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However, when I had surprised Lexi, she hadn’t thrown herself in my arms. Instead the incident had ended with her screaming at me.

Better than the alternative.

You mean the alternative where I made love to her on the towel?

Except that wasn’t what I had wanted to do. I had wanted to fuck her ruthlessly, endlessly.

It’s a sickness.

I pushed myself into a run, trying to outrace the thoughts of lust of her freckled body, of her backside when she’d bent over.

A white van passed me, engine clunking as it drove down the street, windows dark.

I frowned at it. I was always suspicious of vans, for good reason. I tracked it as it turned on a side street.

You’re not going to outrun it.

Maybe I should buy a motorcycle, but then I wouldn’t be able to run myself to exhaustion just to earn a few hours of sleep.

The van pulled to a stop at the end of the block. A man stuck his head out.

I peered.

He was talking to someone. A car drove past, illuminating the figure’s bright-red hair.

Lexi.

25

LEXI

“You got a package!”

“I’m a horrible person and I don’t deserve a package,” I said dejectedly when I walked into the cramped, dark studio apartment. I dumped my towel on the back of a rickety folding chair.

“Aw, did your sunbathing not give you a mood boost?” McKenna asked.

I slumped down in a chair.

“Grayson was there.”

“Yikes.”

“Yeah.”

“He wasn’t happy, I take it?”

“Really?” Grenadine demanded. “That man wasn’t happy that he saw a busty lass in a bikini?”

“I was wearing a thong-kini,” I said with a grimace. “He was not amused.”

“Bullshit,” Grenadine insisted. “No red-blooded American male looks at an ass as nice as yours and thinks, I need to have that removed immediately from my house.” She tapped me on the hip with the wine bottle.

“He’s going through a lot,” I said, rubbing my face. “I’m pretty sure the big S was the last thing on his mind. That’s why he has all that food—it’s a trauma response thing. Grayson had a sad childhood.”

“No, he didn’t. He went to Harvard. His bio doesn’t say anything about him being a foster kid or anything,” McKenna argued. “I looked him up before I took the job.”

“Maybe he doesn’t advertise it,” I said dully. “Of course someone who had a bad childhood is going to hoard food. I know that. I volunteer. I should have been more mindful. That wasn’t nice of me. His mom was probably a domestic violence victim or something.” I sighed and opened my laptop. “Maybe his family was homeless, and that’s why he’s donating to those charities. I should make a donation or something in his mom’s name.”