Caught Up: Chapter 9
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
Five minutes to three oâclock, a forest green Mercedes Sprinter comes rolling up my driveway. Besides the fact I already know who this is because security at the front gate had to call me and clear her, this van screams Miller.
As does the way sheâs blaring music from the speakers and driving a little too fast for my liking. A fucking travel van. I bet the nomad herself lives in it too.
I was surprised when I got the call that she was here, but Iâm thankful she came back.
Miller parks, hops out of the driver side, and rounds the front.
âWhat the hell is that?â I ask, arms crossed, leaning against a pillar on my front porch.
âThis old girl?â She proudly pats the hood. âMy van.â
âYou have a van.â
âYep. Live in it sometimes too.â
âOf course you do.â
She mirrors my posture, leaning on her car with crossed arms, a peek of a smile tugging on her lips. Iâm sure she loves the satisfaction of knowing she can get under my skin with something as simple as not having a permanent residence, but I truly have no clue as to how someone could live so unattached.
Millerâs tanned and tatted arm glistens under the early July sun, the glint of light reflecting off her septum ring. Maxâs new nanny has yet to figure out the concept of a real shirt because, once again, sheâs only wearing some kind of strapless piece of fabric as a bra, almost like a bathing suit. Itâs flimsy and barely there, but the rust orange color looks nice underneath the denim one-piece.
âOveralls again, huh?â
Sheâs got a different pair on, and this time theyâre baggy and full-length, covering her thighs I tend to daydream about.
âTheyâre easy.â
âYou know who else wears onesies?â I gesture to the baby monitor in my hand where a sleeping Max can be seen.
She huffs a laugh. âShut up.â
âSeriously though, those seem like the biggest pain in the ass to take off.â
âSo, youâre thinking about taking them off of me?â
âNoââ
âAt least get me inside first, Baseball Daddy. Weâre in public.â
I canât help the small smile tilting on my lips as I lean my shoulder on the pillar, thankful sheâs up for bantering with me after what went down the other night.
Miller takes the steps leading up to my porch, bypassing me for the front door, but I gently grab her wrist to stop her, pulling her back until her chest bumps into mine.
My voice is low and sincere. âIâm sorry. About the other night.â
Her gaze dips to my lips for a split second, but I catch the movement. I especially catch how she licks her own lips after looking at mine. âAnd?â
âAnd thank you for coming back. I appreciate what youâre doing for us. For me.â
âAnd?â
âAnd . . . youâre good with Max.â
âAnd?â
What the hell? âAnd . . . I donât know what else you want me to say, but I am sorry for how overprotective Iâve been with him. Itâs just that heâs all Iâve got.â
Millerâs set shoulders drop. âRemember that time you grabbed my tits?â
âOkay.â Reaching around her, I grip the doorknob to usher her inside. âGreat talk, Miller.â
She puts her hand on mine, stopping me, her tone growing serious. âThat was your one fuck-up, Rhodes. Treat me like my presence is a burden to your summer again, and Iâll walk out this door and never come back.â
A small smile tilts on my lips. âYes, maâam.â
âDonât smile. Youâre too old to be smiling. Youâre sure to get wrinkles just from doing it once.â
Shaking my head, that grin grows as I open the door of my house for her.
She enters first and, from behind, I watch as she takes in the first glimpse of my home. I bought this place a few months ago, so there are still some boxes tucked in various corners, but overall, weâre moved in. The house is a nice size. Perfect for Max and me. Iâm not sure if Chicago is our long-term spot, but I like the idea of picking a place and setting roots. Especially now that I have a son. Once heâs old enough to start school, I donât plan on moving him.
God, that thought is depressing. Heâs only fifteen months old and I already feel like Iâm missing out on too much time. What am I going to do when heâs too old to be traveling with the team? When heâs in school? Leave him in Chicago while I travel for work and hire someone else to raise him?
I want to be involved. I want to be a good dad. I want him to be surrounded with unconditional love from his family. The last thing I want is for him to feel the weight of too many responsibilities at too young of an age the way I did.
I want his life to be easy. At least, in a reasonable way. I want him to learn how to work hard, to earn things in his life. But the big stuff, like finding a way to get to school when you live across town, figuring out where your next meal will come from, or forging your dadâs signature on paperwork because you donât want anyone to know you and your little brother live alone. Yeah, my kid will never know what thatâs like.
Rounding Millerâs body, I face her in the foyer. âMaxâs room is down that hall. Iâll let you explore on your own once heâs awake from his nap, but the main part of the house is this way.â Hands in my pockets, I nod towards the opposite side of the house. âCome.â
âGod,â she moans, head falling back. âI canât wait to hear you say that in the bedroom.â
Jesus.
I wouldnât know where to start figuring out how this womanâs mind works, how she makes these connections. She loves to throw me off balance, to get a rise out of me. But this is my house. Iâm in charge here, and Iâm tired of this twenty-five-year-old woman making me feel like a teenage boy with no retort for the pretty girl who spits out the most asinine statements.
Instead of backing up or shaking my head at her as I typically do, I take a step into her, invading her space before leaning down to keep my voice low but clear. âIf youâre as terrible of a listener in the bedroom as you are in real life, Miller, I can promise you this, you wouldnât be allowed to come.â
Those pretty lips part, jade eyes wide.
âTwo can play this game, Montgomery. Now, letâs go.â I nod towards the other side of the house once again.
Her lips press together, holding back a grin. âYou keep talking like that, Kai, and Iâll be ditching the âbaseballâ part and just be calling you âdaddyâ.â
A laugh bursts out of me, a smile mirroring the one on Millerâs mouth.
Her eyes track my face as she stands only inches from me. It feels only slightly sexual, but more so satisfied. Like sheâs proud of herself for getting me to laugh.
âThanks for helping me out with him today,â I add, needing to voice a bit of my appreciation for her coming back before she can leave the two inches that separate us.
She nods, following behind as I lead her through the other side of the house. Maxâs bedroom is in the furthest corner, done purposefully in hopes that heâd be able to sleep through whatever noise is happening in the main part.
âMy room is down that hall, as is a guest room. Living room. Dining room,â I continue, rattling off the open spaces as we pass them. Turning the corner, we leave the main family room. âHereâs the kitchen, and if you come this way, youâll findââ
I stop in my tracks, no longer hearing Millerâs sandaled feet slap against the hardwood. Her back is to me, eyes on the kitchen.
âThis is your kitchen?â she asks.
âYeah.â
âKai, itâs stunning.â
Is it? I guess it is, with its butcher block countertops and brand-new appliances. Thereâs plenty of storage, white cabinetry, and black finishes. But Iâve never thought much of it because I, for one, never use it.
âItâs what the contractor had picked out, but it works.â
âIt works?â she asks with a breathy laugh. âThis is my dream kitchen. Is that a convection oven?â
âI have no idea.â
She leaves her spot, opting to explore, her hands roaming over the electric buttons. âIt is.â
Miller continues to open cabinets and drawers because of course she does. The woman wouldnât know what a boundary was if she tripped and fell right over one.
She comes up empty in almost every drawer before continuing to the fridge. Itâs embarrassingly bare, but I just got back from a road trip so Iâll chalk up my lack of groceries to travel and ignore that Iâve been too exhausted to set up a grocery delivery or even go to the store myself.
âKai Rhodes,â Miller gasps. âIs that beer in your fridge?â
âWill it still be there by the time I get home, or should I plan on you emptying me out?â
Miller glances at the stove to check the time. âItâll probably be there. Itâs after three. Too late in the day for my drinking habits.â She closes the fridge, leaning on the counter next to it. âWould you mind if I borrowed your kitchen tonight?â
I shrug. âGo for it. Just try not to burn my house down. And I uh . . . clearly donât have much to cook with.â
âI wonât be cooking, but Iâll get some groceries delivered. Iâll get you stocked up too.â
After how I treated her the other night, I figured Iâd have to be on my hands and knees to get her to watch my son again, but sheâs being surprisingly . . . pleasant. What the hell did Monty say to her?
âI mean, youâll be paying for it obviously,â she continues.
âObviously,â I chuckle. âIâd appreciate that. I havenât had the time. Thereâs an emergency card you can use in that drawer.â I point to the small drawer by her hip. âAs well as all the phone numbers you need. Maxâs pediatrician, local hospital, my buddy Ryanâs number is there if you need any help. He lives ten minutes down the road. I also laid out Maxâs nighttime routine. Heâs eating regular foods now as you know from the last time you watched him, but if he gives you any trouble while youâre putting him down, you can give him a bottle. I already prepped it for you. Just add water.â
âSo organized, Baseball Daddy. I bet youâre one of those people who knows where their birth certificate is, arenât you?â
âYou donât? Miller, thatâs something you should definitely know the location of.â
This woman, who is about to be responsible for my child for the next two months, canât even locate one extremely important piece of paper.
Max likes her. Sheâs Montyâs daughter.
âIâm going to need you to say something reassuring right now because Iâm about to leave a human in your hands and Iâm not having much faith.â
âIâm fun.â
I can feel one side of my mouth tugging upward. âIs that supposed to be reassuring?â
âIâm also very good at poker.â
âWell, thankfully my fifteen-month-old doesnât have much money to his name.â
She slides her palms against the counter. âAnd I look good in your kitchen.â
I attempt to hold back, but fuck it, I like sparring with this woman. âThat you do.â
Thereâs no question there. Miller looks damn good in my kitchen when I allow myself to look.
âDoes your boyfriend know what a flirt you are?â
âOh, come on, Kai. Youâre better than that. Be direct. Ask me if Iâm single.â Thereâs a sly smile on her lips, a smile that screams she likes flirting with me as much as I do her.
Thereâs something about Miller, something so fierce about her personality, that my gut knows loyalty is deeply ingrained in her. So, no, she wouldnât be flirting with me if she had a boyfriend.
âNo need to ask. Iâve already got my answer.â
âOh yeah? And whatâs that?â
I miss letting loose and flirting with a beautiful woman, remembering how easy life used to be, and Miller makes it pretty easy to get caught up in pretending I still have the freedom to be that man.
But I fucking donât. Thereâs a kid in the next room reminding me of that.
I clear my throat, not answering her question. âCall security at the front gate when the groceries get here. Theyâll come and drop them off.â
She looks around the room. âItâs fancy out here, Baseball Daddy.â
âItâs safe.â
âGlad to know I donât have to worry about anything dangerous getting in.â
She might not have to worry, but I do. Because with Miller Montgomery, my coachâs daughter, standing in my kitchen looking like that, Iâm afraid something very dangerous has already gotten in.
These seats are the fucking worst.
Before I signed my contract last year, I shouldâve amended that the bullpen needed more comfortable chairs. Eight and a half innings and my ass is numb as I wait and watch for my team to pull out the W at home.
Isaiah is playing his ass off. His defense is tight and locked in. He hit a two-run homer in the fourth and another double in the seventh, bringing in a run and giving the Warriors a comfortable lead. I was going to invite him over after the game to have one of those beers that may or may not still be in my fridge, but with how well heâs doing, Mr. Popular is about to get a whole lot of attention heâs not going to want to pass up.
Itâs not that Iâm not a team player, but I hate bullpen days. Besides my forty pitches thrown to get my arm loose and active between my starts this week, I donât do anything here other than watch.
We sit somewhere off the foul line for the entirety of the game when I could be sitting at home, spending time with my son. This is where it gets hard for me. On my starting nights, I can justify the time away, but nights like these, I wish Max were here too.
With my hat in my hands, I absentmindedly run my thumb over Maxâs picture. Itâs a habit, but also a good reminder when work becomes too much, none of it really matters. He does.
I love the game, I really do, but I love my son a whole lot more and I donât know how to find that balance.
Maybe if his mom hadnât left him the way she did Iâd be handling all of this a whole lot better. Iâd be more hands-off perhaps. But most of the time I feel like I need to overcompensate, to be both parents and just hope that Max doesnât notice the gaps.
âAce.â One of our relief pitchers pats me on the back. âI like this no-work thing. You think you can go another eight innings on your next start?â
Chuckling, I lean back in my chair, crossing my arms. âIâll try my best.â
Taking a seat next to me, he offers me a bit of his chew, but I decline, holding up my seeds instead.
âYour brother is going to be insufferable after tonight.â
âGod,â I exhale. âTell me about it.â
And right on cue, post-game in the training room with the music blaring, my little brother waltzes in like the arrogant fucker that he is.
Isaiah slowly unbuttons his uniform to the song, the jersey with his number nineteen falling to his still cleated feet. âIâm here, baby!â
Lying back on a training table as I get my shoulder rubbed out, I watch, trying my best not to laugh. But itâs pretty difficult not to when heâs got the whole room on his side, cheering him on as he strips down to the music, high from our win and his personal game.
âRhodes, youâre on my table tonight,â Kennedy, one of the trainers, says. âIâm rubbing you down.â
Isaiah stops mid-dance, his eyes going wide with excitement because well, heâs in love with Kennedy.
âKenny . . . are you serious?â He follows her to her table like a love sick puppy dog.
âYep. Strip down and hop up.â
My brotherâs attention darts to me, his mouth hanging open but smiling at the same time. Kennedy rarely volunteers to work on Isaiah because the kid can be a colossal pain in the ass.
Looking at me, he points to her then to himself as if she has no idea how obsessed he is with her.
I canât help but laugh at him from across the room, but then my doctorâs thumb digs into my rotator cuff and wipes my smile right off my face.
âIs this part of my reward for having a good game?â Isaiah asks Kennedy as he strips down to nothing, his cup clattering to the floor. âJust how much are we talking here with this rub down?â
âJesus, Rhodes.â Kennedy turns away from him as quickly as possible, covering her eyes. âLeave your goddamn compression shorts on. This isnât that kind of massage.â She peeks over to me. âAce, what the hell is wrong with your brother?â
âI wish I knew, Ken.â
Isaiah uses both hands to quickly cover his dick while standing bare-ass naked next to Kennedyâs training table. âWell, you said to strip down and I got excited.â
I motion to what heâs covering. âClearly.â
The entire room falls into a fit of laughter. Isaiah pulls his shorts back on and hops onto the table with his stomach down and his calves exposed.
âI just thought,â he continues. âFinally, my Kenny is going to realize Iâm the guy for her. After all these years and all this tension, it only took a two-run homer for her to open her eyes.â
Kennedyâs voice has no inflection. âThereâs no tension.â
Isaiah smirks, looking over his shoulder at her. âBaby, thereâs tension. You could cut it with a knife. Youâll see one day, Kenny. Youâre gonna want a real man, and Iâm a real man.â
Kennedyâs elbow digs into Isaiahâs right calf.
âOh, holy fuck!â he screams, biting into the padded table to muffle the sound. He lets out a strangled whimper, his voice cracking. âKenny! Kenny!â
âThatâs it, baby. Let it out like a real man.â
The entire room is in hysterics as my egotistical brother melts into the table, squirming to get away from her. âYou like hurting me?â he asks, sitting up and getting out of her reach. âLittle do you know I like pain. Some might even call me a masochist in the bedroom.â
Kennedy is trying her hardest to hold back her smile. Theyâve worked together for three years and my brother has tried his best to get her in his bed. It hasnât worked. Though, the girl used to have a diamond on her left ring finger, and this season she doesnât, so who knows, maybe thatâs reignited his determination.
âIf you like pain so much, get back on this table.â She pats the cushion.
âKenny, youâve had a long day. Iâm good. I donât want you working too hard.â
She laughs, shaking her head and walking away. âWimp.â
My doctor continues to stretch out my throwing arm as I speak to my brother. âYouâre going to drive her to quit one day.â
âNah,â Isaiah says, his voice growing louder as he walks to my table, looking down at me. âSheâs in love with me. She has absolutely no idea, but she is. And clearly, Iâm in love with her.â
âClearly. Since you flaunt a new girl in your bed every night while staying in the same hotels as her.â
Isaiah pops his shoulders. âWe have an understanding.â
I chuckle.
âIâm surprised you stayed for PT. I figured youâd be rushing home to get Max away from the hot nanny.â
âYeah, well, Iâm trying to work on loosening the reins per Millerâs request.â
âWeâre taking requests from Miller now? Interesting.â
âSheâs not so bad, I guess.â
Isaiahâs brows shoot up, a mischievous smirk on his lips. âSheâs not so bad, huh? Who are you and whereâs my overbearing big brother?â
I use my free hand to flip him my middle finger.
âYou know, I was thinking, maybe I should come over tonight. Make sure Miller is okay. If she doesnât like your house, she can stay at mine.â
Kennedy walks by, shaking her head.
âAs a friend,â Isaiah quickly adds for her to hear. âAs a friend, Kenny!â
âYouâre an idiot and sheâs not staying at my house.â
âBut Maxâs nannies have always lived in your house.â
âAnd Maxâs other nannies didnât have a dad they could crash with who lives thirty minutes away.â
They also didnât look like Miller, talk like Miller, or have me wanting to flirt back with them every time they open their damn mouth. Additionally, they didnât have my throwing hand putting in extra work while in the shower because flashes of her thick thighs and green eyes wonât leave my fucking daydreams.