Drive Me Wild (Bellamy Creek #2) Read online Melanie Harlow

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Funny, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Bellamy Creek Series by Melanie Harlow
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Total pages in book: 94
Estimated words: 92069 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 460(@200wpm)___ 368(@250wpm)___ 307(@300wpm)
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But I wasn’t ready for this to be over yet either. I needed more time—time for whatever it was I felt for her to run its course. Time for the physical spark to burn out. Time for me to remember I didn’t want or need her in my life.

So when the parts for her car arrived early—the very next morning, in fact—I didn’t put them in her car.

I hid them.

And I didn’t say a thing about it to anyone.

Fifteen

Blair

I was dreading Wednesday, but I tried not to show it.

To be honest, I’d hoped Griffin would protest when I brought up calling the motel. Not that I blamed him for wanting his space back. I’d been here a week already. No matter how amazing the sex was, you couldn’t just move in with someone so fast. I wasn’t insane.

But I liked him. I didn’t want what we had to end.

All day Monday, I kept looking at the clock, dismayed to find that time seemed to be passing more quickly than usual. We were busy at the garage, which was great, but also made the day fly by. Plans for the anniversary event were also keeping me preoccupied. After we closed, I ran over to the print shop Darlene had recommended and ordered the photo enlargements, which the woman at the counter promised to have ready by Friday.

“Perfect,” I said. “I also wanted to ask you about printing some flyers for an event we’re having on Labor Day weekend.”

She helped me with the layout and design, and I hurried back to the garage as the skies darkened, lightning flashed, and thunder rumbled above me. Griffin was standing on the sidewalk in front of the garage as if he’d been waiting for me.

“I was about to get in the truck and come find you,” he said sternly, pulling open the lobby door and following me inside. “You weren’t answering your phone, and this is going to be a bad storm.”

“Sorry. I must have left it on the desk. I was in a hurry to get there because I was concerned about keeping the photos dry.”

He frowned. “I was worried about you. Take your phone with you when you go somewhere, okay?”

“Okay,” I said, unable to keep from smiling.

“What’s funny?” he demanded, his chest puffing up.

“You. Worried about me in the rain. It’s cute.”

“For the last time, mechanics are not cute.”

“Then what do I call a mechanic that makes my clothes fall off and my heart go pitter-pat?” I asked, patting my chest with one hand.

He narrowed his eyes at me. “There better only be one of those.”

I kissed his cheek. “There’s only you.”

Tuesday night, after I showed him how to make penne with summer vegetables and a kale salad—which he grumbled about eating but admitted it tasted better than he thought—he insisted on doing all the dishes. Then we stretched out on the couch and watched a movie together while the summer rain continued to thrum against the windows.

We made it about halfway through the latest Marvel movie before our minds and then our hands started to wander, and we ended up naked and sweaty on the rug between the couch and the coffee table. I don’t know what was louder, me or the thunder, but poor Bisou wouldn’t come out of her crate for the rest of the night.

“Aww, I feel bad,” I said to Griffin when she didn’t come out to eat.

“She’s okay. I fostered another cat once who was afraid of storms. She’ll eat when she gets hungry.” But I noticed he set her plate and bowl right outside her crate rather than where he usually kept them.

Eventually we made it into bed, where we snuggled up and listened to the thunder. My head was resting on his chest, my body tucked alongside his. A particularly loud crack of thunder made me jump.

“Do storms bother you?” he asked.

“I was really scared of storms like this when I was little,” I explained. “We lived on a golf course, and once when I was small, I heard my parents talking about someone who’d been struck by lightning while playing. I was always convinced it was going to happen to me while I was playing outside.”

He held me a little tighter. “What were you like as a kid?”

“Hmmm. Talkative. Definitely talkative.”

A laugh rumbled in his chest. “I bet. Did you drive your parents crazy?”

“Yes, but not just them. I’d talk to anybody. I’m totally the girl who should have been abducted by the creep in the white van.”

“Part of me worries you’re still that girl.”

I snuggled closer. “I was also lonely.”

“Lonely?”

“Yeah, I didn’t have any siblings or close neighbor kids to play with. I was always by myself.”

“Or with your horse,” he teased.

I poked him in the side. “Fine. Or with my horse. But Alistair never wanted to play Barbies with me.”



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