Don't Break This Kiss (Top Shelf Romance Book 5)

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Don't Break This Kiss (Top Shelf Romance Book 5) Page 85

by Jessica Hawkins


  Tears brimmed over her eyelids. “I want nothing more.” Not waiting for him to get to his feet, she flung her arms around his neck. “I love you so much, Andrew.” As she squeezed him, she heard him chuckle, the sound surprising her. “What’s so funny?”

  “You didn’t let me put on the ring.”

  Honey laughed and pulled away, giving Andrew her hand again, watching him slide the diamond on her finger. The band was gold and simple with a single pear-shaped stone.

  “Forever,” she whispered as she stared at it.

  He was on his feet when she hugged him again, and this time, he lifted her into the air and said, “It’s a promise.”

  Jared

  The invitation had said it was a black-tie gala to celebrate the surviving passengers and crew of Flight 88. I knew it was really the airline looking for an opportunity to create good press. Even if they weren’t responsible for the plane going down, having their name linked to a crash wasn’t good for business. This party was the airline’s attempt at putting it all to rest.

  What the invite hadn’t said was that the vice president of the United States, the mayor of New York, and several celebrities were going to be there.

  It was a fucking media circus.

  There was only one reason I had come.

  Billie.

  I just had to put my eyes on her. Turned out, she was easy to spot, but so was everyone else who had been on our flight that day. We all showed the same physical symptoms—dark circles under our eyes, a short attention span, the fear of our drinks getting too low in a public setting. I could tell who was medicated. They were the ones who could manage a smile.

  That was how I knew Billie wasn’t taking anything. The corners of her lips hadn’t lifted once since I got here.

  She was on the other side of the room in a black dress, holding a small purse in one hand and a glass of white wine in the other. Even though she was painted up and in heels, she wasn’t the girl I’d sat next to on the plane. The one who could barely let a quiet moment pass between us, who smiled the whole way from the lavatory to her seat. Who had a curvy, sensual body I hadn’t been able to stop thinking about.

  What I was staring at now was a tired, much thinner version, looking completely lost.

  Still, I didn’t take my goddamn eyes off of her.

  And even though I knew it was dangerous and it was exactly what I’d told myself not to do, I followed her to the restroom when I saw her head that way.

  Since I’d worked this ballroom many times before, I knew a faster route, and I entered the hallway through the east side of the room and followed it until I was spit out directly in front of the restrooms.

  Billie was several feet away, looking at her feet. She had no idea I was here. She hadn’t seen me; I was sure of that.

  “Billie …”

  She slowly glanced up, the realization passing across her face. There wasn’t a smile, but her eyes lightened. “Hi.” Her voice was so soft. “I didn’t think you were coming … I mean, I figured you’d have been here by now.”

  I’d watched her look for me. She was easy to hide from.

  “Are you doing all right?”

  It had been a month since the crash, and she still hadn’t posted. And then there were her eyes that were still so fucking haunted. I knew the answer; I didn’t need her to say a word.

  She shrugged, leaving her shoulders high for a few seconds before dropping them. She then took a breath, looking away when she shook her head. “No.”

  “Jesus Christ,” I whispered when her stare returned, the rawness fucking killing me. If anyone understood that feeling … it was me. “Are you getting help? Talking to someone?”

  She couldn’t do this alone. She needed support, but that person just couldn’t be me.

  She nodded. “Every other day. It helps.” She wrapped her arms around her waist. “Reliving the parts I remember, it’s awful.”

  “I know.”

  There was silence—not in the hallway, but between us.

  And then, “Jared …”

  I hadn’t forgotten the way it sounded when she said my name. I’d just forgotten how much I liked it.

  “I have so much I want to say, things I didn’t get the chance to say at the hospital.”

  “You’ve already thanked me, Billie.”

  She shook her head. “This goes beyond thanking.”

  She had begun to process what had happened. I knew the stages, how therapy worked. I’d stood in the corner during my clients’ sessions.

  I just wanted her focusing on her—not us.

  “Listen to me …” When my gaze narrowed, hers weakened even more. “Once you return to your life and your job and you stay busy, this will all get better.”

  She pulled her hair to her right shoulder, exposing her left. On the top was the faintest outline of a bruise. It was where she had slammed into the side of the plane when the wheels touched the ground.

  My hands clenched as I shook my head and said, “Trust me, Billie. I know what I’m talking about.”

  Her eyes weren’t filling with tears, but they might as well have been.

  I just wanted to wrap her in my fucking arms and comfort her and …

  What the hell was I thinking?

  I never should have come to this event.

  I never should have met her in the hallway.

  What she needed … I wasn’t that guy.

  “I’m trying,” she replied. “I really, really am.”

  A group of people were walking toward us, and I wanted to move her out of the way. I signaled, so she was aware, and then I put my hand on her lower back and brought her over to the wall.

  She leaned her shoulder against it and turned to me.

  “What do you need, Billie?” I asked when I searched her eyes and couldn’t see the answer.

  “A hug.”

  I know better, goddamn it.

  My fingers clenched again, teeth grinding together.

  Touching was what I wanted … and the worst thing for the both of us.

  I took a deep breath, pushing those thoughts away, and I reached forward. She fell into me as though she were tired of standing and couldn’t do it for another second.

  She didn’t need to with my arms around her.

  I would take all of her weight.

  And I did as her hands clung to my back, and her cheek pressed against my chest. I felt everything that was inside of that girl—her pain and sorrow. I wanted to take it away, hold it for her so she could return to her life. And that was what I tried to do when I put my face in her neck, clutching her with all of my strength.

  We stayed like that.

  For minutes.

  Until I heard, “Jared, my whole family is here, and I want you to meet them.”

  I’d warned myself before I hugged her.

  Now, it was time to listen.

  I straightened my back, lifting my face out of her neck, and my arms loosened. I waited until she felt stable enough before I took a few steps back and said, “My driver’s outside. I have a flight to catch.”

  Her brows furrowed, her stare bouncing from my right eye to my left. “You’re not staying? You’re … flying tonight?”

  I put my hand on her other shoulder, the unmarked one, the same place I’d held during the crash, and I tried not to let the look on her face affect me. Because if I took in the pain in her eyes, I’d never fucking leave her. “Remember, Billie … go back to your life. I promise, it’ll help.”

  I should walk away and not look behind me.

  And I did.

  But not for a few seconds. I had to learn that beautiful face one last time. I hoped the world would get to see her smile again. The one I had seen when she gazed through the window of the plane and in the picture of her in the coffee shop. The one that deserved to shine so fucking bright.

  “Wait,” she whispered as I turned my back to her.

  I knew her sounds and what they meant.

  Without stop
ping, I moved to the back of the ballroom and through a hallway to the exit where Tony was parked by the door.

  “Home?”

  “Yes,” I replied once I was in my seat.

  But my mind was on the building behind us and the girl I’d just left inside of it.

  Billie

  When Jared had walked away at the hospital, I hadn’t been in the right frame of mind to understand what was happening. But now, as I stared at the back of his tall, broad frame while he moved down the busy corridor, I knew what it meant.

  And I hated the way it felt.

  When I had been around him tonight, even though it was brief, I hadn’t felt the weight of the crash. His presence had given my pain a pause, but it’d made my chest tighten in a way that reminded me of before—back when I’d only thought of him as a handsome seatmate and not one of the people who had saved my life.

  Now, he was gone, and I didn’t know if I would ever see him again.

  One of the passengers I’d spoken to earlier mentioned he wanted to get everyone together on the one-year anniversary of the crash. I wondered if that would be the next time we ran into each other, and then I questioned if Jared would even attend. He obviously wasn’t one for group events. He’d skipped the pictures at the beginning, and he hadn’t come onstage during the ceremony when everyone on the flight was acknowledged.

  Once he rounded the corner of the hallway, the top of his head vanishing, an emptiness returned to my chest. It was the same feeling that had been living there for the last month.

  The one that felt nothing like me.

  I wondered if that was a side effect of the situation. If it was because Jared had saved me or if it was due to something more.

  Something heavier.

  Like emotions.

  Not having any idea, I sighed and headed back to the ballroom, my urge for air—the reason I’d come this way in the first place—gone.

  I didn’t take more than a few steps when I heard my father say, “Are you all right, sweetheart?”

  I glanced up from the floor, meeting his concerned face, which meant he’d come this way to check on me.

  I wrapped my hands around his arm, joining his side. “I’m okay, Dad.”

  My family had been hovering since the crash, and there was always someone checking on me. I appreciated their efforts, but they just didn’t understand, and I couldn’t explain it to them.

  “I ran into Jared,” I said.

  He smiled, and it was so warm that I wanted to wrap myself in it.

  “Where is he? I would like to thank that man for everything he did for you.”

  I shrugged. “He had to leave.”

  Every time I told the story, I spoke about Jared. He was the biggest part of it, and I told everyone he was one of the main reasons I was alive. This wasn’t the first time my father had mentioned to me that he wanted to thank Jared. The idea of it was absolutely beautiful. But with the way Jared seemed to pop in and out, I just didn’t know if it would ever happen.

  Dad’s hand went to my cheek, his thumb brushing by my nose. “If you want, we can all leave too. Everyone will understand. We only came here for you.”

  I turned my face, nuzzling into his palm. It didn’t matter how old I got; I’d never stop doing that, and it would never stop feeling good. “No, Dad, let’s stay. It’s important.”

  It was closure.

  For all of us.

  I had to look at it that way.

  “You’re sure?”

  I nodded and grabbed his fingers that were on my face, holding them before I lifted them away and walked with him to where my family was standing.

  Appetizers were on their plates. Meatballs and lamb chops and ahi tuna crisps. And they were alternating between sips and bites. Now that Ally was eating for two, she was double-fisting plates.

  Not a single thing they were putting in their mouths looked good to me.

  That part still hadn’t returned.

  And I desperately wanted that piece of me back.

  Jared

  I entered through the main lobby of Morgan Security, saying good morning to the receptionist before slowly making my way toward my office. Every few feet, I was stopped by an employee to talk, and by the time I got in my chair, my coffee was cold. I called my assistant, asking for a new one, as I waited for my computer to turn on.

  After entering a series of passwords, I clicked on my email. There were hundreds waiting to be opened. Only one mattered. It had come in around three this morning, and I had been awake when my phone buzzed.

  I’d read it enough times that I knew it by heart.

  Each time, I heard it in her voice.

  And each time, she got quieter.

  As I mentioned in my last email, I was one of the passengers on Flight 88 that you’ve been hearing about recently on the news. It’s been extremely difficult, adjusting to life after the crash, and I’m afraid my healing has just begun. Even though I previously requested an extension on our contract, I’m writing to let you know that I won’t be able to fulfill it in the way we agreed.

  To put it simply, I’m just not ready to get on a plane and fly.

  I understand that traveling to your restaurant is a requirement, and your establishment is too far to drive to, so I would like to offer another option before you cancel our contract. Over the next few weeks, I’m going to be starting a new feature, allowing restaurants to air thirty-second spots on my social media channels. I ask that you show your kitchen and preparation, cooking demonstrations, plates, your staff, dining room—whatever you can fit in without exceeding the time limit. With the reach that I have, I feel this would be a wonderful opportunity to show a unique part of your business to a worldwide audience of eaters.

  To help make your decision, I’ve attached the demographics of each of my channels and a detailed report of my engagement and click rate. If this is something you’re interested in, I’m happy to discuss it in greater length or send a revised contract. If you would like to cancel the contract completely, please let me know, and I’ll send you that form.

  Please know, this wasn’t an easy decision to make. I’ve dedicated my life to this job, and I want nothing more than to return to it, eating my way across the globe. One day soon, I hope that comes true.

  Noodles and Toodles,

  Billie Paige

  “Here’s a warm one,” my assistant said.

  I dragged my eyes away from the screen to see her putting a new coffee on my desk before she walked back out of my office.

  I didn’t want it.

  Nothing in that mug was going to make the situation on my screen look any better. Billie was struggling, and I saw it in every word but her sign-off and signature, and those had been auto-generated. She was apologizing when she didn’t have to. Justifying when she didn’t need to do that either. The weight of the plane was on her back. Her entire world felt like it was falling apart, and she was barely hanging on.

  That was the reason I could help her.

  I knew what that felt like … better than anyone.

  But it meant reaching out and spending time with her when I’d purposefully been staying away.

  “I’m afraid my healing has just begun.”

  That line kept catching my attention.

  I read it again.

  And again.

  Knowing this was going to be one of the most challenging things I’d ever done—and probably something I’d regret—I took out my phone, pulled up a new text box, and typed in the number at the bottom of her email.

  Me: Let’s meet for coffee.

  I set my cell beside my desk and returned to my computer, working my way through my inbox. I was penning my first reply when her message came through.

  Billie: Who is this?

  Me: Jared.

  Billie: Wow.

  Billie: Hi!

  Billie: How did you get my number?

  Me: Are you free this afternoon?

  Billie: Yes.

  Me:
I’m going to text you an address. Meet me there at 3.

  Billie: Okay.

  Billie: See you soon, Jared.

  Honey

  Spring 1985

  Honey was set to marry Andrew on a Saturday afternoon in the middle of March, three months after he proposed. She chose to have the ceremony outside in front of a lighthouse despite it being a little chilly. The scenery was one they both loved, and it felt like the perfect place to exchange vows.

  The morning of the wedding, Honey put on a simple, non-descript, long-sleeved white dress, which she had found in a secondhand shop in Boston a few weekends before. Andrew wore a dark suit. And because she wanted to experience the entire day with her husband, they left their condo together, and they got in the back of the limo Andrew had rented.

  When they arrived at the park, their immediate family, Valentine, and Andrew’s best friend were all waiting. Since they were the only guests, they walked as a new family to the lighthouse, and the officiant stood before the couple and began his speech.

  Once it came time to exchange rings, Honey didn’t want to put Andrew’s band on the finger he had shared with his ex-wife. She wanted a new hand, a new placement, a new memory. That was why Andrew’s wedding band went on his right.

  When it was Andrew’s turn, he held Honey’s hand, slipping the traditional one on first, followed by her engagement ring. He didn’t let go, producing one more that he held at the tip of her nail, slowly sliding it on, stopping when it hugged the other side of her diamond.

  “If this is what I’m wearing on my left hand,” he said, “I want you to have one that matches.”

  It was smaller, thinner, more delicate than his father’s band, but there was no mistaking the gold braid-like weaving across the front.

  When she looked up at her husband, she had tears in her eyes. “I love it.”

  “I love you.”

  Honey felt herself blush as she stared at the man she was in the middle of marrying. The man who had fixed her when she was in an immense amount of pain. The man who had been loyal to her since he came into her life. The man who had put not one, but three rings on her finger.

 

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