Inferno Anthology (56 page)

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Authors: Kailin Gow,Vi Keeland,Kimberly Knight,Cassia Leo,Addison Moore,Liv Morris,Laurelin Paige,Aleatha Romig,Jessica Sorensen,Lacey Weatherford

BOOK: Inferno Anthology
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“Um…” I said, as he held open the door for us to leave. “You know, someone who goes around fucking a bunch of different chicks.”

“Then no, I wouldn’t consider myself a player.” He shut the door behind him, and we started walking toward the elevators. The stairs were good to go down, but not up. Especially while talking.

“But you’ve slept with chicks in the last seven years, right?”

Why was I so curious about him that I couldn’t stop asking questions? This was more than just casual talking. It was like I wanted to know everything about him. Get to know him and his dark secrets. But why? After seven nights, I would never see him again and would go back home to—Jared.

“Of course I have, but I don’t sleep around. Usually they just suck my dick.”

I felt my face blush at his bluntness. I was starting to wonder if he wanted me to suck his dick. It didn’t make any sense in my mind that he was hanging around a girl with a boyfriend when he had a whole ship full of single women. If he wanted somebody to suck his dick, he would have a better chance going elsewhere.

“You don’t say?” I laughed. “Why do you stop at them giving you head?”
Why was I so fucking curious? The questions were just pouring out of me.

“In high school, the chicks were more likely to give you head than sleep with you. Now, they would rather sleep with you than suck your dick, so I like it better.”

“I suppose that’s good logic.” I laughed. “What happened to end your relationship seven years ago?”

I noticed as we exited the elevator that we weren’t going in the direction of the mixer, but were on our way to the back of the boat. I didn’t mind at all. I figured Nicole and Avery were probably scoping out our floor, waiting for us to leave so they could use our cabin. When we were getting ready for the mixer, Nicole made sure to shave—everywhere, to wear cute panties, and basically told me that I needed to find something else to do until at least midnight or even one in the morning if I didn’t want to walk in on them.

Easton paused for a moment before replying. I wondered if I had crossed a line talking about his past. I didn’t mean to, but there was just a natural feeling I had towards him—like I could talk and laugh with him for hours.

“So, do you want the long and real version or what I normally tell chicks that ask me?”

“Well, I think you should tell me the long and real version since we have a long time until we can go to sleep,” I replied.

The wind blew through my long hair as we walked the side deck towards the rear of the boat. People were all around us, laughing, hugging, kissing and drunk.

“I got married right out of high school,” he began.

I knew we were both old enough to be married or have been married, but I was still shocked and a little disappointed to hear it. I’d always had the fantasy of having a big wedding and sharing it with someone for the first time, but if I married Easton, I’d be his second wife.

Why are you thinking about marrying this guy? You only just met him.

“I was young and stupid, but I got the best daughter out of the deal.”

“Oh wow, you have a daughter?” I asked in shock. Even though I was thirty, I couldn’t imagine having a child, but when you got married right out of high school, I guess you started early.

“I do, and she’s my world.”

“That’s so sweet. How old is she?”

“Ten going on thirty,” He laughed. “She thinks she knows it all. She gives me a run for my money sometimes, and I’m not looking forward to raising her alone when she is a teenager and going through her woman
things
.”

Hearing Easton talk about his daughter was warming my heart. The way his sky blue eyes lit up and his smile reached the crease—it was priceless. I hoped that the man I married and had kids with would love our child as much as Easton loved his daughter. “I bet. I’ve heard that kids can be a handful.”

“Especially when you’re a single father and have no idea what you’re doing.”

Easton leaned on the railing of the back of the ship when we approached. The wind was still blowing, causing my hair to wisp across my face from the left side. I held it down with my hand and turned to face him to prevent it from becoming tangled.

“Her mother isn’t in the picture?”

“She passed away a little over five years ago.”

“Oh my!” I gasped. “I’m so sorry.”

“Thank you. We were going through a divorce at the time, but it’s been hard on Cheyenne since it happened.”

“Cheyenne is your daughter?”

“Yep, that’s my Peanut. Here I have pictures on my phone,” he said, reaching into his pocket. I waited as he turned on his phone. “I don’t know why I have my phone on me since we don’t get service out here.” He laughed.

He showed me a series of pictures of a beautiful girl with long, dirty blond hair that matched his hair color. Her eyes looked lighter than his—like a light blue, almost grey, and her smile had dimples just like his.

“She’s beautiful,” I said, handing him back his phone. “I can’t imagine what you’ve gone through since her mother passed away.”

“It’s been tough because her death was sudden. It happened on the last day of our divorce trial. She was hit by a fucker who ran a red light and plowed into her. She passed away before she reached the hospital.”

I hadn’t known this man for more than seven hours, but as he told me about his wife—or ex-wife—dying and having to raise his daughter on his own, I wanted to wrap my arms around him and never let go. I wanted to make everything better. Do whatever needed to be done to make sure he and Cheyenne didn’t experience any more heartaches in their lifetimes. But that wasn’t reality.

People experience heartaches every day. Some are minor and some are major. We learn from them. No matter what the heartache is, we grow, we become better people—fighters—survivors. I’m not big on going to church, but I believe in God, and I know he would never make someone face any situation that they couldn’t overcome—except death, of course.

“I bet that was tough on Cheyenne. I’ve practically lived without my mom since I was thirteen.”

“Practically?” he asked, changing the subject to me.

“When I was thirteen, I came home to a note and one hundred dollars from her. The note said that she had to go out of town on business for a week. She had business trips at least once a month after that. Some lasted more than a week, some lasted only the weekend. The trips occurred like that until I was sixteen, and then she decided to make the trips longer. Oh and did I mention that I have a younger sister? I had to take care of her and myself.”

“How much younger is she than you?”

“Seven years.”

“Wow seven? That’s a big gap.”

“Well, we don’t have the same father, and we both don’t know who our fathers are.”

“Sounds like an episode of Maury or something,” Easton laughed, lightening the conversation.

“I know, right?”

We both laughed and stood at the back of the ship, looking out into the endless black night until it faded. The water around the boat rippled as it went through. The night air had turned cold, and I shivered in my strapless pleated chiffon dress and strappy heels.

“I’m not trying to put the moves on,” he said, holding out his hands in defense. “But do you want to go back to my room? We can talk where it’s warmer. Our best friends are in your room…or we can go back to the mixer if you want to do that.”

“Um…yeah, sure, we can go back to your room. I’m done drinking for the night, and it’s freezing out here.”

As we walked to his room that was on the opposite side of the ship from my room and one floor higher, I started to get nervous. I had no intentions of doing anything with him besides talking, but part of me wanted to see what it would feel like to kiss him. To see if I got those butterflies in my belly. To see if there was a spark like I read about in my romance novels.

When we arrived at his room and walked in, I awkwardly sat on the uncomfortable loveseat. Easton propped himself up on one of the beds, kicked off his shoes and got comfortable. I decided to take my heels off, seeing as I might be there a while.

We started off talking about where we lived, what he did for work and the reason he and Avery named the bar Halo. We talked about how I met Nicole, how he met Avery, and then we went deeper, like we had no secrets to hide from each other…like we had been best friends our whole lives and hadn’t just met.

“Do you want to tell me about your four year problem with your boyfriend?” he asked.

“He’s a lazy asshole.”

“So why are you with him? Does he make you happy?”

“Sometimes. I think I’m just with him because it’s what I know. We’ve been together for so long, live together, and I just don’t know if the grass is greener.”

“The grass is definitely greener in this case. You should never doubt your relationship. If you do and you search for those answers and you’re still unhappy, then it’s time to move on.”

“I know, you’re right. Is that why you got divorced?”

“Um—no.” He chuckled. “Honestly, I got married because
we
were stupid. We had Cheyenne early on because
we
were stupid. And we were getting divorced because
I
was stupid.” He sighed and then continued. “I used to model when we were married and lived in Long Beach. I would go to New York a lot to do gigs, and the girls would just throw themselves at me. I was young, stupid and didn’t think about my wife or my kid at home waiting for me. Since Dana died, I’ve had to raise Cheyenne on my own, and I like to think I’ve grown up a lot. All the women that I mess around with now know that I’m not looking for a relationship and just want to hook-up.”

“Don’t you think Cheyenne needs a mother figure in her life?”

“She has my mom. She only lives down the street from us.”

“A grandma is not a mom. They play different roles. I know from personal experience that I missed having a mother in the picture full-time. I know Bailee did, too. I just think that if you have the choice to have a family again, you should. My mother chose not to have a family, and that’s what shaped me as a person.”

“You seem like you turned out well, though.”

“I did, but there is a place in my heart that is missing the mother figure—hell, parents in general. But I’m thirty now, and I need to start thinking about starting my family and hoping to pick someone who won’t leave me alone with the kids. I want my kids growing up and not seeing mistakes like my mom made. You need to grow up and shape Cheyenne’s future. She’s going to look up to you someday. All girls with dads do. Don’t let her see you treating women as toys, because she will think that is how she should be treated by the guys in her life.”

“I’m going to call you Oprah and Avery is Dr. Phil. Between the two of you, I will never need to go to a therapist.”

I threw the pillow at him and we laughed. It was good to lighten the mood, but the words that he said were ringing in my ear. I needed to leave Jared and find someone who would treat me like a princess.

“Well, since Avery’s not back, yet, and it’s getting late, you might just be sleeping here,” Easton said, getting up to rummage in his suitcase. He handed me a pair of his boxers and a Halo t-shirt from his bar. I took them, changing in the bathroom and inhaling the scent of Easton that smelled like cedar, citrus and other scents I couldn’t identify. I stared at the logo on the t-shirt, remembering what he had told me about naming the bar Halo. The t-shirt was black with a gold halo above white angel wings with the name “Halo” across them.

I crawled into Avery’s untouched bed, and Easton turned off the light and crawled into his bed. We talked for a long time, and he told me about how he had to tell a five-year-old that her mother died and how she took it. I cried in the dark as he told me how Cheyenne always visits her mother’s grave and talks to her whenever she’s in California. We also talked about me raising Bailee some more and how my mother almost forgot my birthday.

Before long our conversation started to fade, and I closed my eyes and drifted off, not waking again until I heard Avery walk into the room, his hair all a mess with a huge grin on his face like he just had sex all night long.

CHAPTER TEN

Easton

“S
o, you and Brooke, too?” Avery asked as soon as Brooke shut the door behind her.

I groaned, rolling over to try to go back to sleep. “No.”

“Easton Crawford couldn’t seal the deal, and I was able to?” The fucking bastard chuckled.

“I wasn’t trying to seal any deal. She has a boyfriend, remember?”

“You’re still acting like that has ever stopped you before,” he said, rummaging through his luggage.

“It’s too early to get the third degree from you. Why aren’t you still shacked up with Nicole instead of bothering me?”

“It’s not that early, and if we want to go to breakfast, we have to get ready now.”

I had never been on a cruise before and didn’t realize that they dictated when you could and could not eat. I thought that you could eat twenty-four/seven. I guess that was true, but if you chose to eat during their off hours, you wouldn’t get the sit-down meal that they served on a set schedule. Plus, no matter what, I knew that I would have breakfast, dinner and hopefully lunch with Brooke since we were at the same table.

After Avery washed the smell of pussy from his entire body, I took my turn in the shower, and we headed to meet the girls for breakfast. The ship was on its way to Puerto Vallarta, and we were at sea for the next two days. Originally, Avery had wanted to go to the pool and scope out all the broads in bikinis, but now that he was already getting laid, I wasn’t sure what the plan would be.

When we arrived at the Aqua room, the girls weren’t there, yet. The hostess didn’t direct us to our table, but told us that we were to always sit at the same table for each meal. We looked at the menu that was already on the table while we waited for the girls.

I was about to ask Avery what he was planning on getting for breakfast when two women sat at the table, but they weren’t the ones we wanted to see.

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