Caught Up: Chapter 34
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
âAre you okay?â I find Isaiah with a bowl of pretzels in his lap, sitting and sulking by himself in the dugout while Family Day continues on the field.
âNo.â
Taking the seat on the bench next to him, I pop a pretzel in my mouth. âYou canât blame her for being somewhat related to the guy.â
âI donât blame her for anything. Sheâs a literal angel who can do no wrong in my eyes, but I can blame her mother for having terrible taste in men and marrying who I can only assume is the devil, seeing as Dean Cartwright is Satanâs spawn himself.â
I fall forward in laughter.
âItâs not funny, Miller. This is the worst possible scenario.â
âNah. It could be worse.â
He scoffs. âHow the hell could anything be worse than Kenny being related to Dean motherfucking Cartwright?â
âThey couldâve been sleeping together, so I count âstepbrotherâ as a win.â
Isaiahâs brown eyes widen as I watch the realization flash through his mind. âOh my God, youâre right.â
Feet dangling off the bench, I snag a few more pretzels.
âHappy birthday, by the way,â he says, nudging his shoulder into mine.
âThank you.â
âItâs going to be weird not having you here, traveling with us. All the other nannies have sucked.â
God, I donât want to think about another nanny. I havenât even asked Kai what his plan for childcare is once I go, mostly because thereâs no part of me that wants to picture someone else in my place.
âDo you . . .â I begin. âDoes he know who is going to replace me?â
âNo one yet. The trainers and some of the staff have figured out a schedule to help Kai for the rest of the season so he doesnât have to bring someone else on quite yet. And depending how deep we go into the playoffs, we only have a month or so of baseball left at best.â
I quickly nod. âThat sounds . . . good.â
He swings an arm over my shoulder. âYouâre irreplaceable, Miller. No one else will ever be the Hot Nanny.â
My chest rumbles in a silent laugh. âAlways the charmer, Isaiah Rhodes.â
âHow are you holding up?â
âNot great.â
âI assume youâre a mess over leaving me and it has nothing to do with my brother or nephew.â
âYouâre charming and brilliant now? You really are becoming a whole new man.â
He chuckles. âDo you think youâll be back to visit soon?â
His question holds so much hope, and I know that hope is strictly for his older brother.
âI donât think so. Work keeps me busy, and at this point I have sixteen kitchens Iâm scheduled to consult for. Thatâs four years of bookings.â
âFour years?â His tone is filled with shock. âHell, I donât know what Iâm even doing in four days, let alone in four years.â
When I first opened my schedule to consultation services, I wanted every booking I could get. I didnât have much family or friends I was worried about penciling in. I had my attention laser focused on being the best, but now the lack of free time, the lack of a social life sounds dreadful.
And awfully lonely, if Iâm being honest.
âCan I be serious for a moment?â he asks. âAnd you know this is important because Iâm very rarely serious.â
âYou and me both.â
âI know. We drive my brother nuts.â
I pop another pretzel into my mouth as Isaiah adjusts himself on the bench, trying to get comfortable when getting serious makes him anything but.
âMalakai is the best person I know. Heâs my best friend and the best dad to his son. As Iâve gotten older, Iâve begun to realize everything heâs done for me. No fifteen-year-old shouldâve been left to raise their sibling. He got me through our momâs death. He got me through high school. He taught me how to drive. Hell, the guy even took me to buy my first pack of condoms.â He chuckles to himself. âWhich is ironic now, seeing as heâs the one who ended up with an accidental pregnancy.â
We find those two, Max tugging at the flips of dark brown hair curling out from Kaiâs hat.
âWhat Iâm trying to say is that my brother deserves the world and for him, you are the world.â
My pulse is thundering, my heart pounding in my chest. Thereâs an odd contradiction happening inside of me. I want to be his world because heâs quickly become mine, but the last thing I want is for this man to get hurt because of me. Isaiah doesnât have to tell me these things. I know how good his brother is, how much he deserves. Itâs what made me fall in love with him when I was trying so hard not to.
I realized it yesterday at the shoot. I didnât know what it felt like to be in love, and the realization that I am snuck up on me in the worst way possible. I leave tomorrow and Iâm in love with Kai and his son. Iâm in love with the life and friendships I built here.
And none of it matters because this was simply a pit stop to getting back to my real life.
âIf thereâs any chance of you coming back to see them . . .â Isaiah shakes his head. âI donât know what Iâm asking here. Iâm just trying to repay Kai for everything heâs done for me, and Iâve never seen him look at someone the way he looks at you. Iâve never seen him so immersed in someone elseâs orbit, and I donât know how you did that. If you found a crack and wormed your way in or what, but heâs been so focused on Max for the last year that he forgot about himself. But you . . . you didnât forget about him. Iâm asking that you donât forget about him when you go.â
âIsaiah.â My head falls to his shoulder with an exhale. âTrust me, Iâll never be able to forget your brother.â
Iâll never ever be able to forget about Kai or his son. Theyâve etched themselves onto my soul and unfortunately, Iâll never be able to tell Kai that, to give him any sign of hope that I could stay. Tomorrow I leave town, and Iâm hurting, aching at the homesickness thatâs already begun to settle into my bones.
Itâs one of our rulesâno grand declarations of love.
I asked Kai to remember that weâre simply a summer fling, and Iâm praying for his sake that Iâm the only one who forgot.
âHey, are you Miller? Emmettâs daughter?â
Looking up, a man that looks to be my dadâs age comes hopping down the stairs into the dugout. He seems nice enough until I zero in on Atlantaâs team logo on his quarter-zip.
Lifting my head off Isaiahâs shoulder, I say, âYeah, thatâs me.â
âIâm Brian. Your dad and I used to play together in the majors back in the day.â
âOh, very cool. Itâs nice to meet you. Are you working for Atlanta now?â I gesture towards the logo on his chest.
âI am. Iâd love to come and work with your dad someday, though. He and I used to make a hell of a pair. In fact, he was my catcher until he decided to retire mid-season while we were on a World Series-winning pace.â
The smile on my lips falls. He retired that season because of me.
âHe and I both would have our own rings if he stayed and played out that season, but he just had to call it quits. Absolutely wild to me.â Brian shakes his head in disbelief.
âIt was a . . . tough time for us then.â
âYeah.â He exhales a humorless laugh. âItâs a shame that his rash decision cost him his career.â
Isaiah looks from the Atlanta coach to me. âWhat is he talking about?â
I shake him off, realizing Kai hadnât even told his brother about Monty not being my biological dad or how our family came to be.
âEmmett quit mid-season to adopt her.â Brian gestures to me. âShe didnât have anywhere to go so he left the league and started coaching at some tiny shithole of a college. He gave up a good chunk of change over it too.â
I can feel Isaiahâs attention burning into the side of my face, but all I can do is keep my head down, staring at my feet. As if I didnât still feel guilty all these years later over my dad giving up his life for me, this random dude had to remind me with an audience present.
âYour dad said youâre some big-shot chef now.â Brian continues. âSaid youâre going to be on the cover of some magazine soon. Thatâs good to hear. At least youâre doing something impressive with your life after he gave up his.â
âHey.â Isaiah stands from the bench. âWhat the hell is wrong with you?â
Brian seems genuinely confused, as if he were simply stating facts and not trying to make me feel bad with his words.
âIsaiah, itâs okay.â I pull his arm back for him to return to the bench next to me. âHeâs right.â
As much as the words burn to hear, itâs exactly the reminder I need to get through tonight and back on the road tomorrow.