Kiss My Boots (Coming Home #2)

He must see something written in the silence around us because in that moment, the deep, dark blue of his irises swirl and light up with understanding. And unmistakable lust.

“You sure about this, Grease?” he questions on a whisper, lips quirking with his nickname for me. He’s used it since the first day we met, when I was covered in engine grease.

“I’ve never been more certain about anything in my life, Starch,” I answer, the butterflies picking back up to full speed when his smirk grows into a panty-melting smile at the use of my nickname for him—a standing joke about the high-society world he comes from back home in Dallas.

“Nothing in this world could make me stop lovin’ you,” he murmurs, his head moving down, closer to me, and before I can reply, his mouth captures mine in a deep kiss. I feel him all the way to my bones with this kiss. He’s branding himself into my very soul, and I know without a shadow of doubt I will always feel him there.

There isn’t any more talking after that. Moans, grunts, and the sound of bare skin brushing against bare skin, tentatively at first and then more urgently as we move together, are the only things that fill the silence around us. Through the pain of losing my virginity to the only boy I’ve ever loved, I bask in the beauty of this moment we’ve been building toward for years, knowing that my life will never be the same. Our future might not be set in stone, but we’ve come this far with only summers together since we were middle-school age. I have no doubt that we have what it takes to make it through him starting his medical school career and beyond. We’re not little kids anymore, confused about how we feel. We’re on the cusp of adulthood, old enough to understand our hearts are connected so powerfully, you can almost feel them nestling close together, beating as one.

As one.

- -

Present Day

I gasp when the memory clears, feeling my cheeks wet as I focus back on the paper in my hand. I pray that the name I read wasn’t his, but even with the shaking of my hand making the paper vibrate softly, I know it’s just wishful thinking.

The Ghost of Heartbreak Past apparently is back in Pine Oak.

Tatum Montgomery.

Jesus Jones.





2


QUINN


“You’re Still the One” by Shania Twain

- -

The rest of the day passes in a fog. Memories long since locked away have suddenly slipped free of their confines and infiltrated my mind, filling my brain with bits and pieces of a past I thought I’d left behind. It doesn’t matter that I don’t want to remember them—all it took was one piece of dadgum paper to rip away the metal chains securing those unwanted recollections deep within the depths of my soul. By the time I realize the sun has set and I’m alone in the shop, I’ve worked myself into a downright tizzy.

On a normal day, I can be hard to handle, but when I’m nursin’ a tizzy, whoa boy. Irrational and manic, that’s probably the best way to describe me in freak-out mode.

I’ve found that the best cure for a tizzy is popping open a cold one, so I head to the mini-fridge in my office, pop open a Corona, and perch on my still-messy desk, swinging my legs back and forth as the bitter liquid slides down my throat and brings me instant relief, the first I’ve felt all day since that piece of paper landed on my desk and shook me to my core.

I hate him for having this power over me.

I hate that I feel the pain of those memories sear through me as if they had happened mere seconds before and not nearly nine godforsaken years earlier.

I hate what he represents in my life.

And most of all, I hate that I care so much.

I’m used to letting those lost parts of my life define the person that I’ve become. I build a shield out of them, keeping everyone out except a select few, and in the end all it’s given me is a whole lotta nothing.

I’m alone.

The story of my life, it seems.

Not alone in the sense that I have no one. I do . . . have someones, that is, but I don’t have someone, and for a girl who’s only ever wanted to feel the love that the other half of your soul can give you—that means a whole lot more than I care to admit.

To be fair, not all the blame for my solitary life can be placed on Tate Montgomery’s shoulders, though a big ol’ heavy ton of it can. I guess, if I want to be technical about it, a large portion of the emptiness I feel stems from the woman who birthed me. Calling her a mother would be a title she doesn’t deserve, but until recently, I would have given anything to have her claim it.

I was too little when she left to have any real memories of her—only the fantasies that I’ve built around the idea of having a mother—but just because I can’t actually recall anything about her doesn’t mean that I don’t feel her rejection down to my bones. My brothers, God love them, did everything—still do everything—to show me I was loved, but growing up with the father we had. . . . His hate canceled out a lot of what Clay and Maverick tried to give me.

Aside from my brothers, the only other person who I know loves me unconditionally is my best friend, Leighton James. We’ve known each other our whole lives. Cheered each other on during every single step we took to become the women that we are today. There isn’t a single part of my life that her presence hasn’t imprinted upon. She is just as much a part of my family as my brothers are, especially now that she’s marrying one of them.

If I’m being completely honest with myself, her and Maverick coming together and finally finding their happily-ever-after is playing a big part in this self-pity stew I’m cooking up nice and powerful.

I’ve avoided finding mine.

I’ve dissuaded male attention and advancements because I know deep down my heart will only ever belong to one man. It just so happens that he wasn’t strong enough to fight for it.

Tate taught me to trust him. Every summer that he spent at his grandparents’ ranch only solidified his unrelenting pursuit of me, of us, of our future together. It took him almost four years to convince me of his adoration, his undying love and loyalty. He took a sixteen-year-old girl who had always feared trusting in the very thing he was offering and made her believe. For two years we survived on emails, phone calls, and only two months out of the year being spent physically in the same place. That was all it took though. The foundation we built was meant to be everlasting—even if his promises hadn’t been.

He taught me trust.

He showed me love.

Then he gave me pain.

So, no . . . all the blame might not be able to fall directly on him, but a large part of it does, and the rest of that dadgum blame only seems to be exacerbated with the unwelcome addition of his memory.