I settle into a chair in the living room. Dadâs gentle snores have increased to a rumble that nearly drowns out the television. Not that Iâm really paying attention.
My attention is tuned to the sounds upstairs: the water running, the soft footsteps, the opening of a door. I hate that sheâs here. Hate that she saw my dad like this. Iâm not embarrassed of him, but itâs just not something I share. I remember that well enough from being a kid. When your dad is the town drunk, people give you these pitying looks and everything you do is measured against him.
Right after I was drafted to the league, I ran into a teacher from middle school and she couldnât stop telling me how proud she was of me, how great it was that I had made something of myself despite my circumstances.
My circumstances never held me back. If anything, they were the fuel pushing me to be anyone but him.
Iâm deep in my thoughts and still craning my head to listen for any movement upstairs when Dadâs hoarse voice says, âJackson.â
His blue irises are dimmed by his glassy and bloodshot eyes. Heâs taking stock of the situation: lying on the couch, me sitting with him, the clean room. Hell, maybe he doesnât even remember that he made a mess of the place before he headed to Perryâs.
âDad,â I say keeping all emotion out of my tone. Once upon a time, I might have been sad or angry but now Iâm just resigned that this is who he is. No matter what I say or do, no matter how much money I make or success I have, heâs a variable I canât control. If he were anyone else, I would have cut him from my life.
âIâm guessing by the look of disgust on your face that this visit isnât a happy one.â
Christ, he doesnât even remember us picking him up from the bar. I shouldnât be surprised. Just another Saturday afternoon bender.
âCoach called. You were giving his new bartender a hard time after he cut you off.â
A spark of recollection flashes in his face, some of his color returning, and the light in his eyes returns too. As he processes through the memory, his expression turns remorseful. âI met up with some of the guys to watch the game. You know Bruce is always buying rounds for everyone. I might have gone a little too hard.â
Yeah, letâs blame Bruce and not the entire case of beer that he likely drank before he left the house. I hold in the thoughts. His friends are drunks, just like him. Though they all somehow manage to get home without passing out or driving under the influence. Wishing he could be a more responsible drunk is among the many wishes Iâve cast over the years.
Dad sits up with a groan. He looks like shit. He needs a shave and a haircut, definitely a shower.
âIâm sorry Coach called you. He shouldnât have done that. I know how busy you are. You donât have time to be driving up and taking care of me. Let me make you a cup of coffee for your trouble.â He stands, wobbling on his feet.
I get to my feet instinctively and move toward him, catching him when he sways. My knee protests with a twinge of pain that makes stars dance before my eyes.
âOops. I think my leg is still asleep. I better sit down again for a minute, then Iâll get the coffee.â
I situate him and adjust his weight so my left leg isnât taking the bulk of the pressure. âI donât need any goddamn coffee, Dad.â
The outburst silences him and then I curse myself. Yelling at him in this condition isnât going to help anything. If it would, then he would have been cured twenty years ago. And it never makes me feel better anyway.
Softening my tone, I say, âYou should rest.â
âIâll do that after you leave. I havenât seen you in too long.â His eyelashes flutter closed. âI missed my boy.â
âIâm not going anywhere. We can talk later.â
âAll right.â Eyes opening, he reaches over and pats me on the shoulder. âMaybe just a little rest. I have steaks in the freezer. Will you stay for dinner?â
âYeah, of course.â
I convince him to go to bed instead of sleeping on the couch. Heâs a little steadier on his feet, but it takes some effort for me to get him to the master bedroom. I give silent thanks, once again, that itâs on the lower level. It wasnât a selling point I considered when I bought the house for him, but thereâs no way I could get him upstairs right now .
On the walls are pictures of me growing up. I doubt he remembers much of my childhood, but he has the photos up like a proud parent anyway.
Once Iâve put him to bed, I close his bedroom door and then lean against it. Letting out a long breath, I grimace through the ache of my knee. Dammit. The last thing I need is to tweak it less than two weeks into recovery.
Movement catches the corner of my eye. In all the commotion with my dad, Iâd stopped listening to her moving around upstairs, but here Ev stands, freshly showered and in one of my old hockey T-shirts.
Something stirs inside my chest at the way the fabric hangs off her shoulder and grazes her upper thigh. Her long, wet hair has soaked the right side of her shirt, and like the asshole I am, I notice that sheâs not wearing a bra.
âEnjoy rifling through my clothes?â I ask with bite in my tone. It has nothing to do with her taking my shirt and everything to do with my reaction to this whole fucking day. I donât know what I would have done if she hadnât been here. Iâm glad and Iâm mad and itâs confusing.
âMy dress smells like sunscreen and stale beer, but if you would prefer to see me in my bikini then all you have to do is ask. Should I go change into it? Maybe lather myself in suntan oil for you too?â The challenge in her voice makes me smile. Only on the inside, of course. Iâm not sure what would be worse at this point: her strutting around in a bikini or what sheâs wearing now. Iâm starting to think it doesnât matter what she has on. Everly is gorgeous and I canât deny my attraction to her.
Acting on it is a whole different story.
I clear my throat before answering her question. âI donât care what you wear.
â
The tension between us teeters precociously. Her hazel eyes narrow in on me but if she can tell that Iâm full of shit, she doesnât say.
âHowâs your knee? Did the peas help?â
âFine.â I take a step to prove it to her.
âLiar.â She smiles like sheâs happy to have caught me exaggerating the truth, but then sympathy splashes across her features. âWhat can I do?â
âIâll be fine. Iâve just been on my feet more than I should.â
âOkay.â She straightens. âYou sit. I am going to find us something to eat. Iâm starving.â
âOrder whatever you want. Itâs on me.â
âDoes this town do delivery?â
Fuck. No, of course not. Nothing good anyway. âThereâs a pizza place that does for sure.â
âI donât mind cooking.â She takes off toward the kitchen.
I follow behind her instead of going to the living room.
âSit,â she commands when she sees that Iâve trailed after her.
I take a seat at the oval table just outside of the kitchen. Unopened mail and vitamin bottles sit in the center, as well as a worn paperback.
Before Iâm fully situated, Everly is already approaching me with a fresh bag of frozen vegetables.
âThanks,â I mutter quietly.
She laughs. âWhy does it always sound like it pains you so much when you say thank you. Did your parents not teach you any manners?â
âAs you can see, the parental lessons I got were a little less constructive.â
Her sassy smile slips. Shit. I didnât mean to make her feel bad. I know she was joking and I turned it into a personal attack. Having her here has me all out of whack. My dad is not someone I introduce to people. They either pity me, which sucks, or they want to help somehow and thereâs nothing anyone can do. Trust me. Iâve tried it all.
âI think there are steaks in the freezer.â
With a nod, she moves back to the fridge. She finds them and sets the package on the island.
âThose are going to take awhile to thaw out.â
Fuck, can nothing go right today?
âYou know what, I got this.â She whirls around, opening cabinets and drawers to find whatever she needs.
âPizza is still an option,â I say.
âThis will be better.â
Iâm intrigued but I donât ask. Instead, I pick up the envelopes on the table. I started paying Dadâs bills years ago so there arenât any surprises here, mostly junk.
The book is dog-eared about fifty pages in. When I was a kid, Dad was a big reader. He always carried a paperback with him: to my games, to doctor appointments, anywhere he might have a moment to sit and read. Itâs been years since I thought about that. Though to be fair, itâs been years since Iâve seen him with a book lying around.
âDo you like to read?â Everly asks.
I set the book down. âNo, not really. You?â
âIâm obsessed with thrillers.â Her face lights up. She has a big block of cheese in one hand and grates it into a bowl. Itâs a shock to see either of those gadgets being used in Dadâs kitchen. Grilled steaks or burgers and takeout make up ninety-five percent of the meals that grace this kitchen.
âIâm reading this one right now about a woman who is a nanny for this really rich family. The wife is crazy and the husband totally has the hots for her. I think itâs going to be one of those snapped situations where the wife goes all scorned woman and kills everyone.â
I snort a laugh at the premise.
âDonât laugh. With all the women youâve left heartbroken, you could be one scorned woman away from a thriller plotline.â
Sheâs talking about my demise, but all it reminds me is that I havenât fucked anyone in a while.
âRelax, I was kidding.â
When I clear the thoughts of sex (mostly) from my brain, I look over at her. Everly has one dark brow lifted and a smirk on her face.
âWhat are you making over there?â I ask, changing the subject for the sake of my sanity, and stand.
My knee is already feeling better, but I sit at the island on one of the stools and prop my leg up on the empty one beside it.
She waits until Iâm situated before answering. âMacaroni and cheese.â
A laugh slips from my lips. âSeriously.â
âDonât knock it until youâve tried it.â
âI havenât had mac and cheese in years.â
âI have it at least once a week.â
âOf course you do.â
âIs that a knock on my age or my eating habits?â she asks, going back to grating the cheese. The movement makes her boobs jiggle, and I am going to hell for noticing.
âBoth. Let me do that.â I motion for the grater. âIâm just sitting here. I can be useful.â
Reluctantly, she hands me the block of cheese and grater and then pushes the bowl toward me. After sheâs found a pot, filled it with water and set it on the stove to boil, she comes back to stand on the other side of the island from me .
âWhat about you? Break any hearts lately?â I ask when my mind keeps circling sex. As far as I know she isnât dating anyone, but it isnât like she typically shares that kind of stuff with me.
She snorts with an eye roll. âAre we going to make girl talk now?â
I grit my teeth, but Iâm distracted from the job at hand and grate my finger on the last hunk of cheese.
âFuck.â I pull back and instinctively place my pointer finger in my mouth to relieve the sting.
The tangy metallic taste of blood hits my tongue.
Everly laughs. Not loudly, but clearly sheâs amused by my pain.
âI think thatâs enough cheese,â she says. She takes the bowl and weapon away from me.
When she returns to stand across from me, she pulls herself up and sits on the counter, feet dangling off the side and my T-shirt riding high on her thighs.
âI had big plans for a summer fling before I went off to my internship in August, but that is not working out very well so far.â
âWhy not?â I ask, unable to help myself. I know guys have to be throwing themselves at her.
âYou say that like thereâs a plethora of attractive, fun, single guys out there.â
âIsnât there?â
âHow many of your friends are single?â
Huh. I would have said most of them, but thatâs not true anymore. Leo, Declan, Ash, Ty, Maverickâ¦nearly all my closest teammates have settled down.
âGalaxy,â I say, then add, âMikey.â Our goalie.
âTwo guys and both hockey players.â
âWhatâs wrong with hockey players?
â
Amusement dances over her features. âNothing. Itâs just that you all still treat me like Tyâs annoying little sister.â
âThatâs because you are.â
She reaches over and grabs a handful of my hair, then tugs it.
âWhat the hell?â I ask, then laugh before I can think better of it. âAnd you wonder why we treat you like an annoying little sister.â
âWow, was that a laugh? I didnât know you were capable of that noise,â she taunts, then says. âYou should do it more often. It sounds nice.â
Iâm still stuck on those words when she adds, âThat reminds me I need to cancel my date tonight.â
Everly hops off the counter. When she does, the shirt rides up and she flashes the red bikini bottoms. Thank fuck sheâs not going commando. Although just that small peek of her ass has me needing a cold shower.
She grins as she taps away on her phone. Everly walks back toward me, but instead of sitting on the island like before, she leans forward on her elbows. The pose makes her blonde hair fall over her shoulders and puts her face closer to mine. She has a sprinkling of light freckles across the bridge of her nose and her cheeks are a slight pink from the sun.
âWho is he?â I ask.
She doesnât look at me as she responds, âJust some guy.â
Plucking the phone out of her grasp, I bring it closer to look at their back and forth.
âGive that back,â she protests.
âHis name is Will?â I ask. That is the least of my concerns though as I read through a few of their messages.
She comes around to take her phone back. I hold her at bay with my injured arm. Look at that, the cast is finally good for something.
Their messages arenât all that exciting. The dude is eager to meet up with her and disappointed sheâs canceled tonight. Everly is playing it more casual, but her texts indicate she was looking forward to it too.
âJack!â She lifts up on her toes and reaches over me. The position puts her boobs right in my face and Iâm distracted long enough that sheâs able to snatch her phone back.
âRude.â She marches back around with her phone.
âWhereâd you and Will meet?â
âOnline.â
âSeriously?â
âUhhâ¦yeah.â
âLet me see his profile.â
âNo.â
âCome on.â
âYouâre just going to make fun of him.â
âOnly if thereâs something to make fun of.â Iâm definitely going to make fun of him.
She doesnât look like sheâs going to budge.
âFine. Tell me something about him then. Whatâs Will like?â
âStop saying his name like that.â Mild amusement laces her tone as she moves to the stove and puts the noodles in the boiling water to cook.
When sheâs done, she leans against the counter next to the stove and crosses her arms over her stomach.
Iâm silent, waiting for her to tell me about her date. Is this really what my life has come to? Iâm at my dadâs house asking my teammateâs little sister about her love life, which is sadly more interesting than my own .
âI just swiped right on him two days ago, so I donât know much. I was going to get to know him more on our date tonight.â
A date that isnât happening because of me. I should probably feel bad, but I donât.
âThat guy was not looking to get to know you. At least not in the way you mean.â
Her face lights up with mischief. âBold of you to assume I didnât want to get to know him the same way.â
I canât tell if sheâs kidding. Warmth spreads in my gut as I stare at her smug expression. She knows sheâs shocked me and she likes it.
âStill time to drive back and meet up with him.â
Her mask slips ever so slightly. She might want to play it off like Iâm keeping her here, but Iâm not. She chose to stay here tonight, and she wouldnât have if she really wanted to be fucking Will.
Not that any of that gives me the right to be an asshole. I canât seem to stop myself lately. And Everly doesnât deserve that. This is why Iâve spent all summer alone. No one should be subjected to me in this state.
Standing, Iâm glad that my knee seems to be feeling better so I can walk away from this conversation and leave her in peace.
âYou can have the guest room upstairs. Second door on the right. Across from mine,â I add since she seems to have found that one just fine.
âYou donât want dinner?â
âIâm not hungry.â