Read Perfectly Toxic (The Sterling Shore Series Book 9) Online
Authors: C.M. Owens
Chapter 15
BELLA
Just as I reach the end of the block, the distinct sound of a crotch rocket pulls up beside me. I glance over to see the shiny, reflective glass of a helmet. But I know whose dark eyes are hiding behind the tinted lens.
After lingering for a second, he zips by, but he parks just ahead of me and tugs off his helmet. I really don’t have time for this crap. Right now, I just want to go home and get the smell of the hospital off me. I’d also like to wash away his scent.
Ethan runs a hand through his hair just as I near him, and he arches an eyebrow at me.
“Krysta—Ruby’s sister—is the girl I took home,” he states without any sort of emotion in his voice.
My footsteps falter, and I end up stopping just a few feet away from him.
“She’s too young to be getting wasted at my house,” he goes on. “I didn’t trust someone else not to take advantage of her, since she’s going through some stuff right now. As for Lynn, I got my leg cut before we ever got down to business. So no, Bella, I didn’t lie to you. But you’d know that if you bothered to fucking hear me out. But go ahead and think you have it all figured out, and keep going on your desperate dates. As for me, you’re finally getting your wish. I’m done trying to play this game with you. Turns out that it’s not my thing.”
I don’t even get the chance to speak before he pops his helmet back on and revs out of the space he was in, zigging in between traffic and heading back toward the city.
I’m not sure what I would have said even if I had been able to form words in time. Desperate dates?
Okay, so maybe they are a little desperate, but not as desperate as thinking a guy like him is magically going to be a steady, legitimate boyfriend.
Magic is for fairytales, and I stopped believing in happily-ever-afters with guys like him a long time ago. Guys like him can have any girl they want, and they usually do.
Happily-ever-afters come from guys who don’t have hundreds of other options at their greedy little fingertips.
Deciding I can’t stand here all day and think about it, I resume my walk home. My car is still back at the hospital, because I walked to that damn milkshake shop.
I don’t know if I feel guilty or relieved that Ethan is finally finished with me. But I do feel like I need to apologize.
I hate my life sometimes.
My phone chirps, and I read a message from Ruby.
RUBY: 911 – my friend Bo needs some serious girl time, and you’re the best person to help me out. We’re taking her to Silk.
I don’t think I’m in any position to help anyone out, but I blow out a breath and decide to roll with it. At least a night out will help me get Ethan out of my head.
ME: Send me the address.
Ruby has briefly filled me in on the Bo and Jax thing, but she’s more concerned about Bo than the breakup. Bo seems to be struggling to find herself.
Been there. Done that. Thought I was finished with that portion of my life… Until that bastard started stalking me and making me question my reasonable life plan.
After rushing home, showering and changing, I head to the address Ruby gave me. Bo’s apartment building is one hell of a badass place, and I have to ride up the elevator to the fifteenth floor.
The door is unlocked, and I walk in like I have the right to. Holy mother of pearl. Her apartment is bigger than my house.
“Get dressed,” I hear Ruby saying, which reminds me I’m supposed to be on girl duty.
“Why?” asks another voice, and I walk into the bedroom unannounced.
Bo startles when she sees me, but I just flash a smile at her. This is what I’m good at—being a good girl friend even to strangers. I just suck at all the other stuff.
“Bella, will you grab those black boots in the back of the closet?” Ruby asks me.
I’m dressed like I’m on the prowl, but in reality, I just want to go home and crash. Not that I let them know that. I’m not a total buzzkill.
“What’s going on?” I hear Bo asking as I fall in love with her amazing freaking closet. Holy jackpot! Can’t I just be gay and sweep Bo off her feet?
“We’re taking you to Silk,” I tell her as I force my eyes to zero in on the wall of incredible shoes.
I’m fairly sure I just whimpered.
I snatch up a pair of the most perfect black boots the world has ever seen, and maybe I drool a little.
“You said you wanted to get out more,” Ruby tells her. “Even said you needed to get over your issues with groups. And I don’t trust you to be alone anymore, so I’m taking you with us.”
“And the best way to get over a man is to get under a new one,” I add, forcing a smile I don’t feel.
I go back to help Ruby find a shirt for Bo, and I fall a little more in love with this closet when I realize it’s organized by the color wheel. Seriously, why can’t I be gay?
“You’ve showered today, right?” Ruby asks.
I hope she’s not talking to me. Surely I got the hospital smell off—
“I worked today, so yes; I’ve showered,” Bo tells her, and I try not to laugh at myself.
They talk about Jax and the breakup, which all seems a little sad to me. I don’t need to hear sad stuff. I need to hear about all the happy couples who are in love and happily living life. It motivates me to find my own slice of perfection.
But I’m starting to think that I’m such a horrible person that no amount of good deeds can redeem my tarnished soul. Maybe this is my punishment—staying in a lather, rinse, repeat cycle of all the wrong choices I’ve made.
Tonight, I’ll do another good deed, and that involves being a good friend. Eventually karma has to stop punishing me for the past and start rewarding me for the present.
Chapter 16
ETHAN
“You look like you need to hit something,” Jax Marshall tells me as I finish the first set of weights and move on to the next.
“You volunteering?” I ask dryly.
He snorts derisively while shaking his head. “So who is she?”
“Why does everything have to be about a girl?”
I move to the bench and lie down, ignoring him when he laughs under his breath. It’s Monday morning, and I’m still as pissed as I was when I went off on Bella. It’s not rational to be this angry over something as simple as our argument. It’s also not rational to be hung up on a girl I barely know.
“You’re getting sweat all over my shit. You’re supposed to be wearing a shirt,” Jax tells me without any real authority in his tone, so I know he’s fucking with me.
“Shirts don’t stop sweat.”
I lift the bar and start the set, and he stands behind me, ready to spot me, until Kode and Tria are suddenly calling his attention away. Thankfully.
After a few sets, I finally rise up, running a hand through my now-wet hair. Working Bella out of my system is going to be annoying.
I passed on going to Silk when Dane invited me, but now I wish I had gone, considering Bella was apparently there for a little while. I guess she parties as long as I’m not around to call her out on it.
I blow out a breath, refusing to think about her any longer. I’ll never leave the gym if I don’t stop thinking about her.
Just as I start moving toward the leg press, some chick steps into my path. My eyes move between her and another girl who has to be her identical twin.
“I have a king-sized bed that would look perfect with you on it,” the girl tells me.
I scan her face, but unfortunately it doesn’t match the one my fucking dick wants. So I walk away like she didn’t just offer to get naked, because I’m an ass like that. And she’s not what I want.
I’m never going to work Bella out of my system if I don’t stop thinking about her. Plugging in my earbuds, I crank up the music, and the rest of the world fades into nothing as I push myself to the limits.
Chapter 17
BELLA
By the time I arrive at the restaurant Monday afternoon, I’m already five minutes late and really exhausted from a hell day at work.
“You look… surly. What’s wrong?” Allie asks as I sit down, hating my day.
My eyes flick to Brin, Ruby, Rain, and Tria, and I shrug in response. “Just tired,” I lie, well, partially lie. I really am tired. I’m not willing to explain the root of my surly attitude in front of everyone else. “Where’s Raya?”
“Oh, she’s with Kade. They’re tasting wedding cakes,” Rain tells me.
They study me like they’re waiting on something to be revealed, but I say nothing.
“Thought you were going to New York today,” I say to Tria.
“Thought I was too, but Kode’s meeting was delayed until next week. At least they told us before we got on the plane.” She pauses for a beat. “So, heard you made a scene at the charity ball,” Tria pries, staring at me with innocent eyes that don’t fool me one bit.
“I heard about that too,” Brin says with a smirk.
“Just owed him one,” I say with a shrug, but Allie is too intent on studying me. I’m not telling her about Ethan. It’s too embarrassing to confess.
She went through hell, and yet has always had her shit together. Me? I’m a mess who creates problems for myself. Problems like Ethan.
“I heard you were celebrating something the other day. Are you and Kode getting married?” I blurt out, desperate to shift the subject off me.
Tria’s drink pauses at her lips as her eyebrows go up in surprise. She lowers her drink while slowly shaking her head.
“I don’t believe in marriage,” she finally says with a shrug. “Fortunately, Kode isn’t the proposing type.”
“What? Why?” Allie asks, absently touching her own engagement ring.
“It’s nothing against marriage, per se, but I think some people stop trying once rings are exchanged. Mom always said Dad was the best boyfriend there ever was, but the worst husband there has ever been. I like the way things are between Kode and me. I’m happy, and so is he. There’s no reason to mess that up with something that could make us complacent.”
It’s hard to argue with that, but at the same time, it’s a little disheartening.
“I think Kode would be a good husband to you. He loves the hell out of you,” Rain points out. “Don’t let Edward take that away. Don’t give him anything else.”
Edward is their father who passed away before Allie and I became a part of the group.
Tria just shrugs at Rain. I regret asking the question because she seems a little distant now.
“How’s the new book coming?” I ask Rain in deflection, feeling guilty for putting Tria on the spot now.
She groans while shaking her head. “It’s going crazy. It started off as a regular romance, and somehow turned into a zombie apocalypse with vampire warriors. Don’t ask.”
Weirdly, I’m intrigued, but before I can announce that, Tria is hissing out a breath.
My eyes flick over to a table that is a good distance away from us, where some chick is sitting down with another chick, but I don’t know either of them.
“Is that Star?”
“Yes. Yes it is,” Rain says dryly. “And Chloe. It’s like a Sterling ex gathering.”
Ruby glares a few daggers at the one named Chloe, but she clears her throat and turns back around.
“Who?” Allie and I ask in unison.
“Star Morgan and Chloe Macintosh,” Rain says evenly. “Chloe dated Maverick in school.”
“And Corbin,” Ruby says while cracking her neck to the side, her jaw clenching.
Rain pauses, but she doesn’t say anything about that. “And Star dated Maverick too.”
“And Ethan,” Tria adds.
My stomach flips, and my eyes move back over to the table.
“Which one is Star?” I ask before I can stop myself.
“The blonde with the legs for days,” Tria tells me. “That’s why the guys call ‘Star’ when they’re into a girl.”
“Huh?” Brin asks, apparently just as confused as we are.
“Star,” Tria and Rain both say quietly, as though they’re explaining, but they’re not.
“Maverick and Ethan were both into her, and she was playing them both. Maverick is younger than Ethan, and Star is right in the middle of their age gap. Anyway, Maverick and Ethan ended up in a fight that resulted in a lot of blood and almost an expulsion from school. Tag broke up the fight, and ended up taking a hit in the process. It took a while for Maverick and Ethan to mend fences, but when they did, they iced out the girl who played them. Anyway, that’s the story behind Star,” Rain supplies.
Tria is cursing, and my eyes move back to the table where a third girl is joining them. Who the hell is this one?
“You’ve got to be kidding me,” Rain growls, grabbing the butter knife like she’s on the verge of attacking.
“Rain, put the knife down,” Tria hisses, clutching her sister’s arm before Rain can stand.
“I’ll just cut her a little. I swear I won’t do much damage,” Rain promises, still glaring at the newest chick.
Damage with a butter knife?
“Is that Fiona?” Brin asks. “Dale’s ex?”
“Yes,” Rain says, trying and failing to get up when Tria all but sits in her sister’s lap to keep her stationary.
“You can’t stab her in a crowded restaurant,” Tria whisper-yells.
“No one will see it. It’ll be like on the prison movies,” Rain goes on. “Just walk in front of me for cover.”
I don’t know whether to laugh or be worried.
Allie’s expression says the same thing.
“You can’t stab her here. This is one of the few nut-free establishments I can eat at,” Ruby says to Rain, only adding to the lunacy of our current conversation.
Fortunately, Brin’s phone rings, and she answers while Tria keeps Rain from reenacting a prison shanking scene.
“Oh! Oh! Yeah! Oh! We’re on our way!” Brin squeals, hanging her phone up and standing so fast her chair flips over.
“What?” Tria asks as Rain stops struggling.
“Ash! She’s in labor! Baby on the way!” Brin yells as she starts racing toward the door.
Allie and I get up too, and Allie tosses down some money for the drinks they’ve ordered. Rain grabs a roll from the dish in front of her, and I laugh when she launches it across the restaurant and pegs Fiona right in the back of the head.
Rain flips her off, and Fiona’s eyes widen when she sees her assailant. I’m worried by the fact she turns pale, and I start to wonder if Rain really would stab her.
“Baby!” Tria reminds Rain, dragging her away as Allie and I race outside.
“I’ll catch up to you,” I call out, not willing to tell anyone my car is still at the hospital.
So I start jogging, happy that I wore sneakers.
By the time I reach the maternity ward, everyone is already there, and Allie frowns when she sees me. It wasn’t much of a jog, so at least I’m not sweaty, but I am a little breathy.
“What’s the word?” I ask the very full waiting room.
“Nothing yet,” Wren states as he chews on his thumbnail and bounces his knee.
Allie leans back, relaxing. All the men look nervous, including Kade Colton. I think there’s wedding cake on his face.
Raya walks in with a round of coffees, passing them all out. I frown when I notice one face missing. I mean, even Maverick is here, cracking jokes about anything and everything. But Ethan isn’t.
Surely he’s not so pissed at me that he’d miss the birth of a friend’s kid.
Grabbing my phone, I send a message to him. He was their friend long before I was.
ME: You can come to the hospital. I’m heading home. You shouldn’t miss Tag’s baby being born. And honestly I shouldn’t be here for it, considering Ash and I aren’t that close yet.
I read it three times to make sure autocorrect hasn’t fucked me over, then I press send.
“Hey, I need to get back to the house. I forgot there’s a guy coming to fix my sink,” I tell Allie, hating the fact that I’m the one who’s lying now. But I can’t tell her what’s going on in front of everyone.
“Okay… It’s messed up again?” she asks, confused.
“Yeah. Damn thing is a pain in the ass. Call me and let me know when the baby is born. Okay?”
She nods, but I get out of there before she can ask any questions. She seems to know I don’t want to answer anything in front of anyone, so she doesn’t follow me.
I never should have messed with Ethan even a little. Now I’m lying to my best friend and losing the group of friends I just got. It’s not like Ethan and I did more than just a kiss. It’ll die down eventually, then we’ll get used to being around each other without all the crazy sexual tension between us.
Until then, it’s time to lie low.