“He doesn’t pull my strings,” I explained. “Medical school is looming, and with the house going up for sale, everything is just—”
“So he’s not the reason I haven’t slept over?” Ben interrupted. “Or barely gotten you alone in two days?”
He wasn’t mad. His raised eyebrows and gentle tone told me he already knew the answers. It wasn’t that Ben expected sex, but he knew it was the next step between us. I’d been warm, and now I’d gone cold.
I frowned, wishing he wasn’t right.
I knew I still wanted Jared. The chemistry hadn’t changed, and no matter what we failed at, we were great in the bedroom.
But there was still love there, too. More than ever, actually. I didn’t know if I wanted him back, and I wasn’t ready to make that decision yet, but I knew I didn’t want Ben with the same passion.
And he didn’t deserve anything less.
He gave me a sad smile and leaned in. “I’m glad you gave me a shot.” He kissed my cheek. “Good luck at Stanford.”
And he turned around, walking back to his car.
I watched him go, feeling a little regretful. He’d made it too easy for me. But no matter what happened, it was the right thing to do.
I turned around, refusing to meet Jared’s eyes, because I knew he was still watching, and I headed back for my car. Pasha still stood in the garage, looking after Ben’s ride as he sped off down the street, while Juliet and Fallon had continued their conversation.
“Well.” Fallon rubbed her neck, acting like they hadn’t been trying to eavesdrop. “I’m determined to make the most of this time with just the two of us, but you know Madoc . . .” She trailed off, sounding amused. “The more the merrier. He wants five. I said one. We compromised at five.”
Juliet busted up laughing, and I realized they were still talking about Madoc’s plans to knock up his wife ASAP. Fallon still had two years of graduate school at Northwestern, though, so I knew she’d rather wait.
“Is this your mom?” Pasha called out.
I looked up to see her leaning over a workbench, regarding a frame on the wall. I knew the picture that hung there. My mom, dad, and me at Disneyland when I was five.
“Yeah,” I answered, fastening the last cap under my hood.
“How did she pass away?” she asked.
I shot my eyes over to her, confused. “How did you know my mom died?”
Her mouth fell open slightly, and she hesitated.
“Um . . . I,” she stammered, her eyebrows doing a nosedive as she searched for words. “Well, I . . .”
And then she huffed out a breath, looking at me with an apology in her eyes.
“He kind of has me send flowers to her grave every year on April fourteenth,” she admitted, wincing.
I stood frozen, my hand on the cap while I gaped at Pasha. “What?” I whispered, in too much shock.
“Tate.” Juliet’s mouth hung open, and I saw her eyes tear up.
I darted my eyes over to Jared, seeing him let the hood drop closed and smile at his brother, a joke passing between them.
“Please don’t tell him I told you,” Pasha grumbled. “He’ll bitch, and then I’ll have to listen to it.”
Flowers. He sent my mother flowers.
How had I not known that?
I guess I still would’ve been at college every April, but my father should’ve known. Wouldn’t he have told me?
“What are they doing?” Fallon spoke up, and I looked to see her confused expression focusing over at the guys all slipping on their shirts and hopping in the Mustang with Jared in the driver’s seat.
“Jax?” Juliet called, standing up.
He stuck his top half out the passenger side window, looking at her over the hood. “We’re just taking the car for a test drive!” he shouted over the deep rumble of the engine. “Be right back!”
Jared slipped on his black sunglasses and gripped the wheel, the tight cords of his forearm visible from here. He shot me a quick glance, the hint of a smile on his lips, before jacking up the music and backing out of the driveway.
And, as if the thunder had only been waiting for the lightning, he roared down the street like a tempest that could not be contained.
My heart fluttered, wanting to be a part of the storm.
I smiled at my friends. “Get in the car.”
“What?” Juliet’s back straightened, and Fallon started rubbing her hands together.
“Aw, yeah,” she teased, standing up.
“What are we doing?” Juliet asked, looking nervous as Pasha stepped forward.
I ignored the question and simply waggled my eyebrows, ready for some mischief, as all three of them piled into my G8.
Chapter 12
Jared
“So . . .” Madoc rested his arm on the passenger side door, tapping his fingers as I drove. “Two days. You still haven’t lost your touch, huh?”
I held the steering wheel with my left hand, my arm steel-rod straight as I pressed my back into the seat. “What do you mean?”
“She just broke up with Ben,” he pointed out, talking about Tate. “You know that’s what that was about just now.”
I pulled down into fourth, picking up speed. “I don’t know shit.”
“Don’t give me that,” he retorted. “You’re already planning how you’re going to get in her bed tonight.”
I exhaled a laugh, glancing out the window. Fuckin’ Madoc.
When I saw Ben show up, I’d immediately tensed, hating how he looked at her. Knowing what he wanted from her. I had no idea if they were sleeping together, and I didn’t care. As far as I was concerned, she was done killing time.
Madoc was wrong. I didn’t want in her bed. I mean, I wanted that, but most of all, I just wanted her back.
“I’ve got an idea,” Jax piped up from the backseat.
I met his eyes in the rearview mirror, seeing his fingers locked on top of his head as he slouched down in the seat.
“What’s that, little brother?” Madoc inquired.
Jax smirked at me as he spoke to Madoc. “Well, he could just get over it and ask her to marry him already.”
I instantly froze, staring out the front windshield.
Marry. My fist tightened around the steering wheel, wondering how my brother thought that either of us was ready for that. Or was he just tossing any crazy idea out there?
I never thought I wouldn’t marry Tate. But it still seemed far off.
Madoc was looking at me, and I knew Jax was waiting for a reaction, but this was none of their business. I wanted Tate forever, but first I needed to get her back. Why the hell would she say yes now?