WILD CHILD
A Wild Ones Novella 1.5
By
M. Leighton
For those who have loved. And lost.
Weeping may endure for the night, but joy cometh in the morning.
CHAPTER ONE- Jenna
“No sex before the wedding. For me and Trick.
With my mouth hanging open, I watch her unpack her suitcase. She’s staying with me during this ridiculous celibacy thing she’s insisting she and Trick observe the last couple of days before the wedding. She said nothing about dragging my libido into it.
“What?” I exclaim as she crams some shorts in beside the few belongings I brought home for the month. Having just graduated college, I didn’t pack much. I didn’t think there was a need. Now, seeing all the crap Cami travels with, I’m glad I didn’t. There’s not enough room for both of us in here. “No sex for me either? What the hell kind of twisted joke is this?”
She laughs. “I knew you’d love it.”
“Um, excuse me. Have you
“I knew you’d love it…when I told you how good it would be for the boys. I read an article about the benefits of anticipation. Sexually speaking. But then I started thinking about how much it would make the guys miss us if we weren’t so…accessible. How much more they’d appreciate us, and how they’d realize how lucky they are to have us.” Cami nods her head slowly, meaningfully until I see what she’s getting at.
“Ohhh, I think I see where this is going.”
Cami grins. “That doesn’t mean we can’t tease them. And make them
“Riiight,” I say, nodding along now.
“But you have to stick with it, Jenna. No caving.”
I’m already recognizing the merit of her plan and how it could lead to very good things for me and Rusty. “No caving,” I agree. “Unless Rusty finally drops the L bomb. If that happens, I’ll be on him like stink on shit.” Cami wrinkles her nose as she eyes me. “Okay, bad analogy. I’ll be on him like a cheap suit. Better?”
Her brow smoothes. “Much.” She reaches into her suitcase and takes out more clothes, these on hangers. She walks to the closet and begins hanging them on the empty half of the rod. “So, still no progress on that front?”
I sigh. “No. I know he loves me. Well, at least I
“Well, as long as you know…”
I feel a pout come to my lips and I can’t seem to stop it. “But it’s not enough. I
“Some guys just aren’t the type to spill their guts like that, Jenna.”
I plop down on the bed, shoulders slumping forward as I pick at the bedspread. “I know. But I hope Rusty’s not one of them. You know how I am, Cami. I tell it like it is. I don’t think I could live my life always wondering if maybe I was wrong, if maybe I’d imagined it and he really
Cami’s gasp interrupts me. “Does that mean you got the interviews?”
I can’t help but smile. “Yep. Both of ‘em.”
“Jenna, that’s awesome! Ohmigod, this is just what you wanted.”
“I know, but you see why this is stressing me out? I don’t want to make plans for my future until I know where Rusty stands. I mean, he already thinks I’m the leaving kind and this will just make it seem like he’s right.”
“The leaving kind?”
“Yeah. He’s always teasing me about being too restless for this town, about having plans that are too big for this town. I’ve never tried to hide how much I hate it here or how I want to live in a bigger city. Maybe Atlanta. But sometimes, I think he sees us as…temporary because of it. He thinks I’m some sort of wild child that will never settle down.”
“You
“But that doesn’t mean that I’m gonna bail on someone I love.”
“No, it doesn’t. And I’m sure Rusty knows that. Deep down.”
“That’s the problem. I’m not sure that he does. His dad abandoned him and his mom when he was little and I think it effed up his head.”
Cami shrugs. “Maybe, but he can overcome that. You can show him that you’re here to stay. With him, I mean.”
I sigh again. “That’s what I’m trying to do. But sometimes I’m just not sure it will ever be enough. Maybe it’s
“He’ll come around for you, Jenna,” Cami interrupts as she finishes hanging her clothes. When they’re all neatly arranged in my closet, she comes to sit on the bed with me, bumping me with her shoulder until I look over at her. “For
“I’m trying. I’m trying.”
“See? My plan is a good one. Maybe he’ll realize that he can’t live without you. That he doesn’t even want to try.”
“I was hoping he would see that during one of the many, many weeks we were apart while I was at school, but it’s not looking like he did.”
Cami pats my knee. “But now you’re back home. And school is over. Maybe he’ll see how much he likes having you around. And how awful it would be if you got a job in Atlanta and didn’t get to come back here as much as you did during school.”
“I hope so. I can’t wait forever.”
“You won’t have to. I promise.”
I just hope she’s right.
Shaking off the depressing thoughts that are threatening to infringe on my bestie’s good mood, I hop off the bed and pull Cami up with me.
“Come on, old wise one, I’d say Fab Dad has something delectable waiting for us in the kitchen.”
We’ve both referred to my father as “Fab Dad” for as long as I can remember.
“God, I wish my dad cooked like yours. And was as sweet as yours.”