“’Lo?” I utter into the phone.
“Be quiet,” Nikki grumbles.
“Well, don’t you two sound pleasant this morning,” my sister practically sings in my ear.
“Do you have to be so loud?” I question.
She laughs and I pull the phone from my ear. “Get up and drink tons of water, brat. Take some Advil and trust me when I tell you that you’ll feel better with something bland in your stomach.”
“There is no way in hell I’m putting anything in my stomach,” I force out when just the thought makes my stomach revolt.
“I’m on the way.” She sighs and hangs up.
I drop the phone and curl back up with Bam.
This time, instead of getting a little peaceful sleep, my visions are full of Nate. That kiss. That dance. And his words.
By the time my sister is poking me with her foot, I was so worked up I was seconds away from shoving my hand down my sleep shorts and taking care of my arousal.
He’s put some voodoo curse on me.
My body seems to be stuck in some sort of Nate-induced provocation of lust and need.
“Time to get up, Em!”
I jump at Maddi’s outburst and glare up at her.
“Here,” she says and thrusts a huge bottle of water in my face.
I take it with greed-fueled need, as the dryness in my mouth seems to intensify at the sight of water.
“Slow down,” she says when I take huge pulls and gulps of water, the excess running from the sides of my mouth and onto the top of my shirt. “You’re going to get sick if you drink that fast. Slow down and take these,” she stresses, pulling the bottle away from me and pushing two pills into my mouth before pressing the water back to my lips.
She continues to stand over me until I’ve drunk almost half of the bottle before giving me a piece of toast. I give her a look of disbelief—doubting I’ll be able to actually keep that down—but I take it and slowly nibble. By the time I had finished the second piece, I was feeling less zombie-like and closer to a lukewarm human.
“Better?” she asks knowingly.
“Don’t be a bragger.”
She just laughs at me and helps pull me up from the floor. I look over at Nikki with a smile when I see her finishing some toast of her own.
“Don’t worry, she got to me too. She’s like the hangover Nazi.”
“Go clean yourself up, then meet me in the living room so we can chat,” Maddi says before leaving the room.
“Well,” Nikki says with a mouth full of toast. “You heard the tyrant. Get your ass in gear before she comes back in here with more demands.”
“I heard that,” my sister calls from further in the house.
“I meant for you to!” Nikki yells back.
Rolling my eyes, I drag myself into the bathroom and go about ‘cleaning myself up.’
“So …”
I groan, pulling the brush through my hair, and ignore my sister.
“Yeah, I second that so,” Nikki adds when I don’t make a move to speak.
I finish brushing my hair before dropping the brush down on the coffee table. I curl my legs up and wrap my arms around them before looking at the two of them sitting on the loveseat together, waiting none too patiently for me to give them what they want.
“So he just danced a little. What more do you want?”
“Uh … no. I want you to start with when he pulled you over his shoulder like Tarzan and you disappeared up those stairs. Then you can end with what happened when he ‘just danced a little,’ which in turn caused you to put so much alcohol into your body that you had to be carried out to the car and put to bed without so much as moving a muscle.”
I gasp at my sister in shock. “I had to be carried out? I don’t remember that.”
She laughs. “Well, I would think not since you were basically comatose when Cohen helped you in the back of his truck. You didn’t even move once. Which, bravo on taking your twenty-first down like a beast.”
“I’m never drinking again,” I vow.
“Sure … that’s what everyone says.” She laughs.
“Would you two shut up and get to the good stuff.”
I roll my eyes at Nikki, look down at my toes, and make a mental note to repaint them later.
“I’m not even sure I understand what happened,” I tell them honestly.
“How about you start at the beginning, and we can help you figure that out,” Maddi says compassionately.
With a sigh, I do just that and start from the beginning. Well, more like the middle since both of them know what started all of this—that being my humiliating graduation night.
I gloss over the night of Dani and Cohen’s wedding. I’m not sure why, but deep down, I know that moment should be left between Nate and me. “We had a run-in almost two years ago. It wasn’t pretty, and no, I’m not going to give you more than that. It’s been … hard, you could say, for me to be around him since.”