Crash: A Bad Boy Stepbrother Romance (3 page)

BOOK: Crash: A Bad Boy Stepbrother Romance
3.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

“Working,” Katherine responded. “Tons of overtime.”

 

Wait, Her Highness had a job? Like… a job-job?

 

“I hear you,” the waitress nodded. “So what can I get for you? The usual?”

 

“Yes, please,” Katherine said.

 

“I’ll have the mango chicken salad,” Katherine’s mother said. “Dressing on the side, please.”

 

“Got it,” the waitress said. “For you, sir?”

 

“I’ll have the Burrito Loco,” my father said. “With refried beans. And can I get a side of sour cream with that?”

 

“Sure thing,” the waitress said. “And you?”

 

“Um… I really haven’t had a chance to look at the menu,” I muttered, pulling it open and scanning it quickly with my eyes.

 

“Their carnitas are to die for,” Katherine pointed out.

 

I shrugged and said, “That’s fine.”

 

I closed the menu and the waitress gathered them and took them away.

 

“Will you excuse me, I need to use the restroom,” Katherine said.

 

I had to slide out of the booth to let her by. I watched her hips sway as she sashayed toward the restrooms. Damn, I had to admit she was sexy in that little white sundress, the way it hugged her perky little tits and almost grazed her knees. It was just my luck that my dad was getting remarried, and the girl who was going to be my stepsister gave me a boner the size of Montana. My father cleared his throat, and it wasn’t until then that I realized I’d never sat back down after she left the table. I eased myself back into the booth.

 

“Luke, I apologize if my daughter offended you earlier. I don’t know what came over her. She’s usually very polite.”

 

I shrugged and said, “No big deal.”

 

“Trust me, Katherine is usually a very sweet girl. She’s just been acting a little out of sorts lately.”

 

A very sweet girl? Her? Why did I have a hard time believing that one? Maybe the fact that the little Ice Princess couldn’t even be bothered to say hello to me?

 

“Cut her some slack, Luke,” Dad said quietly.

 

“Sure, whatever,” I returned.

 

I’d be polite to her, but that was it. I couldn’t wait for the afternoon to be over.

 

Chapter Three

 

Katherine

I was assaulted before I even made it to the restroom. Claws gripped my arm, and I was shoved against the wall. My heart thudded, and then her eyes caught mine.

 

“So? Who is he?” Mariana squealed.

 

“Who?” I feigned stupidity.

 

“Come on, chica! Tell me, already? New boyfriend?”

 

Mariana released my arm, and I rubbed the spot where it still ached from her iron grip.

 

“Soon-to-be stepbrother,” I groaned. “And he’s a jerk.”

 

“No shit? Your mother’s getting remarried?”

 

“Unfortunately,” I moaned. “I can’t believe it.”

 

“Me, either! The guy is so hot! You have to invite me over!”

 

I felt a twinge of something in my throat. I swallowed hard and turned away from Mariana without another word, pushing open the door of the restroom and retreating inside. She followed.

 

“Hey, what’s up with you?”

 

“Nothing, Mari.”

 

She flicked her dark hair over her shoulder and said, “Something’s up. What’s going on? You don’t like this guy?”

 

“I told you, he’s a jerk.”

 

“Wait, are we talking about the father or the son?” Mariana asked, her hands on her hips.

 

“Both,” I answered. “Wait, no. I can’t really say that about Steve. He’s been decent, I guess. But his son… Luke. God. He’s a real ass.”

 

“Too bad,” Mariana said. “But the hottest guys usually are.” She paused for a moment, thoughtful. Then she added, “Say, would you give him my number?”

 

I rolled my eyes and entered a stall, locking the door behind me.

 

“I gotta get back on the floor, girl,” Mariana called. “Slip him my digits when you get a chance, okay?”

 

I heard the restroom door screech as it opened, and then it thudded shut. I leaned against the stall door and groaned. Did she really expect me to give him her phone number? I barely knew the guy. It seemed so tasteless.

 

I left the stall and washed my hands. I hadn’t really needed to use the restroom at all. I just needed a few moments to collect my thoughts. Now they seemed more jumbled and disjointed than ever.

 

Mariana was right about one thing. Luke was hot. He was gorgeous. Sexy. Masculine. It’s why I couldn’t find my voice when we first met, and why I stood frozen like an idiot instead of shaking his hand.

 

But the guy was a total asshole. He’d called me a stuck-up bitch within seconds of meeting me. What kind of person would do such a thing? A bully, that’s what kind. And if there was one thing I couldn’t stand, it was a bully.

 

I yanked a couple of paper towels from the dispenser and dried my hands before heading back to the table. Luke stood to let me into the booth, and I slid over toward my mother. Luke sat back down, hovering near the end of the seat as far away from me as he could manage. I sipped my iced tea and stared into the courtyard, watching the palm fronds sway in the breeze.

 

“I thought we’d have the reception in Malibu,” my mother said. “What do you think, Katherine?”

 

“Hmm?” I muttered.

 

“I was asking what you thought about having the wedding reception in Malibu,” my mother repeated.

 

“Like, in a hotel?” I asked.

 

“No, on the beach,” Mom said.

 

“That doesn’t sound very practical, Mom. All that sand, and wind, and insects… wouldn’t you rather have the reception indoors?”

 

“Doesn’t it sound romantic to have the reception on the beach?” Mom asked with a wistful sigh. “The waves crashing, and the gulls calling. Pure romance.”

 

“I think Katherine’s right, Luce,” Steve said. “Maybe we can have the ceremony on the beach and do the reception indoors.”

 

“Oh, but I had ideas for a beach theme for the tables and everything,” Mom pouted.

 

“We can still do the beach them at the reception, Mom,” I promised her. “The guests will be much happier if they can sit down at a sand-free table to eat.”

 

“I guess you’re right,” Mom sighed resignedly.

 

“We’ll figure something out,” I promised her.

 

“How about bringing the beach indoors?” Luke interjected.

 

“What do you mean?” Mom asked him.

 

The food arrived at that exact moment, and Luke attempted to elaborate over the clatter of plates and murmurs of the wait staff as they unloaded trays onto the table.

 

“Like you could have bowls of sand with candles and seashells in them as the centerpieces for the tables, and have the sound of ocean waves playing in the background,” he suggested. “Maybe have various ocean scenes playing on a big screen via projector.”

 

“That’s a fabulous idea, Luke!” Mom gasped, clapping her hands together. “I love it! Can we do that, Steve?”

 

“It sounds like a plan to me,” Steve said.

 

“I can’t wait! This reception is going to be amazing!” Mom sighed happily as she began to dig into her salad.

 

Luke didn’t look particularly pleased with himself. If he’d been gloating with a smug grin on his face, I don’t think I could have stood it. But he’d turned his attention to his carnitas, and I picked up one of my beef empanadas and took a bite.

 

“Shit!” I blurted out as blazing hot beef and cheese squirted down my chin.

 

I grabbed a napkin and wiped the burning filling away from my skin, but I could almost hear my flesh sizzling as it began to sting. I snatched up my iced tea and pressed the glass against my lower lip.

 

“Are you alright?” Mom asked.

 

“I just burned myself,” I said, my voice muffled by the tea glass.

 

Then it happened. Luke snorted. Then he snickered. Then he burst into laughter. My mother erupted immediately after, and then Steve began to bellow. With all three of them laughing until tears rolled down their cheeks, I couldn’t help but join in.

 

“I’m so glad my pain amuses you all,” I said with feigned irritation.

 

“You’re supposed to eat your food, not wear it!” Luke chortled, pointing to some cheese that had dribbled its way down my chin to rest on the snowy white backdrop of my sundress. I dipped my napkin in a glass of water and tried to wipe it away, but I only managed to make the spot larger.

 

“It’s ruined!” I wailed, scrubbing harder at the spot. Tears sprang to my eyes.

 

“It’s just a dress,” Luke shrugged. “Buy another one. It’s not like you can’t afford it.”

 

I was suddenly overwhelmed with fury. I picked up my tea glass and slung it in his direction. The frigid liquid splashed into Luke’s face and dripped onto his lap. He gasped, and sat there frozen with his hands in the air and his mouth agape.

 

I scrambled over the table, knocking half its contents onto the floor in the process and stormed from the restaurant. I’d ruined dinner, and I didn’t care! I just wanted away from that asshole as quickly as possible! I hoped I’d never see the jerk again!

Chapter Four

 

Luke

“Okay, what the hell just happened?” I asked, still motionless with tea running in rivulets down my face.

 

Lucy sighed and said, “Her father gave her that dress not long before he died. It’s her favorite.”

 

“Damn,” I muttered. “I didn’t mean anything by it. I just figured… I mean, dresses aren’t all that expensive, and… Damn.”

 

“It’s alright, it’ll blow over,” Lucy said.

 

“Of course it will,” Dad said. 

 

I wasn’t so sure. She might have been a spoiled little princess, but I hadn’t meant to offend her so deeply. I’d only been trying to lighten the mood by joking around with her.

 

Part of me wanted to go after her. After all, she was about to be my stepsister, and I didn’t want any tension in the family. We all had to get along, or at least pretend to, right? Wasn’t that what families did? Hell, how was I supposed to know? I’d grown up with a workaholic father and a nearly absent mother. I’d never really had an example of what a family was supposed to be like.

 

But no matter how much I tried to convince myself I should go after her and apologize, I couldn’t force myself to do it. Too much pride, I suppose. I just sat there staring at my carnitas as if they were doing a river dance on my plate, complete with knee socks and lederhosen. Wait… Mexican, German… what was I thinking?

 

God, that girl had me so flustered. I didn’t know if I’d been shot, fucked, powder-burned, or snake-bit, to borrow a quote from a movie I love.

 

I half expected my father to insist I go after her, but he and Lucy both seemed to be concentrating on their food, and if they weren’t going to insist, I was going to sit right there with them and enjoy my food, which, by the way, happened to be not only the best Mexican food in The Valley, but in the whole damned state, as far as I was concerned.

 

I chewed on a tortilla that I’d stuffed with the pork. Juice dribbled onto my plate. I licked it off my fingers. I should have been enjoying the hell out of it. Instead, I felt wracked with guilt. How could I sit there enjoying the food she’d chosen for me, in a restaurant she’d picked, when she was probably off bawling her eyes out over her dead father?

 

“Aw, hell” I muttered.

 

I flopped my napkin onto the table with a thump and slid off the end of the booth to go find her. I had no idea where she might be, but I had to try. Sure, she was a complete bitch, but she was a human being. She obviously had some kind of real, human feelings given the tears that had filled her eyes before she crawled across the table like a possum at a picnic.

 

My eyes scanned one side of the road, and then the other. She wasn’t near the car. She wasn’t walking down the street in either direction that I could see.

 

“Katherine!” I shouted. “Hey, Katherine!”

 

No response. Where could she have gone?

 

“Have you seen a pretty blonde in a white dress?” I asked a dark haired little boy.

 

He stopped licking his ice cream cone long enough to point down the street, and I took off in that general direction.

 

The streets in this neighborhood were lined with small stalls and shops. They were full of families shopping and eating and laughing. Most of the residents seemed to be Hispanic, but I didn’t let that deter me. I knew a lot of them could speak English just as well as I could. I continued asking if anyone had seen a blonde in a white dress.

 

“Excuse me,” I said to a young woman at a flower stall. “Have you seen a pretty blonde woman in a white dress?”

 

“Can you be more specific?” she asked, shrugging.

 

“She was upset… crying.”

 

Her eyes narrowed knowingly, and she frowned.

 

“What did you do?” she asked.

 

“Me? Nothing! We were having dinner, and… well, I said something that upset her, but I had no idea it was a sore spot, and…”

 

She interrupted my rambling to say, “Take her some flowers.”

 

“I don’t even know if she likes flowers…”

 

“Every girl likes flowers,” she said.

 

“You just want to sell me some flowers,” I challenged her. I was ever the cynic.

 

“Here,” she said, thrusting a bouquet into my hands, “take them. No charge. Just find your girl and apologize.”

 

“She’s not my girl. I actually just met her.”

 

“Take her these flowers and maybe she will be your girl soon.”

 

I snorted. Even if the flowers were enough to unfreeze The Duchess’ heart, I wanted no part of it. I didn’t do relationships, and I certainly didn’t do them with spoiled little rich girls. Hell no.

 

Still, I owed it to my father to be nice to her. I didn’t have to see her much after the wedding, but until then I figured I could try to be friendly.

 

I pulled out my wallet and pushed a twenty toward her. She threw up her hand and shook her head.

 

“Keep it,” she said. “If she turns out to be your soul mate, maybe you can come back and pay me then.”

 

Soul mate. Yeah, right. I didn’t believe in soul mates, or even love. I started to walk away, and when she turned to help another customer, I slid the money under her cash box and left.

 

Other books

Never Let Me Go by Jasmine Carolina
Más respeto, que soy tu madre by Hernán Casciari
Florence of Arabia by Christopher Buckley
Wagers of Sin: Time Scout II by Robert Asprin, Linda Evans
The Black Opal by Victoria Holt
Bare Nerve by Katherine Garbera