Caught Up: Chapter 26
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
âIsaiah, youâre coming over tonight.â I grab my car keys, wallet, and phone from my locker stall after practice on our home field. âCody and Trav, you too.â
Isaiah struts out of the showers with nothing but a towel around his waist. âWhy?â
âBecause I said so.â
Codyâs brows shoot up. âYes, Baseball Daddy.â
âYouâre not allowed to call me that.â
âNo,â Travis cuts in. âOnly the coachâs daughter is allowed to call him that.â
âYeah, well, for reasons Iâm not going to discuss with you, she can call me whatever the hell she wants.â
âTrust me, Ace. We all know why the coachâs daughter gets to call you âDaddyâ,â Cody says. âSo why are we coming over?â
âMiller is working on some new recipes at the house tonight and I need people other than me to hype her up. So come over, eat, and sing her fucking praises with whatever dessert she puts in front of you.â
âYou shouldâve just said that. You wouldnât have even had to ask me to come over. I wouldâve just shown up.â Isaiah throws his shirt back on. âMaybe you should invite Kennedy too.â
âShe doesnât want to hang out with the team outside of work.â
âBut sheâs friends with Miller now, so sheâd probably be into it.â
âThen go ahead and invite her.â
Isaiah sighs in defeat. âSheâll definitely say no if Iâm the one to ask. Cody.â My brother turns towards our first baseman. âWill you ask her?â
âWhy?â he laughs. âSo I can trick her into spending time with you?â
âWell . . . yeah. Exactly.â
I grab my hat off the bench before leaving the locker room. âCome over around seven.â
Before I hit the parking lot, I take a sharp left and round the corner to Montyâs office. The door is slightly cracked already, so I rap my knuckles against the wood and let myself inside.
âHey, Ace.â He barely peeks up at me over his computer screen. âHowâs the arm?â
âGood.â
âDid you get some time in the training room? Let the staff work on it?â
I take a seat on the chair opposite his desk. âI did.â
Monty finally peels his eyes away from the computer. âIâm assuming youâre in here because thereâs something you want to tell me.â
I exhale a shocked and uncomfortable laugh. Fuck my life.
âWant to tell you?â I ask. âNot a chance in hell. Is there something I should tell you? Probably.â
âWell, are you going to?â
Am I going to look him in the eye and tell him Iâm sleeping with his daughter? Abso-fucking-lutely not.
âIâm gonna plead the fifth on this one, Monty.â
He laughs to himself, clearly entertained by how uncomfortable I am.
I change the subject. âAre you free tonight?â
âI am. Well, I was going to see if Millie wanted to get dinner.â He lifts a brow. âOr is she busy?â
God, this is weird. Six weeks ago, I thought I couldnât stand the girl, and now I know her schedule better than her dad. And he knows as well as I do that if sheâs not free, itâs because sheâs with me.
âAs far as I know, she is, but what do you say about having dinner at ourâmy house instead?â
A knowing smirk lifts on his lips at my slip-up. âI could do that.â
âGreat. And after, I need you to stick around for a bit. Miller is working on some recipes for work tonight. Well, she doesnât know she is yet, but I think itâd help her if you were there for that.â
Monty leans back in his chair, folding his hands over his stomach, his tone full of suspicion. âWhat are you planning, Ace?â
I lean back too, sprawling my legs out in front of me. I guess if this man were anyone other than Monty, Iâd feel uncomfortable being so honest, but more than being Millerâs father, heâs my friend.
âLook, the other night she got a call about work, and she was pretty upset because she hasnât had much time in the kitchen. Thatâs my fault, so tonight, some of the guys from the team are going to come over and try whatever she comes up with. She needs to regain some of her confidence in the kitchen, and I know that more than anyone else, Miller wants to impress you.â
He shakes his head. âThatâs ridiculous. Iâm always impressed by her.â
âI know. Trust me, I know, but . . .â Fuck. How the hell do I tell Monty about his own daughter who he clearly knows better than me? âSheâs putting a lot of pressure on herself to get back to the level she was at before she won that award and hearing it coming from you that sheâs doing a good job would help ease that burden, I think.â
Monty pauses, a bit confused by my spiel, but eventually he relents. âOkay, Iâll be there.â
âGreat.â With a simple nod of my head, I stand from the chair, but he stops me at the door.
âI know you donât want her to leave, so why are you helping her do just that?â
Well, shit.
Thereâs no way to answer that question without him figuring out just how fucking deep I am.
I sink into the chair again with a heavy sigh. âBecause itâs her dream, and I care about her too much to not help her chase it, even if that means I wonât be there when she gets everything sheâs worked for.â
Monty watches me, looking for any signs of bullshit, Iâm sure. I wish I was lying. I wish I wasnât such a fucking sap that I could, in good conscience, do everything in my power to make her stay. But I wonât be the reason she gives up on her dreams.
âYouâre good for her, Ace.â
âNo, itâs . . . itâs not like that.â
âOh, itâs not like that, huh? So youâre going to sit here and tell me youâre sleeping with my daughter but it doesnât mean anything? Canât wait to hear that.â
Goddamn. I should have never come into his office today.
âHey, donât look at me.â I hold my hands up in surrender. âIf you want to have that conversation, you talk to your girl about the rules she made regarding sex.â
Monty grimaces.
âJesus. I canât believe I just said sex in front of you.â
âYeah, letâs never do that again, especially in reference to my daughter.â He sits back in his chair. âEven if you two are too blind to see it or are too stubborn to admit it, I know what this is.â
âSheâs leaving.â My two least favorite words that tend to fall from my lips whenever Iâm looking for an explanation.
âShe is,â Monty agrees. âAre you going to be okay when that happens?â
I look right at him across the desk and lie. âIâll figure out a way to be.â
His smile is full of pity. Iâm now getting pity from the man whose daughter Iâm sleeping with. Fucking great.
âYou remember our conversation, right?â
Heâs referring to the time he requested I speak to him if I ever felt the urge to ask Miller to stay, to leave her dreams behind and settle into life with me and my son.
The urge is there every single day, but I wonât ask that of her. Itâs not what she wants, and I donât have the strength to hear her rejection.
Miller doesnât allow me to show her how I really feel about her, so the best I can do is tell her through my actions. Support her dreams, help her chase everything she wants. Iâll continue to do just that as much as itâll kill me in the end because unfortunately, Iâm well aware that a simple life with me and my son would never be enough for her.
âI remember,â I say. âBut thatâs not what this is for her. She has so many opportunities waiting for her when she gets back to work.â
Monty gives me an understanding nod. âWhat time should I be over tonight? Make sure itâs early enough that Max is still awake. I want to see my little guy.â
âSix?â
âIâll be there.â
Once again, I stand to leave, but my eyes are drawn to the picture sitting on Montyâs desk. Miller in her bright yellow softball uniform, kneeling with a pitcherâs glove on her knee.
âHow many of those do you have?â I gesture to the frame. I know he has one at home, this one at his Chicago office, and one he keeps in his travel bag for road games. I think he might even have one in his wallet.
âI donât know. Three or four.â
âWhy?â
âWhy do you have a photo of Max in your hat?â
Touché.
âTo remind me of whatâs important when the stress from work or life starts to become too much.â
âExactly.â
Without hesitation or asking for permission, I take the frame off his desk and unclip the back. The photo is small, maybe only two or three inches in height and fits perfectly next to the one of Max in my hat.
Monty stays silent as I put the empty frame back on his desk.
âShut up.â
He laughs. âI didnât say anything.â
I tuck the photo of Miller under the band, close to the one of Max, running my thumb over both of the edges. âHow old was she here?â
âThirteen maybe?â
âShe looks happy.â
âShe was. She was a really happy kid, much in the way yours is.â
Monty slides in the gentle reminder that Iâm doing okay. Itâs his way of reassuring me that Max is all right. That Iâm doing a good job, just like he did. But Iâm only doing a good job right now because of the girl in the photo next to my sonâs.
I put my hat back on and leave his office.
My hands are full of groceries by the time I make it home. The house is empty and quiet, so after I set the shopping bags on the kitchen island, I make my way to the backyard in search of Max and Miller.
My sonâs laughter echoes off the glass of the back slider, and I open it to find him in nothing but a diaper at his water table, splashing and clapping for himself when he dumps water from one small bucket into another slightly larger one. Miller sits on the ground and claps with him, cheering him on as he drenches himself in water, perfect for a hot August day.
When she catches my eye as I stand on the back porch, she offers me a small wave. Max follows her hand and, with a beaming smile on his face, takes off in my direction, arms up above his head as he races towards me.
âThereâs my boy.â
âDadda,â he squeals.
I gather his wet little body in my arms, hoisting him up to sit on my forearm. Miller follows behind, and when I kiss my son, Iâm beyond tempted to lean over and kiss her too. This is a normal, everyday moment, one I want to seal into my memories because these are the moments that matter.
But I donât seal it with a kiss because the soft, easy kisses are against the rules for her.
I nod towards the house. âCome.â
âMalakai,â she scolds. âInappropriate.â
Shaking my head, I let her pass by us, giving her a slap on the ass. âGet your dirty mind inside.â
She finds the groceries on the counter. âDo you need help putting these away?â
I give her a second to rifle through them. She pulls out more flour, sugar, brown sugar, and milk. The best chocolate I could find from a local baking store. I purchased the most expensive vanilla extract on the shelf. I bought every kind of fruit the store had to offer.
âNana!â Max hollers when she pulls out a bunch.
âWhat are you making?â she asks.
âIâm not. You are.â
âIâm making what?â
âWhatever you feel like.â I adjust Max in my arms. At almost seventeen months, heâs starting to get heavy. âYou havenât had time to create because weâve been on the road so much, so Iâm taking care of Max tonight and youâre going to get to work. I know you do better in the kitchen when you get to see someone try your desserts and gauge their reaction. I figured maybe you should go back to what makes you happy, and bake for the people you care about, so a few of the guys from the team are coming over. Your dad too. Whatever you feel like making, weâll feel like eating.â
She doesnât say anything, simply stares at the groceries.
âI hope thatâs okay.â
Millerâs nose takes on a rosy hue, but that girl doesnât cry. âMore than okay.â She turns to me with a crooked smile. âThank you, Kai.â
âItâs the least I can do after stealing you away all summer.â
She looks too soft, too vulnerable for me to resist, so I break her rules by cupping her head to pull her into my chest, placing a kiss on the top of her hair. Max, in my other arm, catches on and flops his body in half to place a sloppy one on her head as well.
She laughs, looking up to find my very proud son. âThanks, Bug.â