Cannon (A Step Brother Romance #3) (13 page)

"What don't I want, sweet-cheeks?"

"You know," she says.

"Spell it out for me," I say.  I lean against the wall, my hands above her head, intentionally not touching her, because if I lay a hand on her, it's all over.  She'll own me.  So I force my hands against the wall, not moving, and just look at her.  I drink in her scent, and I stand there, paralyzed.  "Because I think you were the one who said
no
.  But if you do..."

"I don't," she says.  Her mouth opens and closes, like she wants to say something else, but doesn't.  She breathes in deeply, and I look at the tops of her breasts in her shirt and want to bury my face in those tits.  Then she clears her throat.  "I don't."  More firmly this time.

"Good," I say.  "Then we're agreed.  Neither of us want anything."

"We're agreed."

"Good," I say.  "Because it's time for dinner with the family and neither of us will be wanting anything inappropriate at a family dinner."

"Crap."

 

FIVE YEARS, FIVE MONTHS AGO

 

"But it's not fair."  Addy drops her fork, and it falls against her plate with a clatter.  "You said that if I finished the tour this year, I could spend senior year at a normal high school, with regular kids."

I cut my steak and stare at my plate, uncertain whether to remain silent or if Addison would get mad at me for defending her.  Or whether I should just go get stoned with my friends.  The last option sounds a hell of a lot better than my current situation.

"You cannot be that naïve, Addison," her mother says, looking at her with contempt.  Addy's mother Wendy – forever known to me as the Wicked Bitch -- doesn't bother to look at me at all.  It's apparently beneath her.  It's beyond me how someone so damn white trash can see anyone as being beneath her, but she somehow manages to convey her contempt for pretty much everyone on a regular basis.  Some people at least make a pretense of being tolerant and kind, and you only find out later that they're assholes.  But not the Wicked Bitch.  She was terrible from the very beginning, so I guess it's right that she ended up with my father.  "I find it hard to believe you're that stupid."

"Yeah, I guess it was naïve to think that I could be happy," Addy says.

"Addison," the Colonel interrupts. 
It's about time,
I think.  My father isn't the best parent, to put it mildly, but at least he has moments of non-assholery.  "One thing that you'll learn in life is personal happiness is overrated."

"That's it?" I ask, not bothering to stifle my bitter laugh.  "Happiness is overrated?  That's your best advice?  For Christ's sake, she's asking to go to public school, not talking about running off to live in a commune.  It's not really that big of a deal."

"Stay out of this, Hendrix," the Colonel warns.

"Or what?"  I ask.  "You'll ship me off to military school again?  Been there, done that,
sir
.  News flash – the military academy doesn't want me back.  So you're shit out of luck.  You're stuck here with me."

"And clearly, you learned nothing from the experience," he says.  He gives me a hard look.  "As much as I prefer the Army, at least the Marines will instill some discipline in you."

I suck in a deep breath and glance at Addy. 
Please don't let her realize what he just said,
I pray silently.  I haven't told her.  I keep meaning to tell her, but then I don't.  It never seems like the right time to give someone that kind of news.  She'll hate me.

Or maybe she won't give a shit,
I think. 
Because she doesn't care and it's all in my head. 
That's my real fear.

Addy turns her head slowly to look at me.  "The Marines," she says flatly.  "What is he talking about?"

"Oh, your stepbrother is joining the Marines," Addy's mother says, dismissing me with a wave of her hand.  "I thought you already knew.  And anyway, I thought you might have another fit about public school.  That's why I found you a private option.  It's not a tutor, before you get all upset.  It's an actual private option for children who have a lifestyle like ours."

I hear Addy's mother speaking, but her words don't sink into my brain.  My head is swimming, and I'm just looking at Addy, who shakes her head slowly at me.  "Addy," I start, as she stands up and throws her napkin down on her barely-touched steak.  "I meant to tell – "

"Fuck you, Hendrix," she says, her voice steady and calm but I can see her eyes brimming with tears.  "Fuck all of you."

"Addison Stone," her mother says.  "That is inappropriate and –"

"Let her go," the Colonel says, his hand on his wife's arm.  "Teenagers and their emotions."

"She's not emotional," I hiss.  "Both of you are just assholes."

"Hendrix Cole," my father bellows.  But his voice gets softer because I'm already walking away, walking after Addy, through the dining room and the hallway.  I look for her in her bedroom and then the music room, even though I know she won't be there.  I find her outside, walking across the yard, her back turned to me.

"Addy," I yell.  She picks up speed when I call to her.

"Leave me alone, Hendrix."

I stomp through the grass, increasingly irritated with my father for dropping that little bombshell about me joining the Marines.  I'm also irritated with myself for not telling her before.  I should have just manned up and told her.  "Addy, come on," I yell.  "Stop and let me catch up."

"I'm not kidding, Hendrix."  But she pauses, because she's at the edge of the property, and there's nowhere else to go beyond the set of trees, except down the ravine.

"Addy."

"Just go."  She's facing away from me, her arms crossed in front of her, and I can't just fucking turn around and walk away.

I come up behind her, pull on her wrist, even though she tries to shrug me off, and I spin her around to face me.  She looks down at the ground beside us, at anything but me.  "I was going to tell you, Addy," I say.  "I just...shit, I didn't know how."

"Why?" she asks, her voice cracking.

"I...just...couldn't come up with the right words, okay?" I say.  "I kept looking for the right time, but it wasn't ever the right time."

"Family dinner was a
perfect
fucking time," she says.  "Hearing it from your dad was just awesome."

"You've been gone, Addy," I say.  "You were on tour and -- "

"You hate the military," she says, shaking her head.  She looks at me with such sadness and disappointment that the ache in the pit of my stomach threatens to gnaw a gaping hole in it a mile wide.  "Why?"

My grip is still tight on her wrist, and I want to grab her other hand.  I can't touch her without wanting her.  "I can't -- "

"Because you hate me more," she says, her jaw clenched.  She's looking up at me, her eyes flashing.  "That's what it is, isn't it?  You've been mad at me ever since the road trip and you hate me for some reason, but you won't tell me and you're going to join the Marines and you can't leave.  You just can't.  And you can't fucking di --"

I know what she's going to say.  She's going to say
die
.  And I won't let her say it.  I bring my mouth crashing down on hers, kissing her with everything I have.  I'm only seventeen, going on eighteen in a few months, so I'm not supposed to have earth-shattering moments.  I might be young, but I know enough about life to know when a moment is different from everything else that's ever happened before, or will likely ever happen in the future.

That's what it's like when I kiss her.

It's cheesy and corny, like some romantic movie, but I swear on my life that everything pauses.  The world stops rotating on its axis, the bullshit parents and record label and adoring fans and stupid friends fade away into the background and it's Addy and I and no one else.

I kiss her like I've never kissed anyone before, and like I know I'll never kiss anyone ever again.

When I pull away from her, I inhale the breath I've been holding, her face in my hands.  Her lips plump and swollen, she speaks, breathless.  "Don't leave."

 

 

PRESENT DAY

 

"Don't you find it strange that they never moved out of this place?"  I ask.  We sit in the driveway in the car as rain pours down on the windshield, runs down the glass in rivulets.

Addy rolls her eyes.  "Why would they?" she asks.  "It was paid for with my record deals.  Who wouldn't want a free mansion?"

"You could sell it," I tell her, as we walk inside.  "Talk to that attorney of yours."

Addy shrugs.  "My mother hasn't been as horrific as she used to be," she says.

"They orchestrated you winding up stuck with me," I note.

"Exactly," she says.  She winks at me, then turns away, walking ahead down the hallway before I can even respond.  So now she likes being stuck with me?

"Mother," Addy says.  The Wicked Bitch greets her with air kisses on the cheeks, like we're in Paris and not Nashville fucking Tennessee.  She makes a move to air kiss me as well, but I hold up my hand and shake my head.

"Hello, Wendy," I say.

"Well, the two of you are late."  That's the extent of the greeting I get before she turns, cocktail in hand.  She's wearing a bright turquoise silk pantsuit and heels like she's hosting a dinner party.  "We're in the dining room already."

"We?"  Addy asks.  "You didn't tell us this would be anyone other than family."  I can hear the irritation in her voice, and I know she's considering walking out of here.

"Oh, don't be ungracious, Addy," her mother says.

The Colonel stands, gesturing toward the people at the table, an older couple and a guy around my age.  The guy stands up, his napkin in hand, and I can see him checking Addy out.  I decide that if I catch him doing that one more time, I'll obviously have to kill him.

"This is Martina and Rudolph Benton, and their son, Tustin," he says.

"We should just do this another time.  We're not really dressed for a dinner or anything," Addy says, looking down at her clothes.  She's wearing black leggings and a long shirt made out of some kind of pink material that shimmers when she moves.  She looks amazing, but then Addy could make a paper bag look like a ten thousand dollar dress.  "Since we didn't know we were coming to anything but a family dinner, Mother."

"Nonsense," the Wicked Bitch says, laughing nervously.  She puts a hand on Addy's back to guide her.  "I thought you could have a seat by Tustin.  You two have a lot in common, actually."

Addy's forehead wrinkles, but she walks slowly around the table to sit down.  And I realized immediately what this is.  It's our parents setting Addy up with this obvious tool, Tustin.  They're pimping her out.  I'm sure they have some kind of agenda, since they only really operate out of self-interest.

I'm so disgusted and enraged by the entire thing that I don't realize I'm the only one standing there, my hands clenched by my side, until my father says, "Hendrix, there's a seat for you right there."

Great.
  My options are to walk the hell out of here and leave Addy with some douchebag my parents are trying to set her up with, or sit across from her at dinner with the douchebag my parents are trying to set her up with, silently seething and swallowing my rage.

Fucking awesome.

Addy gives me a long hard look across the table.  I recognize that look.  It's the you'd-better-not-do-anything look.  I take a sip of water and wink at her. 
Challenge accepted.

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