Unafraid (Beachwood Bay) (19 page)

Read Unafraid (Beachwood Bay) Online

Authors: Melody Grace

Tags: #Contemporary

By the time the elevator arrives back down in the lobby, I’ve pulled myself together, clenching my jaw to hold in the tears. My phone buzzes with a text.

 

I know you’re kicking butt! Call me when you’re done.

 

I stare at the text, my blood running cold. He doesn’t even realize how completely out of line he was. But why would he? Everything comes so easily to him, he’s never known what it’s like to fail, to be turned away, over and over again. He has no idea. This is my life, my dream, but he thinks he can come waltzing in and fix everything.

I hit ‘delete’ and head outside. Hunter’s truck is still parked out front, but I keep walking, on and on down the city streets, waiting for the desperate ache in my chest to subside. I don’t know where I’m heading, I just know I have to keep moving. And with every step, I fight the treacherous whispers of self-doubt lurking in the back of my mind.

You’re not good enough. You’ll never be good enough.

You’ll never be good enough for him.

 

 

I take the bus back to Beachwood Bay, rejection still thick in my veins. With every mile that rolls by, it hardens into resentment; Maxwell’s dismissive words beating in my skull.

“You either have it or you don’t. And you, my dear, do not.”

I stare out of the window, letting the world outside blur into ribbons of green and brown speeding past. He’s just some pretentious asshole, I tell myself. His opinion doesn’t matter to anyone else. He didn’t even want to give me a shot: he made up his mind about me the minute I stepped through that door, all the amazing designs in the world wouldn’t have changed a thing.

And whose fault is that?

I look up and realize we’re driving through the outskirts of town now. I rub my eyes and focus as I see a familiar turn-off. The road up to Hunter’s ranch.

“Stop the bus!” I yell, before I have a chance to think about it. “This is my stop, right here!”

The bus shudders to a stop and I scramble down, still clutching my useless portfolio. I want to head home and collapse with a drink and a hot bath, but something pushes me on up the winding road towards the ranch. Anger, still coiled tightly in my veins—all my rejection pushed into a sharp point of bitterness.

He had no right to do this to me.

The sun is setting by the time I make it up the hill to the ranch, making the red paint on the barn glow, warm against the dusk light. There are a couple of horses in the paddock, and hay baled outside the stables, but everything is freshly-painted, quiet and still. This is Hunter’s life right here: picture-perfect and serene. I feel a tight clench in my chest, thinking of the places I grew up, just a few miles away. Run-down bungalows with old cars rusting in the yard; the years living out of a trailer park; late-payment warnings like confetti in the hall. He has no idea what I’ve been through, but still, Hunter thinks he can make everything right.

“Brit!”

I hear my name called and look up to find Hunter riding towards me from the fields on a large bay mare. He pulls up the horse and slides down, barely pausing to loop the reins over a fence post before striding towards me. His face is stormy, jaw clenched tight. “Where the hell have you been?” He grips me by both my arms, holding me tight, surprising me with his anger. “I called your cell like a million times. I’ve been worried sick!”

“I shut it off.” I say, trying not to feel a ripple of guilt at his panic.
You don’t owe him anything,
I remind myself.
This is his fault.

“Are you OK?” Hunter demands, his blue eyes blazing down into mine. “What happened? How did you get home?”

“I’m fine.” I wrench away from him. “I took the bus. You shouldn’t have worried.”

Hunter’s mouth drops open. “Of course I worried!” he yells, his voice rising. “I even went back to the office to try and find you, but Alicia said you left ages ago. I was driving around the city for hours, just looking for you!”

“Well, the search is over.” I snap, sarcastic. “I’m here!”

“I don’t understand what’s wrong with you, to just go running off like this. Is this about the interview?” Hunter demands, his blue eyes still dark with anger.

I turn to ice. “What do you know about that?”

“Nothing,” Hunter says, “Alicia just told me it didn’t go so great.”

I give a bitter laugh. “That’s the understatement of the year.”

“So you freak the fuck out and go AWOL?” Hunter’s voice rises. He’s breathing heavy, his whole body taut with tension. “Did you even think about me for a second, what I was imagining? You could have been in an accident, you could have been dead!”

I finally snap. I take a step back, glaring. “This has nothing to do with you!” I yell. “Why can’t you see that? This is my life! I wouldn’t even have been there if it wasn’t for you!”

“What are you talking about?” Hunter looks confused.

“The interview!” I yell. “The whole fucking ambush. You had no right to interfere like that, but you had to try and play the hero!”

“I was trying to help!” Hunter protests.

“Well, I don’t need it,” I shoot back. “I don’t need anything from you!”

“Dammit, Brit, won’t you let me do one thing for you?” His voice rises. “Why do you have to keep everyone at arm’s length like this? Why do you have to make everything so hard?”

There’s a sound behind us. Hunter looks over my head. One of the stable hands is lurking in the doorway of the barn, watching us fight.

Hunter turns back. “Let’s take this inside,” he tells me through a clenched jaw.

“I’m not staying.” I tell him, but he grabs my arm again.

“Just get inside the damn house, Brit!”

Hunter propels me up the steps and into the main house, his hand firm on my arm. I feel a familiar rush of heat at his touch, burning through my shirt, but I pull away the minute we’re inside. I can’t let my body betray me now, not after everything, not with all this violent emotion whirling in me, the anger I know is right.

Hunter doesn’t seem to notice the charge. He ignores me, striding over to the kitchen area, and running water from the faucet. He rinses his hands then bends to duck his whole head under the tap. He stays under for a moment, so I catch my breath and look around the space. Wooden beams, full-length windows, a living area with cracked leather couches, a staircase leading up to the loft bedroom. Rustic and homey, clean lines and wide open spaces. It’s all so damn Hunter, I can’t take it.

What the hell am I even doing here? This is what being impulsive gets me. I wanted to just unload my anger and disappear, but now I’m stranded out here with him. Alone. And he’s looking so damn good. “Take me home now.” I tell him, clenching my hands into fists at my sides. My heart pounds, my body still wired with angry adrenalin.

Hunter finally lifts his head from the sink and turns back to me. “No.”

“Dammit, Hunter—”

“Not until you calm down.” He cuts me off. He pushes his wet hair back, clearly trying to get his temper under control. Water trickles down the planes of his face; his shirt now dark and wet in patches, clinging to his chest.

He’s so fucking beautiful. And he just doesn’t understand.

Hunter takes a ragged breath. “The last time I saw you, we were great, and now you’re spitting mad and screaming at me. The least you can do is tell me why. What happened?” He exhales. “What did they say at the interview?”

I feel a flush of shame. I didn’t want him to see this side of me, the messy fucking failure, but now I’m laid bare, raw and hurting right in front of him. “The same thing everyone’s been telling me, my entire fucking life!” I slam the portfolio down on the rough-hewn table, watching as loose-leaf pages slip out the side. A freeze-frame photograph of all my stupid ambitions.

“I’m a joke,” I tell him, my voice twisting. “He didn’t even look at my stuff for more than a second. Why would he? I’m nothing. It’s all a joke!”

Hunter’s face changes. “Brit, that’s not true!” He moves closer, but I can’t listen to any more of his lies. I grab my sketchbook, the drawings I labored over so carefully, sketching and shading long into the night. I open the book and start ripping, tearing the heavy pages from the seam. “What are you doing?” he cries, reaching for me, but I pull back.

“You didn’t see the way they all looked at me!” I cry, ripping at the book again and throwing the torn piece to the floor. “He’s right, I was stupid, stupid to even think—”

“Brit!”

Hunter grabs me by the arms, crushing me against him.

“Let go of me!” I struggle, trying to push him away, but he holds tight, solid and strong, and I’m trapped in the warmth of his embrace. “Let me go!” I feel a sob rising in me, and I try to bite it back. I can’t be the girl who cries all over the damn place, I’ve got to keep it together, the way I always do.

“Shhh,” Hunter holds me to his chest as I gasp for air. “It’ll be OK, I promise you. I’ll make it OK. Just tell me what to do.”

He’s trying to calm me, I know, but his words are like salt, rubbing raw in my open wounds.

Trusting him is what got me into this mess; believing even for a second I could rely on someone else. “I knew this would happen,” I wrench away. “God, I knew it.”

“This is just one setback,” Hunter promises me. “You’ll see, we can try again, send out more applications—”

“There is no ‘we’!” I yell. “You think I haven’t done this before? Haven’t applied to all these places, tried my hardest to make it work? I’ve been sending out letters for months now. Nobody wants me!”

Hunter catches his breath. “You didn’t tell me.”

“Because I didn’t want to see that look on your face!” My voice twists.

“What look? Brit, what are you talking about?” He’s so confused, he doesn’t even realize.

“That one,” I tell him, feeling it like a punch to my gut. “Right there, in your eyes, when you realize what a mess I am. What a fucking joke.”

“That’s not true, Brit.” Hunter takes a step towards me.

“You said I wasn’t broken,” I accuse him angrily. “That I was perfect.”

“You are!”

“Then why are you trying to fix me?” My shout rings out in the darkening room.

Hunter stares at me, realization dawning in his eyes. “Is that what you think this is about?”

“Do you know what it feels like, being told you’re nothing?” I challenge him. “No, of course you don’t. You’ve never failed at anything in your life.”

Something flashes across Hunter’s face. He clenches his hands into fists at his side. “This isn’t about me. This is you, trying to find some excuse to push me away again.”

My mouth drops open in amazement. How can he try and turn around and put this on me, after everything? “This is all you!” I cry, “Trying to play the hero, to fix the fucked-up girl no-one else can love! And you want to know the worst part?” I demand, “For a moment there, I believed you. I believed in us. I thought we could just put all the bullshit and the real world aside, just be us. Be Susie and Bob, on that beach again. You and me.”

“We can be.” Hunter comes forwards, catching my hands in his. “Listen to me Brit, the things you’re saying, you’ve got it all wrong.”

“No!” I cry, furious at myself for believing in him. I snatch my hands away, even as his touch rolls through me, a glimpse of treacherous sweetness I can’t let myself surrender to.

“This is crazy!” Hunter yells back, his frustration boiling over. “You keep pushing me away. I don’t understand what’s going on in your head.”

“You can’t.” The space between us is a chasm, bigger than he’ll ever know. “You can’t ever understand what it’s like for me. You’re the golden boy, remember?” I look at him, golden and gorgeous even in a damp shirt with water dripping down his face. I shake my head, turning away from his glow. “God, why did you have to be so fucking perfect?”

Hunter’s face changes. “You keep saying that.” His voice is like ice.

“It’s the truth, isn’t it? Your perfect face, and your perfect family, and your perfect life.”

Hunter’s eyes meet mine, so full of bitter fury, I catch my breath. “You want to know what kind of man I really am?” he demands, his voice rasping with tension. He crosses the space between us, grabbing my shoulders. “You want to know the truth?”

“Hunter,” I gasp. His face is dark, like a stranger’s, and his fingers dig painfully into my shoulders. I try to shake loose. “Hunter, you’re hurting me!”

“You keep saying I’m perfect, but it’s all a lie!” His eyes blaze into mine, tortured and bleak. “Every day, I have to pretend. Well, I’m sick of pretending, I can’t do it anymore, not with you!”

“Hunter…”

“Jace is gone,” he confesses, his voice broken.

I gasp.

“He’s dead, Brit, and it’s all my fault.”

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