Home > Fuel the Fire (Calloway Sisters #3)(66)

Fuel the Fire (Calloway Sisters #3)(66)
Author: Krista Ritchie

I walk over to the room’s desk and lean against it, my hands on the wooden surface. “I don’t think you’ve ever spoken this much to me,” I say. “…I appreciate it, for whatever that’s worth to you.” My life was nothing like his.

I never once struggled with my identity the way he did. But someone in our group did grow up as the yes kid, just like him. “You always saw yourself in Daisy, didn’t you?”

He tenses and nods. “Yeah.”

“Now we’re back to one-word responses.”

He sits on the edge of the bed. “Maybe you should tell me what the fuck you were doing tonight.”

This is why I think he divulged more than normal. He thought I’d do the same in kind. “I’ve given Rose a lap dance in front of you all. This isn’t different.”

“You stripped in front of a fucking pub, not just the five of us, and that lap dance was part of a bet during the reality show.” He adds, “It also never fucking aired on television. This was live.”

It never aired because it would’ve shown the physical chemistry I have with Rose, and Scott was trying to edit the show to make it look like Rose was attracted to him, not me.

“And?” I ask.

“And what the fuck was it for? I’ve been trying to make sense of everything that you two have been doing, but I can’t…” He shakes his head. “I know something is going on, and I’m asking you as my friend to tell me.”

“It’s better if you don’t know.”

He stands off the bed, which forces me to stand. “I will fucking deck you.”

“This is why I can’t tell you,” I say calmly, even as he edges closer, pissed. “You’d respond like you are now, and I need rational, level-headed people on my side.”

“I’m assuming Rose knows the truth. You think she’s that fucking rational?”

My jaw twitches, and I rub my lips to hide my irritation. Rose isn’t rational all the time, but she’s far less aggravating than Ryke. They have a lot of similarities, and the things that make them different make me exponentially more compatible with her and exponentially less compatible with him.

I have one inch on Ryke, but we’re still nearly level.

“You have no idea how badly I want to fucking punch you right now,” Ryke growls. “You need to stop manipulating me, Connor. I can see every time you do it.”

I let him share, thinking that I’d share in return.

I didn’t.

What hits me out of everything he says—it’s not the I want to fucking punch you or the you need to stop…it’s his use of my name. He rarely calls me Connor and not Cobalt, and when he does, I can practically taste the severity of our friendship, trembling in the balance between broken and whole.

A real friendship is a two-way street. I’ve driven down it with Loren. I’ve given him vulnerable parts of myself, more of me, and he’s let me see his weakness. Ryke might’ve been brick-walled in the beginning, but I’m the variable that makes this friendship sit at a standstill, not him.

“Take a step back and I’ll tell you,” I suddenly say. I don’t want to manipulate my friends. I don’t want to deceive him. I want something real.

Ryke hesitates. “Don’t lie to me.”

“I won’t,” I assure him. “I promise.”

With this, he takes a couple steps away from me, putting about five feet between us. “Let me talk all the way through before you interject.” My voice is impassive, holding no endnotes of irritation or defeat. I spend the next few minutes detailing what I’ve done with Rose, first to help Moffy and bury an article, then our test to see if we can redirect the spotlight off our children.

When I finish, I watch him run his hands repeatedly through his thick, brown hair. His eyes set on the carpet, processing the complete truth. The first thing he says, “I could’ve fucking helped you.”

If someone asked me to name the first two attributes of Ryke Meadows, aggressive wouldn’t even be on the list. In the heart of his soul lies kindness, wrapped tightly in selflessness that shows in almost every action.

I recognize, unflinchingly, that I don’t share his compassion with the world and with so many people, but a part of me longs to understand on a deeper, more human level.

“It was easier on me if you didn’t help,” I tell him the truth.

He exhales roughly. “That’s my fucking brother and his kid. That rumor was partially about me. I could’ve done something so Rose didn’t have to.”

“Rose wanted to,” I remind him. I’m a little concerned that he’s going to share this information with Lo. “You can’t tell him, Ryke. You realize this?” It’d send his brother to a dark place. Guilt weighs on Lo more than it ever hits me, so we have to keep secret anything that’d push him to drink.

Ryke sets his hands on his head and takes a couple deep breaths.

“Please confirm with me,” I say, unable to read him past frustration and anger.

He drops his hands. “I won’t ever fucking tell him. It’ll always just stay between you, me and Rose.” I hear Lo in the back of my head, joking about an older kid’s club.

It exists during times like this.

“I want to fucking help,” Ryke tells me, taking one step closer.

“You don’t need to…” I see his fist tighten and then the angle of his body. He’s going to hit me. I don’t turn out of it.

He decks me in the jaw, my gums pressing into my teeth, tasting iron from blood on my tongue. I don’t touch my face, I just rotate to him once more while he settles down.

He’s been waiting years to punch me. He’s stopped himself short countless times before. His features relax, the hardness of his jaw less apparent. His face holds no malice, no aggravation anymore.

He’s content.

Ryke nods to me. “Tomorrow you can tell the press I hit you and that we fucking hate each other or you can make up another story.” He walks back to the bed, giving me a headline to stir the press away from my daughter.

I let out a laugh, stunned and amused. “This is your way of helping me?” I follow him, my jaw throbbing but I don’t complain. In my life, I’ve given Ryke more shit than any other person.

Because I knew he could take it.

Still it added a thin layer of animosity over our friendship—jokes half in jest and half in irritation—and I just now feel that layer begin to slowly peel away.

“Yeah,” he confirms. “I never had a better fucking reason to hit you until today.” He climbs back on his side and slips under the covers.

He literally couldn’t deck me unless it helped me. “How kind of you.” I settle on my end of the bed.

“Just say the word, Cobalt, and I’ll fucking punch you again.” He turns off his lights.

I arch a brow. “And what word is that—woof?”

“Fuck off.” His voice is lighter than before.

My lips rise and before I turn off my lamp, I feel pressed to say one more thing. He deserves this answer in its entirety. “During Christmas, I told you that I didn’t celebrate Christmas because my mother didn’t, but I never mentioned that I’d come to spend them at Faust.”

He shifts onto his back, brows furrowing in confusion and surprise. “How many guys spent holidays there?”

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