Better Hate than Never (The Wilmot Sisters, #2)

“Ten, actually.”

“—and you big spooned me all night even though I know I’m a nightmare to share a bed with. I kick in my sleep. Then I woke up to a note to stay in bed because you were making me p-pumpkin pancakes”—her lip wobbles, and God, when she cries, I feel like someone’s cutting out my heart—“and what did I do? I smothered you with my vulva twice—no, thrice—last night and woke up with my blood all over your sheets.”

“Ahhh.” I pull back enough to wipe her tears beneath her eyes, before I tuck her snugly back in my arms. “So that’s what’s got you all weepy.”

“I’m not weepy,” she weeps. “I’m overwhelmed. Because you . . . you did my laundry. You made the most incredible love to me all night and made me breakfast this morning and did my laundry and I bled all over your sheets—”

“Kate.” I tug the sheets out of her arms and toss them over my shoulder. “First, fuck the sheets.”

“They’re Egyptian cotton,” she whispers hoarsely, as I rub her back and she wraps her arms around me, smooshing her cheek against my chest. “One thousand thread count. I checked the tag.”

“And I have more up in the closet. They’re replaceable.”

“According to a cursory internet search on my phone, their market value is three hundred dollars. I just bled over three-hundred-dollar sheets,” she mutters tearily.

I laugh into her hair, earning her narrow-eyed glare. “I’m sorry, Katydid. I’m not laughing at you.”

“Uh-huh.”

“I just haven’t seen this side of you in a long time. You’re generally either ice-cold or fiery pissed, and this sweet, emotional side of you is very precious to me.”

“I’m not precious,” she grumbles.

“You are the most precious. Now, listen to me. I loved giving you those orgasms, not to mention receiving every orgasm you gave me. And while your cuddling may be a bit . . . active, I slept better holding you than I have in a very long time.”

“You did?”

“I did,” I tell her softly, kissing her. “So stop worrying about what’s not perfect and focus on what is, Katerina. This. Right here.”

She sinks into me, kissing me back, her hands tangling in my hair. But then she pulls away suddenly and sniffs the air. “Hey. Is something burning?”

I glance over my shoulder and see the pumpkin pancakes smoking in the pan. “Shit!”



* * *





“Okay.” Walking down the sidewalk toward her apartment, I hand Kate a pumpkin muffin covered in cream cheese frosting, freshly unearthed from the Nanette’s pastry box. “Pumpkin-based breakfast, take two.”

Kate accepts the muffin, then bites into it, smiling, her gaze dancing over me.

“What?” I ask, smiling back at her, adjusting her laundry bag on my shoulder.

“You’re just really sweet,” she says, shrugging. “I feel spoiled.”

I bite into my butter croissant and say around my bite, “I have bad news for you, Kate. I’m just getting started, spoiling you.”

She rolls her eyes as she bites into her muffin again, but a pretty blush sweeps up her cheeks, and she can’t hide her smile.

I stare at her, feeling my heart pound, hard and feverish. God, I love her. I love her.

And I do want to spoil her. I want to surprise her with plane tickets to wherever her heart desires and leave behind work, devoting myself only to those smiles and blushes and learning all the scattered, lovely things her brain notices and absorbs.

I want to wake up every day to her smoky laugh and hard kisses. I want her fierce intensity and lung-burning sprint races for the most unexpected things. I want to sleep curled around her and talk while she bathes and cook with her in the kitchen. I want to stare into those stormy eyes and feel the thrill of knowing there’s so much I already know about her and so much more that I don’t, this dizzying cocktail of memory and mystery.

I watch her smile up at me, her hand finding mine and lacing our fingers together. And I feel the world tip beneath me.

I want to give Kate everything she deserves. I want to promise her and ask for everything, too. I hope we’ll figure out how that’s possible for two people who live so differently, that somehow our lives can meet halfway.

Kate squeezes my hand and smiles up at me, reminding me what’s changed—what all this is about.

I don’t have answers yet, but I don’t have to find them on my own. Kate and I will do that together, hand in hand. One step at a time.





? THIRTY-FIVE ?


    Kate


“I’ll take that.” Stopped outside my apartment door, I reach for the massive bag of now clean laundry from Christopher’s shoulder. He doesn’t seem inclined to give it up.

“I’m fine carrying it,” he says.

I blink at him, weighing my options. My room—Juliet’s room, where I’m staying—looks like a tornado hit it. Even with most of my dirty laundry scraped into a bag, it’s still a wreck of, among many other random odds and ends, half-drunk water cups and snack bar wrappers because snack bars are about all I managed to eat this week. The last time he saw my room was that paintball night, and its status was borderline hide-from-anyone-whose-good-opinion-I-value, but by the time he’d tucked me in, it was dark and he left before sunrise, so I got away with it.

Today, in the light of late morning, which pours into that bedroom, it’ll be like tugging down a microscope on my mess and shoving it in his face.

No, thank you.

Christopher’s home is worn around the edges and sweetly dated—all of which I adore—but for all the things others might think could use improving, its tidiness and cleanliness are not among them. Christopher is a neatnik. He likes doing things like wiping down his fancy coffee machine after each use and deploying a lightweight shiny vacuum to pick up crumbs in the kitchen’s corners after cooking. He voluntarily did my laundry, for Christ’s sake. He folded everything. Even my underwear.

My high-waisted, once-white but now dingy-dishwater, grandma underwear. That’s embarrassing enough.

But Christopher is so stubborn, and I’m realizing that with my good old hiss-and-flex-the-claws days behind me, what this situation calls for is something we’re just starting to figure out: compromise.

Resting against the door to the apartment, I attempt a casual lean and paste on what I hope is an ingratiating smile. “I propose a deal.”

Christopher arches his eyebrows, resettling the massive duffel’s strap on his shoulder like it’s full of paper products instead of my entire laundered wardrobe. “I’m listening.”

“You may carry my bag inside the apartment.”

His eyebrows lift higher. “And . . . ?”

“And that’s it. You may carry it in, and then you may carry it no further, most definitely not inside my room.”

His eyes narrow. He purses his lips, thinking this over. “Your terms are close to but not quite what I’m looking for. I propose a negotiation.”

“Nope.”

He sighs, shaking his head. “Rookie mistake,” he mutters.

I’m annoyed by that and turn toward the door, about to unlock it when Christopher stops me with a hand gently circling my wrist. “Hey.” His voice is quiet, the brief contentious fire between us doused.

“What is it?” I ask.

He glances toward the door, then back to me. “Is Bea home? If she is, I just want to know what to say when we walk in together.”

I frown. “Would we have to say anything? Couldn’t we just walk in and that’s that?”

“Possibly. Or it might be obvious what we’ve been up to.”

I search his eyes, looking for some clue as to how he feels about that. And then I remind myself that I have a mouth, so I ask him, “And would that be all right, if it was?”

He smiles, slow and satisfied. “Very all right with me.”

I’m nearly dizzy with relief.

“What about you?” he asks, searching my eyes, too.

I nod. “Very all right.”

His smile grows. “Good.”

“We can tell the friends, too,” I blurt.