Read Only One (Reed Brothers) Online

Authors: Tammy Falkner

Tags: #New Adult Romance

Only One (Reed Brothers) (9 page)

I look over and see a small fire flickering in the sand, and all the Reeds are sitting around it. I wave at them.

“Come join us!” someone calls.

I look at Carrie and she just smiles and shrugs her shoulders. I take her hand and we walk toward the flames.

Paul is sitting with Friday almost in his lap, and he motions for us to take a seat on a spare towel. Carrie sits down. She already knows almost everyone here, except she might not know Reagan, Emily, or Friday, so they introduce her.

Sam walks down from the house, and he’s carrying a guitar in one hand and a bundle in the other. He passes the guitar to Emily, and the bundle he gives to Paul. “Couldn’t sleep, huh?” Paul asks Sam.

“I think he wants some boobie,” Sam says.

“Well, I just happen to have some of that,” Friday says. She takes the baby from him, coos at him for a minute and then adjusts her shirt, cradling him to her. Paul throws a blanket over them and the baby goes still. And so does Friday. She leans against Paul and he turns to kiss her really quickly.

“You got enough boobie to feed ten of those,” Emily chirps.

Friday picks up a marshmallow and throws it at her. Logan catches it and eats it. Friday makes a face at her.

I can’t believe I’m sitting with the Reeds around a campfire. “No cameras?” I ask, looking around.

“We get time off sometimes,” Paul says.

“Where are the kids?” Carrie asks, looking into their faces.

“The good kids are sleeping. And the other one is on the boobie,” Matt says.

This time, Paul throws the marshmallow and it hits Matt in the middle of his forehead. Logan catches it on the ricochet and pops it in his mouth. He shrugs when Matt grouses at him.

“We get a nanny as part of the production crew when we travel. It’s kind of nice at night when they’re sleeping,” Paul explains. He looks fondly down at his own. “Or not sleeping, as the case may be.”

Sky is sitting with her legs stretched out in front of her toward the fire, and Matt’s head is in her lap. “How’s your mom feeling?” he asks Carrie. Sky drags her fingers down the length of his long hair, and he looks so content.

“Better,” she says. “Thank you for your help the other night. And all of you for moving furniture.”

I bet she’s wishing they’d tightened up those headboard bolts right about now.

“Don’t worry about it,” Matt says with a breezy wave. “I’m glad she’s feeling better.”

Emily starts to strum her guitar and everyone goes quiet. I can’t believe I’m sitting here listening to Emily Reed play her guitar. She’s famous for when she was playing with Fallen from Zero. Then she wrote a song that was supposed to be a fluke, but it took off and hit the charts a couple of weeks ago. It’s a beautiful song about love and loss and finding where you’re supposed to be.

“I’m taking requests,” she says.

She runs through a couple of upbeat songs that I know, and she does her single, and I have to pinch myself because I still can’t believe where I am and what I’m doing.

“Hey Nick,” Pete calls out.

“Yeah,” I reply. I can barely see him over the flames, but I know he’s there.

“Do you know any preachers?”

The guitar and all the people go quiet.

“A few, why?” I reply. I immediately think of Patty’s funeral, and I hope to God he’s not going to ask about that.

“Well, Reagan and I were thinking we might like to get married on the beach while we’re here.” He waits.

All the Reeds erupt at once, jumping to their feet to hug Pete and Reagan. “Are you serious?” Paul asks.

“Completely,” Pete says. He sits down with Reagan again and looks into her eyes. “I don’t want to be anywhere else.”

“Then you two can have some babies too!” Sam cries, like he’s faking excitement. Then he pretends to heave.

Reagan snorts. “How much have you had to drink?” she asks. “
No
.”

“Oh, come on,” Sam says. “You know you want kids too. Rug rats. Crumb snatchers. Diaper fillers.”

“Maybe someday,” Pete says, looking into her eyes. She nods at him and my heart goes pitter-patter for them. I want that look. I want that life.

“I just happen to know a preacher who owes me a favor,” I tell him.

“Speaking of kids…” Matt says.

Everyone goes quiet.

“No freaking way,” Sam breathes.

Matt lays a hand on Sky’s stomach. “Yes, way,” he says.

Carrie shakes her head and laughs as they do the congrats thing again.

“You figured out where those things are coming from yet?” Paul asks as he sits back down.

Sky blushes and Matt laughs. “Yep.”

Sam mocks Paul’s tone. “Do you need to get a condom from the drawer?”

Pete deepens his voice too. “You need to wrap that shit up.” He makes a circle with his finger in the air.

Matt laughs. “Okay, that’s enough,” he warns. “We know where they’re coming from.” He looks at Sky. “You can use me any time you want to get pregnant, baby,” he says. She shoves his chest when he pulls her down so he can kiss her.

Paul loads up a marshmallow stick and hands it to me. I offer it to Carrie and she nods. She roasts the marshmallow and pulls it back when it’s a glowing ember. She blows it, grinning at me over the top of it.

She’s happy right this minute. And I can’t help but think she’s the prettiest girl I have ever seen. And I don’t want to be anywhere but here, unless she leaves. And then I want to go with her. I’m referring to the campfire. I think.

Carrie

I can’t believe how nice they all are. They have taken to Nick like he’s extended family. And me, too, for that matter. Sam and Pete just got into a wrestling match in the sand and Nick pulled me back to lean against his chest, getting me out of their way, but I think he just wanted an excuse to put his arms around me. It feels good and safe when he’s holding me, so I lie back and look up into the dark sky, with my head on his shoulder.

I narrow my eyes when I see two forms walking up out of the shadows. “Amber?” I ask.

“Carrie?” she says. She’s walking hand in hand with Seth, Matt’s oldest son. She plops down next to me, and Seth sits next to her.

“Hey Carrie,” Seth says.

“Where have you guys been?” Matt asks.

“We walked down to the pier,” Seth says. He looks up sheepishly, and Amber blushes. I can see the telltale color of her cheeks.

“We have to talk tomorrow,” I whisper to Amber. She nods and smiles. I see Seth’s fingertips overlap hers in the sand and it makes me feel all warm inside.

“You feel like walking to the pier?” Nick asks me. I nod and let him pull me up, wiping the sand off my butt as I stand up.

“Do your parents know where you are?” Paul asks me.

I nod. “They’re a little busy,” I say. I look toward the house and bite my tongue, because I don’t want to say any more.

Matt laughs. “Good for them.”

“Don’t be gone too long,” Paul says.

Nick looks at me and grins. “Yes, sir,” Nick says with a laugh.

Paul shrugs. “I can’t help it. I’m a dad with a daughter.”

“We won’t be gone long,” I tell him. I tug on Nick’s fingertips and walk toward the beach.

“I can’t believe we just sat around a campfire with the Reeds,” Nick says.

“You’re a fan, huh?” I look up at him. He still looks a little star-struck.

“The biggest,” he says. “They’re just like they are on the show, but better.”

“They’re pretty nice.”

“Nice?” he cries. “They’re amazing! Emily Reed just played a song for us.”

“I had no idea that’s who she was until she started to sing.”

“Then you knew?”

“I’d have to live under a rock not to know that song.”

He laughs. Then he gets quiet. We walk all the way to the pier with nothing but the waves and the wind talking.

Suddenly he turns to me and takes my face in his hands. I startle a little, but he just holds me tenderly. “I want to kiss you,” he says.

“You totally should.”

“But I don’t think I can.”

My heart stops beating for a moment. “What?” I ask. I cover his hands with mine.

“You’re going to leave me eventually,” he says. “You have to go to school, and I’m not going. I’ll be devastated. I’m not sure I can take losing someone I care about as much as I care about you.”

“You could come and visit.”

He shakes his head. “I can’t. I have too much going on here.”

“So that’s it?” I ask. My gut is in my throat.

“I think we should be friends,” he whispers.

“I think we should be friends who kiss,” I whisper back playfully. But I know he’s serious. He’s telling me no.

“Can friends kiss?” he asks. His eyes search my face in the moonlight.

I step onto my tiptoes and touch my lips to his. He hesitates for a second, and I worry that I’ve made a mistake. He kisses me, his lips tender and soft at first, but then he growls and wraps his arms around me. His hands slide under my shirt and tickle up and down my back as his lips ravage mine. Greedy, wonderful fingers slip into the waistband of my shorts and splay across my bottom, and then he jerks me against his hardness. I can feel every inch of him and tell how much he wants me, but he lifts his head and buries his face in my neck.

“Don’t make me fall in love with you,” he says quietly.

I look up and brush a lock of hair from his forehead. “I’ll do my best.”

We walk back to my house hand in hand, absorbing the quiet. The wind tickles my skin almost as much as his proximity does. We wave to the Reeds as we walk by and he takes me all the way to my door. He kisses me softly and quickly, then stops to take a deep breath by my hair. I can feel the tension in his arms and I want to hold him. But something tells me he doesn’t want to be held.

“Good night,” he says.

“Night,” I reply. He stands there while I open the door, and then I see him walk off into the darkness.

I find Mom sitting on the couch when I go inside, and she grins at me. “So, did he kiss you?” she asks. I remember how mean I was to her the last time she asked me and I regret it.

I sit down next to her and let my shoulder touch hers. “Yeah, he kissed me.”

She laughs. “Tell me about it,” she says.

We stay up talking most of the night. Until morning breaks over the ocean and Dad comes to take her back to bed. I watch them walk away together and gratitude swells within me for the gifts I have been given.

Nick

I spent today fishing with John. Patty tells me to call him John, but he scowls at me every time she says it. So I call him John in my head and Mr. Michaels when I’m with him.

Actually, John was fishing and I was working. I have a friend who owns a fishing boat, and sometimes I go out and help him. I convinced him to let John go with us. He had a good day, I think, but now he’s looking at his watch and I think he’s ready to head back.

The Michaels have been here for two weeks now and Patty is starting to get thinner and thinner. She’s finding it harder to keep down the protein shakes they give her, and she ends up throwing them up more than she takes them in. Sometimes she hides it, but I think it’s getting harder for her.

Every night, Patty and Carrie walk down to the lighthouse. They sit at the base of it and talk. But last night Patty was too tired to walk, so they didn’t go.

I followed them one night, just so I could see what they do when they go there. They sit at the base of the lighthouse in a sandy spot, and they lie down side by side and stare up at the stars. With Carrie’s hand clasped in hers, Patty talks. Carrie talks. They talk to one another. Then they walk back, and Patty and John go to bed. Together.

Today I follow John in the back door and find Carrie and Patty on the couch. Patty is sitting, and Carrie is lying with her head in her mom’s lap. They’re watching some romance movie on TV and they’re both crying.

“Dude,” John says to me, stopping in the doorway. “We should go to your house instead.”

I laugh. John is actually pretty fun. I nod at him. “Yours looks like dangerous territory.”

He walks inside anyway, and goes to take a shower. I wish I could too. Carrie and Patty don’t even look up, so I go to the kitchen and get a soda. As I lift it to my lips, I feel arms slip around my waist and I smile.

“I missed you,” Carrie says quietly. “Did you have a good day?”

“Yeah, but I kind of stink,” I warn her.

She laughs and buries her face in my back. “I don’t care,” she murmurs. Her voice is soft and low and it shoots straight to my dick.

“I need a shower,” I protest. “I’m going to run home for a few minutes.”

“I’m going with you,” she says. She doesn’t give me time to respond. “Hey, Mom!” she yells. “I’m going over to Nick’s for a few minutes, okay?”

“Sure,” her mom yells back, but her voice is weak. “Don’t be gone too long. Your dad is making dinner.”

She takes my hand and pulls me to the door and to my jeep. I get in and she puts a hand on my knee. I look at her. “You sure you want to go to my house?” I ask.

She nods, and draws her lower lip between her teeth. “I’m positive.”

“Okay.” I close my eyes and take a breath.

Carrie has been to my house, and she’s even been inside, but she has never stayed long. Just long enough for me to grab something or to change clothes. Now I’m going to be naked in one room while she’s in another.

We’ve been together for two weeks now. Two weeks since I told her not to make me fall in love with her. I’m doomed. Absolutely doomed. I’ve been in love with her since I was fourteen. Since that day I was walking on the beach with my friends and I saw her. I fell on my butt trying to impress her, and she just laughed at me.

We walk inside, and it’s so damn hot inside the trailer that I immediately regret bringing her here. “Sorry,” I say.

“I love it here,” she says. She ambles around and looks at the pictures on the wall. “I remember when you looked like this.”

“Will you be okay out here while I grab a shower?”

She nods and keeps walking around, engrossed in memories.

I turn on the water and step under the spray. I steady myself, trying to figure out what I’m going to do about Carrie. She’s leaving in a few weeks to go to college, and I don’t know if she’ll ever be back. She’s going to take my heart with her.

Other books

Juice: Part Two (Juice #2) by Victoria Starke
Warrior's Rise by Brieanna Robertson
Laird of Ballanclaire by Jackie Ivie
Suicide Hill by James Ellroy
La Sombra Viviente by Maxwell Grant
Knot Guilty by Betty Hechtman