Sugarlips (Beefcakes Book 2) Katana Collins (win 10 ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Katana Collins
Book online «Sugarlips (Beefcakes Book 2) Katana Collins (win 10 ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Katana Collins
Even my mom had her gaggle of friends in town.
So, it was just me. The lone wolf.
Except I wasnât a wolf. Wolves were alpha and masculine. I was something smaller⊠sweeter. Like a lone⊠otter.
It wasnât that I didnât have friends. I did. I just didnât see them much. With my schedule, it was rare that I had the time or the energy to meet up with people, and through the years, those friendships just⊠waned.
God, that was pathetic. I guess I needed Chloe more than I realized.
âThank you,â I said, my voice far quieter than I intended it to be. âFor beingâŠâ My words faded, but as always, Chloe jumped in to the rescue.
âYour person?â
Her words made my heart kick faster against my breastbone. In fact, I was going to say âfor being here for me,â but I decided not to correct her. Instead, I nodded, repeating, âFor being my person.â But that statement also made a dull sense of loss spread through my stomach. As much as I wanted to believe that to be true, she wasnât mine. Not really. Despite the other night. Despite all my efforts. And even despite the fact that I knew she had feelings for me, too.
I studied her for the length of an inhale. The sky outside the window was fading to a light bruised color; the deep blues and purples of the night edging away as a faint hue of yellow split between the wispy clouds. Yellow light streamed in, cascading over her face and golden hair. For a long moment, I was distracted by the glow of her skin beneath the sunbeam.
She didnât look over, or meet my stare, but kept her hands clenched on the wheel and her eyes straight ahead. I forced my gaze away from her face, but not before catching the pink flush that crawled up her neck, deepening along the tops of her cheeks.
âThat coffeeâs yours,â she said simply, pretending not to notice the way Iâd been staring at her. But I think we both knew better. To my left, waiting for me in the cup holder, was a steaming cup of coffee in one of Chloeâs to-go mugs. âI even added that disgusting pinch of nutmeg you claim is so good.â
I snorted, taking the handle of the cup and bringing the steaming brew to my mouth. It smelled heavenly. âMaybe itâs an acquired taste, but it is good. Youâre just stuck in your ways.â
She hurled a quick scowl in my direction. âAnd youâre not?â
I made a noise with my mouth that resembled a tire losing air. âIâm flexible as hell.â
She barked a laugh and nodded. âYeah, okay.â Chloe stole a quick glance at me as she turned toward 95 South. âSo⊠are you nervous about today?â
I began to shake my head no but stopped myself. I didnât want to lie to Chloe. To put on some false bravado that I was fine; everything was fine. Thatâs the sort of bullshit I might have pulled with other friends in the past, but Chloe and I were different. And that required me changing old, bad habits. It required me opening up more. I took a deep breath and answered honestly. âNervous isnât the right word. Iâm confident the surgery will go wellâmastectomies are pretty common. Iâm more nervous for what comes next. Wondering if the surgery will work overall and get Mom into remissionâ
I skimmed the tip of my finger over the plastic lid and dipped it into the pool of warm coffee that settled in the seam.
âDid the surgeon say what the rate of success is with this kind of surgery?â
I shrugged. âItâs good. But theyâre careful about their statistics. They donât want to give false hope, and cancer is a tricky bitch. They thought the chemo and radiation was going to be enough to send her into remission initiallyâand yet, here we are.â
Weâd been so hopeful when her chemo ended; she was looking and feeling so good⊠better than weâd seen her in months. Maybe we just got too cocky. It was a real kick in the gut when her scans didnât come back clear.
âHow soon after surgery will they know if sheâs in remission?â
âIt takes a few weeks.â
More waiting. More wondering. More silent stress that will loom like an imminent rain cloud over my family while we all pretend we arenât on the precipice of a potential hurricane.
âCan I ask you a personal question?â I asked.
âOf course,â she answered simply, as though there wasnât even a question of her hiding her vulnerability. It was one of the many beautiful aspects about Chloe. She wore her heartâas well as everything elseâon her sleeve.
âDo you miss Dan?â That question had been plaguing me, burning in me. Anytime he came up in conversation, Chloe would either spit his name or change topics really quickly.
If I wasnât mistaken, her grip on the wheel tightened, and for half a second, I thought I had screwed up by asking that.
âSometimes,â she said after a pause. âBut then⊠I donât think itâs actually Dan that I miss. I miss having someone to wake up beside. Someone who held my hand and took me out for cocktails. Someone to go to parties with. Someone to cook forâŠâ
âYou? Cook?â I joked.
Her laugh was a balm, soothing in an otherwise raw moment.
Biting her bottom lip, she smacked the backs of her knuckles against my arm. âHey! Anyone can make a casserole!â She continued her thought. âAnyway, I think I miss being in a
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