Authors: Rachel Higginson
Uh, oh, I hoped he didn’t get food poisoning from Baileys!
Ha!
I so wished I could have been there when Ms.-I’m-a-Sure-Thing showed up at Fin’s tonight. Ah, well. There would always be the unlikely chance he would vent about it at our next scheduled indentured-servitude-gathering. More than likely Cassie would message again and then I would get a sEcond chance at this.
Just for good measure I clicked on her profile. She was definitely gorgeous and not nearly as skanky as the girls that usually hung around Beckett. She was also a senior, so she had probably known Fin for a while.
I had to wonder why he shot her down….
Maybe, besides all rumors, evidence and lack of pictures in his apartment, he had a girlfriend?
Except then why was he pushing so hard with me? I was the kind of situation that would piss of any kind of girl.
A girl that owes your boyfriend gobs of money and has to do whatever he says until the debt is paid? A girl he is practically stalking and most definitely harassing and possibly even flirting with? Yep, sounds like a trip straight to couples counseling.
So what gave then? Why had Fin taken himself off the market?
I would investigate this. Soon.
Right now, I had to make sure his morning quickie was still on for tomorrow.
Once I decided he hadn’t actually been on his account in probably two days or more, I felt a little more relaxed.
And brave enough to check his texts.
Why did you leave work early? Was Ty mean to you? I can beat him up if you want me to. Although… he would probably kick my ass. But still, just say the word. Nobody messes with my slave.
I laughed out loud at that. And then I looked around quickly, not wanting to be caught laughing at his jokes. He sent that shortly after I got here. The sEcond message was sent just ten minutes ago.
Usually when I text a girl, I have to turn off my ringer because she won’t stop texting me back… You should text me back so my self-esteem doesn’t start to suffer….
I tried really, really hard to stop smiling at that, but it was a useless effort. With a quick click of a button, I turned the screen of my phone off and decided it was probably a good idea to let his self-esteem marinate, especially after he just had a pretty co-ed banging down his door to give him whatever he “needed.” Obviously, it was for the good of humanity that I let him wait this one out.
I eventually returned to my now cold meal and settled into the remaining minutes of the family dinner. My parents were headed back home tonight, and Lennox to his apartment halfway in between. We kissed and hugged and promised to miss each other in the parking lot and then off they went. I wouldn’t see my mom and dad again until I went home for spring break in three weeks. Which was fine with me.
They however, weren’t as accepting of the idea, begging me to come home this weekend and when I declined because I had to work, they tried to shove cash into my hand.
I eventually let them. My dad only had sixty dollars to give tonight and I was seriously starting to worry about my cholesterol after the sheer amount of cheap food I’d been consuming. Maybe I would buy some fruit. Some…. canned fruit. Plus I could see my brother’s eying me like vultures waiting for their prey to die and I didn’t want to stick around this parking lot longer than I had to.
When my parents were waving goodbye from the street I turned to sprint to my car, but Lennox intercepted me with his arms crossed again.
“Ellie, we want to talk to you,” Lennox said.
Beckett and Grayson closed ranks behind me so I was effectively trapped. Oh gosh. “About what?” I asked innocently.
“First, your roommate leaves. And there are definite rumors about some kind of addiction. Now there’s talk of you and Hunter spending extended amount of time together,” Beckett explained, his gray eyes cold and dangerous.
I held up my hands in a sign of surrender, deciding if I acted like this was a big admission on my part, they might actually believe me. “My roommate did leave. And I can’t say her reasons for sure, plus it’s not my place. All I know is that she’s gone and I’m happy for it. You guys decided it was a good thing she’s gone, too. Remember? And fine, Fin and I have a project we are working on. I saw him twice yesterday,
on campus
. We talked about the project and that’s it. So stop bothering me about him. We are in no way dating. I’m not interested in him at all. And that’s the end of the story.”
I let out an aggravated sigh, while they stared at me with their narrowed, scrutinizing eyes. SEconds ticked by while they collectively decided whether to believe me or not. The thing was, it was mostly the truth, but my brothers were born with a strong sense of distrust when it came to everything about me. Not that they didn’t trust me, just that they didn’t trust anyone else when it concerned me. I could kill Colton right now for bringing me back into their overprotectiveness.
“We will find out if you’re lying,” Grayson growled.
“Gray,” I pleaded, in my sweetest voice. “Why would I lie about that? If I was dating Fin, don’t you think I would believe he could take care of himself?” Mostly that was a lie. In no way did I think any male alive could hold his own against these three.
They all three grunted in response. I should probably tell them how tough and strong I thought they were, but I was their sister…. I wasn’t supposed to build them up. It was my job in life to dish out as much as I took.
“Besides,” I continued soothingly. “You were all on your best behavior with Colton. It’s not like I’m scared to bring a guy home.” I was totally scared to bring another guy home. And they were in no way on their best behavior.
“Only because he was a tool,” Lennox stated matter-of-factly. “And we weren’t really on our best behavior, we just allowed him to live because we all knew it wouldn’t last with you two.”
Before I could ask any questions about that, Grayson continued, “But you still let that go on way longer than it should. And you got hurt in the end. Ellie, we won’t make that mistake again. You better choose your next boyfriend carefully.”
The three of them nodded their heads in unison and then Lennox added, “And it better not be Hunter.”
Time to defuse this unnecessary tension. I went up on my toes and gave Lennox a quick kiss on the cheek. I felt his shoulders relax and then he pulled me into an affectionate hug. Next was Grayson and I didn’t even wheeze when he squeezed me too tight. Finally Becket, although we just did the side hug thing. We were too close in age to be overly demonstrative.
“Thanks, guys,” I finished sincerely. “I know you’re looking out for me. I appreciate it.”
They finally let me go then, all waiting until I was in my Subaru, with the doors locked and the engine running. The tank read below empty, a dangerous place for the red needle to be. Thankfully dad had pitched in for the tank and I wouldn’t be surviving on fumes for the next week.
But it was the only time I would let him give me money again. Nights like tonight could not continue to happen otherwise I would lose my mind.
Chapter Seven
A cold mist still settled over the track, as I stretched out on the red, gravelly ground. Britte and I tried to run together three times a week. We were vigilantly fighting the extra pounds that came packaged with the first years of college, plus trying to stay in shape. In high school, I did well in track, running the mile, the two mile and a few hurdle relays. Britte had been some kind of volleyball super star. We both missed the regular routine of athletics, but it was hard to find time with our heavy schedules.
We used to run in the evenings on days we didn’t have to work, but now with Fin demanding much of my time, we switched our schedule to the morning. The
early
morning. I wasn’t even sure if my legs would work this early. I felt stiff and sluggish, but I stretched out anyway, preparing to at least trip around the track until I hit a mile. Usually Britte and I strode for three, but we decided to take it easy this morning and see if we could finish one mile without either taking a nap or causing accidental but serious bodily harm.
“How did the fam dinner go the other night?” Britte asked through a yawn.
“Fine,” I yawned back. What sucked the most was that we couldn’t even have coffee before this. Well, we could have, but probably that wouldn’t be wise.
“Fine?” she asked, unbelieving.
“Ask me again in two hours when I can remember it.” I stood up and then bent down to touch my toes. This felt kind of comfortable so I stood there hanging for thirty sEconds longer than I needed to.
“Did you tell them about Tara the twa-“
“B! Cuss jar!” Gah. There was nothing I hated more than bad words for girly parts.
“Sorry,” she laughed.
“Well, they found out. But it was Beckett that told them, not me. Stupid brothers. I cannot figure out how I got sucked back into a world where my family is everywhere! I must have been out of my mind to transfer.”
“Hey, you still have me! And you would not have had me if you wouldn’t have transferred. The good outweighs the bad here, Els,” she admonished, looking a little hurt.
“You’re right,” I sighed. “I do have you. And a rumored relationship with Fin.”
“What?” She gasped while doing some high knees and then some calf stretches.
“They are convinced I’m dating Fin. Apparently there are some rumors around campus that have us together, acting like a couple.”
“Are the rumors true?” Britte asked with a knowing look.
“We’ve been together twice on campus, Britte. And you were there for one of those times, so you tell me.” Ugh, I hated that these rumors might not be unfounded. He did kiss my neck in front of a lot of people the other day.
“I was there when he kissed you, and when he visited you at your place of work. I think he’s into you, Ellie. Your brothers might actually have something to worry about,” she smirked at me, and then waggled her eyebrows.
“Whatever,” I laughed. “Don’t forget I owe him a ton of money! He’s just micromanaging his investment. Plus, I’m not his type.”
Britte started off in a slow jog and I followed suit. We both hated to talk while we ran; we believed if we weren’t out of breath than obviously we weren’t trying hard enough. But this conversation needed to be wrapped up.
“What makes you say that?” Britte asked in a tone that made me feel stupid for thinking I wasn’t every single guy’s type on the entire planet. She was such a good friend.
“I have full access to his Facebook account, I see the girls that message him all the time. They’re fan-club girls. And I lack the va-va-va-voom to even be considered for membership. As much as Beckett can’t stand Fin, they do share the same type.” I hated how desperately pathetic my voice sounded.
Britte didn’t seem to notice though, “Beckett has terrible taste in girls. What is his problem?” She sounded so worked up about it I raised my eyebrows at her, but she just waved me on and picked up the pace.
Soon my leg muscles were burning and my abs stretched tight. Sweat dripped down from my temples and the back of my neck and my arms pumped with the will to finish out our workout. We eventually woke up and were able to push ourselves past one mile, and then two and we were closing in on the third and final. The only sound between us was heavy breathing and the slap of our feet against the track.
The morning was still frigidly cold, and my lungs burned with every breath. But it all felt good and necessary. There wasn’t much I loved more than losing myself in a strong run. The concentrated effort but how my mind could just drift at the same time, the way every muscle burned and stretched with each step forward, the way my arms pumped at my sides and the slick feeling of sweat as it coated my body. This was a good feeling, a feeling necessary for my happiness.