Authors: Piper Vaughn
laptop, but I shoved it out of the way with my head
so I could nuzzle up under his tank top and kiss his
belly.
Dusty giggled. “Hey. That tickles.” He did
that thing with his fingers in my hair that I loved so
much, tugging just a little bit but mostly just
touching. I burrowed my face right into his body
and let him play with my hair for a long time. It
was one of my favorite things.
“Dust?” I finally said quietly.
“Yeah?” He curled over and kissed the top of
my head.
“I’m really sorry for the past few weeks. I
know I wasn’t in the best mood, and I took it out on
you a lot.”
“Not really. Believe me, I know what that
feels like, and this wasn’t it. You were just going
through a rough patch.”
“I just wanted everything to stay perfect
between us, you know?”
Dusty gave me a smile that was halfway
between adoring and pitying. “There is no perfect.
You know that. Reality was sure to intrude
sometime.”
“I know. I just didn’t want it to happen to
us
.”
He put his laptop aside and scooted down
until we were curled up in our customary ball
together. “We’re fine, okay? I love you.”
“I love you too.” I remembered then, that the
entire world didn’t revolve around me. Dusty had
been looking rather intently at his laptop when I’d
come in. “What were you doing? I’m sorry I
interrupted you.”
He shrugged. “I’m not sure what I’m doing.
I… well, this stuff with Archer kind of reminded
me of my sister. She’s not like Archer, at least she
wasn’t. But she’s in college now. I kind of
wonder, you know? What things could be like. I
just didn’t want to bring it up to you with all that’s
been going on.”
I felt awful. Dusty was always putting me and
us before everything. “This is nothing like me and
Arch. You know I’ll help you find her if you want.
Or not, if you decide you’re not up to it. Either
one. I just want to help.”
Dusty nodded. “I did look on Facebook. I
found her, but I’m not sure what to do next. She
could hate the idea of me for all I know.”
“Is she still living at home?”
Dusty shook his head.
“No. I guess she goes to school in Florida.
It’s more likely that she’ll want to talk to me that
way. Mom and Dad aren’t breathing so hard down
her neck.”
“Well, you know where she is, right?” I
rubbed his back. “Think about it. Decide what you
want to do. I don’t think there’s any rush.”
“Yeah. I’ll think about it.” Dusty reached
down and pulled his plaid comforter over us. I
snuggled him into my arms and kissed his
forehead, his nose, and his lips.
I hoped Dusty got his happy ending with his
sister. I doubted I’d have one with my own sibling.
At that point, I just wanted to put the whole thing
behind me for a long, long time.
Chapter Twenty
Dusty
OVER a month had passed since the weekend of
Archer’s first scene, and two weeks since Asher
had given the collection agency his very last
payment. Sure, his credit would be damaged for a
while, but there was no helping that. All things
considered, the situation had ended up much better
than any of us had thought it would. Aside from
wishing it had never happened in the first place,
we couldn’t ask for much more.
We’d heard from Dom that Archer had
become a rather hot commodity since his debut in
the porn world. Asher had seemed kind of
horrified when he’d told me about it, but I wasn’t
entirely surprised. Archer’s weaknesses were
drugs, money, and sex. I imagined he would love a
job where he could combine any of those things.
Asher hadn’t spoken to Archer directly in
weeks. After that first shoot, Archer had asked
Dom to pass the money along to Asher until his
debt was paid in full. I didn’t think Asher minded,
really, though I knew he would have liked to talk
to Archer himself. He wanted to make sure his
brother was okay, and I respected that. But Archer
had made it clear he had no interest in
communicating. It was sad, but, well, there wasn’t
anything Asher could do aside from accept it.
Our relationship was back to normal, and
stronger with the proof that we could withstand
just about anything. We made love, hung out with
Rue, Erik, and our other friends, and just enjoyed
each other, the way we would have been doing if
we hadn’t discovered Archer’s deception. It was
actually a blessing that we had, I supposed. If that
account had gone unpaid, we might not have found
out until someone showed up on our doorstep with
papers telling Asher he was being sued for the
balance. I couldn’t even conceive of the amount of
stress that would have come from that.
As for me, I’d been waffling about whether or
not to call my sister for days. I’d programmed her
number into my phone after finding it on her
Facebook profile, and I’d come so close to doing
it. So very close. But every time I tried, I wimped
out at the last second.
I didn’t know what was holding me back.
Well… I did know, actually. It was fear. I had no
idea if she wanted to hear from me. If she did,
wouldn’t she have attempted to contact me by
now? And if she didn’t, would it be better not to
know? To just keep thinking “maybe.” Maybe one
day. Someday.
But, no. I’d talked to Asher. I’d talked to Rue,
and even Michelle. They all agreed—even if we
couldn’t have a relationship anymore, at least I
would have tried. I wouldn’t have to go on
wondering forever.
So there I was. Asher had just left for a shoot,
and I was locked in our bedroom, sitting in the
middle of our bed with my phone in hand. Her
number was pulled up on the screen. The only
thing left was to push “call.”
Finally, after days, weeks, of hesitating, I did
it.
Each ring seemed longer than the last. When
they stopped abruptly and I heard “Hello?” at the
other end of the line, I almost dropped the phone in
shock.
I scrambled to catch it and gripped it so hard
my fingers nearly went numb. “Mandy?”
“Yes?”
“It’s Dusty,” I said. “Dustin. Um… your
brother.”
“Dusty?” she repeated. “Oh, my God.”
There were so many emotions in her voice it
took me a few seconds to sift through them all.
Surprise was there. Definitely. Disbelief? Yeah,
some of that too. And under that… joy?
“I can’t believe this,” she went on. “How are
you?
Where
are you? Still in California?”
I blinked, taken aback. “Yeah, I… I’m in
West Hollywood. How… how are you?”
“I’m great. Now that you’ve called me, I’m
better than great. I thought I might never talk to you
again.”
I barely knew how to reply to that. “You
wanted to hear from me?” I asked. There was no
way I could keep the shock out of my tone.
“Of course,” she answered. “I went to The
Bean before I left Wilmington. Craig told me you’d
moved and gave me your number, but I… I’d been
wanting to call for a while, but, well… Mom and
Dad told me you didn’t want to talk to us anymore.
They said when you left, you told them not to
contact you, that you didn’t want anything to do
with us.”
For a long moment I couldn’t even find it in
me to speak. They’d told her that
I’d
left? That
I
hadn’t wanted anything to do with them? How
could they? How could they do that?
I was stunned, and right after that, I got angry.
Why was I surprised? I shouldn’t have put it past
them to do something like that. I should have
suspected they would. All these years, and my
sister had thought
I
was the one who’d walked
away?
My eyes filled with tears, and I reached up to
rub furiously at my cheeks when they spilled over.
“Dusty?” Mandy’s voice was timid. “I’m
sorry. Did I say something wrong?”
“No,” I forced out. I had that ache in my
throat, the one I got right before I usually lost
control and started sobbing. I tried to fight it back.
“I’m just… I’m just so….”
“They lied, didn’t they?” she asked when I
trailed off. “You didn’t leave. Not on your own.
They
made
you leave… right?”
I hesitated, not sure how to answer. My
relationship with my parents was ruined, spoiled
beyond repair. There would never be any getting it
back. But they loved her. They always had. During
the time I’d lived with them, they’d treated her
well. I didn’t know if I wanted to say something
that could cause drama between them, even with
all the wrong they had done me. It wasn’t that I felt
I owed them anything, not my protection, not any
loyalty. And yet… I couldn’t bring myself to say
the words.
When I didn’t respond, Mandy sighed softly.
“I thought so. I should have gone with my gut and
called you. I was worried you wouldn’t want to
hear from me. Now I realize what a moron I’ve
been.”
Instinct made me shake my head. “No. You’re
not
a moron. They’re your parents. You believed
them. There’s no shame in that.” I gave a low,
bitter laugh. “Why would you think they’d lie?
Why would you assume they were telling you
anything but the truth?”
“Because you’re my Dusty Bear,” she said
simply. “You would have never left me without
saying good-bye. I shouldn’t have believed you
would.”
I couldn’t help it. I cried then. And Mandy,
she stayed on the line through it all. She cried with
me, and listened, and when I calmed myself down,
we talked… and talked… and talked some more.
By the time we got off the phone two hours later,
we’d made plans for her to come visit me during
the summer. She would have almost three months,
and it wouldn’t be very long from now until I
could get her onto a plane and into my arms.
I was already planning for all the things we’d
do together, the conversations we would have. My
heart was filled to bursting with excitement and
elation. Finally,
finally
after all these years I
would get to see her.
I bounced up off the bed, practically floating.
Asher would be home soon, I knew. I couldn’t
wait to tell him. With the way I was feeling, I’d
probably jump him the moment he walked in the
door.
I went into the bathroom to take a shower.
Then I would get ready for dinner. And when
Asher got home? We were going to celebrate.
Asher
I WALKED into an apartment that smelled like
something amazing was cooking. Not unusual any
longer, but still very much appreciated. Dusty
came around the corner from our little kitchen into
the living room with an apron tied around his waist
and a big smile.
“Hey, you.”
Oh, I know that greeting.
The “hey, you”
with a big, kinda sly smile? It always meant good
things.
“Whatcha cookin’?” I snaked my arms around
Dusty’s waist and bent for a long hello kiss.
“A celebration dinner.” He didn’t say