Sweet Collide Read Online Ava Harrison

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Sports Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 130
Estimated words: 129323 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 647(@200wpm)___ 517(@250wpm)___ 431(@300wpm)
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Nothing works. He’s ingrained in me. Always has been.

That’s the worst part.

Eventually, the water turns cold, snapping me back to the present.

Stepping out of the shower, I wrap a towel around my shivering body. I tiptoe across the cold tile because all I want to do is sneak out of here unseen and try to get my life back in order.

As I dry off, my reflection in the fogged-up mirror seems to echo the internal conflict raging within me.

Do I sneak out? Do I tell him?

I twist the soft cotton material surrounding me as I try to think of what he will say.

Shaking my head to myself, I decide against it.

That ship has already sailed.

We had sex, and there’s no going back…it’s fine.

It has to be.

Hastily, I get dressed, throwing back on my skirt and top that only hours ago were discarded on the floor when Aiden commanded that I strip. My cheeks start to flush at the memory of his dominance, a rush of heat warming my skin, but I push it away. This is not the time and place for that. One day, I’ll cherish those memories of how Aiden Slate made me feel things I’ve never felt before, desire that I’ve never felt before, but that moment won’t be now. No, it will be when I’m back at Emma’s and am able to breathe again.

At this moment, I need to concentrate on the fact that I need to leave this bathroom and this hotel room, if I’m being honest.

There’s no turning back, so I just need to face the music and get out of here unscathed. I check myself in the mirror one final time, determined to end this crazy one-night stand on the highest note possible.

As I step from the bathroom, my heart pounds. My gaze sweeps across the room, searching for any sign of Aiden. And there he is, sitting on the couch.

The first thing I notice is that he’s more casual than before. Donning gray sweats and a black tee, he should look more relaxed, but he doesn’t.

Instead, he’s leaning forward, body stiff, and I can see the lines that have formed between his brows.

I follow his line of sight, and that’s when I see what he’s scowling at.

A bowl of assorted candies sits on the coffee table before him. He’s glaring at it as if the bowl has offended him.

I don’t make my presence known. Instead, I linger in the shadows, watching him.

My eyes fixate on his hands where they hover over the bowl.

What’s he doing?

Narrowing my eyes, I try to determine what could have him appearing so anxious. Then it dawns on me. It’s the assortment of colors.

A memory pushes its way out of my subconscious. Aiden Slate sitting below the tree. His tree.

A box of Sweet Tarts in his hand. The box I got him because he told me they were his favorite, but as I watched him, he stared down at the box. His face tight. I remember asking what was wrong…

The same thing is happening now.

He’s fighting the desire to pick them out, to sort them.

But eventually, the desire wins. Just like it did when we were younger.

Aiden Slate can’t—won’t eat any color but blue.

He begins his work, meticulously picking the blue out and separating them from the rest.

A mix of emotions surges within me—surprise, then comfort, for as much as things have changed, he’s still the same boy I knew, which leads to an odd sense of relief.

With a deep breath, I move from the shadows so he can see me.

Aiden looks up, and our gazes lock. He furrows his brow and then looks down at the bowl. I don’t need him to tell me how he feels. I know it deep in my bones. If there was one thing he hated back when we lived in the trailer park, it was people seeing his quirks.

No matter how smart or talented Aiden was, his fear of judgment clouded his brain.

He always felt that his quirks put a mark on him. His mother was the worst offender, but unfortunately, she was not the only one.

Other kids would mock him as well. It was always a way for them to ridicule and attempt to bring him down to their level.

I did my best to shelter him from those kids. From the nasty bullies who would do anything to cut another kid off at the knees, just to make themselves feel better about their pathetic lives.

It’s sad that any kid grew up in an environment where that behavior became their method of protecting themselves.

The room is heavy with silence, and his features are hard when he lifts his eyes back up to me. The boy I knew is preparing for ridicule.

Something I would never give him.

Instead of the judgment that he expects, I simply smile.



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