Letting Go (Thatch #1)(30)



“Like I said, I really appreciate it.”

“Don’t worry about it, kid.” Hooking his arm around my neck, he walked us into the living room, and his voice dropped to a low whisper when he said, “But I will kill him if you slept with him.”

“Graham!”

“Does that mean you did?”

“No.” I groaned and stepped away from him to go sit on the couch; he just followed. “You and Dad are both ridiculous when it comes to all that. But you can call Janie if you don’t believe me, I stayed with her last night just like I had the entire time I was gone. No reason to kill Jagger.”

“I will.” He said the words like he was trying to make sure I knew how serious he was.

I rolled my eyes and huffed softly. “I know.”

“Okay, you’re sitting down!” Mom said excitedly as she and Dad came into the room. She sat down on the couch opposite Graham and me, and her face lit up. I swear she started bouncing up and down. “Now tell us everything.”

“Mom,” Graham grumbled at the same time Dad complained, “Darcy.”

“What?” she asked, an innocent expression masking the curiosity and excitement that had just been all over her face. “I want to know!”

I let my head fall onto the back of the couch so I was looking up at the ceiling. This was going to be a long and awkward day.

I STOOD THERE hours later with key in hand, just staring at the door in front of me. Before everything had happened, I would’ve unlocked the door and walked right in. But now, well, everything had changed now. I didn’t know if I should knock, if I should knock as I unlocked and opened it, or if I should call Jagger to let him know I was standing outside the warehouse.

I’d told my family as little as possible about the thoughts and feelings I’d sorted through while I was gone and what had happened the night before in the gallery. All while trying to turn the conversation to any other subject whenever Graham and my dad started freaking out over a small detail that they were blowing out of proportion—which was practically the entire time. My mom had still been begging for more details after noticing my evasiveness, and I’d only escaped by saying I’d needed to shower and get to Jagger’s.

Thankfully my brother and dad were still trying to decode certain things I’d said by the time I’d gotten ready and come back down. With my mom acting as the peacekeeper on Jagger’s behalf and mine, I was able to slip out after a quick good-bye without giving my mom the chance to corner me.

And now I was there, staring at the stupid metal door like it had the power of changing everything. Like what I decided to do in the next five seconds would give the wrong message to Jagger. I laughed to myself when I realized minutes had gone by with me just standing there, before finally unlocking the door and letting myself in.

“Jag?” I called out when I didn’t hear music or see any sign of him. “Jagger?”

Shit. I should’ve called. Or knocked. I totally picked the wrong option.

Turning around, I took three steps toward the door before a deep voice stopped me. “Where you going?”

As I looked over my shoulder and up to the loft, a soft smile crossed my face when I saw him leaning over the railing, his hands covered in lingering charcoal, his face and neck covered in smudges.

“You have a little something there . . . well, kind of everywhere.”

He rolled his eyes, but his signature lopsided smile offset the action. “I’m working on it. Are you hungry?”

“A little.”

“Can I take you out?”

My smile widened. “Covered in charcoal?” I teased. “And since when do you have to ask me if we can grab food?”

“Since when do you take off after not being able to find me for half a minute?” he challenged.

I searched for something to say other than the unspoken questions lingering in my mind. How much has changed between us now? What has changed? When nothing came to mind, I simply shrugged. “Apparently since now.”

Jagger watched me for a few seconds, and I knew he was trying to figure out the questions I’d just avoided. With a small nod, he pushed off the railing and took a step back. “Give me a couple minutes and I’ll be ready.”

In all the years since Jagger and I had become friends, I’d never felt awkward while waiting for him at his place. When he’d lived with his mom and Charlie, I’d wait in his room with Ben, or by myself. During college it had been the same. Just like he and Ben had always done with me. There had never really been any privacy among the three of us, and that had continued on after Ben died. But now I was terrified. I didn’t know what he would think if I went up to the loft to wait for him, or what he would think if I didn’t. I didn’t want him to think something might happen if he walked out of the bathroom and found me waiting on his bed, but quickly realized he’d had years to think this and had never acted on it.

It was then I realized I was the one who was making things awkward. Not Jagger. Not the change in our relationship. I, with my fear of the unknown, was making this harder than it needed to be. I knew I couldn’t worry about what might happen between us, or doing or saying the wrong thing. This was Jagger, my best friend and the one guy who knew absolutely everything about me, and had seen me at my worst. He was the guy I’d fallen in love with at some point in my life.

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