something sexy as fuck about a girl who gives none.
“Hey,” Oakley shouts. “How much for you to shut the hell up?”
Cole squeezes his shoulder. “Relax. Griffin’s harmless.”
Hmm. Oakley doesn’t usually have such a short fuse. Not unless someone is dumb enough to mess with those he cares about.
Like some kind of personal fuck you from the universe, my brain puts the pieces together at the same time the girl turns around.
A mixture of anger, confusion, and something else I’m not ready to acknowledge twists my guts as I stare at Dylan.
Why the fuck is she dancing on a table… looking like that? The red Solo cup she brings to her glossy lips answers my question.
It’s her birthday…and the anniversary of her mother’s death.
Of course, she’s drinking. For the same reasons I did.
She wants to forget.
I grind my molars as I make a beeline for Oakley and Cole.
Oakley nudges my brother when he sees me approach. “Look who’s here.” He bumps my fist. “Hey, man. What’s good?”
Placing my soda on the table, I glare at him. “Any reason your cousin is stripping for half the school right now?”
He makes a face. “She’s dancing, not stripping.”
Cole smirks over his beer bottle. “Not yet, anyway.”
Oakley smacks his arm. “Shut up.” His stare drifts to Dylan who’s now shaking her ass—this time to some godawful hip-hop song—which is how I know she’s past the cutoff point. “It’s her birthday. She deserves to have some fun.” His eyes cut to mine. “Everyone needs a break from their bullshit from time to time.”
He’s not wrong, but it doesn’t mean he should stand by and be complacent while a bunch of guys ogle her like she’s a cold drink of water on a hot day.
Annoyance brews in my chest as Dylan slowly gyrates her hips and rakes her fingers through her blonde hair.
One of Oakley’s pot buddies holds up his bong and asks if she wants a hit. I want to scream at her not to be a dumbass because while they seem harmless, there’s no telling what they could have laced that shit with.
My fingers curl into fists as she leans over and inhales.
“You gonna put a stop to this?”
Oakley looks at me like I’m crazy. “A stop to what? Her taking a bong hit?”
No, the way Courtland Bennett’s leering at her like a dog who wants a nice juicy bone. My teeth clench when he says something to Dwight.
I can’t hear him, but I know what the phrase run a train looks like coming out of someone’s mouth.
Dwight appears hesitant before he laughs and shrugs.
Irritation makes me snap. “Seriously, Oakley?”
“Seriously, what?” He fixes his gaze on me. “Quit acting like I’m doing something wrong because you’re jealous.”
“He’s right,” Cole chimes in. “If you want to stop the dogs from peeing on your lawn, you need to put up a fence. Not a sign.”
Not only does that analogy not make any goddamn sense, it doesn’t apply.
“The both of you can fuck off. I’m not jealous.”
I’ve had enough of this shit. If I spend another minute here, the Knights will be down two players for the upcoming playoff game.
Digging my keys out of my pocket, I flip them the bird. “I’m heading out.”
Chapter 35
Dylan
“Do you want another one?” my bong buddy asks.
Nodding, I lean over and place my lips around the mouthpiece.
“Damn,” some guy wearing a football jersey says as I inhale. “You sure look like you’re enjoying that.”
Coughing, I reply, “It’s pretty good. Not that I’m a professional or anything.”
He exchanges an impish smile with his friend. “That’s a shame. Such a pretty mouth shouldn’t go to waste.”
I’m not so far gone I can’t understand his crude attempt at a joke.
Paying them no mind, I go back to dancing like no one’s watching.
Just like my mom used to tell me to do.
Although I don’t think she had this particular scenario in mind.
A sharp pain infiltrates my chest. If she didn’t want her daughter dancing on tables for her eighteenth birthday, she shouldn’t have died.
I shake the terrible thought out of my head. I rarely feel such resentment and bitterness about her death, but given this birthday is one of the big ones—combined with the alcohol currently flowing through my system—I guess it’s starting to bring out an angry side of me.
I close my eyes. Keep it together, Dylan.
Forcing myself to take a few deep breaths, I stuff the pain down as far as it will go.
I’m gonna need more alcohol. Enough to drown it out.
I’m about