Read Addicted: A Bad Boy Stepbrother Romance Online
Authors: Lauren Landish
After several furtive whispers, the other judges, except for Gabe, got up and began walking out.
April turned on me when they were gone, her eyes furious. “What the hell was that?” she demanded. “All you’re going to do is get Vicky into trouble with a stunt like that.”
I shrugged. “That wasn’t my intention. I just need five minutes with her. Five minutes.”
April scowled. “And that makes it right?” she growled. “You need to go and never come—” She paused and stared at me suspiciously. “Wait a minute. How did you know that Victoria would even be here? She doesn’t usually work the judging panel.”
I gave her a crooked grin. “I have my ways.”
“Ugh!” April snarled. “You are so infuriating! I see why Victoria would get so pissed off when talking about you.” April placed her hands on her hips. “Look, it’s obvious your little stunt didn’t work. So you’d better just head on out. I don’t know what Christine will do about this, but I hope she puts your nuts in a vice. You need to be taught a lesson.”
I shook my head. "I'm not leaving until I talk to her. At this point, I don’t care what happens.”
"I was hoping I wouldn't have to do this," April sighed. She made a flipping motion with her hand. "Gabe, please get security."
Gabe looked reluctant. “Why don’t we just . . .”
"Gabe!" April cracked. "Now!"
"Alright!" whined Gabe, slowly getting up. "Don't get your panties all in a bunch."
He made it couple of steps before I said sternly, "Wait."
Gabe paused, turning around to regard me, his eyebrow raised.
"Hear me out," I said to April. "Just let me tell
you
my side of the story and I'll leave."
April pursed her lips, undecided.
“Five minutes,” I urged. "I just want Victoria to know that I . . .” A lump appeared in my throat, making it difficult to speak. "That I love her," I finally managed. It was hard to say it. I’d been thinking it for a long time, but my words were carefully chosen. I knew it would give April pause.
Shock etched across April's face at my announcement, exactly what I was hoping for. Even I was surprised by it. It felt very strange to have those words come out of my mouth, especially after I'd sworn to never fall in love with a girl again.
“Wow,” April gulped. “I was almost convinced. But not quite.”
“Go on,” Gabe persuaded. “That can’t be all?”
“Gee, thanks for your support,” I muttered.
Gabe winked.
“Promise me that if I don’t like what you have to say, you’ll put an end to this and never bother Victoria again.”
I grinned. “Promise.”
April stared at me suspiciously for a long time before letting out a huge sigh. "Fine, but make it quick."
H
ow dare
he show up like that?
I thought, standing before the large window of Christine’s office with my arms crossed and looking out at the darkening skyline.
After I’d run from the auditioning room, crying my eyes out, I made it back to the top floor, locking myself in Christine’s office. There I felt safe, away from everyone. I'd gotten myself together and resumed my duties, working to try to forget what happened.
Still, there'd been a part of me that wanted to run back down and confront Tyler just as fast as I’d run out, to call him the scum of the earth, a lying bastard. It took all of my discipline, repeating an empowering litany over and over in my head, to stay put.
No, I was better off without him in my life.
A knock on the wall jolted me back from thought. "Hey Miss Boss Lady!"
April walked into the office, a concerned look on her face.
"Hey," I replied. I hadn't seen April since I ran from the auditioning room, and I wondered if she was mad at me. "How'd everything go?"
April walked over and set some papers down on Christine's desk and sighed. "Awful. I had to call off the rest of the audition. It's being rescheduled for tomorrow. I've already called Christine and confirmed. She was angry about it, but I think she has too much on her plate right now to worry about it. That is, as long as everything gets taken care of tomorrow.” April twisted one of her side ponytails around her index finger, looking thoughtful. "Something about Patty White is giving her an ulcer."
I know all about it
, I thought.
"What about Tyler?" I asked. I hated how eager I sounded.
April stopped fooling with her hair and looked at me. "I sent him away."
"Did you have to call security?" For some reason that was important to me. I liked the idea of Tyler fighting with security guards and getting thrown out on his ass. It would show his cocky ass right.
April shook her head. "No, he left on his own."
"Oh." I sounded so disappointed.
April walked over to stand next to me and placed a hand on my shoulder, looking me directly in the eyes. "Are you okay?" she asked with concern.
For a moment, I thought about lying, but then I thought better of it. Since my ordeal with Tyler, April had been a great friend. She only wanted what was best for me.
"At first I wasn’t,” I replied. "I cried and cried, but then I slowly pulled it together." I sniffed. "Someone had to do the work around here."
"That's good," April said softly. "But I have a question."
"Huh?"
"Did you ever give Tyler a chance to explain why that girl was there that day?”
I scowled. "No, why should I? The skank was holding his dick while he was half-naked. What is there to explain? That she wasn't real? That I was having delusions? Please, April." I thought it was odd that April, who'd been the very one condemning Tyler, was asking if I'd given him a chance to explain his lies to me.
April studied me, understanding in her eyes. "Sometimes, Vicky, things aren't what they seem."
I glowered. "What the hell is that supposed to mean?"
Instead of answering, April turned toward the window. "It sure is a beautiful view at dusk," she murmured appreciatively.
Doesn’t beat the view from Tyler's office
, I thought.
"It is," I admitted, wondering what April’s deal was. "A beautiful view and an ugly day."
"It wasn't that bad."
Are you kidding me?
I turned away and walked over to Christine's desk, ready to go home. April was suddenly acting too weird for me. "It's time to get out of here.” I paused, looking around the desk to make sure Christine’s things were exactly how she liked them.
"Hey, April."
"What's up?"
"Can you tell Gabe to bring Christine's
White Book
before you go? He came by here a bit ago, asking to borrow it. I want everything to be where it’s supposed to be when Christine gets here. She'll have a fit if it isn't here in the morning," I said.
April turned to regard me, a twinkle in her eye. "Sure. I'll send him up as soon as I track him down." She walked toward the office doorway but stopped to ask, "Do you need anything?"
Okay, now I really know she's acting weird.
I crossed my arms. "No. Just that book. Now,” I said with my best Christine impression.
April saluted me with a laugh. "Right on it, Boss."
I gagged. “Gross.”
Leaving a peal of laughter in her wake, April left the office, practically skipping out.
"Weirdo," I muttered when she was gone.
While killing time for Gabe, I went about tidying up Christine's office, making sure nothing was out of place. Christine was a neat freak, and if she came back with so much as a pen out of place, I was sure I'd never hear the end of it.
I still couldn't believe that she'd let me run her office for a day. Me, the girl she'd practically tortured since coming to work for her. Me, the girl who thought she was doomed to be a slave for Christine for most of her adult life, only to be tossed to the wayside when she wasn't needed.
But things were beginning to change. Christine started treating me with at least a hint of respect, and she obviously had enough faith in me to give me this opportunity.
All in all, I thought I did a good job if not for the disaster in the audition room, even if I was practically an answering machine.
"C'mon, Gabe, where are you?" I muttered, glancing at Christine's antique clock on the wall. I was already here later than normal. The sun had sunk behind the horizon, leaving a darkened skyline twinkling with lights.
Sighing in frustration, I sat down at Christine's desk and called Gabe's extension. I didn't know why he was taking so damn long. He worked several floors below me, but he still should've been burning wheels to get that book back to me. He was usually the first one out the door every day.
The phone rang several times before his answering machine picked up. "This is Gabriel, your fashion divanista. I'll get back to you guys whenever I feel like it . . . BITCHES!"
Beep.
I swear to God, he only had that message somehow specifically for me. There’s no way he’d survived working for Christine that long with a voicemail like that. “Gabe, what the hell are you doing?" I demanded. "I'm ready to go home. Why aren't you here yet? You know who’s going to be killed when Christine comes back in tomorrow morning looking for . . .”
"This?" asked a deep voice at the doorway.
I looked up and my heart jumped in my chest.
Tyler.
Again
.
He was standing in the doorway, this time with clothes on, a tux, no less, holding Christine's
White Book
in his hands. Five o’clock shadow shaded his jaw as he grinned at me with his enigmatic eyes.
I swear on my life, he never looked more hot and sexy than in that moment.
What the hell did he do between now and the last time I saw him?
I wondered, awed that he would show up looking so formal just for me.
"What—" I began.
"Am I doing here?" Tyler finished for me.
It felt like the cat had my tongue. I nodded.
"I've come to see you, what else?” He said, as if it was plainly obvious. "And to bring you this book." Keeping his eyes on me, he swaggered over to Christine's desk and set the book down before me.
April must have known about this . . . that’s why she was acting so differently.
"At your service, Madame," Tyler said dutifully, treating me to a majestic bow. His charm was powerful; it always had been.
Don’t fall for his antics and let him prey on your emotions
, that annoying voice urged.
Get him out of here.
Gathering all the mental strength that I had at my command, I shot to my feet, stabbing a finger at the door. "Get out!" I shouted. Though I tried to sound as threatening as possible, I actually sounded frightened.
Tyler didn't budge, his eyes still twinkling, unfazed by my barely-there wrath. "You sure about that?"
“I’m positive!” I hissed, trembling all over. "You're a cheating scumbag and you don’t deserve me!”
Tyler's grin evaporated and he looked at me with surprising anger. "I never cheated on you," he growled. "I swear on my life."
“You may not have, because I happened to catch you, but you were about to!”
"What you saw was one moment," Tyler said calmly. "You have no idea what happened before that."
Why am I even listening to this?
I wondered.
"Will you calm down and let me explain without freaking out?" Tyler pleaded, a gentle tone in his voice that made me feel like mush inside. "I promise you’ll understand better once I'm done. And if you still don't want to talk to me when it's over, I'll leave and you'll never have to hear from me again."
For some reason, the thought of never hearing from him again really bothered me, even though I'd spent the last several months avoiding him at all costs.
Maybe I should just listen
, I thought,
if only to see how ridiculous his lie is going to be.
I bit my lower lip, deep in thought while Tyler gazed at me with an earnestness that I found surprising.
Screw it. Just give him a chance to explain himself and be done with it.
"Go ahead then," I said finally, crossing my arms across my chest and sticking my nose up at the ceiling in a snobby manner. "For all the good it will do you."
Tyler let out a relieved sigh. "Thank you, Vicky."
It was the first time he'd called me
Vicky
. I had to admit, it sounded good to my ears.
Then he began telling me about what happened after I left him. How his ex-girlfriend suddenly showed up and demanded re-entry to his life and how she'd forced herself on him after he demanded that she leave.
"And you walked into the room right as she grabbed me," Tyler said as he finished his tale. "I was about to forcefully remove her, but then I thought better of it. I didn't want her to accuse me of something, she’s the biggest gold digger I’ve ever known, after all. I was in thought about how to handle the situation, and she took advantage of it. That’s the God’s honest truth.”
I stood there for a long while, mulling Tyler's story over in my head. For all my suspicion about his being a player, his story sure sounded genuine. His tone sounded genuine. Not one word he said sounded like a lie. But then again, that’s what he was known for, a honey tongue.
"And she's the one who caused me to lose my faith in relationships to begin with,” Tyler continued. “Trust me when I say that I’d never allow her in my life again. I tell you now, I've never been hurt by much of anything, even when my parents divorced. But what she did . . .” He shook his head, his eyes haunted. "It fucking destroyed me, probably because I’d allowed myself to grow such a huge ego that I never thought something like that would happen to me. I gave her everything . . . all of me . . . and still it wasn't enough. I know what it feels like to be cheated on, and I would never do that to you.”
It was hardly fathomable to me. What kind of girl would cheat on Tyler Locklin? He had everything. I mean, he was young, good looking, rich.
And he’s good in bed
, said the voice in my head.
"So when you hear about me being a player, it was all because I was acting out my pain. I’m quite certain none of those girls ever had any inclination that I was interested in them beyond that first night. In a way, I was protecting myself. I’d put a barrier up, and I refused to let anyone get through it. That is, until you came along.”
I could tell it was difficult for him to get the words out. I'd never seen him so conflicted by his emotions before . . . and I liked it. It was nice knowing that he was capable of it.
"What about that crap about my lips when I was getting your measurements? I started out no different than any of the other girls you’ve discarded,” I demanded.
Tyler cleared his throat, feigning embarrassment. "That was just me being me. Besides, it was before I knew you." He chuckled at me, winking. "But I gotta’ say, I was absolutely right.”
"Asshole!"
“Relax, I’m just kidding. Kind of.”
I scowled. "Not funny. Not funny at all."
"Yeah it is, you just don’t want to admit." He turned serious. "Do you believe me?"
For once that voice in my mind was silent, a good sign.
"Maybe," I said coyly. "But what happened to your ex? Am I just supposed to believe she left and never came back?"
"She did come back," Tyler admitted.
I tensed up, feeling anger rise up in my throat.
"But she left when she got what she wanted," Tyler added quickly, seeing my dark scowl.
"Which was?"
"Money."
"Are you serious?" I demanded.
Tyler looked helpless. "It was a quick fix, I admit. I had enough shit going on, and I just wanted the problem to go away. She’ll probably be back, but we can cross that bridge when we get there.”
A ping of sympathy went through me, seeing the earnestness in his eyes, the pain. He really was telling the truth.
"I believe you," I said, not bothering to ask how much he’d had to pay her to go away. I suppose it really didn’t matter, and I figured the number would piss me off and we'd be back at square one.
Tyler let out an audible sigh, his expression one of relief.
"But that doesn't mean I'm just ready to start right back where we left off," I was quick to add.
It would take some time to adjust to the idea that we were back on again, especially spending the last few months hating him.
I have to make him suffer a little,
I thought.
I went through a lot of mental anguish during the time I was avoiding him . . . even if some of it was my fault for not giving him the time of day to explain what actually happened.
"Of course," Tyler said diplomatically. "I wouldn't expect you to be.”
Uh huh.
I glowered at how he was agreeing with anything I said. I thought I’d test him, see if he was even listening to what I was saying. “And I want five hundred thousand dollars."