One Reckless Night

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Authors: Stephanie Morris

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One Reckless Night

Stephanie Morris

One Reckless Night

It Happened One Night series

Copyright © 2013 by Stephanie Morris

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ISBN-13: 978-1-60659-972-3

All rights reserved under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of

this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical

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permission in writing from the publisher.

All rights reserved under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of

this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical

including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without

permission in writing from the publisher.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the

author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or

dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and

does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

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Dedication

To my wonderful friends who are a part of the sushi tradition. I know that
none of you ever thought this would come

out of it. Thank you for the inspiration
for this series. Thank you for allowing me to tell our stories. Love you guys!

Prologue

“I’m tired of being good.”

Bayleigh Williams looked up when she heard the sound of chopsticks hitting the table.

Tonight she was enjoying her weekly outing with her three best friends. Bayleigh had met the trio in

the school library her freshman year in college on the campus of Southern Methodist University.

They had quickly become a quad and have been inseparable ever since.

Bayleigh didn’t know what was wrong with her. From a young age, she’d been socially

awkward and unfortunately, had never grown out of it. The only reason she connected so well with

her friends was because they’d bonded on an intellectual basis first. Growing up, she had always

been a wiz at schoolwork. Not anywhere near a genius level, but studying had come easy for her. So

had good grades, making her somewhat of an outcast and adding to her already socially awkward

high-school years. She’d also been chubby and her fashion sense had been a little off. Most of the

other kids just stayed away from her.

After high school it hadn’t gotten much better. There had been a handful of awkward

relationships with men, none of them memorable—at least not in a good way. Besides her brother

and father there was only one man she could be around for more than five minutes and not make a

fool of herself. He was a co-worker, also the only male friend she had.

“Would you care to explain your statement or do we have to guess?”

Bayleigh stared at Deidre blankly. “Explain what?”

Maylea put down her chopsticks. “Are you okay Bayleigh?”

Bayleigh nodded as she remembered what she said that warranted Deidre’s question.

Giselle picked up her chopsticks. “Personally I’m not sure I want to know. It sounds like it

could lead to trouble.”

Bayleigh smiled. “Which happens to be what I’m looking for.”

Deidre’s mouth dropped open. Leaning over, she strained to look into Bayleigh’s cup. “Are

you drinking green tea or did you sneak and get sake?”

Bayleigh laughed. “It’s green tea.”

Bayleigh looked down at her plate and frowned. More food had disappeared than she

remembered eating. She must be in bad shape because she loved sushi and looked forward to eating

at Zenkichi’s. Because of Maylea she now went through withdrawal if she went more than a week

without sushi. Right now it was the only daring thing she did in her life. But that was about to

change. Taking a deep breath, she looked at each of her friends.

“I want to be bad.”

Giselle began to choke. Maylea patted her on the back, while Deidre stared at Bayleigh a

gaped-mouth stare.

Maylea sighed. “What happened, Bayleigh?”

Bayleigh shook her head. “Nothing happened, which is why I want to change it up a little.

My life is so boring it is ridiculous. I need to let my hair down, let my bad side out.”

Deidre’s eyes widened. “
What
bad side?”

Bayleigh looked at her friends, full of excitement. “The one that I plan to develop.”

Maylea sat her chopsticks down, giving Bayleigh an inquisitive look. “Are you sure

something happen that we don’t know about?”

Bayleigh sighed with frustration. “No. Like I said, that’s the problem. There isn’t anything

happening. My life is boring.”

Giselle looked at her with puzzlement. “You have plenty going on in your life.”

Bayleigh’s eyes widened with surprise. “I
do
?”

Deidre nodded. “Yes, you do.”

Bayleigh folded her arms across her chest. “Besides you guys, my family, and work, name

one thing.”

It was a struggle for her to keep a straight face when her friends fumbled to find something

else and smiled when they looked at her in defeat. “So, like I was saying, I need to add some spice to

my life.” She paused before giving all of them a pointed look. “We
all
do.”

Maylea was the first to speak. “What brought this on?”

Bayleigh turned her gaze to Deidre. “You.”

Deidre stared at her, her expression full of surprise. “Me?”

Bayleigh nodded. “It’s more to do with your mom than you.”

The light in Deidre’s eyes dimmed. It was one of the reasons she had been hesitant to bring

it up. Deidre had lost her mom to brain aneurysm two months ago. Bayleigh reached across the

table and squeezed Deidre’s hand. “Losing your mom so suddenly made me realize that life is

precious. I’ve accomplished a lot in my life, but there is a lot more that I want to achieve. I also

know that I don’t have forever to do it.” Bayleigh sighed. “I want to shed my good girl persona. Live

on the wild side a little.”

Giselle looked concerned. “Are you sure about this?”

Bayleigh nodded. “I’m more than sure. As I said it’s something we
all
need to consider.”

Deidre shook her head. “I want no part of this.”

Bayleigh stared at her. “Can you sit here and tell me you are one hundred percent happy with

your life? Have you ever wondered what would happen if you handled a situation the complete

opposite way than the lackluster, humdrum way you always do?”

“You aren’t making any sense, Bayleigh.” Maylea pressed her fingers to her temples. “What’s

wrong with the lives we currently live?”

“We exist. We aren’t living. There is a major difference.”

Giselle shook her head. “I like my life the way it is.”

“Giselle, at some point we have to stop being so boring and predictable.”

Deidre frowned. “There is nothing wrong with being
responsible
and
conservative
.”

Bayleigh laughed at the emphasis Deidre put on the words.

Maylea sat back in her chair. “What are you getting at, Bayleigh?”

Bayleigh leaned closer to her friends. “I think we should all dump our good girl personas at

least once. Do something out of the ordinary. Nothing life threatening, just fun.”

Giselle shook her head. “I don’t understand.”

Bayleigh sighed. “Look around us.”

She watched as her friends glanced around the restaurant before looking back at her.

Deidre frowned. “What are we looking for?”

Bayleigh shook her head. This was going to be more difficult than she thought. Yet the fact

that they were so oblivious to what was in front of them told her she had made the right decision.

“We are the only single women in here because we don’t have anything better to do. Not that I

don’t enjoy spending Friday nights with you guys but it would be nice to have other options on

occasion, like a date or something. ”

She watched as Maylea, Giselle, and Deidre glanced around again. Their gazes returned to

her after a few moments.

“So this is about being single?”

Bayleigh rolled her eyes at Giselle. “No. This is about enjoying life and if having a man is a

part of it, then fine. If not, that’s fine, too.” Bayleigh exhaled. “I’m tired of feeling like life is passing

me by.”

Maylea began to fidget. “I’m not so sure about that. We know what happened the last time I

threw caution aside.”

“Yes, we do,” Giselle muttered.

Bayleigh gave both Giselle and Lea a sympathetic look.

“Alec, Joaquin, Erwin and Jerry were jerks.”

Deidre nodded. “Bayleigh is right. They were jerks. They also knew they could take

advantage of us—”

“Because we are nice girls,” Lea finished.

Giselle shook her head. “This is crazy. You can’t tell me the two of you are buying into this.”

“I don’t want to, but Bayleigh is right.” Deidre’s expression fell a little. Bayleigh knew how

hard the loss of Mrs. Tarlosa was on her friend.

Deidre put down her chopsticks. “Mom used to always tell me that I needed to be more

sociable, get out and enjoy life a little more. She said there was so much in the world I hadn’t

discovered yet because I hadn’t stepped out of my shell. It might be nice to break out, even if it is

temporary.”

Bayleigh smiled. “Your mom was right, Deidre. There’s a lot you’re missing out on. We all

are.”

Lea and Deidre nodded in agreement. Giselle shook her head, grumbling underneath her

breath. Bayleigh grinned. She loved her friends despite their quirks. They had a lot in common but

there were a lot of differences between them as well. Bayleigh looked around the table studying

them. With a Black mother and Japanese father, Maylea was the most exotic looking of the four.

Deidre was of mixed decent as well. Her mother was Black and her father Native American.

Giselle’s mother was Black but her father Cuban. Bayleigh was the only one who had an African

American mother and father.

She loved her friends, didn’t know what she would do without them. Her friends were

always there for her when she needed them.

“So what do you think, Bayleigh?”

“About what?”

Deidre laughed. “This was your plan and now you aren’t paying attention?”

Bayleigh stared at Deidre and Maylea, wondering what they had come up with. “I’m paying

attention now.”

Maylea leaned forward. “Deidre and I said you’re right. So we’re going to follow your

suggestion and do something different than we normally do.”

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