Ride Steady (Chaos #3)(153)


“Great.”

“Okay, see you later,” I said.

“Right, Carrie, see you.”

We hung up. I did a lot of texting. I was nearly hyperventilating when I called Joker to let him know I was going out with the girls that night.

Not surprisingly, he thought that was a great idea since he liked me having a life and friends and fun (I left out mention of my tube top) and then he promised me he’d be good hanging with his brothers at the Compound before patrol.

With all this, I was three minutes late getting back to my register.

That had never happened before.

Sharon said nothing.

And I prayed I wouldn’t mess up my drawer because for the rest of my shift, my mind was whirling.

I was off a dollar and seventy-two cents.

That had only happened twice before.

Again, Sharon didn’t say anything.

Then I went home.

* * *

I sat in my car in my good jeans (the only pair I had, post-pregnancy), tube top, spike-heeled black leather booties (pre-divorce and pre-pregnancy, they were designer, cost a fortune, and luckily, my feet had not changed sizes with Travis), and black leather jacket (also pre-divorce and I was happy it still fit me and looked great) and I poked at my phone.

I group texted the girls, Running a little late! Sorry! Hair emergency! Be there soon!

I looked up from the phone and stared at the house.

Okay, I was going to do this.

Time to do this.

Right, just open the door and do this.

My phone rang in my hand and I jumped.

I looked down at it and my heart skipped a beat when I saw it was Tory.

I took the call and put the phone to my ear.

“Tory, is Travis okay?”

“I get it,” she whispered on a sniffle.

Oh no.

This was not happening.

I didn’t ever want to do this, I couldn’t imagine why she was calling me to do this, but right then, I simply couldn’t do it.

“Tory, I’m in the mid—”

“I stole him from you, of course you’d steal him back from me.”

Darn it!

“Really, listen, right now I can’t—”

“And if it wasn’t you, it’d be someone,” she spoke over me. “If he’d leave his wife who’s pretty and sweet and freaking pregnant, what was up for me? This. He told me he wanted space two weeks ago. So since it’s his house, I had to move in with a girlfriend. Tonight, he officially kicked me out.”

Ugh.

But, if Tory was gone, who was looking after Travis while Aaron was at work? And why hadn’t he told his attorney to tell my attorney there was this change in circumstance?

I wasn’t going to get into that with Tory. Unfortunately, I’d have to get into it with Aaron through Angie.

“Okay, I can hear you’re upset,” I told her. “But—”

“Don’t take him back,” she hissed, hiccupped, and kept going, “He’s just going to do it again.”

“I’m not taking him back, Tory. I’m with another man.”

“He said you were getting back together,” she told me, now sounding perplexed. “He said we were through because you were putting your family back together.”

“He lied,” I shared. “But this is between you and him. There is no him and me. When I say I’m with someone else, I’m with him. We’re unofficially living together. And Aaron knows it.”

“That *!” she yelled.

I shook my head. “I know you’re upset and angry, and I’m sorry about that for you. We have an odd relationship, and I can’t say you’ve been my favorite person. You made some choices that affected me in not-so-good ways. But in the end, I got where I wanted to be partially because of them. So I can’t really hold ill will. And because of that, I’ll say right now, it doesn’t feel like it, but you’re better off too. Now you can find someone who’ll be good to you. And Aaron isn’t very good at that.”

“You’re right about that!” she snapped just as my phone buzzed in my hand in the way it did when I had another call.

“Anyway, I’m in the middle of something and have another call coming through. I have to go. But take care of yourself.”

“I’ll start doing that,” she told me sharply. “And he can go f*ck himself.”

“Okay, well… good attitude,” I forced out encouragingly. “Now, I gotta go.”

“Right. Sorry. I don’t even know why I called. It’s uncool. I was just—”

My phone kept notifying me of another call so I interrupted her. “Tory, I have to go.”

“Right. Well… uh… later.”

“’Bye. Good luck,” I replied, took the phone from my ear, dragged down the screen without really looking at it, and put it back to my ear. “Hello?”

“Hey, Riss.”

Aaron.

Why me?

Why?

“Aaron, I—”

“I want you to know I heard you. What you said during our last phone conversation. I know you want me to think on things. I promise I’m doing that. But I’d like you to think on things too. And while you’re thinking, you should know, I’ve finished it with Tory. Until I can get him into daycare at work, Mom’s been looking after Travis while I’m at work. Tory officially moved out tonight.”

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