The Last Second Chance: A Small Town Love Story (Blue Moon Book 3)

Read The Last Second Chance: A Small Town Love Story (Blue Moon Book 3) for Free Online Page A

Book: Read The Last Second Chance: A Small Town Love Story (Blue Moon Book 3) for Free Online
Authors: Lucy Score
would make what we did in high school illegal,” she shot back.
    “I wanted you here,” Jax said, pacing now. Why couldn’t she see it?
    “Oh for fuck’s sake. Why didn’t you just say so? I’m not family, Jax. I’m not going to show up for every freaking Pierce occasion.”
    “You damn well should have showed up for this,” he said, his voice grim.
    “Why?”
    “Because it’s for you,” he exploded. “It’s all for you. I came back for you.”
    Well, that shut her up. She was gaping at him like a fish on the line before she let out a noise somewhere between a screech and a growl. “You drive me insane!” She threw her hands up in the air.
    “Right back at ya, Jojo.”
    She crossed her arms and kicked at a keg. “Why do you want to be with me?”
    Jax stopped and stared at her. “Why?” he laughed. “You seriously don’t know?”
    Joey just stared at him.
    “Joey, I love you. There hasn’t been a time in my life when I haven’t loved you.”
    She was staring at him, her expression unreadable.
    “Say something,” he said quietly.
    “I don’t think we know what love is,” she said finally.
    “How can you even say that?” He shoved his hands through his hair.
    “You hurt me, Jax.”
    He stared at the floor, shoved his hands in his pockets. The guilt clawed at him. “I know I did. I was reckless and careless and you got hurt. I can still see you in that car.”
    “In the car?” I’m not talking about the accident, you idiot. I’m talking about you leaving.”
    “I almost killed you!” His voice echoed off the metal of the kegs.
    “Oh, sweet Jesus. A deer almost killed me. You almost destroyed me when you left without a word.”
    “The accident—”
    “Was an accident,” she said, enunciating each word like he was an annoying toddler. “You leaving was on purpose. And I don’t know how to forgive that.”
    “You have to.” She did. There was no way around it. Joey had to forgive him so she might as well accept it.
    “Maybe it would go a little better if you’d at least, oh I don’t know, apologize ?”
    Jax cringed. “I don’t know how,” he said the words quietly. “How do I say I’m sorry for something that big? You almost died because of me.”
    “Are you not listening?” Joey threw her hands up as if she was appealing to a higher power. “You don’t owe me an apology for the accident. You owe me an apology for abandoning me. How am I supposed to move past that if you won’t tell me why you did it?”
    “Because I hurt you!” he shouted.
    “I’m about to hurt you,” she yelled back. “Get it through your thick, stupid skull. Until you can make me understand why you felt like you had to disappear without a word, or a call, or an email for eight years, there is no chance for us. Now, I’m going back upstairs to have a beer.”
    She stormed out, the slim heels of her boots clicking on the concrete floor.
    She was right and Jax knew it. But he also knew the answers would only push her further away.

4
    “ I need you and your house,” Gia announced, hovering over Joey’s head as she lay in a puddle of her own sweat on a borrowed yoga mat. Joey’s head lolled to the side. A chipper Summer was sitting cross-legged and staring at her expectantly. The rest of the yoga studio was empty except for Gia’s sisters. Emma was frantically typing away on her smart phone while Eva lounged on her mat staring out the front window.
    Summer had dragged her along to class again. Joey had to admit, it wasn’t awful. Especially not after spending the morning wrestling horses for vaccinations with the vet. Gia’s class had helped work the kinks out. Plus, it gave her the perfect excuse to avoid the two dozen red roses and apology card from Jax that arrived at the stables from Every Bloomin’ Thing.
    They had tangled at the brewery the night before, but it felt good to finally say a few of the things that had been running laps in her mind for the past several years. She

Similar Books

Rilla of Ingleside

Lucy Maud Montgomery

Feminism

Margaret Walters

There Once Were Stars

Melanie McFarlane

Flight of the Hawk

Gary Paulsen

Habit of Fear

Dorothy Salisbury Davis

The Hope Factory

Lavanya Sankaran

The Irish Devil

Diane Whiteside