Hell yes, I am. Iâm not going to leave her alone in here to fuck with my shit or throw up all over my books.
âYou bring out the worst in me.â Her comment surprises me out of my silence.
âThatâs harsh,â I snap at her. I bring out the worst in her? She doesnât even know me. I continue: âAnd yes, I am going to sit here and babysit you. Youâre drunk for the first time in your life, and you have a habit of touching my things when Iâm not around.â
I sit down on my bed as she cautiously takes a drink of my water. Thought so. The room is probably beginning to spin for her. Poor girl. I watch her carefully as she gulps down the water. The way her eyes close and she licks her lips when sheâs finished, the way she breathes too heavily. I stare at her without her noticing and try my damnedest not to overthink why Iâm staring at her in the first place.
Thereâs just so damn much that I donât know about her, so many things I want to know.
She seems so readable from the outside. Sheâs blond, beautiful in a simple way, and I can tell by the old-fashioned way she speaks that she spends hours and hours with her face buried in a book. Yet her temper and the giant chip on her shoulder make me wonder whatâs underneath all that.
âCan I ask you a question?â I speak without thinking. I try and smile at her, but I get the feeling that I look like a fucking creep.
Her brows push together. âS-s-s-s-sure,â she says, drawing out her answer.
What the hell am I going to ask her? I had kind of assumed she would tell me to go to hell.
I go for the easiest question I can think of. âWhat do you want to do after college?â I know that I shouldâve asked something more personal, something to help me win this game with Zed.
Tessa seems to ponder the question, tapping her finger against her chin before she answers. âWell, I want to be an author or a publisher, whichever comes first.â
I could see that, easily.
I donât tell her that I plan to do the exact same thing. Instead, I stare blankly ahead after rolling my eyes.
âAre those your books?â Tessa waves toward my bookshelves.
âThey are,â I mumble.
âWhich is your favorite?â
Fucking Christ, sheâs nosy.
âI donât play favorites,â I lie. Sheâs getting too personal, and sheâs been in here awhile. Her knowing my favorite books wonât help me get what I want.
I need to turn this around, make it less personal. I need to annoy her. âDoes Mr. Rogers know youâre at a party again?â
My smirk complements her scowl. Mission accomplished.
âMr. Rogers?â
âYour boyfriend,â I explain. âHeâs the biggest tool I have ever seen.â
âDonât talk about him like that. He is . . . he is . . . nice.â
I canât help but laugh at the way she fumbles for a compliment about her loafer-wearing boyfriend.
She waves a finger at me. âYou could only dream of being as nice as he is.â
âNice? Thatâs the first word that comes to your mind when talking about your boyfriend? Nice is your âniceâ way of calling him boring.â I laugh.
âYou donât know him,â she insists with admittedly impressive fearlessness.
âWell, I know that heâs boring. I could tell by his cardigan and loafers.â Iâm laughing now, really laughing, and my stomach tightens. I canât help it. When I look up at her pissed-off expression, I laugh harder, imagining the human Ken doll whining over a hole in his cashmere sweater.
âHe doesnât wear loafers.â Tessa covers her mouth to hide her need to laugh. I get it. I would laugh, too. She takes another drink of my water and I keep going.
âWell, heâs been dating you for two years and hasnât fucked you yet. I would say heâs a square.â
As my words hit the air, Tessa spits water back into the cup.
âWhat the hell did you just say?â
âYou heard me, Theresa.â I smile at her, fueling her anger.
âYouâre an asshole, Hardin.â
Man, I love how fiery she gets whenâ
Cold water splashes against my face.
I gasp, surprised by her audacity. I thought we were having fun, throwing rude comments back and forth. I was purposely aggravating her, and it seemed that she was enjoying getting riled up just as much as I enjoyed riling her.
By the disgusted expression on her face, it occurs to me that maybe she doesnât.
Why the hell did I even bring up her boyfriend in the first place? Iâm a damn idiot. She was fine, sitting in my room, laughing with me, and I had to ruin it.
Tessa leaves my room quickly as I wipe the water from my face and step into my doorway, watching as she takes the staircase two steps at a time.
Back in my room, the quiet hum of my ceiling fan is my only company. I sit down on my bed, and for the first time since I moved into the house, I wish I wasnât alone in this room.
nine
The moment her lips touched his for the first time, he felt it. He felt a shift somewhere deep inside, somewhere hidden and covered in dust. It was completely untouched since he could remember, likely forever. She awakened him, brought him light and laughter and longing and he knew from the moment her mouth found his, he would never be the same.
Tessa just threw water in my face and left my room in a storm of huffs and puffs and eye rolls. Yet here I am, following her down the stairs after only a few minutes of sitting in my room, whining to myself like a little child throwing a fit over his favorite toy breaking.
Only Tessa isnât my favorite toy; sheâs too shiny, too new for my dirty hands to play with.
I was only trying to lighten her mood, to cheer her up, but I obviously failed. I should have known that bringing up the subject of her lame-ass boyfriend would be a trigger for her temper.
Sheâs so annoying. She feels entitled and sheâs moody. Overly sensitive, she is, and she pisses me the fuck off. Who throws a drink, water . . . but still . . . into someoneâs face like that? For someone who thinks so highly of themselves, she sure does behave like a petulant child.
When I get to the bottom of the stairs, Tessaâs in the kitchen, taking a drink from a bottle of liquor. Sheâs looking around the room for someone, and as I watch her my phone goes off in my pocket, another text from Ken: Karenâs making dinner tonight if you want to stop by. Thereâs something I want to talk to you about. You havenât responded to my other texts, so I figured one at 3:00 am would at least get to you when you were awake.