Caught Up: Chapter 29
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
âThis one was a little too inside, but your speed was good.â Harrison, one of the pitching coaches, uses his cursor to move the stilled image around, showing me all angles of one of my pitches tonight.
Iâm trying to focus on the computer, showcasing my post-game pitch breakdown, on the flight from Anaheim to San Francisco, but thereâs a woman in the aisle opposite me, holding both my sleeping son and all my attention.
The baby Tylenol finally kicked in, thank God, relieving some of Maxâs discomfort and allowing him a bit of rest. Miller is overly exhausted, but Max wouldnât go down in his crib, always being a bit needy when he doesnât feel well, so sheâs trying her hardest to get an hour of sleep in an uncomfortable airplane seat while my son naps on her.
Having a sick toddler is no fun. Having a sick toddler while on a work trip? Absolute nightmare.
The past three days have been rough. Guilt gnaws at me over putting my sick son through my travel schedule. I shouldâve left him home, but I felt just as guilty over the idea of leaving Miller to watch him full-time, especially when heâs not feeling well. Thatâs not her responsibility.
Itâs moments like these that I feel selfish as hell for keeping my job, and if it werenât for her helping me, I couldnât do any of it.
Harrison moves onto the next pitch in the sequence so we can analyze it together, but when I catch Miller attempting to readjust out of the corner of my eye, using the fuselage to rest her head against, I canât sit still any longer.
âSorry, but can we do this in the morning?â I gesture to the seat across the aisle from me. âMax has been sick.â
Harrison peeks over. âHe seems fine to me. Millerâs got him.â
âAnd she needs a break.â I try to keep my tone even when, in reality, Iâm annoyed and short. I get that the organization has bent over backward to make my situation work, but these are the moments that matter to me. âLook, Iâll wake up an hour earlier tomorrow and meet you for coffee or something, but tonight I just need to take care of my family.â
He agrees but is clearly frustrated over it, and I know heâs just trying to do his job. I did lose us the game tonight, so I donât have much room to be making demands, but he gives in, taking his iPad and heading back to the front of the airplane to sit with the rest of the coaching staff.
Iâm fucking drained. Wrecked by the lack of sleep due to my son being sick while fighting the overwhelming desire to treat the nanny temporarily living in my house like sheâs here to stay. But right now, I just really want to hold them both.
With the plane dark and quiet, most of the guys trying to get a bit of shut-eye before we land, I stand from my seat and sneak my way across the aisle.
Trying my best not to wake Max, I slide one arm under the bend in Millerâs knees, the other under her back before I gently lift her in my arms, turning to steal her seat. I get her settled onto my lap so Iâve got them both.
âWhatâs wrong?â she asks, not even opening her eyes as she buries her head into my shoulder, Max still melted onto her chest.
âNothing,â I whisper. âGet some sleep.â
She breathes deeply through her nose, nuzzling herself further. âWhy arenât you working?â
âBecause there are more important things than work, Mills.â
She doesnât respond, and yeah, maybe I said that in a way that referred to her work as well.
She buries herself deeper, running a hand over Maxâs back. âYou holding me like this in front of other people feels pretty intimate.â
I quietly chuckle. âYeah, well, sometimes I donât give a shit about your rules, Miller, and right now is one of those times.â
âWhy havenât you tried to break the one where you sleep in my bed?â
Wait . . . what?
I play with the hair framing her face, pushing it out of the way so I can see her better. âDo you want me to break that rule?â
âIâm just wondering why you havenât tried.â
âYouâre confusing the hell out of me, Montgomery.â
âIâm confusing myself too.â
I readjust my hold on them. âI havenât tried to sneak into your bed mostly for your sake, because Iâm fairly certain if we start having sleepovers, youâre going to low-key fall in love with me and I know how adamant you are about this remaining a fling.â
A sleepy smile lifts on her lips. âI missed you.â
Her jade green eyes shoot open at that, and I canât help but quietly laugh at her exhausted candor.
Weâve seen each other every day since she got to Chicago, so thatâs not what sheâs referring to. But taking care of a sick Max has been done in shifts, both of us too tired to do anything together once heâs finally asleep.
âTold you, Mills. Youâre already falling.â
âI donât fall in love.â
Those words instantly change the playful vibe. She wants a no-strings-attached kind of life, and the deeper we get into this, itâs clear the only life Iâm complicating is my own.
She continues our hushed conversation. âIâm sorry I couldnât get Max settled down tonight.â
My eyes flicker to my sleeping son who is very much settled down in her arms.
âI think he hates me,â she continues.
âWhat are you talking about?â
âI tried to get him to sleep, I really did, but he didnât want me.â Her voice cracks, the words whispered but watery, and her greens are glossed over in a way Iâve never seen. âI didnât know what to do.â
A single but shocking tear rolls down her cheek, and I swiftly wipe it away with the pad of my thumb.
Sheâs clearly more exhausted than I assumed because Miller is not a crier.
âHe kept screaming and crying and I really think he hates me, and you hated me when I first got here, and I just know youâll both love that redhead.â
What the fuck is she on about?
More tears fall from her closed eyes, and I clean them up, reminding myself not to give her shit tomorrow once weâve both gotten some sleep. Knowing Miller, sheâs going to cringe at the reminder that she was so vulnerable.
But I love it. Whether she wants to acknowledge it or not, Miller is, at the bare minimum, attached to my son. I couldnât tell you how many times Iâve broken down from worrying that Iâm not doing enough, and I know firsthand that you only react like this if you care.
âThat wasnât on you. Heâs needy when heâs sick and for some reason, Iâm the only one who can calm him down. Itâs always been that way.â
My brother, sitting in front of us, peeks his head through the opening between the seats. âHeâs right. One time, I was babysitting while Kai was at a charity concert and I had to walk into a completely silent auditorium during a violinistâs solo because Max was going to make me go deaf from his wailing, but of course, he was perfectly fine once Kai had him.â
âStop eavesdropping, you little creep.â
He ignores me, wearing a mischievous smile. âMiller, youâre a beautiful crier.â
âShut up, Isaiah. Turn around and forget this ever happened.â
I try to hold it in, but I canât keep my body from shaking with a silent laugh.
Isaiah catches my eye, giving me a knowing smile before he turns forward again. What he knows or why heâs looking at me like that? No fucking clue.
âMiller,â I whisper. âIf youâre this sad, I have a shoulder you could lean your legs on.â
She cackles. Yes, cackles. Itâs adorable, which is a word I would never let her catch me calling her out loud.
âHey, Iâm the one with the dirty teenage boy jokes.â Her smile falls again as more tears continue to cascade down her cheeks. âIâm just tired, and you were upset with me after the game.â
Exhaling, my head drops back. âI wasnât upset, not with you. I pitched like shit. The press wouldnât stop asking questions and then having to go talk to fans . . . Iâm tired and I knew you were tired. I wanted to give you a break. I didnât mean to take it out on you or make it feel like it was your fault.â Running a hand over her hair, I usher her head back to my shoulder. âAnd he loves you, you know?â
When she looks up at me, Millerâs eyes are an even more vibrant green from the red that surrounds them.
âIâve never seen him so smitten.â
Which makes two of us.
âYou think so?â
I chuckle. âYes, Mills. Heâs passed out and drooling on your overalls. I think itâs safe to say heâs in love.â
She looks down for a moment, running a hand over his dark hair. âOkay.â Sniffling, she composes herself. âAre you going to make fun of me tomorrow for having an overly-exhausted cry?â
âOh, absolutely.â
She lightly laughs, regaining some of that spirit that makes her who she is, before nuzzling back into my shoulder.
âThank you,â I whisper. âI know I donât say it enough but youâre so good with him.â
âDo you think Iâm better than the pediatrician lady with all the cardigans?â
Confused, I tilt to get a better look at her. âMaxâs pediatrician is a man, and I donât think heâs all that into cardigans.â
âThe redhead.â Miller yawns. âThe one who gave you her number after the game. Do you think Max will like her?â
Wracking my brain, I look for something to piece together. Cardigans. Doctor. Phone number.
Phone number . . . the red-headed woman who slipped me a piece of paper after the game? I assumed it was her phone number, but I didnât check before I tossed it in the trash outside of the bus.
âMiller Montgomery.â A smirk lifts. âAre you jealous?â
She shakes her head to tell me no.
âLittle liar.â
âShh,â she hushes, burrowing against my chest. âIâm sleeping.â
I canât stop the grin from spreading on my lips. Miller Montgomery is jealous, which feels like the opposite of a no-strings-attached kind of emotion.
Itâs just after 2 a.m. when I get into my hotel room in San Francisco. Max slept through the entire flight, thank God, never once waking up on the bus ride to the hotel or while I set up his travel crib in our room. For him, I hate red-eye flights and the team has rearranged our travel schedule to avoid them this season; however, sometimes we donât have a choice and have to get to the next city.
After brushing my teeth, I flop onto the bed, completely drained from the past few days.
But thereâs a woman on the other side of this wall from me whoâs equally as worn out, and I canât stop thinking about how upset she was over thinking she wasnât enough for Max. Thatâs not something you worry about if youâre âjust passing throughâ.
Grabbing my phone off the charger, I shoot her a text.
Me: Are you okay?
A minute passes before she responds.
Mills: Yeah, Iâm good now.
Me: Good. So, what are you wearing?
I hear her laughter through the wall.
Mills: Wouldnât you like to know.
Me: I would. Thatâs why I asked.
She sends me a picture of her in bed, fully covered from head to toe. Oversized sweatshirt, baggy sweatpants that I think might be mine, glistening from her night-time skin care. Clearly ready for sleep and God, do I want to be in there next to her.
Me: If I ask you something, will you tell me the truth?
Mills: Well, I donât make a habit of lying to you, so go for it.
Me: Why were you upset over Max?
Thereâs a hefty pause before I get a response.
Mills: Iâm not sure. I just wanted to help him. To be enough for him, I guess.
Me: Is that because you love him?
Mills: Yeah. I do love your son.
And she thinks she doesnât fall in love when sheâs already done it once this summer.
Me: Can I ask you another question?
Mills: Shoot.
Me: Were you jealous tonight?
Three gray dots appear then disappear, repeating that pattern a couple more times on the screen.
Finally, she responds.
Mills: Yes.
Me: Why?
Mills: Would you believe me if I said Iâm not sure? Iâve never been jealous before. Iâve never cared about anyone enough to be.
Me: But you care about us?
Iâm too much of a coward to suggest only me. At least if I throw Max in there, I know she wonât be able to fully say no.
Mills: More than I knew I was capable of.
Fuck, my heart feels like itâs about to explode out of my chest. I want to bust through the door between our rooms and pull her into my bed, to let myself believe sheâs mine for more than the summer. But Miller made these rules, so sheâs going to have to be the one to break them.
Before I can respond, Max starts to stir and itâs not long after that his cry begins to fill the room.
Quickly, I stand from the bed. There are times I let him cry himself back to sleep. Him being sick is not one of those times.
âCome here.â I pick him out of his crib as his wail gains volume. âShh. Itâs okay, buddy. I got you.â Bouncing on the balls of my feet, I pace with him.
He cries as I hold him. My arm is throbbing after a night of pitching, but if I put him down, neither of us is getting any sleep, and that includes our neighbors who share these thin walls. So, I walk the length of the room. I rock him, rubbing his back until his screaming cry settles into a sniffle as he tries to find a comfortable position on my shoulder.
I take him back to my bed instead of his crib. Maybe this way Iâll get lucky, and heâll be able to get a couple hours of rest.
Keeping him towards the middle of the mattress in case he rolls, I occupy one side, facing him. He uses my bicep as a pillow while he continues to cry, but this cry is the one he uses when heâs trying to settle himself back to sleep.
Rubbing his back, I make soothing noises, attempting to help calm him down, when the door separating my room and Millerâs opens.
She peeks inside and catches my eye.
âSorry,â I whisper from the bed. âWeâre keeping you up.â
She simply shakes her head and comes into my room, closing the door behind her. Lifting the comforter on the other side of Max, she slips into bed with us.
âMmm,â Max hums, trying to say her name when he rolls over to look at her.
âHi, baby.â Miller brushes his hair from his face before running her hand over the length of his back, soothing him.
She settles her head onto my open palm against the pillow, her eyes lifting to mine. âIs this okay?â
Typically, I hate someone else getting these moments, even the tough ones, but with Miller thereâs no envy. It feels right that sheâs here.
My words are desperate, but hopeful. âPlease stay.â
She nods against me, gently stroking Maxâs back and softly kissing his head until his little cry dissolves and he falls back to sleep.
I have no idea what she was worried about earlier, but itâs obvious to me that this wild woman is my sonâs calm. And in a lot of ways, I think I might be hers.
Scooping my hand, I pull her in with my son sandwiched between our bodies, tangling my leg with hers, and draping my other arm over her waist in hopes to keep her close.
I liked seeing Miller jealous tonight, but she doesnât need to be. I know this picture, the three of us, will dissolve as soon as she leaves, but for now, I plan to steal every second while pretending thereâs no end date to us in sight. Because unfortunately for me, I know no one else will ever compare to how complete she makes both me and my son feel.