The XOXO New Adult Collection: 16 Full Length New Adult Stories
Page 54
“Hi, Justin,” Cole heard her say. “Nice to see you. Are you enjoying winter break?”
“Hell, yes,” Justin said. “Interventions kicked my ass. Did you pick up the texts for next term?”
Ah, Cole thought. So this was a fellow student. He turned around and pretended to look at his phone, but Justin’s hug replayed itself in his mind, as did his overly-friendly tone.
“Yeah,” Everly said. “Our fourth clinical looks like a killer.”
“Tell me about it. Hey, do you want to get together before classes start? Prep for what lies ahead?”
Cole’s grip on his phone tightened to the point he feared he might crack the case. He forced himself to relax. He could be reading into things.
“I promise,” Justin said when Everly didn’t reply, “I won’t pressure you for another date.”
Okay, that did it.
Getting to his feet, Cole approached Everly. Since nearby diners were already staring, he didn’t see any way to avoid a scene.
“Hi,” he said when Justin looked at him. “You must be Everly’s classmate, Justin. Nice to meet you.”
Justin grasped Cole’s outstretched hand out of instinct, but his confused gaze moved between Cole and Everly. “Who are you? Her brother or something?”
“Oh, no. I’m Cole...her boyfriend.”
Justin yanked his hand back. Cole barely restrained a smile. He reached over and put an arm around Everly.
“Since her food is getting cold, I thought I’d come and rescue her.”
“Rescue?” Justin repeated, his brown eyes narrowing.
“Sorry...poor choice of words,” Cole said smoothly. He looked at Everly.
“Oh. Um, yes. I should finish my lunch. Justin, I’ll e-mail you, okay?”
Apparently seeing no other option, Justin shrugged and said, “Sure.”
Cole waited until the other guy sat down, then led Everly back to their booth. When they were seated, she gave him a steady look.
“What was all of that about?” she asked.
“I thought you looked uncomfortable. Are you upset?”
She shook her head. “No. You were right. Thanks.”
He tapped his fingers when she lifted a piece of her pizza. “So, you two have a history?”
Had he really just asked that? Shut up, Dumbass, he thought. But he couldn’t help himself.
She paused with the pizza in front of her mouth. “If you call one lousy date a history.”
It took everything in him not to question her further. What was wrong with him? He hated when a woman grilled him about his past.
“Here’s your check,” Dee Dee said as she approached the table. “I’ll take that whenever you’re ready, sugar.”
The look she gave him would have lit most guys’ pants on fire. When she walked off, Everly covered a laugh with her napkin.
Instead of laugh with her, though, he wondered why she cared so little about the server’s flirting and he cared so much about one past date with Justin. He couldn’t help but feel that their relationship was unbalanced, and he didn’t like the feeling.
He didn’t like it at all.
Chapter 40
Everly enjoyed spending the afternoon with Cole wrapping presents for his family in front of a warm fire. It reminded her that she still needed to wrap the gifts she’d bought for her grandpa, Cole, and Wyatt. She’d asked Cole to sign a couple of baseballs for her grandpa and—reluctantly—her father, so she wanted to get stands for those and wrap them, too.
When he asked her to stay another night, she hated to say no. But she’d talked to her grandpa a couple of times in the past two days, and he sounded weary.
“I can’t stay,” she told Cole as she packed her things. “I want to, really. But there wasn’t a lot of food left in the house before...the attack. I have to make sure Pee Paw’s eating right, which probably means a trip to the grocery store.”
He watched her pack from his seat on the bed without comment. She looked at him when she zipped up the backpack containing her clothes and lifted it onto her shoulder. His gaze was intent.
“Is there anything I can do to change your mind?” he asked. “I could pay Jonette to—”
She moved forward and placed her fingertips on his lips. “Please don’t make this any harder on me, Cole. Not everything can be solved with money.” To soften her words, she leaned down and replaced her fingers with her mouth. She kissed him, then stood back up. “My grandpa needs me.”
He sighed. “All right.” He got to his feet and brought his lips to hers again. Heat pooled in her belly over the kiss and the memories of what they’d shared in the bed right beside them. When they parted, he asked, “So I won’t see you again until Christmas Eve?”
“Yeah. I’m volunteering at the center all day tomorrow and I have so many chores to handle on Sunday before I start my shift at Prix Fixe.” She smiled. “But don’t think I won’t know if you don’t do your exercises on your own.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
Feeling as down as he looked, she linked her hand with his and walked with him out of the bedroom. They didn’t converse as they made their way downstairs to the door leading outside. She hated the coming goodbye, even though she knew she’d see Cole again in a couple of days. A knot of anxiety and sadness tightened in her chest as they stopped in front of the door.
Wanting to get it over with, she reached for the handle. Cole reached out and put his hand on the door, keeping her from opening it. She looked up at him.
“I’m going to miss you, Ms. Wallace,” he said in a husky voice.
She swallowed hard, feeling foolish for being so distraught over their parting. Why had she let herself get so emotionally snared? She knew very well that she was far from capable of handling this level of attachment.
Still, she found herself saying, “I’ll miss you, too, Mr. Parker.”
He kissed her goodbye and stayed in the doorway until she drove away. To keep herself from dwelling on how she felt about leaving him, she made a mental list of things she had to get done at home. First and foremost was stocking the fridge and pantry. She had no doubt that her father had eaten whatever he wanted and not bothered to replace it. Thank goodness for the extra income she was earning from Cole and her shifts at Prix Fixe.
Thinking about going to the restaurant after the attack made her tighten her grip on the steering wheel. Cole had effectively distracted her from thinking about it over the past couple of days, but the fact that she’d been physically assaulted with Rowan only a few feet away haunted her. The police had no leads as of that afternoon, and she hardly expected them to put much effort into it with so much more serious crime happening around the city. With Christmas only days away, they also had to be stretched thin on personnel.
Although Cole told her about his interaction with Rebecca at the club, she had a hard time believing that his ex-girlfriend had sat out in the cold with a baseball bat to take a swing at her. From what he’d said, Rebecca took a lot of pride in her appearance and was about as girly as they came. On top of that, Everly had the vague impression in her mind that her attacker had been male. Was it possible she had just been in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Well, she couldn’t stop living her life in either case, she concluded as she pulled into her grandpa’s driveway. Rowan had hired security guards to man the parking lot through at least the holiday season. She sincerely hoped the police got some kind of lead between now and January.
Frigid air greeted her as she opened her door. Night was falling, turning the sky deep purple. She shivered and hurried up the couple of steps leading to the house. When she opened the door, she spotted her grandpa in his recliner and her father on the couch.
“There’s my girl,” her grandpa said with a smile. “So happy you’re home.”
He did look tired, she thought. Why was that? Her gaze moved briefly to her father, who stared back without speaking.
“Hi, Pee Paw,” she said, removing her coat, hat, a
nd scarf and putting them in the coat closet. She pulled her phone out of her purse and texted Cole that she was home. “I’m happy to see you, too.” She walked over to him and kissed his cheek. “Have you eaten dinner?”
“Not yet. How’re you feelin’?”
A smile rose as she thought about the question. Cole’s image floated into her thoughts. “I feel fine, Pee Paw. It was nice to have a couple of days to just relax.”
“You deserve ‘em,” he said. “You work too hard.”
She patted his hand. “It’s for us. Worth every penny.”
He squeezed her hand and held her gaze for a moment. “So good to have you home,” he said again.
“I’m going to see what I can put together for dinner, okay?”
He nodded. She got to her feet and headed to the kitchen without addressing her father. When she went to the fridge, she was unsurprised to find it virtually empty. Rummaging through the veggie drawer, she decided she might be able to make a salad with the unspoiled part of the romaine she found. There was a carrot, green pepper, and tomato she could also incorporate.
Turning with the ingredients in her hands, she almost ran straight into her father.
“Hello, Everly,” he said.
She couldn’t read anything in his gaze. Swallowing her discomfort, she moved over to the sink and placed the vegetables where she could reach them for washing.
“Hello,” she said.
It made the hairs on the back of her neck stand on end to keep her back to him, but she had no choice. She picked up the carrot and ran it under the water.
“You had a good time with Cole?” he asked.
“Sure.”
“How good a time?”
She stiffened. “That’s none of your business.”
“So you’re definitely sleeping with him then. Good.”
All of her warning bells sounded. Keeping the water running to mask their voices, she turned to look at him.
“Don’t go thinking that you can use my relationship with Cole to get something out of him,” she said in a low voice.
“I’m not asking for money or anything like that,” he said, holding his hands up. “All I want is the chance to ump here in the States.”
His response surprised her. It also made her feel slightly ill. The last thing she wanted was her father moving closer to her. Turning back to the vegetables, she began washing the pepper.
“It’s not like he has a close connection with the Umpire Administration,” she said. “You know better than most how hard it is to get an umpiring job in the MLB system. There’s very low turnover, and—”
“I just want you to ask him. That’s all.”
Resentment burned her throat. She’d known from the moment he first mentioned Cole that this sort of thing was coming. His visit had nothing to do with spending time with her or his father and everything to do with trying to further his career. In his mind, she had more leverage to get what he wanted because she was sleeping with Cole.
How dare he cheapen something so precious to her?
She finished rinsing the vegetables and struggled to rein in her temper. Then she turned and grabbed the hand towel to dry her hands
Facing him at last, she said, “I don’t owe you anything.”
His expression darkened. Gone was the façade of innocence. Moving closer to her, he made her feel cornered. Her heart thudded into her throat.
“By God, Everly May Wallace, I’m your father. You owe me your respect. You will do as I ask of you.”
He was so close she could feel the heat from his body. She dropped the hand towel and clutched the counter behind her to keep her hands from shaking.
“I’m a grown woman,” she said in a level voice, looking into his eyes and absorbing the hate she read there like a barb to her heart. “You haven’t been a part of my life since you walked out of it eight years ago. I think it’s high time you walked right back out of it.”
The strike shouldn’t have caught her by surprise, but it did. Her head snapped back. She barely caught herself before she fell to the floor. Pain had her gaze fading in and out of focus.
“You little bitch,” he hissed.
“Mason, you stop that,” her grandpa said from the doorway. “You need to leave this house.”
“Don’t you side with her.”
Everly feared her father’s anger was about to be directed at her grandpa. “Pee Paw, get—”
Her father turned back to her. He looked like an enraged bull. His hand reached out and encircled her throat. He gave her a hard shake. When she tried to knee him in the groin, he pushed her back against the counter so that she couldn’t move.
“Shut up!” he growled. “Now you listen to me. I won’t leave here until you do what I say. I always told you you’d be good for something one day even though you’re a female, didn’t I? Well, this is it. You’re good enough to fuck an All-Star and get me a goddamn job.”
She couldn’t breathe. In the face of the man who should have loved and cared for her, she forgot all of her self-defense training. She gasped for air and fought back tears.
The sound of a gun cocking broke her father’s concentration.
“Mason, get your hands off my granddaughter.”
Everly used the moment of distraction to wriggle out of her father’s hold and shove him far enough from her to get a few feet away. Her gaze fell on her grandpa standing in the doorway. He held a revolver in his hands, one she had seen him clean a number of times. His gaze and the hold on his gun were iron steady.
“You know I’m an excellent shot,” he said, not looking away from her father. “Everly, why don’t you get out of here for a while?”
“No, Pee Paw. I don’t want him to hurt you.”
“He won’t. Get your phone ‘n get ready to dial nine-one-one.”
Everly edged around the kitchen to put more distance between herself and her father. She pulled her cell out of her pocket as she reached her grandfather’s side and called up the keypad. Her faced throbbed where she’d been hit.
“Damn you both,” her father said, his face an unnatural shade of red. His gaze met hers. “You’ll regret this.”
“Believe me,” her grandpa said. “We already do.
“Now get the hell out.”
Chapter 41
The fist-sized bruise on her cheek required an extensive amount of cosmetics to cover up for her work over the weekend, but Everly managed. By the time she went to visit Cole on Christmas Eve, it had faded to purplish-green and the swelling was completely gone. She was grateful they had waited until the evening to get together. The lighting better masked the imperfection.
“Hello, Ms. Wallace,” he greeted her as she walked up to the house from Champ.
She smiled, ignoring the lingering ache that resulted in her cheek. “Hello, Mr. Parker. Merry Christmas Eve.”
He looked down at the gifts she carried. “Those aren’t both for me, are they?”
“No. One is for Wyatt. I’m hoping you’ll bring it with you tomorrow since you’ll be seeing him.” She pulled them from his reach when he started to take them. “Uh-uh. No shaking or otherwise trying to guess ahead of time.”
His face fell, making her stifle a laugh. “You’re no fun,” he said.
“I’ll give you a kiss to make up for it if you’ll let me inside.”
He stepped aside and made a grand flourish with his hand. “Please enter, mademoiselle.”
She stepped inside and said, “Wait a minute. That almost sounded French.”
“I’ve been practicing.”
His mouth came down on hers before she could respond. She forgot about everything else. Pleasure she felt only at his touch unfurled inside her.
The packages started to slip. She pulled away from Cole to right them. He gave her a wicked grin.
“Sorry. Did I do that?”
“Ha ha,” she said. “Why don’t we head upstairs?”
“Exactly what I was thinking.”
&nb
sp; She laughed over his suggestive tone. Heading for the stairs, she said, “One track mind.”
“You know it. And I did my exercises over the weekend. I deserve to be rewarded.”
Her smile faded as she walked up the stairs. Was he being serious, or just kidding with her? Her father’s harsh words about her relationship with Cole ran through her head. She forced them to the side. Their relationship was based on more than just sex.
Wasn’t it?
“All good things to those who wait,” she said, deliberately keeping her tone light. “We have hours together, after all.”
“We sure do. And if the weather guys have their way, it’ll even snow later. Maybe I can convince you to stay if it does.”
When they reached the family room, she set the gifts on the coffee table. A wrapped box was already sitting there. She didn’t remember wrapping it.
“Is that for me?” she asked.
“Yep. I’m not without my shopping wiles,” he said.
Her smile returned. “Thank you.”
“Come on. Let’s get you out of that coat.”
He started to reach for the top button, but she grabbed it first. For some reason, it was increasingly important to her that they not have sex just then. Him undressing her, even just to remove her coat, could easily lead to that.
“Absolutely,” she said, turning to make it seem as though she hadn’t noticed his movement. “Is that wine I see chilling on the island?”
“Um, yeah,” he said.
She winced when she heard the uncertainty in his voice. “I’d love a glass.”
“Sure.”
When she had hung her coat and returned to the family room, Cole had a plate of cheese and several varieties of fruit and crackers set on the coffee table along with the glasses of wine. He lifted both glasses as she neared, handing one of them to her.
“Thanks,” she said. Then she lifted her glass. “To Christmas.”
“To Christmas.” He touched his glass to hers and sipped, not looking away from her.
She took his hand and pulled him around to the other side of the sofa. Then she sat on the ground so she could reach the food. He joined her.