Eight Days a Week (25 page)

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Authors: Amber L Johnson

BOOK: Eight Days a Week
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I pulled up in front of Debra’s house and unbuckled my seat belt.

“Is it okay if I walk them in alone?” I asked.

Gwen nodded, though her brow furrowed.
 

As I approached the door, I straightened my shoulders and braced myself.
 

“Hey, Debra.”
 

The children glanced at me suspiciously, waiting for some sort of bomb to drop, no doubt.

“Hi, Andrew. Where’s Gwen?” She looked over my shoulder and spotted her daughter in the car. She gave a small wave when they made eye contact.

“I asked her to stay in the car because I didn’t want her to know I was asking this.”

Debra’s forehead creased and her mouth turned down into a frown. “Ask what?”

I placed a hand on each child’s shoulder and gave my most charming smile. “Would you be available to watch Brady and Bree on Gwen’s birthday?” I squeezed the kids’ shoulders.

“Sure. You can drop them off here after school. It’s not my weekend, but they can stay the night.” Her face held a look of suspicion, but I ignored it.

“Thanks.” I bent and gave each of the kids a kiss on the head, then pushed them toward the open door. “We’ll be back in a few hours after we meet with your teachers, okay?” They both nodded, and I hurried to the car.

Gwen and I were quiet on the way to the school, but it wasn’t uncomfortable. Nothing was ever uncomfortable between us anymore. The attraction was always there. We were used to it. The challenge was not acting on it.

At the school we separated, and Gwen met with Brady’s teacher while I met with Bree’s. Miss Tate was a pretty blonde with a high-pitched giggle and a sweet demeanor. She welcomed me into the room and gestured that I should sit in one of the tiny chairs that made me look like a frog with my knees shoved into my chest.

She scanned her papers and cocked her head to the side. “You’re Andrew. You live with Gwen Stone, and you take care of the Pope kids.”

I leaned forward uncomfortably in the ultra-small seat and narrowed my eyes. “How do you know all of that?”

She sat down next to me and smiled. “I’m sorry. I’m Ainslie Tate. I went to school with Bryan and Anna. And Gwen.” She looked down at her left hand. “My fiancé, Thomas, and I just had dinner with Gwen recently.”

Ta-Ta Thomas?

“Thomas,” I repeated with a nod.

“Yeah, Thomas. So you’re the spider guy, right?”

I bit my lip and nodded.

She laughed. “Gwen’s lucky to have a man around the house brave enough to handle a brown recluse.” She winked then waved her hand in a circle. “Anyway, I’m totally prepared to have Bree in class. She’s going to love it. I hear she’s smart, and that usually means she’ll get bored easily. Maybe I can get her to be a class monitor or something.”

“I was thinking maybe you could veer her toward doing music. Like chorus or piano.”

Ainslie sighed. “I would love to, but we don’t have a music teacher.”

“That’s a shame.”

She stood and crossed over to her desk to retrieve a packet. She handed it over and patted me on the back. “Take a look at what we have to offer for after-school programs. Bree needs to stay active or else she’ll start to withdraw.”

I stood and shook her hand, thanking her for her time and the information. “If there’s anything else she needs or that I can do, just let me know.”

Ainslie walked me to the hallway. “Off the record, because I’m kind of nosy, I’m going to just come out and say it. You’re perfect for each other. I don’t know what you’re waiting for,” she said, and then her face flushed bright pink.

Little did she know, I wasn’t planning on waiting any longer.

Chapter 28

Birthday

I had no idea it would be so hard to watch Brady and Bree get on the bus to go to school. All I knew was how proud I was of Bree for making sure they sat together. I knew Brady would be safe with her watching over him.

Gwen stared at me while I watched them leave.

“What’s wrong?” she asked.

I felt pitiful standing at the door with my hands shoved into my pockets. I looked around feeling lost and then shrugged and made that
pfft
sound I always did. “What the hell am I supposed to do all day now?”

It was a legitimate question. What did a nanny do while the kids were at school all day?

“I guess you’ll have to get a hobby.” She patted my arm as she walked to her car.
 

There were a few things I could think of doing.

 
 

I suppose my abundance of extra time was what led me to plan such an elaborate birthday party for Gwen in the hopes maybe she’d see it as more of an olive branch than the lame apology I’d given her for being so evil to Thomas.

When her birthday came, I was beyond ready. I just hoped it would work.

The plan was for Cece to pretend her car was broken down and ask Gwen to drive her to Xander’s bar then invite her inside to pick up his keys.
 

I waited inside, listening as they crossed the threshold of the door, giggling together. When Cece pulled back the curtains, Gwen’s feet faltered, and she gasped.
 

Cece smiled, and I did, too, because it was the first thing we’d worked on as a team and it had actually been successful.
 

I locked eyes with Gwen from across the room and held out a chair for her at a table for two, adorned with candles and pristine wineglasses. I smiled as she approached.
 

“What
is
all this?” she asked, pointing toward the table and candles.

“I wanted to give you a birthday dinner. Away from the house. Is that okay with you?” I winked.

She took her seat, and I pushed in her chair then sat in the empty seat next to her and filled her glass with wine.
 

“So I take it you bought my sister’s story about her car breaking down?” I asked.

Gwen glared at Cece for tricking her. My sister just shrugged and disappeared into the kitchen, where Xander was plating the dinner I’d prepared.
 

Gwen nervously pulled her skirt over her knees. “If I’d known you were going to do this, I’d have changed into something nicer.”

“You look beautiful.” I couldn’t stop staring at her face, illuminated by the candles, how her hair was shiny and her lips were bare after being at work all day.

I jumped up from my chair. “I cooked dinner for us. The kids are staying with Debra tonight, but we only have the bar until nine for our little private party. So we should get started.”

I went to retrieve our plates from the kitchen and set them down on the table with all the grace I could muster with the anxious feeling in my chest.

“Cece and Xander are in the kitchen since they helped me plan everything, but they have explicit instructions not to interrupt us.” I raised my wineglass and tipped it toward her. “Happy birthday, Gwen.”

“You didn’t have to do all this, you know.”

“I did. And I have cake for dessert, but it will be served at home.” I raised an eyebrow.
 

She crossed her legs and ducked her head to cut into her beef Wellington. I was pretty sure she didn’t do it on purpose, but she moaned. The familiarity of it made me pause.

“Does that mean you like it? Because it sounds like you really like it.”
 

She cut off another piece and placed it on her tongue. She chewed and gave me a knowing smile before she swallowed. “I have to admit it’s the best meat I’ve ever had in my entire life.”

I choked on my bite and shoved my napkin to my mouth, turning away to pound the food from my windpipe.

“You okay?” she asked with wide, innocent eyes.

“Yes. I’m fine.”
 

She was baiting me but I wasn’t taking it tonight. Once I regained my composure, we fell into easy conversation. I caught her staring at me a few times, the sparkle in her eyes apparent even in the dim lighting. We talked about the kids and school. How much Bree loved her teacher, and what a bad influence Brady’s new friend Keegan was on our child, even though the things Brady did at home were too funny to reprimand him for.

“They’re going to be quite a handful in a few years,” Gwen said, then looked down at her plate.
 

“We’ll see about that,” I said with a chuckle. I was going to kick all of Bree’s boyfriends’ asses when they came to the door. I’d probably escort her to prom and stand in the shadows to make sure they danced a foot apart.
 

The silence was heavy until I looked up at her. My hands shook a little, and I knew. All she had to do was say the words and we’d have a chance.
 

“Thank you,” she whispered, and I gave her a tentative smile.

She dropped her gaze, and my hands clenched while I fought back the urge to say what was on my mind. But I didn’t want to play games anymore. I was done with that.
 

She pressed her lips together and placed her elbows on the table, staring at the candle’s flames. “Dee?”

“Hmm?”
 

“Can I ask you a question?”

“Anything.”

“Have you . . .” She looked up at me and sucked in a deep breath. “Have you been ruining my dates on purpose? I know it seems a little out of left field to ask, but Tess has this theory that you’ve been trying to interfere. I told her she was insane, but I can’t stop thinking she might be right.” She finally looked at me head-on.

I held her gaze. “If I have been, would you blame me?”
 

She shook her head.
 

“Ask me to go, Gwen, and I will. Ask me to leave you alone, and I’ll walk out of here right now.” I leaned toward her and ghosted my lips across her cheek, and she jumped.

Her eyes closed, and she bit her lip in frustration. “That’s the problem. I couldn’t ask that of you even if I wanted to. That night I went to dinner with Thomas, he told me something I haven’t been able to get out of my head. He said no man in his right mind would stay and watch someone else’s children if he didn’t care. That if things between us weren’t real, you’d have left a long time ago.”

My heart twitched, and I bit my tongue to keep from saying something stupid. Like
I love you
. Or
Marry me and have my babies
.
 

She turned in the chair, her entire body angled to face me, then tilted her chin up and squinted to see deeper into my eyes. She scooted forward to perch on the edge of her chair, and I slid forward, too, and pulled her legs in between my knees.

“Is that true?” she asked. “Because hearing you took the job because you wanted to get your inheritance—or because you only wanted to sleep with me—makes me sick to my stomach. But you stayed, so now I’m just confused.”

“Yeah. Of course it’s true. I could have left a long time ago, but I didn’t, right? I’m not here to prove anything to anyone. And I once told you that I don’t say things I don’t mean. You’ve already heard I don’t stick around when I don’t need to.”

“I’ve been pushing you away because I didn’t want the kids to get hurt if something happened. You know that.”

“I do know that. It’s practically beating a dead horse at this point. So I’ll say it again—we’re on the same page.”
 

“But, also, it’s because of something else. I think I was afraid of getting close to you because every man I’ve ever loved . . . isn’t here anymore. And maybe I’m a curse. I don’t want to lose you, too.”

“That’s a terrible thing to think about yourself. We have a chance, you know. We do.”

“I want to believe you.” She nodded, took my hand, and guided it to the top of her thigh. We both stopped breathing for a second. My palm rested above her knee, and I followed suit with my other hand until I was gripping both her thighs and leaning toward her, our faces just inches apart. She placed a warm palm on my cheek and ran her thumb across the deep, dark circles under my eyes, a look of concern clouding her features before she lifted her face to mine and pulled my mouth to hers.

Our lips met, slow and deliberate, testing what we were feeling. The frantic kisses from before were mere blips on my radar, the memories of them so fuzzy they almost didn’t matter. Not compared to this. I pulled her closer, and she wrapped her arms around my neck. I gripped her hips, angling her body toward me so there would be no doubt in her mind about how much I wanted this. How much I wanted her.
 

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