Broken Trust A Dark High School Romance - Tate James Page 0,4
grin was sly, and excitement surged in me for the first time in way too long.
“That’s tonight?” I bit my lip, thinking it over. Widowmaker used to be my race. It was only run twice a year and had a crazy high crash rate. I’d held first place for the last five races and I hated the thought of someone else taking my crown … still, I would have to attempt it in an unfamiliar car and I was carrying a shit load of mental baggage.
“The supra is tricked out with NOS…” Dante coaxed, and I groaned.
“Fuck,” I sighed. “I can’t say no to that.” I scrambled up off the bathroom floor and held out my hand to help Dante up. He grunted as he held his ribs but gave me a tight smile to reassure me he was okay.
“I need something to wear,” I commented as I reached for my toothbrush. I’d been wearing Dante’s t-shirts and shorts for the past week and a half, seeing as I hadn’t left the apartment. But I needed something more kick ass for Widowmaker.
Dante chuckled, shifting past me to grab his phone where he’d left it on the couch. “I’ll call Serena. She’ll get you sorted.”
This time my smile was more genuine. If anyone could make me look badass—other than Eddy—it was Dante’s older sister.
“Holy shit, it’s been so long, Riles!” Serena was a hugger. Over the years I’d grown used to her full bear hugs, and a part of me felt a tiny bit better when she squeezed me tightly.
“I know, so much shit has happened; it feels like ten years since I last saw you.”
She led me across to the couch, and I marveled at the blue streaks in her black hair. Didn’t matter that she was nearing thirty, Serena looked hot and sexy, with a rocker edge.
Her story could have been very different though because it sure as shit started out terribly. In high school she’d been the popular, pretty chick. Until her school’s wide receiver knocked her up at eighteen and then bailed to leave her to raise their kid alone. Luckily her story had a happy ending when “diner guy,” as we’d used to call him, finally got the balls to ask out the pretty waitress that he’d lusted after from afar. Turned out that Rob Laidner, who was a few years older than Serena, was a police officer on the other side of Jersey. But he still made the trip every morning to eat breakfast in her section of the small family diner where she worked.
They’d gotten married five years ago, and Rob was raising Dante’s niece, Chloe, like she was his own.
I loved fairy tales. Pity mine was more of a nightmare.
“So, Dante’s been filling me in a little, but he said the details were yours to share,” Serena started when we were sitting. “So share.”
When she wore that fierce face, she looked so much like her brother, that it was almost scary. “I trusted the wrong people,” I said quietly. “They betrayed me, when they should have had my back. They hurt Dante.”
I practically spat those last words, my anger rising again. Every time I started to miss those bastards, I just had to picture my best friend, bloodied and beaten with a gun to his head.
Serena didn’t look surprised, and some might have thought her lack of concern about Dante was cold, but I knew that she had accepted his dangerous life long ago. I, on the other hand, continued to try and convince him it was time to get out of the Grims. I never wanted to deal with losing him.
“Dante doesn’t seem that upset by it,” Serena said, ruffling her hair up. “He said they were just doing their duty.”
I let out a low grumbling sound. “I don’t fucking get him. He hated them last month, but now he’s almost … understanding and accepting of their bullshit. How could getting beaten and almost killed have taken him from hate to whatever he’s feeling now?”
Serena shrugged, but it was Dante that answered. “Because I understand them better now,” he said as he stepped in from the balcony. He’d been out there taking a phone call. “Beck took no joy in hurting me, and I too have been forced to do things I disagree with out of obligation. Sometimes life is about duty, and from what I can tell, your boys have had to perform for Delta most of their lives.”