"Georgia, you can't hurt him. You'll never forgive yourself if you do." I slowly lifted my hands from around her waist to cup her neck. My eyes steadied on her as her eyes darted from mine down to the knife she had in her hand that was resting on the counter. She stayed quiet giving nothing away. She wasn't thinking clearly. She was going to ruin everything. Finally, she spoke against my chest and I watched as her knuckles whitened clenching around the knife again, "I don't need to forgive myself. I need him to pay." - Disaster seems to be the only constant that happens in Georgia White's life; now that she has Elijah Winters it doesn't seem to be changing anytime soon. In the second book of the Bad Girl series - the lovable couple that everyone from the first book of the Bad Girl series loved - Georgia and Elijah are back in "Dating the Bad Girl". Not only did disaster strike for Georgia, but she worked so hard for Elijah - and herself - to be the better person. Making sure she kept a low profile, stayed away from fights, arguments subsided, and stayed away from seeing the inside of the jail cell - now that she was 18 years-old - was definitely going to prove to be the hardest struggle for Georgia. Especially, when she is betrayed by the one person she believed would be there for her no matter what. Elijah has absolutely no idea how to help Georgia cope with the fact that her mother is gone. More heart-crushing, Elijah feels like he is failing as a boyfriend because Georgia undeniably has no one except him. He wants her to know that he will never abandon her; what Elijah Winter doesn't realize is that the shoes he is trying to fill are too big to consume, once the betrayal has already sunk into Georgia, and suddenly he finds himself trying to retrace his steps to make sure she stays the good girl he knows she can be. Sixty-two days. It took sixty-two days to feel the remnants of the bad girl again. By now, who knows if Elijah can keep Georgia's bad girl away.