The Right Move: Chapter 9
The Right Move (Windy City Series Book 2)
âWhat the fuck is a meet cute?â I take a seat on the couch in my living room, projecting my voice to be heard through Indyâs bedroom wall and her blaring music.
âItâs the way a couple meets. Itâs usually a charming story about an accidental run-in or how two dogs wound their leashes up around their ownersâ legs, forcing them to meet face-to-face.â
Iâm thankful Indyâs in her room with the door closed so she canât see the slight tug on my lips. Custom-fitted suit, cuff links, and a Rolex look a bit out of place paired with the stupid smile Iâm wearing over my twenty-seven-year-old roommate referencing 101 Dalmatians.
âI guess if anyone asks how we met, we tell the truth,â I decide. âYou came to my apartment crying then drooled over how amazing I looked as I stood shirtless in my kitchen. Then you threw up all over my shoes. Is that cute enough for you?â
One tune shifts to another, but in the break between songs, Indy asks, âHave I reminded you of how much you suck today?â
âOnly twice.â
Thereâs a subtle comfortability between us now, most likely because I have to trust her enough to fake our relationship and vice versa. Unluckily for us, weâve only seen each other in passing this week between her travel schedule and mine, so weâre left nailing down our relationship story five minutes before leaving for the fall banquet.
She projects her voice past the wall. âHow about you saw your sisterâs best friend from afar and instantly knew she was the one. I continually rejected you, because of course I did. But you followed me around like a lost puppy until I caved and gave you a pity date.â
âSo much for a realistic storyline.â
âI think most people would buy it.â Her bedroom door opens. âWhat do you think?â
Lilac-painted toes and white strappy heels are the first thing I see as she steps into the living room. My admiring eye trails the never-ending path of her golden legs, though only one is fully on display tonight thanks to the slit falling dangerously high on her thigh. Shimmering satin paints her body in a bright pink, and I donât understand the mechanics of it all, but the dress stays perfectly in place by a single strap across one shoulder.
I wonder how quickly itâd pool at her feet, revealing whatâs underneath, if it slipped off that slope.
âRyan.â
âHmm.â I force my eyes up to meet hers.
âI asked, what do you think?â She holds her hands out, gesturing to herself.
Jesus Christ, get it together.
Nodding, I stand from the couch, smoothing out my suit. âYou look lovely, Blue.â
âYou look lovely, too.â
My chest heaves. âI was going for intimidating, regal, and suave.â
She takes a step towards me, and between her natural height and the added inches from her heels she almost meets me eye to eye. âWeâll work on that for next time.â
It takes all my willpower to keep my hands at my side when all they want to do is rest on those hips. I can only imagine how cool the satin would feel against my palms, how small she would feel under my touch. Sheâs utter perfection, feminine and beautiful, but weâre roommates and sheâs my sisterâs best friend, and the only touching that should be done is while prying eyes are watching us. Only while prying eyes are watching us.
Her matching lilac fingernails find my tie as she straightens me out and I canât help but watch her work. Her eyelids are shimmering, her cheeks are painted rose, and her lashes are darker than usual. Maybe itâs my angle, but theyâre the perfect frame for her whiskey brown eyes as she fixates on my tie.
âYou did a good job on your makeup.â
Her head snaps up, brows creased in confusion.
I motion towards my own face. âYour makeup. It looks pretty on you.â
âThatâs a weird thing to say.â
âWhy?â
âBecause youâre supposed to say you like me natural or something to that extent. Thatâs the typical opinion of the male species.â
âWell, what can I say? Iâm not like other guys.â
She catches onto the mocking tone of the cliché phrase as she rolls her eyes and releases a subtle laugh. âYouâre funny sometimes, Shay.â
âDo you like your makeup? Did you spend time on it?â
She keeps her stare on my tie and not on me. âYes.â
âExactly. So, I think you should know you did a good job on it.â
Those rose-painted cheeks flame. âThank you.â
âHow tall are you?â I keep my words low because sheâs only inches from my lips.
âFive-nine, and no, Iâm not going to change into shorter heels.â
âWhy would I ask you to do that?â
Sheâs done straightening my tie, but her hands are lingering, fingers pretending to work. âBecause Iâm only a couple inches shorter than you right now.â
âI donât mind.â
Looking down, I watch those flaming cheeks ignite once again. At this rate, I shouldâve warned her not to wear blush at all tonight.
âWe should go.â She takes off to the door, grabbing her tiny purse on the way.
âYour jacket,â I remind her.
She turns with attitude, showing off that shiny pink dress. âIâm not taking one. Beauty is pain, and this outfit needs its moment.â
It took the entire drive for Indy to stop shivering thanks to the short walk from my apartment to the town car. I offered her my jacket, but she refused, claiming if sheâs going to be photographed on my arm then itâs going to be in this dress. I donât blame her because goddamn, this dress, but Iâm going to come off like an asshole allowing my date to freeze in the Chicago evening temperatures.
âYou ready?â I ask her as we pull up to the swanky hotel hosting the fall banquet. And though the question is directed at Indy, Iâm internally asking myself the same thing.
Besides the favor-date last year, I havenât been photographed with a woman since I moved to Chicago, and now Iâm regretting pulling Indy into this madness. My life is forever on display, and I hate it. Anonymity is rare and Iâm about to take hers away.
âYeah, I think so.â Her words are breathy, fogging the back window as her eyes stay glued to the hoard of photographers right outside.
An image of Stevie flashes through my mind. I couldnât protect her from the scrutiny of the press last spring, and I vividly remember the mental toll it took on her. She was a normal girl and I kept her out of the limelight the best I could, but once word got out that Evan Zanders had a girlfriend, her life was upended for weeks.
And Iâm intentionally about to do that to her closest friend.
Although, I doubt speculation over my dating life would be as big of a deal as it was for Zanders. Iâm not a playboy. Iâm not flashy. Iâve never flaunted my single life the way he used to, but itâs still too risky.
âHarold, turn around,â I project to my driver. âBack home, please.â
Indyâs head snaps to me. âWhat are you doing?â
âI canât let you go out there with me.â Fidgeting, I run my palms down my thighs as I wait for Harold to pull out of the lineup and get us back home.
Indyâs hand settles on mine in an easy move, unthinking. As if weâve touched and comforted one another hundreds of times in the past. âWhatâs wrong?â
I stare at where weâre connected, her hand small in comparison to mine. And even though sheâs big and bold in spirit, sheâs soft. She has feelings. A lot of them.
âYouâre a normal person, Blue.â
Her lip quirks. âVery observant tonight, Shay.â
âBeing normal is special. I wonât be the reason you lose your privacy. Especially over something as trivial as a fake date.â
My driver turns the wheel to get back on the main road.
âDonât you dare drive.â Indyâs words are harsh and commanding, causing Haroldâs nervous stare to meet mine in the rearview mirror.
Heâs been my driver for four years and Iâve never seen him so quickly shift loyalties than in this moment as the blonde at my side shoots him commands.
She turns to me, that sinful slit inching its way over and taunting those golden legs. âI get that you want to be left alone, and youâre worried about me.â She pats my chest. âCute, by the way, but I like people. Iâm excited about this. Youâre not forcing me. I want to go.â
âIndyââ
âWhat are you worried about? Sure, there might be a few headlines and my name might get released, but who cares? Itâll last a day, maybe two. When they deep dive into my life theyâll find out I go to trivia, I cross-stitch in my free time, and I read dirty books. No one cares about me. Iâm not you, Ryan. Itâs you they worship. So, please, let me go be a social butterfly because Iâm starved for attention.â
Her eager brown eyes lighten with humor.
âYou cross-stitch?â
âProudly.â
âYou grandma.â She smiles at that, matching the now relaxed grin on my lips. âAre you sure?â
âI didnât shave and moisturize every inch of my body to go back home. Yes, Iâm sure.â
Making eye contact once again, I offer a small nod of approval to Harold.
Once we pull up, my door on the street side is opened. I step out, rebuttoning my suit as flashes illuminate the dark sky. My name is yelled, cameras are blinding, but I stay on task. Rounding the car to Indyâs side, I stop the doorman when his hand finds the handle. âIâve got it.â
He gives a polite nod and steps back with his hands folded behind him.
I open Indyâs door by only a fraction, giving myself a moment to check on her and make sure sheâs truly okay with this before subjecting her to the entire world. Sheâs wearing an eager smile on those heart-shaped lips and her brown eyes are shining with excitement.
I dread these nights when I find them on my calendar, and she couldnât be more stoked.
The photographers and paparazzi behind me are relentlessly trying to get a shot, but Iâm not worried about impressing or convincing them. We arenât doing this for them. I just need to make sure weâre on our A-game by the time we inevitably run into Ron Morgan.
Indy puts her hand in mine, one white heel finding the ground as she glides out of the car with so much grace and polish, those previous notions and lack of concern go up in flames.
Because with how perfect she looks tonight, no one is going to believe sheâs mine.
Cameras explode with light as we step onto the carpet leading to the hotel. Indyâs fingers link with mine in the most natural way, but I donât know how the fuck to do this. I didnât think this through. Typically, I find myself sprinting to get inside and away from the fanfare, but I canât exactly hurry Indy along when sheâs wearing those heels and commanding everyoneâs attention the way she is now.
She floats along as I follow, stiff as a board and uncomfortable beyond belief. Clearly, the girl is stunning, but the perfect show sheâs putting on tonight is different than the version I get at home.
Iâm not sure how to take that.
âRyan Shay, a photo!â
âOver here!â
âRyan, over here!â
My date stops on the carpet, pulling me to a halt with her.
âWhat are you doing?â I ask.
She smiles at the crowd, speaking behind her teeth. âLoosen up and pose with me.â
I turn towards the collection of photographers as she puts a hand on my chest. âI donât pose,â I say quietly enough for no one else to hear.
âYou want to sell this? Well, running inside doesnât exactly sell this.â
Sheâs right. Ron already thinks Iâm lying. If I bring a date who I claim is my girlfriend and only show her off for a few moments in front of him, heâll know.
Standing stiffly, I smile, allowing Indy to lean into me.
âPut your arm around me.â
âNo.â
âRyan,â she warns behind that sparkling smile. And how does she speak so clearly behind her teeth? She should be a damn ventriloquist. âYouâre not going to burst into flames from touching a woman. Put your goddamn arm around me.â
Inhaling deeply, I swing my arm behind her, placing my palm at a respectful heightâon her shoulder blade.
âLower.â
Lower shoulder blade.
I can feel the annoyance flaring off her body as she reaches behind her, finding my hand and curving it around her waist. She presses her body into my chest and sells it.
How is she so fucking good at this?
âKiss me,â she quietly mutters. âCheek. Forehead. I donât care.â
âAbsolutely not.â
âKissââ
I hold my hand out to the crowd in a swift wave. âThank you, guys. Have a great night.â
Keeping her hand in mine, I pull Indy towards the hotel, needing to get the fuck out of here.
She sighs. âWe have so much work to do.â
One more hour.
Put on the bullshit Ryan Shay smile for one more hour. Be basketballâs shining golden boy for one more hour. All eyes are on me for one more hour, then I can go home and relax.
Iâve internally repeated those sentences for the last twenty minutes as Indy and I worked the room, greeting season ticket holders, upper management, and saying hello to guys I know who play for the other major league teams in the city.
Another random man pats my back as he walks by. âGreat game last night, son.â Iâve seen him at events, heâs a wealthy fan, and Iâm sure he paid a pretty penny to be at this one tonight.
A small tip of my head. âThank you, sir.â
Indy turns to stand directly in front of me once heâs out of earshot. âWhy are you so tense? Youâre allowed to smile, you know.â She puts her hands on both shoulders, pushing them down. âChill out and letâs have fun.â Her eyes are sparkling with excitement as she takes in the room around us.
âI donât chill out when Iâm at these kinds of things.â
âWhy not?â
Because I donât trust anyone.
But before I can answer, ironically, one of the few people I do trust catches my attention across the room, making his way to my date and me.
âRyan Shay!â he says in excitement, putting his hand in mine and swinging his other over my shoulder. âI canât believe I caught you at one of these things before you slipped out.â
âGood to see you, Kai.â
Kai Rhodes is a good guy and one hell of a baseball player. Starting pitcher for the Windy City Warriors, Kai signed one of the biggest contracts in MLB history last season when his free agency brought him to Chicago. We share the same agent who got him set up with an apartment in my building, and I canât explain exactly why I like him so much, but I do.
Thereâs not a bad bone in his body, and I think my soft spot for him is due to the massive shift his life has taken over the last couple months and how well heâs stepped up and handled his responsibilities. The guy could be out partying every night, getting away with any and every thing, but instead, heâs at home taking care of his son as a single dad.
âAnd who is this?â Kaiâs eyes linger on the woman at my side. Not in a creepy way, but in a respectful youâre one of the most beautiful women Iâve had the pleasure to lay eyes on way.
I said I liked him, but if he doesnât take his eyes off her soon, I have no issue retracting my statement.
Unfortunately, weâre close enough friends that I canât exactly call dibs by referring to Indy as my girlfriend.
âThis is my roommate, Indy.â I gesture towards her, possessively keeping a hand on the small of her back.
He takes her hand, shaking it, his eyes twinkling like he just found the future mother of his child. âIâm Kai, but you can call me Ace.â
âAce, huh? Whatâs with the nickname?â
âAlways been the best pitcher on the team. Iâve got good hands. The right touch. In case you were curious.â
And those good hands are still holding on to my fake girlfriendâs.
âOkay, that seems like enough of a handshake there, buddy.â I separate them, putting my body slightly in front of Indyâs and out of his eyeline.
Kai is basically a golden fucking retriever with his obvious good looks, black-rimmed glasses, and charming smiles. I donât need him showing Indy those smiles especially when I donât give her enough of mine.
He chuckles. âGot it.â
And itâs clear he does. What exactly, even Iâm not sure, but he knows sheâs off-limits.
âHow long are you here?â
âJust long enough to cover my contractual obligations.â He shakes his head. âI gotta get home to release the nanny.â
âI thought you fired the last one?â
âI did. I hired another one, who Iâll probably fire soon too.â
âYou have a kid?â Indyâs voice bursts with excitement.
âA son,â Kai beams. âMax. Heâs eight months old.â Pulling out his phone like the proud dad he is, he scrolls through the endless pictures.
I donât blame him. Max is one of the cutest kids I know.
âYou donât have a kid. You have a baby.â Indyâs tone switches to soft and sweet, her smile beaming as she looks through Kaiâs phone.
âYeah,â he sighs. âAnd heâs looking for a mom.â
âJesus Christ.â I huff out a laugh. âTry to be a little more fucking subtle why donât you.â
The 6â4â baseball player wears a not so innocent grin.
Indyâs brows instantly furrow. âWhereâs his mom?â
And because I know how emotional she is, sheâs about two seconds away from glass-covered eyes, knowing thereâs a baby boy out there without his mom around.
Kai pats me on the shoulder. âYour roommate here will be happy to fill you in, Iâm sure. Iâve gotta sneak out of here. How much longer youâve got?â
We both look around the room. âAn hour at best.â
âYouâre better than me.â Kai turns back to the woman at my side. âIndy, it was a pleasure to meet you. Make sure our boy over here has some fun, will ya?â
And with that, I watch Kai slip out the side door without being noticed and I couldnât be more envious of the guy.
âRyan Shay, do you have an actual friend?â I donât respond to the dig but notice Indy watching his back. âSo, whatâs with baseballâs Clark Kent?â
Dark Hair. Dark-rimmed glasses. Tall. He fits the bill. I look for any interest in Indyâs expression, but she just seems genuinely curious.
âHe and I share an agent. He moved here last spring then found out his ex had his baby when she dropped him off at Kaiâs doorstep and skipped town.â
âWait, Max really doesnât have a mom?â
I roll my eyes. âDonât let him fool you. Kai is happy to be doing this without her. And Max could have any mom he wants. Multiple moms, but Kai is protective. Heâs pretty much the nicest fucking guy in the world as long as youâre not the current nanny. Heâs firing them every other day, but other than that, theyâre good.â
âWhat the hell kind of woman could leave their baby boy like that?â Indyâs chin trembles before she looks over my shoulder and sucks in a sharp breath. âHold that thought. Itâs showtime, boyfriend.â
Her forced smile beams to who Iâd assume is my GM. Inhaling a deep breath, I turn around.
âMr. Morgan.â I hold out my hand for his.
âShay.â My General Manager shakes my hand before motioning to the woman at his side. âYou know my wife, Caroline.â
âOf course. Good to see you, Mrs. Morgan.â I turn to Indy with my hand hovering, not sure what amount of touching is appropriate or believable, so I end up patting her upper arm a couple of times like a middle schooler afraid to catch cooties. âThis is my girlfriend, Indy.â
Indy stares at me blankly and we donât know each other too well, but her look is unmistakable. You suck at this. You have no idea what youâre doing. But then thereâs the Indy spin on it and I internally add, are you really that afraid of girls?
She forces a smile back on her face, turning back and holding her hand out to shake Carolineâs. âSo lovely to meet you.â
âYou as well.â
Iâve always liked Caroline. Sheâs sweet and brings Ronâs intimidating edge down a few notches. Guy turns into putty when sheâs around.
âI love your dress,â Indy compliments.
âI feel the same about yours. This pink is so much fun.â
The two women fall into comfortable conversation, which I attempt to focus and join in on, but Iâm too distracted by the penetrating stare coming from the man who signs my paychecks.
Ron watches me before his eyes bounce to the gaping space between my date and me. Clearly, heâs not impressed, and my body language is practically screaming that Iâve never touched this woman outside of a hug or small innocent gesture.
Is it hot? It feels really fucking hot in here. Pulling at my collar, I try to loosen it, but Ronâs disapproving gaze is burning me up. This little stunt isnât even about faking it in order to get him to approve of me anymore. Itâs about getting out of this colossal lie I created, unscathed.
The man spends a good amount of the teamâs budget on my salary and Iâve yet to bring him to the playoffs. How much longer is he willing to invest in me? At what point is he going to gamble with a younger guy who might be a diamond in the rough, but cost him a whole lot less? If he finds out this is some elaborate scheme to get him to like me, I canât imagine that option being too far off.
Indyâs smile is radiant and warm as she converses with Caroline, and she doesnât look at me or break away from the conversation sheâs having, but she pulls my hand away from my collar and laces her fingers through mine, holding my hand.
âDid you go to the game last night?â Caroline asks.
âI couldnât.â Indy crosses her other arm over her body, holding my single hand with both of hers. Sheâs effortless and luminous and so fucking good at this. âI was traveling for work, but I watched it on TV. Heâs amazing.â
Wait. She watched from her hotel room?
âDo you enjoy your job? Flying the Raptors around. That sounds fun.â
âI love my job, but when Iâm on the road, I miss home.â She smiles up at me and itâs soft and loving, but I know itâs not real. I know this is all pretend, but fuck, Iâd be lying if I said that didnât do something to my insides.
âAny chance youâre in town next Thursday?â Caroline asks the woman at my side. âWe were supposed to have dinner with Ethan and Annie this weekend, but last minute, Ron was invited to speak at his alma mater. Weâre headed to Hanover tomorrow, but if you two can join us next week, thatâd be wonderful.â
âHanover? As in Hanover, New Hampshire?â Indy asks, turning towards Ron. âDid you attend Dartmouth?â
His brows lift. âI did.â
She nods approvingly. âYou seem like an Ivy League man.â
Thereâs a faint, almost indistinguishable tug at Ronâs lips, but for a man like him, itâs equivalent to a full-tooth grin.
Whatever Indy wants, she can have. I canât even begin to list all the ways I owe her for tonight.
âThat was my dream school.â
My neck almost snaps with how quickly I turn to look at her before remembering Iâm her live-in boyfriend who should know these things.
âItâs a tough school to get into. Low acceptance rate.â
âYes, thatâs true.â Indyâs radiant smile falters, but she recovers so quickly I may have imagined it.
At this moment, Iâm realizing how much I donât know about this woman and how much I wish I did.
She turns back to Caroline. âIâm sorry. Huge conversation shift. I am in town next Thursday and we would absolutely love to have dinner with you two.â
There are no scowls or hard lines on Ronâs face besides the ones permanently etched in his skin from a constant state of disappointment. But this is the softest Iâve seen him look and itâs because of Indy.
Though, she is being more formal than the chaotic girl I found crying in my apartment, and I hope she knows she doesnât have to fake more than our relationship here.
âSheâs lovely, Shay,â Ron says to me and itâs the first time Iâm involved in the conversation.
Awareness floods me. Indy has been carrying this with grace and confidence, meanwhile Iâve been standing as stiff as a board, my fingers splayed wide with tension while Indyâs are effortlessly curled around mine.
âHow did you two meet?â he continues.
Shit. We talked about this. We knew this would come up, but we never decided.
âWeââ Indy and I begin at the same time, but I pause and let her continue because I trust her enough to get us through this.
âWe were introduced through his sister.â
Perfect. Simple. To the point.
She looks up at me and I can only hope she can read my appreciation.
âOh, I see that look,â Caroline mews. âYou two lovebirds. Thereâs more to the story, isnât there?â
She has no fucking clue.
âThere is,â I tell her, clearing my throat because itâs the first time Iâve really spoken in God knows how long. I slide my arm around Indyâs waist, pulling her into my side, and when I speak, I keep my eyes locked on hers. âBut we like to keep the details between us.â
Indyâs brown eyes shine with relief as I finally get one thing right tonight.
âYou two are utterly adorable. Indy, Iâm looking forward to seeing you at dinner next week. Weâre doing something a little different.â
âI canât wait. It was so wonderful to meet you.â She leans her head on my shoulder.
âShay.â Ron puts his hand out to shake mine and a bit of that disbelief and distrust has washed away. Heâs still skeptical, clearly, but he seems as if heâs questioning the possibility of this being legitimate instead of outright believing itâs a lie.
As they walk away, my chest deflates with a much-needed exhale. âYou were incredible, Blue.â
âAnd you were terrible. We have so much work ahead of us if Iâm going to even consider taking you to that wedding.â
âYou know you can be yourself while doing this, right? You donât have to be so poised and perfect. Theyâll like you regardless.â
She pops her shoulders. âIâm used to playing the doting girlfriend who always has the right thing to say. That was almost second nature.â
âI canât believe youâre still here.â Ethan sets another glass of champagne in front of his wife, Annie, as he speaks to me. âThis is the longest Iâve ever seen you at a work event.â
âThatâs because heâs got a stunning girlfriend to show off.â Annie motions her flute in Indyâs direction.
I find Indy by the bar, holding court, surrounded by a few of the guys from the Raptors. Sheâs wearing that infectious smile, those kind brown eyes, that confident body-language. And Iâm suddenly aware that she works with these men every time sheâs on the road.
God, they must love her.
Indy wasnât lying. She really is a social butterfly and I find myself a bit envious at her ability to be so open.
âItâs not real, Ann.â
âI know, I know,â she brushes off her husband. âBut a woman could dream. Imagine Ryan having a real girlfriend. Iâd be in heaven having someone at team events instead of the flavors of the week the rest of your teammates rotate through.â
âSorry to crush your dreams, Annie.â I smile into my whiskey glass, taking a swig. âSpeaking of staying out late, you two are out past ten. Parents gone wild.â
âWe have an overnight babysitter.â
âAnd a hotel,â Ethan adds with a suggestive brow wag.
âSo, daughter number four in nine months. Got it.â
âHereâs hoping.â Ethan holds up his beer bottle in a cheers.
Annie smacks him in the chest. âAbsolutely not.â
âRy, have you planned team dinner yet?â Ethan asks.
I lean back in my chair, casually sipping my whiskey. Of everyone on my team, Ethan is my closest friend and the guy I feel most myself around.
âWhat do you mean?â
âTeam dinner,â he repeats. âTeam captain plans team dinner every other month. And weâre almost a month into the season.â
âWait. Thatâs a thing? I thought we went to your house every other month because your mom is an amazing cook.â
Annie and Ethan share a laugh. Ethanâs parents came to the states before he was born, and his mom would cook up a storm of authentic Korean dishes every month for the team to gather around their table and share a meal. She even taught me how to prepare my own kimchi last season. Itâs the one outing I genuinely look forward to.
âNo, man. Thatâs part of your duties as the new team captain.â
âWell, fuck. Canât we keep doing it at your house? I need Mrs. Jeongâs cooking.â
âI think itâd go a long way with the guys if you planned something yourself. Itâd be good for them to see who you are outside of basketball.â
âWhat are you talking about? Iâve played with some of these guys for four years.â I find a group of my teammates gathered around a high-top table, shooting the shit, and laughing with each other. âThen thereâs Dom who Iâve played with since college. They know me.â
âThey know the best point guard in the league. They know the guy who holds the record for the most assists in a single season, but they donât know anything about you. Youâre in charge now, man. Youâve got to connect with them off the court.â
âYou sound like Ron.â
âWell, maybe he wasnât that far off. You want to prove him wrong? Team dinner is your first opportunity.â
The idea of allowing fourteen guys into my apartment for dinner causes my skin to crawl. Ethan has been over a few times and Dom has stopped by here and there, but the rest of the guys, they havenât been in my space. I havenât allowed them to.
No one besides Indy.
âYouâre still welcome to come over anytime for my mother-in-lawâs cooking,â Annie offers. âAnd bring that cute fake girlfriend of yours when you do.â
âThat secret stays between us three,â I remind them. âNo one else can know. I canât risk one of the guys slipping up and Ron finding out.â
Annie motions as if she were sealing her lips and locking them up without saying a word.