: Chapter 19
Bad Cruz: A Reverse Grumpy/Sunshine Romance
âThere he is, the man of the hour, the townâs beloved.â Mrs. Underwood, who was approximately a thousand years old, wobbled her way toward me outside the clinic after I closed shop.
I stilled, inwardly punching my own face for forgetting to check the windows before I got out of work. There was always someone wandering past wanting a favor. A ride, a quick medical diagnosis, some life advice.
âHeard youâre treating Beau Duggarâs pregnant wife under the table âcause sheâs got no insurance. Thatâs kind of you.â She waved her walking cane in my direction, flashing her blindingly white dentures at me.
âThank you, maâam.â
And then, because it was still ingrained in me, because I was so deeply and acutely attached to the role this place designated to me, I forced myself to add, âCan I take you anywhere, Mrs. Underwood? Home, maybe?â
âOh!â She put her hand to her chest. âAre you sure?â
âAbsolutely.â
âHow nice of you to offer. I was actually on my way to your motherâs, if you can believe it. Weâre working on the next luncheon.â
âItâd be my pleasure.â
It would also be my hell.
Mom lived on the other side of town, which meant a longer drive in the opposite direction of my destination, in the presence of the townâs biggest gossip. But I couldnât backtrack, could I?
âLovely. Sheâs telling me you are going to help her with the seating arrangements at the rehearsal dinner next week. You must be excited to see Wyatt getting married again.â
âBursting at the seams.â
âYou next?â
âUnfortunately for the future Mrs. Costello,â I jested mildly.
âAh, câmon. Anyone would love to have you, Cruzy.â
Not the townâs most infamous and gloriously scandalous waitress, so it seemed.
After I dropped Mrs. Underwood offâand walked her to my motherâs doorstep, arm-in-armâI went back into town to take some promotional pictures for the Wellness Awareness Program I was taking part in.
I was going to run a marathon with a few more folks to raise money for a foundation designed to help children suffering from obesity. When I was done with the promotional stuff, I checked my watch to see if I had a moment to check in on Tennessee at the diner.
I had about three minutes before I needed to go back home and get ready for Wyattâs bachelor party in the city.
My showers, my snacks, my coffee breaksâeverything was timed perfectly with a stopwatch to ensure the utmost time efficiency.
I was about to open the door to Jerry & Sonsâcould almost spot her through the windowsâwhen a small figure reeking of flowers blocked my way.
âDr. Costello! How nice to see you. Iâve been hopinâ to run into you, actually.â
Mrs. Holland threw herself in front of me, in a pastel cardigan, designer jeans, and a Chanel purse. Her brunette bob was sharp, her eyes shrewd and cold. You could tell Gabriella was her spawn, because they both looked perpetually put-together and hungry.
âMaâam.â I smiled patiently, peppering the gesture with a brief kiss on her cheek. âHowâre you feeling today?â
But was Tennessee really my girlfriend?
Probably not.
In fact, she would no doubt hit me with a sharp object if I ever called her that in public. Still, in my head, I could call her whatever I wanted.
âIâm well, thanks. And yourself?â
I looked past her shoulder at Tennessee inside the diner, serving a table of snotty teenagers who pretended to drop some utensils to look up her skirt. They laughed when she bent down, and for once I really paid attention to , not her.
My blood ran cold. How dare they.
âGood. Good,â I heard myself say, anyway.
She turned her head to follow my gaze, realized who I was looking at, then pierced me with a look.
âGabriella said you and she are taking a break.â
âWe decided to stop seeing each other, yes.â
âWell, thatâs just a shame. Listen, I know what itâs like, all right? Gabriellaâs daddy was exactly like you. Very sought-after. Handsome, rich, well bred. He had trouble settling down, finding peace with just one woman. I understand the charm and allure certain women have on men.â Her voice became high-pitched, almost shrill. We both knew exactly who she was referring to. âBut Iâm here to tell you, honey, that Gabriellaâs still interested. You had your fun on the cruise, and now you two can put it behind you. Sometimes a man needs to blow off some steam. Get things out of his system before he moves on. Better you did it now than after you got married.â
I wanted to tell her that her daughter couldnât even compete with Tennessee Turnerâs little toe.
Gabriella was a pretty present tied in a ribbon and Tennessee was a tempestuous ticking time bomb wrapped in a booby trapâ¦and yet, she was the one I wanted.
But because I was me, the greatest guy alive, I bowed my head with faux-humility.
âIâm terribly sorry, Mrs. Holland, but I really have to run.â
She grabbed my forearm with her bony fingers, pressing hard to stop me from going.
âHeard you were getting some kind of a medical award. That true?â
âYes. The AAFP. American Academy of Family Physicians.â
She grabbed me by the collar, stepping into my face, her smile melting into a scowl.
âListen here, Dr. Costello. My daughter is smart, beautiful, and earns a good paycheck. The best catch in this godforsaken town. She is willing to go a long way to make you two happen. Iâd hate to see you blow it on some one-night stand that has stretched into a month or two. Not to mention, peopleâll start talking, and Iâd hate for that to happen.â
I had no idea how Mrs. Holland came to the conclusion Tennessee and I were an item, but asking her would be a way of confirming our relationship, something my reluctant girlfriend didnât want and I didnât need.
So instead of feeding my curiosity, I took a step back.
âMaâam, I have the utmost respect for your daughter, but Iâm in a place where I need to think long and hard about my next step, and it wouldnât be fair on her if I jerked her around.â
By the time I got out of Mrs. Hollandâs pacified (retracted) claws, I was about ten minutes behind on getting back home. I threw another annoyed look into the diner. Tennessee was now swatting away a truck driver whoâd passed by town and looked to be persistently flirting with her.
Truth was, I didnât feel powerful at all in that moment. I felt like a pushover. Cornered to let the townsfolk treat Tennessee however they pleased. And restricted by Tennessee herself to claim her as mine and protect her the way Iâd always wanted.
But ultimately, answering Mrs. Underwood, or Mrs. Holland, or just taking whatever the fuck I wanted from my girlfriend was out of the question.
I was too good.
Too .
I shook my head and went home.
An hour later, I was in hell.
More specifically, in my brotherâs Mercedes as we made our way to Winston-Salem to his bachelor party. I was the designated driver, because Dr. Cruz Costelloâyou guessed itâwas always on DD duty.
That, in itself, wasnât too bad.
I needed to cut back on the alcohol, anyway, if I wanted to keep that lithe runnerâs body. But the fact Wyatt had gone ahead and invited ? That was unforgivable.
Downright stupid.
It was bad enough Iâd had to endure the douchebagâs presence over dinner the other day while my mother fawned over him and moaned about what an embarrassment Tennessee was to Fairhope, but now I had to spend an entire night with him, along with Tim Trapp and Kyle, one of the useless sons who was responsible for Jerry & Sonsâ title.
âWhyâd your first marriage end?â Rob asked Wyatt from the passenger seat, cracking a beer open. He looked much less heartbroken than that day Iâd found him on his ex-girlfriendâs front porch.
âShe was a cokehead and bled me dry financially, but man, she was a hot piece of ass. How about yours?â Wyatt sucked on his vape pen.
âMy first marriage broke up due to the fact that Julianna was a goddamn â Rob did a hiccup and snort kind of mix, that didnât earn him any points, taking a pull of his beer. âShe was straight up a moody cow and always bitched when we had to move places because of my jobsâhow was it my fault that I needed to travel from school to school to coach? And Dani, well, Dani was a sweetheart.â
He downed the rest of his drink.
âThen what happened?â Kyle asked from behind, sitting in the backseat, rolling himself a joint.
âShe found out I had a son.â
âWomen.â Wyatt sighed, sucking on his vape. âAlways so dramatic.â
Everyone laughed.
âShe planned a trip to Fairhope to surprise me for my birthday, bring me back to my hometown, see my parents, and I had to explain to her why we couldnât go,â Rob whined.
âYou hid the fact you had a son from her?â I asked.
It was the first time Iâd spoken since we hit the road, so everyone turned toward me to ensure they heard right.
Silence descended on the car before Rob answered.
âIâm not exactly proud of that, man.â
âSort of sounds like you only came back home because every other plan fell through,â I said roughly.
Robâs face sobered, and he put aside his empty beer can. âI came home because it was time to man up. I made a mistake. Iâm paying for it now.â
âWater under the bridge.â Wyatt waved a hand, trying to calm things down. âYouâre back, itâs all good.â
âLook, I know I really fucked it up with her. Nessy, I mean.â
âYou gonna try to win her back?â Kyle licked the rollie paper of his joint from side to side.
Tim was napping in the backseat at this point between Kyle and Rob, totally checked out. Thatâs what happened when you had to pay child support to two different women and held onto three jobs.
âHell yeah.â Rob chuckled. âNessy still has a killer body, a sassy mouth on her, and she is the mother of my son. Bonus pointsâshe pays her way through life, which canât hurt in my financial situation. Figure if she hasnât come for my throat financially yet, sheâs not going to.â He cackled, shaking his head. âThough I mean it about helping her out. Iâm going to start paying for Bearâs stuff. In the meantime, Iâm going to play the tortured saint for a few months and hopefully crawl back into her bed for a bit, at least. Think sheâll have me?â
âSure,â Wyatt said.
âMaybe.â Kyle cocked his head.
Snorting out, I said, âSheâs not stupid or desperate, you know.â
âWhatâd you say?â Robâs hand found my shoulder.
I shook him off.
âNothing.â
We got into a swanky sports bar twenty minutes later.
There was a black vinyl booth reserved for us. Country music blasted through the speakers, football games were playing on huge flat screen TVs on the walls, and there were people grinding and dancing a few yards from the bar, which connected to some sort of a dance club.
I had the acute sense of being the only responsible grown-up in this bar, with the average IQ in the place equating to that of a half-eaten sub. Wyatt was my brother, so loving him was part of a package deal, but I never understood his decisions.
Especially the one to invite one of ex-best friends to his bachelor party.
The waitressesâwho wore even less than Tennesseeâs diner uniformâserved food in black thongs, a matching bra, and a white silk tie. We started with a round of drinks and some tequila slammers, ordered food, and then more tequila slammers.
Everyone downed their alcohol like it was a competitive sport while I watched and prayed no one puked in the Mercedes on the long drive back home. The car wasnât mine, but the headache of getting it cleaned afterwards would be.
Seven shots and four beers later, my brother and his friends were treading close to disaster territory with a side of alcohol poisoning. They were about half a step away from getting matching, horrible tattoos theyâd definitely regret later.
Wyatt, Kyle, and Timâthe latter seemed visibly more awake after drinking his own weight in shotsâdragged their nearly-middle-aged asses to the dance floor, grinding their crotches against college girls to the sound of Sam Hunt and Blake Shelton.
Rob stayed behind. Didnât take a genius to know it was because he had a bone to pick with me. I studied my glass of water like it was the most interesting thing in the universe, wondering if I could make him drown by pushing his head into it.
âSo,â Rob said.
âSo.â
âI kind of figured youâd at least pick up the phone and call me after you found out I was in town.â He sat back on the vinyl, eyeing me behind the rim of his whiskey glass.
âSame could be said about you.â My voice was terse, smooth. âI wasnât the one who went MIA for thirteen years.â
âFirst time I saw you again, you were with Nessy, and you didnât seem all too happy to see me.â Rob put his whiskey down, angling his entire body toward mine. âWhatâs going on between you and my ex, Cruz?â
It took everything in me not to tell him the truth. That we were fucking, and laughing, and bantering, and getting to know each other.
That lately, Tennessee stopped spraying her hair into something that resembled plastic, and dropped the weird nails, and slowly began to realize people might see her for who she was if she just gave them a chance.
It was like Cobainâs quote: âIâd rather be hated for who I am than loved for who Iâm notâ. She decided to be herself, unapologetically. Honoring herself and who she was. Not making amends or trying to appease the people in town.
That I was more than ready to pick up the pieces heâd left behind, and I didnât think he deserved half a chance with her, even if, unfortunately, she had to put up with his existence for her sonâs sake.
But I knew she would never forgive me if I told her ex-boyfriend the truth.
I took a sip of my water. âNot sure how itâs any of your business.â
âIâm her ex.â
âYou were kids, and you fucked off before you pulled out of her. You want to know something about Tennesseeâs life, ask her, not me.â I slammed my glass against the table.
âDonât think I donât remember how you used to pine for her.â He looked angry, contemplative, and constipated. Guess he tried to appear tough.
A lopsided smirk met my lips. âYouâre drunk.â
âThat might be so, but Iâm also right, arenât I? Am I going to have competition here? The least you can do for me is be frank.â
âActually, Rob, I owe you jack shit where Tennessee Turner is concerned. If my memory doesnât fail me, and it rarely does, was the one who was supposed to ask her out all those years ago.
won the game.â
Was I actually bringing up the rock-paper-scissor encounter from before my balls had fully dropped as though it meant anything?
Wyatt, Kyle, and Tim were taking shots from the inside of waitressesâ cleavage and howling to the ceiling while Rob and I were engaged in a stare down that would have been tense had he been able to focus properly in his drunken stupor.
âYouâre seriously still stuck on this?â His mouth dropped. âShe wanted .â
âYou fucking her.â
âYou donât know the whole story.â
Robâs head reared back, and he stared at me with so much hatred, I wondered if Iâd ever known him at all. I was putting a dent in his carefully designed plan to make Nessy wife number three.
He wasnât prepared for resistance from any of us.
Thought heâd walk right in and play daddy to Bear and husband to Tennessee.
His on-hold family, that heâd kept on the back burner, in case all else failed.
And that Tennessee, the town nobody would be so happy, so grateful sheâd welcome him back as though she had no pride or self worth. As though she didnât deserve better than himâhell, than all of us.
âEnlighten me, then.â
Wyatt was now French-kissing a woman who was definitely not his future wife in my periphery. Iâd have felt worse for Trinity, if she didnât patronize her older sister as if she herself had her life all figured out.
Rob blew out air, standing up and sliding out of the booth.
He began to pace.
âI was too young.
too young.â
âSo was she.â
âCruz, I asked her to abort it.â
I saw red. All. Fucking. Red. I couldnât see anything but the blood I wanted to draw from that bastard at how heâd just reduced âa fucking amazing kid heâd had nothing to do with shapingâto âitâ.
â
has a name now. A personality, too. Likes. Dislikes.
was growing inside her. Keeping was her right.â
âIf Iâd stayed, I would never have had a chance to be something. I wanted more for myself.â
âWell, Iâm glad youâre giving me your side of the story after being so self-sacrificing and stoic for so long. Iâm really starting to root for you on this heroâs journey of self-discovery,â I said sarcastically. âYou planning on backpacking through Europe to find yourself next?â
âShe decided for both of us. It wasnât fair.â Rob yanked at his hair, shaking his head.
âFair flew out the window the moment you turned your back on her, you bastard.â
Rob reached for his drink, emptying the glass in one swig and slamming it against the table, sneering.
He looked up, his eyes empty and cold.
âYouâre still in love with her.â
If he loved her, he never would have acted the way he had. Or like this.
âJust remember, Cruz. Even if you fucked her, she is, and always will be, my leftovers. I was there first. I tasted her first. Iââ
didnât let him finish the sentence.
I tackled him to the floor, throwing the first punch, which landed square on his nose. He got up and stumbled backward, steadying himself by grabbing the edge of another booth and someoneâs wig with it.
The person slapped Robâs hand away. Rob smiled at me, his teeth bloodied with the popped vessels I probably damaged with my fist.
Blake Shelton sang that God gave him someone, and I was about to hand the Almighty another son of His in the shape of Robert Gussman.
My ex-best friend hurled his entire weight at me, crouching down to try to get me in the stomach. But I was faster, not to mention sober, and sidestepped, making him land against our empty booth in a heap of limbs.
He groaned in pain, and I heard the music lower and people behind us running to break up the fight.
I grabbed the hem of his collar, lifting him up and tugging at him until his eyes found mine.
âDonât.â
I punched his face.
âYou.â
I punched his stomach.
âDare.â
I kicked him in the balls.
âCall her leftovers.â
Punch. Punch. Punch.
Robâs entire face was bloodied, but he still managed to throw a hook straight into my eye socket when I wasnât expecting it. I tripped a few steps, Wyattâs arms catching me before I bounced back and went for Robertâs full destruction.
Tim and Kyle pulled Robert away, breaking us up.
âHoly shit, Cruz. What the fuck?!â Wyatt boomed, pushing me violently toward the door, his expression roaring, his lips still glittering with a strangerâs watermelon lip gloss.
Rob, Kyle, and Tim stayed behind. We spilled out to the humid summer night, and I blew out air, my body buzzing with violence.
âHeâs a son of aâ
.â
âHe was one of your best friends.â Wyatt pointed at the door to the club.
The two bouncers outside looked at us like we were guests on âwhen the baby daddy who impregnated five women in a span of three days just walked in to hear his paternity results.
âWhatâs happening to you, brother? Donât think I havenât noticed you got cozy with the other Turner girl. I didnât say shit because I figured youâd drop her after the cruise, but Jesus Christ, this is getting to be too much.â
âToo much what?â I challenged him, arching a brow.
âToo much trouble for someone like her.â
I threw my head back and laughed. âYouâre marrying her .â
âHer sisterâs different. Trinityâs harmless. A church mouse.â
âWell, Tennessee is all venom and honey. Dangerous but irresistible. Sheâs better than Trinity. Better than all of them.â
âIn the sack, maybe. Butââ
I grabbed the hem of his shirt, no longer giving any damn about my precious reputation.
I pressed my nose against his. âDonât. This is the last time you talk about her like that, got it? Next time, your face will be the shape of my fist.â
âWow. Okay.â He pushed me away, taking a few steps back. He turned around and kicked a trash can, pouring its contents onto the sidewalk. âGoddammit!â
He paced back and forth.
Robert, Kyle, and Tim trickled out of the club, sweaty and disoriented.
Rob looked at me with murder in his eyes, pointing a finger to my face. âIâm not getting into a car with this psycho.â
âBetter get a head start if you want to make it home by morning. Westâs that direction, in case your drunk ass needs a map.â I spun the keys on my index finger, starting toward Wyattâs car.
They all trailed behind me, Robert included. Wyatt was the first to catch my step.
âIs it serious?â he asked.
I knew exactly what he meant.
I weighed the pros of telling him the truth. There was no way at least some of this evening wasnât going to make its way to Mrs. Underwood, whoâd make sure to tell everyone else in Fairhope.
No point in pretending otherwise.
âYeah.â
âDoes Mom know?â
âNo.â
âAre you going to tell her?â
I rubbed my chin. âIf Tennesseeâs okay with it. Either way, weâll wait until after your wedding. I donât want your bride to die of a heart attack.â
âI appreciate it. Finding a third one would be a hassle.â
âDonât sell yourself short. You still have most of your hair and a respectable chunk of inheritance. Youâll be all right. Just donât tell anyone before Tennessee and I are ready to.â
âYou got it, bro.â
There was silence for a few moments. I wondered if the other guys had heard us. I wasnât sure if I wanted them to know or not.
âYou kissed someone else,â I pointed out to Wyatt.
He sighed. âBaby bro, not all relationships are the same. Trinity and I have a very good idea of what we want from each other. I doubt she expects faithfulness from me. She just wants to marry into money and stop working.â
âGood,â I said. âBecause she is a pretty crappy nurse.â
âNessy is a good waitress. Kyle says Jerry told him she gets the best tips.â
âSheâs talented.â
âI hope she makes you happy.â
âWyatt?â
â
?â
âTell Trinity what happened tonight. Because if you donât, I will.â