Love Redesigned: Chapter 44
Love Redesigned (Lakefront Billionaires Book 1)
Despite my best attempts at distracting Dahlia from our current situation, I find her getting lost in her thoughts numerous times throughout the night. I hate to see her spiraling, but there isnât a lot I can do while trapped in a jail cell.
I know she regrets admitting she is falling in love with me. Just like I know she plans on fighting me every step of the way until either she accepts the truth or I give up.
Words will only get me so far, so instead of making her a promise she wonât believe anyway, I keep quiet and hold her tight against me until Roberts returns.
The deputy takes his sweet time walking over to us, only to stop in front of the door and turn toward Dahlia. âBen told me about the prank you had planned. Sorry I ruined it.â
The asshole doesnât sound the least bit sorry.
âWhat prank is he talking about?â I ask her.
She rises from the bench and stretches her legs. âA stupid one.â
Roberts leans against the bars. âDahlia here planned on having you thrown in the back of a cruiser and dropped off at your motherâs house with the sirens on so all the neighbors would make a fuss.â
Although my mother would have happily filmed the whole thing, I would have died of embarrassment before making it up the driveway.
He shrugs. âToo bad I ruined Strawberry Sweetheartâs plan.â
Dahliaâs cheeks flush.
âDonât call her that,â I snap.
His lips curl. âDid I strike a chord?â
I force my mouth shut.
Dahlia stares at me for a solid ten seconds without blinking. âStrawberry Sweetheart?â
My hands curl by my sides.
She frowns. âMy contact name on your phone doesnât stand for Satanâs Spawn, does it?â
Mierda. No wonder she is hesitant about falling in love with me if she thinks her contact information on my phone means that.
Roberts unlocks the door with a special sparkle in his eyes. âYouâre both free to go, although Iâm not sure you will feel that way once you see your mothers.â
âGracias por eso, pendejo,â I mutter under my breath.
Gracias por eso, pendejo: Thanks for that, dick.
Dahlia drags her feet behind me as Roberts leads us through the station. She prolongs the inevitable by asking to use the restroom and grabbing a drink of water, which only excites Roberts more.
âGood luck.â He walks back to his desk, where he can watch our mothersâ reactions with glee.
Dahlia cringes at the expression on her motherâs face as we walk up to them. âMami.â
âNot here,â she hisses before walking outside. Itâs still dark, which means we couldnât have spent too long in the cell, although it sure felt like forever.
Dahlia follows behind her mother with slumped shoulders while mine locks elbows with me and whistles.
â¿En la camioneta de tu papá? ¿En serio?â
âMa.â
âI didnât think you had something like that in you.â
I trip over my feet.
She swats my arm with a laugh. âItâs okay. That truck has seen a lot of miles over the years, so Iâm not one to judge, although itâs a good thing you redid the whole interior.â
A full-body shudder rolls through me as we walk outside to find Rosa raising her arms in the air and whisper-shouting while Dahliaâs eyes drop to her boots.
âI raised you better than that.â
¿En la camioneta de tu papá? ¿En serio?: In your dadâs truck? Seriously?
Dahlia flinches.
âI expect something like this from your sister, but you? Nunca en mi vida.â
âPerdón, Mami.â
âThe whole town is going to know about this by tomorrow morning.â
Dahlia looks as excited about the idea as I probably do.
Rosaâs arms flail. âWhat will I say when Father Anthony asks how I feel about my daughter going to hell for premarital sex?â
âDo me a favor and ask him if the weather is hot all year round so I can plan my outfits accordingly.â
âDahlia Isabella Muñoz! ¡No empieces conmigo!â
My mom nudges me. âLetâs go save Dahlia before she reconsiders moving back here.â
A little too late for that after her call about Archer.
âRosa!â My mom claps her hands together. âLetâs relax. Theyâre kids. Itâs not like we can expect them to know any better.â
âKids? I had Dahlia when I was her age.â
âAnd you did such a good job raising herâthis little incident with the truck aside.â My mother wraps an arm around her childhood friend and steers her toward her car. I bet she will talk Rosa down from her tirade in two minutes flat.
I loop my arm around Dahliaâs waist and lead her to the sidewalk instead of my motherâs car. âWhat do you say we walk
Nunca en mi vida: Never in my life.
¡No empieces conmigo!: Donât start with me.
back to the truck instead?â
Her gaze swings from my momâs car to me a few times while she gnaws on the inside of her cheek. âOkay.â
Dahlia remains quiet as we walk toward the diner. I only last sixty seconds before breaking the silence. âDid your mom actually believe you were saving yourself for marriage?â
âIf she didâwhich Iâm almost positive was the caseâitâs safe to say she doesnât anymore.â
I flinch. âSheâs going to hate me.â
âProbably. You are the man who stole her virgin daughterâs ticket to heaven.â
âPretty sure you earned yourself a one-way trip to hell years ago, but fine, Iâll take the blame for your fall from grace.â
âThis is so embarrassing,â she groans. âWhat will everyone think?â
âThat itâs about goddamn time.â
She stops midstride.
âWe got caught having sex in a parking lot. Itâs not exactly the scandal of the year.â I press my hand against the small of her back and give her a little push.
âNo one knows weâre together.â
âThey will now.â
âJulian,â she pleads, but for what, Iâm not too sure. She wraps her arms around herself. âThis isnât going to work between us.â
âBecause of the long distance or your trust issues?â The comment slips out before I have a chance to rein it in.
Her step falters, along with her breathing.
I rub my face with a curse. âWeâll figure it out.â
Neither one of us says anything else for the remainder of the walk, which gives me time to process our situation.
Did I expect Dahlia to push me away when she realized how she felt about me? Yes, I did, yet Iâm still disappointed to think she would so easily give up on us because of a few logistical problems.
Iâm not the same guy she expects me to be anymore. Iâve changed, and if I have to fight Dahlia every step of the way to prove it to her, then so be it.
By the time we make it to the dinerâs parking lot, a plan has already started forming in my head.
âAre you hungry?â I unlock the truck and open the passenger door.
âNo.â A condensation cloud forms from her long exhale.
I grab her by the hips and lift her into the cab before she has a chance to climb on the step bar.
Once the engine rumbles to life, I blast the heat. âYou should eat something.â
Her nose scrunches. âI will.â
Message received loud and painfully clear.
âIs this your plan, then?â My question packs a bite.
Her brows scrunch. âWhat?â
âPush me away because youâd rather avoid your feelings about us.â
âIâI donât know.â
âI think you do.â
Her nostrils flare. âSince you know everything, why donât you go ahead and say what Iâm thinking?â
âI donât need to be a mind reader to know youâre afraid.â
âIâm not afraid, Julian. Iâm fucking terrified.â
My forehead creases from my furrowed brows.
âI donât want to fall in love with you.â
My ragged breath matches hers.
âI donât want to fall in love with anyone. Period. It nearly destroyed me the last time, and Iâm not sure I could survive that kind of pain again.â Her voice cracks toward the end. âYou deserve someone who trusts you, and Iâm not sure Iâll be able to do that when I canât trust myself.â
The twinge in my chest morphs into full-blown heartache. âI canât take back the pain you went through, no matter how much I wish I could, but I can promise to never hurt you like he did.â
âA little too late for that.â She canât hold my gaze for more than a second.
âDahlia.â I cradle her chin despite the pain lacing through my chest. âIâm not going to give up because you expect me to.â
âBecause you like a challenge?â
âBecause I like you enough to know youâre worth fighting for.â
She stares out the window. âIâm moving back to San Francisco in January for my new show.â
Iâm aware, seeing as I spent the last few hours in a jail cell processing the fact.
But what are you going to do about it?
Somehow, in a short span of time, I went from planning the rest of my life in Lake Wisteria to putting everything on the line for the woman beside me. Because if Dahlia wants to move back to San Francisco, then I plan on going with her, and no amount of cons in the world will stop me.
I reach for her clenched hand. âWhen we break the news to my mom about moving, do me a favor and tell her youâre in love with me. Itâll help soften the blow.â
Her cloudy eyes tug at something in my chest. âYou canât seriously be considering moving.â
âI am.â
âBut what about your company?â
âTurns out Iâd rather build a home with you than a thousand houses by myself.â
She turns away with a sniffle.
I cup her chin and turn her head toward me. âWhat part of Iâm falling in love with you are you not understanding?â
âThe part where you give up your whole life here for me.â
âLife without you is hardly considered a life at all, so Iâm not giving up anything by following you to San Francisco.â
âNo, but by being with me, youâd be giving up the chance at having your own family.â She stares at her lap like it holds the secrets of the world.
âIs that what this is really about?â
Her face remains blank, but the vein in her neck throbs.
Why didnât you consider that sooner?
âYou think Iâll regret being with you because you canât have kids of your own?â
âI know you will because itâs already happened once before.â
âI already told you I donât want to have kids that way.â
She shakes her head. âThis isnât the first time Iâve heard someone tell me that.â
I could find a hundred different ways to tell her I care enough to choose her, but none of them matter unless I find a way to show her.
Pro: She could find my list romantic.
Con: She may reject me anyway after I reveal one of my biggest secrets.
Shut up and show her.
I pull out my phone and open the note-taking app. âHere.â
She grabs it from me and reads over the first few lines of text. âYouâve been working on a pro-con list about me?â
I nod.
âPro: She sucks at chess. Seriously?â Her nose scrunches.
âNot my fault you started every single game with the queenâs pawn opening. Change it up every now and then.â
She returns to the list. âPro: I like her enough to attend Stanford too.â She looks at me for a few seconds without blinking. âYou chose Stanford because of me?â
âYes. You liked California, and I liked you, so it made sense.â
She shakes her head in disbelief. âHow long have you been working on this?â
âSince sometime after you started competing for the Strawberry Sweetheart pageant.â
She blinks. âThat was over a decade ago.â
âIâm aware.â
âBut why?â
âInformed decision-making is my thing.â
She scrolls through the list while mumbling to herself. âThere are things listed here that I donât do anymore.â
I know. Unfortunately, I inherited my appreciation for nostalgia from my mother, and I have never been able to outgrow it, which is the only reason why I could never delete the list no matter how many times I tried.
After a few more minutes, she reaches the bottom of the note. âYou only have one negative.â
Con: She may never love me back.
âLittle by little, your cons annoyingly started making their way over to the pros column.â
Her laugh comes out like a half sob. âThatâs ridiculous.â
âNo, Dahlia, thatâs love.â
âYou agreed to a casual relationship knowing your feelings might never be reciprocated?â Disbelief colors her voice.
âYes.â
âWhy?â
âSome people are worth the risk.â
Her bottom lip wobbles.
âLife without you was a series of pros and cons. Risks and rewards. Black and white with very few shades of gray. But then you came back and flipped a switch inside me, flooding my world with color after a ten-year blackout, and I donât plan on giving that up. Not now. Not ever.â
Tears pool near her lash line.
âYou might not believe my words now, but I wonât stop until you do. So go ahead and try to push me away, but you already know based on our history that I will stop at nothing to prove you wrong.â