Meeting Mr Anderson: Chapter 23
Meeting Mr Anderson (The Men Series – Interconnected Standalone Romances Book 1)
âWhoâd have thought it, eh, Anderson? People canât get enough of your ugly mug. Hollywood must be blind!â Rob elbows me in the ribs.
âOuch.â I laugh, pretending to look hurt. âI know Iâm not your type, butââ Robâs hand clamps over my mouth.
âStop talking; youâre ruining it.â
âWhat are you going on about?â I ask, pulling the hand away. I follow Robâs gaze across the room to a tall, raven-haired woman with a killer body in a figure-hugging red dress.
Weâve come to a party for a well-known fashion house. Theyâve just signed me to be the face of their entire new season of menswear. I shoot in a weekâs time. Itâs an amazing opportunity and my eyes almost bulged right out of my head when I saw how much they were offering as payment. Rob insisted on coming along as my plus one to play the supportive childhood friend card. We both know itâs got far more to do with the number of single women that come to these events.
âWhy donât you go talk to her?â I whisper in Robâs ear. Just as I say it, the woman in the red dress looks over in our direction and smiles.
âMaybe after another drink. Donât want to look too keen,â Rob says, brushing off my suggestion.
âFine.â I shrug my shoulders, knowing better than to argue. Robâs more stubborn than red wine on a white shirt.
âWhat you having this time?â I shout over the music as we cut through the crowd to get to the bar.
âJust a Pepsi.â
I look at Rob with a raised brow. âThereâs a free bar, and you want a Pepsi? You remember I said Iâd drive home, donât you?â
âI know,â Rob shouts back, âbut itâs your night and you should be celebrating. Iâll drive us. If you trust me with your car, that is?â A smirk crosses Robâs face, along with a silent challenge.
I never let anyone drive my car, so I know Iâm being tested. My entire family jokes about it, saying Iâm too uptight. Itâs not that at all; Iâm just a bad passenger. I like to be the one in control. I think it stems from sitting in the back seat when my dad gave my aunt a driving lesson once. I swear my knuckles were so white. I thought they may drop off from lack of circulation at the end of the half-hour ride of terror. Thereâs no way Rob will expect me to agree to it.
I narrow my eyes. âYouâre on!â I grin, throwing my keys at Robâs chest.
âSeriously?â
I nod and Rob pockets the keys before I can change my mind. Itâs time I started loosening up a bit.
âOh God,â I groan, squeezing my eyes shut. My head feels like someoneâs crushing it in a vise. I run a hand up in my hair and itâs met with wetness, warm and sticky. What the hell?
I force my eyes open and stare through slitted lids at my fingers. Theyâre red, covered in⦠blood? Is that blood? I try to sit forward but a crippling pain shoots across my chest, winding me, and I slump back, gasping air into my lungs.
Sirens blare in the distance. The smell of gas and something metallic makes my stomach lurch and I gulp hard, not wanting to throw up all over myself.
I wrench my eyes fully open; the searing pain in my head turns into a relentless pounding. Itâs the only part of my body I can feel; the rest is numb. I look down. My white shirt is covered in blood, as is the seat belt. Iâm in my car. My head grows heavy and I slump in the seat.
The sirens are louder now. Help is coming. There must have been an accident, but Iâm okay, Iâm alive.
Iâmâ¦
I lurch forward in the seat as adrenaline floods my body.
Rob! I was in the car with Rob!
A sense of dread claws its way inside my body, taking over my soul. Thereâs only the sound of one set of rasping breaths in the car.
Mine.
I look across to the driverâs seat.
âRob?â
Silence.
âRobâ¦?â
Dark-blond hair matted with blood clumps around Robâs face.
âRobâ¦?â I lean over and shake my best friend.
My friend Iâve known since I was a kid. My friend I traded snacks with at break time. My friend I fell off my bike with, copied math homework from, went to my first underage club with, had my first drink with. My friend I donât know how to live without.
âRobâ¦!â I scream.
This canât be happening.
This canât be real.
Empty green eyes stare into space, all light from them gone.
No, no, no. Please God, not Rob. Why not me? Take me instead! Fucking take me!
Strong hands surround me.
âWeâre here to help; can you tell me your name?â a faceless voice probes.
âHeâs in shock,â they call out.
âWeâve got to get him out now. The tanks split. Itâs leaking everywhere,â another voice shouts.
People are grabbing me now, pulling me away.
Away from Rob.
I fight back. I scream at them to stop.
They donât listen. They pull me away. Farther and farther away until I canât see Rob anymore.
A police officer asks something about a name as Iâm strapped down onto a board.
My eyes dart back to the crumpled metal that used to be my car.
Emergency personnel are surrounding it, talking in hushed voices. One looks at another and drops their head to their chest with a defeated shake.
No.
This canât be real.
This is a nightmare. Iâm going to wake up in a minute.
âWhatâs her name?â a policeman asks.
Why is he talking to me? Why isnât he helping Rob?
âWhatâs your girlfriendâs name?â the same police officer says.
My lips move and words come out, but I have no idea whoâs saying them. It doesnât sound like me.
âSheâs not my girlfriend,â the voice whispers. âSheâs my best friend.â
âHer nameâs Robyn, Robyn Cooper.â