Bad Cruz(68)
Also, I so didn’t have any extra money for a new skateboard. Was I going to have to take out a loan?
I spun around to turn off the TV, aware Cruz’s eyes were probably focused on my ass. I was still mad at him for hanging out with Rob and calling Gabriella, and frankly, for simply hogging oxygen on a planet where our resources were slowly but surely dwindling.
Note to self: donate to an environmental charity when and if I get my bleep together and pay back my debt.
“Bear said he was hungry, so I offered to make him dinner.” Cruz smiled winningly, undeterred by my less-than-eager reception.
“Good news is Bear is not three anymore and can make his own food.”
“But it’s better when other people make it for you,” Bear pointed out.
“Which reminds me.” Cruz stood up, throwing the joystick on the couch. “I need to check on the pasta sauce and chicken nuggets. Be right back.”
“I’ll come with you,” I volunteered.
We needed to exchange a word or seven.
In the kitchen, I closed the flimsy door behind us, trying to ignore the mouthwatering scent coming from the pot on the stovetop and focusing my gaze on him.
“What the heck, Cruz?”
“You’re not returning my calls,” he explained casually, dipping a finger into a pot full of tomato sauce and popping it into his mouth. He then proceeded to stir the sauce, before moving toward one of the cabinets with a familiarity I should have hated.
“That’s because we said we were done after the cruise.”
“About that. I changed my mind. I don’t want to be done after the cruise.” He moved around my kitchen like he owned the dang place, adding the pasta to the sauce and stirring everything.
“Sadly for you, it takes two to tango.”
“I’ll never tango with you, sweetheart. You’re one of the clumsiest people I’ve ever come across.”
“It’s a figure of speech. I don’t want to be with you.”
“Now, that’s just a flat-out lie, and as a policy, I don’t accept lies. Give me one reason why we shouldn’t continue sleeping together. Make it good.” He ambled to the oven to check on the chicken nuggets.
“I’ll give you a handful, just because I’m generous like that. One—you’re best friends with my ex, with whom I might get into a legal dispute with over our son.”
Cruz pulled the tray with the steaming chicken nuggets from the oven, waving me off. “Calling Rob more than an acquaintance at this point is a stretch. I met him for dinner because my mother invited him. We’re not going to shoot the shit anytime soon, and anyway, it will never go as far as a legal dispute, because Rob knows everyone in town would kill him if he pulled anything shitty.”
I snorted. “Yeah, because I’m Fairhope’s favorite darling.”
“No, but you’re the one who stayed and sucked it up. People’s loyalty lies with you, even if you’re not their choice for citizen of the year. Next reason, please.”
I let out a quick breath. Could it be that simple? “Gabriella. You’re still in contact with her.”
“She calls every now and then. What am I supposed to do, hang up the phone in her ear? So what?”
“She thinks you’re getting back together.”
“I think nudist beaches should be opened for hot people only. So what if she thinks something? It hardly makes it true. Neeeext.”
“Your mother is starting to suspect we’re sleeping together,” I hurried to point out, watching as he set three plates at the round, chipped dining table in my kitchen, inviting himself to stay. “She insinuated as much when we were on the cruise.”
“While you wouldn’t be my mother’s first choice of daughter-in-law, it is not her business who I sleep with or who I choose to live the rest of my life with. Don’t worry your pretty head with things that have nothing to do with you. Now that that’s settled…”
“Wait, I have more!”
He grabbed me by the waist, picked me up, and removed me from blocking the fridge with ease, placing me by the counter and opening the fridge to pull out a bottle of Diet Coke. He set three glasses on the table, too.
“I’m listening.”
“Trinity specifically asked me not to start anything with you. She doesn’t want any wedding complications.”
That made him freeze mid-stride. He turned around slowly, his jaw ticking again as he watched me through narrowed, hawk-like eyes.
“You mean our lives are now being managed by a ditzy twenty-five-year-old who cannot even recognize a class-A douchebag when one asks her to marry him?”
He had a point, but it wasn’t that simple. Trinity was my sister. I couldn’t go against my entire family for a fling.
I swallowed hard.
Cruz set the Coke on the table, making his way toward me with purpose and confidence. I knew Bear could come in any second now, and the thrill of getting caught made my pulse quicken. But it was more than that—I’d missed Cruz.
Every nerve in my body tingled when I thought about Cruz’s hands on me. Again. His big, strong body against mine. He parked his arms on either side of me on the countertop, his lips an inch from mine.
“I’m sick and tired of people telling me what I should and shouldn’t do. How I should and shouldn’t act. I want you, and you want me, and that should be enough. Am I understood?”