Hate the Game - Winter Renshaw Page 0,47

to get one-hundred-and-one kinds of complicated.

Chapter 26

Talon

They say time flies when you’re having fun and it just might be the truest words ever spoken, cliché or otherwise.

In one week, we leave for Irie’s cousin’s wedding in Missouri.

In two weeks, my offer from Richmond expires, which means they’ll be allowed to make a new offer, one that will undoubtedly be less sweet than the first.

Music plays low from a speaker on my desk as Irie and I are sprawled across my bed on a random Thursday night.

We were supposed to be studying, but neither of us are feeling focused on anything other than each other tonight.

“It’s getting late,” she says, her leg intertwined with mine as I twist her soft hair in my fingers. Hozier’s From Eden plays in the background, and her body is warm against me.

“Stay.”

She gazes up at me through sleepy eyes, her lips pink and swollen from two solid hours of kissing me tonight.

“I can’t,” she says. “I’ve been staying over a lot lately, and that’s not fair to Aunt Bette.”

“Has she said something?”

“No. She hasn’t. And she won’t. But still. It’s not right.”

I stroke my hand against the side of her pretty face. I always hate when she leaves. Everything feels empty and hollow, lifeless. It’s like a piece of me is missing. She’s my phantom limb.

“Why are you looking at me like that?” she asks, sitting up and tucking one leg halfway beneath her.

“You think you’ll miss this?” I ask.

We’ve been so focused on having fun this past month that we’ve intentionally side-stepped the inevitable—life after graduation.

“What kind of question is that?”

“Just answer.”

She rolls her eyes, pretending to be annoyed. “Obviously.”

“What if I never find anyone like you again?” I ask. “What we go our separate ways and I never find someone who drives me half as wild as you do?”

“I don’t know why you’re bringing this up right now,” she says. “We went into this knowing we wouldn’t have a future, remember?”

“A couple years ago, there was this volunteer board at the Memorial Union,” I say. “I walked past it probably half a dozen times before I actually stopped and looked at it. Irie, your name was on every last sign-up sheet.”

She shrugs. “Just doing my part.”

“Where am I going to find another girl as selfless as you? As giving? I mean, you live with your eighty-year-old aunt taking care of her instead of living in some campus apartment with a bunch of friends, getting that true college experience,” I continue. “And don’t even get me started on the way you hold your own when other girls give you shit. You are everything, Irie. Inside and out.”

“Everything? No one’s ever called me that before.”

“You’re the real deal,” I say. “And I know that if we walk away from this, I’m never going to find anyone half as real as you.”

Irie slides off the bed and begins to gather her things from around the room—shoes, bag, phone, and when she’s dressed and ready to dash out the door, she turns to me and hesitates.

“I think we’re moving way too fast,” she says. “And I think you’re overthinking this.”

“What are you trying to say?”

“That we shouldn’t get ahead of ourselves or make rash decisions because we’re afraid. The future is terrifying. There’s never a right decision when it comes to anything.”

“I disagree.”

“Just … let’s have fun.” Her eyes soften. “I like this … being with you. I don’t want to ruin it. I don’t want to complicate it. You promised …”

She’s right.

I did.

Irie slides her hand in mine and I kiss the top, her skin cashmere-soft against my mouth.

“Goodnight, gorgeous,” I say.

She smiles, lowering her swollen lips to mine one last time for the night. “See you tomorrow.”

With that she’s gone.

I lie in bed, staring at the ceiling, waiting for the emptiness to sink into my bones as I contemplate my future.

Sliding my hands behind my head, I drag in a heavy breath and close my eyes, imagining a life without her … only it’s depressing as fuck. The second I sign that contract and move out east, I’m going to be surrounded by opportunists, fame-chasers and plastic women who aspire to be nothing more than a baller’s wife.

The creak of the door pulls me out of my silent pity party, and I sit up in bed, peering across the room to a familiar shadow standing in the doorway.

“I thought you left,” I say to her.

She closes the door behind her, dropping her bag near my

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