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Those Three Little Words (The Vancouver Agitators, #2)(95)

Author:Meghan Quinn

“Of course I would—”

The closet door opens, revealing my parents. Arms crossed, nostrils flared, they stare down at me with twin glares that I can actually feel my skin start to melt off my body.

“Uh, can I help you?” I ask them with a forced smile.

Dad holds up a book. “Why do you have this?”

My eyes narrow in on the pregnancy book I’ve been reading.

Oh, God.

That’s more revealing than a damn man sock!

“Uh, Eli, I’m going to have to call you back.” Before he can say anything, I hang up and slowly extract myself from the closet.

Okay, don’t panic. This will all be okay. You’ve gotten pretty far on the whole loving yourself lie, so why not stretch it out a bit? They don’t know what’s going on with your friends. For all they know, it could belong to someone else.

Like Blakely.

YES!

It belongs to Blakley. She’s in a relationship. She’s sexually involved. She’s the perfect scapegoat.

“It’s Blakely’s,” I shout and then turn to face my parents, whose arms are still crossed. “She left it here at my apartment the other night. Yeah . . .” I slowly nod. “Poor girl is knocked up, but you know, at least she has Perry, right?”

“Call her,” Mom says.

“Um, what?” I blink a few times.

“Call her. We’d like to congratulate her.” There’s a challenge in my mom’s eyes, the kind of challenge that scared me right out of my socks when I was young. And if I was wearing socks now, they most likely would have shot across the room.

“You know, it’s late,” I say as casually as possible. “I don’t want to disturb her.”

“Call. Her,” Mom says, her words so forceful that I find myself searching for my friend’s name on my phone.

“I don’t even think she’s awake, you know. Because of the baby and all. Makes her tired. She just sleeps all day, every day. Sleep. Sleep. Sleep. So, don’t be surprised if she doesn’t answer. Maybe we should just—”

“Put the call on speaker.”

Ugh, my mom is being a total pill.

I put the phone on speaker and think of a way to communicate to my friend that she needs to cover for me. If she’s quick enough on her feet, she’ll be able to handle this. I know she can.

“Hello?” she answers.

“Hey, you,” I say as casually as I can. “So I just wanted—”

Mom jostles the phone out of my hand like a ninja and then walks toward the kitchen, out of grabbing distance. “Hello, Blakley dear. It’s Mrs. Lawes. How are you?”

“Oh hey there, uh, I’m good. How are you? Visiting, I’m guessing?”

“Yes, we are.” Mom looks up at me and says, “Just wanted to celebrate with our daughter.”

Oh no . . .

Ladies and gentlemen, this is what a master conversationalist looks like at her best. Tina Lawes was once the PTA president, a woman celebrated for her ability to communicate so well that local businesses feared her as she walked around, searching for donations. She is a manipulator but will do it with a smile, so you never truly realize what Tina Lawes has done to you until you’re recovering, thinking over everything, and slowly understanding that you’ve been stripped from your dignity by only her words.

And that’s precisely what she’s doing right now.

“Celebrating, oh that’s fun,” Blakely says.

Blakley, if you can hear me, you’re pregnant. You have absorbed my child, and you are now the one with indigestion, onion cravings, and the need to bury your head into a pair of testicles because that’s how horny you are.

Can you hear me?

“Yes, such exciting news about Penny, right?”

Damn it!

“Blakely, don’t—”

I start to shout, but Dad slips his hand over my mouth, halting me. Did I mention Joseph Lawes is Tina Lawes’s evil henchman? He performs the dirty work, as you can see.

“Aw, about the baby? And here she thought you guys were going to be angry.” Oh Blakely, what have you done? “I told her anyone would be happy to be grandparents.”

“Thank you, Blakely. You’ve been incredibly helpful.” And then, like the freaking mob boss that she is, she hangs up and slowly lowers the phone onto the counter.

“Care to explain?” Mom says.

“Uhh . . . sure.” I step away from my dad and slowly make my way to the living room area, near the windows. “You see, when she said baby, she was talking about the puppy I’m going to adopt. Surprise.” I raise my arms up in the air. “We call it a baby.”

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