Crashed (Mason Brothers 2)
“Let me in.”
“God, you are fucking insane. You never take a hint, do you? Go home.”
I swiped my wet hair back from my face. I was under the overhang of his porch, but I’d gotten soaked on my way across the street. Lightning flashed, followed by a roll of thunder. At one in the morning, there was no one else on the street. “Did you try to kill yourself?” I shouted over the thunder. “Is that what that means? Because I know what that feels like.”
“You don’t know anything about what I feel,” Andrew said. “Not the first fucking thing.”
“I know what it feels like to think you’re worthless. To be lost. To believe that no one could ever want you or love you, that no one will ever love you. To feel like you don’t have anyone in your world and you never will. That you’ll always be alone, and it looks so long and hard that you don’t know what the point of it is.”
“Do you?” Andrew said, his voice raw through the phone. He was angry now, and I welcomed it. It matched my own emotion. “Do you know what it feels like for me to watch you walk out my fucking door every day? To know that some guy is going to come on to you while I sit here, and one day you’re going to say yes? And then you’ll be gone, Tessa. Like everyone else.”
I banged a fist on his door. “Andrew, let me in!”
“No.”
I banged again. “I spent three weeks in a mental hospital when I was seventeen,” I shouted into the phone. “I had a breakdown, okay? I couldn’t handle anything anymore.”
Nineteen
Tessa
* * *
He let me in.
The house was dark. When I closed the front door behind me, the lock clicked. A voice from down the corridor said, “Back here.”
I stepped through the living room to the hall. There was a dim slice of light coming from the bedroom.
I took a step, and my feet squelched. I kicked off my soaked sandals and walked, dripping, down the hall toward the slice of light. I could feel my T-shirt clinging to my body, the ends of my hair dripping water down my neck. I felt heat pulsing through me—adrenaline, embarrassment, lust—and shivers on my skin. I felt terrified and ecstatic and alive.
He hadn’t said anything about what I’d just told him. Not a word. But this was Andrew. He didn’t have to say it. I’m sorry, that’s too bad, I hope you’re okay, have you tried therapy? No. The things people struggled to say would sound ridiculous coming from Andrew. He didn’t have to say a fucking thing.
At the bedroom doorway, I stopped. I was familiar with Andrew’s bedroom, but it looked different tonight. The only light was from a bedside lamp; the blinds were shut. I could hear rain lashing the windows and thunder rolling overhead. Except for the sound of the storm, it was quiet.
Andrew’s chair was pushed to the foot of the bed, empty. Andrew sat on the edge of the bed with the covers pulled back behind him. I’d obviously caught him just as he’d maneuvered himself into bed, getting ready to get under the covers. He was wearing nothing but boxer shorts.
I took a minute to take him in. His shoulders were sleek and muscled, his arms like marble as his hands braced against the bed on either side of his hips. He had a short dusting of dark hair on his chest, over his pectorals and down the perfect line of his stomach. His chest was wide and strong, his abs and his waist perfect. I could even see hard muscles lining the sides of his ribcage.
His thighs were sleek and strong, not bulky. His calves were thin. He was barefoot, his feet resting limply against the bedside rug.
I raised my gaze back to his shoulders, his gorgeous collarbones, and then his face. He had trimmed his beard so it was sleek to his jawline. His dark hair was brushed back from his forehead. His beautiful mouth was set. And his eyes watched me with wariness tinged with hurt and anger and lust.
I knew he’d looked me up and down, just as I had him. I knew my shirt was wet and my nipples were hard, that my chest was rising and falling, that my cheeks were flushed. I liked that he’d seen all of that. I felt naked in front of him anyway.
He was tense as he sat there looking at me, his muscles bunching, his hands gripping the edge of the mattress. Even his knuckles were sexy.
“That was the truth?” he asked me, his voice rough.
He meant the confession I’d just given him. “Yes,” I said.
There was no joking now, no back-and-forth banter. The Andrew who used his wits as a defense, who would say something about how I must be crazy to hang out with him, was gone tonight. There was only this Andrew, who had been pulled out of that twisted car and gone into the darkness, who had put himself back together using the only tools he had. Who was still putting himself back together, day after day.
Lightning flashed through the blinds, and thunder rolled. Still, Andrew’s gaze held mine. “You can’t fix this,” he said in his rough voice, motioning to his legs. “Do you understand that? I’m not a project or a broken piece of furniture. You can’t fix it. I will always be like this. Always. You can’t fix me.”
I nodded. “I can’t fix myself, either,” I said.
“You can,” Andrew replied. “You will. And then you’ll leave.”