Chapter 5
5
K ent sat in his kitchen, sipping his coffee while going through his checklist. The only people who had ever taken Elle overnight had been his mother and Jackie. Had he known his nanny would need to be gone, he would have made arrangements for his mother to fly down, or he’d have found a way to change shifts.
He flipped to the second page, crossing out a couple of things that were no longer relevant.
“No, Daddy, toss that thing away.” Elle bounced her way into the kitchen from the family room. Her smile had turned to a frown the second she laid eyes on the folder.
“This has emergency numbers if something happens.” He tapped his finger on the paper.
Pursing her lips together, she pointed to the fridge. “And the same information is tacked there.”
“I don’t know why this bothers you so much.”
“Because its sooooo embarrassing. Every new school year, you march yourself down to my new teacher and hand them a piece of paper with instructions on how to care for me.” Elle held up her hands and made air quotes while she simultaneously rolled her eyes. “They are highly trained professionals in the care of children. Like you are dealing with fires.”
“That’s not the?—”
“Dad, I’m not finished.” She planted her hands on her hips.
Kent bit his tongue.
“And anytime I go to a friend’s house, you have to get on the phone with the parents.”
He held up his hand. “Every parent does that.”
She shook her head vehemently. “They don’t tell you how to make their kid’s sandwich, right down to the exact mixture of mayo and mustard I like.” She brushed her hair from the sides of her face. “Which, by the way, it’s fine to slop it on the bread. I’m not two anymore, and I don’t have a cow if it’s not the perfect color.”
“I’ll make sure I add that to the notes,” he said, waffling between frustration over his daughter’s sassy attitude as of late and the sinking feeling in the pit of his gut that perhaps she was right.
Ding-dong.
Elle wiggled her finger.
“Young lady,” he said, lowering his chin. “Don’t take that tone with me.”
“I’m sorry, but if you give that folder to Dixie, she’ll be as angry as I am.”
“I doubt that. Now go get the door for our breakfast guests.”
Last night, after dinner at Rex’s, he’d dropped Dixie off at Jackie’s house, giving her an awkward hug goodbye at the door. The woman turned his brain to mush.
“Good morning,” Dixie said as she breezed into the kitchen like the ocean lapping at the shore. “I hear we’re having pancakes for breakfast.”
He stood, holding the folder in his hands. “Do you want some coffee?”
“I do. But I can get it.” Stretching her arms up, her shirt lifted from her miniskirt, showing off her taut stomach.
Cartoons blared from the family room, reminding him of all the reasons he shouldn’t pursue another kiss.
“Here.” He held out the folder. “Just some information about staying with Elle for the night.”
He swallowed, watching Dixie eye him over the mug, the steam from the coffee floating up toward her face.
She set the mug down, taking the folder between her fingers.
He kept telling himself he was just being a good parent. Elle was his world, and all he wanted to do was make sure she was well looked after when he couldn’t be there. So he went overboard with all the tiny details, like how she liked to have her towels warm when she got out of the shower. Of course, she did that herself these days.
“This is six pages long,” Dixie said. “And at the end, you have a little test.”
He’d added that this morning.
“You’re seriously nervous about leaving Elle with me overnight?”
Kent took a small step back. The glare coming off Dixie’s sapphire eyes was more like a raging hurricane than the calming of the ocean.
She shoved the folder with his detailed instructions against his chest.
“I did this for your aunt the first time?—”
Dixie poked his chest. “Would you be insulted if I didn’t trust you to take care of Nicky for one night?” She stormed out of his kitchen and into the backyard, slamming the door shut.
“Come on, Dixie.” Tossing the papers on the counter, he followed her outside, the morning sun already tipping the temperatures well into the eighties. “I can’t help that I’m a detail-oriented person. I make lists. Wouldn’t you make me a list for Nicky?”
“No. Actually, I wouldn’t.” She planted her hands on her hips. “You’ve spent enough time with him for me to feel comfortable knowing you’d take care of him like you would your own.”
“You’d leave instructions if you left Nicky with Elle or say the teenager who lives next to Jackie.”
“I’m not a teenager.”
“I didn’t mean to offend you.” He couldn’t believe his daughter had been right.
“Well, you did.”
“And I’m sorry, but as a single parent, you have to be able to see why I’d be a little skittish.”
She laughed, but it wasn’t a ha-ha funny noise. More like a har-har, right, asshole noise. “The first day I came to babysit, yes. The second day, maybe. But now? Absolutely not.” She folded her arms. “I’m good enough to kiss, but not good enough to make sure your daughter is safe for twenty-four hours.”
He wondered if they’d ever get to the topic of their one kiss yesterday in Rex’s kitchen. He knew Tilly was up to her tricks, trying to push them together. The idea to kiss her hadn’t appeared in his mind until he stepped into the room, and she looked so sweet and sexy with her concerned expression. He loved the way her nose crinkled, and her right eyelid twitched when she was nervous.
“Dad, we’re hungry,” Elle said, standing in the doorway with Nicky on her hip.
“Give us ten minutes.”
“Fine,” Elle said, rolling her eyes before turning and disappearing back into the house.
He swallowed. “Now that is scary,” he whispered.
“What is?”
“My daughter with a kid on her hip.”
Dixie patted his shoulder. “She’s going to grow up someday and fall in love with a man and?—”
“Don’t say it. Or might I remind you of your little man one day falling in love with a girl and… and… and…”
“Having sex.” She no longer shot daggers at him, but now her baby blues doused him with sarcasm.
“And you don’t have a problem with that?”
“What, that my son is going to grow up to be a man, and hopefully a good one, like you and not his fath…” She snapped her head toward the house. “Thank God he wasn’t standing there.”
“I don’t think he heard you.” He rested his hands on her forearms, gently rubbing up and down. “Your aunt told me his father hasn’t been paying child support.” He racked his brain for the details of that conversation so as not to muck it up with what Darius had found out. He figured one mistake today was enough.
“He never wanted to be a dad. I kept thinking that as soon as I gave birth, he’d fall in love with his boy, but Daniel just looked at him and told me I needed to prove Nicky was his kid.” A tear rolled down her cheek. “How could anyone not love their own child?” She pointed to the house. “Nicky still asks when his daddy is coming back.”
“What do you tell him?”
She slumped her shoulders. “I just smile and tell him that his father thinks of him every day.”
He bit down on his anger and choked on sadness. “Nicky is a smart kid; that won’t work much longer.”
“I know. But how do you tell a kid his father doesn’t want him?”
“I wish I had an answer.” What Kent really wished for was five minutes alone with that weasel. He tipped her chin with his thumb and index finger. “Nicky will grow up to be a fine man because he has you for a mom.” He searched her eyes for a reason to pull away. Yesterday, he’d told himself that they would never share another kiss. Things were too complicated, and they both had children to protect.
“Thank you for staying that.”
“It’s the truth.” Cupping the back of her neck, he drew her closer. The bitter smell of roasted coffee flowed from her lips.
“Your neighbor is staring at us.”
“Is it Jessica?”
“Yes.”
“Good, let’s give her something to gossip about at the park today.” Before Dixie could protest, he circled his free hand around her waist, crushing her chest to his, and molded his mouth on her lips.
She fisted his shirt as if she were going to shove him away, but instead she relaxed into his arms, resting her soft palms on his shoulder blades. Everything about her excited his body and his mind. He wanted to explore every inch of her skin and listen to her talk until the wee hours of the morning.
The revving of a motorcycle engine reminded him he had to leave for work, and he’d promised to have breakfast with his daughter.
“I don’t know about you, but I’m starving,” he said, kissing the side of her neck.
“We should go inside. I think Jessica just snapped our picture.”
He glanced over his shoulder, then smiled and waved at his nosy, but harmless neighbor. “Beautiful morning, isn’t it.” Draping his arm over Dixie’s shoulders, he guided her to the back door, leaving Jessica with her jaw wide open. “You might want to stay clear of the park today, unless you want to field a dozen or so questions about our relationship.”
“We don’t have one.”
“A second kiss puts us near that territory.”
“No, it doesn’t,” she said, though her smile said something else.
“We’ll talk about it when I get back from work.”
He opened the door, and Nicky came running… to him.
“Kent!” the little boy wailed. “Don’t leave!”
He glanced from Nicky to Dixie, who stared at him with wide eyes. His heart raced as he bent over, lifting the toddler and cradling him in his arms. “What’s gotten into him?” he asked his daughter.
“I don’t know. I just said you would be gone all night. I didn’t know it would upset him. I’m sorry.” Elle chomped down on her fingernail.
“It’s okay,” Dixie said, patting the boy’s back. “You had no idea he’d react this way. Come here.” She tried to pull him, but he wouldn’t let go of Kent’s neck.
“Why don’t you two start breakfast while Nicky and I go have a man-to-man.”
Dixie shook her head, her hands still tugging at her son. He understood her concern, but Nicky had a death grip, and he figured if he didn’t handle it, Nicky would make the assumption this was just another man who was going to walk out of his life.
Well, Kent wasn’t going to do that.
“We’ll just be in the family room.” He leaned over and gave her a quick peck on the cheek, which caused his daughter to gasp and then chuckle. He wasn’t sure what to make of that, but he was going to have to talk to Elle anyway. He hugged Nicky, rubbing his back, trying to get him to stop sobbing so they could have a little chat, though having real discussions with three-year-olds were generally not too deep.
“Nicky? Do you know what I do for work?” Kent asked.
“No,” he said with a quiver in his voice.
“I’m a firefighter.”
“Really?” Nicky snapped his head up as Kent sat down on the sofa. “You ride in a red truck?”
Kent laughed. “I do, and you see, if I don’t go to work and someone has a fire, who will be there to put it out?”
“But why all-night work?”
“It’s just the way we do it sometimes. I’ll be home tomorrow morning, and if it’s okay with your mom, maybe we can go fishing.”
Nicky nodded his head wildly as he wiped his own tears away. “I don’t want you to go away like my daddy where he only gets to think about me.”
Well, for fuck’s sake. Kent did all he could to not punch the wall. This kid deserved better and eventually he’ll figure out the truth about his father, but hopefully not until he’s ready and mature enough to understand this wasn’t his fault.
“How about we go get some pancakes?”
Nicky nodded.
Kent stood and made his way back to the kitchen with a heavy heart. Getting involved with a woman with a deadbeat ex and a toddler was going to be complicated as hell.
“Smells good in here.” He handed Nicky to Dixie, who hugged him like an overprotective mother, which made Kent chuckle. Sitting down at the small round table, he placed a napkin in his lap and a fork in a stack of fluffy pancakes.
“Daddy, wait for the rest of us.”
“I’ve got ten minutes, Buttercup.”
Elle put one hand on her hip.
“Fine,” he muttered. “Elle, I’ve got ten minutes before I have to be out the door, so let me stuff my face.”
Elle smiled sweetly, setting a couple more plates on the table. Nicky climbed up on his knees, waiting for his pancake.
Once Dixie was seated at the table, Elle patted her father’s leg. “A nice, romantic meal, sort of,” she said.
He dropped his fork.
Dixie choked on her juice.
Nicky covered his mouth, giggling.
“Come on, Dad. I saw you two kissing out there. And at Uncle Rex’s place.” She smiled like she just won first prize in the spelling bee. “You’re dating.”