Caught Up: Chapter 6
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
Still in most of my uniform, I jog down the hall to my hotel room. As quietly as possible, I enter the darkened space, Maxâs noise machine covering up whatever sounds I do make as I hurry to his crib.
Heâs okay. In fact, Iâd say heâs better than okay, sleeping soundly in a cozy pair of pajamas with his favorite lovey in his fist that I didnât even tell Miller about.
I donât know why I didnât tell her about the tiny fox-shaped comfort heâs obsessed with. Max doesnât sleep without the thing, but even though Iâm glad heâs getting some rest, I canât lie and say Iâm completely stoked that she seemingly did fine without my guidance.
Following the light filtering through the crack under the adjoining door, I tap my knuckles against the barrier between Millerâs room and mine.
âCome in,â she says just loud enough for me to hear.
Opening the door, I find her sitting on the mattress, legs crossed, attention on the TV. Maxâs baby monitor sits on the nightstand where she can check on him while she watches the Food Network without any sound.
âDoes this make sense to you if you canât hear it?â I gesture towards the TV, but Miller doesnât look in my direction, keeping her eyes on the screen.
âIt makes way more sense with the sound off. I only wanted to see how they made their frittata. I donât need the backstory about how their great grandmother had a chicken farm, so it inspired them to create this dish for their children on the first day of school, ya know?â
âI have no idea what youâre talking about.â
Mesmerized by the woman on the television, she barely glances my way to wave me off before doing a double take, her eyes falling right back to my body.
âAre you still in your uniform?â
âHad to rush over here and make sure my kid was still breathing.â
âYou texted all night. Lighten up a little, Baseball Daddy.â She refocuses on the screen, but then her brows furrow and her attention finds mine again. âYou know, this uptight control freak thing is making it really hard to imagine myself watching Max all summer long.â
I cross my arms over my chest. âIs that supposed to deter me?â
Her eyes narrow. âFor someone who says they like my dad so much, youâre hell-bent on making his job hard, huh? You act like this towards any person who comes within a ten-foot radius of your son, they quit, or you fire them, only for him to bend over backwards to do it all over again for you.â
Well . . . shit. Thatâs annoyingly perceptive.
And because I hate that sheâs calling me out on day one, I deflect. âIf heâs so important to you, where have you been? Iâve been playing for him for a year and a half and assumed you were a kid, not a full-grown woman, because youâve never come around before.â
âIâm not around because heâs important to me.â
I nod my head as if I understand. âThat makes no fucking sense.â
âEmmett Montgomery would give up his apartment, his dreams, and his career if it meant he could live near me. Work keeps me busy, keeps me from staying in one place for long, so we see each other on the road a few times a year. This is the first time in my adult life I have some free time and he wants me around. I owe him, so could you stop making it so difficult to pay him back?â
âWhat do you mean you owe him?â
She waves me off. âMaybe one morning we could get drunk together and Iâll explain it to you then.â Miller grabs her phone from the nightstand, holding it out for me to see. âLook at this video of Max. Look how happy he is.â
On the small phone screen, a video plays of my giddy son sitting on the couch, pointing up to the television screen where he can see me pitching. Heâs never been to one of my games and, for all I know, this might be the first time heâs ever seen me play. The constant repeat of âDaddaâ makes my chest physically ache as he watches me do something Iâve loved my entire life, but all that changes at the end of the video when I watch him cuddle up to his new nanny.
I can feel my face fall in conjunction with my stomach. Heâs never been so comfortable with someone else so quickly, never had a woman in his life that he wanted to cuddle up to.
It scares the shit out of me.
Because as much as Miller has freaked me out today, what scares me more than anything is how Max will react in two months when sheâs gone, if this is how much he likes her on day one.
She continues to scroll through picture after picture of him, Max smiling as widely as his little mouth allows, and when sheâs done with her slideshow, without a word, I head back to my room.
âThatâs it?â she asks.
I linger back into her space. âWhat else do you want me to say?â
âI donât know. How about âThank you, Miller. Iâm not surprised my son loves you already because youâre the easiest person to get along withâ or maybe you could try to get to know me. Anything really.â
âI donât want to get to know you.â
Whatâs the point when sheâs leaving soon?
Her head jerks back from my words. âDid the fucked-up social skills come with fatherhood, or were you born this way?â
I donât say anything, continuing to lean my shoulder on the door leading from her room to mine.
âYou do realize youâre the issue here, right? Your son is easy.â
Again, I donât respond.
She doesnât have to tell me that. Iâm self-aware enough to know Iâm the problem. I know Iâm overly protective. I know Max is easy, but heâs also my only family outside of my brother, and Iâm his. Heâs all Iâve got.
Miller exhales a tired sigh, and it sounds awfully like sheâs tired of me. âYouâre just not going to respond? Cool. Do you need anything else?â She gestures towards my body. âDo you have any post-game therapy you need to do before I call it a night?â
âNo, Iâm done.â
The lie slips easily off my tongue. My body is going to pay for pitching into the eighth inning without taking care of my shoulder, elbow, or wrist tonight. I should be going for a midnight swim or spending the next hour in the training room, letting them run me through stretches and mobility work. Instead, I got on the first bus to leave the arena without even giving the equipment guys my uniform.
Miller laughs and itâs without humor. âGod, you finally say something and itâs bullshit.â
I shouldâve known better than to lie to her about my post-game routine. She was raised by a baseball coach.
She stands from the bed, handing off the baby monitor as a physical sign that sheâs done for the night. âI had fully planned on playing Mary fucking Poppins this summer, but thereâs no way I can deal with you for two months.â She casually grabs her things from around the room. âI thought I could do this. Max is great, but youââ She shakes her head. âYou are not.â
What is she doing? And where does she think sheâs going? My entire game, I expected her to fuck up so I could fire her, but now sheâs leaving on her own accord.
And all I can think about is that little boy in the next room who is sound asleep after happily spending his day with this girl whoâs going to leave because of me.
I step in front of her, between her and the door. âWhere are you going?â
âAs far away from you as I can get. This whole overbearing single dad thing was kind of hot at first, but nowââshe motions up and down my bodyââthis is exhausting.â
She steps to the side, reaching for the door to the hallway, but I move with her, blocking the exit.
âPlease move.â
âWhere are you going?â I ask again. âItâs late.â
She throws her head back for a moment to compose herself. âI have a house rental I need to pack up so I can drive to Chicago tomorrow.â
âOh.â Well, thatâs a good sign. Sheâs heading back to my city. âSo, Iâll see you on Sunday then? At my house.â
She chuckles and itâs laced with so much frustration. âFirst, you donât want me to watch your son. Now, you do. Make up your mind, Rhodes. Which is it?â
Great fucking question. Does she think I have a goddamn clue what Iâm doing? I want Max to be safe. I want to be the one to keep him safe, but I canât be with him 24/7. I want him to be happy, but I also donât want him to get his heart broken when this woman leaves in two months.
I lift my hat off my head, running a frustrated palm over my scalp before flipping it, brim to the back. âI donât know, Miller.â
âOh my God.â She throws her hands up. âIâm so done with you. Move.â
She bolts to the other side of me to get to the door. Without thinking and without words I reach out to stop her, but she moves one way and I move the other far too quickly so that both my hands land on her tits instead of my intended destinationâthe safety of her upper arms.
We freeze by the door, my hands cupping her.
Millerâs greens bounce down to my hands then back to me. She pauses for a beat, not saying anything until finally she clears her throat. âYou gonna keep them there all night, or . . .â
âShit.â I jerk my hands away, letting them settle at my sides, forming them into fists to resist accidentally touching her again because holy fuck, she felt good to touch.
My skin is buzzing; my nerves are on fire. I almost forgot what a womanâs body felt like, how delicious the weight felt in my palm. My fingers are tingling to remember again.
God. How fucking pathetic am I that an accidental tit grab is the most action Iâve seen in well over nine months?
âYou need to touch them again?â Miller asks and itâs when my attention snaps to her that I realize my eyes have been trailing all over her body, thinking, fantasizing. âIf touching my boobs makes you chill the fuck out, please, be my guest.â
âSorry . . . I . . . It was an accident.â
âYouâre acting like youâve never touched a set of tits before. You have a kid. I do hope there was some boob grabbing on the night you made the little guy.â
âIâm sure there was, itâs just . . . Sorry.â
Miller softens, no longer trying to escape, but now I feel like a creepy old man standing in front of her door, refusing to let her leave after manhandling her without permission.
I move to the side, giving her a path to go, and wordlessly, she does.
âWill I see you in Chicago?â I desperately ask before sheâs fully out the door.
Miller pauses for a moment before turning back. âKai,â she exhales, her voice all gentle and I can tell from the tone alone that I wonât like the answer Iâm about to get. âIâve got a lot going on this summer, things Iâm far too stressed about. I canât handle your stress on top of my own. I thought I could do this for my dad, I wanted to do it for him, but I donât think itâs going to work out.â She offers me a placating smile. âYouâve got an awesome kid. For both of your sakes, I hope you can learn to loosen the reins.â
Fuck.
There are so many questions I want to ask. What is she stressed about? What can I do to change her mind?
Then thereâs the other part of that equationâMonty.
God, my brother was right. I am a grumpy dick because who else would ruin this for Monty of all people? Heâs been so good to me and my family and all he wanted was to spend the summer with his daughter.
And my son. Fuck. My son liked her.
How many nights have I stayed awake, worrying about what being raised by an all-male baseball team is going to do to him? He genuinely liked a woman for the first time in his short life, felt comfortable with her, and my own bullshit scared her away.
I watch Miller leave down the hall, watch her get into the elevator, and Iâm stuck wondering about how only hours ago I was wishing her away and now that sheâs gone, I find myself desperate for her to stay.