PART 6–CHAPTER 197
LUKE
The second I was out of the locker room, I grabbed my phone and scrolled to Josh’s number. My fingers were shaking, a leftover from everything that had just unfolded, and it took a second longer than I wanted to hit call. I could still hear Michael’s pathetic pleading echoing in my head, and Francesca’s empty excuses. My stomach turned, but the only thing I wanted–no, needed–was to find Jess.
The line rang. Once. Twice. I almost hung up and called back, but then Josh picked up, his voice groggy and disinterested. “Yeah?”
“Where is Jess?” I demanded, cutting straight through the tired haze in his voice. My tone left no room for hesitation. “I need to know where she is right now.”
There was a pause, then a deep sigh. “What the hell, Luke? What’s going on? You need to let Jess go, man. I love you like a brother, but you can’t keep giving her hope. She needs a chance to move on,”
I clenched my jaw, my hand squeezing the phone so tightly I could feel the plastic straining. “Josh. Listen. I just ended things with Francesca. She’s been cheating on me with some rookie–Michael–and there’s no baby. It’s not mine. I ended it. It’s over.”
Silence. I could almost hear the gears turning in his head as he processed that. “Wait. You’re serious? You could have led with that, you know,
asshole!”
“Completely,” I said, my voice a low growl. I didn’t have the patience to explain the humiliating details, not right now. “Now, tell me where Jess
DOCK
There was a pause, and then he breathed out a relieved, “Fucking finally.”
I closed my eyes, exhaling heavily. “So you’ll tell me?”
“Oh, I’ll tell you. In fact, I’m coming with you.” Josh’s voice had a spark of excitement I hadn’t heard in a while. “Meet you at the airport in twenty.”
Twenty minutes to throw a bag together, barely time to process that I’d just upended my entire life. It didn’t matter. Nothing else mattered but finding Jess.
The flight was a blur, my mind racing over every single thing I’d done wrong in the last few months. Jess’s face, her smile, her laugh–they haunted me, mingling with the memory of how I’d walked away, buried in denial and distracts that led me nowhere but here. Josh didn’t talk much, and I was grateful. We didn’t need words to know we were both. thinking about Jess and Laura and how badly we’d messed it up.
We landed in Paris the next day, and Josh immediately whipped out his phone, dialing Laura’s number. He paced back and forth, muttering impatiently as each call went straight to voicemail. “Damn it, Laura, pick up,” he grumbled, pressing redial.
After five attempts, he glanced over at me, his brow furrowed. “She’s not answering.”
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Letting My Brother's Best Friend Take My V-Card (Jessie and Luke)