we were all buddy-buddy? They used me. Played me. We weren’t friends. Not even fucking close.
Joey shrugged and shook his head. “None of my drivers are vouching for you, you’re shit out of luck, rich kid. Go sit on the sidelines and watch how the big boys—er, and girls—do it.”
There was a small scuffle behind me, but I didn’t bother turning around. I knew what I’d find. Some sort of testosterone fueled standoff between Beck and Dante.
That shit was getting real old, real fast.
“Let’s roll,” Rabbit said with a wicked grin, throwing me a wink. “Ready to get knocked off that throne, Riles? This is my year, I can feel it.”
I scoffed a laugh, shaking my head as I sidestepped both Beck and Jasper and made my way back to the Mustang. I was just opening my door when he caught up to me. I knew he would.
His hand closed over my bare upper arm, and I shivered—except this time it wasn’t from the cold.
“Don’t do this, Riley,” Beck demanded, his voice rough. “I’ve heard about this race. People have died in this fucking thing.”
“No shit, Beck.” I laughed with bitterness. “It’s called Widowmaker for a reason.” I spun around to face him, jerking my arm out of his grip. I shoved him sharply in the chest, forcing him back a step and creating some space between us. “The next time you touch me without permission, I’ll make you regret it.”
I slid into the Mustang before he could say anything more, but as I slammed the door shut I couldn’t help catching his murmured response.
“I already do.”
Despite my anger toward him, that small comment felt like it had just cracked my heart in two. Clenching my jaw, I swallowed past the tears that threatened in the face of Beck’s regret and revved my engine.
“See you at the finish line,” I snapped, giving Beck one last glare before taking my car over to join the other racers at the starting point.
Lucky for me, the racers and spectators at Widowmaker were anything but impressed by Beck and Jasper and their flashy cars. I had no idea where Evan and Dylan had ended up, but they were probably warned not to bother coming by.
This place did not like Delta heirs.
The thought made me snicker as I shifted gears and slammed my foot down a bit harder to increase the gap between me and Rabbit. He hadn’t been joking about those NOS upgrades, but all the power in the world was useless if you were a shitty driver.
Not that Rabbit was shit, but he didn’t have a patch on me, and he knew it.
The two of us flew over the finish line with a car length between us. We eased off the gas and let our cars slow down gently before circling back to where the cheering spectators waited. Rabbit pulled his car up beside me and rolled down his window as we crawled back toward the crowd, and I did the same.
“Still got it, eh, Butterfly?” He was just teasing, but that nickname had taken on a whole life of its own and I gritted my teeth.
“Never lost it, Rabbit,” I replied with a grim smile. “Clean race this time, or what I saw of it.”
He jerked his head in a nod. “Joe is drinking, so can’t have been any crashes.” He nodded ahead where the race organizer had an arm slung around a petite blonde, and a can of something in his other hand.
Rabbit and I had reached the cleared area for parking, and we cut our engines.
“Time to celebrate.” He grinned at me, then hopped out of his car and caught the little redhead who practically threw herself at him.
I unclicked my seatbelt and reached for the handle, but before I could grab it the door flew out of my grip and I was snatched out of the vehicle. Arms like steel pinned me between a hard body and the side of the Mustang, and I let out a small squeak of shock and protest.
“I swear to fuck, I want to lock you in a damn cage and never let you out,” Beck muttered into the side of my neck where his face was pressed. “Jasper is right, you drive like a fucking wet-dream, but you could have fucking died, Butterfly.”
The shock cleared a little and I struggled in his embrace, trying to free myself. All he did was tighten his grip further, and my anger flared. Shifting my weight, I