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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“So here’s what’s going to happen.” I wipe the rest of my tears from my cheeks. No return, no going back. “If you don’t promise me here, today, that you’re going to stop using, then I’m moving to New York. I’m going to live in an apartment on the same hall, and every day that you snort coke, I’m going to do the same.”

His eyes flash hot. “Jane—”

“If you’re going to destroy your life, your body, then I’m going to destroy mine.” I add in French, “Ton destin est mon destin.” Your fate is my fate.

Charlie steps forward. “Ton destin est mon destin.”

“You’re insane.” He rubs away his tear tracks with the heel of his palm. “You’re both insane.”

“We’re Cobalts,” Charlie declares.

Beckett extends an arm. “So being a Cobalt is now synonymous with insanity? That’s great.” He plants a look on me. “You’re not taking coke. You freaked out when you ate a pot cookie. I call your bluff.”

Charlie reaches into his back pocket. “We thought you’d say that.” He procures a small baggie. Filled with white powder.

36

THATCHER MORETTI

13 Days Snowed-In

Charlie waves the small baggie of coke. Which he bought in town before we were snowed-in. I knew—I fucking knew this part would be like a swift kick to the gut.

It’d throttle me to move. To come to her aid. To sweep Jane protectively in my arms and pull her from immediate danger. I watch this play out in real-time, and it’s fucking unbearable. Tendons in my neck pull taut, searing inside out. I grit down on my teeth and stay frosty.

Focused on her.

Back when I first heard the plan, my immediate reaction was to say no.

Fuck no.

Hell no.

Anyway you want to say it—no.

But Jane loves her family, and she’d do just about anything to protect them. Even put herself at risk. Being the barrier between her and that is like telling her not to be all of who she is.

So I said yes.

But seeing the events unfold, I’m questioning my judgment seven ways to hell.

Beckett has a what the fuck expression as he stares at the baggie. “Where did you get that? How…?”

Charlie arches a brow.

“Right. You’ve been to Scotland before,” Beckett remembers. “I’m guessing you knew someone here who could sell to you?”

“Maybe.”

“Fantastic,” he mutters.

Among the security team, Beckett is known to be somewhat reasonable, mostly calm and dedicated to his craft—but I’m staring at a twenty-one-year-old who’s so fucking frayed at the seams. I question how many times a day he spends ensuring every thread is hidden, every fucking stitch sewn.

I want to protect him.

I want to protect her.

He glances at Jane. “Sis, you’re not really going to go through with this?”

“I am.”

Sickness burns my throat. I blink infrequently, almost not at all.

Charlie sits on the edge of a red floral couch. He pours cocaine on a glass coffee table and uses a black credit card to separate the powder in lines.

Beckett looks haunted. He pushes away from the windowsill but he stops short of the table. He turns on me. “You’re really going to let Jane snort cocaine?”

I don’t answer. My pulse is in my ears. Ever since my PTSD crept outside of a nightmare, I worry I might meet it again.

Not today, I pray.

“Seriously?” Beckett shakes his head. “What kind of boyfriend are you?”

“One who knows how important this is,” I say with severity. “You’re the only one in this room who can stop her.”

“Bullshit.”

I glare, and my anger bursts. “If you want her to stop, just fucking tell her!”

Tell her, goddammit.

“You tell her!” Beckett points at Jane.

“I can’t!” I shout. “You’re the only one.”

His face contorts. “No. I’m getting Moffy.” He heads to the door.

I side-step to block his exit, and I stare down at him. “Maximoff already knows.”

His eyes darken. “There’s no way.”

Jane sinks down to her knees in front of the table. “Well, technically Moffy thinks you’d never let me do this.”

Maximoff believes in him.

Farrow doesn’t. I don’t, and I feel like 9 out of 10 outcomes involve Jane using drugs in this room. If we repeated this ten times, I only see Beckett choosing his sister and brother once.

Is this that one time?

I doubt it.

Charlie went a darker route when we planned this, and he said, “We might need to call in Moffy to join us.”

“No,” Farrow and Jane said.

But the reality is that Maximoff is sober. He has the family history of addiction, and Charlie thinks that forcing Maximoff to use drugs could push Beckett to quit more than them.

Maximoff agreed.

He’s waiting in the hall.

If Charlie gives me a signal, I’m supposed to radio Farrow, who’ll tell Maximoff to come inside. But I can’t put Farrow in the position I’m in.

I can’t put Maximoff in the position Jane is in.

Beckett has to choose his sister.

He stares past me and out the many windows. Confliction tearing up his face—and I just tell him, “Choose her.”


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