Rebound Roommate

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Rebound Roommate Page 23

by Jules Barnard


  “Okay,” she says dazedly.

  And then all conversation stops because my mind goes numb with the pleasure this girl gives me, inside and out.

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Mira grabs her torn undies, tucked partway beneath the couch from last night, and holds them up. “These were my favorites.”

  I hand her the to-go mug of tea I made her (yes, I’m whipped, I freely admit it), and slip on my shoes. We’re about to head over to Jaeg’s place for a Sunday movie with him and my sister. “I’ll buy you another pair. Hey, you know, I don’t think I’ll mind shopping for your unmentionables. I could go with you into the dressing room and—”

  “Stop right there. No way. We’re done with closet make-out sessions. And what do you mean, you don’t like shopping? You were so good about it when you took me to buy work clothes.”

  I look over sheepishly. “I hate shopping.”

  Her expression is blank, and then she smiles. “You did it for me. You are a secret softy, Tyler Morgan.”

  I tuck her beautiful dark hair behind her ear, bringing her to my chest with my arm. “For you I am. I would do anything for you. Go shopping, hunt down bad guys, stare at algebra equations until I’m cross-eyed. It’s a condition I have, but I like it. I think I’ll roll with it.”

  Her face twists in an indignant pout I’d like to take a bite out of. “You make me sound like a disease.”

  “Mmmm, more like a hot and feisty obsession I don’t want to part with. You are the best thing I’ve ever had in my life, even when I didn’t know I had you. And for the record, I did remember you from when we were younger.”

  She tilts her head, her eyes doubtful as she pulls the strap of her purse across her chest between us without tilting her mug. “In junior high? No, you didn’t.”

  “Yep, had my own crush on the fiery, dark-haired girl with caramel eyes who tried to kick a girl twice her size.”

  “You did not,” she says, but I sense the hesitation in her voice.

  “Did.”

  “If that’s the case, then why didn’t you say something when we studied together?”

  “Didn’t want to lay all my cards on the table. Had to make you work for it.”

  She smacks me in the chest with the flat of her hand, but then stretches up and gives me a scorching kiss.

  There is nothing about Mira that has ever been forgettable, not even when we were young. I thought that was my curse, but it’s really my fortune.

  “Oh, wait,” she says, and pulls out of my arms, walking toward the back door. “I told Cali I’d bring a few of the giant pine cones we have in our backyard. She’s making some kind of fall centerpiece.”

  “You mean like for a dining table? I thought Jaeg did the cooking?”

  Mira looks up, exasperated. “What does a centerpiece have to do with food?”

  I roll my eyes. As if that makes sense. Girls. “I’ll meet you in the car.”

  “Okay,” she says, and slips out the back door.

  My car is still in the shop, so I walk toward Mira’s truck, her keys in hand.

  A car down the street catches my eye. It’s sleek, black, and parked at an odd angle, as if the driver got out in a hurry.

  I turn around and stare at the fence to the backyard. There’s no sound and Mira has only been gone a minute, but something feels off.

  “Mira?” I call. “Everything okay?”

  She doesn’t answer and my heart begins to race. The hair on the back of my neck stands at attention, my muscles tensing. I run to the gate leading to the backyard and almost bust it down in my attempt to get past the latch.

  I hear the sound of feet scuffling, then Mira’s whimper. I tear around the side of the house—to find a vision that nearly stops my heart.

  The mug I gave Mira is on its side on the ground, and Mira’s back is pinned to the chest of the asshole who beat her, his arm locked around her throat. He’s leaning over her, his back to me.

  I don’t consider stealth. I don’t think of anything except crippling the bastard.

  I sweep up the biggest log within reach on my way to them and swing it at the back of his skull.

  His head whips forward and he grunts, but his grip doesn’t loosen on my girl. I whack him again, this time nailing him square in the temple.

  Asshole goes down, tumbling Mira with him. He doesn’t move.

  I haul Mira up by the waist and carry her off to the side. I touch her neck, her face. “Are you okay?”

  “H-he was angry—said I got him sent out of town.” Her face is red and blotchy, her expression confused. “I told him I’ve been making my payments.”

  I look over at the guy on the ground and pull out my cell phone. Mira buries her face in my chest. “I paid off the man you owe. This guy has no business being here. And even if he did, he has no right to touch you.”

  I call 911 and describe the incident.

  “What do you mean you paid him off?” she asks when I tuck my phone back.

  I glance away, worried how she’ll take this. Mira doesn’t appreciate me telling her what to do, and this falls in the overbearing category. But I’m not letting anyone hurt her again.

  Still, I probably should have mentioned it sooner. “I didn’t want you to worry about debt after your mother died. You’d paid most of it off. I paid the last bit. The money you gave Lewis went into a savings account for you.”

  She stares at me, her face pale, throat red from the clutch hold that asshole had on her. She hasn’t cried once during this ordeal, proof she’s hard as nails. “Oh.”

  “Oh? You’re not angry?” I glance to make sure the guy is still out cold. Just in case, I guide Mira toward the front of the house. I’d feel better waiting for the police out in the open.

  “I’m not angry,” she says as she walks beside me, her body tucked up close to mine. “You were being thoughtful. And to tell the truth, I’m tired of owing that money. I’ll pay you back, of course, but it’s nice to not owe that man anymore. Though in a roundabout way, he brought you to me.”

  Is she referring to the forest? When I found her passed out?

  “Yeahhh, how’s about we not attract hitmen from now on?”

  She huffs out a feisty sigh, her color returning to normal. “Of course not.”

  I groan. Why do I think this won’t be the last time Mira puts herself in the line of fire?

  I have my hands full. And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

  Mira

  Tyler and I never made it to Jaeger’s. We spent the afternoon at the police station, where I finally told them about Denim Jacket.

  “Ms. Frasier.” Sergeant Billings, the officer I spoke to after my attack in the woods, taps his pen on the desk. “You’re certain this Ronald Devans is the same man who attacked you weeks ago?”

  “Yes. One of them.”

  “And you’ve seen him since then? Why didn’t you come forward earlier with this information?”

  I’d intended to tell the police about Denim Jacket after Lewis and Tyler continued to hound me about it, but apparently not soon enough. I can’t believe he staked out my house. All those times I thought I saw him I was probably correct.

  I hadn’t time to be as terrified as I could have been this afternoon. Because as soon as the man grabbed me, Tyler was there.

  “I owed money to a man Ronald Devans worked for. In the beginning, I was worried that telling you I knew who my attacker was would cause me more trouble, but I’d reconsidered. I planned to come in, then this happened.”

  The officer scribbles down the name of my loan shark.

  “And you said Devans was with Drake Peterson at the casino?”

  I nod.

  “Mr. Peterson is awaiting trial. I don’t know what his connection is to Devans, but Devans has a long rap sheet, including drug possession and assault and battery. He’s not walking away from this. I’m confident we’ll get Devans to give up the name of the other man who attacked you as well. I’ll follow up with the lo
an shark. It sounds like he may be involved.”

  Once Tyler and I return from the police station, a week passes before he lets me leave the house (i.e., our bed) for anything other than work. The attack freaked him out. It freaked me out. Yes, we had sex. Okay, a lot of sex, but we also spent hours just holding each other, thankful our story ended well.

  Because that’s what it’s been. A long love story involving the boy who caught my eye in junior high and never left my thoughts and heart. I will forever be grateful Tyler found me.

  And maybe, just a little, I found him too. The real Tyler, the one he buried all those years ago, but who came back to me.

  Again.

  Epilogue

  Mira

  Two months later

  Tyler and I stand on the cement stoop of a single-story house in a middle-income Carson City neighborhood.

  I am so nervous, I might hyperventilate.

  The door creaks open and a pretty, middle-aged woman with bright red hair stands on the other side.

  Tyler rests his hand on my lower back. “Hey, Mom.” He leans forward and kisses her cheek. “This is Mira.”

  She lets us in, her eyes never leaving me. I feel bared, buck naked in front of this woman, when I’m wearing my warmest sweater and winter coat.

  “Ah.” She nods, still eyeing me. She glances at her son. “I see.”

  Tyler shifts nervously. “Mira’s my girlfriend I’ve been telling you about. We went to school together in Tahoe and recently reconnected. Remember? She’s the girl I tutored my junior and senior year.”

  Madeline Morgan’s eyes shift in recognition and she nods. “Well, that explains it.” She smiles brightly and gives me a warm hug. “Welcome, Mira. Nice to finally meet you.”

  I look at Tyler, and he shrugs, shaking his head, as if I shouldn’t worry about his mother’s strange comment.

  “So, how did you two run into each other again?” Mrs. Morgan asks as she leads us to her backyard, where Cali and Jaeger are bundled up and drinking beers on the back patio. There’s no snowfall yet, and Mrs. Morgan still has a badminton net set up.

  Tyler rubs his jaw. “Yeah, well, you see, Mira was in a bad situation. She’s been crashing in Cali’s room.”

  His mom aims an intense look at him. “And where is Cali living?”

  Tyler stares like a deer caught in the headlights. “With Jaeg?”

  His mother’s mouth twists. “Hmm, seems my daughter has some explaining to do. I don’t like this, Tyler. This living together before you’re married. You know what that leads to?”

  Shit. She’s not going to bring up sex, is she?

  I glance desperately at Tyler, but he’s staring at his mom, a smirk crossing his face. “Cozy living quarters?”

  His mom frowns. “Nice one, son.” She shakes her head, exasperated. “Babies. That’s what it leads to.” She points a finger at the two of us. “Keep that in mind the next time you get cozy.”

  I cover my face with my hands. Most embarrassing moment ever.

  Here I am, meeting Tyler’s mom for the first time, as his girlfriend, something I’ve only dreamt of, and it’s like I’m sixteen again, getting caught sleeping with my high school crush.

  A choking sound erupts from my throat, and I realize I’m laughing. A bit hysterically, to be exact.

  Tyler wraps his arms around my shoulders, chuckling in my ear. “She’s always like this. You’ll get used to it.”

  I look up and smile. His gaze falters at the loving look I level at him, and he kisses me.

  “Babies,” his mom calls from her place in front of the barbecue.

  I hide my burning face in his chest.

  “Hmm,” Tyler says. “I wouldn’t mind seeing you with my baby in your belly.” I look up, my eyes wide. His lips graze my ear. “When we’re ready. But we’ll be married by then.”

  I squeeze him around the waist and kiss his lips clumsily, which he doesn’t seem to mind as his arms tighten around me.

  “Enough PDA, Tyler,” Cali calls. “Get over here so I can slam your shuttlecock into next year.”

  Jaeger rolls his eyes beside her. “Babe, you need to tone down the shit-talking.”

  “What?” she says. “That’s how we do it.”

  “I know, but—” He leans forward. “You know how you are with balls.”

  A devilish look crosses her face. “This is a shuttlecock. But how am I with balls, Jaeger?”

  He grins, tugging her chair closer to his. “Bad girl.”

  Cali smiles at her boyfriend, then peers up at us. “Bring it, Tyler. I’m ready for ya.”

  Tyler huffs out a pained sigh. “Give me a moment to whoop my sister’s ass. Should take me two, maybe three minutes.”

  Tyler picks up a racket and Jaeger tries to give Cali pointers. I’m getting the impression that Cali super sucks and talks out of her ass. Kind of makes me like her even more. Especially when she talks shit to Tyler.

  I smile and make my way to his mother. “Can I help you with anything, Mrs. Morgan?”

  “Oh, sweetie, you can call me Maddie. I have a feeling we’ll be getting to know each other real well. One look at my son with you and I knew you were someone special. You might even be the reason he went from a fun-loving guy to a grump his senior year.”

  I glance away. “I—I don’t know. I mean, maybe. But I didn’t mean to.”

  She waves my words away. “He needed a kick in the butt. That boy can be stubborn. And look how much he appreciates you now.”

  I smile, unable to hide how happy her words make me. “I care about him.” It’s a simple statement, and so incomplete when I consider my feelings for Tyler.

  She grins, turning the corn on the barbecue. “Oh, I know. He wouldn’t be with you if this wasn’t something special. Never seen him look at a girl the way he looks at you.”

  “Mom”—Tyler’s voice startles me, and I glance up—“quit giving away my secrets.” He approaches from a few feet away.

  Behind him, Cali plops onto Jaeger’s lap with a frown on her face.

  That was a quick ass-whooping.

  “She knows you love her,” his mother says. “I’m not a blind woman, and neither is she.”

  Tyler rolls his eyes, sending me a wink.

  Maddie is right. I see it now. Tyler’s love. We were both blind.

  “You know, Tyler,” his mother says, “now that those royalty checks will be rolling in, you should think about buying yourself a house. Plant some roots.”

  “Already on it,” Tyler says. “I had my real estate agent contact the owner of Cali’s place. It suits me, and it’s where I wrote the book.” He leans closer. “And where I rediscovered my true love,” he whispers in my ear.

  Apparently, Tyler wasn’t as lazy as everyone thought. While he was “regrouping” and living at Cali’s place, he wrote a book. The Nose Knows is a popular science book that his agent says will be gobbled up by laypeople and biologists alike. Some professors may even make it assigned reading for students. Apparently, it looks at new research on olfactory senses and attraction and is highly entertaining, which for a biology text is difficult to come by. The students who have seen the manuscript are raving about it.

  Tyler returned to our hometown because he needed a place to recover from his loss and guilt over what happened in Colorado, but his intellectual talents haven’t been wasted. I should have known Tyler would make something of himself no matter where he landed.

  “You’re buying the cabin?” I say.

  Tyler mentioned he was considering buying a place in Tahoe, and I knew he’d spoken to a realtor. I didn’t know he was considering buying Cali’s place. Which is really her old place, now that she’s permanently residing at Jaeger’s.

  He nods, his face suddenly serious. “Is that okay? Because I can—”

  I beam up at him. “It’s perfect. Only”—my mouth twists as I consider the furniture—“can we get a new couch?”

  Tyler tucks me close. “Are you kidding? We are buying
all new furniture. That place needs to be dragged into this century.”

  I laugh. “You realize that will involve shopping.”

  “Yes, but this is for our place. For our life together.”

  I touch his strong jaw and he leans down to kiss me.

  We were meant to be together. And now we finally are.

  Dear Reader,

  * * *

  You may be wondering about Nessa and Zach, since I’ve more than hinted at a little somethin’-somethin’ going on. Grab the next book in the Men of Lake Tahoe series, HOOKUP MASTER, and discover how Nessa finally manages to get out of the friend-zone with Zack.

  * * *

  Xoxo,

  * * *

  Jules

  PREVIEW Hookup Master

  Nessa

  I’m stuck in the friend zone. Again. What is it with me and guys?

  I unload drinks from my cocktail tray, stealing glances at Zach and that woman.

  The same blonde comes into Blue Casino every month like clockwork. She’s beautiful, with short platinum hair tucked behind her ear in an overgrown pixie. Tonight she’s wearing stilettos and a skintight black micromini dress. It’s hard to tell, with the invention of Botox and fillers, but she seems older than Zach. Maybe mid-thirties.

  Bartender Jimmy, in the sports bar where I work evenings, shakes his head. “Doesn’t deserve you, girlie.”

  “What?” I shove the last empty glass to him. “I just find it fascinating.”

  Blondie hands Zach a plastic keycard. He stares at it, then glances up.

  Right at me, because I’m looking. Again.

  Our gazes lock, and for an instant, guilt flashes across his face.

  I swivel my head toward the bar, my hands shaking. Crappers.

 

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