Read Enamor (Hearts of Stone #3) Online
Authors: Veronica Larsen
My line of sight lifts to my closed door. Standing up, I straighten my posture and march out of my bedroom, down the hall, and into the kitchen. I'm ready to look Giles in the eyes. Because big fucking deal, right? He saw me naked. Well, you're welcome, asshole. Hope you got a nice long look, because it's all you'll ever get.
But Giles isn't in the kitchen.
I keep myself cool and collected, preparing my own breakfast and expecting him to enter the room at any moment. He doesn't. Ava does, though.
She walks in from the hall, half dragging her feet along the floor, still clinging to sleep.
With effort, I pull a smile to my lips. "Wow. I was starting to wonder if you even really lived here."
She gives me a halfhearted smile, reaching into the cabinet for instant oatmeal. "I know, I know. I'm never around. I'm sorry. It's been a crazy week. I'm trying to get as many hours in now that finals are over. I barely have time to breathe."
"No worries," I say with a shrug.
She watches me for a few seconds, her expression softening. "I feel kind of guilty."
"Why?"
"I mean, we're the only two girls here and I've just left you out in the cold."
"I'm a big girl."
Again, she eyes me with intense curiosity.
"Are you and Giles getting along? Has he serenaded you yet?"
"Serenaded me?"
She raises an eyebrow. "It was his lame way of seducing girls when we were in high school. He'd sing to them. He's got a pretty good voice, actually."
I laugh, unable to imagine Giles singing. "I've been spared of any serenades, thankfully. And we have yet to murder each other, so I guess it could be worse."
"Don't let him get to you. He likes to play with boundaries."
Play with boundaries? This phrase catches my interest, but I mask this by rifling through one of the kitchen drawers.
"Do you like him?" Ava asks. I tilt my head as though not understanding her meaning and she amends her question. "Are you two screwing already?"
"What?
No.
" My face crinkles in disgust a bit too dramatically. "No way. He's an asshole. I mean, no offense because he's your cousin and all. But a huge, huge asshole."
Ava laughs and I somehow know it's not at what I've said but at how I said it. My own reaction brings warmth to my face.
"He's not really that bad. But yeah, don't get too comfortable, either."
Her friendliness falls short of bridging the awkwardness of us still being strangers. Despite being roommates, for the past week I've seen her maybe three times, always headed out of the door.
"And…your mom?" I ask, taking my plate of food to the table as she follows close behind with her own.
I'm not sure how to ask, but I know I should. It's not something I should ignore; it's the giant elephant hanging off her shoulders.
Ava settles in her seat across from me, avoiding my eyes for a moment. "She's,
uh
, she's okay. Still not good, but not worse."
I nod, noting her vagueness as a reluctance to speak on the subject. My stomach ties in knots as I eat my breakfast, unable to control where my thoughts go. An awful part of me wonders if her mother is even really sick. I know this is a horrible thing to think, but when someone you barely know has shown a proclivity to being untruthful, it casts a shadow of doubt over her as a whole. One lie has the power to taint a thousand truths.
Don't get me wrong. I like Ava, I really do. She's friendly and welcoming, and my gut tells me her intentions are good. My conscience, on the other hand, weighs heavy with a warning to not get too close.
The people you meet aren't simply good or bad. There's a whole lot of gray; layers upon layers that sometimes don't even match each other.
"Did you invite anyone to the party tonight?" she asks, after a lull.
"I didn't. I work late tonight and…well, I don't really know anyone I want to invite."
Ava eyes me as she eats.
"What?" I prompt.
"Nothing, it's just…I don't know. You act like you're only here temporarily. Like you're trying not to set down roots."
I don't know how to respond to that. Actually, I do. I want to say,
what do you know
? We've had, like, three full-blown conversations and two of them were before I even moved in. But there's something keen about her gaze that gives me pause, making me wonder if she's one of those people who just sees more than others. Some people are intuitive that way, seeing things you haven't even showed them. Things you wouldn't even know were there to begin with.
"I've been busy," I say. "Haven't had a lot of time to meet people or hang out."
"Well, you'll have lots of choices for hanging out tonight." She winks at me and the smile that pulls at my lips is mechanical. Her glance flickers to the neckline of my t-shirt before she adds, "Show off those boobs a little, girl. They're fantastic."
CHAPTER EIGHT
Julia
I
T
'
S
RARE
I
WORK
a truly busy night at Callistro's Bar and Grill. I'm still technically the new bartender and the two existing ones have established their own schedules. But every once in a while, like tonight, I score a Friday closing shift for one reason or another. The restaurant is abuzz with activity. Finals week is officially over and it seems that everyone is in a celebratory mood. The dining room full, patrons opt to sit in the bar area, which includes half a dozen, circular tables skirting the bar.
"If one more person asks me where the
C
in my name went…," Derik says from beside me, his threat hanging in the way he trails off.
I'm focused on punching in an order on the screen. His nametag isn't what gets him attention; it's his faint, but still discernible, German accent, prompting customers to ask where he's from. Inevitably, what follows is an array of questions that derail his mission to serve the other intoxicated people demanding more alcohol as though it's time sensitive medication.
"I don't understand why I get all the chatterboxes and you don't."
"It's your eyebrows," I offer. "You've got friendly eyebrows."
They do have that upward tilt, as if he's about to ask a question. Derik's tall and lanky, his kind face inviting of conversation with strangers.
He shoots me a sideways look and grabs a pair of glasses from under the bar. I get busy making a few drinks, Derik and I work around each other like synchronized swimmers despite the area behind the bar being relatively small.
"Jules?"
I freeze at the sound of the nickname that no one here calls me. Three guys settle in at the bar, only one of them I recognize.
"Steven." His name comes out in choked surprised. And while he's smiling widely, I can't pretend I'm even remotely happy to see him.
I don't like Steven Franklin. Never have. He's Andrew's best friend, but I've always seen him as a snake. And now this snake slithered all the way from Newport Beach in Orange County to my restaurant, in University Village, San Diego. What are the fucking odds?
"Well, well. What a surprise. I heard you moved down here." His slimy gaze drags down my body, a faint smile still on his lips.
The other two guys are standing near him, no room for them to sit. They are caught up in their own conversation, but Steven slaps one of their arms and nods to me. The guy turns distractedly, thick eyebrows raised in question, until he focuses on me with a sense of recognition. I've never seen this guy before. Ever. But he's seen me. My stomach tightens because I know the most likely way that could be the case.
"Remember her?" Steven asks.
The guy looks a hair embarrassed by the question, scratching his nose before nodding.
"Can we get three beers, dark ale, whatever you have on tap?" the third guy asks, obviously oblivious.
I turn and grab the glasses, dreading the fact that the beer taps are on their side of the bar. From my peripheral, I watch as Steven leans into the third guy and says something in his ear.
"Get the fuck out of here," the guy says. "Show me."
My fingers grow numb and I nearly drop the first glass of beer as I set it on the counter in front of them. I rush to fill the other two glasses, wanting desperately to abandon this side of the bar for a few seconds so that I can gather myself again. But when I set the rest of their drinks down, not one of them looks at me. Steven has pulled out his phone and they are huddled around it. Even through the clinking of glasses and silverware, the hum of chatter and laughter, the sound coming from his phone speakers reaches me.
Moaning.
Me
moaning.
The sounds trail from Steven's phone speakers and wrap around my neck, squeezing hard until I can't breathe.
I should snatch the phone from him. I should slam it straight into his face and crush his nose underneath it. But what floods me isn't the anger I need to do just that. It's mortification so potent it planted me to the spot. Like the tiled floors have sprouted roots that bind me all the way up to my knees. All the while the room seems to swell, then churn, fixing my focus to the three guys in front of me, watching, with wide-eyed fascination as I lose my virginity to a camera I had no idea was sitting on a bookshelf.
My lips part as I try to speak and my eyes burn furiously as I hear my ex-boyfriend, calling me sweetheart and urging me along.
"Julia?" Lex's voice pulls me back, bringing with it all the noises around me.
Concern etched on her face, she follows the spot my gaze just left, and the male groans must reach her too, because her reaction is immediate, snatching the phone from Steven's grip.
"Are you watching por—" She cuts off when she catches sight of the screen. Jaw suddenly lax, she glares at the three guys. Then without breaking eye contact with Steven, she says to me, "Julia, we need you in the back. Go."
My legs move again, on their own, as I make a beeline for the kitchen doors and rush past Derik, furious with myself for the hot tears now rolling down my cheeks.
CHAPTER NINE