Do Anything

Read Do Anything Online

Authors: Wendy Owens

Table of Contents

 

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Chapter Thirty-Four

Chapter Thirty-Five

Chapter Thirty-Six

Chapter Thirty-Seven

Epilogue

Acknowledgements

About the Author

It Matters To Me

Do Anything

Copyright © 2014 by Wendy Owens

 

Cover design by Regina Wamba of Mae I Design

Interior book design by Stacey Blake, Self Publishing Editing Service

Editing services provided by Madison Seidler of MadisonSeidler.com

Proofreading provided by JS Nelson Editing

 

Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted, in any form without the prior written permission of the author of this book.

 

This book is a pure work of fiction. The names, characters, or any other content within is a product of the author’s imagination. The author acknowledges the use of actual bands and restaurants within this work of fiction. The owners of these various products in this novel have been used without permission and should not be viewed as any sort of sponsorship on their part.

 

Dedicated to the man in my life who would Do Anything for me. I love you Joshua.

 

As the rain falls on the metal roof, I stare, my head cocked back sharply in the chair I am slouching in, and watch as the droplets gather together in the ridges of the skylights, veining outward across the glass. I’m not sure how long I’ve been sitting here; it seems time has lost meaning in recent days. I run my fingers over the tan line on my finger. I don’t need to look at it because the place where the ring had been has become an obsession. I’ve tried everything to lighten it. I scrubbed it with soap, and I even tried bleaching the area in hopes it would fade, even slightly. All it did was give me a headache and leave my skin dry and irritated.

I hear Kenzie running around my apartment frantically, rambling on about something or other, but I tuned her out at least twenty minutes ago. Don’t get me wrong—I’m not sure where I’d be without her. She is the one person who has been there for me through all of the drama; it’s just that sometimes she can go over the top with the pep talks. A girl can only hear ’you need to get back up on that horse,’ or ’there are plenty more fish in the sea,’ so many times before she wants to physically remove her ears from her head.

On the other hand, when I told my parents what happened, they expressed what a shame it was and how much they liked Jack. Leave it to them to point out the strong qualities of a man who pulled my heart out of my chest cavity before stomping it into a thousand pieces.

I know they had undeniably truthful arguments, but even though there were a lot of amazing qualities about Jack, there were some things that couldn’t ever be undone. I met him during college; I was a freshman and he was a senior. He had the greatest smile I’d ever seen. You know, one of those where the teeth are so perfect and white that you can’t imagine they’re natural, but then there was a slight lift on one corner of his mouth that made it all come together perfectly. He came from a prominent political family, and I couldn’t believe out of all the girls on campus, he noticed me. It really is such a cliché when you think about it.

He was smart and funny; he always knew what to say in a crowd of people. I’d preferred the characters in my books to the real thing. People made me nervous—they always had. But not Jack, and I never had to worry about other people, because I always had him.

When we met, I wasn’t looking for a boyfriend, but that didn’t matter to him. He had been so suave about it, too. I didn’t even know his name, but one day, while reading at the campus cafe, he came over and asked, “Should we meet there, or do you prefer I pick you up?”

“Excuse me?” I’d asked.

“This Friday, at six … oh, I mean, I assumed you would be going.”

I had peered at him, quite puzzled, but he didn’t miss a beat. “You must have me confused with someone else,” I assured him.

He looked around the cafe, then pressed his finger against the book I’d been holding. “Nope, you’re the only girl around here I see reading a Jonathan Franzen novel.”

“What?” I remember my voice had cracked slightly when I spoke.

“He’ll be signing at the campus library this weekend, and I assumed you were a fan given what you’re reading. But hey, if you don’t want to go, I guess I can go by myself.”

“Are you serious?”

“About Franzen or the date?” That was the first time I saw that sly and captivating smile from him, that lip that curled at the edges. I wanted to climb into the tiny ridges around his lips and stay nestled there for an eternity.

I squeeze my eyes shut tightly, wishing I could erase the memory from my mind somehow. Jack wasn’t someone you could just forget, though. I didn’t even want a boyfriend, yet after only three dates I was certain I was going to marry him one day. He popped the question at my graduation last year. Life had seemed so perfect in that moment. Jack could be very romantic, but he was also the practical type. I liked that about him. He wanted to finish law school before we took the leap, and now with his bar exam right around the corner, the wedding plans had moved full steam ahead.

While I love romance novels, I wasn’t the little girl who had always dreamed of her wedding day and what it would be like. In fact, the details of the actual day concerned me very little. I just wanted to get through the event and move on with our lives together. I didn’t have any family here in Chicago, so Kenzie took care of a lot of the planning. My mother, who lived in Ohio, didn’t seem to mind either. This was not surprising, considering we had never been what you would call close.

Had Kenzie not been planning the wedding for me, I’m not sure I would have ever discovered Jack’s dirty little secret. Would I have been at our apartment when he didn’t expect me to be, had she not sent me home from the office in the middle of a workday to pick up the measurements for the bridesmaid dresses? I’d forgotten the paper on the counter that morning, and despite several attempts at calling Jack to request he bring them to me, I found myself begrudgingly making the trek home. To think, had I not, I may have never known about Jack’s study sessions. He was supposed to be cramming for the bar, but instead I discovered him in our bed, cramming himself into our across-the-hall neighbor, a blonde bombshell who looked like a Swedish super model. I can still hear the sounds of them going at it.

The only thing I have in common with the woman is our long hair. Hers was a pale yellow in color with a silken texture, while mine is wavy and coarse with deep chestnut tones. Her skin was tanned while mine is pale; her eyes blue, mine brown; her features slight all the way down to her slender nose, while a round ball sat at the tip of mine. I’m not ugly, and I’ve never thought of myself that way. Well, not until I saw this naked goddess in my bed. That moment had definitely been a solid blow to my self-esteem.

I think I handled it well. Okay, no, I didn’t handle it well at all. When I first walked into the condo I heard them. Initially I thought an intruder was lurking around our place, and my heart had begun to race. Quickly, I realized exactly what type of noises I was hearing, so I then thought I had walked into the wrong apartment. Somehow, in that moment, it was making sense in my mind … that my key had fit into someone else’s lock and worked. I never said I was thinking rationally. Then I saw a picture on a side table—the one of Kenzie and me during our vacation to Mexico senior year.

It was confirmed that this was my apartment, these were my things, and whoever was making those noises was in my bedroom.
What would Jack do when he found out someone was using our apartment to have random stranger sex?
When I walked into the room I wasn’t exactly quiet, but neither were they, so I went unnoticed. I just stood there, watching. Honestly, I still have no idea why I watched. It was a horrific display, like two wild animals pawing at each other, but I was helpless, a captive prisoner, forced to stare at the sweaty primal union.

The next part is where I like to gloss over the details when I tell people about what happened. I’m pretty sure most people would have started shouting and screaming at their cheating partner, or perhaps just turn and leave.
Oh God, why didn’t I just leave?
I walked up to the edge of our bed, the entire time thinking about completely pointless details, like how that bed was the first thing we had purchased together in our relationship. I suppose I was hoping one of them would notice me and stop the appalling display. And luckily, Jack did see me, eventually. He rolled off Elsa, or whatever the hell her name was, and started screaming at me.

I’m not sure what he was saying, but knowing Jack, he was probably making excuses. I couldn’t hear him because I was busy regurgitating the burrito I’d had for lunch on the way over to the apartment. Not only did I vomit, but I managed to spray it all over the bed, thoroughly dousing Jack and his Swedish Barbie. It was at that point I turned and ran out of the apartment, not looking back. I can still remember their faces; it’s one of the few things that gives me satisfaction when I think back on the horrific memory. As embarrassing as it is to vomit on someone, I can’t imagine it being nearly as traumatizing as being the recipient of the discharge.

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