Page 11 of Before You Go
“That’s not true. I see you multiple times a week.”
“It’s not the same as having you here all the time, like when you were little.”
Laughing, I wrap my arms around her. “How about I come to spend the night next weekend? I can bring PJ, and we can stay up late, eat junk food, and watch movies.”
“I’d love that.” Her hold on me gets tighter, making it hard to breathe.
“All right, let her go, honey before you cut off her oxygen,” Dad tells her.
“I’m not going to cut off her oxygen,” she snaps, letting me go and glaring at him.
“You could.”
“I was just hugging my baby, not strangling her.”
“With you, it’s kind of the same thing,” Dad mumbles, wrapping his arm around her waist. Ignoring the look she gives him, his eyes come to me. “Call or send a text as soon as you get home.”
“I will,” I promise, and he leans down, kissing my cheek. “Love you, Mom.”
“I love you too.” She steps away from my dad to give me another hug. “Tonight wasn’t so bad, was it?” she asks in a whisper, squeezing me tight.
“No, not at all.” The party as a whole wasn’t as bad as I thought it might be, but I’m mentally exhausted after spending time around so many people and ready to be alone to decompress.
Kissing her cheek, I get another hug from my dad, then say goodbye to a few other people before I make my way through the house. When I get to the entryway, I see Dayton near the front door, talking to one of my father’s friends. Not wanting to interrupt them to say goodbye, I step outside, and two young guys—around the same age as the kid who opened the door for me when I arrived earlier in the evening—turn to look at me.
“Would you like us to get your car?” one of them asks, and I shake my head, carefully navigating the steps.
“No, I’m going to get an Uber, but thank you, though,” I say softly, and he nods, going back to chatting with his friend.
Dropping my eyes to my phone, I load up my Uber app. It’s not very late, but between the time and the location of my parents' house, the closest driver is twenty minutes away.
“Great,” I whisper to myself. Still, I press the button, agreeing to the ride.
“Everything okay?”
Turning my head, I look over my shoulder at Dayton as he comes down the stairs. After we sat outside earlier, he didn’t bother putting his jacket back on or rolling down his sleeves. Besides my dad, he was the only man inside who seemed to have no problem getting a little more comfortable.
“Yeah, just my Uber won’t be here for a bit.”
“I’ll give you a ride.” He passes a piece of paper to one of the kids, and they jog off into the dark toward the area at the back of the property my parents use for parking any time they have a party like this.
“I already ordered a ride but thank you.”
“Cancel it.”
Smiling at the quiet demand rather than bristling—which would be my normal response to anyone else—I shake my head. “It’s really okay.” I rub my arms, which are suddenly covered in goosebumps. It’s much cooler than it was earlier, and my dress is doing nothing to fight the chill in the air. “They’ll be here in twenty minutes.”
“It’s too cold for you to be standing out here for twenty minutes.”
“I….” I start to tell him I’ll just wait inside but stop when he swings his jacket out and wraps it around my shoulders, enveloping me in warmth and the smell of his cologne.
Adjusting the lapels, his fingers accidentally brush over the tops of my breasts. The innocent touch should not cause the muscles in my lower belly to twitch or my breath to catch, but I can’t stop the reaction.
“Cancel the ride,” he repeats, his deep voice sounding different, gruffer, and more raw. Lifting my gaze to his, the moment our eyes lock, the air around us thickens and swirls with an electricity I have never in my life felt or experienced before.
“Okay,” I whisper, knowing I’d probably give him anything he asked for if he spoke to me like that in his deep, gravelly voice and looked at me the way he’s looking at me right now.
“Okay,” he repeats, seeming to get closer, and I almost think he’s going to kiss me, but the sound of an engine roaring severs our connection, and we both turn to watch a silver sports car come up the road toward the house, going fast.