Sweet Little Lies Read online



  Finn sighed. “Who are you and what have you done with my brother?”

  “Just hurry up and handle it and get your ass back to work.”

  “There he is.”

  Chapter 32

  #TakeMeToYourLeader

  When Finn finally made his way to the pub that night, he stood in the middle of the bar as music played around him. His friends and customers were all there having fun, laughing, dancing, drinking . . .

  The pub was a huge success, beyond his wildest imagination. He’d never really taken the time to notice it. But he was noticing now that his heart had been ripped out of his chest by a gorgeous dynamo of a woman with eyes that sucked him in and held him, a sweet yet mischievous smile that had taken him places he’d never been . . . then there was how he’d felt in her arms.

  Like Superman.

  And he’d dumped her. Roughly. Cruelly. And her crime? Nothing more than trying to make sure he was okay after a tragedy that hadn’t even been her fault. Not in the slightest.

  Hating himself for that, he stopped right in the middle of the place. He wasn’t in the mood for this. He needed to think, needed to figure out what the hell to do to alleviate this pain in his chest and the certainty that he’d walked away from the best thing that had ever happened to him.

  But everyone was at the bar, waving at him. Bracing himself for the inquisition, he headed that way.

  “Rumor is that you’ve been a dumbass,” Archer said.

  Finn stared at him. “How the hell did you know—”

  “The girls and I stopped by Pru’s place,” Willa said.

  “Is she okay?”

  “She looks and sounds like her heart’s been ripped out.” Willa met his gaze. “She’d clearly been crying.”

  Shit.

  Elle squeezed his hand. “Whatever you did, it’s not completely your fault. You’re a penis-carrying human being, after all. You’re hard-wired to be a dumbass.”

  “Sit.” Spence kicked out a barstool for him and poured him a beer from the pitcher in front of them.

  Finn took a second look at him. “You’re wearing glasses.”

  Haley grinned proudly. “Do you like them? I picked them out for him.”

  “No, you didn’t,” Spence said. “I did.”

  Haley patted him like he was a puppy. “You were impatient as always and grabbed the first pair off the display you could. It took you less than two seconds. I waited until you’d left and put them back and picked you out a better pair that would better suit your face.”

  Spence pulled his glasses off and stared at them. “I liked the other pair better.”

  “Yeah?” Haley asked. “What color were they?” Spence paused. “Glasses color.”

  Haley rolled her eyes. “Just like a man,” she said to Will and Elle, who nodded.

  Archer shook his head at Spence. “This is why you’re single.”

  “You’re single too,” Spence said.

  “Because I want to be.”

  Spence closed his eyes. “We were going to rag on Finn, not me. Let’s stick with the plan.”

  “Right,” Archer said and looked at Finn. “Tell us all how you messed up so we can point and laugh.”

  “And then fix,” Willa said, giving the others a dirty look as she patted the empty seat. “Come on now, don’t be shy. Tell us everything.”

  “Yes,” Ella said. “I want to hear it all, because that girl? She’s not just yours, Finn. She’s ours now too.”

  “She’s not mine,” Finn said.

  Everyone gaped at him.

  Elle narrowed her gaze. “Does this have anything to do with that wish she made for you on that damn fountain? You know about that, right?”

  Finn blinked. “She wished for me?”

  “Have you ever heard of being gentle?” Archer asked Elle. “Even once?”

  Elle sighed. “Okay, so he didn’t know. Sue me.” She shot Archer a dirty look. “And like you know the first thing about being gentle.”

  “Didn’t know what exactly?” Finn demanded, refusing to let them go off on some tangent. “Someone needs to start making sense or I swear to God—”

  “She made a wish for you to find true love,” Willa said. “I was never clear on why she wished for you and not for herself. Probably because that’s who she is, down to the bone.”

  Spence sucked in a breath. “I’ve been by that fountain a million times. It never once occurred to me to make a wish for someone else. That’s . . .”

  “Selfless,” Willa said. “Utterly selfless. And, by the way, it’s also something that none of us would’ve thought to do. So it’s not just Spence here who’s an insensitive ass.”

  “Thanks, Willa,” Spence said dryly.

  She turned expectantly to Finn. “So? What happened?”

  A terrible knot in his chest twisting, Finn snatched Spence’s beer and knocked back the rest of the glass, not that it helped.

  “Sure, help yourself,” Spence muttered.

  Everyone was looking at Finn, waiting.

  He shook his head. “I can’t. It’s . . . private. What happened between us stays between us.”

  “Hey, this isn’t Vegas,” Spence said, and earned himself a slap upside the back of his head by Elle.

  “Do you love her?” Willa demanded of Finn.

  At the question, that knot in his chest tightened painfully. “That’s not the problem. She . . . kept something from me.”

  “That sucks,” Archer said, as Finn knew, understanding all too well the power of secrets and how they could destroy lives.

  “No,” Elle said, glaring at Archer. “No, you don’t get to blindly side against her. She maybe had her reasons. Good ones,” she said very seriously.

  Something they knew that Elle understood all too well. She had secrets too, secrets they kept for her.

  Archer met Elle’s gaze and something passed between them. The fight might have ratcheted up a notch but Willa, always the peacemaker, spoke up. “Do you love her?” she repeated to Finn firmly.

  Finn’s mind scrolled through the images he had. Pru coming into the pub drenched and still smiling. Pru dragging him away from work to a softball game. Comforting him after a fight with Sean. Clutching a photo of her dead parents and still finding a smile over their memory. She’d brought a sense of balance to his life that had been sorely missing. It didn’t matter whether she was standing behind the controls of a huge boat in charge of hundreds of people’s safety or diving into a wave to save her dog, she never failed to make him feel . . . alive.

  Just a single one of her smiles could make his whole day. The sound of her laugh did the same. And then there was the feel of her beneath him, her body locked around his when he was buried so deep that he couldn’t imagine being intimate with anyone else ever again . . .

  “Yes,” he said quietly, not having to speak loud because the entire group had gone silent waiting on his answer. “I love her.”

  “Have you told her?” Willa asked.

  “No.”

  “Why not?”

  “Because . . .” Yeah, genius, why not? “And exactly how many people have you told that to?” he asked.

  “Good one, going on the defensive,” Elle said, not looking impressed.

  Willa agreed with an eyeroll. “I mean I get that when you’re playing sports or bragging to the guys and you need a six-foot-long dick,” she said. “But this is Pru we’re talking about.”

  “Six-foot-long dick?” Spence asked, grinning.

  Willa waved him off and spoke straight to Finn. “Whatever she kept to herself, you did the same, Finn. You always do, even with us. You held back. You think she didn’t feel that? Pru keeps it real and she’s tough as nails, but she lost her family,” she said, unknowingly touching on the very subject of the breakup. “She lost them when she was only eighteen and it left her alone in the world. And as you, more than anyone else knows all too damn well, it changes a person, Finn. It makes it hard to put yourself out there. But that’s