She lifted one shoulder. “It’s more of a healthy fear, like Oh, that shit’s hot—let’s not burn down the house or a finger off. Those things happen, you know, with stuff like firecrackers.”
“Okay, my little fire-fearing friend.” I patted her hand gently.
She scowled. “How much do you hate him again?”
“This much.” I held my hands wide, nearly taking out our waitress as she tried to squeeze by us. We were at the bar, drinking away our sorrows. The only reason I was there was because Austin had promised to buy me two drinks. Then again, her parents were rich, so I didn’t feel too guilty about saying yes.
She still lived at home.
Of course, if my parents had three pools, a sauna, and a tennis court, I would ask to be buried in their house.
But no. Instead, I had my mom’s macaroni and a room filled with stuffed animals that came alive at night. Yay me!
When I was little, I was convinced my teddy bear was real—and all these years later, I still found him in different spots throughout the house, though I was pretty sure my dad moved him around to freak me out, the bastard.
I let out a wide yawn. “Hating people is exhausting.”
Austin gave me a funny gaping look, then red flooded her cheeks.
“What? Why are you blushing? Who did you see?” I glanced around the dimly lit bar, hungrily seeking the reason for her reaction, but all I saw were overworked men in poorly fitting suits and a few girls with way too bright lipstick and skirts that barely covered their asses.
Austin gaped again, her gaze tracking right behind me.
“What?” I turned, but she grabbed me by the dress and held me in place.
“If you love me, as a friend, you won’t turn around right now.”
“Why?” I asked slowly.
“Because the hottest man candy in the entire world just looked our way, and if you look, he’ll know I’m talking about him. Quick, lipstick on my teeth? Weird makeup smudges on my cheeks? Tell me straight, sister, because I’m going over.”
Austin always looked perfect, even when she was tired from trying to finish her MBA in less than two years.
Her dark brown hair was wavy and messy but gorgeous, and her blue eyes stood out like giant, dazzling diamonds.
“You look horrible, ugly. How did you even leave the house this morning?”
“Thanks.” She kissed the top of my head, hopped off the barstool, and ran off.
I finally turned around when I thought it was safe, but it was too dark to make out the guy she was talking to. Then again, she was taller than most, so her body was blocking the view.
“Move, bitch,” I hissed under my breath.
“Well, well, well. Drinking alone I see,” a familiar voice said to my left.
I closed my eyes and willed Satan away. That was how those things worked, right? I needed garlic.
Instead, I reached for the salt in front of me and shook a little in Lucas’s direction.
When I opened my eyes, he was glancing down at the salt on his pants with a cheerful grin. “I think that only works on vampires. Or is it witches?”
“And here I thought it worked on all of Satan’s minions and even the little red man himself—my bad.” I smiled wide and took a large drink of my vodka and Coke. “And I’m not drinking alone. Austin found, according to her, the hottest man alive, so she just had to chase after him. Fingers crossed she won’t get another restraining order.”
He scowled. “You still hang out with her?”
It was no secret that he’d never approved of my friendship with the girl who pushed me off the monkey bars in first grade. I have the scars to prove it.
“Yes, Thorn.” I nodded. “Because that’s what friends do when they don’t screw you over and destroy your life by betraying your trust. They stay loyal, friends for life and all that. Duh, we only had like fifteen friendship bracelets in middle school.”
“Oh, I know.” He stole my drink and gulped it like a caveman. “I’m the one that had to cut them all off when you broke your wrist and it started to swell to the size of a small whale.”
“Hey!” I snatched my drink back, only to find the glass was empty. See? He was a complete monster! “It’s not my fault I fell off the roof!”
“It was totally your fault!” His voice rose. “You were waiting there to dump water on me!”
“Because you called me stupid!”
“You failed math on purpose to talk to the quarterback!”
We were chest to chest.
I don’t know when it happened. When the anger between us sizzled into something else.
But it did.
And I had no graceful way of making it unhappen, so I jerked away, like he was too hot and I’d just burned myself on his perfectly sculpted chest.
He rolled his eyes and motioned at the bartender. “Chill, I don’t hit on children.”
“I’m sorry.” I punched him in the shoulder. “Did you just call me a child?”
He eyed me up and down quickly, dismissing me like I wasn’t in a really tight purple dress that made my boobs look awesome. “You’re twenty-two. Hardly an adult.”
At that moment, there were so many immature things I wanted to say and do. Most of the latter involved something sharp—or maybe just a really, really large car that I could steal and run him over with—but instead, I went with a more stupid option, knowing it would cause Lucas to back off. I thrust out my chest and whispered in a low voice, “Funny, I’m pretty sure that’s the last thing my boyfriend thinks when we’re in bed together.”
Lucas spit the drink he’d just ordered all over the bar, slowly turning his head, hazel eyes locked on mine. “No.”
“What? What do you mean no?”
“You shouldn’t be having sex.”
I burst out laughing. “You do hear yourself, right? The king of the polygamy colony? Because that’s not just the pot calling the kettle black, that’s like—you know, I can’t even come up with a comparison. It’s plain stupid.”
“So now I’m stupid?”
“At least I didn’t call you a child.”
He smirked. I didn’t like it. I knew that smirk. He believed he had the upper hand, though he clearly didn’t. “So you want me to think of you as a woman—is that what you’re saying?”
My mouth opened and closed at least twice before I gulped and looked away, then whispered, “You’re still stupid.”
I was really good at comebacks.
Austin chose that awesome moment in time to charge up to me with a man in tow and yell, “We’re going to do shots!”
“Pass.”
“Thatch?” Lucas coughed out. “Found yourself a girl, have you?”
I looked back and forth at each of the men. If Thorn knew the dude, that was bad news for Austin. She deserved a good guy, a nice guy, one she could take home to her mansion and make sweet love to while her maid brought her grapes in bed. Not . . . him.
“Oh, hey, Lucas—sorry, didn’t see you.”
“How was surgery?” Lucas asked, completely ignoring everyone but mainly me, which was dumb. I wanted him to ignore me.
And maybe if I kept repeating that in my head, I’d actually start believing it.