Total pages in book: 137
Estimated words: 127949 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 640(@200wpm)___ 512(@250wpm)___ 426(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 127949 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 640(@200wpm)___ 512(@250wpm)___ 426(@300wpm)
“I’m not hurting anyone,” I mumbled, picking at the peeling blue nail polish I borrowed from Jenette’s stockpile.
“You’re acting like a selfish brat, Katrina. Everything your brother gave up to raise you and this is where you end up? Don’t you remember your parents?”
“Who the fuck are you? It’s none of your god-damn business what I do. You don’t want me to work here? Then I’ll go. But I don’t need the fucking lecture, okay?”
Bullets of pain shot through my head and my heart as Jesse glared in stony, sexy silence, his fists balled, and I felt a quick jab of fear as I put together just how much damage he could do to me if so inclined.
In so many ways.
“This ends now. It’s over, Kat. Done. I tried to do things your way, because I promised Kent after that night I would never interfere with your life, because that’s what he wanted, but my oaths to your brother don't trump this.”
My stomach sank. He was being an ass, but he was all I had. Something had always seemed to bring us back together, and he was the safest thing in my life.
And the truth behind it all was I was ashamed. Down to my marrow. The self-loathing, especially on mornings like this, was dangerous. To myself.
"The drinking stops," he said. "Today."
That took me by surprise. What the fuck? “My body, my choice,” I said, not caring that I was misusing the phrase. “And I can stop anytime I want, I just prefer not to.”
My snotty tone reverberated around us. I was just a little kid again. My big brother’s best friend, who I had been in love with for ten years, was staring at me at probably my lowest point in my life, and I reverted to being the dumb little sister he couldn't quite shake off.
I was hung over, I had no home, no car, no real friends, nothing.
Nobody.
That little girl inside of me that never had parents that loved her, that always felt abandoned and unlovable, needed to fiercely defend her heart right now. I could see the fire behind Jesse’s eyes, and I knew the power he commanded.
“I watched you, Katrina. Last night, I watched you, and because of the promise I made to your brother, I did nothing. ‘Let her live her life, make her mistakes. Don’t ever touch her again, and I’ll try to forget what I just saw.’ Well, fuck that. You’re not safe. Well, you weren’t. But you are now.”
Even the thought of Kent turned my vitriol into grief. That fullness in my throat I always got when fighting off the sobs rendered me unable to take a breath.
I pressed my quaking lips together as Jesse squeezed his jaw, the pain in his eyes mimicking my own as he finished. “He said you needed to figure out your life on your own without my controlling ass taking over, but I can't watch anymore. I won't.” He glanced over his shoulder, then sighed. Turning, he pulled open a long door on a wooden cabinet to reveal a row of ten small security monitors. “You set off the alarm when you left the back room. You’re the only other person that has a key to my office. When you punched in your code wrong twice to turn off the alarm, the system called me. I watched your little drinking session from home. You’re killing me, Kat. Killing. Me.”
Did his voice just crack?
“So what? What does it matter? You gonna have me arrested? Trespassing? Theft? Do whatever you want. I’m going.” The muscles in my core spasmed, and I pushed up, taking a moment to balance myself, praying I could stand and take the few steps to the door.
“Where?”
Two steps forward I stalled, considering his one-word question.
Where?
Where could I go? What was I going to do? Spend a few more nights with Jenette, if she'd even have me, and then...
Where?
"I don't know." The honesty in my reply dug its claws into my ravaged heart, and the control I’d clung to for so long left me weeping.
My legs gave way like overcooked egg noodles, and I fell against the door in a heap. I had nothing left. Until Kent had died, I'd had two brothers watching out for me, one by blood and one by choice. Now I'd just lost the only family I had left.
I knew I should go and stop making his already difficult life more difficult, but I had no idea how. I didn't have the strength. Not even the strength to stand.
Jesse moved like a bullet from a gun as he came around the desk and caught me, his thick fingers encircling my arms, his biceps bulging out of his trademark white t-shirt. I looked into his black eyes as he towered above me, his calm demeanor only that much more intimidating. At least if he had lost control, yelled back at me, screamed and told me to fuck off, then the playing field would be even.