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Forever Golden: Dark High School Bully Romance (Kings of Cypress Prep Book 3)

Page 16

by Rachel Jonas


  “I missed you too, but my ribs just healed from last time,” Dane jokes.

  “Aw, suck it up, boy,” Mr. Landry counters, shoving Dane aside to grab Sterling this time, squeezing him the same way.

  Beside me, Scar grins behind her hand.

  “Good to see you,” Sterling says with a groan, drawing in a deep breath of relief once released from his grandfather’s grasp.

  “Your turn, kid,” he greets West, bringing him in for the same rough hug.

  “Mom sends her love,” West says once he’s free.

  “Next time bring her with you,” Mr. Landry replies. “But you know my rule. Don’t bring your—”

  “Slick-ass daddy to this door,” West says in unison with him. “I know, Grandpa.”

  Apparently, this is something West hears often.

  Now, Mr. Landry’s attention is on us girls.

  “What on God’s green Earth are three pretty little things like yourselves doing with these knuckleheads? You boys bribe em’?” he asks, turning to his grandsons then.

  “Grandpa, I’d like you to meet Blue and Scarlett Riley,” West says, placing his hand at the small of my back.

  “Nice to meet you, Mr. Landry,” I say.

  “Call me Boone,” he insists, correcting me with a wave of his hand. “And the pleasure is all mine.”

  He places a light kiss on the back of my hand and Scar’s, instead of the bear hugs we witnessed a moment ago.

  “And this is Joss,” Dane says next.

  Boone looks her over. Not in a creepy, ‘what’s on the menu?’ sort of way. Just a general glance as he takes in how gorgeous she is. She’s taken her braids down since I last saw her, choosing to rock her natural, spirally ringlets for the trip.

  “Pleasure meeting you, too, sweetheart,” he says, kissing her hand in the same manner as he did with me and Scar. “You must be something special if you managed to tame this rascal.” He points at Dane then, which has Joss scrambling.

  “Oh, we—we’re… not together,” she stammers, which seems to confuse Boone.

  When he shoots Dane a look, I’m certain he’s about to get called out.

  “If you haven’t locked this one down, you’re either blind or dumb. Even West managed to get himself a lady.”

  “Thanks, Grandpa,” West says with a laugh.

  “Well, you know what I’m talkin’ about! Just a month or two ago you pissed a girl off so bad she vandalized your uniform. Now, look at you. You’ve got yourself settled down.”

  West and I share a look, trying not to laugh. “This is, uh… the same girl,” he confesses.

  That look of confusion returns to Boone, but then it morphs into a grin.

  “I knew I liked you,” he says, while wagging a finger at me. “West needs someone who’s gonna put the fear of God in him. At least we know you can hold your own.”

  West’s brow shoots up when he agrees with a nod.

  “Now, y’all get inside before you have my neighbors thinking I’m a bad host.”

  The man doesn’t have a neighbor for miles.

  We step in onto a large, fancy rug, and I have to pick my jaw up off the floor. Beautifully polished wood floors, a vintage chaise situated beneath a large, gold-framed mirror, painted portraits I guess to be family, a chandelier the size of a Buick hanging over our heads. It’s a lot to take in. In a good way. A phrase comes to mind—old money.

  “Misty should be around here someplace. She’s supposed to see you kids to your rooms,” Boone says distractedly, peering around a corner, seemingly in search of this Misty he speaks of.

  “It’s cool, Grandpa. We know the way,” Dane chimes in.

  “Well, I suppose you do. Just make sure you put the girls in the white room. It’s the best we’ve got.”

  “On it.”

  “And don’t dilly dally when you get done, either. Duke’s dropping off a few sacks of crawfish for tonight’s boil. That man’s back’s about twenty years older than he is, so I told him you boys would be here to help,” Boone explains.

  “Of course, you did,” Dane grumbles.

  “Damn right, I did! What’s the point in running that football up and down the field if it ain’t earned you some muscles! Not only will you help him, you’ll do it with a smile on your face. Now, get flip with me again and I’ll knock your ass into next Tuesday. Understood?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Despite Boone’s harsh tone, it’s clear he isn’t serious, which is why Dane takes the threat in stride, laughing as he grabs Joss’s things. He leads the way, ascending the staircase. I reach for my own luggage, but West intervenes, using his solid arm as a barrier between me and my things.

  “Sterling, mind taking Southside’s and Scar’s bags up for me?”

  “No problem.” Sterling doesn’t question why West seems to be hanging back, but I’m curious.

  “Southside? What the hell kind of pet name is that for a woman?” Boone mumbles to himself, slipping into another room through a set of French doors.

  Now that it’s just the two of us, I grip West’s hand and meet his gaze. “Not coming up yet?”

  He nods once toward where his grandfather just disappeared. “In a few. Figured I’d bring him up to speed first, see what he thinks should happen next.”

  For a little while, I’d forgotten the trouble we left back home, but West clearly hasn’t. Being a protector by nature, I shouldn’t be surprised he decided to take immediate action sooner rather than later.

  It’s hard not to feel like my heart’s in a vice when I stare at him, knowing he’s carrying the same weight I am.

  When I squeeze his hand once before heading upstairs, he knows what it means.

  Even when I’m not at his side, I’m with him. Because come hell or high water, we’re in this together.

  @QweenPandora: What have we here? It looks to me as if TheGoldenBoys and their entire crew—whom I hereby dub TheGoldenCrew—are boarding a plane to beat the winter blues.

  Where on earth are you six off to?

  I’m certain you took special care to keep your destination under wraps, but CP won’t be the same without you. Who else will we gossip about while you’re gone?

  Later, Peeps.

  —P

  Chapter 24

  BLUE

  I’ve only ever seen the inside of a house like this on TV. And when Boone said the white room was the best, he wasn’t lying.

  With enough space for three queen-size canopy beds, Joss, Scar, and I certainly have zero complaints about sharing a room. Our linen is pure white, as are the wool rugs beside our beds, and the sheer curtains covering both sets of French doors leading out to the balcony. And at the room’s center, another extravagant chandelier.

  Scar whirls around with her phone, video chatting Shane to show off where we’re staying, while Joss and I unpack. She’s been quiet, other than the few times she’s tried to force herself to talk, but it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see she’s struggling.

  “I’ve been told I’m a pretty good listener.” I peek up at her after sliding a small stack of t-shirts in the dresser between my bed and hers.

  Joss meets my gaze and offers a weak smile. “I won’t ruin your trip by dragging you into my family’s shit,” she says wearily.

  “Trust me. With the things I’ve seen and lived through, it’d take a bomb falling on me to ruin anything.”

  She laughs, and so do I.

  “I’m assuming you saw the post. Everyone else has,” she mumbles.

  I nod. “Yeah, I saw it.”

  “Figured.” A dim smile touches her lips, but never her eyes. “Sure you don’t mind? I guess I could use another girl’s perspective on things. The guys are hellbent on toughing everything out like they’ve always done, but sometimes, you just—”

  “Need someone to tell you it’s okay to throw a bitch-fit and eat your way into a chocolate coma?”

  She tilts her head. “I swear I’ve never felt more seen than I do in this exact
moment.”

  I laugh and snap to get Scar’s attention. “Headphones, kid.”

  She rolls her eyes, mumbling something about how she’s not listening to our conversation anyway, and then pops in her earbuds like I asked her to.

  “Okay, I’m all ears,” I say, hopping up onto the bed when I decide to stop folding while Joss talks. She does the same, almost needing to get a running start to get onto the high mattress.

  “Well,” she sighs. “Not sure if you’ve heard, but my dad would lock me inside a bubble if given the chance.”

  “Honestly, I thought it was kind of strange they let you come here,” I admit.

  Something I said has her laughing.

  “Are you kidding me? I’m not here because I have permission. I’m here because I’m beyond the point of giving a shit what he thinks. My whole life, I’ve walked this fucking tightrope of expectations, terrified what would happen if I slipped up and disappointed him,” she admits, swiping at an angry tear. “He never came out and said I had to be perfect, but he sure as hell made me feel it. Nothing was ever good enough; nothing was ever quite to his liking. And for what? Who the fuck is he to tell me how to live my life?”

  I nod, letting her vent without interruption.

  “The worst part is, after only a week of deliberation, my mom’s decided she isn’t leaving him. We have no clue how long this has been going on, no clue how many women there have been, but she’s not even considering divorce. It’s like he’s just getting away with this shit, with zero repercussions!” she sighs.

  “I—wow.”

  “Yeah, I know.”

  She pauses to think, and maybe to slow the tears, but in the silence, I take note of how she’s twisting her ring. I wouldn’t know it’s significance if Lexi hadn’t pointed it out. Apparently, it’s a symbol of Joss’s virginity, some vow her parents required that she make. As she stares at it now, I imagine it only serves as nothing more than a symbol of their control.

  “I don’t think I’ve ever been angrier in my entire life,” she seethes. “I’m expected to give perfection, never making a damn mistake, but he can make the mother of all mistakes and is just forgiven? No,” she says, shaking her head. “Fuck that and fuck him!”

  There’s so much pain in her voice, I feel it myself. Especially when she peers up and more tears flood her eyes.

  “If X hadn’t blasted that shit on the app, we never would’ve even known. I think that’s the part that pisses me off the most. He’s only trying to make things right with my mom because he got caught, not because he’s actually sorry.” She’s somber now, reflective.

  I hop down from my bed and sit beside her instead. When I place my hand on top of hers, she stares at it.

  “Believe me, I know what it’s like to have parents who fall way short of expectations, so you’re not alone,” I say, hoping she knows she’ll get no judgment from me.

  “I just had no clue I could feel this disappointed. In either of them. I’m so pissed she’s staying,” Joss adds, shaking her head.

  I shrug and let out a breath before sharing a bit about myself.

  “My dad stayed. My mom was the cheater, and he just kept letting her string him along. Hell, they’re still in that cycle.”

  She glances over at me and some of the sadness has faded.

  “Damn.”

  I nod. “Exactly.”

  Her gaze lands on the rug again while she thinks, but then her phone sounds off. When she glances down at it and a faint smile appears, I don’t peek but can’t help to ask…

  “Is it Dane?”

  “Huh? Oh… no. Just a friend I met last summer in Cuba,” she answers distractedly, while responding to the message. “We spent time there visiting my mom’s side of the family after staying in Haiti a while with my dad’s parents.”

  This is the first she’s mentioned the guy to me, but I do recall that day in Headmaster Harrison’s office when I overheard West and Dane’s phone conversation about him. The guy is definitely a bone of contention between him and Joss.

  “So… he’s just a friend?”

  She glances up with a laugh. “Is that so hard to believe?”

  I shrug. “Not as hard to believe as you and Dane pretending not to want to jump each other’s bones.”

  Now, her face is red as a beet, which means I struck a nerve.

  “Okay, fine,” she huffs. “I’m not saying there’s not something there, but we’ve been friends since we were twelve and we’re just so different, you know?”

  “Haven’t you ever heard that opposites attract?”

  “Mmm, I think it’s possible to be too opposite,” she reasons. “I’m a virgin and have no plans to change that. Especially now that my dad’s taught me men aren’t to be trusted.” She pauses and rolls her eyes before continuing. “Meanwhile, Dane has no plans to stop, you know, doing what he does. I’m not judging him, just stating facts. This is who we are, and who we are would drive the other insane.”

  She laughs, but it sounds to me like she’s making excuses. I don’t point that out, though.

  “Besides, what better way to ruin a perfectly good friendship than by interjecting romantic feelings?”

  She laughs again when I squint at her. “I hear you, but aren’t you at least a little curious about him?”

  At first, I think she might ignore the question, but then she smiles.

  “Okay, so I may or may not have fantasized about losing my V-card to him once or twice, but only because we’re already close and I trust him with my life.”

  Her explanation sounds vaguely familiar, making me glance toward Scar.

  “I might have also had this fantasy because, let’s be honest, he’s fucking gorgeous,” she admits. “I’m also about ninety-nine percent sure he’d be amazing. Plus, with him, it’d actually mean something, you know? We don’t love each other like that, but… there’s still a form of love between us.”

  I try and fail to hold in my smile. “I knew it.”

  “But,” she proclaims, “I will stand my ground. Never in a million years would I risk losing his friendship should things not work out. So, as far as I’m concerned, this will stay a fantasy.”

  For now, I let her think I believe that.

  “How’d you two become friends anyway?”

  She peers up and there’s a distant smile on her face. “Well, I guess he’s kind of always been my knight in shining armor. Even back then.”

  When she pauses, I’m admittedly on the edge of my seat.

  “It was the first day of sixth grade and I’d just moved to Cypress Pointe that summer. Dane and I got put in the same homeroom and I was assigned the seat behind him and this other kid who isn’t even around anymore. Back then, I was kind of shy, so I hadn’t said one word. To anyone. But the other kid kept turning in his seat, giving me this mean-ass glare over his shoulder,” she adds, kind of solemnly.

  “Anyway, the teacher started taking attendance, and when she called my name, the kid made this ugly, racist comment under his breath that only Dane and I heard. Long story short, Dane got out of his seat and decked the kid, broke his damn nose,” she adds with a laugh. “The school suspended them both once they got the whole story, but when Dane came back a few days later, we were kind of inseparable.”

  “Shit, that’s awful.”

  Joss nods. “It was. I’d had things like that happen before, but Dane was the first person to ever go to bat for me. I mean, he got suspended fighting for some girl he didn’t even know.”

  She’s lost in thought for a few seconds after reliving the moment, then her eyes flash to me again.

  “Enough about me, though. What about that Ricky guy? Was he your first?”

  I nod. “He was. Actually, Ricky and I have been everything to each other you can possibly find on the relationship spectrum. Just so happens that we’re at our best when we’re friends.”

  She gives me a look.

  “What?”

  “Just wondering if you’re po
sitive he’s buying into that whole ‘at our best when we’re friends’ theory you just mentioned. Because from the outside looking in, it looks like he’s still got it pretty bad for you. I mean, West sure as hell thinks he does.”

  I open and close my mouth several times before actual words come out. “Okay, so we didn’t make the cleanest break, but I’ve moved on. I just have faith that, one day, Ricky will find someone who helps him move on, too.”

  She’s still giving me a look, but this time it shifts into a laugh. “Whatever you say, heartbreaker.”

  I shove her a little and her laugh dulls into a thoughtful smile.

  I know talking things out with me hasn’t miraculously solved all her problems, but I hope she at least feels less alone. At the end of the day, our entire crew can attest to having a less than perfect homelife. The only difference is, until a week ago, Joss had no idea that was the case.

  We all needed this getaway, and we can only hope the tiny fires we left behind in Cypress Pointe don’t turn into full raging blazes while we’re away.

  Chapter 25

  BLUE

  So, this is what family looks like.

  I scan the yard, looking at maybe fifty or sixty of the triplets’ relatives. The closest thing I’ve experienced to this is the one and only family reunion I ever attended. And with the Riley name attached to it, it’s safe to assume it was a disaster. Long story short, Mike got drunk and fought one of his second cousins over a poker game, which then led to our entire family of five getting booted.

  Luckily, this gathering is nothing like that.

  All I see are people having fun. There’s good music, lots of laughter, and enough food to feed a moderately sized country. Most are congregating around one of the five bonfires to keep cozy, but fifty-five degrees feels like a heat wave after leaving Cypress Pointe. It warmed up to around seventy this afternoon, and some of that heat stuck around for the evening. Almost like this gathering was meant to be.

 

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