Chapter 33
Playbook (The Holland Brothers 2)
Archerâs face gives nothing away. I just gave him a play-by-play of the last twenty-four hours. I didnât leave anything out, including how I drank so much that London had to put me to bed.
âWhat do you think?â I ask when I canât take it any longer. I need his opinion because my brain is too cluttered. Iâve used it more in the past twenty-four hours than in my entire life.
âYou know what I think, but I didnât talk to her. Is she willing to do a DNA test?â His face is still guarded.
âI donât know,â I say. âWe only talked for a few minutes. She told me how her parents adopted her at birth, and she always knew, but she only started looking for her birth parents earlier this year. She obviously didnât know about me either, but when she started researching themâ¦â
âShe found you.â
I nod.
âDid she ask for money?â
âNo. She said she just wanted to meet me.â
He makes a gruff, disbelieving sound deep in his throat. âShe could still be making the whole thing up.â
âI know.â Heâs not wrong. Itâs just a story. âBut Archâ¦I donât think she is. It feels like she could be the real deal. I canât explain it. Something about herâ¦â I trail off, feeling silly. âMaybe Iâm just gullible.â
His scowl turns into a sympathetic smile. âYouâre not gullible. You just see the best in people and some people are assholes.â
âWill you meet her? I know youâre skeptical and I understand why, but I need someone else to help me figure this out because I canât see straight.â He knows what my parents were like, so I donât have to worry about him feeling any differently about me. He saw me at my most broken and heâs never held it against me.
âOf course I will.â
âAnd not yell at her.â
âNo promises.â
My body relaxes knowing he has my back on this.
âWhere were you last night anyway?â I ask, desperate to change the conversation.
âI went to Wrenâs house after the game.â He grimaces. âWe ended things.â
âOh, shit. Iâm sorry.â I drop whatâs left of my sandwich onto my plate and wipe my hand on a napkin. âYou let me go on and on for the past hour and said nothing until now?â
His masked expression gives way to a small smirk. âI donât think my relationship status competes with a potential secret sister.â
Secret sister. Fuck. My brain is going to explode.
âWhat happened?â I ask, pushing thoughts of Sabrina away for now. I went twenty-three years without thinking about her, another hour or so wonât make a difference.
âEhâ¦â He lifts a hand and waves it around, diverting his gaze. âIt wasnât really going anywhere. I knew it. She knew it.â
âSo? I thought you were just having fun and not looking for anything serious.â
âIâm not.â
âThen why stop seeing her?â
He lets out a long breath. âI just wasnât feeling it.â
Thereâs something heâs not telling me, but I canât figure out what. âDid she dump you?â
âIt was mutual,â he replies dryly.
âI donât get it then. Sheâs hot. You two seem to get along. Itâs uncomplicated. And the sex sounds like itâs fun.â
I get another look at that comment, but come on, our bedrooms are close.
âYouâre deaf. I am not,â I remind him.
He flips me off in reply.
âWhat is the actual problem?â Itâs cheering me up focusing on his life instead of mine.
âShe talks a lot.â
âO-kay.â One side of my mouth lifts. Of course, Iâve noticed that Wren likes to hear herself talk, but I didnât realize this was a dealbreaker for him. âAnd thatâs a problem? Because it doesnât sound like a problem when sheâs yelling your name. âArcher! Oh, Archer!ââ
He looks like he wants to strangle me, but I feel better so, whatever.
âNo, butâ¦â He hesitates like he doesnât want to admit whatever it is to me.
âShe always forgets to look at me while sheâs jabbering on,â he says finally. âOr she covers her mouth with her hand.â He demonstrates, resting a hand over his mouth so itâs impossible to read his lips.
He lets his hand drop and shakes his head. âItâs dumb, I know. Iâve dated plenty of women that Iâve struggled to communicate with at times. I think thatâs just to be expected, but Wren treats my hearing loss like itâs an urban myth. Iâm constantly having to ask her to repeat herself or just smiling and nodding and pretending like I understood and hoping I didnât agree to something crazy. Itâs exhausting and Iâm always on edge. Sex is the only time we manage to communicate just fine.â
Sympathy for him and anger at her duel for my primary emotional state. What an inconsiderate asshole. I guess anger won out.
I think back on the times Iâve been around them, seeing it all differently now. I thought he was just tuning her out. I should have known better. Fuck.
âIâm sorry,â I say. And I am. Sorry I wasnât there when he ended things. Iâm sure he was way too nice about it.
âItâs whatever. Dating is too complicated right now anyway. Sex, parties, and fun only from now on. The Brogan Six playbook so to speak. Pre-London, that is.â
I know heâs deflecting, but I let him off the hook. Lord knows I have done enough of that lately. âLetâs hope Iâm not Post-London.â Thinking of my girlfriend makes my chest tighten.
âI thought you said she was great about everything.â
âShe was, but Iâm supposed to see her tonight and sheâs going to have questionsâ¦â I trail off. âHow do I explain it?â
âWhat?â
âAll of it. My parents. That the people who are supposed to love me more than anyone or anything in this world could give a shit less about me. Or that the thought of having another one of me was so awful they gave my sister up for adoption and never bothered to tell me. I was barely two when she was born, so itâs not like I expect to remember much from that timeframe, but it still seems like something I should have known. I guess itâs on par for them. The only time theyâve contacted me in the past ten years was to ask for money. Not even a fucking âHey, how are you? Congrats on the job!â âProud of you, son!ââ
âFuck them. Itâs their loss.â
God, I wish I could write them off as easily as he does, or at least write off their actions as having nothing to do with me. What the hell did I do to make them hate me so much? I wasnât a bad kid, I donât think. I tried my best to stay quiet and not need them for anything. No matter how small I made myself, they werenât happy with me.
They didnât care if I got good grades at school or if I played a good game. They didnât care about me, period. And they didnât want me around. They were only interested in going out and hanging with friends. At least as best I remember it. If they were home, they were sleeping, or our house was filled with people I didnât know. They werenât addicts, I donât think, though they did plenty of partying. It just seemed like they werenât interested in being parents. Sometimes I think itâd be easier if they were. I know thatâs fucked-up, but if I could blame it on anything other than myself, I would. Otherwise, it just feels like it was my fault they didnât love me.
Seeing Sabrina put me back in that place. If she is my sister and they gave her away, why didnât they do the same for me? Was there some time they did want me, and I fucked it all up? I know what Archer would say if I asked him, but I canât help but wonder. Was I the problem?
We eat the rest of our lunch in silence, but when we get up to leave, Archer says, âIâm sorry I wasnât there last night or this morning.â
âProbably better this way. You might have tossed her out before I had a chance to talk to her.â
âIf sheâs as hot as Tripp says, I doubt it.â
I stop and glare at him.
âHe doesnât know sheâs your sister, but I put it together. The hot redhead from the bar you were talking toâ¦â He trails off. âHe texted me last night because he was worried you were fucking around on London.â
âWhat the fuck?â
âI told him you werenât.â
âYou werenât even there.â
âI donât need to have been there. I know you,â he says firmly.
I relax, thankful the rest of the team doesnât know who Sabrina is yet. And then I remember he just called her hot. Twice. âThatâs my sister youâre talking about.â
He chuckles. âMaybe.â
Later that night, I swing by Londonâs apartment to pick her up for dinner with her parents. I gave myself a pep talk on the way over. I spent the day spiraling and wondering what the fuck I should do.
âHi.â Her smile is bright, and she searches my face with a hint of worry in her eyes. âHow are you?â
âGood.â I let my gaze fall over her. Sheâs wearing a short black dress. Itâs simple, but hugs her curves, and she has on red lipstick that makes the green in her eyes stand out. âYou look great.â
âThanks. You too.â
âSleeves down?â I ask, smiling a little as I think about the first time we went out with her family. God, that feels like a million years ago, but also like no time has passed since I met her.
âYour choice. Theyâve all seen your forearms, unfortunately.â
Chuckling, I put the truck in drive and pull away from the curb. I turn the radio up a notch. My shirt feels tight around my neck as London continues to glance over from her seat.
âHow did things go with Sabrina?â
Her name alone has my anxiety climbing. âFine. I donât really want to talk about it. If thatâs okay?â
âOf course,â she says, smiling, but I can see the underlying concern in her expression. âWe donât have to go tonight if you donât feel up to it.â
âNah, Iâm good.â I force my smile to inch higher.
We drive to the restaurant with our fingers intertwined and the radio loud enough to drown out some of my thoughts.
The day has been weird and Iâm not feeling like myself, but I can do this for her. Iâd do anything for her. The realization doesnât freak me out like I always thought it would.
Her parents are already seated in the back with her sister and Ben. London groans when she spots them.
âWhy are they always here?â
I look closer to the subject of her frustration. Chris and Gretchen. A few other members of the wedding party are here too, so it isnât that odd, but I wrap my arm around the back of her waist and drop a kiss to her forehead. âIgnore him.â
Weâre seated and food is brought out not long after. I find myself in a daze more often than not. Itâs hard to follow the conversation around me, and London keeps glancing at me like sheâs checking in.
I take a long drink of water, wishing it was something stronger.
The conversation has turned to work and I perk up when Londonâs parents ask how things are going at Channel 3.
âItâs fine,â she says, looking down at where her fingers rest on the bottom of a water glass. âIâve actually been thinking about moving to part-time or maybe seeing if theyâd let me freelance.â
A smile lights up my face. âReally?â
She gives me one of her own smiles back and hesitantly nods.
âYou want to quit your job?â Londonâs dad asks, breaking the moment. His tone has my hackles rising.
âWell, no,â she says. âIâd still work. Iâve been getting more side projects, and I could take on even more if I had extra hours.â
The silence at the table says more than her parentsâ matching disapproving looks.
âWhat about benefits?â her mom asks. âHealthcare? 401k? Do you have savings?â
London opens her mouth to answer, but her dad speaks first.
âItâs great if you want to do your arts and crafts on the weekends, but quitting your job to draw cartoons for people?â His tone softens like it makes his words any less cutting. âThatâs not a real job, honey.â
âIt is a real job,â I butt in without thinking about it. âAnd sheâs really, really talented.â
âOf course. Weâre so proud of you,â her mom says.
âAre you?â London asks.
I hear the uncertainty in her tone, the hurt that is buried so deep that sheâs questioning everything right now. Is she good enough? Can she succeed without their approval? Do they love her? Why donât they want her? I know exactly how that feels.
My head spins and my body feels like itâs not my own.
Iâm vibrating with anger when I speak. âSheâs worked really hard, and you all should be congratulating her, not dismissing her accomplishments like theyâre nothing.â
âWeâre just looking out for her. London knows we love and support her no matter what.â Her momâs face is filled with shock, like she canât imagine how I jumped to that conclusion.
âDoes she?â I glance at my girlfriend. I know how much guts it took for her to bring it up to them. She was excited and shared something with them and now she looks defeated.
âIâm fine,â London says in the same tone Iâve been using all fucking day. Sheâs not fine and neither am I.
âBeing her parents doesnât give you a free pass to make her feel bad. Donât you want her to feel loved and appreciated? The world is hard enough, but youâre her safe space. She cares about you more than anyone else in the world, and this is how you repay her?â My temper rages on. âLondon is smart and talented, and she just wants you to love her for who she is instead of whoever you think she should be. Do you know she works twelve- and thirteen-hour days just to do the thing she loves? Or that she designed the cover of a book that hit the New York Times list?â
They say nothing, but I canât seem to stop.
âShe deserves more from the people who are supposed to care about her the most.â
âReally, Brogan.â London places a hand on my forearm. âIâm okay.â
âWe didnât mean anything by it. We only want to make sure sheâs thought through everything before she makes any rash decisions.â Her dadâs voice has a hard edge, but I can see he means the words coming out of his mouth. Heâs completely oblivious to how his words cut her down. God, why do we as people have no ability to limit our damage to only hurting ourselves instead of everyone around us?
âYour parents must like to give you a hard time sometimes,â Chris says patronizingly. âYou know what itâs like.â
âNo. I donât, actually. The last time I spoke to my dad, I was thirteen years old, and he was kicking me out of the house because I accidentally spilled orange juice on the counter and ruined his cigarettes.â One of many times he kicked me out, but that was the final straw. I was so tired of being yelled at every time I made a mistake. I moved out the next day on my fourteenth birthday.
The shock on their faces is immediate and no one says anything for too long. Fuck.
âIf this is what itâs like to have your parents be a presence in your life, then I donât think I missed out on much.â I stand, my chair screeching back along the floor. âExcuse me.â
My hands are clenched into tight fists as I step out into the night air and gulp it in. I let my head fall back so I can stare up at the dark sky.
Footsteps click behind me. I could pick hers out anywhere. I drop my chin to face her.
âBrogan.â Her voice is soft.
âIâm sorry.â I run a hand through my hair. âI canât stand the way they dismiss you and your art like that. You work so hard, and itâs like they canât see that not accepting it only hurts you.â
Her lips pull into a thin line.
Iâm suddenly very aware that Iâve overstepped a pretty big boundary. The parentsâ approval is usually a pretty big thing in relationships, I think.
âThank you for having my back and for coming tonight when I know you have other things going on, but whatever just happened back there wasnât just about me.â
My brow furrows.
âYou are pissed at your parents, and I understand why.â She steps forward and runs her hands up the side of my arms. âOr I want to, but you have to talk to me. Tell me whatâs going on with you.â
âIâm sorry,â I say. My emotions are jumping between rage and guilt. I overstepped. Fuck did I overstep.
âTalk to me,â she says again.
âWhat do you want me to say?â I have a barely contained leash on my anger. âMy parents didnât love me.â The words feel like nails and the pressure on my chest intensifies. âThey didnât fucking love me and I donât know why.â I tip my head up to the sky and all but yell, âWhat the fuck did I ever do to make them hate me so much?â
She coils herself around me, squeezing me like she thinks she can take away all the pain.
Letting out a breath and feeling more tired than I have in years, I drop my stare to her face. Sheâs so beautiful. So perfect.
âI donât know why either,â she says, offering me a sympathetic smile. âBut you didnât do anything.â
I look away from her, but she reaches up and tugs my chin down until I meet her gaze again. âI canât tell you why they didnât, but Iâd venture it has everything to do with them and nothing to do with you. You are the most wonderful man I have ever met. You bring so much happiness to everyone in your life. You are funny and considerate, hard-working, talented, sweet.â She drops her hand to my chest. âThe way that you make people feel says so much about your character. Anyone who doesnât love you just hasnât gotten to know you.â
Silence falls between us, but she continues to hold on to me and pierce me with those stunning green eyes. The need to flee is so strong but fuck, I donât want to leave her either. Sheâs the best thing thatâs happened to me since the Holland family.
âI should go. Iâm in a shit mood and I donât think anyone wants me back inside.â
âI do.â
I try to smile at her, but I donât know if I manage it. âCan you catch a ride home with your sister?â
âYeah.â
I pull back slowly.
âBrogan.â The plea in her tone almost undoes me as we break apart. âAre you going to be okay?â
âFine. Iâm really sorry.â Iâm so ashamed that I made this whole night about me and embarrassed her in front of her family.
She steps forward, wrapping her arms around me again. âText me tomorrow?â
I donât say anything. I want to, but then what? I needâ¦something. I donât even know what. All I want to do is slam my fist into a wall repeatedly.
âI need a couple of days. Is that okay?â I ask.
A flicker of hurt passes over her expression, but she nods. âOf course it is.â
She steps away this time and my chest feels hollow.
âHey,â I say quietly.
She glances over her shoulder at me. I donât say anything, just smile the best I can.
âIâm here if you need anything,â she says.
âYeah.â I nod. âI just need to clear my head for a day or two.â
Her mirroring nod is the only reply I get before she disappears back into the restaurant.
God, sheâs so understanding. I love her for that. I love her, period. And itâs just about the worst fucking time to have that realization.
I let out a long breath, already wishing I could run after her. But fuck, she deserves so much better. If my own fucking parents donât want me, why would anyone else?