Sultry Oblivion by Alexa Padgett

2

Aya

His words hit me square in the solar plexus, sending reverberations through my chest. I studied his face for the sincerity so evident in his voice. He seemed tired but also...not lighter; that was the wrong word. Maybe relieved. Like he’d been carrying a weight, and now he’d managed to share its burden.

I wrapped my trembling fingers around my teacup—as if I hadn’t realized it was the same from that photo—the sneaky, caring heartbreaker.

And that’s what our relationship boiled down to.

I settled back in the chair, my fingers warmed by the delicate porcelain, and met his gaze. “I want to believe you. I do. I want to believe we can do this.”

His long lashes fluttered down, hugging those chiseled cheekbones. I’d seen pictures of Lev, of course, but it was Nash who’d been blessed with the best of his parents’ features—and the worst of their demons. Well, actually, I didn’t know who Nash’s biological father was, so maybe he looked like that man.

I sucked in a breath. “When I went to that party to tell you my mum was gone, I expected you to hold me. I really needed you to hold me…”

This talk was so long overdue. I’d hoped to never have it, but by forcing down my emotions, I’d held myself back, rendering me unable to move forward with Alistair, with life.

A rough sound came from Nash’s throat. I looked up, shocked by the tears rolling down his cheeks.

I placed my hands on the table, palms slick, and shoved back.

“I know you’re sorry, Nash. I understand now that you’d just been through your own nightmare, and that what happened wasn’t even your fault. But that night gutted me.”

He made no move to wipe his face, and a tear dripped down his chin onto his shirt and the table.

“That’s why I said what I did in the coffee shop,” I explained. “I wanted you to feel like I did. Hurt like me.”

“I did. Hurt, I mean.”

“And so did I,” I whispered. “Maybe more than before. I…I hated myself for what I did to you that day.”

“Fuck, Aya. I don’t know what to say,” he rasped.

I closed my eyes. They were scratchy, and they ached. “Maybe that’s the problem. Maybe we don’t know how to talk anymore.”

He made a deep, pained sound, but I didn’t open my eyes. Exhaustion slammed into me—not just physical, but emotional. I’d used up all my reserves to get to this point. Now I wanted to sleep. I craved the oblivion, at least for a few hours. Until my heart didn’t hurt this much. There was so much work to do. The way forward seemed so difficult.

“Maybe we shouldn’t try,” I said.

“Is that what you want?” he whispered. He sounded tortured.

I opened my eyes and met his turbulent gaze.

“Really?” he murmured.

“No.” The word exploded from me like a gunshot. “No, Nash. I want us to be us again, to find our way. It’s...it’s a lot to process. And then, on top of all that, I want you to...to fuck this sexual tension out of me so I can just go back to being numb. Blissed out...”

I bit my lip, but then I started to giggle at how ridiculous I must sound. Nash smirked, and then he chortled, especially after I broke into a second fit of laughter.

A moment later, we both guffawed. I laughed and laughed, my stomach aching. Finally, we settled back, the release of tension leaving me more relaxed, but also hollow.

Nash leaned closer, careful not to touch me but close enough for me to see each eyelash, to study the variety of browns and golds in his irises.

“Give me this chance; give me now. Let me hold you tonight, in my bed. Let me prove I’m ready to move forward with you. We need this time together.”

I nodded. We did.

“I wish…” I sipped the warm brew, knowing it wouldn’t soothe me enough.

“What do you wish, Ay?”

“I wish we’d been older, more mature, better at expressing ourselves. That I’d given you the opportunity to explain, that I hadn’t hurt you that day. So many things, really.”

Nash nodded, his face settled in solemn lines. “That we’d had less dysfunctional childhoods. Less grief and loss and crazy backstabbing.” He grimaced, rearranging the bag of peas.

“Need some pain meds?”

He shook his head. “I don’t have any pills here because I won’t take anything. Ever.” His face twisted. “I’m like her—my mom. I have that predisposition toward addiction. For me, the best option is to avoid temptation.”

“And that’s worked?” I asked.

He shrugged. “Better than anything else. But it’s only been a few months.”

“Do you miss it? The high, I mean.” I probably shouldn’t have asked. No, I knew I shouldn’t have.

He licked his lower lip. “I miss the numbness. It’s easier to go through life not caring than feeling the way I do for and about you. I missed you, Ay.” His throat worked, his eyes those toss’d seas Shakespeare wrote about. “I’ve missed you every day. At first, I was just angry, but then, it settled, and my longing was so, so huge it ripped into my guts.”

“I don’t want to hurt you,” I breathed. “I mean, I did, but that just made me feel worse. I understand now that we’ve both made mistakes.” I clasped my hand tighter around my teacup in an effort not to reach for him. If I did, I’d kiss him. Kissing Nash felt…like home.

I glanced around the kitchen. “I never got over leaving Austin. I never loved London. I just… I couldn’t face you.” I inhaled, but it was choppy. “That’s on me. I was…I was so scared you’d hurt me again.”

He raised an eyebrow in that Nash Porter way that said I was on thin ice. I laughed, charmed by his arrogance, which caused him to smile back. His white teeth flashed behind the russet-and-honey stubble, the deep dimple winking in his right cheek. His eyes sparkled like the sun through whiskey. He took my breath, then reached forward with his good hand and clasped my cold fingers.

Warmth pulsed through our touch, reorienting my world.

“I won’t hurt you, Ay,” he said, a vow. “Not on purpose. Never on purpose.”

“I missed you,” I blurted, desperate to fall into his arms. “So much I couldn’t breathe.”

“Same.”

That comforted me because it was our pattern, but more so because of the depth of emotion in that single word.

Fatigue blanketed me again. I needed sleep, but I also wanted him to hold me like he used to. I craved the connection, our closeness. Some return to normalcy. It had been so long.

He sighed, shaking his head. “It’s late. Let’s get you to bed.”

I let him lead me down the hall. He hesitated for a moment in the doorway to his room before he gently tugged me over the threshold. He moved toward his large, gleaming chest of drawers and opened one.

I let my gaze sweep the room, landing on the snapshots on the mantel. I crossed to them. There were two of Nash and Lev, one of his family taken weeks before Lev’s death, but the rest of the photos were me. Some were from our time at Holyoke, but others were more recent. They were press shots, and they appeared to be the originals.

“I bought them,” Nash said. “I couldn’t get close to you any other way. Not being able to talk to you? That was worse than losing Lev.”

I pressed my hand to my heart, which seemed to flutter and tumble under my palm.

Nash was still the same sensitive soul under the layers of cynicism and heartache. He still yearned for a connection, for love, for people to see him as more than the child of famous parents and a wealthy, spoiled celebrity.

But it was the conch shell sitting on his nightstand, mere inches from his pillow that stopped me cold.

“You still have it?” I whispered. I turned and wrapped my arms around him, careful of his swollen hand. Nash’s breath warmed the cool skin of my cheek. He dipped his knees, bringing himself to my eye level.

I loved that he’d do that for me—meet me on my level. He always had, and each time he did so, I felt seen, understood, cherished.

Yes, even when he hurt me, I’d known Nash cherished me. That was part of why coming here frightened me so. I’d spent years fighting for my independence, and I was damn well going to have it.

He nodded. “We can’t change the past, Ay. But I’ll always be grateful it brought me you. All we can do is live—now and onward.”

I nodded my cheek against his chest. I was exhausted. “Onward, my wayward prince,” I murmured.

He laughed softly. “Cheeky girl.”

“Exhausted from jet lag and emotion, you’re a lot to handle, you know?”

He shook his head. “Let’s get you to bed, then. I can’t wait to hold you close.”