Caught Up: Chapter 7
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
âDad, you donât need to make up the couch. Iâm sleeping in my van tonight.â
Bending to reach my toes, I stretch out my back, needing some relief after my twenty-hour road trip. The last thing I want to do after sitting for so long is to sleep on a couch. The mattress in my van is far more comfortable.
âYou can take my bed,â he insists.
âIâm not sleeping in your bed.â
âAnd youâre not sleeping in your van in downtown Chicago.â
I exhale a resigned sigh. âCan we figure it out later?â
âFine. How was your drive?â
âGood. Easy.â
âAnd how long are you staying in town?â
I knew that was coming, but anything I have to say, he wonât want to hear. I only decided to drive up to Chicago from Miami to placate him, but my original plans of slowly making my way out to the West Coast are back on. Heâs going to be spending most days at the field or in other cities for games, so whatâs the point in sitting around Chicago if Iâm not traveling with him to help with Max?
He rounds the kitchen in his apartment, pulling out a few ingredients even though he knows two minutes into him cooking, Iâll be the one taking over. Emmett Montgomery is great at a lot of things. Cooking is not one of them.
âWant to talk about what happened the other night?â he asks.
âNope.â
âOkay. Letâs talk about it anyway.â
âKaiâs too much,â I quickly blurt. âThat guy has no chill whatsoever.â
My dadâs back vibrates in a chuckle as he stands over the stove, cracking eggs into a pan.
Without hesitation, I follow.
âYou should stick to coaching,â I tell him, fishing out a few eggshells before they cook into the whites.
âYou should be grateful Iâm terrible in the kitchen. Itâs the reason youâre doing something so amazing with your life. The cover of Food & Wine magazine, Millie? Incredible.â
His voice drips with pride as it always does, but Iâm trying not to think too much about the article or the award I just won. I need to get back into the kitchen and practice without anyone breathing down my neck.
Itâs probably for the best that Kai is too difficult to help. I have other things I need to focus on.
I grab the spatula from him, officially taking over. âCan we talk about something other than baking?â
âSure. Letâs talk about Kai.â
âSmooth.â
âWhat happened the other night?â
I shoot him a pointed glance. âI just want to let you know that you have terrible taste in people because your favorite player is the worst. He told me he didnât want to get to know me after I spent the entire day taking care of his son.â
Then proceeded to call my phone countless times, but I havenât listened to the voicemails. I assume they were forced by my dad, and I donât need to hear his coerced apologies.
Grabbing some fruit from the fridge, I cut it up, keeping an eye on our eggs while throwing a couple slices of bread into the toaster, diving right back into taking care of him the way I did growing up.
âHeâs a little protective,â my dad admits.
âUnderstatement of the year.â
âAnd heâs used to doing everything on his own. He practically raised his brother and heâs only two years older than Isaiah.â
Wait. What?
My attention darts to him, but I quickly avert it. He loves Kai and for my own pettiness, I donât want to learn why.
âHeâs got a lot of pressure on him, Miller. Heâs Maxâs only parent and heâs maybe the best pitcher Iâve ever seen, let alone coached. The MLB life is almost impossible to live when youâre a single dad.â
Without knowing, those words fall onto my chest, sitting heavy. Iâve carried them around for years, all too aware of what he gave up for me.
My dad was also in the majors before I came along, but unlike Kai, the second he became a single parent, he left the league. He settled in a small town in Colorado. Coached at a shitty college with an almost non-existent budget. Stayed when the bigger offers started rolling in. Raised me on his own. Was home every night. Made it to every school function, every one of my softball games.
All the while he was talented enough to make millions of dollars playing a game he loves. But instead, he gave it up because of me.
âHe needs your help, Miller. He doesnât know how to ask for it and Iâm not sure if he knows how to accept it, but if thereâs anyone who could bulldoze their way in, itâs you.â
I burst a laugh. âIâm not sure thatâs the compliment youâre intending, Dad.â
âI donât want him calling it and retiring early.â
The hits keep coming. He doesnât want Kai to give up his life for Max the way he had to give up his life for me.
Clearing my throat, I plate our breakfasts and meet him at the table. âWhereâs Maxâs mom?â
âNo idea. Last fall, right before playoffs, she showed up out of nowhere, left Max at Kaiâs place, and a couple of days later she skipped town. Didnât want any part of her kid.â
âShit,â I exhale.
âHe tried to retire the next day,â my dad continues. âCame to my office, told me what happened, and asked what kinds of fines he was looking at for breaking his contract early. We were about to go into the playoffs, and he was ready to walk just like that.â He snaps his fingers. âNo hesitation in taking on this whole new responsibility.â
That makes me dislike him a little bit less. And it makes his overprotective, overly annoying parenting style make a whole lot more sense. Max didnât have anyone and suddenly, Kai stepped up, ready to be his everything.
It reminds me of the man sitting across the table from me.
âI canât spend my summer with someone like that, Dad. Heâs unbearably uptight. The guy has no idea how to chill the fuck out.â
âHeâs a good man, Miller. Good heart, takes care of his family. He just needs a reminder that he has to take care of himself sometimes too. And if thereâs anyone who knows how to let loose and have a good time, itâs you. Maybe thatâll rub off on him.â
âYou want me to rub up on him?â
âOff, Miller. I said âoff.â â
I pop my shoulder. âI like my version better.â
âMillie,â he begins, setting his fork down. âPlease, for me, give him another chance. Kai needs your help. He might not say it, might not fully realize it yet, but youâll be good for him. Both of them.â
Fuck my life. This man, who has given up so much for me, knows I canât say no to him.
âYou want me to force myself into their lives when he told me he didnât want to know anything about me?â
âYes.â
I huff a laugh. âIâll think about it.â
A moment of silence passes between us, unspoken words lingering in the air before my dad finally breaks the silence and speaks them out loud.
âIf you decide to stay, have fun. Make him have fun, take care of his boy, but donât forget that youâre leaving at the end of the summer, okay? Kai is grounded and attached, and he has a good reason to be. But you, my girl, are the most no-strings person I know.â
âYouâre just full of compliments today, arenât you,â I joke, but heâs right. I always leave, knowing I wonât have to deal with the sting of homesickness when I go. At least for anyone but him.
âIn a way, Kai is lucky,â he continues. âThat he doesnât miss Maxâs mom, and that Max wonât remember her when heâs older. But the stakes are a lot higher when kids are involved. Take care of them, but donât give them someone to miss.â
Heâs asking a lot of a girl who, up until ten minutes ago, was contemplating leaving town at her earliest convenience.
âDad, that was a very long, drawn-out way for you to tell me not to have sex with your pitcher.â
âWell, my way sounded a whole lot more poetic than that, but yeah, donât have sex with my pitcher.â