Broken Record

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Broken Record Page 11

by Linde, K. A.


  “Well, I’m happy for you,” she forced herself to say. “It seems that everything has lined up.”

  He blew out a breath. “I guess it has.”

  “I’m just going to…” She pointed at the exit.

  “Wait, why did you come here anyway? I didn’t think you wanted to talk.”

  “Oh,” she breathed, trying to think of a response to that. “I just wanted us to be in a better place. I didn’t want us to end where we had.”

  “I see,” he said softly. “Then, consider us in a better place.”

  “Good. Good.”

  She took a step backward. What she’d said wasn’t a lie. She did want them to be in a good place. After the way things had been left at the party, she couldn’t imagine a life with Lucas not in it. But that hadn’t been the reason for her visit. She’d have to find another time for that.

  Another lifetime perhaps.

  16

  Girl’s Night Out

  Dylan leaned over Savannah’s desk and grinned devilishly. She had a pile of paperwork to get through, and after the encounter with Lucas earlier this week, she’d been focusing primarily on work. But that smile told her that Dylan had something up her sleeve.

  “Can I help you?” she asked.

  “So, Josephine knows a guy who works in the Business division. He invited her to this bar tonight. A bunch of the Post staff are going to be there. I think this is what we’ve been waiting for.”

  “We?”

  Dylan arched an eyebrow. “You need to get out there. Your serious boyfriend left you, and your, like…side-piece dude has a girlfriend. It’s time to have a taste of something new.”

  Savannah couldn’t help but laugh. “Jesus, I sound like a train wreck when you discuss my life.”

  “Well, that’s not a lie.”

  “Thanks,” she said sarcastically.

  “Come on, Sav. At least come help me find a guy even if you don’t want one.”

  Savannah glanced away from her computer and up at Dylan. “Girl time might be nice.”

  “That’s right. And some hot guys too.”

  “Maybe…some hot guys,” she conceded.

  Dylan squealed and hugged Savannah. “Oh, this will be so much fun.”

  “But just flirting.”

  “Whatever. I can’t wait.”

  “Miss Gonzalez,” Savannah’s boss, Mr. McAllister, snapped from the door to his office. “Don’t you have work to attend to?”

  Dylan saluted him with a wink. “Sure thing, Rich.”

  Mr. McAllister sighed in exasperation. Apparently, even hard-ass bosses couldn’t control Dylan Gonzalez.

  “See you tonight!” Dylan crooned before returning to her desk.

  Savannah just shook her head and went back to her work. But inside, she smiled and found that…she was actually excited for tonight.

  * * *

  Savannah stepped into the dimly lit bar. Dylan had texted that she was already inside with Josephine and Sandra. She craned her neck to see if she could locate them, but the place was packed. When Dylan had said that this was a Post party, she hadn’t thought that every person from the paper who was single would be in attendance.

  She stepped around the crowd and hugged the perimeter until she saw a glimpse of Dylan’s unruly curls. She sighed in relief and headed to where she was standing.

  “Savannah!” Dylan cried, throwing her arms around her. “I’m already two drinks in, and you need to catch up.”

  Savannah laughed and let herself be escorted to the bar where they promptly did pink shots that burned all the way down. She coughed and blinked rapidly. “That was intense.”

  “Only the best for my girl.” Dylan winked at her and then grabbed a pair of clear drinks off of the bar. “Here you go.”

  She took a tentative sip and winced over the sheer amount of gin in that drink. “How trashed do you want me to get?” she asked on a laugh.

  “Not trashed. Just comfortably numb. Then, you’ll let guys hit on you.”

  “Who says that I won’t let guys hit on me when I’m sober?”

  Dylan raised an eyebrow and said nothing.

  “Fine,” Savannah grumbled, taking another sip of her drink. “So, I’m supposed to help you find a guy, huh?”

  Dylan grinned. “Mission accomplished. You know Brad?”

  “Isn’t he dating someone?”

  “Not anymore. You might not like a rebound, Maxwell, but I sure as hell do.”

  Savannah snorted. “Oh dear Lord. Is he even supposed to be here?”

  “Oh yeah, he told me he’d be drinking away his misery. It was practically an invitation.”

  “Practically,” she drawled.

  Dylan laughed, not caring an ounce that Brad probably needed a little more time to recover. Or maybe she did, and she thought a night of fun would be good for both of them. Either way, she dragged Savannah across the bar to where Brad sat with two of his friends. One wore glasses and a tweed jacket even though it was about a hundred degrees with the insane DC swamp humidity. The other was cuter with curly blond hair he kept short on the sides. He filled out his T-shirt and appreciatively looked her up and down, and best of all, she had never seen him before in her life.

  Dylan plopped down next to Brad after he invited them to join, and Savannah sat down next to the T-shirt guy. He grinned at her.

  “I’m Charles,” he said, holding his hand out.

  They shook a little awkwardly in the small space between them.

  “Savannah.”

  “So, do you work for the Post like Brad?”

  She nodded. “Yeah. Both Dylan and I both do. What about you?”

  “Ah, not half as interesting. I work for the EPA but still working my way up. More of a paper-pusher, number-cruncher at the moment.”

  “Well, still, the EPA is important.”

  He shrugged one shoulder. “It can be. If they let us hire people and do the work. You know, it’s a job.”

  Savannah had about a million things to say to that. She had grown up in a political family after all. She knew all about policy and the direction the EPA had taken in the last couple of years. She knew how important it all was, but it seemed that Charles didn’t really want to talk about it, so she let it drop.

  At that point, Dylan stood up and was dragging Brad out onto the dance floor. He must have been drunk enough to say yes. Tweed Guy and Charles shared a look.

  “That’s a bad idea,” Tweed Guy said.

  Charles shook his head. “Helen is going to kill him.”

  She glanced between them. “I thought he was single.”

  “Oh, sure,” Tweed Guy said, “he’s single once a month. They’re toxic, but she has her claws in him.”

  “Jared is right. If Helen shows up, this is going to go south quick,” Charles said.

  “Guess she should stop breaking up with him,” Savannah said bitterly.

  She knew all about train-wreck relationships. She had been in one for three years with Easton. And one with Lucas for much longer. Her friends probably thought the same thing about her that Charles and Jared were thinking about Brad. It made her sad to see it all from an outsider’s perspective. She didn’t know Brad or his friends or his ex-girlfriend. But she knew the feelings and emotions that yo-yo’d between them.

  It made her exhausted. All the years of indecision and going back and forth between these men. She didn’t want to have to get drunk and talk with new guys to figure this all out. She just wanted to be happy with herself. Find what she really wanted.

  And finally, she was getting some kind of grasp on what that was. It was clear that this yo-yo was not it. If she ever got back together with Easton, she wanted it to be the right choice, not the only choice. If she got together with Lucas, she didn’t want it to be out of their continual, primal lust. The years of pent-up energy between them boiling over. She wanted it to be because they were right for each other.

  Mostly, she wanted to continue her work at the Post. Prove to
her boss that she was useful. That she could do so much more. She wanted to get promoted and eventually become the investigative journalist she’d always dreamed of. She knew that she had to climb the ladder. That her name had no bearing on why she’d gotten the job and that she was a force to be reckoned with. The paper would realize that too.

  She wanted to make decisions without fear. Without wondering what these boys in her life would think or how they’d react. She might even audition for another musical. She could fit it into her schedule in the fall. She’d given that all up in college to pursue journalism like a fanatic. But maybe it was important for her to discover balance. Maybe everything she did didn’t have to be delivered like a religious zealot. She could have her family and friends and journalism and still have room for hobbies. Maybe even a boyfriend if she decided on that.

  For the first time in years, a calm settled over her shoulders.

  Easton had been right. She needed this time to step away and figure herself out. No matter what that meant for them. Or where they ended up.

  Dylan had thought bringing Savannah here would get her a one-night stand and help her move on from the boys. But in fact, she realized more acutely that she didn’t need sex to help her discover what she wanted. If anything, she’d just needed to see someone else who was as much of a train wreck as her. And somehow, it all fitted together like the missing pieces of a puzzle settling into place.

  Savannah leaned back against her chair, took a sip of her drink, and smiled.

  Things would be okay.

  Not right now. Not yet.

  But eventually.

  And it felt good to finally see it all so clearly.

  Charles and Jared continued to talk, and Savannah was surprised to find how funny they were. She didn’t want to date either of them. But it was better than waiting around for Dylan to come back with Brad.

  She was shocked to find out that Jared worked for ESPN. It seemed like it would be the other way around since Jared was the smaller of the two in glasses and tweed, but apparently, he worked behind the scenes for the local network.

  “How did you get into that?” Savannah asked.

  “I’ve always loved sports. I’m just…horrible at playing them,” he said with a laugh. “So, I went and got my PhD in statistics with a sports analysis focus. I had an internship with ESPN, and they kept me on. I do a lot of obscure data management. All those random stats that no one thinks about where they came from.”

  “Huh,” she said in awe.

  Way more interesting than Charles working for the EPA. At least Jared seemed passionate about it.

  “Oh shit,” Jared said, his eyes going round. “I didn’t think she’d show.”

  “Who?” she asked. She looked around. “Helen?”

  “No, there’s this cute girl at my work. I invited her out tonight.”

  “She showed?” Charles asked, clearly in shock.

  “Oh,” Jared said on a sigh. “Looks like she brought a date.”

  “Sucks,” Savannah muttered.

  “Yeah, man. Those sideline reporters never go for the stats guys.”

  Jared wrinkled his nose. “I know, but…” He shrugged and didn’t finish that sentence. “I’ll just say hi.”

  He waved his hand and finally got the attention of a redhead who had just stepped through the dance floor and was now walking straight toward them.

  Savannah’s stomach sank. “Fuck,” she whispered.

  She hadn’t pieced it all together. Jared worked for ESPN. The woman was a redhead sideline reporter.

  “Mariah Glover,” Savannah whispered.

  Jared startled. “You must watch basketball.”

  “Sure do,” she muttered as her eyes dragged to the tall guy following behind her.

  The recognizable build, the shaggy, dark hair, and mesmerizing eyes. Those eyes that had found her in the crowd. That were now narrowed as he tried to figure out answers to everything at once. What she was doing there. Why she was with these guys. Where Easton was.

  All the questions piled up as his eyes found hers again.

  “Holy shit,” Jared whispered next to Savannah. “That’s Lucas Atwood. He’s a five-star recruit…”

  He rattled off Lucas’s stats like he’d memorized them before this meeting. But Savannah could barely hear him. All she saw was her impending doom. This wasn’t how she wanted him to find out. This wasn’t how she wanted to tell him.

  She could see the fury building in those eyes as Lucas and Mariah finally stopped in front of them.

  “Well, Savannah Maxwell,” Mariah said with an arched eyebrow, “funny seeing you here.”

  “Hello, Mariah.”

  Lucas’s eyes narrowed further. “What are you doing here?”

  “It’s a Post party.”

  He looked from guy to guy and the empty space in between but said nothing.

  Mariah had no such qualms. “So, where’s your fiancé?”

  She wielded that word like a weapon.

  Savannah swallowed and moved her gaze back to Lucas’s. She took a deep breath and decided it was now or never. She had decided what she wanted. No going back now.

  “We broke up,” she told them and waited for the fallout.

  17

  Boil Over

  “You did what?” Lucas asked, his voice as cold as ice.

  Mariah’s attention diverted to her boyfriend. Savannah could see her immediate displeasure at the way he’d asked that question. But it was Savannah he’d directed that rancor toward.

  “You and your fiancé broke up?” Charles interjected, clearly not reading the situation. He tenderly placed his hand on Savannah’s arm. “I’m so sorry. That’s horrible.”

  “Yes, it is,” Mariah said with none of Charles’s warmth or sympathy. “How exactly did that happen?”

  Savannah swallowed. “We decided we needed time apart.”

  “After he proposed?” Mariah asked incredulously.

  “Yes, it wasn’t exactly planned.”

  “Are you getting back together?” Lucas demanded.

  She bit her lip and shrugged. “I don’t know.”

  Jared sighed across from her. “No wonder Dylan dragged you out here. You need a drink.”

  Savannah didn’t think drinking any more in this situation was going to be a good idea. Lucas looked as if he was going to boil over at any second. Mariah was the only thing keeping him from shaking Savannah and demanding answers. Savannah knew him too well not to see it.

  Fuck, she should have just told him when she went to see him.

  She had been so caught up in her own mind that she couldn’t see the truth. She never should have hidden this from him. Easton had scared her into staying away from Lucas, and now, she was going to pay the price for this secret.

  It was too late for her isolation to bring her the clarity she needed to know not to hide from him. Lucas was supposed to be her best friend. Whether or not they ended up dating, she had always wanted to salvage the lifelong friendship. And now…she might have fucked the whole thing up.

  “I think we all need a drink,” Lucas spat. He turned to Mariah. “What do you want from the bar?”

  “Jack and Coke,” she said softly.

  He nodded once and then stormed away from the group, leaving Mariah and Savannah to stare at each other in dismay. Jared immediately stood and gestured for Mariah to join their group. Her eyes flickered to where Lucas had disappeared to, and then she finally sat down next to her colleague.

  Charles and Jared seemed to be picking up on the tension between them as they tried to make small talk. But, thankfully, Dylan decided to return that minute with a rather drunk and sweaty Brad.

  “Hey, girlie!” Dylan said, twirling in a circle. Her curls making a halo around her head. “Come dance with us!”

  Savannah’s eyes were wide. She saw her out and took it. “Restroom.”

  Dylan raised an eyebrow. “All right. Do we have to be girls about it?”

  “Safet
y in numbers.” Savannah grabbed Dylan by the arm and dragged her away from the uncomfortable situation.

  Dylan grumbled. “If you make me lose ground with Brad, I’m going to be pissed.”

  “Lucas is here, and the redhead is his girlfriend.”

  Dylan ground to a stop. “Wait, what?”

  “Keep walking,” she bit out. “Apparently, Mariah knows Jared, who is friends with Brad. It’s twisted fate that they just fucking found out that Easton and I broke up.”

  “Oh Jesus, Savannah.”

  “Tell me about it.” She pressed forward into the restroom and leaned back against the sink. “God, this is a nightmare. I feel like I just figured everything out. Like I was in the right place, being here with you and just chilling, having a good time with friends. I didn’t need a one-night stand or anything. I just wanted that time to be me. And now, he’s here. And he had to figure this shit out this way.”

  “Yeah, that’s messed up,” Dylan agreed. “Keep talking. I’m going to pee.”

  Savannah chuckled softly and shook her head. “I’m just going to call Liz and have her pick me up.”

  “You’re going to leave?” Dylan groaned from the stall.

  “This is going to go from bad to ugly. It’s better if I get out now rather than wait around for it to all blow up in my face. Because it will. I know it.”

  “Ugh, I hate this. Can’t you just tell Hottie McHottie and his little ginger friend to GTFO, so you can have a good night? We can deal with it later.”

  Savannah sighed. She wished it were that easy. But she knew better. “I’m calling Liz.”

  Dylan muttered a string of four-letter words.

  Savannah laughed and dialed Liz’s number.

  She picked up on the third ring. “Hey, Sav. What’s up?”

  “Please tell me that you and Brady aren’t busy tonight?”

  “Brady is still at the office. Some congressmen billiards and cigars something or other,” Liz said. Savannah could practically see her eye roll. “How’s your night out? I would literally kill someone for a margarita.”

  “Well, uh, Lucas showed up with his girlfriend.”

 

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