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Resist: Bad Boy Romantic Suspense

Page 2

by Violet Paige


  “I should have warned you about all the concrete.” I heard a tinge of regret in her voice.

  “I’ll be ok in a week,” I added.

  She twisted her bottom lip under her teeth. Even with a funny expression on her face she was still pretty. Greer was one of those girls who could leave the house without makeup and her skin always looked flawless. She had bright olive skin and long dark hair.

  “I have a way to help you forget about your swollen blistered feet.”

  I looked down at them. “They are horrible aren’t they?”

  “Yeah, but I want to take you out for drinks.”

  “Drinks? As in I have to walk down three flights of stairs?”

  She sat next to me. “Yes. But I’ll call an Uber. No metro walking.” Her eyebrows arched.

  “I don’t know if I’m up for celebrating. I’m exhausted, and my head is about to explode from all the human resources meetings I had to go to today. I think it’s worse for lawyers. They think we’re all going to sue each other.” I smirked.

  “You don’t even want to know what I went through when I was moved to the senate committee. Background checks. Family investigation. Special security clearance. It was insane. I’m surprised I didn’t have to sign away the rights to my first-born.”

  “Did you read the fine print?” I joked. “Maybe you did.”

  She sighed. “There is nothing funny at the Armed Services Committee. This job drains me.”

  “I’m sorry.” I could see the look of exhaustion on her face.

  “This is not about me. Come on, get up. If you stay here, we’ll never get out. We have to celebrate your first day at work. Your first few days in D.C. Your new life. All of that stuff.”

  I groaned. “Can we celebrate tomorrow when my feet aren’t threatening to disown me?”

  “No.” She shoved me. “Since you’ve been here we’ve had pizza one night. Chinese the other and last night I didn’t even make it home to eat, so I have no idea what you had. Sorry. You deserve a proper welcome.” She paused. “Hurry up and change. We’re leaving in fifteen minutes.”

  “You’re a really pushy roommate. You know that?” I placed one foot on the floor, testing the tenderness.

  “You have always loved being my roommate.” She winked.

  “Loved is past tense,” I teased her. “We haven’t lived together in five years.”

  She shrugged. “Get dressed.”

  I still hadn’t unpacked all of my clothes. There were boxes scattered on the floor. I thought about a short blue sundress I wanted to wear, but I wasn’t sure I could find it. I started ripping tape and rummaging through the stacks.

  It was folded at the bottom of one of the piles. I held it in front of me. I remembered the days in college when Greer and I would swap clothes. I didn’t realize how much I missed it until I was standing in front of the mirror holding my blue dress.

  I knew it wasn’t the same. We weren’t the same girls we were back then. We had careers now. Greer had Preston. Life had been sweet and ugly since we graduated from college.

  I unfolded the belt from my waist and pulled the dress over my head.

  “Hey, Greer. I need to get in the shower,” I called from the doorway. “Give me ten minutes.”

  There was no way I was going out with the day still clinging to me.

  I quickly rinsed off and slid into the blue sundress. It felt good to have something clean on that didn’t smell like coffee. I shook my hair out and let it fall around my shoulders in golden waves. Good thing the beach hair look was still in.

  Somewhere in this room was a cute bag that matched this dress, but I didn’t feel like excavating again.

  I walked in the living room. “Do you have a purse I can borrow? I don’t have the energy to unpack.”

  Greer sat on the couch, flipping through a magazine. “Sure. I have a straw one that would be cute.”

  She returned from her room holding a waffle cut hemp bag. “Thanks.”

  And for a second it felt as if we were twenty-two again. We weren’t in Washington D.C., focused on careers and making a difference in the world. We were two girls getting ready to go out for the night to have some drinks. Maybe hit a mixer at the Sigma Nu house.

  She put an arm around me. “Preston’s going to meet us in about an hour.”

  “Oh? I didn’t know he was coming.” I tried to hide the disappointment in my voice.

  “He said he wanted to buy you a drink and congratulate you on your first day in person.”

  She locked the door behind us as I surveyed the staircase. If only I could shimmy down the banister.

  “That’s sweet.” I mustered the words.

  It wasn’t that I didn’t like Preston. I did. He was nice, but that was the only word I could think of to describe him. I didn’t get what it was about him that made Greer so giddy. I didn’t see the spark. I didn’t see any fire between them.

  He was okay to hang out with, but he had a knack for making me feel like the third wheel. He reminded me I was the single one in the group. He knew things about my best friend I didn’t. While I had been working my ass off in a law firm, Preston had been here with Greer. He knew the details about her I used to know.

  We made it to the first landing. “Yeah, he wants to get to know you better too. I told him I thought it was a good idea. You’re okay with it, right?” Greer babbled on.

  “Oh, of course,” I lied. I hoped I would get one girls’ night. I had seen Preston every one of my three days here.

  By the time we reached the bottom of the building I was wincing in pain. I swore I would never wear those damn heels again.

  “Let me get the car,” Greer offered. She darted ahead of me and ran toward the street.

  Luckily, we were in a busy part of the neighborhood and there was an Uber around the block. We waited less than two minutes. I hobbled to the sidewalk and slid into the backseat.

  She tapped my knee. “Don’t worry, a few drinks in and you won’t even care about your feet.”

  I grinned. “I don’t know if D.C. has that much liquor, but we can certainly try.”

  Chapter Two

  Greer always knew the best places to go. It was some kind of innate ability she had. I called it party radar in college, but now it had matured into something else. We walked inside the bar and I looked at her.

  “This place is amazing.”

  She grinned. “It’s the most popular spot in Georgetown. It’s only been open for six months, but it’s my favorite place to go for drinks. When I get out,” she added.

  I don’t know if I was expecting her to take me to one of those stuffy political bars where her work friends went and the only thing you saw people drink was dark bourbon and whiskey, but this felt soothing, calming even.

  We were escorted to a table and slid onto white leather seats.

  “Don’t freak out when you see how much the drinks are,” she warned. “This isn’t New Bern. You can’t get a Cosmo for less than twenty dollars.”

  I had already experienced an entire day of feeling like an outsider. I didn’t need to cap the night off the same way. At least I had her now to give me the insider tips.

  “Got it.” I nodded. I kept my eyes poised not to widen at the prices when I opened the menu.

  “This is on me,” she announced. “We have so much to celebrate.”

  The offer was generous, but I was uncomfortable letting her pay for pricey drinks. She was the reason I was here. She was the one constant I had in my life no matter what. She was the friend who offered to split an apartment and show me the ropes to a new city. I didn’t want to point out the huge gap in our salaries. There was no way she could afford this.

  “Then I’ll take a Cosmo.” I folded the drink menu.

  “Me too.” She smiled. “Like old times.”

  A waitress walked up to our table. “Are you two ready?”

  Greer placed our order and we waited for the drinks to arrive.

  “I want to hear
all about your first day. Everything. How was the clinic?” She leaned on the tabletop with her elbows.

  I moved back when the waitress placed the cosmos in front of us. “It was mainly HR stuff all day and introductions. Tons of paperwork. There’s not much to tell.”

  “Did you get any cases? Any students?”

  I shook my head. “No, I think cases tomorrow and then students start next week. At least I have a few days to get my bearings before I have to start teaching. Right now I have more questions than answers. I’m not the best mentor. How can I teach when I can’t find my way around and clearly have no idea what shoes to wear?” I joked, but it didn’t feel light.

  I took a sip of the vodka drink. It was refreshing with the twist of lemon floating on top.

  “But you said you wanted to teach.” Greer looked puzzled. “That’s the career move, right? You wanted to use law in a different way.”

  “I do. But everything’s so overwhelming. You should have seen me this morning. I wore those stupid shoes that basically broke every bone in my feet. I almost took the wrong metro. I spilled coffee on the campus shuttle, and I couldn’t find the clinic. I went to three others before I wound up at the women’s center.”

  “Oh.” She pulled the glass to her lips. “That’s a rough start. I’m sorry. It’s only your first day here. It’s going to get better.”

  I sighed. “It is. But D.C. moves faster than I’m used to. Maybe I’m not cut out for this. I sound like the country mouse has moved in with the city mouse.” The reference made me giggle.

  “Hey, don’t say that. You graduated top of your law class. You’ve been at one of the best law firms in New Bern. You know law. You can do this, Elliot. You’re going through the same stuff we all went through when we moved here. It takes time.”

  I bit my lip. “I know. I know, but it was a shitty day. I wanted it to be empowering. I wanted the kind of day that would tell me I made the right decision. That I left New Bern for a good reason.”

  “You mean one that would tell that you left Garrett for a good reason.” She eyed me.

  The guilt clinched the sides of my lungs.

  “He needs me. He always has. They all do.” I could feel myself sinking back into the old routine of blame and anger. It was what I knew. How I functioned.

  “Your parents can take care of your brother. You need to be here, moving ahead with your own life. You have one of the most prestigious law residencies in the country, with the chance to teach at American. Do you know how fucking awesome that is?”

  Her eyes lit up. She would have made a great cheerleader.

  I smiled. “I do. And I’m glad you pushed me in this direction. I am.” I didn’t want to turn this night into a counseling session about my family, or my career. I wanted Greer’s enthusiasm to be contagious. I wanted to catch it. I needed it to be part of my new start.

  Our waitress reappeared. “Sorry, to bother you two but the guys at the bar sent these drinks over.” She lowered two more Cosmos in front of us.

  I looked at Greer as her head whipped over her shoulder. “Wow, they’re cute.”

  The guys were hunched over a couple pints of beer. Their ties were loosened at the neck and their sleeves rolled up. I couldn’t tell one from the other.

  “Greer!”

  She shrugged. “What? They are. They don’t need to know I’m taken, and you aren’t in the market.”

  I shot her a puzzled look. Her words irked me. I never said I wasn’t in the market. Of course there wasn’t a worse time to meet someone. My family was back at home in shambles. I still had unpacked boxes in my bedroom. I didn’t know my way around the city. I had no idea where the grocery store was. I hadn’t worked one full day at the clinic yet. I wasn’t in a great position to date anyone.

  But I was used to this. Whenever we went out in college, guys always bought Greer drinks. It was standard. It wasn’t that I wasn’t pretty. I knew I was attractive, but next to her I faded into the background. She was stunning. She had a way of looking up from the corner of her eyes that men found irresistible.

  She brushed her dark bangs to the side. “Tell them we said thank you,” she reported to the waitress.

  “And what do you tell Preston when he shows up?” I hadn’t forgotten he would be here any second.

  “He will be glad he doesn’t have to pay forty dollars to buy us drinks.” She giggled.

  I held up my glass and we clinked the rims. “Cheers to that.”

  “Enough about my shitty day. How was yours?” I asked. I didn’t want the conversation to drift back to my family. “What big bad stuff is happening with the senate committee?”

  She rolled her eyes. “It might seem like being a research analyst for the Armed Services Committee is glamorous, but it’s not. Completely not.” She rested her Cosmo on a cocktail napkin. “Today consisted of taking notes while the senators bickered about who was going make the next decision. There was no decision. Just bickering.”

  “Sounds like fun.”

  “A complete waste of a day. Meanwhile, all the things I am supposed to be working on are piling up in my office because they can’t decide on a to-do list.” She gulped down the last of the drink and moved on to the one sent over from the guys at the bar.

  “And you still like it there? This is what you want—politics?”

  She nodded. “I do bitch and complain about it, but yes. I’m an analyst now, but I could quickly move into one of the senator’s offices. I’m less than a year away from being an advisor. Can you imagine that? It would be huge.” She traced the rim of her glass. “Preston loves his job. He’s a senate aide. He wants this for me.”

  I ignored her last comment. “And to think we started out wanting to be pro-bono attorneys.” I winked at her.

  That was a million years ago. Greer and I had been pre-law at Carolina. We both thought we could fight social injustice and join causes that we were passionate about. I ended up joining a law firm close to home and Greer moved to D.C. to work as a senate page.

  “At least at American you’re doing that. The clinic helps people,” she reminded me. “So does teaching.”

  “It does.” The liquor started to warm my limbs, and if I didn’t think about my feet I couldn’t feel how badly they ached. “I just never thought I’d be a teacher. I’m going to be one of our stuffy law professors.”

  Greer almost spit her drink across the table. “Please, God. If you do, you have to wear little pins on your suit jacket—you know the ones you can change out for each holiday. Oh, and maybe try to make a theme with each case you cover. And you definitely need to wear glasses.”

  “I have an entire year before I get to that process, but maybe I’ll start collecting pins now so I’m fully stocked.” I laughed. I had an image of a shoebox filled with Santas, shamrocks, and Easter eggs.

  She looked over my shoulder. “Oh, Pres is here.” Greer jumped from her seat and ran to greet him.

  Preston towered over her. He looked like every other guy in the city. He had brown hair, cut short. He wore a button-up blue shirt with a dark blue tie. He could sit with those other two at the bar and I’d never be able to pick him out of a lineup.

  He moved to the city after a senate campaign he worked on was successful. He and Greer met in the Capitol cafeteria.

  They walked toward me hand-in hand.

  “Hey, Elliot” He leaned over to give me a side hug.

  “Hey.” I faked a smile.

  I noticed the guys behind us were ticked. They grumbled at each other once they realized Greer wasn’t available, and they were out at least forty dollars.

  Preston sat across from me. His hands clasped on top of Greer’s dainty fingers.

  She looked at him as if she could devour him on the spot. Her blue eyes sparked under the calming lights of the bar.

  “What are you two drinking?” Preston glanced at our glasses.

  “Cosmos.” She giggled. Her cheeks were pink.

  “I think I’ll get a
beer.” He raised his hand for our server, before placing it around her shoulders. She leaned in to him as he whispered something. Greer burst out laughing.

  I wiggled in my seat. “I think I’m going to make a trip to the ladies’ room. I’ll be right back.” I threw the straw bag over my shoulder and walked away in search of the restrooms.

  I needed a second. Just one tiny moment to take a breath away from the suffocating reminder I was alone. I didn’t need what Greer had right now. I knew that. I didn’t want a guy like Preston. But something about being around them made me want more than what I had. It made me thirst for someone in my life to share all these changes with.

  I didn’t have a person. There wasn’t someone at the end of the night to check in and tell them I made it to D.C. safely. There wasn’t someone to call to tell them I made it through my first day of paperwork. I didn’t have someone to tell me tomorrow would be better. That tomorrow I’d find my way.

  There was a plush sofa in the sitting area before the ladies’ room. I sat down and leaned my head back on the cushions. One thing at a time. New city. New job. New apartment. That was plenty to focus on without getting involved with someone.

  I hated self-pity. I wasn’t going to wallow. I had everything I wanted. I needed to march back to the table and finish the night the same way we started it—by celebrating.

  I stood, inhaling fully. As I swerved through the tables I noticed Greer and Preston were standing next to their chairs. The waitress was taking Preston’s credit card. I felt a quick wave of relief that Greer didn’t pay for the first round of drinks.

  “What’s going on? I wasn’t gone that long.” I looked at them.

  Greer sighed. “I got a call. I have to get to work. There’s a meeting at seven in the morning and the file isn’t ready.”

  “But it’s so late.” I had no idea what time it was but it had to be close to ten.

  Preston squeezed Greer’s shoulder. “I’m going to make sure she gets to the capitol okay.”

  “Oh, all right.” I wasn’t sure what to do. I didn’t know what part of Georgetown we were in, but I could get my own Uber home.

 

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