Drew wiped his finger on his shirt and then wiped at my lip again, repeating the same action.
“I love you, too,” he whispered, and I knew it was true. I felt it.
“We’re gonna deal with those bastards at Omega.” He began. “Now that the family knows, you can move in here. Things will get easier—”
“No.” I cut him off.
He pulled back, wrinkles forming in the center of his forehead. “No?”
I shook my head. “I can’t do this.” I gestured between us. “Being together isn’t going to work.”
He leapt of the bed, an incredulous look in his eyes. “The fuck do you mean we aren’t going to work?”
Just say it.
“We can’t be together. I won’t be with you.”
He laughed, a half-crazed sound. “You just told me you love me.”
“I do,” I whispered.
“Is this because of tonight?” he yelled. “Because some assholes jumped you? You’re going to let them win!”
I had no doubt the entire house could hear him yell. But I didn’t tell him to be quiet. If they heard, it would save me from having to say this twice.
“You’re a pussy!” Drew roared.
I stiffened. Everything in me revolted. “I’m a realist!” I yelled and pushed off the headboard. I jabbed my finger at him in the air. “What are you gonna do, huh?” I went on, relentless. “You gonna go to Omega and kick a bunch of ass? Show them you don’t give a flying fuck what they think?”
He started to say something, and I stood. It hurt to straighten to my full height, but I did it anyway.
“What then?” I challenged. “What happens the next time someone hates on me for loving you? What happens when it’s you lying in a parking lot instead of me?”
The last part completely drained me. I sagged forward.
Drew was there, his strong body offering support. “Sit down.” He nudged me gently. “Come on. You need to chill.”
I let him help me back into bed. I was so tired.
“Don’t ask me to do that,” I pleaded with him. “Don’t ask me to wonder every time you leave the house if you’re going to be someone’s victim. Don’t ask me to watch you get torn apart in the media for your relationship with a man.”
“We don’t know that will happen.” He tried to reason. “Emily thinks it will help my career.”
“Emily isn’t the one in love with you. I am. I’m not going to exploit the fact I fell in love with my best friend to sell magazines.”
“I don’t expect you to.”
“And I don’t expect you to lie.” I rubbed a hand over my head and made a sound. “I don’t want to sneak around. I don’t want to pretend I’m just your manager when really you’re my entire world.”
“So you’re breaking up with me?” He pulled back, hurt and pain in his expression.
I looked away. “Yeah.”
“No.”
My head shot up. “No?” I couldn’t help it. I was amused.
“I don’t accept that. I don’t break up with you.”
“You don’t have a choice.” My voice was final. My decision was made.
“If you love me as much as you say you do, then fight,” he challenged.
“This is me fighting. Fighting to keep you safe.”
“Fuck my protection!” Drew roared and shot across the room. The sound of a heavy thud and the cracking of drywall made me wince.
He yanked his arm back, pulling his fist out of the hole he just made in the wall. His knuckles were bloody.
Ignoring the blood, he stormed across the room and snatched something off his dresser. He threw it on the bed. It landed with a thud between my legs.
“Ask that,” he huffed.
I picked up the magic eight ball I’d given him. “Ask it what?”
“Ask it if we should be together. Let’s let fate decide.”
My fingers tightened around the ball. “I already did,” I said miserably.
“What?”
“You asked me before if I asked it a question.”
“You said no.”
“I lied. I asked it if we should be together. It said ‘all signs point to no.’”
He laughed, but it wasn’t with humor. “It’s a dumb toy. It doesn’t know anything.”
“Yet here we are.”
Drew’s head snapped back like I punched him. “It took me months and months and months to finally admit to myself how much I cared about you. In one week, the one goddamned week we’ve been together, I learned all those months of agony were worth it. I’d do it all again to end up here.”