Never Give Your Heart to a Hookup (Never Say Never #2) Read Online Lauren Landish

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors: Series: Never Say Never Series by Lauren Landish
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Total pages in book: 120
Estimated words: 111610 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 558(@200wpm)___ 446(@250wpm)___ 372(@300wpm)
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Luna places her hand over Carter’s, smiling at him sweetly. “You are great.”

“Is nobody gonna tell him the best part?” Cole asks, drawing my attention.

There’s a ripple of laughter and, confused, I ask, “What?”

“Vivian came back,” Cole tells me.

My eyes widen as I scan his face, looking for any hint of a lie. “She did not.”

He holds his hand up like he’s testifying, “I swear. It was fucking hilarious.” He mimes her stomping out, whirling around, and wagging her finger. “And another thing! Blah-blah-blah.” Laughing hard, he says, “I swear she did it like three times, just ranting her ass off each time, making less and less sense. There was even something about her cat when she was a kid.”

“No way!” A little part of me wishes I’d seen that.

Cole holds his hands out, shrugging. “I guess Grandpa Chuck told her Muffalina died—legit, the cat’s name—but it actually ran away and he didn’t want to search the whole damn town to find the beast because it was a mean thing, always biting and scratching people. Vivian included. He thought it was a blessing in disguise then and still does now. She did not agree and was sobbing that he never cared about Muffalina or anyone else, and that maybe she should’ve gotten a tomcat so he would’ve looked for it. He apologized, but she said it was too little, too late, and stomped off again.”

I close my eyes, picturing Aunt Vivian wailing about a cat from forty-plus years ago. Not that it died, but that some other family probably took it in and it wasn’t hers anymore. Hell, it probably ran away on purpose to get away from her.

“But guess who didn’t go back with her?” Kyle hints. “Not the cat. Aunt Vivian.”

“Devin?”

“Ehnt! He was following Mommy around like a puppy on a leash, back and forth with her each time, glaring at us when we laughed at her outbursts and telling her that she’s sooo right to be upset. But Bridgette? She got progressively annoyed with the whole thing, and the last time Devin tried to shoo her after Vivian, she waved him off. Told him to ‘sort his mother out’ and that she’d take an Uber.

Apparently, I missed a lot when we left.

“What happened?”

“I took her home,” Cole answers. When all eyes shoot to him, he adds, “Dropped her at the curb, told her to listen to Samantha, and pulled away as soon as she walked in the front door. I don’t know if she’s gonna take the good advice, though. She was pretty quiet the whole way.” I get the feeling he’s already told them this at least once before.

“After that, the party broke up pretty quickly,” Kayla says. “So that was our night. How was yours?”

She’s fishing, big time.

“I apologized to Samantha for our family, she apologized for upsetting everyone, and we shook on it, deciding to leave it in the past.” Technically, I‘m not lying. We definitely did some apologizing and shaking, just not in the way I’m making it sound.

“Good,” Carter declares, not calling me out on the lie.

“Maybe we can double date sometime?” Luna asks hopefully.

“As long as you don’t call it a date, maybe so,” I answer, more of a realist than she is.

“If we’re done here, I really gotta go,” Cole says, looking at his watch. I’m surprised he’s sat here this long with us, to be honest.

When he gets up, everyone starts to leave, but Cameron hangs back. I’m not surprised. He probably wants to do a big brother speech, better known as Dad 2.0.

“What’s up?” I ask.

He swallows hard and looks up at the ceiling, gathering his words. “Be careful, that’s it. I can tell you have real feelings for Samantha, but if she’s not . . .” He trails off, and after a heavy sigh, tries again. “I’ve been in love—real, deep, forever love. I’ve held it in my hand until it didn’t even seem special anymore, and I took it for granted. And when I lost it . . . it fucked me up, man.” He grips at his chest over his heart, showing more emotion about the loss of his wife than I’ve seen from him since her funeral.

My instinct is to throw my arm over my brother’s shoulder, but he purposefully steps away from me, not wanting any comfort.

“Cameron, what happened to you was—”

He cuts me off. “Just . . . I do hope it turns into something more. For you, for her. Because I’d go through ten more decades of the hell I feel every morning for the good years I had. But be careful. Because if this is one-sided or Samantha can’t give you what you need, it’ll burn out just as fast as it started, leaving you alone to realize you burned your whole world to the ground for someone you can’t have a future with.”


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