LOGINShe returned with secrets that could destroy them both. He hates her. He wants her. And he’ll never forgive the only girl who still owns his heart. ***** I moaned into his mouth as Noah pressed me harder against the railing, his body solid and demanding against mine. One of his big hands slid down to grip my ass through the thin silk of my dress, squeezing possessively as he ground his hips forward. Gosh, he was rock hard. I could feel every thick inch of him. “Feel that?” he rasped against my lips. “That’s what watching you with him did to me. I’ve been hard all night thinking about dragging you somewhere dark and fucking the attitude right out of you.” My breath hitched, but I forced a smirk. “Poor baby. Jealousy looks good on you, Hale. Too bad you don’t deserve any of this.” He bit my bottom lip hard enough to make me gasp, then soothed the sting with his tongue. “You talk so much shit for someone whose nipples are hard enough to cut glass right now.” His free hand slid up my side, his thumb brushing the underside of my breast through the silk, sending heat straight between my legs. “Bet you’re soaked too. Bet if I pushed my hand between your thighs I’d find you dripping for the man you claim to hate.” “Keep dreaming,” I shot back, but my voice came out breathy and weak. My hips rolled against him anyway, chasing the friction I desperately needed.
View MoreELENA'S POV:
The rain wasn't just falling. It was that aggressive, stinging East Coast downpour that turned the Ridgewood campus into a blurry watercolor painting of grey stone and dying ivy. My boots supposedly waterproof according to the 5 star reviews on A****n had surrendered ten minutes ago. Now, they just squelched with every step, a pathetic soundtrack to the sinking feeling in my chest. I ducked under the narrow stone archway of the Humanities building, shivering as a gust of wind whipped through my thin trench coat. My laptop bag containing the half-finished draft of my pitch to the Ridgewood Daily was tucked firmly under my arm. I fumbled for my phone, my fingers numb and clumsy. "Come on, Lora. Pick up." The call connected, and a blast of heavy bass and high-pitched shrieking exploded through the speaker. "Elena! Tell me you’re calling to say you’ve finally decided to have a personality and come to this mixer!" Lora’s voice was a frantic, joyous yell. I could practically see her: multicoloured hair perfectly tousled, holding a drink that was definitely a colour not found in nature. "I’m drowning, Lora," I shouted, pressing my back against the cold stone. "The buses stopped running the North route, and I’m stuck at the far end of campus. Please tell me you’re near your car." "I... okay, so, funny story," Lora shouted back. I heard someone in the background yelling something about a "legendary" beer bong hit. "I am currently at the Sigma Delta house. And by 'at,' I mean I am legally a citizen of this dance floor. Also, I’ve had three of those 'Blue Voodoo' punches. If I try to drive, I’ll end up in the campus fountain, and frankly, I look too good to die in a pond." I closed my eyes, leaning my head back against the wall. "Great. I’ll just grow gills and swim to the dorms." "Ugh, don't be a martyr, it doesn't suit your bone structure," Lora chirped. "Call your brother! He’s probably just 'studying' and by studying, I mean ruining some freshman’s life. Tell him I’ll let him flirt with me for five minutes if he rescues you." "Ethan? He’s probably dead to the world but fine. Stay safe. Don't drink anything else that looks like radioactive waste." I hung up and scrolled to the contact that was always my last resort. Ethan was my brother and the school’s most charming headache. Since he’d made the varsity basketball team, his ego had its own zip code. I hit dial. It went to voicemail twice. On the third try, he picked up, but the sound that came through the speaker wasn't a greeting. It was a soft, feminine giggle followed by a muffled, "Ethan, stop it!" "Ethan!" I yelled, my patience evaporating faster than the puddles around me. "El?" He finally answered, sounding exactly like a guy who had been interrupted mid-makeout session. "This better be an emergency. I’m uh in the middle of a art study." "Unless that 'art' is a romantic comedy starring you and whatever girl you're currently traumatizing, I don't want to hear it," I snapped. "I’m stranded at Humanities. It’s a monsoon and I’m freezing. Please tell me you can come get me." "Crap, El, I can't. Coach has us on lockdown at the athletic center. Conditioning starts in ten. If I leave, I’m benched." I heard a rustle of sheets and another giggle. "But stay put. I’m sending someone. One of the guys is heading out because he wants to grab something . He’s already in the lot and will be there in five." Relief flooded me. "Thank you. Who is it? Should I look for a specific car?" "You'll know it. It’s the car that probably costs more than our parents' house. Black Mercedes-AMG G 63. Just get in, okay? I gotta go, Coach is—babe, stop—I gotta go!" The line went dead. I tucked my phone away and hugged my bag tighter. Five minutes. I could survive five minutes of shivering if it meant a heater and a ride. I stared out into the sheet of grey, watching the way the streetlights reflected in the growing puddles. A pair of headlights cut through the gloom, turning the rain into falling diamonds. A sleek, matte-black car rolled up to the curb. It was a beast of a vehicle and looking entirely too clean for a night like this. The car didn't stop directly in front of me. It lingered about two feet away. I waited for the driver to hop out, or at least roll down the window. Nothing. I stood there for thirty seconds, the rain soaking through my coat, until the passenger window slid down just a crack. "Are you planning on taking root, Voss? Or were you waiting for me to come out and carry you in like a bride?" The voice hit me like a bucket of ice water. A gravelly tone that I would have recognized anywhere, even after three years of trying to scrub it from my memory. I didn't move. "The door isn't going to open itself," the voice drawled. "Unless you’ve decided you prefer the hypothermia." I lunged for the handle, yanking the heavy door open and scrambling into the cabin. The warmth hit me instantly, an expensive, cedar-and-mint-scented embrace but the tension in the air was so thick it felt like I was breathing in smoke. I slammed the door shut, shivering violently as my wet coat bled moisture into the pristine, black leather seats. "Geez," the driver muttered. "You’re getting water everywhere. Do you have any idea how much this interior costs?" I turned, my hair plastered to my face to find Noah Hale staring at me. He looked exactly the same yet entirely different. His jaw was sharper, shadowed by a dark stubble that made him look less like the boy who used to steal my snacks and more like a man who destroyed reputations for fun. He was wearing a black team hoodie, the sleeves pushed up to reveal forearms corded with muscle. His grey eyes swept over me with a look of pure, unadulterated annoyance. "Nice to see you too, Noah," I said, my voice trembling with a mix of cold and panicked adrenaline. "I’m so sorry my near-death experience is inconveniencing your upholstery. Should I have asked the rain to wait until I found a plastic bag to wrap myself in?" He didn't look at me. "You’re soaking wet, you’re late, and you’re currently ruining a six-figure car. Ethan owes me a massive favour for this." "Ethan owes you? I’m the one stuck in a car with a guy who has the personality of a cactus," I snapped, fumbling with my seatbelt. "If I’d known Ethan was sending the campus grinch, I would have walked." "Then get out." Noah turned his head then, his gaze locking onto mine. There was no warmth there. "The doors are unlocked, Elena. Go ahead. Walk." I looked at the torrential downpour, then back at his stony, gorgeous profile. My pride was screaming at me to leave, but my frozen toes and my expensive laptop won the argument. "Drive the damn car, Noah," I whispered, turning to stare out the window. "Buckle up, Voss," he replied, his voice smooth and dangerous. "It’s going to be a long ride." As the car pulled away from the curb, I realized with a sinking dread that the rain was the least of my problems. The storm wasn't outside anymore. It was sitting in the driver’s seat.ELENA'S POV I sat at a small table on the second floor, my notebook open in front of me, pretending to review the notes Jax had promised to return to me. The truth was I was hiding from the way Noah had behaved. From the way my own heart kept betraying me every time I thought about him and I just didn't expect him to find me here. The heavy wooden door at the end of the aisle creaked open, and for a moment the low murmur from the study room downstairs drifted up before the door swung shut again. I looked up out of habit, the way anyone would and my stomach dropped. Noah walked in. He was still in his practice clothes with gray hoodie, sweatpants, hair damp and messy. His eyes swept the rows once, twice, and then found mine across the long aisles of books like they always did like magnets and his jaw locked. He didn't sit down. He didn't pretend to look for a book. He walked straight toward my table, long strides eating up the distance between us, and the few students still scattered
NOAH'S POVThe text from Ethan came in at 7:12 p.m.I was in my dorm, half-watching Game Of Thrones for the fourth time on my laptop, half-thinking about the way Elena had looked at me at the party when she saw me with Ashley. Ethan: Heads up. Elena agreed to dinner with Jax tonight. Said she needs her notes back. Don’t do anything stupid.I stared at the screen for three full minutes. Three minutes of my brain refusing to process the words. Three minutes of my heart slamming against my ribs like it wanted out. Three minutes of that hot rage rising in my chest again, the same one that had made me swing on Jax in class, the same one that made me follow her in the rain, and the same one that made me want to burn everything down just to keep her close."Dinner with Jax."Why the fuck was she having dinner with Jax? What was her motive? Was is a comeback for being with Ashley? If it was, it's downright petty and immature. I stood up so fast my chair scraped loudly against the floor. My h
ELENA’S POVThe party was loud, chaotic, and exactly the kind of place I didn’t want to be. But apparently Lora would not hear about it. After telling her about the night everything happened between Noah and I, she couldn't believe it."What the hell was that, Elena?" Lora had all but screamed. "You've both crossed a really dangerous line."Music thumped through the frat house like a second heartbeat, bass vibrating up through the floorboards into my bones. Red Solo cups littered every surface. People laughed too loud, danced too close, and pretended the world outside didn’t exist. I’d only come because Lora dragged me, promising it would be “good for me” to get out after everything with Noah, promising it'll be the best for my mental health like this party was helping my mental health right now.I regretted it the second I saw him.Noah stood near the makeshift bar in the living room, a red cup in one hand, the other resting casually on the small of a blonde girl’s back. She was beau
NOAH'S POV The knock on her door was soft and I knew she had heard it by all means.I stood in the dimly lit hallway of her dorm building, blood still drying on my hoodie, my split lip throbbing with every heartbeat. My knuckles burned where they’d split open against Jax’s face. I shouldn’t be here. I should’ve gone back to my own room, iced my hand, and tried to forget the way my friend’s words had cut deeper than any punch.But I couldn’t stay away. The door opened. Elena stood there in nothing but an oversized t-shirt and sleep shorts, hair messy like she’d been tossing and turning. Her eyes widened the second she saw me with the blood on my lip, the bruise blooming along my jaw, and the raw splits on my knuckles. For a split second, something soft and worried flashed across her face. Then it hardened into that familiar fire I craved like oxygen.“What the hell happened to you?” she demanded, her brows furrowing obviously not liking the sight of me on her doorstep.I didn’t answer
NOAH'S POV The second Elena pulled that envelope from the bottom of Ethan’s locker, the entire world narrowed to a single white rectangle in her hands.I felt it before I even saw the name. That familiar sick twist in my gut. The one that never really went away no matter how many points I scored o
ELENA'S POVOkay so in my defense, I was exactly where I was supposed to be.I need that on record before anything else because knowing Noah he has already constructed a version of this story where I wandered into the middle of a live drill waving my camera around like I had a death wish, and I ref
ELENA’S POVI told myself I’d only wait five minutes, but that was an hour ago. Now I was standing in the corridor like a complete idiot, Noah’s varsity jacket folded too neatly in my arms, pretending I had a shred of dignity left. Every time the heavy doors at the end of the hallway groaned open,
ELENA'S POV: The rain wasn't just falling. It was that aggressive, stinging East Coast downpour that turned the Ridgewood campus into a blurry watercolor painting of grey stone and dying ivy. My boots supposedly waterproof according to the 5 star reviews on A****n had surrendered ten minutes ago. N
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