Rebel Hard (Hard Play #2)(46)
“Tomorrow,” he promised himself. He’d find Nayna tomorrow and make her understand that she was the most important part of his dreams now. Everything else they could work out. She didn’t have to be afraid he’d try to put her in a box. Never would he do that to his bright, brilliant Nayna.
“Tomorrow,” he whispered again, and it was a vow.
24
(very quiet whispers only please)
“Nayna.”
Nayna buried her head under the pillow, wondering why someone was playing the tabla inside her skull. But then a cruel hand came and ripped the pillow away.
“Nayna,” the voice said again. “Wake up or you’ll miss your flight.”
Groaning, Nayna cracked open one eyelid. “I hate you,” she said to her best friend. “How can you be so chipper?” As far as she knew, ísa had drunk exactly as much tequila as she had.
ísa raised an eyebrow. “Do you remember how I told you not to get started on the half bottle of whiskey I found?”
Nayna scowled. “What bottle of whiskey?”
“Exactly.” Throwing the pillow aside, ísa pointed toward the bathroom. “Shower, then I’ll drop you off at the airport if you want.”
Usually, if Nayna was traveling within the country, she just parked her car in the airport’s long-term parking lot, but today she nodded. She was going to be gone at least a week, maybe more, and she didn’t want to leave her car in the lot for that long.
“I’ll go grab your stuff.” ísa picked up Nayna’s keys. “And I’ll move the car to your parents’ place tomorrow.”
Staggering into the bathroom, Nayna turned the shower to as hot as she could handle, then stepped in. It was halfway through, as the heat burned away the last of the alcohol fumes that she began to remember. Eyes huge, she slid open the shower door, and yelled out, “Did I call Raj last night and tell him I wanted to lick his abs? And that I was going to have sex dreams about him?”
Given the hysterical laughter that came from the direction of ísa’s kitchen area, the answer was a resounding yes. Dear God. Ducking back into the shower as her face flamed, Nayna quickly finished washing up. ísa had thrown in her overnight bag in the interim, so after stepping out of the shower and drying off, she brushed her teeth using the toothbrush she’d bought yesterday. Technically, she thought, overnight bag wasn’t the right term.
It was more a “running away from home” bag.
After slapping on some moisturizer from the hastily assembled bag of toiletries, she put away the bottle, then dug through to find clothes. Panties, bra, jeans, T-shirt, socks, and she was done. She stuffed her heels in one corner of the bag.
Taking it to near the front door, she saw ísa had found her trainers. She left the bag beside the shoes, brought over her laptop bag and purse from where she’d left them in the lounge the previous night, then joined ísa at the breakfast counter. Her friend pushed a bowl of porridge toward her. Made Aji’s way. And with brown sugar on top. “You’re the best,” she told her friend. “My abused stomach thanks you.”
When her phone beeped, she figured it must be a text from her mother reminding her of her second cousin’s son’s fourth birthday party—which she was supposed to attend tonight. If she hadn’t intended to run away, she’d most definitely have worked late. She loved children, but that four-year-old was a horror. Last time Nayna had been around him, he’d purposefully spit orange juice on her dress while his mother looked on indulgently.
However, it wasn’t Shilpa Sharma who’d messaged her. The name on the screen was Raj and the attached image was of his abs with the caption: Ready to be licked.
Groaning, she dropped her head to the counter and banged it twice while ísa grabbed her phone—and began to laugh so hard she nearly fell off her stool.
“Why didn’t you stop me?” Nayna said. “Isn’t that in the friend code?”
“I was drunk,” ísa pointed out, gray-green eyes dancing. “And man, he does have nice abs!”
“You can lick your gardener’s abs. Gimme back mine.” She’d swiped the phone into her hand before she realized what she’d said.
Mine.
“Hey,” she blurted out in an attempt to distract herself and her clever best friend, “you never told me about cactus love.”
“Eat your porridge.” ísa shoved a big spoonful into her own mouth.
Nayna didn’t think she was hungry, but she got to the bottom of her bowl. After which she drank a huge cup of black coffee, and then the two of them rushed out the door. Thankfully traffic was light this early in the morning, and ísa was able to drop her off right in front of the domestic terminal.
Nayna gave her friend a quick hug, grabbed her bag, and said, “Remember, cone of silence.” She intended to text both her family and Raj just as she was about to board, let them know she was fine and that she was taking off for a few days. Nayna would never leave them to fear for her safety—she’d experienced that awful sensation herself when Madhuri left; to inflict it on another human being was beyond her.
However, she’d be keeping all details of her intended destination to herself.
Nalini Singh's Books
- Archangel's Prophecy (Guild Hunter #11)
- Night Shift (Kate Daniels #6.5)
- Archangel's Blade (Guild Hunter #4)
- Nalini Singh
- Archangel's Consort (Guild Hunter #3)
- Tangle of Need (Psy-Changeling #11)
- Archangel's Shadows (Guild Hunter #7)
- La noche del cazador (Psy-Changeling #1)
- La noche del jaguar (Psy-Changeling #2)
- Caricias de hielo (Psy-Changeling #3)