Total pages in book: 112
Estimated words: 103754 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 519(@200wpm)___ 415(@250wpm)___ 346(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 103754 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 519(@200wpm)___ 415(@250wpm)___ 346(@300wpm)
Shrugging the jacket from her shoulders, she catches it in her hands. “Who says they’re not?” She twists her wrist to see the face of an analog watch. Other than the expensive brands, those are hard to come by. “I’m late.” Coming up to me, she says, “One more drag?”
She opens her mouth and blinks twice with her eyes latched to mine. It’s not an invitation, Keats, but she makes it damn tempting to kiss her. I give her what she wants and hold the cigarette to her mouth. Her lids dip closed as her chest rises. I shift my gaze to the orange glow to keep myself from staring so much. She makes me feel like a kid with a high school crush. She’s carefree to my reserved, spontaneous to my scheduled. There’s an air of excitement just being in her vicinity. I haven’t felt like this about a girl in a while. I can’t even remember the last girl I took an interest in.
What makes her different is the same things she’d argue are flaws, and that leaves me wanting to get her number.
She moves away too soon, tossing my coat to me, and says, “Thanks.” Her smile knocks all twenty-three years from my chest as if life is just beginning.
My heart starts thumping, my breath shortens, and my thoughts spin wildly as I try to figure out what the fuck just happened. I’m not a frivolous guy. That luxury was never afforded to me, but being caught up in her makes me feel alive. It’s exhilarating.
Sosie’s too fast, running away before I have time to collect my thoughts. “Thanks for the cigarette.” She hits me with that stunner of a smile when the light invades the moment we were sharing and resets time like it hadn’t existed prior. “And the jacket.”
While she rushes down the path toward the main house, I call, “Hey?”
She stops and looks back, the sides of her mouth gently curling upward. “Yeah?”
Slipping one arm back into the jacket, I ask, “What if I want to see you again?” My voice is deeper, heavier as time slips away from us.
Her smile spreads on one cheek, and she replies, “If it’s meant to be, it will be, Poet.”
“What crew are you with?”
Desperation grows into panic, my heart ticking like a time bomb about to set off, as she disappears through the back door like she’s sneaking into the party. Damn . . . What just happened?
Why didn’t I ask for her number?
Will I see her inside?
Fucking hell. Was I struck by lightning?
Feels like it.
She was more of a hurricane the way she whipped through my world, leaving nothing but questions in her wake.
Fuck me. I didn’t expect to be blindsided by a girl tonight. My breathing evens as I finally catch my breath after the whirlwind of Sosie settles around me.
I take a drag of the remaining cigarette and put my coat back on before walking toward the house again. I don’t even know where she came from, much less where she’s working tonight. It’s not catering since I know the entire crew. Bartending? Singer? Cleaning? She didn’t have a uniform on and nothing visible to change into. Maybe she’s a thief robbing the place.
I head back, knowing I’m a few minutes late. Just outside the bustle of the inside, I stab the butt on the stone wall, then drop it in the flower bed, kicking dirt over any evidence.
I don’t know where she went, but I’m not leaving tonight without seeing her again. Next time, hopefully with her number.
CHAPTER 2
KEATS
Five minutes until midnight, I’m standing on the edge of the party with my hands clasped in front of me like a damn bouncer. The kitchen is clean with only the finale left before I get to go home.
I’ll need to load the truck in a few minutes, so I use the time I do have and search the room, sifting through the guests in hopes of seeing Sosie again. I’ve done it more times than I can count. I searched the bathrooms, asked the piano player if he had seen her, talked to a kid hanging around the perimeter who said his parents dragged him there, and even found a valet to ask if he had seen her in front of the house. She’s disappeared without a trace.
It’s been frustrating. I thought I’d have that chance, but I didn’t take it when we were outside. If I weren’t already in a bad mood from being hungry and exhausted, this would tip the scales.
Sierra and Darren push the cake cart front and center. She lights a single tall candle on top of a champagne bottle-shaped dessert, then they join me in the shadows of the party. The hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Stansbury, take over, calling their daughter to come blow out the candle and rousing their guests to sing “Happy Birthday” to the star of the show.