I walk inside Griffinâs cozy home, trying to force myself to look calmer than I feel. Because I feel distinctly calm. But Iâm putting my big girl panties on and playing it cool.
If he can bring himself to sit down and tell me whatever has been eating away at him, then the least I can do is handle it maturely.
My mind runs rampant as I head toward the big kitchen table and plop into a chair. I take a really, really deep breath and stare down at my hands flattened on the tabletop. Iâve seen some shit, some terrible shit, and this canât be as bad as that.
I gaze up at Griffin, who follows slowly behind me. Thereâs just no way. I know in my heart that Griffin is a man. Heâs not my father. He is gentle and considerate, and whatever he has to tell me will be completely surmountable.
I need it to be.
I check him out while he pours us each a cup of coffee. The way his shoulders bunch beneath his t-shirt in the most mouth-watering way, the hem of that shirt resting along the curve of his ass, his hair all mussed like he spent the entire night running his hands through it.
âHere.â He slides the coffee across the table and pulls up a chair opposite me before turning it around and sitting on it backward, the back rest pressing into his broad chest like some sort of shield.
His big brown eyes rest on my face, and he drinks me in. Thereâs a finality in his eyes that I absolutely .
âStop looking at me like that,â I snap. âOut with it. Youâre going to give me gray hair with all this waiting.â
His lips quirk up. âYouâd still be hot with gray hair.â
Heâs stalling.
âGriff.â I give him a pleading look. I know heâs trying to lighten the mood or whatever, but itâs not working for me.
He stares down at his coffee cup as silence stretches between us. He trails the pad of a finger over the handle of his mug, delicately, thoughtfully, and the veins on the top part of his hand bulge and ripple, almost hypnotically. His touches are always hypnotic. With purposeâwith meaning. Never sloppy or rushed.
I love his hands on me.
âIâve never admitted this to anyone except my mom. Not even my dad. I c-cââ He groans, running a hand through his hair and tugging at the tips. My heart lurches as he stumbles over the word.
âI c-c-couldnât stand the thought of how he might look at me if he knew. Him and my mom, their relationship? Itâs what Iâve always wanted. What I know theyâve wanted for me.â
I nod and wrap my hands around the mug before me. Not wanting to interrupt him but hoping the heat from the coffee might seep into me and chase away the chill thatâs creeping through me.
âThe day of my accident, I was drunk.â
I hate that word. I hate it anywhere near Griffin. Hate to think of him that way.
âI was partying a lot. T-t-too much money. God c-complex. Surrounded by yes-men. Bad mix.â His throat bobs, and his cheeks go pink. He still wonât meet my eye.
âHey. Hey.â I reach across the table and capture his hand, hating watching him struggle. âYou got this.â
He nods abruptly but doesnât meet my eyes. He knows what heâll find there. The muscles in his hands relax at my touch though, and I watch his shoulders drop just a little when they do.
âI was still drunk from the night before, Iâm sure. We were on the road for a game in Vegas, and the temptation was just . . . a lot. My decision-making was consistently getting stupider. I often wonder if Iâd been sober, would I have made the play I did? Would I have seen the play coming? Would I have forgotten to strap my helmet? Everyone saw this wholesome superstar, the mediaâs version of shiny, perfect quarterback Griffin Sinclaire. But thatâs not how things looked from where I sat.â
God. I had no idea. He said he partied too hard. He referred to himself as an alcoholic. But I did not know he tormented himself like this, no idea heâs hidden his struggle and buried himself in the shame quite this thoroughly.
Suddenly, a lot of things about his behavior make a lot more sense. I squeeze his big, warm hand in mine, lending him whatever strength he needs.
âThat night.â He growls and glares up at the ceiling. I see his Adamâs apple bob in his throat, and I just wish he would look at me. âThat night I got married.â
All the air leaves my lungs in a heavy whoosh. âYouâre married?â
He snorts. âOn paper. She was some jersey chaser who came to Vegas to cheer the team on. Iâd never met her before then, and I havenât seen her since.â
My heart is pounding so loud I almost canât hear his words.
That one word is like a cruel fucking echo in my mind. Not that Iâd been thinking about getting married to Griffin, not yet. Maybe I absently mused about spending my life with him.
âYouâre married?â
He looks at me now, eyes drowning in pain as he wraps his other hand around mine. He looks fucking devastated. âListen to me. I didnât even know it had happened until I got a letter from her lawyer over a month later with a copy of the license, pictures of us with a fucking Elvis officiant, and a demand for a monthly stipend. According to her, there was a tape, a threat to release it. I mean, literally it was out of a bad movie. Less funny when itâs your own life.â
My tongue darts out over my lips as I try to piece everything together that heâs telling me, that little spark of rage I recognize so keenly growing in my chest. âLike a sex tape? She came for your money? She blackmailed you?â
âNadia, I lost so much in that one trip. My career, my speech, my fame. Everything I used to define my value in life was swept away in a matter of seconds, and anger and sadness consumed me. And just this overwhelming sense of shame and guilt. Because there was no one to blame but me and the universe and just pure bad luck. And I wanted someone else to blame so badly. But all I could come back to was And I was stuck with my own company, with this deep sense of self-loathing. And that manilla envelope from a woman whose name I didnât even recognize was a nail in the coffin. Itâs what tipped me over the edge, because not only was my career goneâeverything Iâd ever worked forâbut Iâd spat in the face of my parentsâ values and everything theyâd instilled in me. The last thing I cared about was money or that contract. I didnât want any of it coming out. My biggest goal at that point was to not entirely humiliate my parents. Or myself. Thatâs all I cared about.â
His other hand lands on top of mine so that weâre practically clinging to each other over the top of the table. âUntil you. I want a fresh start with you. I donât want to drag this shit around with me. Iâve been sending her divorce papers for years with no response, and it never bothered me. The money. The legal implications. I just didnât care. I had no reason to. It was easier to hide. But now . . . well, now, it really matters to me.â
âYou canât shoulder this all, Griffin. Itâs not fair.â My eyes scour his face, his strong features, the fine lines from years of pain and suffering that he just doesnât deserve. Self-inflicted pain and suffering. âYou donât deserve this kind of misery.â
âYou should hate me.â
I tilt my head and stare at him. Hard. Trying to pierce through the haze of shame in his eyes. âNo.â
âYou should.â He takes a harsher tone with me, no doubt trying to push me away. I know because I recognize that spark in his eyes. The anger.
I dig my nails into his skin, hard enough that he shifts in his chair. âI could never hate you, Griffin Sinclaire. I tried, and I failed. You hate yourself enough already. I hate that this happened to you. I hate you didnât tell me sooner. I hate that you feel you canât tell anyone. But I do not hate .â
âIâm sorry.â His thick lashes flutter down, pushing away the moisture building there. My entire body aches with the need to wrap him in my arms and show him this changes nothing for me, but something holds me back.
It doesnât change how I feel about him. That much is true. My heart pounds to the same beat as his. Thatâs why it hurts like it does right now. But thereâs an inkling of my survival instinct creeping in, words from my therapist, words from my journal, thoughts of desperately not wanting to become my mother.
Attached to an unhappy man, who, in turn, makes everyone around him unhappy. Griffin is my father, but sometimes I worry that Iâm my mother.
âIâm so fucking sorry. I tried so hard to stay away from you, to keep you away from me. And I failed at that too.â
I smile sadly, pulsing my fingers on his. âIâm persistent, Griffin. You never stood a chance.â
He smiles back, but itâs forced. âSheâs apparently finally going to sign the papers, my lawyer told me last night. Then the divorce would just need to process.â
âDid you pay her off?â
âNo. I decided I didnât care if she wanted to run her mouth about it anymore.â
I nod in approval. âGood. Iâm thrilled for you.â
He laughs, but itâs angry. âYou have no business being this mature about my mess, Nadia.â
âIn my head, Iâm not being very mature. In my head, I really hate that bitch. Itâs more like, â
He stares back at me, shaking his head, lips pulling up a fraction. âYouâre vicious, Wildflower.â
âIs there really a video? Did you sleep with her?â I blurt it out before I can even stop myself. I guess my maturity knows some bounds after all. Obviously, he slept with the woman.
Griffin grimaces, looking physically uncomfortable. âI donât know. Iâve never spoken directly to her, and I donât remember that night at all.â
A pained sound escapes me as I lean back, untangling my hands from his. The air is cold against my skin, and what I really want to do is crawl across the table and curl up in his arms. My mind is telling me to sit back and take some space though.
âWhat will you do if she releases it?â
His eyes slam shut, and he sucks in a raspy breath. âPray you never see it.â
Heaviness lodges in my throat, and my stomach drops. I feel like I might be sick, so I promptly change the subject, not wanting to think about seeing him with someone else, or having the world see him so exposed.
âDid you ever go to rehab?â
His hands lay limp on the table before him, and he looks completely flayed open. I fucking hate it. I hate seeing him hurt. Because I recognize it so perfectly. The pain, the anger, the sadnessâit was me a few years ago. Before I worked on myself.
âNo.â
âTherapy?â
âNo.â He winces, like he knows those arenât suitable answers.
I pick up my coffee cup and sip it, but I donât taste it. I turn this all over in my head. His story. His sadness. His growth.
Leave it to me to want someone normal and happy, but to end up head-over-heels for one of the most complicated men in the world.
âWhy didnât you tell me?â
He groans. âOld habits die hard. And Iâve buried this secret for a very long time. Iâm so embarrassed. I wanted to be a normal, happy person for you, and I thought I could just . . .â He drops his head into his hands before speaking straight into his palms. âI donât know. Get this all dealt with and then tell you and Iâd be the fresh slate you deserve. It sounds really dumb now that I say it out loud.â
I chuckle. It does sound dumb. Well-meaning, but dumb. Dumb and impossible. âWeâre not normal, happy people, Griffin. Remember?â
He leans back with a heavy, ragged sigh, letting his arms go limp at his sides in defeat. âYeah. I know.â
âI need to go for a walk.â A panicked expression crosses his face as I push the chair away to stand. âIâm not leaving. Iâm not quitting. I just need some processing time.â
Griffin nods, schooling his face back into that unaffected look as his lips thin and press together. Heâs totally freaking out. And as I walk out that front door, emotions warring inside of me, I realize weâre both faking.
Because Iâm freaking out too. School. Family. Life goals. I see them all slipping away right before my eyes.
Iâm in love with Griffin Sinclaire, but I refuse to give up everything Iâve wanted in life just to hear him say he loves me back.