of them dies or gets bored with the other. Dad is on wife number three and it’s fizzling out quick. From how many times I’ve walked into his office and found his secretary ‘searching for a pen’ that rolled under his desk, he’s already got number four lined up.
“Believe it or not, I wouldn’t mind you being wife number one. You’d let me live my own life while you’re off doing whatever you do. We’d have some wicked-cute kids to screw up, and I’m told you’re incredible in the sack.”
I launched myself at him, tackling him into the dirt.
“Whoa,” he cried, laughing away. “Save it for the honeymoon.”
“Just because life has twisted you into a cynical sack of crap, doesn’t mean we all treat marriage like it’s meaningless. You don’t want to play this game with me, Knight. Take it back. Before everyone, take it back.”
The world spun.
I smashed onto the shifting earth. Carter towered over me. Beautiful. Cold. Victorious.
“Looks like you’re going to be my wife, Belle. Lucky for me.” He peeled me up, pulling me into a hug. “Because I missed you,” he whispered in my ear. His wet, warm tongue darted out, licking the shell. “You still taste so good.”
Carter walked off, leaving me on the deserted beach without a backward glance.
Chapter Six
“So... you and Carter?”
“There is no me and Carter,” I snapped. “You know I made up that Huntington’s garbage. He took over from there.”
Zion stretched out on my balcony despite my resolve to avoid the space. I survived the trip to the orange grove and Mrs. Desai’s separate session to chat with the girls, only to run up to my room at lunchtime. Zion was close on my heels.
“Why would he do that?”
I skipped a step, slowing my pace. “Because... I gave him no choice.”
“Ominous. What does that mean?”
It means he’s doing what he thinks he has to do to get me to tell the truth. But I can’t, so once again, we’re at war.
“I’m not marrying him, Zion. He can use some other girl to scam his way into a bigger trust fund. That is if anyone wants him after I spill that we were both lying through our teeth.”
“Are you sure you want to do that?”
“It’s the only thing to do.”
A knock sounded at the door.
“Who is it?”
“Preston.”
I jumped up and yanked him inside. “What the hell is Carter doing?!”
“You’re asking me? Because I’ve got some questions.” Preston snapped to Zion. “Get out.”
My friend beat it for the door.
“Hey,” I said. “Don’t come in here barking orders at people like you’ve got something to be mad about.”
“I shouldn’t be mad about you acting like I was the one who deceived you when the whole time you were going after Carter? Get the fuck out, Zion!”
He got the fuck out, leaving me alone with a pissed-off Preston.
“I don’t know what he told you,” I began.
“He said you came to a mutually beneficial arrangement where he wins either way. Said I should be thanking him for saving me from you.”
“Your friend is a liar. We didn’t come to any kind of arrangement and I’ll kick his balls up his throat either way. I’m telling everyone the truth as soon as I get the chance, so you can relax. My last name is destined to remain unhyphenated.”
I flopped on my bed. “You’ll also be happy to know that I believe you. You didn’t know who I was.”
The mattress dipped. Preston laid out by my side. “What changed your mind?”
“Carter is leveraging a marriage proposal to make me tell you what happened between us. Which means he didn’t tell you himself.” A heaviness settled over me. After everything he’d done, I still couldn’t see Carter as anything other than what he was: the victim. “He really scrubbed me from his life after entering the academy, didn’t he?”
“If he spoke your name, it wasn’t to me.”
“And Nathan? Those summers he stayed in Bracknell. He didn’t mention me?”
“Bracknell? You mean that was you?” Preston propped himself on his elbow. “He never gave me a name, but he did talk about a girl he met over there that made his summer of exile bearable. After the second summer, I didn’t hear about that girl again.” He blew out a breath. “Wow.”
“What’s wow?”
“Three guys connected by one girl and they didn’t know it. Now we’re all thrown together again. I’d say it’s fate but I assume you have the same feelings toward that as you do for magic.”