He
was just a boy.
And
I was just a girl.
But
if that’s all there was to the story it wouldn’t be very
interesting, would it?
Up and coming band Willow Creek is back
in their hometown for the summer. For the drummer, Maddox Wade, this
summer was meant for writing music and playing gigs.
Falling in love was not part of the plan.
One look at Emma Burke and those plans
cease to matter.
Emma
is quiet and guarded. She’s still hurt from her father walking out
two years ago. She doesn’t want to trust Maddox, but with his dark
hair, smoldering good looks, and infectious smile he’s impossible
to resist.
Together
Maddox and Emma embark on an unforgettable summer of adventures and
first love.
Everything
is perfect…or so Emma thinks.
There are things she doesn’t know, and
when she finds out the truth it might shatter everything she’s
built with Maddox.
No one said love was easy, and for Maddox
and Emma it just might be impossible.
Add on Goodreads:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23489560-last-to-know
Release Date: February
9th
Chapter
One
The grass crunched beneath my feet as I
followed Sadie through the fair entrance. I hadn’t even wanted to
come. I would rather be home reading or playing the piano, but Sadie,
who’d been my best friend since we were in diapers, was relentless.
It was the first official day of summer
vacation and she didn’t want me to lock myself in my house until
school started in August and I was forced to emerge.
She called this fun.
I called it hell.
“Isn’t this nice, Emma?” She
chimed, clapping her hands together. Her brown eyes were bright and
happy.
“Uh…nice
isn’t the word I’d choose.” I wrinkled my nose at the trash
littering the grass. Some guy bumped into me, knocking me to the
side. I reached up to keep my hat from falling off. It was one of
those large black round hats that helped to shade my face from the
sun. Sadie said it looked ridiculous, but I liked it. I’d never
been one to take another person’s opinion to heart. My mom raised
me to be a free spirit like her, so I always did my own thing.
“Emma!” Sadie groaned when she saw
I’d been separated from her. “Taking you places is like having a
child. I take my eyes off of you for two seconds and you’re gone.”
She grabbed my arm, dragging me through the crowd. “Willow Creek is
playing and I won’t miss this! I had to give Adam Carson a lap
dance to get these tickets at the last minute.”
“Ew! Sadie! You gave him a lap dance?!”
People turned to stare at us with my
exclamation.
“A girl’s gotta do what a girl’s
gotta do.” She gave me a look like I’d know exactly what she
meant.
“I don’t even want to go!” I
complained. “I don’t know who they are, and I won’t like their
music anyway!”
“Well, we can’t all be freaks that
listen to classical music, like Beethoven,” she argued.
“Why don’t you go on without me,” I
pleaded, semi impressed that she knew who Beethoven was. “Look,
food!” I pointed to a stand. “I’ll get something to eat while
you go listen to them play and we’ll meet up afterwards.”
“You really
don’t want to go, do you?” She frowned, her brows drawing
together. Sadie wasn’t used to me balking at her plans.
“Not really,” I shrugged. “I’ll
probably just get a headache and want to go home afterwards.”
She sighed. “Fine, you get something to
eat, I’ll go to the concert, and then we’ll walk around for a
while.”
“Great,” I said, prying my arm from
her hold.
“I’ll see you in a little bit!” She
grinned, skipping off towards the bleachers in front of the stage.
Her wavy brown hair swished around her shoulders.
I headed for the area with the food
vendors, thankful that I’d gotten out of going to the concert.
Willow Creek was the star act this year at the fair. Some local band
that was making it big. I didn’t know who they were or what they
sang, and I didn’t care to find out.
I grabbed a hotdog and fries before
finding a vacant picnic table.
I heard the music start up a few minutes
later with a clash of drums.
I sighed. Yep, so not my thing.
After I finished eating, I grabbed my
purse—a large messenger bag with tie-dye strings of fabric hanging
off of it—and pulled out the book I was reading. I never left home
without something to read.
I got sucked into the fictional world of
fairies and completely lost track of time.
I was shocked when I looked up and
realized the sun was setting and people were clearing off the
bleachers.
Where was Sadie?
I looked around, scanning the crowd of
people for her.
I started to panic when I couldn’t find
her.
It wouldn’t be the first time Sadie had
ditched me, usually for a guy.
Some people might think she was a crappy
friend, but Sadie was just…Sadie. And when I really needed her she
was always there for me.
I tucked my book back into the bag,
grabbed my trash, and dropped it in the nearest trashcan.
All the while, I kept looking for Sadie.
I grabbed my phone sending her a text
asking where she was.
Unfortunately, if she was with a guy I
wouldn’t get a reply—and cell service was spotty on the
fairgrounds anyway. I was so
giving her a piece of my mind for this. I hadn’t even wanted to
come! And of course
I’d gotten a ride with her, so I was trapped at the frigging Clarke
County fair twenty to thirty minutes from home. In other words, there
was no way I could walk. And since my mom didn’t even own a
cellphone it wasn’t like I could call her—and she’d be working
in her studio at this time, which meant she wouldn’t even hear the
home phone ring.
“Are you lost?”
I squeaked at the sound of the voice and
took a few steps back. I almost fell in a hole and the guy reached
out to steady me.
“Whoa, are you okay?” He asked,
flicking dark hair from his eyes. It was slightly damp with sweat, as
was his whole body. I wondered what he’d been doing to get that
sweaty, but then decided I’d rather not know. While I watched him
he pulled a baseball cap out of his back pocket and fixed it onto his
head, pulling the brim down low so that half his face was shadowed.
“I’m fine.” I straightened my
cardigan and squared my shoulders. “I’m…I’m waiting for
someone.” I didn’t want to give this guy the impression he could
take advantage of me.
He grinned crookedly, tilting his head.
“Something tells me you’re lying.” He scratched his stubbled
chin. He couldn’t be more than two years older than me, maybe
nineteen or twenty at the most, but something in his silvery gray
eyes made him seem so much older. Like he’d had a rough life or
something. It made me a little more trusting of him. I could relate
to rough. My dad was an alcoholic and before he walked out on us
things had been bad. “I promise I don’t bite.”
“I can’t find my friend,” I
shrugged. “I’m sure she’ll show up eventually.” I looked
around—for the thousandth time—hoping Sadie was about to jump out
from behind one of the stands and scream, “Gotcha!” But she
didn’t, of course.
“Would you like me to wait with you?”
He asked, tapping his fingers along his jean clad leg.
I looked around at all the people milling
around and decided there wasn’t much this guy could do to me in
public.
“That would be great,” I smiled.
“Thank you for offering.”
His lips twisted, almost as if he was
trying not to laugh at me. “I’m going to grab a bottle of water
and then we can find a table.”
“Okay.” I fell into step beside him.
I checked my phone and wasn’t surprised to find nothing from Sadie.
He bought a bottle of water from one of
the vendors and cheese fries—the kind with the liquid cheese that
grossed me out.
“Come on,” he tilted his head towards
a free picnic table. “Let’s just sit down for a while and look
for your friend. What exactly does she look like?”
“Tall, brown hair, pretty,” I
shrugged.
He laughed. “You just described half of
the girls here. Although, none of them are as pretty as you,” he
winked.
My cheeks heated and I looked down. I
wasn’t used to being called pretty. Most of the people that I went
to school with, guys and girls, thought I was weird. I was different,
and people didn’t seem to understand different. It was all to easy
to pass me up as odd.
“Surely you know you’re pretty,”
the guy added. “I think I might be developing a crush on your
freckles.”
When I was little I hated my freckles.
None of the other kids had them and I’d been embarrassed, but as I
got older I learned to love them because they were a part of me. My
mom always told me there was no point in not loving yourself, because
you can’t change who you are and might as well embrace it.
“What’s your name?” I asked him,
wanting to steer the topic of conversation away from myself.
“Maddox.” He answered, wiping his
cheese covered fingers on a napkin. “Yours?”
“Emma.”
“Emma,” he repeated. “I like that.”
“Um…thank you?” It came out as a
question.
He chuckled, like my awkwardness was cute
or something. “Are you from around here, Emma?”
“About twenty or so minutes from here,”
I shrugged.
“Winchester?” He asked.
“Uh…yeah…how’d you know?”
“Don’t worry,” he laughed, “I’m
not a creep, it’s just where I’m from.”
“Oh,” I relaxed.
“We have a lot in common,” he
continued, eating another heart attack inducing cheese fry.
“We do?”
“Yeah,” he nodded.
“I don’t see how we have much in
common except where we live…”
“Really?” He quirked a brow. “You
look like you don’t want to be here and I don’t want to be here
either. That’s another thing we have in common.”
“I don’t like crowds,” I mumbled.
“What a coincidence,” he grinned
widely. “I don’t either!”
I narrowed my eyes at him.
“What?” He frowned. “You don’t
believe me?”
“I don’t know you,” I countered.
“How could I tell if you were being serious or sarcastic?”
“Then why don’t you get to know me,”
he suggested. “Go on a date with me.”
I gaped at him, unable to form a coherent
sentence. “You’re very presumptuous.”
“I’m not asking you to go to bed with
me, that
would be presumptuous. A date allows two people to get to know each
other in a no stress environment.”
“No stress?” I laughed. “I hardly
consider a date as no stress.”
He tapped his fingers against the top of
the table. I was beginning to wonder if it was a nervous habit or
something.
“So…are you saying no the date?”
“Yes. No. I don’t know,” I
stammered. “You’re making me nervous.” My hands wrung together
beneath the table where he couldn’t see.
He chuckled, taking off the hat and
running his fingers through his hair before replacing it. “I make
lots of people nervous.”
“I’m only seventeen,” I warned, the
words tumbling out of my mouth before I could stop them, “so if
you’re like twenty-five you might want to give up now.”
“Do I looked twenty-five to you?” He
laughed.
“No,” I squirmed.
“I just turned nineteen,” he
supplied. “Is that too old for you?”
“I don’t date,” I mumbled, hoping
he’d get tired of me and just leave.
“I find it hard to believe that a girl
as beautiful as you doesn’t date.” He flicked the plastic top to
the water bottle into the grass and I almost felt like scolding him
for it, but I couldn’t find the words. “And I hardly think one
date is that dangerous.”
“You’re annoyingly persistent,” I
mumbled.
He grinned widely, his teeth perfectly
straight and white. “I guess I just don’t want to get old and
look back on my life and wonder what would’ve happened if I asked
the pretty girl with freckles that I met at the fair out on a date,”
he rambled.
This guy? Was he for real? And yet I
found myself succumbing to his charms. “Fine, I’ll go on a date
with you,” I mumbled, agreeing mostly to get him to shut up. As
soon as I finished speaking I realized I’d just agreed to go on a
date with a virtual stranger.
“Excellent,” he grinned, and I
couldn’t stop my smile, “and wear that hat, I like it.”
Wait until I told Sadie that one.
“Any word from your friend?” He
asked, eyeing my phone that lay on the table.
I checked it even though I knew there was
no message. “Nothing,” I mumbled.
“You need to find a better friend,”
he joked.
“I think you might be right,” I
frowned.
He stood up and held his hand out for me.
“Well, we’re already here, we might as well have fun.”
I eyed his hand like it was a live
grenade that might detonate at any second. He wiggled his fingers,
trying to coax me. Instead of accepting his hand I stood up to follow
him. He let his hand drop to his side and smiled to show that he
wasn’t offended.
He started to walk away, assuming I would
follow, and I called, “Maddox!”
“Yeah?” He turned around.
“Your trash…are you just going to
leave it?” I frowned.
He narrowed his eyes at me. “Are you
one of those girls that’s always preaching about saving the
environment and won’t eat meat?”
“No,” I scoffed. “I’ll have you
know that I can devour a cheeseburger in three seconds flat.”
He laughed. “Good.” He came back and
picked up his trash, discarding it. “Coming?” He called over his
shoulder.
I hurried after him.
“Nice boots.” He pointed to my
flowery Doc Martens styled shoes.
“Thanks,” I smiled.
“What do you want to do? There’s
pretty much everything.” He shoved his hands in his pockets.
“There’s the carnival setup over there,” he nodded his head,
“or the track…although it’s probably too late for that. Or we
could take a look at the different booths—we might find something
interesting there.”
I found Maddox’s rambling endearing.
“I don’t know, this isn’t exactly
my scene,” I shrugged.
He chuckled, grinning crookedly. He
peered down at me and I realized now how much taller he was than me.
His white t-shirt stretched taut across his muscular chest, making
his tanned skin seem even darker. My eyes ventured further down and I
saw that he wore black jeans with a studded belt and boots.
“Are you checking me out, Emma?”
“What? No! Of course not!” I flailed.
He chuckled, rubbing his jaw to hide his
widening smile. “You definitely were. It’s okay. You can look,
but no touching below the belt…yet.”
I gaped at him. He did not
just say that.
He laughed, continuing to play with me.
“I like to know girls a little better before I unleash the beast.
It might scare them.”
I didn’t know what to say and I kind of
felt like running away.
He reached out, wrapping his arms around
my shoulders, drawing me against his muscular body. “If you’re
going to go on a date with me, you better get used to my sense of
humor.”
“I’m not sure I want to,” I
mumbled.
“Oh come on, I’m delightful.”
I wasn’t sure delightful was the word
I’d use to describe Maddox. Then again, I’d only met him thirty
minutes ago.
“You say delightful, I say crude.”
“Oh, you wound me.” He grasped his
heart with his free hand.
“I doubt your ego is bruised.” I
couldn’t help smiling at him. There was something about him that
was infectious and easy to like.
“Don’t doubt my affection for you,
Emma. I promise you it’s more than bruised. It’s downright
shattered.”
I couldn’t contain my laughter.
“You know what, forget this madness,”
he waved his arm to encompass all the roaming people. His other was
still slung around my shoulder, a heavy and warm reminder of his
presence. “You wanna just talk for a while?”
“Talk?”
“Yeah, you know, where you move your
mouth like this,” he mimed with his hand, “and words come out.”
“Uh…isn’t that what we’ve been
doing?” I asked, confused.
“Yes, but I think it’s imperative
that we get to know each other better before our date so that we can
avoid the obligatory awkward first date and get to the fun stuff.”
“The fun stuff?” I repeated. “This
isn’t the below the belt stuff is it?”
“Of course not, Emma. What kind of man
do you take me for? I’m offended.”
“Hey, you were the one that brought
that up before,” I defended.
He steered me away from the crowd and
towards the now empty bleachers. A crew was packing up the stage
equipment and loading it onto a truck with the Willow Creek logo—a
willow tree with a tire swing.
“Anyway,” he continued, leading me up
to the very top of the bleachers and sitting down, “I figure if we
know each other a little better tonight, then the hard part is out of
the way for our date.”
I was still shocked that I’d actually
agreed to go on a date with him, but he had a point.
He stretched his legs out on the
bleachers in front of him. “So, tell me a little bit about
yourself.”
“There’s not much to tell,” I
shrugged, playing with a strand of my wavy blonde hair.
“You really suck at this whole getting
to know each other thing.” He grinned.
“You’re right,” I frowned. I
guessed I’d spent too much time avoiding people that now I didn’t
really know what to do. I took a deep breath and tried to think of
something to tell him that wouldn’t be too personal or exposing. “I
play piano. Does that suffice?”
“It does,” he grinned. “I happen to
play the drums.”
“Really?” I asked, surprised. “You’re
not just telling me that so that I’ll think you’re cool, are
you?”
He laughed, ducking his head so that the
brim of the baseball cap hid his face. “Not at all. Scoot over.”
I slid away from him and he leaned over,
plucking drumsticks from his back pocket and hit them against the
bleachers—creating a beat. “Believe me now?” He quirked a brow.
“I believe you.”
He continued to drum, spinning one of the
sticks around his fingers in a fancy trick. “I can keep going if
you don’t believe me,” he grinned boyishly.
“I said I believed you,” I laughed.
He smiled, and the drumming ceased. “Ah,
that’s what I wanted.”
“What?” I asked confused.
“To hear your laugh. It’s beautiful,
just like you.”
“You’re full of all kinds of cheesy
lines,” I laughed.
“Cheesy?” He faked that he was
offended. Removing the baseball cap he said, “Most girls eat that
stuff up.”
“I’m not most girls,” I stated. I
wasn’t like most people my age and I was fine with that. I was
happy to be a free spirit like my mom.
“I’m beginning to see that.” He
smiled, closing the space between us so that our legs touched.
I hadn’t even wanted to come to the
stupid fair, and I’d been pissed at Sadie for abandoning me, but
sitting here with Maddox made me glad I had come. Even if he was a
bit cocky, I liked him for some reason.
Looking out at the dark sky, I frowned.
“I better call for a taxi,” I mumbled. Since apparently Sadie had
left I had no choice. She was getting a mouthful later.
“Taxi?” Maddox’s eyebrows furrowed
together and he looked at me with a perplexed expression. “Why
would you call for a taxi?”
“Uh…” Now it was my turn to look at
him weird. “Because I need to go home. It’s getting late.”
“I can take you home,” he offered.
“No, that’s not necessary.” I waved
away his concern.
“Don’t be silly,” he stood up. “I’m
heading that way anyway. We’ll go together.”
“I don’t know,” I frowned.
I might like Maddox, but I didn’t know
him. Getting in a car alone with him could be dangerous.
“Come on,” he coaxed, “I’ll find
my brother and we’ll head out. What do you think?”
Brother? So we wouldn’t be alone. I
guessed that made it better. “Yeah, sure.”
“Great,” he grinned. “Here, let me
help you,” he held a hand out to me.
“Uh…”
“It’s just my hand and these steps
can be shaky, plus it’s getting dark. Just let me help you,” he
pleaded.
He was right and I was being stupid. He
just…he made me nervous.
I placed my hand in his and he helped me
off the bleachers. There’d still been enough light when we climbed
up them that I hadn’t had a problem, but now I was glad for the
security his hand provided.
When we were on solid ground again he
released my hand. For some reason I missed the feel of it.
He pulled his phone out of his pocket,
texting his brother I assumed. A few seconds later his phone vibrated
with a response.
“He says he’s at the entrance.”
“Cool,” I said for lack of anything
else to say.
“So, you said you were seventeen?”
When I nodded, he added, “Does that mean this is your last summer
before you’re a senior?”
“It is,” I nodded.
“Have you decided what you’re going
to do after school?”
“No,” I admitted. “I’m still
contemplating between a few things. Are you in college or working?”
I asked, tilting my head back to look up at him.
“...I guess you could say I’m
working.”
“You guess?” I questioned, confused.
“It’s complicated,” he shrugged.
I wondered exactly what he meant by
complicated, but I didn’t think he was likely to answer if I asked.
“I see him,” Maddox pointed up ahead.
I squinted, not sure if I was seeing
right.
“Uh…” I paused, looking from his
brother to him. What the actual fuck? Were they clones or something?
I guessed the more plausible explanation would be that they were
twins, but a Maddox clone sounded a hell of a lot cooler.
We stopped in front of his brother and
Maddox introduced us. “Emma, this is my twin brother Mathias.”
“Hi, nice to meet you,” I smiled.
“Whatever.” Mathias rolled his eyes,
and strolled off towards the parking lot.
“Sorry,” Maddox frowned. “He
doesn’t like people…or animals…or living.”
I laughed. “Is there anything he
likes?”
“Sex.”
“Of course,” I sighed. I should’ve
known that would be his reply.
“Just ignore him. It’s what I do,”
he shrugged, and we followed after his brother.
Mathias stopped in front of a gray Nissan
sports car I’d never seen before. “What kind of car is that?” I
asked, pointing. It looked futuristic, like it could take flight to
outer space or something.
“Nissan GT-R,” Maddox answered,
“isn’t she gorgeous?”
What was it with guys and cars? Honestly.
“Looks nice to me,” I shrugged. In my
humble opinion a car was a car and nothing more.
Maddox looked at me like my simple
statement was downright murderous. “Nice? Nice?
This car,” he reached out and lovingly stroked the hood of the car,
“is what dreams are made of.”
“If you say so.”
“Can we get in the fucking car?”
Mathias asked, sticking a cigarette between his lips and lighting the
tip.
“No smoking in the car,” Maddox
warned with a raised finger.
“Fucking killjoy,” Mathias rolled his
eyes, tossed the cigarette on the ground, and opened the car door. I
was surprised when he slid the seat forward and climbed in the back.
“Milady,” Maddox extended his hand
towards the car, “get in.”
I gave him a smile and got in the car.
Even though I wasn’t that tall I had to practically sit on the
ground to get in the low vehicle. Who the hell wanted a car like
this? Well, obviously Maddox.
He started the car and caressed the
steering wheel, making a sound that could only be described as a
moan. “Do you hear that purr?”
Was it too late to run away?
“You’re scaring the poor girl,”
Mathias said from the backseat. “Shut up and drive or I will light
a cigarette in here and good luck ever getting the scent out of the
leather.”
“Asshole,” Maddox groaned, turning on
the headlights and speeding out of the parking lot.
“Whoa,” I grabbed onto the door.
“Sorry,” Maddox gave me a sheepish
smile. “I should’ve warned you about the power she has.”
I’d never been in a car like this
before. I drove an old 1972 Volkswagen Beetle that didn’t start
half the time, and it sounded like the engine was going to go up in
flames anytime I actually drove it. This one sounded nothing like
that. Maddox was right, it did purr.
Since Mathias was in the car we didn’t
really talk. Maddox turned on the radio and let that fill the
silence.
When we got close to Winchester I started
giving him directions, leading him to the simple brick one-story
house that I called home.
To someone else it might’ve seemed like
a dump, but I loved it.
My mom and I did our best to keep it up
and decent looking. The front windows had white shutters and flower
boxes overflowing with purple petunias. The grass was freshly mowed
and green, instead of brown like the other houses on the street.
“Thanks for the ride,” I reached for
the door.
“Wait!” His warm hand wrapped around
my arm and I turned back to look at him. “I don’t have your phone
number.”
“Oh, right,” I mumbled, rattling off
the numbers so he could enter them into his phone. “I’ll call
you.”
“Call?”
“Yeah, call. Is that a problem?” A
single dark brow rose.
“No, not at all,” I stammered
nervously, “I just assumed you’d text.”
He chuckled. “If I text you I wouldn’t
be able to hear your voice and that would be a damn shame. Texting is
so impersonal.”
“Oh,” was all I said.
I’d never met a guy like Maddox before
and I hadn’t quite decided yet if that was a good or bad thing.
“I’ll see you soon,” I smiled at
him. “Nice meeting you Mathias.”
I heard a grunt in reply from the back of
the car. Mathias was clearly a guy of few words. Besides their looks
the twins were clearly polar opposites.
I was surprised when I closed the car
door and heard another one close.
I looked over the top of the car and saw
Maddox.
“What are you doing?” I asked,
perplexed.
“Giving you a proper goodnight,” he
shrugged. “Did you really think I’d just drive off without
knowing you got inside okay?”
“I-I don’t know,” I stuttered.
Maddox had left me flustered.
We walked up the pathway together and
stopped outside the front door while I fumbled for my house key. Once
I got the door opened I expected him to leave, but he didn’t.
Instead, he lowered his head and
whispered, “Thank you for making tonight worth remembering.
Goodnight, Emma.” He pressed his lips to my cheek and walked away,
leaving me standing there flabbergasted.
I forced myself to move and stepped into
the house.
I leaned my back against the closed door,
my mouth parted with surprise. I raised my shaking fingers to press
them against my cheek and closed my eyes. A part of me was convinced
that tonight had been a dream and I’d wake up in the morning and
find that Maddox didn’t exist. And that, surprisingly, left me
feeling heartbroken.
Author Bio
Micalea
Smeltzer is a bestselling Young and New Adult author from Winchester,
Virginia. She’s always working on her next book, and when she has
spare time she loves to read and spend time with her family.
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