Caught Up: Chapter 3
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
Monty: Leave Max with Isaiah and come back to my room. Weâve gotta chat.
Me: Am I leaving Max so you can yell at me?
Monty: Yes.
Me: Cool, cool. Iâll be sure to rush right over for that.
âI found Max a new nanny,â is the first thing he says before Iâve even closed the door behind me.
Huh? I take a seat across the desk in Montyâs hotel room, eyeing him with confusion. âHow? I fired Troy an hour ago.â
âIâm just that good, and youâre going to hire her because you clearly have shit taste in nannies since you wonât stop firing them all, so Iâm taking over.â
âHer?â
âMy daughter.â
My eyes shoot to the framed photo sitting next to him. Itâs the same picture he has back in his office in Chicago. The same photo he props on his desk in every city we visit.
I knew the girl in the picture was his daughter, that much was clear, but even though he and I are close, heâs never told me much about her. I always assumed it was because he felt guilty leaving her and traveling for work as much as we do. That, or he knows talking about his kid who he misses will only reaffirm what I already believeâthat itâs nearly impossible to do this job as a single parent.
The girl in the photo canât be more than thirteen or fourteen years old. Sheâs in that awkward phase we all had in our early teens, donning both braces and acne. Dark hair is slicked back in a tight ponytail, visor shading her face and a bright yellow T-shirt with number fourteen centered on the front. Softball player, with her too-big sleeves cinched together with some sort of band on each shoulder. A pitchersâ glove rests on a single knee as she poses for her season photo.
Monty would have a softball-playing daughter.
âSheâs free for the summer and I want her to travel with us,â he continues.
Makes sense, sheâs out of school for the summer.
âYeah, but Monty, this is my kid weâre talking about.â
âAnd mine.â His brows raise, daring me to say something against this plan. âItâs not a question, Ace. Iâm telling you this is happening. Iâm tired of you finding something wrong with every single person we hire. Weâre doing background checks every few weeks for someone new, and changing names on the hotel rooms and plane manifests is becoming a pain in the ass for the travel coordinators. Sheâs Maxâs new nanny, and the best part about it is sheâs my kid and you canât fire her.â
Shit.
âSheâs only free until September so weâll have to find someone else to finish the last bit of the season, but weâll cross that bridge when we get there.â
Itâs clear thereâs no getting out of this. I owe him for everything heâs done for Max and me, and he fucking knows it.
If I have to leave my son with someone who isnât me, I guess this isnât the worst possible solution. This is a nanny thatâs probably too young to give a shit about a bunch of pro baseball players, and her dad will most likely be watching her like a hawk anytime sheâs not taking care of Max, which takes that responsibility off my shoulders.
Whatâs two months? Just double the time Iâve gone without firing someone.
âCan she drive?â I ask.
His brows furrow in confusion. âWhat?â
âLike if something happens to Max while Iâm not around, can she get him to the hospital?â
âYeah . . .â
Okay, thatâs good. Sheâs at least sixteen. That photo is probably a couple of years old at this point.
âIs she responsible?â
âSheâs . . .â he hesitates. âSheâs responsible at work.â
Weird answer.
The door to his hotel makes that noise when the electric lock is being undone by a keycard. Over my shoulder, dark hair enters first as a woman walks in backwards, using her ass to open the door.
Chocolate hair. Frayed hem to her shorts. Thick thighs.
She turns around and Miss Double Fisting from the elevator is standing in my coachâs hotel room. And sheâs double fisting again, only this time itâs with a couple of coffee cups.
I adjust my glasses on my face to make sure Iâm seeing this correctly. Green eyes connect with mine.
âYou.â The word comes out part seething, part shock.
She sighs, her shoulders dropping. âI had a feeling it was going to be you.â
Huh?
âAce, meet my daughter, Miller Montgomery. Maxâs new nanny.â
My head whips back in his direction. âYouâre kidding me.â
âMiller, Kai Rhodes. Youâll be taking care of his son this summer.â
âAbsolutely not,â I quickly interject.
Miller rolls her eyes, handing her dad one of the two coffees.
How is this possible? She sure as hell isnât thirteen or fourteen. Sheâs a full-grown woman who drinks beer and apparently doesnât sleep. The acne is long cleared up, leaving tanned, flawless skin, and her braces have created perfectly straight teeth in a mouth that says whatever the hell it wants.
She looks like a Miller, though. That wild tomboy thing sheâs got going for her with her cutoff overalls and tattoos.
âSheâs not watching my kid.â
Miller takes the seat next to mine and points at me with her thumb, giving her dad a look that says, this fucking guy.
Monty laughsâtraitor.
âYou two have met already, I see.â
âYeah, she was double fisting beers in the elevator at 9 a.m.â
âDear God.â She throws her head back, and that raspy voice mixed with the sexual way my brain took that phrase has my cock betraying me. âThey were Coronas. Do you know the alcohol content in those? Thatâs some peopleâs form of hydration.â
âI donât care.â I face her dad. âI wonât leave someone like that in charge of Max.â
âLighten up, Baby Daddy.â She takes a casual sip of her coffeeâor rather her chai tea latte per the tag on her paper cup.
âDonât call me that.â
âI had a beer to celebrate me quitting my job this morning. Youâre acting like I was doing lines of coke off the handrails in the elevator, which yeah, now that Iâm saying that out loud, I realize sounds oddly specific, but I promise Iâve never done that.â
I turn back to Monty. âThis your kid?â
âThe one and only,â he says with pride.
âHow old are you?â
âTwenty-five.â
I didnât realize Monty became a dad at such a young age. Thatâd put him at . . . twenty years old when she was born? Damn. I thought this was hard at thirty-two.
âHow old are you?â she asks.
âIâm asking the questions here. Iâm trying to figure out if itâs worth risking my kidâs safety just to hire you and get your dad off my back.â
âAnd Iâm trying to figure out if itâs worth ruining my summer by spending the next two months working for a guy with a giant stick up his ass.â
âIâm being responsible. I donât have a stick up my ass.â
âProbably been lodged so far up there and for so damn long that you forgot it was even inside of you.â
âMiller,â Monty interjects. âYouâre not helping.â
âDo you have any childcare experience?â
âAdult children, yes.â
I shoot a pointed glance towards Monty. âWe donât know if Max will even like her. You know how he is with women.â
âHe was practically throwing himself at me in the elevator. I think weâre fine in that department.â
âIâm pretty sure he was going for your bottles. They look a lot like his.â
âYouâre not going to get over the beers, are you?â
âNo.â
âOkay.â Monty claps his hands together. âThis is going to be interesting.â
âDo you smoke?â That voice of hers suggests she might.
âNo, but it seems you might drive me to if this is how the rest of the summer is going to go.â
âMiller,â Monty interrupts like a stern dad breaking up a fight between his kids. âThanks for the coffee. Can you give me a minute with Kai?â
Miller sighs, quickly tying her long brown hair up in a knot on top of her head, giving me a better view of the artwork on her arms and shoulders. Itâs mostly intricate line-work making up a sleeve of florals. Almost like the outlines of a coloring page.
Max will like those.
âFine.â She stands from her seat, taking her chai with her, that sweet scent of dessert wafting from her again before she turns to me. âBut so you know, Iâm doing this as a favor. So, try to be less of a dick about it, yeah? See you later, Baby Daddy.â She stops at the door, her hand on the knob as she cocks her head in contemplation. âOr should I say, Baseball Daddy? Oh yeah. Much better. Baseball Daddy, it is!â
She leaves us alone with that.
I shake my head in disbelief. âYour daughter is unhinged.â
âSheâs the best, right?â Montyâs chest rumbles at my annoyance.
âYou canât be serious about this. Thereâs no way sheâs the right person to take care of Max.â
He leans back in his chair, tattooed hands crossed over his stomach. âIâm not just saying this because Iâm biased, but youâd be lucky to have her. She might be my wild child and not know what the hell a filter is, but when it comes to work, sheâs the most driven person I know. She will do everything for your boy.â
I toss my head back. âCome on, man. Letâs be serious about this.â
âI am being serious. Trust me on this, Kai. I know my daughter. If for some reason, she ever gives you a valid reason to fire her, Iâll even offer to be the one to do it. Thatâs how much faith I have in this situation.â
Staying silent, I eye him, searching for any sign of bullshit.
I might not know Miller, might not trust her, but I do trust Monty with both my life and my kidâs. And I know heâd never put Max at risk, even if this situation benefits him.
I canât believe Iâm even considering letting him talk me into this, but I owe him. âShe gets one strike,â I say, holding a single finger to reiterate.
âBaseball puns, Ace? Youâre better than that.â
âShut up.â
He puts his hand out to shake mine. âOne strike, and sheâs outta here!â
âOkay, way too far.â
I put my palm in his, but before I can pull away, he tightens his grip, willing my eye contact.
âIâm gonna give you a word of advice, son. Knowing her, sheâll make sure you have the time of your life this summer, both you and Max, but donât even think about getting attached to her.â
My brows cinch in confusion. âDid you not see that interaction?â I free my hand, gesturing towards the door Miller left through.
âI did, and Iâm telling you this, not as her dad but as your friend. She will leave when the summer is over. I love my daughter to death, but sheâs a runner and the last thing she wants is to get caught.â
Monty should know me well enough by now that the last thing I want is for her to stay. In fact, if it werenât for Max growing up far too quickly, Iâd be wishing the summer away already.
âTrust me, Monty. You have nothing to worry about.â
He hums, unconvinced.
Standing, I tuck my chair into the opposite side of his desk. âSee you at the field.â
Iâm almost out the door when he stops me.
âAnd Ace,â he calls out. âKeep your dick in your pants. We all know how fucking fertile you are, and Iâm too young and too goddamn attractive for someone to be calling me Grandpa.â
âJesus Christ,â I huff, leaving his room.