Anya came next to me and tugged on my good hand. “Is this your mom? She’s pretty.”
“Kinda,” I explained. “I was fourteen when she married my brother, so even though she’s my sister-in-law, she’s my mom in all the ways that matter.” Paige sniffled noisily, and I gave her a look. “Do not start crying right now.”
Paige softened her posture, giving Anya a sweet smile. “You must be Anya.”
Anya nodded. “I’m sorry I broke your tree branch.”
“Oh honey, you don’t need to apologize for that. I’m just happy you’re all right.”
Paige straightened, and Logan slid an arm around her waist. He eyed my wrist. “How bad’s the sprain?”
“Grade two,” Aiden interjected. “If I had to guess.”
“I love when athletes make medical diagnoses like they’re doctors,” Paige said to me. “It’s my favorite thing ever.”
Logan ignored her. “I made you an appointment with the team chiropractor for an adjustment. He’s coming to the house tomorrow.” When I opened my mouth, he held up a hand. “You are staying with us for a couple of nights.”
“I love it when the men in my life make decisions for me,” I told Paige. “It’s my favorite thing ever.”
Aiden swiped a hand over his mouth, and Logan gave me a level look. “Isabel, my sister whom I love and respect greatly, would you be so kind as to stay at our house while you recover?”
I gestured for more.
“Please,” he managed.
In answer, I gave him a magnanimous smile. “Of course. Thank you for asking so nicely.”
“Aiden, it was nice to meet you. Thank you again,” my brother said, then he walked back to the car, muttering something about sisters and gray hair.
Paige laughed. “Emmett, grab Iz’s backpack. She’s injured.”
“I can carry it.”
“No way, let him be useful. It’s good for him.”
Emmett slung it over his shoulder and waved goodbye to our hosts. “Thanks for letting us stay over.”
Aiden nodded. Anya ran up to Emmett just before he climbed into the back seat and squeezed him in a tight hug. Emmett’s face went bright red, and Paige grinned. “I love that kid.”
Anya ran back in our direction and flung herself around my legs. I smoothed a hand along her downy soft hair. “I hope you feel better soon,” she told me. “Thanks for catching me.”
Paige waved a hand in front of her face, and her eyes were suspiciously bright. Mine probably were too. Aiden was staring at the ground.
“Anytime,” I told her. “I’ll see you later, okay?”
When Anya disappeared back into the house, Aiden finally, finally made eye contact with me. My stomach flipped featherlight at what I saw.
I blew out a slow breath because we both seemed to have lost the ability to pretend anything after what happened in his bedroom.
Paige glanced between us, her eyebrows popping up. “I’m, uhh, just going to get in the car. Aiden,” she said, waiting until he looked at her to continue, “thank you for taking care of my girl.”
He nodded. “You’re welcome.”
“I’ll be right there,” I told Paige.
She squeezed my hand, eyes warm and understanding. Honestly, there was no conceivable way she could understand shit because I’d told her so little. That was always my problem. Hold it just long enough that it pressed the seams of my skin to bursting.
I’d done it with my mom leaving.
I’d done it with Paige showing up.
And now I was doing it with Aiden.
All the big things, the changes that I hadn’t seen coming, the pieces that made me who I was. And now, I knew, he was part of that. Even if he may not be able to say the same.
Neither one of us spoke for a moment after Paige left us alone.
“I’ll probably take a day or two off work,” I said quietly.
His brows lowered.
“I’ll go crazy sitting at home.”
Aiden sighed, briefly moving his gaze to the car where Logan and Paige weren’t even pretending not to watch us. “I’d feel better if you took the whole week. Definitely no teaching.”
“I’ve already got my classes covered.” I fidgeted with the hem of my shirt because I had nothing to do with my hands. “If I take this whole week off, that means I miss most of the next two weeks.”
He tilted his head. “Why?”
“My sister’s wedding. It’s on the calendar.” I sighed. “And the—” My voice cut off because it wasn’t like I owned the self-defense class. But it was important to me. To him, too.
I saw in his face that he wanted to ask, in the way he opened his mouth, in the searching way he watched me. But no words came out, and the searching stopped when he turned his attention to the car again.
Standing in the silence with him no longer felt tolerable, and that realization could so easily turn to frustration, to anger, if I let it.
He wanted me. I knew he did.
“Thank you, Aiden,” I said.
His jaw clenched. And nothing.
Right.
“You’re welcome.”
There was so much I wanted to scream at him in the wake of that. In the wake of those bullshit, politely spoken phrases. I wanted the Aiden who sat in the dark with me. But instead, I chose to protect what was left of my energy after a really draining twenty-four hours, and I walked to the car with my head high.
Once I was buckled in, Paige turned around and gave me a look.
“Holy shit, girl, you and I are going to talk when we get home.”
Logan sighed, pulling the gear shift so he could back the vehicle out of the driveway. “I don’t have to be a part of that conversation, do I?”
“No,” Paige and I answered in unison.
“Excellent.” He caught my eye in the rearview mirror and winked. “Ready to go home?”
I sank back against the seat and sighed. “You have no idea.”
New Book: Back Home to Marry Off Myself
Loredana’s father left the family for his mistress, leaving them to fend for themselves abroad. When life was at its toughest, her father showed up with “good news” after 8 years of absence: To marry off Loredana to a paralyzed son of the wealthy Mendelsohn family.