BEST KIND OF BROKEN by Chelsea Fine (January 13, 2015; Forever Trade Paperback; $12.00)
SOMETIMES MOVING ON MEANS MOVING IN
Pixie Marshall wishes every day she could turn back time and fix the past. But she can't. And the damage is done. She's hoping that a summer of free room and board working with her aunt at the Willow Inn will help her forget. Except there's a problem: the resident handyman is none other than Levi Andrews. The handsome quarterback was once her friend-and maybe more-until everything changed in a life-shattering instant. She was hoping to avoid him, possibly forever. Now he's right down the hall and stirring up feelings Pixie thought she'd long buried . . .
Levi can't believe he's living with the one person who holds all his painful memories. More than anything he wants to make things right, but a simple "sorry" won't suffice-not when the tragedy that scarred them was his fault. Levi knows Pixie's better off without him, but every part of him screams to touch her, protect her, wrap her in his arms, and kiss away the pain. Yet even though she's so close, Pixie's heart seems more unreachable than ever. Seeing those stunning green eyes again has made one thing perfectly clear-he can't live without her.
Levi can't believe he's living with the one person who holds all his painful memories. More than anything he wants to make things right, but a simple "sorry" won't suffice-not when the tragedy that scarred them was his fault. Levi knows Pixie's better off without him, but every part of him screams to touch her, protect her, wrap her in his arms, and kiss away the pain. Yet even though she's so close, Pixie's heart seems more unreachable than ever. Seeing those stunning green eyes again has made one thing perfectly clear-he can't live without her.
AN EXCERPT:
It’s late, and most of the inn
guests are already asleep.
I wait until I hear the TV click on
in Levi’s room before I start plugging everything I own into the wall.
We argued today. We avoided each
other. And aside from the weird look we exchanged in the hallway this morning
and our little spat in front of Zack, everything is back to normal.
Which means I owe Levi for the cold
shower I had to take.
I turn everything on and the lights
go out. I hear the TV die in the next room and crawl onto my bed with a smile.
“Pixie!” Levi’s irritated voice
rings through the walls and I’m feeling happier than a mature person should.
I hear stomping, and then he opens
my bedroom door. Just opens it. Like he has the right to just waltz into my
room. I could be naked in here; he doesn’t know.
“You’re going out to the fuse box
this time.” He steps inside, and now he’s standing just a few feet away,
pointing his finger at me.
I’m on the bed, trying to look
casual, like lying in the dark playing games on my phone is perfectly normal.
The only light in the room is coming from the glow of my phone and the
half-moon outside, so we both look blue and soft. And in the blue softness, I
see he’s shirtless.
I see Levi without a shirt on
almost every morning, but I’ve never seen him half-naked in the dark, and
something about it makes my body feel electric.
“Not going to happen,” I say.
He steps closer. “Well, I sure as
hell am not marching outside to turn the power back on.”
I shrug. “Fine with me. I don’t
need electricity tonight. I can watch TV on my fully charged phone.” I wiggle
said phone at him.
He sighs. “You don’t understand. I
was looking up the contact information for an alarm company I found so I can
call and schedule the installation tomorrow. I need the Internet, Pix.”
“Then use your phone.”
“My phone is dead.”
The boy never charges anything. He
almost makes the whole fuse-blowing thing too easy.
“Well, that’s too bad. I guess
you’re going to have to turn the electricity back on after all.” I pretend to
be very interested in my game.
“Let me use your phone. Just for a
minute.”
“No.”
“Come on. It’s for Ellen.” He
implores me with a pouty face I’ve seen him use on his mom a dozen times.
I scoff. “Please.”
“Dammit, Pixie.” The pout is gone.
“Maybe tomorrow you’ll remember to
charge your own phone. Or hey, better yet, maybe you’ll let me have a hot
shower.” I make a big production of pressing random buttons on my phone.
He slumps his shoulders like he’s
accepting defeat, then whips out his arm and tries to swipe the phone from my
hands. Sneaky bastard.
I pull my phone back and kick at
him with my foot, but he grabs my ankle—because I’m not exactly a ninja with my
kicking skills—and then we both freeze.
Because now I’m leaning back on the
bed with my legs spread apart, and he’s got one hand on my ankle and the other
on the bed next to my hip where he was reaching for my phone, and his body is
in between my legs, which are completely bare except for the tiny gym shorts I
have on, and my right arm is raised over my head with my cell phone still out
of his reach, but my back is arched and my shirt has come up so my stomach is
completely exposed and I’m hot all over.
Hot. Heat. Everywhere.
I mean, really. We look like we’re
in the middle of having sex, but with clothes on. My body knows this. His body
knows this. And our bodies are really, really happy about this.
He’s looking at me with nothing in
his eyes except want. And I like it.
No, I love it.
This must show on my face because
his hand—still wrapped around my ankle—moves up my leg an inch, and he watches
my reaction.
I try not to react because, hell,
he can’t win. He can’t just be
asshole Levi all day long and then climb into my bed at night and touch me
wherever he pleases.
Ugh. Yes he can.
I part my lips and he slowly, slowly slides his warm hand up my calf
and, holy hell, I could orgasm right here. I might, actually.
My calf.
My calf.
He’s touching my calf and I’m more turned on than I’ve
ever been in my life.
His hand shifts again, and the only
thought in my head is, Go higher, go
higher.
Please,
dear God, go higher.
About Chelsea Fine:
Chelsea lives in Phoenix, Arizona, where she spends most of her time writing stories, painting murals, and avoiding housework at all costs. She's ridiculously bad at doing dishes and claims to be allergic to laundry. Her obsessions include: superheroes, coffee, sleeping-in, and crazy socks. She lives with her husband and two children, who graciously tolerate her inability to resist teenage drama on TV and her complete lack of skill in the kitchen.
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