Chapter 3
Chapter Three
The last time I saw Reed Roman Jackson, it was my last day of school, my freshman year.
I was walking over to the parking lot at the end of the day, to get to my brother, Ledger’s, truck so we could go home, when I saw him in his car.
Well, not his car.
His Mustang, from what I’d heard, was in the shop after what I did to it.
I didn’t know what he was doing there because I was under the impression that he’d left for the day. That was why I was taking that route, where I knew he usually parked his car.
But now that I’d seen him, I didn’t know what to do.
I was frozen in my spot. Unable to move. Unable to look away.
Maybe because he was alone and I hadn’t seen him alone since that night when everything happened.
Since that night, he’d always been with a group of people. He’d always been busy and surrounded, unaware of my existence.
That day though, he was alone.
He had his eyes closed and he was sitting in the car with the music on and the windows down. I was too far away to know what he was listening to but I remember wondering if it was one of our songs.
Songs that I danced to for him.
It was silly of me to think that, to even entertain that thought after everything.
But standing there, I couldn’t stop the rush of memories.
The rush of those moments when he’d drive me around in his Mustang and take me to the woods. When he’d put on music, sit on the hood of his car and watch me dance.
And the rush was so strong that my legs moved on their own.
My legs wanted to go to him.
I wanted to go to him.
And apologize.
Yeah, I wanted to apologize. How silly. For destroying his Mustang.
The only thing that he loved.
Then I wanted to hit him. I wanted to hit him and punch him and demand to know why he did what he did.
Why did he break my heart? Why was he so cruel?
Why did he betray me for a sport, for soccer?
Why wouldn’t this hurt go away?
Why, why, why?
I wanted to ask him all that.
But before I could go to him, a group of his friends descended on him, taking away the opportunity, and I ran away. Thank God for that.
I took a detour to get to Ledger’s truck and that was that.
That was the last time I saw him; he never showed up to his graduation and I never saw him around town.
That was the last time I saw the guy who broke my heart and whose car I stole in order to get back at him.
And who pressed charges against me and wanted me to go to jail for it.
For doing that. For stealing his car.
But never mind that right now.
I have bigger problems.
Problems like he’s here.
What is he doing here?
What the fuck is he doing here?
Great, Callie. Just great.
One sight of him and I’m cursing again.
One sight of him and my whole world is off-kilter.
My whole world is shaken.
Shouldn’t he be in New York City? Living the life of a soccer star, being fought over by agents and recruits? And what about college? Doesn’t he go to college?
It’s September! People go to classes in September!
I take a gulp of my whiskey, trying to calm myself down.
I can’t believe I’m drinking, whiskey no less.
I’m not much of a drinker and I hate whiskey.
But I needed something.
Something strong.
Something punchy, and whiskey is the only strong stuff I know; I have four brothers whose drink of choice is whiskey.
As soon as I saw Reed and he saw me, I took off and made a beeline for the bar because I needed alcohol and also because I needed to get away from my friends.
Who had also seen him and were asking all kinds of questions.
I never told them anything, see.
About what happened in the past. About how I ended up here.
I mean, except for the fact that I stole a car from a guy named Reed Jackson and drowned it in the lake.
They don’t know that he was Roman to me once.
They don’t know that I loved him and that he broke my heart. And that I was supposed to end up in a juvenile detention center instead of at a girl’s reform school.
And neither do they know that I sneak out every week on Thursdays to practice ballet, to chase my dream.
Not that they would object. In fact, I think they’d be super supportive about it.
But all of this is so ingrained in my past, so ingrained in him that I never had the courage to tell them.
And now suddenly, he’s here and oh my God, I can’t handle this.
I can’t.
That asshole.
That fucking asshole. That fucking asshole bastard. That motherfucking…
A long shadow falls on me then.
A black shadow.
I’m standing outside the bar, propped up against the brick wall, drinking my whiskey. I couldn’t stand to be in the same room as him. I couldn’t stand to dance.
Not where he could watch.
So I stole my whiskey from Will and ran outside to calm myself.
But of course he’s here as well.
Of course he’s chased me down. Like he used to two years ago.
Nothing has changed.
Nothing.
And he’s walking toward me.
His boots are thudding on the ground and I feel those thuds in my chest. I feel them in my heart. Like he’s stomping on it with every step that he takes.
And all I can do is stand here, stuck to this spot, letting him do that.
Letting him stomp on my heart with those boots.
Black with a shiny metallic buckle on the side.
When he stops, I’m somewhat surprised to see that there isn’t any blood on the ground, rivering from under his killer boots. The boots that just crushed and broke my heart all over again.
Okay.
Okay, I need to relax.
I need to calm down.
I need to take a deep breath and I need to look away from his boots.
I need to look at him. So that I appear strong and calm.
Even so, I can’t.
I can’t look at him. Not yet.
So I look at other things.
Things over his shoulders, his leather-jacket-wearing shoulders.
The jacket that I’m seeing after two years and it takes my breath away for a second.
Because he was wearing it that night.
The night he told me the truth for the first time. The night he told me that everything else up until that point had been a lie.
I’ve had dreams about that jacket in which he breaks my heart over and over again.
I almost wish he was wearing his hoodie.
His sweet-smelling, soft and cozy, white hoodie. The thing that takes some edge off his sharpness.
But a second later, I’m not even thinking about his hoodie.
I’m thinking about something else. Because my eyes fall on a different bright white thing.
His Mustang.
His baby.
Oh, it’s back.
His baby is back and she looks good.
She looks exactly like she did before I tried to destroy her.
And oh my God, I’m so relieved that I can’t help but say, “Your baby looks good.”
I said that, didn’t I?
I did, yeah, and I would be embarrassed about how breathless I sound about a car but this could be good.
In the sense that I said the first words now and all the break-up movies that I’ve seen — not that we had a break-up because we never had a relationship to begin with — always teach you to say the first words.
To get control of the situation.
To sound breezy.
“She does.”
Two words.
Two words spoken in his smooth, deep voice after two years.
And the momentary upper hand I thought I’d gotten vanishes.
It just goes away and I start trembling.
And then I have to look at him because I can’t not.
I can’t not look at him and so I swivel my gaze and after two years I get to see him.
I get to see him from this close.
I get to see his stubble that makes me wonder if he hates it still.
I get to see his thick eyelashes — I’d forgotten how thick they are, like a forest of dark curls.
I get to see his plush, red mouth. The mouth that always sported a smirk and a cut or a bruise from getting into fights with my brother.
And his wolf eyes.
Gosh, his eyes.
Gunmetal gray and smoky and on me.
I was right.
Nothing has changed. Nothing.
He still has that same rugged beauty.
He still is so heartbreakingly gorgeous.
In fact, he’s more gorgeous now, more tempting and dashing even. And I think it’s his hair.
His rich, dark hair that’s longer now.
It brushes the collar of his jacket and something about that makes my stomach clench.
Something about that makes me think of vintage movie heroes and villains with their leather jackets and long hair. With their devil-may-care attitude.
A cigar-smoking villain…
I shake my head and say, “Are you sure she’s safe though? Your baby. In this neighborhood. People can be very dangerous.”
People like me.
Not that I’d ever touch his Mustang again, but still. He doesn’t know that and I’d like to keep it that way.
Although he doesn’t seem to think that I’m much of a threat, because his ruby red lips stretch up and morph into his typical smirk. “Can they?”
That smirk makes my heart go boom, boom, boom before I find my voice and say, “Yeah.”
“What do you think they’ll do?”
Drown it in the lake again.
But I don’t say it.
Because I don’t want to drown it in the lake again and I don’t want to joke about that.
But I do want to scare him a little so I tilt my head to the side and clench my fingers around the bottle. “I don’t know, steal it? Again. Slash your tires. Steal your rims. Spray-paint your hood. Smash your windows. Douse the whole thing with liquor and burn it down once and for all.”
His amusement only grows. “That’s… quite a creative list.”
“I’m creative.”
“And definitely dangerous.”
“Oh, you’re in for such a surprise, trust me.”
“Does it come with a little bow tied around it? Your surprise.”
What?
What is he…
My whiskey-doused brain finally catches up when I notice where his wolf eyes are.
They are on my stomach, my waist, and I finally get what he’s talking about.
My dress has a bow wrapped around the waist and in his usual style, he’s commenting on it. Because that’s what he does. He comments on my dresses.
And holy crap.
I realize something else too.
I’m wearing white, his favorite color.
And he’s looking at it like it’s his favorite thing ever. Especially that green bow and the lacy ruffled hem that’s grazing my bare thighs.