Excerpt:On the surface, Lila Summers is flawless: good looks, expensive clothes, and a big, beautiful smile. But a dark past and even darker secrets are threatening to bubble over her perfect façade. She'll do anything to keep the emptiness inside hidden—which leads her into situations that always end badly. Whenever she hits bottom, there's only one person who's there to pull her out: Ethan Gregory.
Ethan set the rules a long time ago: he and Lila are just friends. He doesn't do relationships. Although his tattooed, bad boy exterior is a far cry from Lila's pretty princess image, Ethan can't deny they have a deeper connection than he's used to. If he's not careful, he could be in serious danger of becoming attached-and he's learned the hard way that attachment only leads to heartbreak.
When Lila falls farther than she ever has before, can Ethan continue to help as a friend? Or is he also getting close to falling . . . for her?
“Why is
this bothering you so much?”
“It’s
not,” she snaps, turning her back to me. “I was just wondering why. That’s
all.”
I stare
at the back of her head as she rests her chin on her knees, staring out at the
desert land. “It seems like you’re bothered,” I point out.
Her
shoulders lift and descend as she shrugs. “If you leave, then I’ll be alone.”
She mutters it so quietly I can barely hear her.
I’m
silent for a while, unsure what to say or if there’s anything I can say—want to
say. “You can come with me.” It slips out and I want to smack myself on the
head. Taking her with me would defeat the purpose of escaping the noise and
people, yet at the same time I know I’d miss her if I left her behind.
She
glances over her shoulder with skepticism on her face. “Could you imagine me
living in your truck, because I sure as heck can’t.”
“Why
not?” Again, what the hell is wrong with my mouth? Why can’t I just let it go?
She’s giving me such an easy out to a huge commitment I shouldn’t be taking.
“Because.”
“That’s
the silliest reason I’ve ever heard.”
“Because
I don’t understand why anyone would want to take off from a city where you have
everything at hand and live in a truck where you have nothing but a backseat.
It’s pretty much like being homeless.”
I kneel
behind her, inching close to her, then hesitantly place my hand on her
shoulder. “Shut your eyes.”
She
leans away, like I’m scaring her. “Why? ”
“Because
I’m going to prove what’s so awesome about my idea.” I wait for her to do what
I ask and she stubbornly drags it on for longer than necessary, then finally
surrenders and turns
around.
“Fine.”
Her voice softens a little. “Show me what’s so great about a backseat.”
“There’s
a lot of great things about a backseat,” I joke in a low voice, and then dip my
lips toward her ear and whisper, “Now shut your eyes.”
I expect
her to argue, but she very willingly obeys, shutting her eyes the second I
utter the words. I shut mine, too, but only because being so close to her,
breathing in her scent, feeling the warmth emitting from her body is driving my
body into a frenzy.
“Now
picture nothing but mountains,” I say softly, picturing it myself. “No city. No
noise. No crazy-ass parents who act like children and treat their children like
shit. No nothing. Just the quiet.”
“It
seems like an awfully lonely place, if you ask me,” she tells me. “Just me and
the dirt and the quiet. Although I wouldn’t mind the being without the parents
part.”
“You
wouldn’t be completely alone.” I sweep her head to the side and rest my chin on
her shoulder. “You’d be with me.”
She
pauses for an eternity and her breathing is ragged. Or maybe it’s mine. “What
would we do at this mountain place together?” she says.
“Anything
we wanted.”
“Hike?”
There’s disdain in her voice.
“Maybe,”
I say. “Or maybe we’d just sit and enjoy each other’s company in the quiet.”
She
shifts her weight and situates her hands underneath her legs, leaning back
against my chest. “That kind of sounds nice.”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
As
strange as it is, and as much of a pain in the ass asLila
can be, I can actually picture us sitting together up on the mountains in the
noiselessness, living in my truck, driving anywhere and everywhere. Together.
And the comfort in the idea is kind of frightening because it means I’m
thinking about
our future. Together. Shit.
I think
about moving away from her, putting a little space between us because obviously
I’m heading down a road I shouldn’t be headed down. The dream of living on the
road has always been one I’d planned to live out alone and now suddenly I’m
telling Lila she should come with me. God knows
what would happen between us if we
lived in a truck with one another. We’d either grow really close or end up
hating each other. Or maybe both. But I can’t bring myself to move and break
the peaceful moment. So instead I sit down and wrap my legs and arms around her
and we just sit there in the sun,
enjoying each other in the quiet.
About Jessica Sorensen:
Jessica Sorensen is a #1 New York Times and USA Today bestselling author who lives with her husband and three kids in Idaho. When she's not writing, she spends her time reading and hanging out with her family.Social Media Links:Buy Links:
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