Falling out of Hate with You: Hate - Love Duet Book One Rowe, Lauren (black books to read TXT) š
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Reed opens and closes his mouth, searching for his response, before finally blurtingāand not convincingly, I might add, āSheās here to do a job, not to get hit on.ā When I raise my eyebrows, conveying my skepticism, Reed adds, āI promised her boss nobody would hit on her.ā
Well, thatās ludicrous. Since when does Reed let anything or anyone get in the way of something, or someone, he wants? Could it be Reed promised Georginaās boss he wouldnāt hit on her, for some reason? Which I suppose is possible, given her age and inexperience and his position of power and reputation as a womanizer. But even then, I canāt imagine Reed would uphold a promise like that for long, if he really wanted Georgina.
I languidly pull a box of cigarettes out of my pocket. I only smoke when Iāve been drinking. And I couldnāt be happier to have a box with me now, given how much Reed notoriously despises cigarettes. Casually, I stick an unlit cigarette between my lips and say, āI think we should let her decide if she wants to get hit on or not.ā
Well, that does it. Reed canāt keep it together another minute. His dark eyes blazing, he points toward the end of the hallway, like heās commanding a misbehaving dog into a doghouse. He shouts, āGo find the other writer! Her name is Zasu. Sheās been assigned to do your interview.ā
I canāt believe my ears. Reed is going to make poor Georgina, a summer intern with stars in her eyes, give up a solo interview with meāone of the hottest commodities on the planet right nowāsolely because, waah, waah, Reed doesnāt want to risk me seducing her?
I say, āGeorgie and I have great chemistry.ā I heard Fishās date call Georgina that nickname earlier tonight, during our ping pong game, so Iām assuming itāll piss Reed off if I use it, too. I add, āWe already have the whole thing figured out.ā
āYouāre doing an interview with Zasu,ā Reed commands vehemently. āItās not a request.ā
I remove my unlit cigarette from my lips, unable to locate my lighter. āYou want Georgina for yourself, donāt you?ā
Bingo. From Reedās facial expression, itās clear Iāve hit the nail on the head.
His voice tight, Reed grits out, āMy motivations donāt matter. The only thing you need to know is the owner of your label is telling you sheās off-limits. Now, go find Zasu.ā
I slip the cigarette back between my lips. āGot a light?ā
āNo!ā Reed booms. He points again, nonverbally ordering me away, and I know Iāve reached the finish lineāthe point where thereās nothing more I can say or do in this passion play. I pull the unlit cigarette out of my mouth again, wink at Reed, and saunter away, but not before tossing over my shoulder, āYouāre too old for her, anyway, man. Sheās only twenty-one.ā
Ha. That ought to sting.
When I re-enter the main room of the party, I discover my friends buckled over with laughter at my performance. I walk toward them, my arms outstretched like, āDid you expect anything less from the master?ā and then, instinctively, glance toward Laila. But, damn, sheās not there. As I look around, I donāt see her anywhere. Did she storm out, too disgusted by my fuckboy display to stick around? Or, worse, did my aggressive flirting with Georgina prompt her to go into a dark corner . . . with Cash?
My heart strumming against my sternum, I look around the large room again, to no avail, suddenly regretting my decision to try to piss her off. Why do I always do shit like this? Why do I always self-sabotage? I thought we were playing a sexy game of āfuck youā with each other. A game of āIām not jealous, youāre jealous!ā You know, lobbing fastballs at each other and daring the other to try to hit it out of the park. But now Iām thinking I miscalculated and totally turned her off.
When I reach my friends, they demand a play-by-play. Which, of course, I give them, eliciting even more raucous laughter, especially from the birthday boy. After a while, Reed comes by and berates me for not following his direct orders and finding Zasu. And so, reluctantly, I leave my friends and take a lap of the massive downstairs area, looking for this Zasu chickāeven though I wouldnāt put it past Reed to send me on a wild goose chase, solely to get me away from Georgina. But, whatever. Whether Zasu actually exists or not, Iām more than happy to take a lap of the party to pretend to look for her, if only to give me a believable excuse to look high and low for the woman Iām actually interested in finding: Little Miss Death Daggers Laila Fitzgerald.
Five
Savage
Would it have killed Reed to describe this mythical Zasu person to me, if it was so damned important to him that I find her? Fucking prick. As Iāve rambled around the packed party, Iāve asked a couple people, half-heartedly, if they know someone named āZasu,ā whoās supposedly a reporter for Rock ānā Roll, and each and every one of them describes Georgina.
āNo, no. Not her,ā I keep saying.
To which they reply, āOh. Then . . . I dunno.ā
Of course, throughout my quest, Iāve kept my eyes peeled for Laila the whole time. So far, no luck. Not knowing what else to do, I head outside to continue my search in Reedās expansive backyard. If Laila is outside with Cash, or, worse, if sheās already left the party with him, Iāll be so pissed at myself. Itās one thing for me to have refrained from hitting on Laila for my best friend in the worldāthe guy whoās more responsible than anyone else for my current lot in life. But as friendly as I am
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