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If It's Only Love

Page 17

by Ryan, Lexi


  It vibrates again, and I swipe the screen to accept the call. “Hello?”

  “Hey, Shay. What’s up?” His voice is all gravelly from sleep.

  “I’m sorry. Are you awake?” Idiotic questions for five hundred, Alex. I flinch when I look at the clock. It’s before eight here, which means it’s not even five in the morning in L.A. “I mean, obviously you are now, but I . . .”

  “No, it’s fine. I normally get up at five anyway. Are you okay?”

  No. You’ve barely talked to me since you left Paris. “I just wanted to hear your voice.” I hate the sound of the sob in my throat.

  “Yeah. Listen, I’m sorry I haven’t called. I came back to a mess here and I just had to deal with everything. I’m glad you texted. I was planning to make this call today.”

  This call. Like it’s one very specific conversation he needed to check off a list and not one of hundreds he plans to have with me. “Wha—why? What’s going on?” But I already know. I hear it in his voice. We can’t be together in the real world.

  “It’s Scarlett. She’s . . .” He blows out a breath. “I can’t get into details. She’s a very private person, but she needs me right now. I think . . .”

  “You think what?” My voice breaks. I already know. I’m going to make him say it anyway.

  “I think I need to be here for her. I need to help her.”

  “Okay . . . but that doesn’t mean you can’t call.”

  “Shit,” he mutters, and I imagine him scrubbing his hand over his face. “Shayleigh, I’ve always known you were too good for me.”

  “No.” Tears roll hot down my cheeks. “Don’t give me that.”

  “Why not? Isn’t it true?”

  “No. It’s not true, and it’s a lame excuse. If you’re freaking out about what happened between us when we were in Paris, then that’s on you. Don’t try to pretend that you’re pushing me away because I’m just so great. Don’t try to pretend you’re doing me a favor.”

  “East?” I can barely make out the small voice in the background. Feminine, worried. “Who is that? Are you coming back to bed?”

  “I’ll be there in a minute,” he says.

  Nausea roils. I feel like my insides have just been pulverized. “By help her, you mean fuck her? Is that code or something?”

  “Jesus, Shay, it’s not like that. She’s . . .” He blows out a breath. “Scarlett is pregnant.”

  For a minute, I’m sure I’ve misheard him. I’m positive this cannot be happening.

  “Shay? Are you still there?”

  “She’s pregnant.” Saying the words doesn’t make them any easier to swallow. How? Fucking how could this work out like this?

  “Yeah.” I press my hand to my stomach, and I’m almost surprised not to feel blood seeping out on my fingers. She’s pregnant with Easton’s baby. All I can hear is the soft whoosh of his breath through the phone. He’s breathing as hard as I am.

  “I grew up without my dad around. I always promised myself that if I was ever a father, that would be my first priority. Do you understand?”

  I nod, even knowing he can’t see me. Yes, I understand. I know that Easton wants to be the kind of dad who’s there for everything—who always puts his kid first. He’d never walk away from a child he knew about, and being put in any sort of situation where he felt like he had to would destroy him. Yes, I understand too well.

  “Shay?”

  “Congratulations, Easton.” The sob rises up my throat, and I choke it back. “I know you’ll be an amazing father.”

  Easton

  I followed Shay to the parking lot, but she was already in her car and driving away.

  Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.

  I’m going to have to track her down. We can’t leave it like this after what just happened. But first, I need to deal with the woman waiting for me at the bar.

  “Easton! Surprise!” Scarlett slides off her barstool and pushes through the crowd that’s gathered around her. I’ve developed a good relationship with my ex-wife over the years, but I’ll never understand her need for surprises. And tonight’s visit to Jackson Brews is definitely a surprise.

  She wraps her arms around my stomach and hugs me tightly. Jake and Carter watch every move. Jake looks a little pissed. Carter looks confused.

  “What are you doing here?” I ask Scarlett, pulling out of her hug. She’s an affectionate person, and while I know she hugs everyone, I don’t need Shay’s brothers thinking this means we’re patching things up. When I decided to come back early from our Chicago house hunt, I was under the impression that she was going to keep looking without me. Kinda hard to look at Chicago homes when you’re not in Chicago.

  “I was thinking—why buy a place in Chicago when I can buy a home here and be closer to you and Abi?”

  I squeeze the knot of tension at the back of my neck. “Why don’t you stay in Jackson Harbor for a few days before you make that decision?” Chicago is too “small-town feel” for Scarlett. Jackson Harbor isn’t going to be her thing.

  She beams and flips her long red hair. “Is that an invitation?”

  “It’s not my town, Scar. Do what you want.”

  “I mean, are you inviting me to stay with you and Abi until I make my decision?”

  Oh, hell no. Not only do Scarlett and I get along a thousand times better when we don’t live together, but I wouldn’t do that to Shay. “Nope. You could stay in a hotel or get a temporary lease, but you and I don’t work under one roof, remember?”

  She sticks out her bottom lip in a pout. “So says you.”

  I look at my watch. Every minute that passes is a minute Shay has to decide we made a mistake. I reach into my pocket for my keys. “I need to get out of here. Talk to Jake or Carter about the best hotels nearby.”

  Shay lives in a third-floor walk-up a couple of blocks from the bar. I know this thanks to Mrs. Jackson, who was pleased to hear that I wanted to swing by and bring Shay some dinner, since she’s been working so hard lately. To make good on my promise, I grabbed pizza and a six-pack of beer on my way over.

  But when I get there, no one answers.

  A gray-haired lady opens the door across the hall. “She’s not home yet.”

  I swallow. “Do you know where she is?”

  She shakes her head. “Hardly ever sleeps here, far as I can tell.”

  Because she’s with George? Is that where she is now? Jesus. I can’t believe this night. “Here.” I hold out the pizza. “You like pepperoni and jalapenos?”

  She takes the box and pulls a piece from inside before backing into her apartment. “Thanks. I’ll tell Shayleigh you came by.”

  I stand outside her apartment like an idiot for at least ten more minutes. When she doesn’t come home, I text.

  I never chose Scarlett over you. She would lose that matchup every time. I chose my daughter over myself.

  Shay

  “I slept with Easton,” I blurt when Teagan opens the door.

  “I’m sorry—what?” She makes a few fish faces like she’s trying to talk and is failing. “You . . . slept with him.”

  I cringe. “Maybe ‘sleeping’ isn’t the right euphemism. There was no sleeping. And no bed.” I thread my fingers through my hair and tug. “Just a wall and some very athletic fucking.”

  Her eyes are wide. I’ve been shocking her right and left, it seems. “Okay. Well, that’s not exactly what I had in mind when I told you not to make any decisions.”

  “I know.” I rub my head. “I really do. It’s just . . . Oh my God, Tea, my life is a mess. I broke up with George, then Easton threatened to kiss me until I talked about us, and I pulled him into Jake’s office and practically demanded he do me against the wall.”

  “I’m sure that was very difficult for him. Should we go down to Hallmark and get him a card?”

  I didn’t even mention the worst part. I just realized I’ve been sleeping with a married man. Nausea turns my belly, and I push past her, down the hall, and into the powder room by
the garage. I throw my purse on the floor and barely turn in time before I vomit up the little lunch I was able to choke down. I hear Teagan behind me, running water in the sink.

  She sweeps my hair to the side and puts a cool, wet cloth on my neck. “Is this always your reaction when you have athletic wall sex?”

  I spit and flush before leaning against the wall and closing my eyes. “Don’t know. That was a first for me.”

  “Well, you’ve been missing out.” She clears her throat. “I mean, I’m assuming you agree? Was it good?”

  I can’t look at her. I’m too afraid I might see what a mess I am reflected in the panic of her expression. “It was great until his ex-wife showed up.”

  “Wait. Scarlett Lashenta was at Jackson Brews?”

  She’s silent so long that I realize it’s not a rhetorical question and open my eyes. “Teagan, focus. She’s the bad guy in this story.”

  “A bad guy with some really catchy tunes,” she says, then ducks her head at my glare. “Okay, okay. So what happened after the evil pop star showed up? Did she catch you in the act? Oh my God, was she pissed? Did you fight?”

  I scowl. “You might be enjoying this too much.”

  She snorts. “Says the girl who just had great athletic wall sex.”

  “Teagan!”

  “Your words, not mine.”

  “We were in the office and heard Carter and Jake looking for Easton and saying she was in the bar.” My cheeks heat when I remember. I’d just had him inside me, begged for harder into his ear. And then I heard her name. “I did not handle it with grace.”

  “Do I want to know what you did?” She grabs another washcloth from the vanity drawer, wets it, and hands it to me.

  “Thanks,” I whisper. I leave the first cloth on my neck and dab the second on my sweaty forehead. “I told him we’re only good for getting each other off and stomped away.”

  She nods as if this was a perfectly reasonable response.

  “You’re the best, Teagan. And I’m not just saying that because you didn’t hide while I puked.”

  She sighs. “About that . . . I’m not sure if you’re aware, what with how quickly everything’s been happening, but as your best friend, I’m woefully under-informed here. Would you like to back up to the part where you broke up with George, or go even further than that and explain your history with Easton?”

  “George. I guess.”

  “Okay. So you told your mom you weren’t going to see each other anymore, but what happened exactly? What was with the ring?”

  “He said the ring was a family heirloom he was taking to the bank.” I press the back of my hand to my mouth as another wave of nausea hits. “But it turns out he’s a liar, so who really knows?”

  She nods slowly. I’m so grateful that she’s not freaking out on me about all this. “So George is a liar. This is a good reason for a breakup.”

  “That’s just it. I didn’t even know the truth when I broke it off with him. Everything’s too complicated right now, and there are so many variables. I wasn’t sure I wanted George to be one of them.” I groan. I’m annoying myself. “And he was kind of pissing me off by implying any future that didn’t involve an academic position would be an immature choice.”

  Teagan sinks to the floor and leans against the cabinet. “What a dick.”

  “That’s not even all. There’s also the part where Easton heard George talking to someone on the phone and calling her Buttercup, and then George was kissing me and called me that, which he’s never done before.”

  “You think he was cheating?”

  “It’s worse than that,” I whisper. “He was cheating, but not on me. With me.”

  She grunts. “Well, who gets to decide that if neither of you knew about the other?”

  “No, Tea. I’m the other woman. George is married.”

  “Wow.” She wraps her arms around her knees. “I think you’re more mature than I am. I’d probably be in jail by now.”

  “I need to tell her he was sleeping with me.” I draw in a breath. “It’s the only way I can forgive myself for being involved with a married man.”

  “Don’t be so hard on yourself. You had no way of knowing.”

  Intellectually, I know she’s right. This isn’t my fault. But when it comes to marriage and families, I’ve always believed everyone is culpable. “I hate him. We weren’t even using condoms. If he’s really sleeping around, God knows what he could’ve given me.”

  Her eyes go wide. “You weren’t using condoms?”

  “I’m on the pill, and he said he’d been tested. I thought the whole not-planning-to-fuck-anyone-else part was implied.”

  “Shay, you’ve noticed your symptoms lately, haven’t you? The queasiness? Aversion to alcohol? The constant exhaustion?” She points to the toilet. “The puking.”

  I wipe my forehead one last time then my mouth. “It’s the stress. It jacks with my stomach.”

  “But you weren’t using condoms.”

  I wave a hand. “No worries, Mom, I’m on the pill.”

  “But—”

  “And I haven’t missed a period.”

  Her lips buzz with her dramatic exhale. “Thank God. Sorry, that’s the first place my mind goes.” Her smile falls away. “But you do know you should get tested for STIs, right? Just in case?”

  I wipe my face again. “I know. I’ll call my doctor.” My purse vibrates from the middle of the bathroom floor, and I frown at it.

  Teagan arches a brow. “Is that your phone or a malfunctioning sex toy?”

  I roll my eyes but then lose my smile. “I’m afraid it’s Easton. I said some pretty shitty things to him, and I’m not ready to be a mature adult and apologize.”

  “Given that he threatened you with kisses and was coerced into wall sex, maybe it might be a decent idea to cool off before you talk.”

  I nod. This is reasonable. But I’m staring at my purse, willing it to do that buzz, buzz, buzz thing that happens when someone sends one text after another. But it was just the one.

  “Do you want me to look?” she asks. I nod again and watch with way too much anticipation as she pulls my phone from my purse, unlocks it, and opens my texts. Her forehead wrinkles as she reads.

  “Is it from him?”

  “Yeah.” She turns the phone to me so I can read.

  Easton: I never chose Scarlett over you. She would lose that matchup every time. I chose my daughter over myself.

  My breath whooshes out of me, and the nausea comes roaring back.

  “Okay. So there’s still a lot I don’t know about you and Easton, it seems,” Teagan says. She takes my hand and squeezes it. “You know you can tell me the truth, right? I won’t judge you if . . .”

  “If I was Easton’s mistress? If he cheated on Scarlett with me?”

  She grimaces, probably because of my word choice. “I understand better than most people that many situations are more complicated than they appear on the surface.”

  “Like with you and your ex?” I don’t know everything about Teagan’s past—I guess we both have secrets—but I do know she and Carter got together when he was pretending to be her boyfriend to protect her from an old flame.

  “Something like that,” she says.

  I reread Easton’s text. Then I read it again. I already knew he was choosing his child. How can I explain that the true motive behind his decision made it so much harder? I couldn’t hate him. I couldn’t be angry about his choice when it was the only choice to make. “Ten years ago, he and Scarlett broke up after dating for probably six months,” I say. “And not long after that, my long-term boyfriend broke up with me while we were in Paris.”

  “Seriously?”

  “Yeah, and I didn’t want my family to worry, so I only told Easton. He surprised me by showing up, and we were together for the first time. We were going to give being a real couple a shot—despite the distance and how different our lives were. We both wanted to try. But then he found out Scarlett was pregn
ant, and all our plans just . . . They weren’t relevant anymore.” I swipe my thumb across the words of his text. “I knew he wasn’t choosing Scarlett over me. I knew he was choosing Abi, which pretty much means I’m a terrible person.”

  “No,” Teagan says. “Not at all.”

  “Tea, I wanted him to choose me over his child and then resented him for years when he didn’t.” The shame of it makes me feel ugly, and I bow my head to hide my face. “Who does that?”

  She makes a face. “Is that what you wanted, though? For him to choose you over his child? You didn’t ask him to walk away and shirk his responsibility.”

  “To Easton, asking him not to be with his daughter’s mother would’ve been the same as asking him to walk away from his daughter. He didn’t have a family growing up. His dad was shit. He called when it suited him but ignored East the rest of the time. He wanted better than that for his daughter.”

  “But Abi isn’t even his kid, right? And didn’t I read that he knew she wasn’t his?”

  I shake my head. “He didn’t at first. I don’t know exactly when he found out, but when he married Scarlett, he believed she was having his baby. I think by the time he found out the truth . . .” I shrug. “Easton’s a good guy, and I’m sure he’s a good dad. DNA wouldn’t change his love and sense of responsibility toward his little girl.”

  “Don’t beat yourself up. Easton made choices, and those choices affected you. You had every right to be upset.”

  I shrug. “Maybe. Maybe not. But I can’t change how I felt then, only how I act now.”

  “Interesting.”

  I know that face. Teagan has opinions and she’s not sharing. “Tell me what you’re thinking.”

  She bites her bottom lip and shakes her head. “I don’t know if you want to hear my thoughts.”

  “I do. Seriously. I’m stuck with mine all day.” I tap my head. “I’m kind of making myself nuts and desperate to hear someone else’s take on the situation.”

 

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