Saving 6 (Boys of Tommen, #3)

JOEY

Pressure was the thing that I was most used to in life. It never normally fazed me, not when I'd spent most of my life with the weight of my father's hands around my neck, threatening to cut off my air supply, but all of that paled in comparison to Aoife Molloy’s infinite ability to restrict my breathing.
It was two in the morning and the clock had rolled into Christmas eve. Instead of being home, like I knew I needed to be when there was a full bottle of whiskey at my father’s disposal, I found myself spinning around with her, instead.
I felt like a criminal being with her. I had no damn business stepping foot inside the girl’s car. A car I had spent a lot of my time working on at the garage. A car I certainly shouldn’t have gotten behind the wheel of and driven, but when she dangled those keys in front of me, the temptation had been too strong to resist.
I also didn’t understand her reasons for wanting to be here with me. Why she continuously sought me out. But I wasn’t about to argue with her tonight because it meant I didn’t have to go home and deal with any of my father’s bullshit. No, I wasn’t about to talk Molloy down from the ledge, because the longer we teetered on the edge of the law, the longer I got to be with her.
Because the truth of the matter was that I enjoyed her company.
I enjoyed being with her, be it arguing or messing around, flirting or fucking around town in the car her daddy bought for her.
I felt genuine affection towards the girl, which was abhorrently abnormal on my behalf.
But I did.
She could piss me off more than most, and she drove me demented at times, but there was no one else I would prefer to break the law with.
Even as we parked up back outside the garage, with a bag of chips balancing on the dashboard between us, I was having a hard time trying to find the motivation to leave her.
The truth was that staying right here in this car, with the only person whose touch didn’t make my skin crawl, seemed like a good idea.
“This one’s my favorite,” Molloy said, turning up the volume on her stereo when The Pogues’ Fairytale of New York drifted from the speakers. “Hands down, the best Christmas song ever.” Popping a chip into her mouth, she grinned over at me. “What’s yours?”
“Don’t know.” Shrugging, I reached over and grabbed a chip. “Never really thought about it.”
“Ah, come on, Joe,” she pushed. “Everyone has a favorite Christmas song.”
Not me.
I preferred silence.
I shrugged. “This one, I suppose.”
“Good.” She nodded her approval. “It reminds me of you.”
“Wow,” I deadpanned. “Which part?”
“All of it,” she teased, tossing a chip at my face. “From now on, this will be our song.”
I narrowed my eyes at her. “Oh, yeah, because we really need a song.”
“Well, it is Christmas Eve, babe,” she joked, and then went right into a piss-poor rendition of the first verse of the song, before choking out a laugh. “See, it’s perfect for us.”
“There’s only one small problem with your song choice,” I offered dryly. “I’m not your babe, Molloy.”
“Whose fault is that?” she came right back with, not looking away, and not backing down. “Hmm. I wonder.”
Christ, she was just so ballsy.
It was seriously impressive.
And sexy as fuck.
I soaked her in, every freckle, every curve, the color of her green eyes, the pale golden streaks in her already blonde hair.
“Yeah, well.” Smirking, I shook my head and turned back to stare out the front windscreen. “If tonight’s little joyride is anything to go by, then you should be thanking me for that.”
“You would think so,” was all she replied, as she rummaged around in a stack of discs. “Okay, so, it’s clear that you’re not sold on the last song, so how’s this for hitting the nail on the head?” Molloy asked then, switching up CDs, and pressing track three on her stereo. The Goo Goo Dolls blasted from her stereo.
“Iris?” I cocked a brow. “Good song choice, Molloy, but I have to admit that I’m not feeling the festive vibe from it.”
“No, asshole, not as a Christmas song,” she urged, cranking up the volume. “As our song.”
I opened my mouth to respond, but she reached across the console and cover my lips with her hand. “Shh. Just humor me and listen, okay?”
Reluctantly conceding to her demands, I nodded once, and kept my eyes locked on hers as the lyrics of the song fucked with my head.
“Well?” she finally breathed, when the song ended. “It’s perfect, right?”
“Yeah, Molloy.” My voice was thick as I wrestled with a million complicated fucking emotions. “It is.”

I CARE TOO MUCH


DECEMBER 24TH 2003
AOIFE

If Joey wanted to sit in this parked-up car outside of the garage half the night, then I would gladly sit right there with him.
It didn’t matter that it was -2 degrees outside or that I was close to freezing in my work clothes. At least if he was in this car with me, it meant that he was out of trouble.
He wasn’t out getting high.
Time passed by much quicker when I was with him, and I didn’t notice the hours slipping away as I regaled him with random tales from my life.
You see, Kevin might be the twin that held the lion’s share of academic intelligence, but I was the one that could talk the ass off a donkey.
For real. I had been blessed with the ability to make a conversation out of nothing, which was how I had somehow managed to keep this wildly unattainable boy’s interest piqued for most of the night.

Chloe Walsh's books

cripts.js">