He cuts the deck in half and shuffles them. “By my dad.” The way he says it, his voice stressed, makes me speculate if something happened to his dad.
“Where’s your dad now?” I rise to my feet, adjusting my skirt.
He aligns the cards on the bed, looking up at me. “He lives in California.”
I cross the room to the bed he’s sitting on, the navy blue sheet balling up beneath me as I sit down and get comfortable. “Then why don’t you just go live with him?”
He grips the shuffled deck of cards in his hand. “It’s complicated.”
“What about your mom?” I ask.
“Even more complicated.” His knuckles whiten as he tightens his hold on the cards. “What about your parents? What happened to them?”
“They left me on the doorstep of the neighbors when I was six months old,” I lie breezily. I’ve been doing it for years, making up elaborate stories to avoid the painful truth of what happened when strangers ask me. “I guess they didn’t want me or something.”
He cuts the deck evenly in half. “Is that the truth? Or are you making up a story?”
“Why would I make up a story about that?” I ask innocently, tucking my leg underneath me. Again his eyes go to my legs, gradually drifting up to my thighs.
He studies me unnervingly as heat caresses my skin and coils in my stomach. “To avoid the real truth.”
“So are we going to play Texas Hold ’Em or what?” I aim to change the subject.
“Yeah… but there’s a stipulation,” he says. “For every hand you lose you have to tell me one thing that’s true about you.”
“I don’t like that rule,” I tell him. “And I don’t like telling the truth.”
“Why? Are you afraid you’ll lose?” he challenges me with haughtiness.
“I’m not afraid of anything.”
“That can’t be true. Everyone’s afraid of something.”
“Fine,” I give in. “But if you lose, then you have to tell me something true about you—and something good.”
He fans the edge of the cards with his finger, like he’s counting the cards. “What if I don’t have anything good to share?”
“I’ll be the judge.” I stick out my hand toward him. “Now give me the cards so I can deal. I’m dealer.”
He turns his hand over with the deck in them. “I usually like to deal.” He puts the cards in my hand, sighing, like he’s surrendering something very valuable.
I wrap my fingers around the deck. “Do you play a lot?”
“Occasionally when I need money.”
I shuffle the deck, even though he already has. I was taught never to trust anyone else when it comes to playing cards. I toss the top one to the side and deal.
I lift my cards up and peek under them. “If we were playing strip poker, you’d lose after one hand since you’re only wearing a towel.”
He picks up his cards, pressing back a smile. “Yeah, but I won’t lose.”
“That’s awfully arrogant of you.” I flip over three cards on the bed, lining them up between us.
His mouth gradually expands to this know-it-all smile. “I know.”
I turn over my cards and he gives me this strange look. “There’s no point in hiding what we have since we’re not actually raising the stakes.”
He smiles. “I’m keeping mine hidden, so go ahead and deal another.”
I do what he says and the next card I deal is an ace. I have one, but I don’t get excited just yet. Even though the odds are in my favor, doesn’t mean they’ll end up that way. First rule of cards. And of life.
Luke’s expression is a mixture of inquisitiveness and boredom, which makes no sense since the two don’t really go together. “Deal the last card,” he says.
I turn it over and lay it down. None of the cards are suits and there’s nothing close to a flush or run. I have a good chance of winning or at least tying if he’s lucky enough to have an ace.
“What are you smiling about?” Luke wonders, rearranging his cards. “Maybe I have an ace, too.”
“I didn’t know I was smiling,” I say, biting my lip to stop. “What do you got?”
He places his cards down and my elation instantly sinks. “What can I say?” He rubs his jawline thoughtfully. “I must be lucky.”
I scrunch my nose at his cards. “How is it even possible for you to get pocket aces?”
“Any hand’s possible.” He relaxes back on the mattress on his elbows and the towel slips open just enough that I can see his thighs. “Now I get to ask a question.”
“Go head.” It doesn’t mean I’ll tell the truth. “Ask away.”
His legs spread apart a little and I swear I can see his balls. “Tell me why you jumped out the window that night.”
I don’t miss a beat. “I was tripping on acid and I wanted to see if I could fly.”
He rolls his eyes. “I’ve seen people tripping on acid before and you definitely weren’t.” He tosses his cards aside and overlaps his hands on his lap. “Come on, Violet. Tell me the truth.”
I frown. “I really don’t want to.”
“Well, you have to. It’s part of the game.”
I waver, biting my fingernails. He’s taking all the fun out of the moment and replacing it with pressure. “Would you believe me if I told you I was trying to fly?”
“Were you?” His body goes rigid. “Were you trying… Did you do it on purpose?”
I drop my hand to my lap. “You think I’m suicidal?”
“I don’t know what to think,” he says, swallowing hard. “That’s why I’m asking you.” His voice comes out off pitch, troubling, and I wonder why.
“I’m not. I promise.” I pause, trying to shake the emerging feelings out of my body. “What about you? Why were you looking for a fight that night?”
He shakes his head. “You haven’t won a hand yet, so I don’t have to answer.”
I lower my gaze to his cards on the bed. “How the hell did you end up with two aces?”
“I guess I’m just lucky.”
“Luck doesn’t exist.”
We stare at each other stubbornly and then reluctantly I give up, which might be a first for me. But I’m still determined to win the next hand and get an answer from him to level the playing field.
“I was running from a couple of guys,” I say as I collect the cards from the bed. I can’t believe I just gave in to him like that. “That’s why I jumped out the window.”
“Why were you running from them?” He hands me his discarded cards and I add them to the top of the deck.
“No way.” I scoot the cards across the bed toward him. “That would be two questions and you only won one.”
He picks up the cards with a smirk on his face. “That’s okay. I’ll just ask you after I win the next hand.” He shuffles the deck and deals out the cards, looking so pleased with himself.
I end up losing that next hand and he asks me the same question I refused to answer earlier, and then waits patiently for me to respond.
“I did something,” I answer, annoyed. How the hell did he win that hand? It’s bullshit. First two aces, then two queens.
“What kind of something?” He has the deck of cards in his hand and is fanning them with his thumb.
“I screwed someone over.”
“That’s still not really an answer.”
“Well, it’s the best I can give you,” I say, but he just keeps staring at me, fanning the cards, over and over again, his sexy brown eyes weaseling their way under my skin. “Fine.” I give in for some crazy reason, the bliss I felt earlier slipping farther and farther away and I know that soon I’m going to have to do something about it. “I screwed them over during a deal a month or so ago.”
He processes what I said and then sits up, chucking the cards aside. “Wait? ‘Deal’ as in drugs?”
I shrug with my hands out to my side. “Are you really that surprised?”
His eyes scroll up and down me. “Yeah… I don’t know.” He scratches his head. “Why do you do it?”
“Because it’s a job,” I tell him. “I also work as a waitress because I hate being in debt and school has made me get in debt a lot.”
“But you could go to jail. Or worse stuff could happen.” He swallows hard. “Drugs are dangerous, Violet.”
“So.”
The Destiny of Violet & Luke (The Coincidence, #3)
Jessica Sorensen's books
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