Title: Caught in Us
Description (Caught in Us):
Dani Cohen knows Damon is
trouble the second he walks in during senior year. He has bad boy written all
over him. . .from his arrogant smirk to his perfectly toned abs. He is
arrogant, intense, and rebellious.
Dani has her future all planned
out. She’s not the type to fall for a bad boy, no matter how panty-melting his
grin is or how shamelessly he flirts, but something about Damon draws her in,
awakening a desire she’s never felt. Slowly, she uncovers the secrets Damon
hides: underneath his arrogance lies a tortured soul, his flirting smile masks
despair.
Damon arrives in Dani’s life against his will.
Carrying the scars of a dark past and facing an uncertain future, he knows he
should stay away from her, but can’t. Her innocence consumes him, as does the
desire to indulge in the passion igniting deep inside her.
An all-consuming bond blooms into a reckless
love. But when mistakes from the past threaten their already fragile future,
can their love survive?
A steamy and emotional full-length, standalone
love story from the USA Today Bestselling author of Withering Hope.
Excerpt 1
As usual, I get too engrossed in my reading and am almost late for
class. Sitting next to Hazel, I take out my books when Damon appears in front
of our desk.
"You dropped your phone in the hallway," he says
politely.
"No, I didn't." I look in bewilderement as he drops my smartphone in my hand. Damon smiles mischievously, walking over to his desk as Ms.
Evans enters the class. Wouldn't I have noticed if my phone had fallen on the
corridor during our altercation? Not really...I was too preoccupied with him to
notice anything else. My skin heats up at the memory of his closeness. I swivel
to ask Hazel something and find her
staring at me with curious eyes.
"Do you have anything to share about your morning?"
"I read a book," I mumble.
Ms. Evan starts talking about the Bronte novel we had to read
when I receive a text.
You
should take better care of your things.
The sender appears only by number, not name, but I know who it
is. Sure enough, one glance in Damon's direction confirms my suspicion. He's
not looking at me or his phone, but lifts the corner of his lips. It
dawns on me that I might not have dropped my phone at all. He must have taken
it from my pocket.
And
you shouldn't steal other people's things, I reply.
Hey,
you were eavesdropping, so don't go all saint on me. You were the first
offender.
I smile, overcome by a strange giddiness. I can't believe he
stole my phone, or that he got my number, or that he's texting me right now.
I'm grinning like an idiot. It's the first time a guy has written to me and not
asked for my notes or something similar. Given our less than friendly
interactions yesterday and this morning, this is a surprise. Sometimes it takes
a healthy fight and a familiar pain to gain a friend.
"After the battle of stares
yesterday follows the battle of
messages?" Hazel murmurs, smiling. "Bad boy is showing quite an
interest in you."
"No, he's not."
Something light settles in my stomach.
"I heard that a junior tried very hard yesterday to make
him ask for her number and failed. He must be very interested in yours if he
got it on his own."
"This doesn't mean anything." The lightness grows, the
giddy feeling bubbling up inside me.
"Maybe not." She leans in conspiratorially.
"Maybe it does."
When Ms. Evan announces she'll question
us about Wuthering Heights, I have the feeling Damon might take this
opportunity to display the same unpleasantness as yesterday.
Be
nice if Ms. Evans asks you something, I type quickly. Please.
He doesn't type back, and
as Ms. Evan begins to ask questions, I brace myself. She deliberately avoids
asking him anything though. Then she asks Beckett what his opinion is about the
motives behind Heathcliff's behavior. He stares at her with a blank face,
clueless.
It's Damon who answers. "Heathcliff felt out of place. He
didn't belong to their class, and everyone else never let him forget it."
Ms. Evans' eyes widen, but all she says is "Do you think
that justifies him?"
"No. That's no justification for being a dick to everyone,"
Damon says nonchalantly.
Ms. Evans flinches.
"That language doesn't belong in the
classroom, Damon." Her tone is firm.
I'm proud of her. "I'll let you out of the questioning round
because you're new, and I gave this assignment a week ago."
Damon's lip twitches, and I can tell he's about so say something
obscene back. I sit up straighter,
staring at him intently. He catches my eye and winks at me. I instantly flush,
dropping my gaze to my hands.
"I had to read the book in my junior year," Damon
replies. Ms. Evans nods, and then continues questioning Anna. I think about
something the principal mentioned today... Damon scored mostly A’s at his old
school. My assessment was spot on yesterday. Under the mask of carelessness hides a perfectionist. Someone who
is clearly smart. As Ms. Evans instructs us to look up a certain passage in the
book, I shift in my chair, holding my copy in my hands and pretending to flip
through its pages. In reality, I am sneaking glances at Damon. Who was he before
he came here and whom did he lose?
Thank
you for not being rude, I text him under the desk. I receive
an answer almost immediately.
Ouch.
That sound like something you'd tell a
dog. I'm not a poodle; don't try to train me.
I write back quickly. You're
definitely not a poodle. More like a pitbull. I hear those are hard to train.
Whatever they do, it's because they want to.
There is a pause in which I wait breathlessly, and then my
smartphone vibrates. They also tend to
attack their owners.
My fingers almost snap as
I hurry to reply. I don't believe that.
They just have a bad reputation. Don't
believe everything you hear. It's all appearances.
Another short vibration. Ms. Evans looks at me, so I just chance
a quick glance at my phone. So what
should I make of your Linkin Park t-shirt?
Frowning, I text back as best as I can while pretending to pay
attention to Ms. Evans. What's the harm
in liking Kinky Fuck?
Damon's next message confuses me. Is that an invitation? I read what I wrote before, and shame washes
over me.
Abandoning all pretense of paying attention to the teacher, I
write It was
autocorrect. I meant Linkin Park. OMG,
I'm so sorry.
He doesn't write anything back, and when I look at him, he
appears on the verge of bursting out laughing.
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