Beautifully Damaged

Read Beautifully Damaged for Free Online Page A

Book: Read Beautifully Damaged for Free Online
Authors: L.A. Fiore
chestnut brown hair and bright blue eyes. I sensed a bit of shyness when she addressed me but she didn't seem to suffer that affliction when she was talking to Trent. This observation had a smile curving my lips.
    "Hi, Ember."
    I turned my eyes back to Trent. "I'm going home."
    "Okay, I'll help you get a cab."
    "No, I'm fine."
    "Are you sure?"
    "Yes."
    Trent pressed a kiss on my cheek before he whispered, "Be safe."
    "Yes, Dad."
    "It was nice to meet you, Kelly."
    "Likewise, Ember."
    I walked through the club and out the front door and as I stepped into the cool night I just stopped moving because at the curb was Trace who was just parking his motorcycle. I couldn't help the smile; it was completely involuntary. I watched as his denim-clad leg swung over his bike and I took a minute to appreciate how his jeans were snug across his thigh muscles. He turned and for just a second I saw pleasure burning in those eyes.
    "Ember."
    "Trace."
    "I missed you play, didn't I?"
    "Yes."
    "Were you leaving?"
    "I was."
    He grinned as he came to stand just in front of me. "I'm sorry I'm late." He reached for my hand. "Will you come with me?"
    I was a bit nervous about agreeing since I really didn't know the man but my gut was telling me that I would be safe with him and so I went with instinct. "Yes."
    He pulled me to his bike before he placed his helmet on my head. He straddled the black and chrome beast so I could climb on.
    "Hold onto me, Ember."
    We were flying down the street and rode around for a while with the cool night air feeling wonderful against my skin before we pulled into the parking lot of a twenty-four-hour diner. I climbed down from Trace's bike and pulled the helmet from my head when he reached for it to place it on his handle bars. He linked our fingers and pulled me through the doors.
    He settled across from me and took off his jacket while I took a moment to really study the beauty of the man before me. My eyes lingered on his left arm where I could see the depiction of Hades and his realm of Hell with his demons burning in the fires of purgatory. It was both disturbing and beautiful.
    "Are you hungry?"
    It was close to two in the morning and I had eaten last at five the night before. I was hungry but before I could answer my stomach answered for me with the loudest and longest rumble. I tried to act blase about the thunderous growl that shook our booth and hoped that he didn't hear it but when I saw the smile that cracked over his face I knew that he had.
    He ordered enough food to feed a small country. The waitress needed three others to help her drop off the plates of pancakes, scrambled eggs, French toast, hash browns, sausage and bacon, and I felt guilty that we would be wasting so much food but I need not have worried about that. Trace plated for me enough food (a small fraction of what he ordered) to feed a three-hundred-pound man and proceeded to eat everything else. There wasn't even a curdle of egg left. I didn't mean to speak out loud what I was thinking but, honestly, I couldn't stop myself.
    "I've never seen anything like that. You, literally, just ate your body weight in food. I think you may have broken a world record. We should call Guinness."
    He sat back and grinned.
    "I'm a big boy."
    That comment had my eyes unconsciously looking over his most excellent form and I had to agree with him but he was no boy, oh no. He was most definitely one hundred percent man. When my eyes returned to his he was silently studying me before he asked, "So what are your interests outside of music?"
    "I love reading. I like being transported to another place, to live a day in a life of someone else."
    He smiled before he asked, "What do you like to read?"
    "I'm making my way through the classics; currently I'm reading Charlotte Bronte's
Jane Eyre
."
    "I'm sorry I missed you this evening. What did you sing?"
    "I didn't sing because I didn't drink enough alcohol so I accompanied Trent on the piano."
    "Didn't drink enough

Similar Books

Superstition

Karen Robards

Kat, Incorrigible

Stephanie Burgis

Earthly Delights

Kerry Greenwood

Another Pan

Daniel Nayeri

Break Point: BookShots

James Patterson

Ghosts of Rosewood Asylum

Stephen Prosapio