Sinful Like Us Read online Krista Ritchie, Becca Ritchie (Like Us #5)

Categories Genre: Chick Lit, Contemporary, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors: , Series: Like Us Series by Krista Ritchie
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Total pages in book: 150
Estimated words: 148434 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 742(@200wpm)___ 594(@250wpm)___ 495(@300wpm)
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I open my mouth, but he’s unusually quicker than me.

“If you’re going to say splitting up will be faster, I’m going to remind you again that it’s not an option.” He seems stricter. More adamant. Maybe he’s pissed we’re no longer dating. Maybe he’s just more serious now that the storm is looming and his comms are down.

Either way, he’s radiating the I’m in charge of you energy that draws me in, and at the same time makes me want to push him away.

It’s spinning my head.

“I was going to mention it, yes,” I reply. “But I won’t anymore. Let’s just find the essentials and get this over with.” I reach for the list in my pocket and try to focus on the task at hand. Not on the fact that I’m standing next to my ex-boyfriend. Not the fact that strain still stretches between us.

No, definitely don’t think about any of that, Jane.

Definitely not.

25

THATCHER MORETTI

We’re done. I’m done.

Her words rush through my head as we make the drive back to Mackintosh House. We’re alone in a cramped rental car, and there are so many things I want to say. But I’m fighting between keeping focus on the snowy road and trying to formulate words that won’t push her further away.

Unfuck this.

I want to.

I’m going to.

We just left the food market five minutes ago, and the wind has escalated substantially. Snow sticks to the ground, and my windshield freezes in the corners, the shitty defroster not working that great.

I steal a glance at Jane. She’s staring out her window, fist to her chin like she’s deep in thought.

One hour.

That’s how long it’s gonna take to get home.

Maybe even longer if the ice slows me down.

Suddenly, the car radio switches on as if it has a life of its own. Static and incoherent voices pour through. We both reach for the knobs at the same time.

Our fingers brush, skin-to-skin. My muscles tense. Images of her naked, sprawling across our bed flash before my eyes like some erotic movie. Heat blazes everywhere.

She inhales a shuddered breath and retracts as if she’s been electrocuted.

Goddammit.

Quickly, I shut off the radio and decrease the heat in the car. I’m sweating through my jacket and there’s a fucking snowstorm outside.

“My mom would say that’s a bad omen.” Jane breaks the uncomfortable silence.

She’s lost me. So I ask, “The radio turning on or us touching?”

“The radio.” She fidgets in her seat. I can tell she wants to say more, but she goes quiet again.

I keep one tensed hand on the steering wheel and shrug off my jacket with the other. I’m quick enough that she doesn’t have time to help me, and then I throw the fabric in the backseat.

My eyes never leave the road. The snow grows heavier, obstructing the streets and my line of sight. It’s my responsibility to bring her home safely.

Whatever discussion we need to have, it has to wait.

I’m just not used to this unbearable silence with her. It weighs on me the longer we’re stuck together in the sedan. Sun sets behind rolling hills, the Highlands breathtaking but more ominous in the dark. Wind howls outside, trembling the car. I’ve been in plenty of snowstorms in Philly, but this is incomparable. In a blink, the entire road is gone.

Lost to a sea of white.

We’re in a fucking blizzard.

“Thatcher.” She tries to peer through the whiteout, but I hear worry on the tail end of my name.

I force myself not to look fully in her direction. Stay frosty. But in my peripheral, I can tell she has a hand firm on the dashboard, bracing herself.

She asks, “Can you see anything?”

“Less than a meter.” I decelerate to a crawl and turn on the fog lights. “We’re fine. I’m taking it slow.”

No other cars are on the road. Darkness creates a tunnel-like feeling as snow piles on the car. She’s safe. It’s the only thing on my mind.

I lose track of time in the quiet, and I don’t want to look down at the clock. My deltoids ache from sitting upright and tensed. I try to roll out my neck and crack some strain—

Tires skate and the car drifts to the right.

My jaw locks. Correcting immediately, I lift my foot off the gas and strengthen my grip on the wheel. My pulse hammers in my ears.

“What was that?” Jane asks.

“We hit a small patch of ice.” Black ice will ruin us, and if we slide on a larger spot, I won’t be able to course correct.

I weigh the risks.

Without cell service and internet and with no clear view of road signs, I’m not 100% certain of our distance to the house. All I know is that it’s a direct shot. One road. One long stretch. Nothing but land.

I ask Jane for the time.

She tells me and then says, “Why?”


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