The Note Natalie Wrye (interesting books to read TXT) đ
- Author: Natalie Wrye
Book online «The Note Natalie Wrye (interesting books to read TXT) đ». Author Natalie Wrye
âYou pretend you donât need anyone else. That you have a handle on every single aspect of everything you touch. But truth is? I think itâs a ruse so that you donât have to let anyone in. Because as long as youâre perfect, as long as you pretend not to need anyone, then you donât have depend on anyone else. Rely on anyone else. Trust anyone else. My guess?â Sophia tucks thick strands of her behind her ears. âSomeone close to you betrayed your trust. And youâve tried to pretend you donât have any since.â
âIs that what you think, Miss Somerset?â My stare hardens, the skin across my neck and torso heating and tightening as my subconscious fights against the truth of what Sophia is saying. I incline closer, invading her space.
But this time, her gaze doesnât flit to the floor. It remains stuck on me, and the tensionâthick and dripping wetâreplaces the heaviness that was once in the air.
I lick my drying bottom lip as Sophia crosses her arms. Defying me. Daring me.
My dark brows shoot up and back. âWhat else do you think you know about me?â
I watch her swallow, her amber-emerald eyes flickering between mine. Back and forth.
At this point, weâre inches from each otherâs faces, and I realize that the dilemma Iâd felt earlier is blown to bits. Shattered to smithereens.
Because âsticking itâ to Sophia Somerset for screwing me over is taking on a whole new meaning as I lean in. Slowly. So slowly.
I can feel the quiet puffs of her minty cool breath on my face as I close the distance between us, my gaze dropping to her slightly opened mouth. Suddenly that mouth starts speaking.
âI think that I, uhâŠâ
âThat you what?â I minimize the distance by another inch.
âThat youâŠâ
Another inch. âThat IâŠwhat, Sophia? What? Say it.â
But she canât say it. Not now.
Not when the sound of a small explosion rings out beneath the town car, and the wheels lean at a dangerous angle. Not when the vehicle goes sliding through the slicked New York streets, kicking up slush as we careen towards the sidewalk, the brakes screeching beneath the carriage.
The tires of the town car scream as we head towards a stop sign without slowing.
It takes me several seconds to recognize that the scream is Sophiaâs as I brace for impact.
Chapter 15
SOPHIA
Wednesday afternoon
I thought we were dead.
For a full three seconds as our car lurched towards a wave of crossing traffic, I just knew that our car would be obliterated, smashed to pieces by the slew of cars coming in the other direction.
I didnât think; I just acted.
My arms braced for impact, yes. But more importantly, they braced for impact against him.
Noah.
My fingers found him in the relative dark of the town carâs backseat, and I wrapped my hand around his, squeezing tight as I waited for the car to slow, and my heart with it.
We skid to a halt, hitting the sidewalk, just before coming into contact with horizontal traffic, and a strangled breath left my lips as we slumped against the gray cement of the New York sidewalk, the heavy rain mimicking the sound of my panicked pulse.
The city continued moving around us amidst the hammering showers, and when I finally unclenched, wellâŠeverything, I had a chance to disentangle myself from the suited man who sat beside me, my insides humming from the sheer proximity of his larger-than-life presence.
The driver Caesar curses under his breath, heading out into the rain to check on the tires as Noah and I focus on re-learning how to breathe. Iâm still practicing the art of inhaling when Noah looks down at me.
âI think we blew a tire.â He glances outside briefly. âOr two.â
âBetter a tire than a blood vessel.â My finger brushes over my temple. âI think I almost had a heart attack.â
Noahâs fingers close over mine. âYou know what the cure for almost-heart attack is, donât you?â
I have to admit: I donât. But I know the cure for forgetting about an âalmost-heart attack.â And itâs having a gorgeous Australian man touching you.
Twenty minutes later, soaked to the skin, Noah shows me the cure to âalmost-heart attacksââŠ
Scotch.
At the nearest bar, we decide to wait for a tow company while Caesar idles inside the broken down town car.
The temperature drops, dumping a deluge of white snow down on the city as the Wednesday afternoon fades into evening. Rush hour traffic still rages like a contained chaos outside the Scottish pubâs dark doors, and while the sirens blare in the distance, horns honking under the quickening snowfall, Noah orders me the second taste of scotch Iâve ever had in my life.
The first taste Iâve ever had was with him. Five minutes ago.
Iâm still reeling from his instructions as I hold taste number twoâotherwise known as a dram, an eighth of an ounceâover the bar top.
Noah stares at me. âNow do you remember the rules?â
I nod. âIt starts with the right glass. And the right ice.â I eye the large icefall currently in my Cobita glass.â
Noah grins. âFor most first-timers, they need something to lessen the harshness, ease the burn. But if you want to be a Big Bear, instead of a little one,â His grin grows wider, âyou wonât need the watering down.â
I groan. âIn this case I think Iâd rather be a Little Bear.â
âDonât sell yourself short.â His blue eyes glow under the dim light. âNext rule?â
I raise the glass chin-level, doing as I was told. I take a deep breath, my eyes skimming over the straws and
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