Undeniable (Cloverleigh Farms #2)(24)



Every girl wanted me! Why didn’t she?

So I’d done what she asked that night, and it had been fucking fantastic. So good I couldn’t stop thinking about it for weeks afterward. Other girls would approach me and sometimes I messed around with them, but somehow they never compared to her. They were pretty but boring. They never challenged me. They never made me feel anything.

A hundred times I thought about calling her, but then I’d remember I had promised not to. I’d recall how distant she’d seemed on the walk back to town.

And I was a fucking gentleman—I’d asked if she was okay. She’d said she was fine, but I knew her—something was off. She was never that quiet. Maybe she regretted it already.

I hoped not. I didn’t regret it. In fact, I was sort of hoping she might want to do it again. And maybe she’d let me fucking text her afterward. Maybe we could visit each other or something. Purdue wasn’t that far from Miami Ohio.

The first thing I did after saying hello to Mr. and Mrs. Sawyer was seek her out. I saw her across the wide expanse of the lobby, standing near the tree. My stomach did something weird and jumpy as I started across the room. I raked a hand through my hair, hoping my shirt hadn’t gotten too wrinkled in the car. I’d ironed it myself.

She was with a group of people I didn’t recognize, and she looked hot as hell in a black dress and tall boots with heels. Her lips were bright red. Approaching her, my heart began to pound.

She caught sight of me, and for a moment, she looked nervous. Then she smiled. “Hey, Oliver.”

“Hey.” I gave her a hug, even though we normally didn’t greet each other that way, holding her a little longer than necessary just so I could breathe in her perfume. “How are you?”

“Good.” She released me and put a hand on the guy standing next to her, a beefy-looking blond guy with a thick neck and a shitty haircut. “This is my friend Dean. He came up from Purdue with me for a few days.”

Fighting off a queasy feeling, I held out my hand. “Oliver Pemberton. Nice to meet you.”

“Same.” Dean shook my hand, although he didn’t look too pleased about making my acquaintance.

Chloe introduced me to the rest of the group, but I forgot all names immediately. All I could focus on was the way she kept touching Dean’s arm and smiling at him with those red lips, and how he put his hand at the small of her back. It was clear they were a couple.

I wanted to fucking punch him.

As soon as I could politely excuse myself, I did, going right over to the bar and asking for some Woodford Reserve, neat. The bartender asked me for my I.D., of course, and I brandished one of Hughie’s old licenses. It was expired, but the guy either didn’t notice or didn’t care. I took my whiskey and grabbed a seat at the end of the bar, away from the crowd. After tossing it back in less than two minutes, I ordered another.

I was halfway through that one, enjoying a decent buzz, when Chloe walked into the bar and spotted me. “There you are,” she said, coming to stand at my side. “You disappeared so fast, I thought something was wrong.”

“Nothing’s wrong.” I barely looked at her.

She paused. “Okaaaaay. Well, why are you in here by yourself? Why don’t you come hang out with us?”

“I’m fine.”

“Are you mad about something?”

“What would I be mad about?”

“I don’t know. You tell me.”

I tipped up my glass. “So is that guy your boyfriend?”

“Dean?” She folded her arms over her chest. “Why?”

Finishing my drink, I signaled to the bartender for another. “Seems like kind of a tool.”

“You don’t even know him,” she snapped.

I shrugged. I was being a dick, but I couldn’t help it. “I don’t need to know him. But I guess he’s your type. He play a sport?”

“Football.”

I’d been hoping she’d say tennis or soccer or lacrosse or field hockey—something I could beat him at. But I was shit at throwing a football, and I didn’t like wearing all that fucking equipment. “Figures. He as dumb as he looks?”

“Why are you being such an asshole?”

Another shrug. “Just being myself.”

“Fuck you, Oliver. I was actually looking forward to seeing you tonight.”

The bartender delivered my whiskey, and I took a big sip. “Why?”

“Good question.” She stood there for a moment, anger emanating from her in hot, pulsing waves. “Look at me.”

Reluctantly, I turned my gaze in her direction.

“Is this about October?”

“What do you mean?”

Her eyes narrowed. “You know what I mean.”

I pretended to be confused for a second. “Oh, that. I forgot all about that.”

“What?”

I lifted my glass again. “I said, I forgot all about that.”

“You’re lying.”

Our eyes locked in a silent battle. “Does Dean know about us?”

“No. And you better not say anything. You promised.”

I laughed. “That’s right. I did. Hey, why are we talking about this, anyway? Isn’t that against the rules?”

“You are being such a jerk right now.”

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