Embarrassment or maybe shock flits across Milaâs face as she stares at me with wide blue eyes.
âHey, Grey!â Evelyn wraps her arms around my shoulders in a hug as Mila turns away, studying the chessboard between her and Griffin. âWant to stay for dinner? Itâs nothing fancy, just grilled cheese and tomato soup.â
âYeah,â Hudson says, backing up, encouraging me farther into the apartment.
âHi! Hi, Grey,â Griffin says, standing. He crosses the room with his arms spread, awaiting a hug.
Milaâs gaze drifts after him, watching our interaction with a hint of curiosity before she slips out of her seat to joins us, stopping at Evelynâs side as Griffin pulls me into a firm hug.
âWant to see a new chess move?â Griffin asks, taking a step back.
âWhy donât we pause the game?â Hudson suggests. âYou guys can finish after dinner.â
Griff looks bereft for half a minute before Evelyn asks him to help her make the sandwiches.
âYou got home fast,â I say, turning to Mila.
She doesnât react except for a slight shrug. âI was playing chess with Griff.â
Hudson messes up Milaâs hair by rubbing his palm over her scalp. She winces and ducks before shoving him toward the kitchen and looking at me. âWhat are you doing here?â She absently smooths the strands that Hudson displaced.
I step back to prevent myself from reaching forward to run my fingers through her hair and offer an assurance that would make her roll her eyes. âI called Hudson, and he mentioned he was over here with you guys, so I asked if I could stop by. I have a favor to ask you.â I give her a pointed look, intended to point out Iâd asked her first.
âYouâd get further making a bet with her,â Hudson taunts.
Mila cuts her eyes to him with a silent warning that Hudson laughs off. Slowly, she turns back to me, hesitation heavy on her brow. âWhat kind of a favor?â
âThe booster club is hosting a party this Saturday for the team, and Linus Kemp and Emma will be there. I would appreciate it if youâd come as my date.â
Milaâs eyes flare just slightly before she schools her features. âNo one is going to believe Iâm your date.â
I scoff. âThey might if you can pretend to lower your standards for two hours.â
Steely eyes snap to mine. âIt has nothing to do with standards. You look at me like Iâm diseased when weâre near each other. Have you considered what this will entail? The whole team is going to be there. Nolan. Palmer. Freaking Lenny.â She waves a hand. âThereâs no way this would work.â
âDiseased? You insisted on sleeping on the couch so you wouldnât have to be close to me.â
âBecause I knew you didnât want me there.â
âIâm the one who offered for you to sleep beside me.â
She doesnât say anything. She doesnât have to. Doubt is etched across her face.
âThe team wonât say shit. Trust me. If anyone understands the power of our boosters, itâs Palmer and Nolan. And Lenny will fall into line because as much as he likes to raise hell, he knows the team comes first.â
âTheyâre going to have a full dessert bar,â Hudson adds.
Mila bites low on the inside of her lip, making them almost look pursed. The expression drags my thoughts back to the hotel this weekend when she had done the same subtle action. And like a key turning in a lock, I realize Iâve seen her do this before, hiding her vulnerability behind those squared shoulders and sharp eyes.
âYou love cake.â My comment is too quiet for the others to hear, intended to be a joke before promising her Iâll be on my best behavior to make this easier for her.
She sputters. âI canât wait to hear Emmaâs insults.â She bites the inside of her cheek, surprising me almost as much as it confuses me. Mila is pure confidence and swagger.
âIf she tries to insult you, Iâll deal with it.â
Milaâs eyes flash with another steely look. âI donât need you to defend me.â
I give her a sardonic look. âI wouldnât dream of it.â
Her gaze sharpens, preparing to parry my words and land her own blow.
âIt would be kind of fun for you to come Saturday,â Evelyn says. âWe can eat all the desserts together, and if Emma says one word to you, Iâll accidentally set my plate on her seat before she sits down.â
Mila chuckles, not admonishing her for offering to stick up for her.
âMake sure theyâre all chocolate,â Hudson adds.
Evelyn grins at him, a look that verifies heâs said the right words.
âShould we start the sandwiches, or does the soup need to be warmer?â Griffin asks, turning from where heâs finished buttering a tray filled with slices of bread.
âLetâs wait until itâs a little warmer,â Hudson says.
Mila turns to me. âHow long are we going to carry on this charade?â
âThis is the last time. After this, the boosters will only be interested in meeting with us to offer sponsorships.â
She releases a breath, and her shoulders slowly round. âYouâre lucky two-thirds of my social life is already attending the party.â
I realize thatâs the closest thing to an agreement Iâll receive. âIâll be here at seven.â
She nods her acknowledgment before moving into the kitchen, where she leans against the counter, her back to me as she faces Griffin.
âGrey, what can I get you to drink?â Evelyn asks, opening the fridge and listing off a dozen beverages.
âIâm good with water,â I tell her. âHow can I help?â
âYou can help Hudson set the table if you want.â
Hudson opens the cupboard beside the sink, withdrawing a stack of plates as Evelyn offers me the glass of cold water.
Milaâs voice is animated but too soft to hear over the clang of the plates Hudson sets out and the fan over the stove where the steam curls off the soup.
Griffin belts out a laugh that has Mila grinning. Her eyes are a warmer, darker hue. Iâve learned that Mila, like her eyes, is comprised of multiple shades. She shines the brightest when sheâs around Evelyn, Griffin, and Hudson, specifically during times when she doesnât realize anyoneâs paying attention.
âWhat are you two laughing about?â Evelyn asks.
âI was telling Griff about the icy patch I nearly broke my butt on after your sage advice,â Mila tells her.
Evelyn laughs, turning to look at Hudson. The two share a look that has jealousy slinking into my chest with so much intensity itâs a sharp breath. The way they often look at one another like theyâre each otherâs reason for breathingâexistingânearly eclipses my reasons for putting the entirety of my focus on school and football.
âNo! No! No!â Evelyn protests, shaking her head before giggling, shaking me from my thoughts. âI warned you. I said it was slick.â
âYou said I should have worn different shoes,â Mila objects.
Evelyn bends as a second wave of laughter hits her. âBecause it was slippery!â
âSaying I should have worn different shoes doesnât translate to:
.â
Tears have Evelyn wiping her cheeks with the back of her hands as she continues laughing.
Hudson shakes his head and turns to me. âDid you tell Krueger about Emma Kemp?â he asks, referring to our temporary head coach.
I shake my head. âI figured the fewer people involved, the better. I donât want Krueger or anyone else to think I influenced Kemp. I didnât know Emma and had never met her before that damned date.â
âSheâs been around a few times. You probably didnât notice.â
âIâm wondering if that was the only reason he offered me the sponsorship.â
Hudson grimaces. Despite his ease with politics, he still loathes them. âBringing Mila is a solid choice.â
It was his suggestion. While flying home from Orlando, Krueger shared heâs encouraging the boosters to offer more paid sponsorships and to see us as more than just athletes. He insisted we needed to show the boosters other sides of ourselves, balanced, real people with families, relationships, and dreams.
I had already planned to ask Mila, hoping sheâd ride out this lie a little farther with me when Hudson suggested I invite her. His reasons had been her understanding of the game, familiarity with politics and wealth, and how she wouldnât be distracted by the team or the event because sheâd been on red carpets in Hollywood as her fatherâs date.
My reasons werenât half as illustrious.
âI asked around, and Emma sounds like the vengeful type. Donât let Mila get caught in the crosshairs.â
âSheâs jealous of Mila.â
Hudson raises his brows. âI can guarantee you thatâs not what Mila thinks.â
âDid she say something?â I glance to where theyâre assembling and cooking the sandwiches and then at Hudson as he shakes his head.
âNo, and she wonât.â
The memory of her expression when that stranger yelled lewd and hateful comments have my fists clenching with regret.
âAnd Silva. Avoid Silva. I saw him yesterday when I met Krueger, and he is bitter as hell.â
Bitter doesnât come close to describing the man Krueger has been working to find a way to ban from all booster events due to the reckless and rude comments heâs become trademarked for.
âI avoid him like a damn cornerback. Have you heard anything about Peters?â I ask.
Hudson grips the back of a dining room chair and shakes his head. âKrueger says he wouldnât be shocked if he shows up to the event, but so far, he hasnât shared anything about his intentions or whether heâll be well enough to return to the head coach position come spring.â
I sigh. âI hope he takes an early retirement.â The shift of the team without Peters being on the field or in the locker room has been a complete one-eighty. If anyone doubted Petersâ lack of skill and leadership before, they have to notice a difference now that heâs gone. Itâs as though we replaced the weak link.
âThis Saturday, we have to be a unified front and talk about how well Krueger is doing. How the team is happy and thriving, but we need to tread carefully. If it looks like a coup, the boosters could turn on us, and we have one more year.â
I nod. Iâd already considered the risk. My background didnât teach me how to maneuver the system, though, only that I should keep my head down and my nose clean.
Griffin carries a plate piled high with sandwiches to the table while Mila and Evelyn follow him with bowls of soup.
I sit across from Hudson, and Mila sits beside me without so much as a glance.
âOkay, dinner question,â Griffin says, reaching for a small red box from the buffet table behind him.
âWhy donât we wait since we have company,â Mila says. âWe can do it tomorrow before breakfast since youâre sleeping over.â
âItâs for three
people,â Griffin says.
âDinner question?â I ask.
âGriff got them in his stocking for Christmas,â Hudson says, taking one of the sandwiches before serving Griffin and passing me the dish. âTheyâre like icebreaker questions to get to know each other. Things like biggest fear, what animal would you be, what meal would you eat every day, that kind of thing.â
Griffin opens the box and withdraws a small white square. âWhatâs the scariest thing youâve ever done? And why did you do it?â
âIâll go first,â Evelyn says. âMoving to Oleander Springs. Hands down.â
âOver quitting volleyball?â Mila asks.
âI mean, quitting was hard, but it wasnât as scary as leaving almost everything I knew behind.â
âAnd why did you do it?â Griff asks.
Evelynâs cheeks flush as she glances at Hudson, then Mila, and Griff before returning to Hudson with another private look. âBecause home isnât a place. Itâs a personâ
. And you guys are my people.â
Mila scoffs, and Evelynâs cheeks flash red as she glares at her.
âYou want to go next, Griff?â Hudson asks.
âMoving to that place.â He nods several times as he shifts forward and then back with a slow rocking motion. The place was an assisted living facility that Griffin had moved into during our freshman year that nearly led to Hudson quitting football because having his brother living so far away and being unhappy made him miserable. âI had to move there. Dad thought it would help me.â
âThat was hard, huh?â Hudson asks, setting his hand on Griffinâs. âBut you were so brave to try making it work and telling us that you werenât happy.â
Griffin nods, still rocking.
âWhoâs next?â Hudson asks. âGrey?â
âPlaying football for Camden.â
Evelyn balks, even Hudson looks surprised.
âI was a backup option. My high school team was pretty terrible. No one knew about us. I was recruited because my mom won tickets to a Camden game and gave them to my buddy and me. His seat was chosen for the halftime drawing, and he let me go down in his place. They had the field set up with one of those gauntlet scenes they do. I guess the athletic director was impressed because he gave my name to the coaches. They came out and scouted me a couple of times but didnât recruit me until a kid out of Minnesota turned down the scholarship last minute. I didnât know if Iâd live up to the potential.â
âAnd now youâre being scouted by the NFL,â Hudson says. âI suddenly hate our athletic director a little less.â
âHate isnât a nice word,â Griffin tells him.
Hudson nods. âDislike.â
Griffin turns to Mila. âYour turn.â
She blinks and looks away from me. âUm, do you remember how hard it was to pick an apartment this summer?â
Griffinâs shoulders slump. âDo you want to reread the rules?â
She grins. âI remember.â Mila releases a sigh. âAdoption court was the scariest thing Iâve ever done.â She clears her throat. âLike you, Griff, I did it because I had to.â
âWhatâs adoption court?â Griffin asks.
âIt was when Jon and Alex adopted me, and I legally became their daughter.â
Griffin stares at her. âYou had to go to court?â
She nods.
âWhy was it scary?â Griffin asks.
Mila bites that low spot on her bottom lip. âBecause I didnât want to leave.â
âLeave?â Griffin looks perplexed. âWhere would you have gone?â
Mila licks her lips. âBack to Oklahoma.â
âButâ¦â Griffin looks from Mila to Hudson. âI didnât know you were from Oklahoma.â
âYou were only six when I moved in.â Mila leans back in her chair, her voice soft and patient as it is every time she interacts with Griffin.
He blinks at her, trying to process the onslaught of information. âWho would you have lived with in Oklahoma? Your old family?â
âIâm pretty sure that question isnât on the card,â Hudson says.
Griffin shakes his head. âBut I donât understand.â
âItâs complicated,â Mila says.
âGriff,â Hudson says. âThatâs enough.â
âButâ¦â Griff begins.
âJust one question, bud,â Hudson says. âShe answered. Itâs my turn.â
Griffin turns a pleading gaze to Mila and begins rocking again in his seat.
Mila rubs her lips together and then gently tilts her head to the side and swallows, her eyes bright with unshed tears that cause an ache in my chest to form and expand faster than I can blink. âI wanted to live with Jon and Alex,â she says. âIt was just ⦠intense.â
Hudson looks at Mila, wearing his captainâs face as he surveys the situation and how to respond just like he does on the field.
âWhat are we going to do tonight after dinner?â Hudson asks.
Mila points at Griffin. âGriff hasnât finished beating me at chess. Iâm waiting to see the new move, and maybe we can watch .â Itâs Griffinâs favorite movie. Hudson jokes he can recite it.
âAnd make hot chocolate?â Griffin asks.
âA hot chocolate bar,â Mila tells him. âI picked up four kinds of marshmallows and three flavors of hot chocolate.â She looks at Evelyn. âI think Hadleyâs corrupted me.â
Evelyn grins, but I notice a residual sadness in her eyes.
âGriff, did you hear how many flavors of cheesecake Hadley made before New Yearâs? I think there were six varieties.â
âEight,â Hudson says.
The conversation turns to cheesecake and the holidays before jogging to their shared childhood. Stories about their attempts to beat world records, peppered with memories that keep the conversation light and constant. Iâm sure itâs to prevent questions from returning to Milaâs childhood where my own thoughts are stuck as I once again imagine Mila as a child facing uncertainty and inconsistency rather than the confident and independent woman she is, surrounded by wealth and comfort.