViolet.â He shrugs. âNot to be a dick, but donât bother remembering her name. She kicked me out like two minutes after the sex.â
I canât help but laugh. âCruel woman.â
âNah. Made my life easier,â he admits. âI didnât want more than one night, anyway.â
âClassy,â Audrey repeats.
Now he chuckles. âRight. Iâm a horrible person for wanting a one-night stand, but sheâs not a horrible person for wanting the same thing. Makes perfect sense to me.â
I change the subject, reaching for my margarita. âYou ready for the game this weekend?â I ask him.
âReady as weâre ever going to be. Theyâll be tough to beat, though.â The intensity in his voice is promising. At least his head is in the game, and not on all the girls heâs hooking up with. âIf we can find a way to contain Jake Connelly, stop him from wrecking us, then weâve got a good shot.â
Ha. If they find a way to not be wrecked by Jake, Iâd love to know it. God knows I havenât found the solution.