by Zara Cox
Freefall
The Indigo Lounge Series, Volume 5
Zara Cox
Published by Zara Cox, 2015.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
FREEFALL
First edition. March 31, 2015.
Copyright © 2015 Zara Cox.
ISBN: 978-1507030301
Written by Zara Cox.
FREEFALL
INDIGO LOUNGE SERIES #5
BY
ZARA COX
TABLE OF CONTENTS
COPYRIGHT
LETTER TO MY 16-YEAR-OLD SELF
CHAPTER 1 - KEELY
CHAPTER 2 - KEELY
CHAPTER 3 - MASON
CHAPTER 4 - MASON
CHAPTER 5 - KEELY
CHAPTER 6 - KEELY
CHAPTER 7 - KEELY
CHAPTER 8 - MASON
CHAPTER 9 - KEELY
CHAPTER 10 - KEELY
CHAPTER 11 - KEELY
CHAPTER 12 - KEELY
CHAPTER 13 - KEELY - SIX YEARS AGO
CHAPTER 14 - MASON
CHAPTER 15 - KEELY
CHAPTER 16 - KEELY
CHAPTER 17 - MASON
CHAPTER 18 - KEELY
CHAPTER 19 - KEELY - SIX YEARS AGO
CHAPTER 20 - MASON
CHAPTER 21 - MASON
CHAPTER 22 - KEELY
CHAPTER 23 - KEELY
CHAPTER 24 - KEELY - SIX YEARS AGO
CHAPTER 25 - MASON
CHAPTER 26 - KEELY
CHAPTER 27 - KEELY
CHAPTER 28 - KEELY
CHAPTER 29 - MASON
CHAPTER 30 - MASON
CHAPTER 31 - KEELY
EPILOGUE
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
COMING SOON
ONE ON ONE BY LEXI LOCKHART
ABOUT AUTHOR
Copyright
Copyright © 2015 Zara Cox
Edited by Kate Reed
Cover by Angela Oltmann
All rights reserved. No part of this e-book may be reproduced in any form other than that in which it was purchased and without the written permission of the author.
This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return it to the retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Letter To My 16 Year Old Self
Dear Crazy You,
It’s ten years from now, and this is what I’ve learned.
Don’t be afraid to stand up to the bullies who tease you for having big boobs at fifteen. Trust me, big boobs are badass. They’ll be even better at twenty-five when you’ve learned to use them to your better advantage.
It’s okay to be a nerd. Nerds rule the fucking world.
Don’t get in the elevator with that old man at Bloomingdales on your seventeenth birthday. If you do, you’ll never use tweezers again!
When Mom tells you it’s time to get on the Pill, please, please, PLEASE don’t fight her on it. I can’t stress this enough, Keely Nina Benson. JUST DON’T!
Now listen very carefully because this one’s important. Nineteen is going to be rough. Way rougher than you think you’ll be able to cope with. Hang in there. The pain may not go away. There may be times when you’ll want to end it all. Times when putting one foot in front of the other, or just breathing seems like a task too far.
Hang in there.
Because there will be moments of acute ceaseless joy. They may be fleeting, but...fuck it (yeah, you’ve taken up swearing. A lot).
Hang in there.
I love you, even though you may not feel it right now.
I. LOVE .YOU.
K Benson xxx
PS - that pink streak in your hair may look cool now, but you’ll hate it in a month. Do yourself a favor. Go with the purple. I’m older. I may not be a whole lot wiser, but listen to me anyway.
Chapter 1
Keely
Orion’s Belt. Cassiopeia. Ursa Minor—
I feel him approach, but I keep my gaze upward on the piercing stars, flung carelessly in a blanket of velvet in the night sky. I search feverishly for patterns I’d learn a lifetime ago, before a time when I’d need something celestial to ground me in the darkness. Something to connect me to the universe, so I wouldn’t feel so uselessly untethered.
His footsteps draw closer. I keep my head up, refusing to let the consternation and bewilderment take over.
I am above that. I am woman. I am strong.
Yeah, maybe not that last part.
The blush grows from my neck and covers my cheeks, my face. Awareness engulfs me as he hovers behind me, his presence an entity I can’t deny.
I squint harder at the cold, bright stars, but my attention begins to waver. Nothing connects.
Damn it.
“What the hell do you want?”
“It’s thirty-six degrees out here, without the wind chill. I figured you could use a blanket,” his deep, growly voice says behind me.
As if reminded that I’m barefoot on a beach in Montauk in late February, goose bumps pile upon goose bumps, and my body screams distress signals to my brain. I shiver so hard, despite my determination to ignore my body’s distress, that I nearly upend myself. My discomfort isn’t enough to make me retrieve my shoes and go back inside though.
He steps closer.
“I don’t need a damn blanket. If I wanted one, I’d have brought one with me.” I lift the chilled, open bottle of vintage Oenotheque Dom Perignon clutched in my right hand and take a huge, bracing gulp.
Fuck yeah.
My best friend, Bethany Green, just got officially engaged to the catch of the century and the love of her life. Personally, Zachary Savage isn’t my type—all that caveman, possessive shit just gets on my nerves. But they are ecstatically happy. He worships the ground she walks on, and after the year she’s had and the snippets of his past I’ve become privy to, they deserve a little, no make that a lot, of happy.
And if a small part of me is jealous of all that happiness, I intend to drown it dead with a little help from Dom P.
As soon as this intruder, the reason for me blushing like a damn schoolgirl virgin, goes away.
“I came out here, Einstein, because I want to be alone. So if you don’t mind...?” I dangle the question, seeing if he’ll take the bait. If not, it’ll be my pleasure to shove it down his throat.
“Take the blanket. Then I’ll leave,” he says again. This time I’m not sure if my shiver is to do with the ridiculously low temperatures, or his low, husky voice. Whatever.
“Fine.” I sigh and reach behind me, without taking my gaze off the constellations. I don’t want to turn around. I don’t want to see his face. Not after the freak out episode he just witnessed.
It wasn’t the things I’d just said ten minutes ago in Bethany’s kitchen that were embarrassing in and of themselves. Hell, I talk about my vagina all the time. I feel zero embarrassment for that part.
It was the desolation, the fear, the neediness as I’d clung to my best friend while I’d prattled nonsense, which makes me not want to face the man behind me now. I’m okay with feeling desperately sorry for myself. Not so cool with complete strangers seeing beneath my skin.
The last time I’d felt like this was six years and one day ago. After what my parents refer to as my Unfortunate Episode.
The date is engraved in my mind, since it was my ninet
eenth birthday. Valentine’s Day, for fuck’s sake.
It was the day I set out to end it all. And failed.
All of that same insecure fucking panic had been in my voice as I’d stood in Bethany’s kitchen and I talked about my clit, my neglected and lonely pussy and my need for a man with a big cock. Except, they were just euphemisms. A cry for help which my self-aware mind had contrived. I know this because I have above average intelligence. Some Stephen Hawking type person with thick, super nerdy bifocals told me so when I was sixteen.
Having what I already knew confirmed had, at the time, made me smug and superior for all of five seconds. Gradually, I’d come to see that news is a curse. It meant that most of the time I knew what was wrong with me but most often never had the tools to fix it. I especially hate that this ball of anguish, which I carry around inside me, will never go away because I don’t know how to fix myself.
Because I’d tried again yesterday. Tried to end it all. And failed.
Another shiver races through me along with the realization that the blanket isn’t in my hand.
I snap my fingers, impatient to get on with my new and highly enlightened get-drunk-and-freeze-to-death plan. A moment later, the weight of a fleece blanket drapes over my shoulders, enveloping me in unwanted warmth.
Manners dictate I should say thank you, but I don’t want to engage this man. He’s seen me at my most vulnerable. Besides Beth and my parents, no one else has seen that side of me.
So I walk away, just a few feet to where a large rock juts out of the water. The tide has receded a little, so I can sit on it without getting my feet wet. I perch and take another swig of champagne.
Then I hear him. He’s moving closer. Mr. Rusty Social Skills, as he’d called himself when I’d snarled at his eavesdropping in the kitchen, was clearly not into getting messages, even when they were spelled loud and clear.
“Are we really doing this?” I ask after a few more satisfying, but less than bracing gulps.
“Looking at the stars? Yep. The Plough is particularly bright tonight.”
I hang my head, my soul weary and my body chilled to the bone. “Please. Don’t,” I whisper, my voice barely audible above the sound of crashing waves.
“We don’t have to talk about the stars. We can talk about the Pygmies in Africa. Do you know they fuck every day for the month of May, then don’t have sex for the rest of the year?” he imparts.
My head whips around. “That’s not true—” I realize too late what he’s done, snap my head back around and raise the bottle to my lips. “Fuck off. Seriously,” I growl. But that quick look has sparked a tiny curiosity. One I’m determined to hide.
“Can I at least apologize for the accidental eavesdropping?” he presses.
“Why is it important to you? You won’t see me again after tonight. You really don’t need to apologize for being inadvertently privy to the sorry state of my clitoris and vagina. Go back to the party. Hell, you have my permission to share the gossip. With any luck, you can get my vagina trending.”
He remains silent for several minutes, and I don’t know if he’s digesting the information or is stunned by my direct talk. I know most men find my brazen mouth a little off-putting. I’ve given up caring. I’ve given up caring about a lot of things lately.
“I don’t like parties. And the state of your vagina doesn’t interest me in the least,” he says finally.
My mouth drops open and I start to turn, increasingly intrigued against my will. I stop myself at the last moment and glare at the black, roiling sea.
“Then what do you want?”
“Maybe I’m intrigued to know why a beautiful, intelligent woman is determined to freeze to death during her best friend’s engagement party. And please don’t make crude references to your female parts. We both know this has nothing to do with sex.”
The certainty and confidence with which he says all this throws me for a second. A particularly brisk wind slashes across my face, bringing me back to myself.
“Since you don’t know me well enough to judge my intelligence, how about I just thank you for the beautiful comment and the blanket, and let’s be done with this conversation?” I stand, ready to move off again.
I sense him rise to his feet, hear him brush sand from his pants. “Is there any reason you won’t look at me, Keely?”
My breath catches slightly at the way my name sounds on his lips, then I steel my spine. This has gone on long enough. “Because I don’t want to talk to you. Nothing personal, but I really want to be alone. Even a guy with rusty social skills can compute such a simple request?” My voice is growing exasperated, and I resent him for that.
“I could leave, but then Zach would cut off vital parts of my anatomy I prefer to hang on to should anything happen to you. Bethany too, I’m guessing, although I don’t know her that well enough to judge.”
A reluctant smile tugs at my lips as I think of my friend and her fiancée. But then I sober up. “What if I promise to just sit on this rock and enjoy my champagne?”
“Then I hope you won’t mind some silent company. We don’t need to talk. Hell, I won’t even ask how you know the mating habits of African pygmies, although I have a feeling it has something to do with the intelligent part.”
“Or maybe I’m addicted to the Discovery Channel?” I don’t bother to hide the snark in my voice. “I’m disappointed it takes so little to impress you.” I gulp some more champagne and am heartened to see that half of it is gone. Great, maybe I’ll freeze to death quicker with three thousand dollars worth of champagne swishing around inside me.
“I didn’t say I was impressed,” the cadence of his voice tells me he’s smiling.
Fucker.
“I don’t care what you are, Rusty. All I care about right now is being left in peace.”
“Rusty?”
I remain silent. I drink. Finally, I begin to feel a buzz. It’s not strong enough to drown out my thoughts, or the unsettling presence of my unwelcome beach companion. But it’s a definitely a buzz.
Raising my head, I stare at the stars again, a little pleased to see them weave in and out. I make out Ursa Minor, but just barely. Yes, definitely a buzz.
“You know there are over—”
“What the fuck are you doing?”
“Making conversation?”
I surge to my feet and face him, anger bubbling through my veins. That’s when I see him, really see him for the first time. Back in the kitchen I’d been too embarrassed and rage-y to really take him in. Now, for the first few seconds, while losing a few billion brain cells, I’m taken aback by his intense, attractive looks. Even with the full beard and unruly hair, he’s breathtaking in only a way few men can pull off. My eyes drift over his thick folded arms and the cross-legged stance he’s adopting as he perches on his own rock.
There isn’t enough light out here to determine the color of his eyes, but he stares back at me with a directness that unsettles me, despite the layer of sadness in the dark depths. Then his gaze drifts over the blanket, as if he can see my body through the thick wool. My bare feet seem to intrigue him the most, and I can almost feel him touching each digit. My feet curl into the cold sand, prompting a quirked brow from him that finally frees me from my stupid tongue-tied-ness.
“You’re not making conversation. You’re making specific conversation. About stars.”
“That’s probably because I know a little about them. No actually, that’s not true. I know a lot about stars. And a whole range of other things too. Pick a subject.”
“I see you’re not the humble bragging type.”
“Is that the type that interests you?” he fires back, raising a hand to drag his fingers through his thick facial hair.
I find that oddly distracting. Enough to fire up my anger another few notches. “God, if all of Savage’s friends are like you, then I’m glad I never let him set me up with one of them like he wanted to?”
Something gleams in his eyes, but it’s gone
too quickly for me to hammer down what it is. But I get the feeling he didn’t like my reference to Zach’s friends.
I toss my hair and settle back on my rock, but I continue to look at him. “How are you on the subject of silence? And practicing it?”
He doesn’t respond. He merely smiles, showing perfect white teeth, which for some reason makes me imagine them biting my clit. I suppress a shudder and after a few minutes, I turn around and face the churning waves again.
The silence holds. But whatever peace I hoped to find is gone forever. His presence is too distracting. Too overpowering. Now I want to engage him. That realization alone makes me drink some more, thus increasing my buzz.
My bottle is getting lighter. Soon it’ll be empty. The thought makes me incredibly sad. Maybe when I’m done, I’ll shed the blanket and walk to the sea, try again to do what I’d failed in my bath last night.
“Keely?”
God, he’s relentless. “What?” Was that my voice? That bleak but eager response, desperate for some sort of tether to a world I no longer want to be in?
“You know when I said I wasn’t in the least bit interested in your vagina?” he enquires in that low, dark, increasingly alluring voice.
Suddenly, I’m not feeling so cold anymore. I’m alert. And I’m holding my breath. “Yeah?”
“I lied.”
Chapter 2
Keely
I get up from my rock, drop the blanket and bottle. My feet crunch through cold, packed sand as I run into the icy, white waves.
“Jesus!”
Icy water closes over my calves and rushes up my thighs. My silk skirt is soaked in seconds, but I keep going. Before I can throw myself headlong into the Atlantic, strong, implacable arms seize my waist.
“Let me go!” I grab his wrists, desperately trying to dislodge his hold.
“Fuck no. What the hell is wrong with you?” He raises me clear of the water as another strong wave hurls into us. He curses and struggles to keep his footing and me from landing in the water.