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Broken (The Broken Series Book 1)

Page 12

by Cox, Carrie;


  I took another sip of my drink and grimaced. It was really sweet and had given me a sugar rush.

  I was actually starting to feel a bit dizzy; I thought maybe I’d had too much champagne at the dinner dance. It had been just so easy and free, and I had never been one to turn down a freebie.

  Still, at least Roger and Lilly’s house wasn’t in the middle of nowhere. It wouldn’t be hard to walk home from here, so at least I wouldn’t have to wait for a lift or try and call for a taxi. If Alexander and Lauren didn’t arrive in the next half an hour, I decided I would head home. Half an hour would be long enough to finish my drink. I didn’t want to appear rude by leaving straightaway, but I couldn’t wait to get home.

  It was funny how I thought of the Harding Mansion as home. It was pretty much the complete opposite of my childhood home, a run down two-bed house on the edge of town that I shared with my mother and Kate before my mother died.

  The wave of grief that engulfed me seemed to come out of nowhere. My mother had been dead a long time, but I’d started thinking about her more recently after my recovery. It was probably because at the time, I hadn’t allowed myself to grieve. I’d tried to wipe it out by getting high as I spiraled into self-destruction.

  I set my drink down on a small side table. I shouldn’t drink anymore. The alcohol was making me melancholy.

  I decided to get some air. I could see the large French windows, lined with heavy drapes that opened up onto the balcony and I squeezed past a couple who were deeply involved in their flirting and barely noticed me.

  I opened one of the French doors and I stepped out onto the balcony. I took a deep breath. The air was cold and smelled of the sea.

  Closing the French door gently behind me, I took a proper look at the balcony. It seemed to wrap around the entire house. It was huge.

  My eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and I saw there was a faint glow of light coming from multiple French doors that lined the entire balcony. There were at least eight of them by my count.

  I wandered down to the far end of the balcony, and then stopped in the corner, leaning back against the rough stone and staring out at the beautiful gardens and the moonlit sea beyond.

  I looked upwards, gazing at the dark blue sky. It was a clear night and the stars were twinkling. I smiled. No matter how badly I screwed up they would always be there, reassuringly shining down on me. I tried working out a few of the constellations, but I couldn’t do it. Just when I thought I had pinpointed a couple that I thought were part of the bear, everything seemed to move and I lost track of the others. There were just so many tonight.

  I was not sure how long I was out there, probably only ten or fifteen minutes. But I shivered as the cold stone started to seep its way through the thin fabric of my dress. I rubbed the goose bumps on my arms. I wasn’t really dressed for a cool night like this.

  Reluctantly I headed back along the balcony, and then I faltered, was it the sixth French door that I came out of? Or was it the seventh?

  I stood there for a moment debating; then shrugged. I didn’t suppose it really mattered. I’d still get inside, unless it was locked. I reached out and pulled down on the metal handle and was glad when it opened freely. I pushed back the drapes and stepped inside, only to freeze when I saw what was in front of me.

  Jack’s blonde ex-girlfriend, dressed in an evening gown with a slit right up to her panty line, was in front of me, sitting on a sofa opposite a short dark-haired man.

  In between them, on a small table, was a pile of white powder.

  I stared down at the little pile.

  My throat seemed to close up, making it hard to breathe. I wrenched my eyes away from the white powder, looking back at Jack’s ex-girlfriend, Joanna. There was a faint trace of white powder around her nostrils and she held a rolled up banknote in one hand.

  She wiped her nose with the back of her hand then gave a starry-eyed giggle.

  “Don’t just stand there. Surely you’re not that innocent,” she said and gestured to the table. “Do you want some?”

  She couldn’t have known … there’s no possible way she could have known … but I broke out into a cold sweat.

  I’d been so strong. I’d thought I was unbreakable. I thought I would never go back… but to see it in front of me like this… just taunting me.

  I took a shaky breath and shook my head, taking a step backwards.

  Then the door opened, and I saw Roger enter the room followed by Lauren.

  “Oh there you are. I’ve been looking …”

  Lauren stopped talking abruptly. I saw the full range of emotions pass across her face. First, she’d smiled happily at me, then her eyes drifted down to Joanna and the pile of drugs in front of her.

  Then her eyes swung back to me, full of hurt.

  I shook my head.

  No. No. No. I wanted to scream. I wanted to tell Lauren I didn’t touch the stuff. I wanted to shake her and insist she trust me.

  But I did none of those things.

  Instead I ran.

  I pushed past Roger and darted out of the door, heading straight towards the front door. I didn’t stop as I collided with a woman smoking a cigarette just outside. My heels clattered down the stone steps and then crunched into the gravel.

  I ran and ran until I met the road. I kicked off my shoes to make it easier, and grabbing them in one hand, I ran back towards the Harding house.

  Tears were streaking down my face, and my lungs were burning, desperate for oxygen. The muscles in my thighs were killing me, but I liked it. I wanted to feel the pain.

  I was not sure how long I’d been running for, feeling the tarmac slap against my feet, when I heard a car not far away. And before I knew what I was doing, I was climbing over the scratchy, dried-out bushes on the side of the road and ducking beneath a large, prickly bush.

  The car was going slowly, but I didn’t look up as it passed. I rested my head on my knees and I clasped my legs tightly to me. I knew it had to be Lauren looking for me.

  I should have stepped out and let her see me. I knew she’d be worried, but I just couldn’t do it. I couldn’t talk to her right now.

  I felt so incredibly betrayed. I knew that didn’t make sense. Lauren hadn’t betrayed me, but I’d seen the look in her eyes. I knew she didn’t trust me and that hurt so much.

  After the car passed, I gave it a couple of minutes before getting to my feet and staggering back onto the road. The prickly bushes grabbed at my dress and scratched my arms, but I barely felt it.

  I continued heading towards the house, but I didn’t run now. I felt empty, devoid of energy.

  When I finally got to the house, the lights were still off. That was good. I wanted to sneak in the house without anyone seeing me. But I knew if I went to my bedroom, Lauren would be there, waiting for an explanation.

  I couldn’t talk to her yet. I needed to get things straight in my head.

  I felt guilty. I was sure that even if Lauren hadn’t appeared when she did, I wouldn’t have touched the drugs. But I felt so confused and screwed up. The truth was: I’d been tempted. But that was normal, wasn’t it? It didn’t mean I would have taken anything.

  I found my way around the back of the house, wincing as the security lights came on.

  I was heading for Jack’s quarters. I knew he’d be asleep by now, and it was the last place Lauren would look for me. My hand was shaking as it reached out to the French doors to Jack’s living room. My breath was shaky and fast.

  To my relief the door opened, and quietly, I slipped inside.

  I didn’t even make it to the sofa; I just leaned against the wall and slid down to collapse on the floor.

  23

  Jack

  I don’t sleep well. I haven’t since the accident.

  I was lying in bed using my usual trick of trying to go around a race circuit in my memory. Sometimes it helped; sometimes it didn’t, but at least it kept my mind off feeling sorry for myself.

  That’s wha
t I was doing when I heard the noise. I blinked into the darkness and strained my ears, trying to listen, but I couldn’t hear anything else. It was normally so quiet around here. The house is set well back from the bustle of Monte Carlo, and as we live on the end of the cliff road, no one travels up this far unless they are coming to visit us.

  There had been talk just recently of a spate of burglaries targeting Monaco’s so-called billionaire row. Alexander had been concerned enough to increase security. I hadn’t paid much attention. I’d been preoccupied with my little pity party just lately.

  I sighed. It was no good. I’d have to go and investigate.

  I grabbed my sweatpants, quickly pulling them on and then reached for one of the crutches that was propped up beside my bedside cabinet. I winced as the muscles in my right leg tightened painfully.

  I moved as quietly as possible through my bedroom, around my bed and out into the living area.

  And that’s when I saw her…

  My first thought was that this had to be a dream. Maybe I was really asleep, and my subconscious had conjured her image to torment me.

  But the cold handle of the crutch and the pain in my legs told me it must be real.

  If it was a dream, I’d be back to my old healthy self. I wouldn’t be stuck in this broken shell of a body.

  “Kristina?” I said.

  If she wasn’t a dream, what the hell was she doing sitting on the floor in the living room at this time of night?

  Her head snapped up. Her eyes were wide and wild, and I knew something was wrong – something serious.

  As I moved closer, I could see she’d been crying. Tears had streaked her face and smudged her makeup, and the sight of her sitting there made me feel so helpless. I felt something twist inside my chest.

  I held out my hand to help her to her feet, but she shook her head and crossed her arms over her chest.

  “I’m sorry; I didn’t mean to wake you up. I just didn’t want to go back to my room.”

  “Something’s wrong,” I said, winning the award for stating the obvious. “Tell me.”

  She shook her head as if telling me what was wrong was the worst idea she’d ever heard.

  “I can’t,” she said,

  “Nothing can be that bad.”

  She stared up at me with a look in her eyes that made me want to pull her close and never let her go.

  “I can’t tell you,” she said. “You’ll think I’m awful.”

  I shook my head. “Impossible. Nothing could be that bad.”

  I reached down for her, which wasn’t easy with one hand still holding my crutch. But this time she didn’t resist and allowed me to pull her to her feet and lead her to the sofa.

  When I sat beside her, she grabbed a cushion and clutched it to her stomach.

  She looked terrified. Was I really that scary? I knew I’d given her a tough time when she first started, but I thought we’d got past that. I thought by now she would know she could trust me.

  I wanted to reassure her, but I didn’t. Sometimes words weren’t enough. So I gave her time. Time to wrestle with whatever demons were haunting her. I couldn’t force her to trust me, and I figured if I waited and didn’t hassle her, there was a better chance she would open up to me.

  When she started talking, it was almost as if she couldn’t stop.

  “You think that you’re broken, Jack, but you’re not.”

  “I’m the one who’s broken.” She put a hand to her chest like her heart was breaking, and it nearly killed me.

  I let go of the crutch and eased myself closer to her on the sofa. I put both my hands on either side of her face and gently turned her head so she was looking at me.

  “You’re not broken.”

  She shook her head. “You don’t know…You don’t know what I did or what I was like before… in the past.”

  I stared at her, waiting for her to continue. I wanted her to open up and tell me. I wanted to know this dark secret she’d been hiding from me.

  I was holding my breath.

  “I was an addict,” she said her voice was calm and even, but she screwed up her face like the words tasted bitter on her tongue. “For years, I took drugs, pretty much anything I could get my hands on. I’d like to say I went off the rails when my mother died, at least that would be a reason, but truthfully it was even before that. I was hooked. I wrecked my life, I hurt my sister and most of all… the thing I’m most ashamed of is that I put my mother through hell, and she died before seeing me turn my life around.”

  Her voice cracked at the end of the sentence and I pulled her to me. Her cheek rested against my chest and I could feel the wetness of her tears.

  “So you see,” she said and sniffed, “that’s the kind of person I am. I’m so ashamed of what I did. I’m trying to put it all behind me, but I can’t. My past won’t let me go.”

  I lowered my head and pressed my lips against her forehead, and then I said, “Stop worrying about the past, Kristina; it’s over. That isn’t who you are. Right now, all I see is a sweet, caring, beautiful woman sitting in front of me. You need to let go of all that shit and live in the now. There is nothing to be gained from beating yourself up over things that happened in the past. You can’t change it, Kristina. Let go of the past and live in the present. You have so much ahead of you. It could be amazing.”

  24

  Kristina

  The shame was overwhelming. Here I was, sitting in front of a guy who’d had his career snatched away from him, struggling through pain each day to just walk around. Something I took for granted.

  Tears swam in my eyes.

  I wanted to do what Jack said. I wanted to live in the present, and I thought I had been doing so well until tonight. I hadn’t expected all these old feelings to come to the surface. The cravings were so tempting. It was overwhelming.

  The reason I was so devastated tonight was because I was so disappointed in myself, and the guilt was tremendous.

  I didn’t move. I didn’t even dare look up at Jack. He knew everything now, my deepest secret, the thing I was most ashamed of.

  I could hear his heart beating steadily, and I pushed myself closer, breathing in the warm scent of him.

  Right now, I was not thinking about tomorrow, or the fact that I could be about to make the biggest mistake of my life. I just wanted to be close to him, even if it was just for one night.

  I gathered my courage and reluctantly pulled away from him. I angled my head so I was looking directly at him. I licked my lips. “You don’t despise me for keeping this a secret?”

  “It’s not my business,” he said. “And it isn’t anything to do with the person you are now.”

  I shook my head and tried to wipe away my tears. I must look such a state. I didn’t really know the person I was anymore.

  Then I looked at him again and realized how hard he was trying to help me. I could see him searching for the right words — words that would comfort me — and the fact that he cared, that he was so kind and so worried about me, made me break out in fresh tears.

  I turned away disgusted with myself. Why did I keep crying? Jesus, I was such a wimp. I savagely wiped the tears away with the back of my hand.

  “Okay, that’s enough true confessions for tonight. I’m sorry I woke you. I’ll leave now,” I said and got to my feet.

  Jack stared at me as if I was crazy. Then he reached up a hand, entwined it in mine and pulled me forward towards him gently.

  “Don’t go,” he said.

  In that moment, any resistance I might have had left melted away. All my earlier determination to resist him and keep our relationship professional faded in an instant.

  I reached out my other hand and trailed it along the raspy stubble on the side of his jaw. He moved his head to the side so his lips grazed the pad of my thumb, and he kissed the palm of my hand.

  It felt like an electric shock shot up my arm, and I actually gasped. I would never understand how my body reacted to him like this. He
kissed my palm and it felt better than all the other kisses I’d had in my life.

  I wasn’t a virgin. Hell, I’d been a twenty-something woman living in Miami for the past few years. I’d partied hard and slept with guys who had appealed to me. I’d always enjoyed sex, but I’d never responded like this before. I’d always been the one in control.

  This was the point of no return.

  I needed to do this.

  I leaned down, feeling brazen, expecting him to pull away at any moment, but he didn’t.

  I moved my mouth closer to his, and I paused only an inch away. I could feel his hot breath on my lips as he waited. His beautiful dark eyes were burning into mine.

  I couldn’t hold back. I closed the gap between us and pressed my lips against his. Gently at first, and then harder.

  I felt his hands encircle my waist, and he pulled me onto his lap as his tongue flickered over my lips and deep into my mouth.

  It felt so good.

  His hands grasped the hem of my gown and pulled it slowly up over my thighs. His hands were hot against my skin as the fabric slid up easily.

  For a moment, he paused, his large hands resting on my thighs as he stared into my eyes. Was he having second thoughts? Was he going to stop? Oh please no, don’t let him stop.

  I knew he wanted me. I could feel his erection hard beneath me and it was all I could do not to press myself down on him. Why was he hesitating?

  Then his hands cupped my backside and squeezed, pulling me closer to him. I pushed myself down, feeling his hardness beneath me. I ground my hips against his, desperate for relief.

  “Do you want me to touch you, Kristina?”

  His voice was so low, I felt the vibration all the way to my core.

  I nodded.

  His gaze traveled downwards, lingering over my breasts before he moved a hand slowly along my inner thigh. Oh God. I was so close already and he hadn’t even touched me there yet.

 

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