I should have known.
If anyone in the freaking world knew the signs—it was me.
Gosh, I couldn’t believe how stupid I’d been.
“Okay then,” she glared at me, “I do have a problem with you walking out on Trey. He’s one of my best friends and you’ve made him miserable.”
I lowered my voice to a whisper. “I told you I can’t talk about that.”
Her face got that mean look that she saved for an opposing team.
My breath hitched when I suddenly realized that—in her eyes—I was now the opposing team.
And that freaking stung.
After everything Gigi and I had been through—I’d been ousted from friend status—to enemy.
“Yeah, that’s what you’ve been saying for a week, now. It’s a pretty weak excuse for stomping on someone’s heart.” Somehow, her expression got even meaner. “You hurt my friend,” she slid closer so we were skate to skate, “and I want to know why.”
I inhaled a ragged breath. “That’s between me and Trey. It’s nobody else’s business.”
The real kicker of all this BS—is that I did nothing wrong.
Except for falling in love with the wrong guy.
And staying with that guy even when I knew I should leave.
“Nice, Lexi. That’s real nice. I had no idea you could be like this.”
That hit right to the very core of me.
I loved Gigi.
And we’d been friends for freaking ever.
She knew me.
If anyone in the world knew me—it was her.
Yeah, I partied too hard sometimes.
Yeah, I got myself into more binds than the average bear.
But I never hurt anyone.
Gigi knew that.
The stupid crap I did only ended up hurting me.
No one else.
Not on purpose, anyway.
Instead of accepting the fact I couldn’t discuss my personal business—she’d written me off as a horrible person.
Yeah, that stung like a mother.
“Looks like you already know everything,” I snapped at her more harshly than I meant to.