He comes back not even two minutes later. He’s still damp all over, his shaggy hair stuck to the sides of his face and the back of his neck. And he’s still not wearing a shirt. He’s swapped out the towel for a pair of gym shorts, which does nothing to make me any more relaxed. I suppose there’s less chance of a wardrobe malfunction now, but he’s still so very naked.
And nice to look at.
The legs of the chair scrape against aged tile as he pulls it out to take a seat. He demolishes half his glass of milk in one long drink, and my eyes stick on the way his neck moves. His Adam’s apple bobs, and I notice how very defined it is. It’s chiseled like his jaw and his muscles, and as weird as it is . . . it’s kind of a turn-on.
If I can’t even look at the guy’s freaking Adam’s apple without getting tingly, there’s probably no hope for me.
He sets the glass down and wipes his mouth.
His mouth. Oh God.
“Water okay?”
I blink. “Hmm? Oh. Yes, it’s fine. Thanks. I mean—”
“I think you’re the most polite person I’ve ever met.”
I shrug and trace a finger through the condensation on my glass.
“Strict upbringing.”
That’s an understatement. The foster home I’d been in before the Brenners adopted me was practically a military institution. We were out of bed at dawn, and had a full day of scheduled chores and activities. There was never a spare minute to just be . . . to play or imagine or discover something new. I was the youngest one in the group, and all the older kids were used to it, but I still only wanted to be outside lazing around in the sun, climbing trees, playing games.
I can’t be too sorry, though. The Brenners had liked how well-behaved I was. At nine years old, I’d stopped dreaming that some family would come take me away. Or at least . . . I told myself to stop dreaming about it. Even then, I was practical to a fault. But they met me, liked how polite I was. They’d laughed and looked at each other every time I uttered “please” or “thank you” or “sir” in my high-pitched voice. And they picked me, just plucked me up and gave me a new life, and there are still days when my life before that feels like a dream.
So really, structure has worked out well for me most of my life. It’s only the last week and a half that it’s been crumbling around me.
Needing to do something to fill the silence, I push the envelope toward him and say again, “Thank you for helping me and Matt. That was a really nice thing to do.”
“Nice,” he mutters and lifts his glass to his mouth again.
“Yes. It was very nice. As was getting your friends to give us a ride and inviting us over to your place.”
He clears his throat. “Trust me. My intentions were not nice at all.”
“You were nice to me.”
I see the first hint of a smile on his face since the moment he opened the door, and even though it’s small, it nearly knocks the breath from my lungs.
“Yeah, well. That’s the only kind of nice I know how to be.”
I blush. Because I hadn’t meant what he’d done to me, though that had been far more than nice.
“I mean . . . you were honest with me. You didn’t get angry when I decided to leave. You offered me a ride home even though you probably didn’t want to see my face again. You invited me inside today, and you didn’t have to. I think that qualifies as nice.”
He taps his fingers on the table and lifts those gorgeous eyes to mine. “I’m not sure my intentions are any nicer today than they were then.”
I swallow, but even with the water I’ve been sipping, my mouth is so dry that it takes longer than normal just to perform that simple task.
“Oh.”
He laughs. Actually laughs. And it reminds me just how different today’s Silas has been from the one I met the other night. I smile back at him. It feels really good to know that even for a few seconds I pulled him back from that. I spend most of my days trying to make a difference, and none of it has ever felt quite as satisfying as that laugh.
“How’s Matt?” he asks.
“Telling everyone that he met you and Carson. He won’t shut up about it, actually.”
“Well, I’m glad someone left that party happy.”
“I didn’t exactly leave unhappy, you know. A little confused, yes. Overwhelmed. But not unhappy.”
Then I wonder if he wasn’t talking about me, but himself, and I’m not sure how I feel about that. I won’t feel guilty for leaving on Friday. It was the right thing to do. And if he was so upset at how things didn’t turn out, he could have gone downstairs and found another girl. I’m sure he would have had no issue there.
Maybe he did do that.
He gets up to refill his glass of milk, and I drag in a few gulps of water because I suddenly don’t feel so well. I don’t want to think about what he did after I left. He sits back down and I say, “Tell me what’s wrong.”
He shakes his head, and all traces of that earlier laugh and smile are gone.
“Still trying to fix me?”
“I wasn’t trying to fix you that night, Silas. I just wanted to know more about you, wanted you to talk to me. Same as now.”
He scowls. He opens his mouth, but then pauses and looks at me, really looks at me. His eyes narrow slightly, and he purses his lips, thinking. It’s becoming even harder to swallow as I sit there wondering what it is he’s seeing when he looks at me. When I’ve waited as long as I can to ask the questions burning inside of me, he leans across the table and beats me to it.
“What if I wanted you to fix me after all?”
Chapter 11
Silas
I don’t know why I said that except that she seems like the kind of girl that might actually be able to do it. I look at a girl like that, who’s somehow wild and polished at the same time, and I feel like she has to have it all figured out. If anyone does, it’s her.
So, I keep going.
“What if there’s something wrong with me? And what if it’s slowly destroying the only things I care about? How do I fix something like that?”
She stares at me, unblinking, and I wish I could pluck all the thoughts from behind those blue eyes. I lower my gaze first, and I notice her hands are clutched tightly around the edge of the table.
“It appears I now know two ways to make you stop asking questions.”
That starts her up again.
“You don’t really think that, do you? That you’re broken?”
“It’s a working theory.”
“Silas, most broken people aren’t self-aware enough to realize that they need help. Just the fact that you’re asking means that you’re fine. Whatever it is . . . you’re dealing with it.”
I laugh, and it probably sounds dark and mocking, but I can’t help it. She’s so damn naive. I’ve known people all my life that were straight-up busted, and they knew it. They knew how fucked they were, but that didn’t make them any better at getting control of it.
“No, I’m not. I’m not dealing with it at all. I’m fucking disintegrating, but I’m not dealing.”
“I think you’re just frustrated, and maybe it feels right now like—”
The thing I like about her . . . that air of sunshine that radiates off her . . . it’s the same damn thing that I can’t stand. So I skip the pep talk and cut straight to the point.
“I’ve been suspended from the football team.”
She stops, her mouth still open around the word she’d been about to say. Her eyes soften, and her head tilts to the side.
“H-How? What happened?”
“I got in a fight.”
“Another one?”
I drop my head down into my hands and grip my hair just hard enough to hurt.
“Yes, another one. And Coach knew about the first one, too.”
“Is fighting against the rules?”
“It’s kind of an unspoken rule not to deck your own teammate.”
She makes this humming noise behind her
pursed lips, and I want to take the words back, reel them back in and lock them away. She somehow still has a decent opinion of me after the other night, even though she walked away, and if I don’t stop I’ll destroy that, too.
“Why?”
“Because he made me angry.”
“Why?”
“Because he’s a prick.”
She huffs. “I mean why did you get angry?”
“Because . . .” I press my hands down flat against the table and stand. I can’t sit here and talk about this with her like it’s normal. “Because I just did.”
“Nope. Not going to cut it. What made you mad?”
I push away from the table, walk to the fridge, turn, and walk back.
“He said I was going to end up like Levi.”
“Levi is the first guy you got in a fight with, right?”
I nod, and she props one elbow on the table to rest her cheek in her palm.
“So what about Levi makes you mad?”
I can’t. I couldn’t explain it to Coach, and I won’t explain it to her.
“I’m not talking about this, Dylan.”
“You asked me how to fix it. How am I supposed to help if you won’t let me?”
“I don’t actually expect you to help—”
“Why not?”
“Because I’m not your charity case.”
She stands and crosses toward me, and my kitchen feels too damn small with her this close. All I can see are all the surfaces I want to press her against to end this conversation.
She lays a soft hand on my forearm, and her touch burns.
“You’re not a charity case.”
I thought the night that we met that she was one of those “good girls” looking to take a bad boy and pretty him up to take home to Mom. I’ve had my fair share of those that I have gladly kicked to the curb. I’m not about to let someone else change and manipulate me to make me into something that makes them happy. Then I thought she was a nice girl looking to get a little wild, maybe freak her parents out.
But looking into her eyes, I don’t think that’s her anymore. She wants to help me for my sake, not for her own. I am her charity case, no matter what she says. But I’m not so sure I mind that.
“Maybe I want to be your charity case. Would you do that? If I asked?”
Her eyes widen. “Do what exactly?”
I drag my hands through my hair and pace away from her. “I don’t fucking know. Fix me.” She makes a noise almost like laughter, and I cross back to her and grip her shoulders. She swallows, and her eyes are serious on me now. “It sounds stupid, I know. But I’m so close to losing it all, Dylan. This life I have now . . . it’s everything to me. And Coach is ready to cut me if I don’t completely clean up my act. I’ve been doing it my way, and I’m failing. So I think I need to try something different.”
Maybe it’s not enough anymore to pretend that I belong here. I have to change.
“I’m just not sure what you’re asking of me, Silas.”
Goddamn it. Neither am I.
“You help people. That’s what you do. That’s what I’m asking for. I need to be better . . . be good. For the team. For me. I just need to get my shit together.”
“Just the fighting? Is that what you’re talking about?”
“All of it. The fighting. The partying. Booze. Pot.”
“Bad-boy rehab?” She still looks skeptical.
“I’m supposed to be a leader, Dylan. I’m supposed to make this team stronger, but right now I’m its biggest weakness.”
And God, I must look so fucking pitiful, because she bites her lip, her big eyes soft and sorry. “Okay.”
“Okay?”
“I’ll help.”
I want to fucking kiss her. Pull that bottom lip between my teeth, instead of hers. But I settle for pulling her against me and squeezing tight.
She makes a little squeak, and it takes her several long seconds before she rests her hands lightly against my bare chest.
“You have to actually listen to me, though.”
It’s distracting, feeling her breath against my skin, but I nod and say, “I will.”
“And you have to talk to me. Answer my questions. I can’t get to the root of your actions unless I know what you’re thinking, how you’re feeling.”
I stiffen. I know she’s right, but that doesn’t mean I relish the idea of talking about my shit . . . especially not with her.
When I don’t reply, she tries to pull back, but I keep my arms locked around her waist. So with her stomach still tight against mine, she leans back her shoulders and looks at me.
“If you want my help, that’s the price.”
I ask, “What if we worked out a trade? Like the other night.”
Pink floods her cheeks, and her tongue peeks out to wet her lips. “You want me to kiss you to get answers to my questions?”
“I was thinking more a question for a question, but I’m fine with your idea.”
She shakes her head quickly. “No, question for a question sounds good to me.”
I must be twisted because the more she tries to pull away, the more I want to kiss her. Maybe there’s something to that whole hard-to-get thing after all.
“First question,” I say. “What are you afraid of?”
“What do you mean? Like spiders? Heights?”
I smile. “No. I mean what are you afraid of with me?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
I trail my fingers along the smooth skin of her jaw and cup her cheek. “You want me. I know you do. But every time you get too close, you run. So what about me scares you so bad?”
She exhales, and her breath fans over my mouth, teasing me.
“It’s not you. Not really.”
“It’s not you, it’s me? That’s what you’re going with?”
“I should have said it’s not completely you. You’re intimidating, definitely. But it’s more that . . . I don’t know what I want.”
I use my other arm still around her waist to tug her body tighter against mine. “Liar. If the number of times you’ve looked at my mouth in the last minute is any indication, you know exactly what you want.”
“I can’t trust that. Myself. Have you ever woken up one day and realized that you’re not who you thought you were? That you have no idea who you really are? Because I have. And it’s awful. To not be able to trust your own mind. And I can’t think about what I want because I’m too busy trying to find the rug that was pulled out from beneath my feet.”
“Sounds to me like you’re thinking too much.”
“I have to think. Otherwise, how can I—”
“No, you don’t, babe. I might not know much, but I know the things that matter, the things you love . . . you don’t have to think about that. You just know.” Like I know that I’d do whatever it takes to stay on the team. Because it’s what I want . . . more than I want to party and have a good time, more than anything. “Fact is, knowing what you want and knowing who you are . . . those are two separate things. One is complicated. The other isn’t. You’re trying to take something simple and make it hard, and there are enough hard things in life without you adding more for yourself.”
She closes her eyes on a sigh, and her lashes are so long against her pink cheeks. She says, “I don’t actually think you need me to help you. You’ve got a better handle on things than I do.”
“Not true. You might think too much, but I don’t think enough.”
Her gaze meets mine again, and this time she’s smiling.
“Maybe we can both learn a thing or two from each other.”
“Deal,” I say.
“Deal?”
“You help me get my life back on track, help me turn things around, and I’ll help you figure out what you want.”
“And I suppose in your plan, us sleeping together is the first step to figuring out what I want?”
“It’s an option.”
“Silas . . .” br />
“When I look at you, I see a girl who has it all together, laced up tight like mistake isn’t even a word you know. But I think you’re starting to suffocate. I think that’s why you got arrested Friday, why you came with me, because you needed to breathe.” Her top knots by her neck in a silky bow, and I pull on one of the strings, undoing it. She doesn’t stop me.
“Don’t you think this will only complicate things?”
“Not if you let simple things stay simple. We don’t have to sleep together, not to figure out what you want. I could just touch you. Because Jesus, Dylan, I’ve never cared less about my problems than when I had my fingers inside you. I think I could forget the whole world if I had my tongue there instead.”
And if I were really inside her, inside that tight heat, Christ, I’m aching just thinking about it. She swallows, and when I run my hand down her neck, I can feel her pulse fluttering wildly beneath her skin.
“Silas . . .”
I wait for her to continue, but she doesn’t, and I’m fine with that because I like the way she says my name. Breathy and sweet.
I run my thumb over her pulse again and again, and I know she feels the pull just as strong as I do.
“Don’t think,” I tell her. “Not this time. Go deeper. What do you want? Not what should you want. You want me gone, push me away. You want me here, pull me closer. Simple as that.”
“Simple,” she repeats.
Then she kisses me.
It’s tentative at first, but she doesn’t hesitate when I open my mouth against hers. She tastes just as sweet as I remember, and her tongue slides against mine, hot and needy. Her hands on my chest slip down to grip my waist, and that glide of skin against skin is so damn good. But not enough. Not even close.
I press her back against the counter, and these athletic shorts do nothing to disguise how much I want her. My hardening cock pushes against her belly, and she breaks the kiss to lean back onto the counter and look up at me. I imagine her that way on my bed, propped up on her elbows, waiting for me to crawl up her body.
Now that the bow on her top is undone, I can see that the line of buttons extends all the way up to her neck. She looks so prim and proper, and it drives me fucking crazy. I just want to rip those buttons off, but the shirt probably costs more than most of my belongings combined. Instead, I carefully slip the first button out of its hole. She doesn’t move, only stares up at me, so I undo a second one.