I hear the garage door grind open or closed, and I immediately shoot to my feet.
Rose holds up a hand. “It’s just Connor.”
“He’s sleeping here?” I say in disbelief and then my lips rise. “Are you finally popping that cherry, Miss Rose Calloway?”
She looks about ready to tear out my vocal cords. My smile only grows.
“He has an early meeting in New York,” she says. Must be for Cobalt Inc., his family’s ink and magnet company, that is almost as profitable as Hale Co. baby products, but not quite. “It was last minute, so I told him it might be easier if he slept here…on the couch.” Oh. Fuck.
I grimace, not able to glimpse at the couch from the kitchen. But through the archway, I imagine pillows astray on the floor and one of the cushions perilously hanging over the edge. Basically I left the room a disaster with Lily swaddled in a blanket. A bystander would assume we fucked on the couch, even though I was thoughtful enough to move her to the rug.
“There are two guestrooms,” I say. “Why the couch?”
“He didn’t want to cause a fuss after he left,” Rose says. Her neurotic self would have to rearrange all of the pillows on the bed, wash the sheets, and probably iron the curtains just to be sure he didn’t touch those too.
Connor walks through the door, a small duffel bag slung over his shoulder and his hand preoccupied by texting on his cell.
When he looks up, his eyes meet mine and then drift down to my nearly naked body, stopping at my blanket, and then right back up.
“Hey beautiful,” I say with a grin.
He barely blinks. “Pants have been invented in this century.” He walks farther into the kitchen to give Rose a light kiss on the cheek. He must add the fact that I’m wearing a living room throw blanket because he says, “I thought you weren’t allowed to have public sex.”
Of course Rose told him about the list. She’ll take any lengths to make sure Lily stays on track in her recovery.
“No one was here. It seemed private enough to me.”
I can’t read Connor’s calm expression, but he looks to Rose. She already shakes her head—as though she knows exactly what he’s about to say. “I told you that you should have clarified for them,” Connor tells her.
“I told you? What are you, one?” Rose snaps, but she’s just pissed she was wrong and he was right.
“Most one-year-olds can barely speak, let alone utter an entire idiom like I told you so.”
She looks like she wants to slap him. “Why are we dating?”
“Because I asked you out and you said yes,” he tells her with a burgeoning smile. “And you’re madly in love with me.”
“I never said such a thing.”
He replies in French, and I can’t even process the words.
She smacks his arm, and he whispers deeper in her ear, his arm spindling around her waist as he draws her to his chest. I don’t think I’ve ever seen Rose so flushed before.
She puts a hand on his black button-down, making sure there’s space between them. He kisses her on the head and keeps his arm around her, but he turns to me. “The couch isn’t vacant then.” His eyes fall to Rose, waiting for her to offer another solution. Like her bed, but she has solidified to stone.
She’s not one-hundred percent ready to share a bed with a guy, which isn’t a bad thing. I take pride in pissing Rose off, but causing her this type of fear—even unintentionally—makes me feel horrible.
Rose says, “The guestroom in the basement is free. I put clean sheets on the bed the other day.”
Connor nods, accepting the offer, and if he’s disappointed, I can’t tell at all.
I leave Connor and Rose to talk quietly amongst themselves, and I carefully lift Lily in my arms. I successfully carry her back to bed without waking her. She sighs, dreaming peacefully as I place her onto the mattress and tuck the comforter around her.
“Lo,” she says in a sleepy voice and rolls over onto a pillow, hugging it tightly in her arms. I’ve never been so jealous of a damn pillow.
But I let myself smile.
A year ago it would have been another man in her arms.
Oh, how far we’ve come.
{ 16 }
LOREN HALE
We made a deal not to put ourselves in stressful situations. Like the Sunday luncheon with Lily’s parents. Like any communication with my father.
Today I’m breaking that deal.
Lily is busy with Sebastian, pretending to be tutored. I told her I was going to work out with Ryke at the Penn gym, but when I drive to Philadelphia, I make the turn into Villanova. Some of the houses have acres and acres of trimmed lawns, decorative fountains gushing in the front yard and glittering Lamborghinis parked in the driveway—a place more suited for Beverly Hills than the suburbs of Philly. My nerves ricochet every mile down the road.