P.S. You’re Intolerable: Chapter 36
P.S. You’re Intolerable (The Harder They Fall)
THIS WAS SO FUDGING stupid.
I hated this house.
It was cute and all, and I would always be proud of the work Iâd put into it, but Iâd chosen it with Liam in a whole other life. It didnât feel like home.
Iâd gotten Joey down for the night, but it hadnât been easy. Davida and Raymond stopped by after bedtime with wine and moral support. We were in my pretty living room, a glass of wine into our evening, Ray and Davida on the gross couch, me channeling Joey by lounging on blankets on the floor.
âYouâre being smart,â Davida said, her glass perched at her lips.
âI know.â I buried my face in the blankets, careful not to knock my wineglass over. I was limiting myself to two and I didnât want to spill a drop.
Raymond clicked his tongue. âBeing smart shouldnât look so damn miserable.â He smacked the cushion he was sitting on. âAlso, can you tell me why thereâs a spring up my ass?â
âThat would be due to it being made the same year I was.â Davida lowered her chin, daring us to guess what year that might have been.
I pushed myself upright, sitting cross-legged on my blanket pile. âDo you know what it felt like when Elliot dropped me off at the house to pack my things?â
âWhat, baby?â Ray asked gently.
âLike when my parents had taken me to the airport when theyâd sent me to Mexico. Up until that point, Iâd been unapologetic about what Iâd done.â I curled my lip at the memory of my punk-ass teenage years. I wouldnât say sorry to save my life back then. âBut when the airport came into view, I fell apart. My whole tough, untouchable front crumbled, and I cried like a little baby. I begged and pleaded with them not to send me away. Promised Iâd be better. Iâd do anything they wanted.â
âAw, darling,â Davida breathed softly. âPoor thing.â
âThey still left me. They dropped me off on the curb with two suitcases. Didnât even wait until I got inside.â I swiped a tear from under my eye and cleared my thickly coated throat. âI didnât ask Elliot to let me stay because I was afraid heâd say no. I donât think I could bear for him to drive off without me. I barely survived my parents doing it.â
Silence fell over us, each sipping our wine. Iâd killed the mood, snuffing out any lightness weâd found in each otherâs company.
Davida broke the silence.
âHe wouldnât have said no.â
My eyebrows rose. âYou sound so sure.â
She leaned forward, her arms resting on her knees. âIâve been around the block countless times and have worked for many powerful men. Iâm not an expert, but Iâd say I am able to read them well. Elliot isnât unlike the men Iâve worked for in the past. He has an ego that matches the size of his success and takes his business seriously. Iâve never seen him break from that character, except with you. Around you, heâs aââ She nudged Raymondâs knee. âWhatâs the word the kids say?â
Ray took a delicate sip of his wine then puckered his lips. âSimp,â he pronounced.
âRight.â Davida nodded. âElliot Levy is a simp for you. If youâd told him youâd wanted to stay, he would have bent over backward to make that happen.â
Raymond swirled his wine. âHowever, Davida thinks you did the right thing.â
Sitting up straight, she lowered her wine to her thigh. âCorrection, I said it was the smart thing. That isnât the same as the right thing. Clearly, Kit is miserable. Elliotâs probably in the same state.â
I put my glass down and slumped. âOr heâs glad to have his peace and quiet restored.â
She scoffed. âI doubt that. Since he was sending emails at ten oâclock, Iâm almost certain heâs at the office.â
I covered my face with my hands. âThis isnât making me feel better. I donât want to think about him being miserable.â
âAll right, fine.â Ray smacked his leg. âNo more Elliot talk. Itâs not like you can do anything this late at night. Letâs discuss, in fine detail, the date Davida went on last night.â
With a gasp, I raised my head. âA date? You went on a date and didnât mention it to me? Tell me everything.â
Davida rolled her eyes, acting put upon, but a second later, she spilled every little thing. My serious, no-nonsense friend blushed when describing her good night hug.
Of course, that set off a pang in my stomach because it reminded me of Elliot.
On their way out at midnight, Raymond took me by the shoulders and gave me a long, hard look. âYou know Iâm still pissed you didnât ask to stay with me when you were down and out.â
Davida folded her arms. âI am as well.â
I rubbed my lips together, too emotional to handle any sort of confrontation without tearing up.
âIâI didnât know if we were close enough for me to ask and didnât want to put you in the position to say no.â
Ray gave me a little shake. âWoman, youâre too much. I saw a baby coming out of your vagina. Weâre close.â
My eyes flared. âYou said you didnât look.â
He dropped his chin, brows raised. âOh, I looked. Itâs burned into my brain.â Another gentle shake. âMy point is, take a chance on Elliot. You will always have a backup plan.â
Davida nodded. âI have plenty of room for you and the babe, but youâll never need it.â
Tears of a girl whoâd been unwanted for too many years dripped down my cheeks, and Ray swiped them away with his thumbs as quickly as they fell.
I gave them both a wobbly smile. âI love you guys.â
Ray sighed in exasperation. âNo kidding. Weâre your baby daddiesâand not the deadbeat kind like you-know-who.â
Davida dragged him out of my house, making me promise to get some sleep and think about what theyâd said.
Thinking wouldnât be a problem.
Sleeping without my cuddly, warm, grumpy love? Doubtful.