: Chapter 29
Dirty Curve
âBailey.â I lean over to grab the apple piece she snatched off of my plate, but sheâs already got the thing pulled to her mouth.
Her eyes go wide, and she tightens her little muscles in an attempt to hold on to it.
âOkay, okay. Hang on.â I pry it from her fingers, checking the ends to make sure no part of it will break off and turn it, letting her run her swollen gums across it. It doesnât take long for it to soften, and I have to take it away.
She throws herself back on her blanket, and begins to fake cry, something sheâs recently discovered helps her get what she wants.
âBailey, baby girl. Stop.â I pick her up, but she bends her back, and if I didnât have a good hold on her, she might have just fallen out of my arms. âItâs okay, mama. Shh.â
Bouncing my upper body, I pat her little butt, offering her Binky and slowly she starts to calm, but I canât.
Sheâs been increasingly testy the last few days and I canât help but feel like Iâm at fault.
They say babies can sense stress, and Iâve been nothing but a basket case.
Sheâs sleeping less, as am I, and itâs not good for her.
Itâs not good for either of us.
How can me doing whatâs right by her feel so wrong when I look at her?
I run my palm over her soft hair, and slowly she settles against me.
Tears spring into my eyes and I look to the ceiling to stop them. I should place her in her bed, but I canât bring myself to move. I just want to hold her a little longer.
But then thereâs a knock on my door.
My breath lodges in my throat and I tense, begrudgingly easing Bailey down on her play pad beneath me.
A second knock comes, and I push to my feet, my pulse beating wildly.
Bianca has a key, so she wouldnât knock.
Thereâs only one other person it could be, and I havenât laid eyes on him since I looked into his and lied my ass off.
The hairs on the back of my neck stand as I reach for the handle, but even then I pause, wondering if heâll give up and go away, but then a third knock follows and so I tug the door open.
My heart falls to my feet as I look up into a completely different pair of blue eyes.
âWhere is he?â Coach Reid snaps. âWhere is Tobias?â
My shoulders lift, and I shake my head. âI donât knowââ
âNo lie,â he seethes, attempting to sidestep me into my house, but I snap out of it and slide with him.
I jerk out the door, tugging it closed behind me. âWhat the hell do you think youâre doing?â
He tugs back, brow raised. âAm I not allowed in your home?â
âNo.â A humorless laugh leaves me. âYouâre not.â
âIâm not, yet he is?â
My spine straightens and he narrows his eyes.
âYou know nothing. You sit back and revel in the fact that Iâm stuck under your thumb, the same way you tried to get Milo there.â
âGuess your brother is smarter than you are.â
âNot so easily manipulated is more like it.â
âDonât blame your shitty decisions on me,â he snaps back. âWe both know you repeatedly make them. I agreed to pay for your classes when you lost your scholarship after you got pregnant. Donât fuck that up by fucking my star player!â
My organs shrivel inside me, and I look away. âI hate you.â
âLook ⦠sweetheart, I donât want to do this right now, just tell me if heâs in there.â
I bite into my cheek. âI havenât seen him, not since I âmade it simple.ââ
He cocks his head, and Iâm sure heâs going to call me a liar, but he doesnât. The opposite, in fact.
The man nods. âI guess that makes sense.â
A frown creeps over me, and I want to ask him what he means, but I donât want to give him the satisfaction of having the upper hand yet again.
Turns out I donât have to because he always has it.
His understanding expression quickly morphs into one of constraint. âHe slept through a game, missed two practices and four daysâ worth of classes.â
Oh my god.
âThey worked on research papers in history, and now heâs a draft behind. His finalâs due by Wednesday.â
A sharp pain zings down my spine.
And there it is, the reason for his constraint, for his sharing this information with me.
I shake my head.
He nods his.
âNo.â
âMeyer, yes.â
âThereâs no way.â
âYou will fix it.â
âNo.â
âI didnât give you an option.â
âI canât.â
âI said fix it!â he screams.
I jump and his hands come up as he takes a calming breath.
âIâm â¦â He blows a harsh breath out his nose to calm himself. âIâm sorry, but Meyer, you will do this.â
âI wonât. I canât be near him.â
He opens his mouth, but promptly clamps it shut as he narrows his eyes on me. âYou fell for the kid ⦠like actually fell for him, as if it could ever happen for you two.â
My jaw clenches, but I say nothing, and he laughs, but itâs mocking.
He lifts his hat, then slowly puts it back on. âYouâll work with him the next two days. Do that, and Iâll transfer you back into your old department. Donât do it and he fails, loses eligibilityââ
âAnd you lose your championship.â
His eyes narrow. âYeah, youâre right, but think of the boy, huh? Since youâve been loose with your morals, yet again, put yourself in his shoes. You have the chance to help him, and itâll be on your conscience if you donât.â
Tears form in my eyes without permission. âThis will do more harm than good, you have to know that. It might help you through this final stretch, but what happens to him after that?â
âThat will be his problem.â
âHe trusts you.â
âAnd he lost that when he let a girl get in the way of his game.â
âSome people are human on the inside, not machines.â
âSome people are stupid.â He walks backward. âIâll tell him where to be and when.â
âWhat if he doesnât show?â
His feet halt where he stands, his tone one of resentment. âWe both know he will.â
I look away and then heâs gone.
And because I seem to be drawn to pain, I go inside, open my computer, and go straight to the university newspaper page.
My heart drops as I read over the articles from the last week, every one of them blasting Tobias and documenting his âdownward spiralâ as theyâre calling it.
There are shots of him fighting on the field, walking into the bar, and even one of him passed out on the courtyard picnic table.
My chest grows tight, itâs as if a sheath of anguish is suffocating me from the inside out.
I did this.
I stole his happy and if I donât do whatâs being asked of me, Iâll be responsible for stealing his future. He has no idea the man he admires is a malicious asshole whoâll destroy him if heâs wronged. Nothing is more important to Tobias than this next step, then accomplishing the goal he set out to make, to achieve what so many have sworn he couldnât.
Tobias is made up of dirt and sweat, of the game, and without it, heâll be lost.
Itâs his life, his future.
I canât let it slip away.
I have to help him, no matter how much it breaks me in return.
My stomach is in my throat, my heart is at my feet, and my mind is as muddled as ever.
I knew, just as the man who sent him knew, that he would show up today.
Itâs a sick kind of torture, but a necessary one.
Iâve had my laptop open and notes out on the picnic table for the last ten minutes. Iâve tried to speak, to engage in work-related conversation, but Tobias has yet to say a word.
He hasnât opened his bag.
In fact, Iâm not even sure he brought his bag.
The man has yet to move.
But heâs staring.
His eyes are searing my skin, making my nerves dance on end and my muscles tight at every angle.
Clearing my throat, I try not to fidget or shake as I turn my laptop toward him, but his hands fly forward, and I yank mine back just in time for him to slam the screen closed.
My eyes jump to his and his glare sharpens.
âAre you for real right now?â he snaps, his palms tightening into a fist on the tabletop.
He stares, the anger in his gaze fighting to hold still, but dissolving with each passing second. Heâs waiting for me to respond, to say something, anything, I imagine, but I couldnât speak if I tried.
Because now that Iâve looked up, finally meeting his deep blue eyes, my insides liquify. Everything stings, burns like a festering open wound a sharp point is being pressed into.
He has dark circles that only come from lack of sleep, his normal scruff is five times sharper, and he might have even lost a few pounds. But none of those compare to the lost look in his eyes.
The confusion.
The hurt.
The hate?
âTalk to me.â His forearms clench. âTalk to me â¦â
âTobias, please.â
âDonât. Donât Tobias me.â He jerks forward, reaching for my hand, but I pull it back, placing it in my lap and the ache in his gaze reflects the feeling in my chest. âWhy are you doing this?â
âStop.â
âI wonât. Iâm fucking not.â He shoots to his feet, stepping around the table, slowly dropping to his knee beside me, forcing us eye to eye.
My pulse pounds against my temple, in my throat. Everywhere. All over, and it only gets stronger when his knuckle comes up, squeezing my lungs and bringing my gaze to his.
A harsh, choppy hiss slips past my lips and I clamp them shut.
âTalk to me.â He frowns.
âYou should go.â
âI said Iâm not, so stop trying.â
My resolve is cracking, so I jerk free, shoot to my feet, and shove my things in my bag, but he stops me, so I let it all go and take off.
âMeyer!â he shouts, dashing after me, but his voice grows farther away. âDamn it, Meyer. Hold on!â
I pick up the pace, thankful the place we met is on the edge of campus and all I have to do is make it across the yard, through the alleyway and into my front door.
His footsteps thump behind me, so I start to run.
I forget to look down the road before I cross and scream when a car comes close to hitting me, having to swerve out of the way as I dash into the street.
âFuck! Meyer!â
Tears stream down my face and my body shakes, but I keep running.
I hear him shout something at the driver, as if it was their fault, and what sounds like a fist against a hood, but I donât look back.
Iâm at my front door a minute later, reaching out and gripping the knob, and then his large palm comes down over mine, freezing me there.
My bag is tossed at my feet, and he grips my upper arm, jerking me around with a gentle force.
âWhatâs the matter with you?â he nearly shouts. âYou almost got hit!â
âGo.â
âStop telling me to go.â
âI canât â¦â My chest heaves. âPlease, I canât.â
âCanât what?â he asks, and the longer he stares, the more his shoulders fall. âCanât what, baby?â
âLeave!â I scream, my cheeks warm with my own tears and Tobias jerks away from me, his eyes roaming my face as he backs up, giving me the space Iâm demanding but donât really want.
âWhatâs really going on, Meyer?â
His tone is so soft, my cries are no longer silent, but breaking through my throat.
He opens his mouth to speak, but the door at my back creaks as he does, and Bianca meets my eyes, a question in hers.
Should she stay or go?
My lip twitches, and I nod, so she slips out, squeezing my arm with worry in her gaze.
Itâs okay, B. Go.
She nods back, climbs into her car and pulls away.
We both watch her go, needing that free second to breathe, but then her taillights are out of sight, and all thatâs left is us.
Tobias rubs at the scruff on his jaw, slowly looking to me.
âI donât want you here.â I manage to keep my voice from breaking. âPlease go.â
âI donât get it,â he mutters, defeat weighting every part of him down. âWhat did I do? Iâve replayed every minute Iâve spent with you over and over again and I donât get it. Was it the article? Or maybe the party? I only wanted to show you off to my friends. If you werenât ready for that you should have told me. I just ⦠I thought you were comfortable with us and that you might have needed a night out with people your age, that maybe youâd enjoy it, but I donât need that,â he rushes. âI donât. I can give up all that.â
âTobias, please.â
âI know I fucked up, I-I know Iâm not someone who deserves you.â He looks away, self-loathing drawing his features tight and making him pace. âBut I thought, with you I thought maybe I was ⦠god, I am just a fucking jackass.â
I donât mean to, but my body moves one step toward him, and itâs a move he doesnât miss.
His gaze slices to mine, and I think heâs stopped breathing.
I should move backward, heed the warnings whispering in my head by reclaiming the space between us, but the broken man in front of me drowns out the voices, freezing me in place.
His jaw clenches, his fingers twitching at his sides and slowly, very, very slowly, he inches toward me.
My hands plaster themselves on the door, and Iâm not sure Iâm breathing.
He starts to say something but is cut off by Baileyâs soft cry from inside.
A burning sense of relief shoots through me and I spin, rushing for her room, but it was a false alarm.
She was searching for her Binky, and she found it, her eyes still closed and her breathing once again soft.
I hang my head in my hands, tears pricking my eyes and slipping from the edges as I try not to make a sound, praying heâs gone when I walk out of the room.
Heâs not, and whatâs worse.
Heâs inside, standing right outside her room, the weight of the world resting on his wide shoulders.
I close Baileyâs door and he steps closer.
I shuffle to the side, desperate for air that isnât infused with his scent, but he catches me by the arm, holding me back.
âTobias.â
âTutor Girl,â he rasps, swallowing as he shuffles closer.
God, heâs such a beautifully broken man.
Misery blanketing his features, and hopefulness lining his eyes, he reaches up to touch my face, wincing as I wince.
Shaking as I shake.
âDonât make this harder.â
âDonât deny me when you want me.â
My muscles twist, a tornado whirling in my abdomen as the caution sirens blare in my head. My hand shoots up, latching onto his wrist and I clench my eyes closed.
âPlease,â he breathes, the heat of his body nearer. âBaby, please.â
My nostrils flare with a fraught, rocky inhale. âYou donât understand ⦠I canât.â
Heâll never allow this â¦
âPlease,â he begs, his lips skating along mine, theyâre so close.
âI canât.â
Heâll destroy my entire world â¦
âIâm losing my mind. Iâm fucking fried. I canât think, eat, sleep.â His hands begin to tremble. âTell me you donât feel the same and Iâll walk away, right now.â He shifts closer. âSay the word, baby, and Iâm gone. I swear, just ⦠say it. Tell me you donât love me back.â
I shake my head, my eyes opening, locking onto his as I crack from the inside out, my words repeated, but this time as a tender confession. âI canât.â