Beautiful Burn (The Maddox Brothers, #4)(14)
“I intend to,” I said, walking backward a few steps before turning around.
Tyler puffed, and then I heard his door open and close and the engine fire up. I crossed the street and returned to Turk’s. Paige was standing outside in the snow-lined alley, smoking, looking relieved to see me.
“You came back,” she said.
My phone buzzed, and the display lit up. I recognized Finley’s magazine-worthy selfie and frowned.
On my way. Marco will drive us.
I growled, shoving my phone back into my back pocket.
“Bad news?” Paige asked.
“It’s just … the girl I was with, my sister, Finley. She has an assistant, and she’s with him now. They’re coming to get us.”
“Us?”
My face softened. “Yeah. You have plans for the next three hours? Or until morning?”
Paige swallowed and then smiled, shaking her head. She had such a sweet face. The death of her innocence was still fresh, and I could tell that she still liked to pretend it existed.
Headlights beamed into our eyes, and we both held up our hands. “The f*ck, Marco? Turn off the brights!”
“I’m sorry!” he called from the driver seat.
The lights dimmed, and I held out my hand to Paige. “This is not happy ever after. It’s just tonight.”
She hooked my fingers with hers and nodded, following me to Marco’s rental.
“Hi,” Finley said as we settled into the backseat. Her lipstick and mascara were smeared.
I recoiled. “Ew, what happened to you? Please don’t tell me you guilt-sucked Marco.”
Finley’s smile faded, and she turned around. “Take us home.”
“Yes, Miss Edson.”
CHAPTER FOUR
Finley waddled into my room, swathed in a plush white robe, holding a box wrapped in thick white paper and a bright teal bow. She flipped on the light and recoiled. The smeared mascara was gone and she looked like her usual gorgeous self, sans the makeup she didn’t need anyway.
She noted Paige naked and prone in my bed, and then joined me on the bench next to the windowsill.
She handed me the box and leaned against the wall. “Open it.”
I did as she asked, pulling at the fussy ribbon and paper, finally getting to the cardboard lid. Inside was another cardboard box. I lifted it, seeing a picture of a camera on the side. “What’s this?”
“Not the most expensive camera for beginners out there, but it’s the best. Or so Google tells me.”
“This was your idea?”
She shrugged. “Marco’s. He mentioned the time you were bored in Maui until you stole his camera. He was really impressed with some of the shots you took. He thought it would be a nice present for you.”
“I barely remember Maui.”
“So a camera is definitely a good idea for you,” she teased.
I removed the lens cap and pressed the power button, configured the few settings I recognized, and pointed the lens at Finley. She held up her hands in front of her face. “Don’t you dare.”
I turned toward Paige, zoomed in on her hand against the wrinkled sheets, and clicked.
The image immediately popped up on the screen, and I turned the camera just enough so Finley could see.
“Marco was right. You’re a natural.”
“Thanks for the camera,” I said. It did feel natural in my hands—something I could hold on to.
Finley nodded toward Paige. “She’s a sweet girl. And God … crazy beautiful. She must have been burned pretty badly to be waking up in your bed. More like tarred and feathered. Poor kid.”
“I know.”
“So, you probably shouldn’t …”
“I know. I’ve warned her.”
“You know that doesn’t work. We don’t get happy endings with people like her. We ruin them.”
I pinched off the cherry of my cigarette, and then tossed the butt out the window to rest with the hundreds of others in the hidden Marlboro cemetery below.
“I don’t know. I’d consider last night a happy ending.”
“I’m serious, Ellie.”
“I know that, too.”
“And so we’re clear, I don’t do guilt blow jobs. That’s your f*cked up talent.”
“I shouldn’t have said that. I was a little messed up. The firefighter kissed me. I was trying to take anyone home but him.”
“The cute one?” When I nodded, her shoulders fell. “Damn it. I wanted him.”
“You did not.”
“I tried to ignore it.”
“Ignore what?” I glanced over at Paige. I could still feel her soft hands all over me, her salty sweetness lingering on my lips.
“That he’s into you. Every time I opened my mouth it was like I was breaking his concentration. He wanted so badly for you to look at him, and you were staring at blueberry muffin over there,” she said, gesturing to Paige.
“I wasn’t her first choice. She’d rather be waking up next to Sugar.”
“Sugar was talking to Zeke about another girl. I got the feeling he’s nursing a broken heart. Paige is better off.” Finley scanned Paige as if she were a dying kitten. “Maybe she’ll be okay.”