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The Neighbor Favor(80)

Author:Kristina Forest

“Nick,” she said, frowning. “I can’t let you pay for this.”

“It’s okay. I told you I have a lot of money saved. I can cover it.”

She gave him an apprehensive look. But then she glanced down at Tomcat, whose meowing pleas to leave hadn’t stopped. “I’ll pay you back.”

“You don’t have to.” Nick picked up Tomcat’s carrier as the receptionist swiped his card.

“Thank you,” Lily said, squeezing his free hand.

“It’s nothing, honestly.” And that was true. He would do anything for her. She meant so much to him. It was why he was determined not to fuck up her life.

* * *

? ? ?

Back at her apartment, Nick placed Tomcat’s carrier on the ground. Tomcat emerged and threw an annoyed look over his shoulder. Lily refilled his water bowl and he drank loudly like he’d been abandoned in the desert. Lily cooed over him and stroked his back.

Nick stood by the door, unsure if he should leave now. Lily looked up at him and smiled tiredly.

“Come sit with me?” she asked. “If you don’t have other plans, I mean.”

Other plans? He’d cancel a meeting with the Dalai Lama to spend more time with her.

They sat on the couch and Nick glanced back at Tomcat, who was busy grooming himself by his food bowl.

“He’s in a better mood,” he said.

“He despises the vet. It’s the only time he gets out of character.” She was looking at Nick intently. “Thank you for everything tonight. I don’t just mean paying the bill. I mean coming to help Tomcat and holding him. Comforting me when I freaked out. All of it. I am going to pay you back, by the way.”

“You really don’t have to.”

“I will,” she said.

He let it drop. If anyone, he understood the desire to not feel indebted.

Tomcat meandered over and hopped up onto the couch. Nick stilled, then held his breath as Tomcat walked right onto his lap and started making a weird motion with his paws while he purred. It was almost like he was softly digging into the fabric of Nick’s jeans.

“Uh . . . what’s he doing?” Nick asked, afraid to move.

“Oh my God. He’s making biscuits on you.” Lily was beaming. “It means he loves you now.”

“Making biscuits?”

“Yeah, look at his paws. It’s like he’s kneading dough. My little baker.” She raised an eyebrow, smirking. “Still think all cats are evil?”

Hesitantly, Nick patted Tomcat on the head. Tomcat leaned into Nick’s hand, brushing his cheek across Nick’s palm. Then he curled into a ball in Nick’s lap, warm and content.

“No,” he finally said. “This guy’s okay.”

Lily smiled, satisfied. “Told you.”

Nick grinned at her, and then they fell quiet. He wanted to apologize for the way he’d left things at her parents’ house.

“About Saturday—” he said.

“So that kiss—” she started.

Lily laughed, and Nick did too.

“I’m sorry again,” he said. “The way I handled the situation was weak. It was cowardly to leave without saying goodbye to you.”

She glanced down, smoothing out her dress. “I think we should just focus on being friends. I’d like for us to be able to do that.” She looked up at him. “Would you?”

“Yes,” he said quickly. “I would.”

“Okay. And no more wedding-date stuff either. I can take care of that on my own.”

He nodded. On one hand, he was proud of her for taking control of this situation. She was still so determined for her sisters to stay out of her love life. But on the other hand, he felt shitty because he was supposed to help her find someone else, to help her find happiness, and instead he’d only screwed things up and gotten in the way.

“Of course you can do it on your own. I’m sorry I wasn’t much help.”

“It’s okay.” She shifted so that she was facing him. “I actually had a date tonight. But I had to cancel, obviously, because of Tomcat.”

Nick froze. His stomach clenched. Casually, he said, “Oh yeah, with who?”

“My new coworker. It’s kind of weird, actually. Physically, he looks how I pictured that guy I was emailing with last year might look. I think I told you about him? The guy who ghosted me.”

Nick gulped. “I remember.”

“Yeah, he’s British too, and the guy I had been emailing with was British.” She brushed her hair behind her ear. “Anyway, Oliver—that’s my coworker’s name—had tickets to a comedy show, and I feel really bad about not being able to make it.”

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