âAre you going to tell me what you did with that goat?â he asks me.
Itâs almost one in the morning, and Sabine has gone upstairs. Iâm not sure why he didnât just drop us off, but he said he wanted to talk. I replied that talking is better after a cup of coffee in the morning, but I didnât resist much.
I plop down next to him on our blue couch.
The den is shadowy, just the lights from the kitchen illuminating us. His gaze skates over me; then he looks away and glances around at our denâa small room but cozy in grays and blues and lime greens. A portrait of Mama, me, and Sabine is over the fireplace, taken the year I graduated NYU. Sabine is a little girl, her face serene, looking somewhere off camera. Mama is dressed in a pink pantsuit, her dark hair coiffed up, makeup on point.
âIf I donât tell you, then youâre covered under deniability,â I say.
âHello. I was driving the getaway vehicle. Iâm expecting state troopers to pull up at my house at any moment.â
I smile. âYou let us off at the corner, so youâre fine. We walked to the stadium and stayed in the shadows on the sidewalk with Lambert.
If they had cameras, it was just two girls returning a goat who escaped. Totally believable.â
âFucking Lambert.â
I laugh. We spent about ten minutes after we got here cleaning out the âgiftâ Lambert left us.
âHow did you get him inside?â he asks.
âI climbed over one of the low fences outside the stadiumâsee, I banged my knee.â I point to my bruise. âThen Sabine handed over Lambert. Thank God for small goats. We snuck inside an open door and found where they keep him. Itâs a small pen now, so not a cage, so at least thereâs that. Maybe people just say heâs in a cage because we hate Huddersfield so much.â
âIâm picturing you in boots climbing over a fence.â He rubs his hand over my knee, his fingers lightly brushing the bruise. I bite back the tingles it sends over my skin. âYouâre okay, though? I can get you some ice for it.â
âIâm fine.â
âI never want you to get hurt over something thatâs my responsibility. You should have let me do it.â Thereâs a serious tone in his voice.
âHonestly? I had fun. I havenât been bad in a while.â I smirk.
He leans back on the couch. âSo this fake-dating thing. You pretty much announced it tonight, but we can always tell everyone it was a joke or that you said it to help us out.â
âTrue.â I nod. Lois heard me, though, and I saw that gleam in her eye. She believed itâespecially after seeing us in his officeâand sheâs probably already told the booster club via a mass text or email, which means everyone will be telling everyone by tomorrow morning. Theyâll be toasting each other with coffee at the Waffle House. Throw in the bookstore kiss, which several people saw, and the foundation has already been laid for a fake relationship, so it wouldnât be hard. Show up to a few games, smile and flirt at school with Ronan in front of Andrew and Melinda. It seems easy, but a tingle of unease rises. I havenât admitted it to myself since seeing him again, but I canât deny that my heart is vulnerable to him. Iâll have to guard it. Carefully.
âLetâs do it,â I say.
He gives me a surprised look and smiles. âReally? All right, all right. Thank you. Again. Is this the album you mentioned?â He leans over and picks up the photo book on the coffee table and flips it open.
I nod.
âThis is you?â He points to a picture someone snapped of our family in front of my rosebush.
Smiling, I lean over. âMy fifth birthday. I remember that red gingham dress. Mom always wore pink, of course, and the small wiry man is my dad,â I say, pointing to him. âMama was taller than him. Bull riders are usually around five-five to five-ten, and itâs all about strength. He used to tell me he was the strongest man in the world, and Iâd brag to all my friends.â I laugh. âHe wasnât a man to dress upâjeans and flannel were all he ever woreâbut I picked out this white button-up at the store and begged him to wear it for my birthday pic. He took it off as soon as the camera clicked.â
âWhen is your birthday?â He chuckles. âWe need to know these things, I guess.â
âJune eleventh. Iâm a G emini, the social butterfly of the zodiac. Take me to a party, and I will shine. Theyâre also flighty.â
âIâd never describe you as flighty. Youâre here for your sister unconditionally; you say unexpected things.â
âLike what?â
His lashes lower. âLike about what beauty really is . . . and what you said about my face.â
I feel a blush rising. Yes, I said that. And I meant it. âItâs the artist in me. You should know that about me in case anyone asks. I draw and paint, mostly flowers, cows and horses, cowboy hats, barns, and churches. I lived in New York, but the things I love to draw are from where I grew up. Maybe I missed home more than I realized. I should have come home sooner and spent more time with Mama.â I sigh. âWhenâs your birthday?â
âSeptember seventeenth. Virgo. Theyâre logical, hardworking, and systematic. The bad trait is stubbornness.â He pops an eyebrow at me, and I laugh and bump my shoulder into him.
âThat is so you.â
âI know. Lois said your dad passed years ago . . .â
âHeart attack.â I chew on my lips, my head circling back to the afternoon I heard Mama scream, then run outside. She started CPR on my dad while I called the ambulance. I tell Ronan about it. âEvery time I hear a lawn mower, I recall that day. He was gone before they got to the hospital.â
A darkness shadows his eyes. âFor me, itâs storms. Lightning scares me, like something bad is going to happen to someone. Tell me something else about you.â
âHmm, I like to cook. My favorite color is yellow.â
âThatâs boring as shit.â
I gasp and put a hand over my heart. Dramatically. âFine. You want juicy? I broke a toilet in Ryan Reynoldsâs penthouse, and he doesnât know it was me.â
He bursts out laughing. âOh, you have to explain.â
âHe was having his party, and Harry Beauchamp and I wentââ
âYou dated a New York hockey player too? Damn.â
I raise my hands. âAthletes are my weakness.â
âIs that right?â he says dryly. âLetâs see. Thereâs Andrew, Harry, Zaneâwho is a dickâthen meââ
âWhoa. You and I, we never âdated.ââ
He dips his head, grimacing. âYeah, I guess not. Who else?â
I tick them off on my hands. âA baseball guy, another footballer, a basketball star . . . hmm . . . Iâm sure thereâs a few more in there . . . they kind of run together.â
âYou have a type.â
My eyes drift over him, lingering on the sharp line of his jaw, on his blade of a nose, on his sculpted body, toned by years of exercise . . .
I clear my throat. âBack to this Ryan Reynolds party. Celebrities were everywhere. B lake Lively is the sweetest ever, A merica Ferrera, J ake Gyllenhaal. I tried not to gawk. Then Harry decided to dance with this actress.â I roll my eyes. âOne dance. Two. Three. I was pissed and slung back several glasses of champagne, which then led to what I like to call the Bathroom Crisis.â
âDid you pee your pants?â
âNo! The first floor had a lineâthatâs where I met A nna Kendrick, but I was doing the pee dance and couldnât talk to her. We werenât supposed to go upstairs, but in my defense, there wasnât a person there to tell me I couldnât go past the velvet rope that blocked it off. If they were serious, theyâd have had a guard, right? So I huddle crawled up the stairs, and voilà , there in the hallway was this beautiful megabathroom. Iâm talking glossy black subway walls, gold faucets, and a glittery chandelier.â
âLavish.â
I laugh, recalling me describing his home that way. âI finish my business, flush, then the toilet starts to overflowâlike thereâs a waterfall gushing out on this fancy marble floor. I jiggle the handle, gold, and it falls off in my hands. I take the lid off the toilet to see if I could adjust the inside of the tank. Nope, the toilet is so high tech itâs beyond my mechanical experience. I drop the lidâit made an awful noise. It cracked just a little. I dragged towels out and cleaned up the water, dumped them in the tub, then set the broken lid back on top of the toilet. Then I fixed my hair like everything was okay, slipped back downstairs, grabbed a glass of champagne, told my date to fuck off, and called a cab. I kept the toilet handle. By accident!â
He gets a funny expression on his face. âWhen was this party?â
âFive or six years ago? It was springtimeââ
âDid Anna Kendrick trip over someoneâs leg and sprain her ankle?â
âShe did! She had an ice pack wrapped around her . . .â I stop, my eyes widening. âNo way . . .â
âI was at that party.â
âBut . . . how did I miss you?â
âHow did I miss you?â he says softly.
Oh. I look down at my lap and chew on my lip. âHuh.â
âI was with Tuck.â
âYou werenât with Whitney?â
He shakes his head. âI hadnât met her yet.â
My heart dips, my mind racing. What if . . . what if I had seen him that night? Would he have noticed me? I stop that train of thought. He met Whitney later and loved her.
âWhy do you keep Leia in a closet?â I ask.
He stills, frowning. âI bought her last year, and when I got her in the house . . . she didnât look right. Something . . .â He shrugs. âAnyway, I figured she might be too sexy looking if the players came over to swim on the weekends.â
âIs it because she reminds you of a night youâd rather forget?â
He gazes at me searchingly. âI donât want to forget that night. It opened my eyes.â
Oh.
His forehead puckers in a frown. âNova . . .â Emotion flits over his face, and his hands tighten as they rest on his thighs. âEarlier . . . in my office. Youâre beautiful and incredible, and we have this past between us, but we should keep things light.â
I stiffen, a curl of anger rising. Got it. Donât develop feelings for the baller. Which is totally fine! Iâd already decided that myself.
He looks up at me. âAfter Whitney, I swore Iâd just chillâyou know, not catch any feelings for a whileâand . . .â
âYou donât have to worry about me getting the wrong idea.â Rode that roller coaster in New York. It crashed and burned.
âAre you okay with what I said?â
Heâs afraid Iâm going to just roll over and fall in love? Pfft. I frown. âIâm not Jenny, Ronan. Iâm not the kind of girl who chases you down and demands we âdetermine the relationship.â We donât have a relationshipâand hello, I like the guy to chase me, so there.â
âWait . . . youâre nothing like her, okay. Itâs just I want thisââ
âTo be light! Message received.â Jeez.
âIâm sorry about earlierââ
âItâs forgotten! Let it go, okay?â
That furrow on his forehead grows, as if he wants to say more.
âWe can pretend in public and be done with it. Check.â I stand up and stretch and yawn, needing some distance from him. âItâs late, and Iâm ready for bed.â
He studies my face for several moments, then stands, thanks me again for helping with the sheriff and the goat, and walks out my door.
I drape myself back down on the couch, and Sparky curls up in my lap, a soft meow coming from him. I give his ears a scratch, my throat tightening, part hurt, part I shouldâve known better than to kiss him!
Ronan doesnât want to get involved with anyone. Heâs emotionally unavailable. I get it. Itâs an understandable feeling after losing someone like he did.
Weâll keep things easy and fun with no attachments.
I swear.