Authors: Piper Vaughn
Michelle was cool, no doubt about it, but she
wasn’t my Rue… even if he
had
just laughed at me
for five minutes straight.
“I don’t know,” I said honestly. I’d been
thinking about it since I’d walked out of Archer
and Asher’s apartment the night before, and I still
didn’t have a clue, only more and more questions.
The biggest one being: did Asher actually want me
too? Was he feeling the same things I did
whenever I looked at him?
“What do you
want
to do?” Rue asked,
picking up his own glass of wine and swirling the
contents. “If you could pick one of them without
any consequences, who would you pick?”
“Asher.” The answer flew from my lips
without a moment’s pause. I groaned helplessly.
“But I don’t even know him, Rues. I don’t know if
he feels the same way. Maybe I’m going nuts.
Maybe I imagined all of those weird feelings. I’ve
never had that happen before. What if it’s some
crazy fluke?”
Rue shrugged a shoulder and reached up to
brush black and pink bangs from his forehead.
“Only one way to find out. If you want Asher,
maybe you should go for it.”
“But what about the fact that I’ve been sort of
seeing his brother? I mean, he caught me making
out with Archer on their couch.”
“‘Sort of seeing’ is a
lot
different than
actually dating, Dustball. You and Archer haven’t
had sex. You didn’t make any commitments to each
other. And from what you’ve told me, well, he
kinda sounds like a prick.”
“
Rue
.”
“I know, I know.” Rue waved his hand. “I’m
trying not to be judgmental since I haven’t even
met the guy… but last time I didn’t like a guy you
were dating, it turned out he was abusing you. So
maybe I’m a little protective now. You’re my best
friend. I can’t help it.”
“Archer isn’t Gary, though. He might be a
little, I don’t know, arrogant, maybe. But he
doesn’t seem like the type of guy who would ever
hit me.”
“I bet you thought that same thing about Gary
at the beginning.”
I sighed softly, frustrated. I knew Rue
worried about me. I knew it’d made him angry that
I hadn’t confided in him when Gary first started
smacking me around. But Gary was on the other
side of the country and probably still behind bars,
and there was no way I would ever let another guy
do that to me again.
No way.
“Seriously, Rue? Can
we not? I’m tired of talking about him.”
Rue reached across the table and squeezed
my hand. “Sorry, Dust. I’m being dumb. I have no
proof this Archer guy is anything like Gary. He
does seem kind of conceited, though. Just… be
careful, okay?”
After a moment, I squeezed his hand back and
gave him a little smile. “I will.”
“ARE you sure you don’t want to go over to New
Grounds? They have good food too.”
Lane glanced sideways at me, his expression
puzzled. “But we’re already here. What’s wrong
with The Banana Leaf? I’m dying for their turkey
pesto.”
“Oh… no, nothing’s wrong. I just like the
coffee at New Grounds better.” I forced my most
casual smile. “It’s fine. I can grab a latte after
work.”
I reached out and pulled the door open,
leading the way into the café. Honestly, I preferred
the coffee at The Banana Leaf to New Grounds, but
I’d been planning to avoid the place for a while on
the off chance that Archer or Asher might be there.
I wasn’t sure if I was ready to see either one of
them just yet, even after a couple of days of silence
from Archer. I didn’t particularly feel like sharing
that bit of info with Lane, though. Guess it served
me right for agreeing to go to dinner with him. I
knew he never wanted to go anywhere else, but I’d
unthinkingly said yes while distracted by a client,
and afterward I’d felt too bad to tell him I’d
changed my mind.
As Lane placed his order, I looked around the
café on the pretense of searching for a table. When
I didn’t see a sign of either twin, I breathed a sigh
of relief. Okay. Potential awkwardness averted.
What were the chances, anyway? I’d seen them a
handful of times, but I’d been to The Banana Leaf
dozens of others without running into them there.
The odds were definitely in my favor. So why was
I feeling so nervous?
It didn’t take long for my question to be
answered. It seemed to go right along with my luck
in general that he would show up the one time I
wasn’t desperately wishing for him to be there.
I felt him the moment he walked in. Sounds
strange, I know, but it was true all the same. I was
halfway into my Greek salad when I sensed a
change in the air, a tingle, a sudden rush of
awareness. I glanced across the café, unsurprised
to see Asher settling into one of the booths that
lined the front windows. And I knew it was him
without even a flicker of doubt.
He hadn’t noticed me yet, but it was a small
place. I sat there, breath held, expecting him to
look up any minute, hoping whatever it was that
had alerted me to his presence would do the same
for him. Anxious or not, I wanted his eyes on me. I
wanted to see his face when he realized I was
there.
No matter how hard I stared, though, he didn’t
even look my way. He sat there toying with his
phone, completely oblivious, until a tall, skinny
redhead entered the café and approached his table.
Asher smiled and stood long enough to accept her
hug and kiss on the cheek. My stomach tensed, but I
kept watching anyway. I couldn’t say why. Maybe
I had a previously undiscovered penchant for self-
torture.
“What is it?” Lane asked. “Dusty?”
His voice snapped me out of the daze I’d
slipped into. I blinked in surprise. “Huh?”
Lane glanced over his shoulder, following the
direction I’d been staring in. “Oh,” he said. “That
guy. Didn’t you talk to him the other week? I know
he may be hot, but he is
such
a man-slut. Seriously,
I’ve heard some stuff about him. Suffice it to say,
you rarely see him with the same person twice.
Men, women, doesn’t matter. He gets around.”
I swallowed hard, trying to fight down the
stupid, achy lump in my throat.
Oh, God, why am I
getting so worked up over a complete stranger?
I
didn’t have an answer for that question, but it was
true all the same. My palms grew damp with
sweat. A wave of queasiness washed over me,
startling in its intensity.
Jesus. He’s not even my
boyfriend. Why does it matter if he’s here with
some girl?
I didn’t know why. But it did matter. It did.
“I’ll be right back.” I slid off my seat without
waiting for Lane to respond, carefully avoiding the
section of the café where Asher was seated as I
made my way to the restroom.
Once there, I splashed a bit of water on my
face, thankful I’d skipped putting on any makeup
before leaving home that morning. I patted my face
dry with a couple of paper towels and leaned
heavily against the sink.
Pull yourself together,
Dusty. Pull it together.
I couldn’t understand what was going on with
me. I’d never felt anything like this for any other
guy, not even Gary, who at a little over a year had
been my longest relationship. At one time, in the
beginning, things had been great between us. But
even then, the feelings I’d had for him paled in
comparison to the longing I felt for Asher.
I’d heard it said once that desire only turned
into yearning when there was pain involved.
Without the hurt, it was only want. I’d wanted
before. I’d wanted Erik, once upon a time, but not
like this. What I felt for Asher, it was yearning. I’d
never said a word to him. He’d barely even
touched me. But I couldn’t describe the feeling any
other way.
“I’m so screwed,” I said to my reflection.
“Totally screwed.” My mirror-self stared back at
me but didn’t have any advice. Sighing, I turned
toward the door, only to have to dodge sideways
when it suddenly flew inward.
“Oh, sorry, I didn’t mean to—”
Asher’s voice died midsentence, and we
stared at each for an eternal, silent moment before
I regained my composure and started to go around
him.
“Wait,” he said, his hand shooting out to
grasp my upper arm. His fingers were gentle, his
grip light enough that I could have broken free if
I’d wanted to.
I couldn’t bring myself to move. In fact, I
barely stopped myself from shuddering at his
touch. It was everything I remembered from the
last time.
“Look,” he murmured, his brown eyes
searching my face. “I know we don’t know each
other at all, but you seem like a sweet guy. If
you’re looking for commitment, you won’t get it
from Archer. My brother, he… he doesn’t do
relationships, okay?”
I blinked up at him. Of all the things I’d
imagined him saying to me, a warning about his
brother was nowhere on the list. I shrugged off his
hand and stepped back. It was obvious that
everything I’d been feeling was entirely one-sided.
He wasn’t looking at me with desire or anything
even close to longing. At best he looked mildly
concerned. It irritated me more than I thought
possible.
“We’re not serious,” I snapped. “I’ve only
been out with him twice. But it’s not like you have
much room to talk, is it? Can’t the same be said
about you?”
Asher’s brows drew together in obvious
confusion. “What do you mean?”
“I’ve heard about your reputation,” I told him.
“Isn’t what you do just as bad?”
For a second, Asher looked startled. Then
something flashed across his face—sadness,
disappointment, I couldn’t say what exactly. All I
knew was it made my stomach hurt to see it.
“Yeah,” he said, his voice a little harder. “Well,
sometimes you do what you have to.”
I didn’t know what to make of that, but before
I could say anything, he reached into his pocket
and withdrew a slim leather wallet. He pulled an
embossed card from inside and pressed it into my
hand. “Here. Just take it… in case you ever need
anything.”
When my fingers curled around the card,
accepting it, he nodded briefly and brushed past
me.
I remembered Lane, who was waiting for me
out in the dining area and probably wondering if
I’d drowned in the toilet or something. I forced my
legs into action and left the restroom, heading back
to my table without really paying attention to
where I was going. My eyes were focused on the
card. There were only three things on it: a phone
number, an e-mail address, and his name, Asher
Kyriakides. No job title, no business information. I
didn’t know what to make of it, or of him, but our
encounter had left me more than a little unsettled. I
had a feeling I’d messed up, hurt him somehow,
though I couldn’t say why. Somehow, deep down, I
knew it was true.
I groaned inwardly and shook my head.
Way
to blow it, Dusty. Good job.
Asher
I FELT like shit. I felt judged and dirty and, well,
like shit. There weren’t too many other ways to
describe the way my stomach twisted every time I
thought about it. The most recent encounter with
Dusty hadn’t been sitting well for days. So he
wasn’t
really
with Archer. As far as I knew they
were only playing around, but somehow Dusty
knew about the porn. Archer’s dumb ass had
probably told him, and that was enough for him not
to want to be with me either—at least if I could
guess by the judgmental look on his face back at
the café. And that kind of annoyed me. Well, it
hurt, because for the few brief moments of our
acquaintance, I thought I could see myself with
him, but hurt had turned into annoyance and had me