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Ask Me Anything

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by Molly E. Lee




  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Check out these exciting Entangled Teen reads!

  Also by Molly E. Lee

  the Grad Night series

  Love in the Friend Zone

  Love Between Enemies

  Love Beyond Opposites

  Independent Titles

  Edge of Chaos

  Edge of Recovery

  Edge of Bliss

  East of Redemption

  Depths of Salvation

  Edge of Brotherhood

  Edge of Regret

  Dear Reader,

  Thank you for supporting a small publisher! Entangled prides itself on bringing you the highest quality romance you’ve come to expect, and we couldn’t do it without your continued support. We love romance, and we hope this book leaves you with a smile on your face and joy in your heart.

  xoxo

  Liz Pelletier, Publisher

  UNCORRECTED GALLEY PROOF

  Not for sale or redistribution.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2019 by Molly E. Lee. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

  Entangled Publishing, LLC

  2614 South Timberline Road

  Suite 105

  Fort Collins, CO 80525

  rights@entangledpublishing.com

  Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

  Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

  Edited by Stacy Abrams

  Cover design by Molly E. Lee and Heather Howland

  Cover images by

  Getty Images/maciek905

  Getty Images/CoffeeAndMilk

  Interior images by Molly E. Lee and iStock/art-sonik

  Interior design by Heather Howland

  Print ISBN 978-1-64063-658-3

  Ebook ISBN 978-1-64063-659-0

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition May 2019

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  For n0decaf

  Prologue

  Amber

  NightLocker: Please talk to me

  NightLocker: Let me explain

  NightLocker: Pixie...I’m sorry

  NightLocker: There are things you don’t understand

  I tucked my fingers under my arms, ignoring the tingle to respond immediately.

  Damn straight I don’t understand.

  Betrayal stung like a paper cut while opening a package of lemonade mix.

  My heart hurt. Like, I’d been burned before…but this? This physically turned my stomach and seared my chest.

  This…

  This was true heartbreak.

  This was can’t sleep, can’t eat unless it’s chocolate, can’t breathe without sharp spikes rattling my lungs, relentless heartbreak.

  NightLocker: Give me a chance

  NightLocker: I can make this right

  NightLocker: I want to...

  NightLocker: I need you...DC remember? Doesn’t that mean anything to you anymore?

  Tears stung my eyes as I read his pleas. His use of our secret word, a code that had become something so much more than a warning. Something as vital as breathing and as true as the ache in my heart.

  Some deep part of me, the one he’d branded his name on, wanted to forgive him. Needed to.

  Because who was I to judge…after what I’d done?

  I should forgive him. I should tell him the truth about what I knew.

  But what was the point? Once he uncovered it…once he learned what I’d really done…

  He’d hate me.

  I reached for the keyboard, the motion almost painful.

  NightLocker: I need you...DC remember? Doesn’t that mean anything anymore?

  PixieBurn: everything & nothing

  NightLocker: Amber

  NightLocker: Please

  NightLocker: What does that even mean?

  I paused my response, choking back a sob.

  It didn’t matter. He’d find out soon enough.

  Might as well endure the break now.

  I just wished like hell it didn’t have to hurt so damn much.

  PixieBurn: It means

  PixieBurn: Hack my gear like this again

  PixieBurn: for a chat

  PixieBurn: for help

  PixieBurn: for anything

  PixieBurn: and I’ll crash your entire system

  I hated myself a fraction more with each message sent.

  NightLocker: No!

  NightLocker: Amber

  NightLocker: Listen to me

  God, did I want to. I wanted him to not be breaking into my system, showing up on my screen…I wanted him here. Telling me we could find our way back to common ground or, hell, hit the reset button and start fresh. Erase every dark piece of our past.

  But this was real life.

  And it was heavy and hard and harsh.

  PixieBurn: goodbye, Dean

  I logged off and shut my gear down. He couldn’t find me if I wasn’t online.

  Unless he shows up at my door…again.

  My heart skipped at the thought—it was betraying me as much as he had.

  I’d barely survived his friendship, his light.

  I certainly wouldn’t survive his hate, his disappointment, the way he’d judge me when he knew…

  Chapter One

  Amber

  Six months earlier…

  “And then I actually got the condom out of the wrapper,” Hannah whispered as we walked toward the largest seminar room in Wilmont Academy. “But I wasn’t expecting it to be…slimy”—a shudder rippled her long blond hair—“so I freaked. And that freak-out resulted in me kneeing his junk.” She clenched her eyes shut, rubbing her palms over her face. “It was a disaster. Jake is probably going to dump me.”

  “No, he isn’t,” I said, resting my hand on her shoulder. We stopped outside the lecture room doors as the rest of the school filed in. “You’ve been together, what? Eight years?” I asked, totally blanking on the actual mileage of their relationship.

  “Ten,”
she said, sighing. “It was the second grade when he asked to trade sandwiches—”

  “And you’ve been in love ever since,” I finished for her.

  I’d heard the classic tale of love at first sight over a hundred times. Hannah and Jake were the perfect couple—they challenged each other, supported each other, and, well, they loved each other.

  “In all that time,” I said, lowering my voice to ensure we weren’t overheard, “you never once put it on for him?” I wished I could ask the question without blushing, but no matter how hard I tried, it was useless. Hannah was my best friend. I knew all about her sex life with Jake, but I had little experience myself. Whenever we talked about it, I felt like zero help.

  She shook her head. “He always does it.”

  “Why try to switch it up?”

  “Because,” she said, shrugging, “I was, like, trying to be adventurous. I don’t know. It was a total, horrid fail.” She glanced toward the seminar room and lowered her voice to barely a whisper. “You think Ms. Conner will cover the art of rolling a condom onto your boyfriend’s dick in the ‘sexual awareness’ assembly today?” Hannah put the words in perfectly timed air quotes.

  A laugh ripped from my lips, and soon she giggled with me. The tension broke for a moment before reality crashed it hard. “No,” I said. “She won’t.”

  Every year on the first week of school, the students of Wilmont Academy were ushered into seminar room #3 for an education on the dangers of being sexually active. Wilmont might be the last non-religious school on the planet still operating under the abstinence only policy.

  Ms. Conner and Principal Tanner had to know more than half the juniors and seniors, and, hell, some underclassmen, were having sex. They couldn’t be that blind. But they treated the topic like a plague warning—if you have sex while in high school you will either suffer from diseases or get pregnant. Not once had they ever talked about where to get birth control or how to handle a pregnancy scare. It was ridiculous, and totally not helpful to those seeking advice on how to be safe and healthy. Like Hannah.

  “This is such a waste of time,” I whispered. “If they’re not actually going to teach us anything about healthy sex, then they could at least use this time to talk about more important things.”

  “Like what?” Hannah asked, looking happy to delay entering the room for as long as possible.

  I shrugged. “Maybe a lecture on sexual harassment? Or voting awareness—some of us are actually old enough to vote now. Or the double standards between boys and girls in this school?”

  “Whoa,” Hannah said, her eyebrows climbing high on her forehead. “Someone ate her feminist Wheaties this morning.”

  I chuckled, waving her off. “I’m just saying those things would—might—have more of an impact than this.” I jerked my head toward the door. “Everyone tunes this out because barely anyone in school actually believes in abstinence.”

  “Ugh,” she groaned, pushing off the wall and turning into the room.

  Our chat had forced us to the back of the long line of students piling in, and that meant the only available seats were front row and, miserably, center. We both swallowed our groans as we sank into the practically spotlighted chairs.

  Hannah leaned close to me while Ms. Conner shuffled her note cards behind the podium on the stage not three feet from us. “Cosmo makes me feel like I’m in way over my head,” she whispered into my ear. “My mom would have a legit aneurism if I tried to broach the subject with her. You’re the only sister I have…” She winked at me. “And I tried typing it into Google—”

  “Omigod, you didn’t.” I clamped my hands over my mouth.

  “Totally did. Totally regret it.” Another shudder shook her body. “Blech,” she said, sticking out her tongue. “Don’t ever Google anything with…” She huffed. “Just don’t Google. It’s dangerous.”

  We laughed until the sound of the doors sealing shut rang out like a prison sentence. The lights dimmed enough to illuminate the giant screen behind Ms. Conner, who clung to the note cards like a lifeline.

  Principal Tanner stood at attention in the front right corner of the room, just to the side of the screen. His arms were crossed tightly over his chest, but the navy suit he wore wouldn’t dare wrinkle. Not only was he the stiffest, strictest human being I’d ever met, but so was his wardrobe. It was no wonder he’d forced me and my fellow classmates into a suffocating uniform that sucked creativity and individuality from everyone who wore it. No use trying to be yourself at Wilmont—not when Principal Tanner was dead set on pumping out legions of worker drones.

  I shifted in my seat, itching to pull out my laptop and play with a tricky set of code that had been giving me a headache since this morning. The security measures around the site were a real jerk, but I’d crack it eventually. Though, I’d be just as willing to start Googling, as Hannah had warned me not to do, if it meant I wouldn’t have to pay attention to this.

  One more look at Principal Tanner shot down that blissful idea. I didn’t need to give him another reason to hate me. He barely tolerated my presence with my pixie-cut dark hair—the left side streaked with a few strands of light pink.

  Also, my mom was an erotica author.

  I got away with the hair because it was technically within the school’s guidelines of not being distracting enough to draw away from academics. The erotica author mom was easier to get away with because she donated boatloads of cash to extracurricular activities in need. Tanner would be selfish to question her motives because her profession “disgusts me”—as he’d once boldly told me when I’d been caught chatting with my ex over messenger instead of working on actual class work during computer science last year.

  I crossed one leg over the other, satisfied that underneath the horribly thick black pants I wore as required by “school policy,” I could feel the warmth of my purple-and-pink-striped socks. They were enough to earn me detention, but he’d never see them.

  Ms. Conner paced around the podium situated on the stage, the massive white projector screen behind her. She had to be the sweetest, gentlest, and clearly the most uncomfortable one in the room. Her pale pink sweater hugged her tiny shoulders, the light blue blouse she wore underneath tightly tucked into a floor-length black skirt. Tanner hand-selected our school nurse to run this assembly every year, even though she fumbled over her words whenever the discussion even came close to sex. Which it rarely did at Wilmont.

  “What about someone else?” I finally whispered back at Hannah.

  “What, like a teacher?” she scoffed, her blue eyes narrowing on Ms. Conner.

  “Or, I don’t know,” I said, glancing to the right, where the most popular seniors sat. Girls like Sabrina and Morgan. The ones with shiny hair and perfectly polished nails. The ones who always looked like they walked off the pages of Teen Vogue. “Them?” It wasn’t a secret that Sabrina and Morgan’s clique knew their way around guys…and girls…or sometimes both at the same time, if the rumors were to be believed.

  Brandon included. Not that I cared where my ex-boyfriend had wound up.

  “You’re joking, right?”

  “I’m trying to help.”

  “I know,” she said. “But seriously? If I approached them it would be all over school in, like, two seconds.”

  “So?” I said. “Everyone knows you and Jake have been together forever. Who cares?”

  “I know that,” she answered. “But I would rather the entire school not know I’m a complete loser when it comes to this kind of stuff. Just because we’ve done it multiple times doesn’t mean I’m confident I know what I’m doing.”

  My cheeks heated again. “If you’re a loser, that makes me a social reject.”

  “You know I didn’t mean it like that.” She wrapped her arm around my shoulders.

  “It’s fine.” I shrugged. “Look, I’m not dying to hand out my V-card, but I hate t
hat I’m totally useless to you right now. You should be able to talk to someone about this stuff and not feel like you’re breaking the damn law.”

  She giggled. “It always feels like that.”

  “It shouldn’t.”

  “Well,” she said, lowering her voice even more despite the chatter in the room. “It may not be that way anymore.”

  “What do you mean?”

  Hannah glanced around to make sure no one was listening. “You know my mom’s on the review board, right? The one Tanner answers to?”

  “Yeah.”

  “I overheard her talking to Dad last night. More like venting. She was going on and on about the start-of-year meeting. How Tanner had dug his heels in when some other board members suggested a more progressive change to the school rules.”

  “You’re kidding.”

  “Nope. Looks like a lot of people think this approach is outdated. But he swore up and down that this has been the way Wilmont has done things for decades. Brought up his grandfather and his father who were principals before him.” She rolled her eyes. “Claimed that his approach equated to better standard test scores and more Ivy League college acceptances.”

  “Wow.” I was stunned that anyone would try to go up against Tanner. Stunned and awed. It was about time someone pushed for change at this school.

  Sure, Wilmont had the best academics program in the state—the sole reason my parents, and many others, tolerated the school’s more archaic rules—but I thought it was more detrimental than helpful. Trying to keep my friends and me ignorant on sexual health was ridiculous.

  “I know,” Hannah said, drawing me to the present. “Mom said they gave him a year to prove it—she didn’t mention how—but if we thought he was strict before, I can’t imagine what he’ll be like now that his job is on the line.”

  I chewed on my lip, gazing behind Ms. Conner.

  Dean Winters sat at the desk to her left, clicking away on the keyboard, his blue-gray eyes flitting over the monitor screen. He was dubbed Wilmont’s resident genius hacker—mostly because his older brother, Sean, had made a name for himself here before graduating two years ago—but I wasn’t far behind Dean’s skill level.

  We’d made a game of topping each other in our coding class, but he had this laid-back calm about him that always combated my can’t-sit-still-for-one-second persona that drove me nuts. I was certain Dean didn’t need any advice on the stuff Hannah and I were talking about. He was wicked gorgeous, and though he likely could have his pick of any girl at Wilmont, he flew solo on the reg.

 

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