Epilogue
Ten years later...
“But, Dad, we’re going to starve!” Cole complained again as he dropped to the ground, doing his best to look like he was dying.
Of course, eight-year-old Elizabeth and five-year-old Joshua copied their older brother, dropping to the ground right beside Jason’s feet and doing their best to out pout the other.
Jason chuckled as he added more burgers and chicken to the large stainless-steel grill he’d bought yesterday.
“Don’t you love us, Daddy?” Elizabeth asked, adding just the right amount of lip trembling while Joshua overdid it.
Jason sighed, throwing more hot dogs onto the grill.
It seemed that he was going to have to work with his youngest son again.
An amateur pout like that could mean the difference between Haley feeling sorry for all of them and baking some delicious treats to shut them the hell up or her rolling her eyes and ignoring them.
“I so hungie, Daddy,” Joshua said, using the baby voice that he knew his parents were suckers for.
Jason looked down at his children and did his best not to laugh at their over-exaggerated pouts.
They were so damn cute, but that was to be expected since they were his kids.
All three of them took after him in height, dark hair, and appetite, but they all had their mother’s beautiful emerald eyes, cute little nose, and the ability to brighten up a room with their smiles.
Pursing his lips in indecision, Jason looked around their large backyard for his little grasshopper.
When he didn’t find her among their guests, he stepped back and craned his neck to look through the kitchen’s double-glass sliding doors.
He spotted his parents, a few cousins, and uncles, but no little grasshopper.
When he looked back at his kids, he wasn’t too shocked to find them already back on their feet, looking ready to pounce. They knew the drill, after all.
“Take this plate,” he said, grabbing a plate off the large picnic table he’d set up as his workstation, “and go hide. Make sure you share because if I hear any whining, I’m not doing this again.
” He threw another cautious look over his shoulder before loading up the plate with three large barbecue chicken legs.
“After you’re done, make sure that you get rid of the evidence and, Cole,” he said, looking over his shoulder at his oldest son, who was licking his lips hungrily, “make sure that your brother and sister remember to wash up this time.”
The last time they’d snuck food at a party, Cole innocently denied eating the double chocolate birthday cake.
Haley would have probably bought their story if Elizabeth and Joshua hadn’t been covered from head-to-toe in chocolate frosting.
Then again, he wouldn’t have been caught if the kids hadn’t ratted his ass out.
He handed the large plate to Cole. “Pick a better spot this time,” Jason warned his son.
Cole nodded. “Can we have some-”
“Jason Bradford!” his mother said, drawing their attention towards the house. They all swallowed noticeably when they spotted Haley standing next to his mother with her arms crossed over her chest and her cute little brows arched.
“Please tell me that you’re not already sneaking food,” his little grasshopper said on a tired sigh.
“No, of course, not-run kids! Run!” Jason yelled even as Cole took off towards the woods with his brother and sister hot on his heels.
His mother let out a long-suffering sigh as she walked over to the table and picked up the small box of baby wipes and three juice boxes from one of the large coolers and headed after them.
Jason gave Haley the grin that still got him out of parking tickets and earned him unlimited free samples at the grocery store. Haley simply stared at him, pushing her glasses back up her nose with one finger.
“I love you?” Jason said, trying not to laugh as Haley tried to look stern and failed miserably.
“They’re my cupcakes, you greedy bastards!” they heard his father yell from the kitchen.
Haley’s lips twitched as she said, “Between you, the kids, and your father, I don’t think there will be enough food for everyone.”
“But they were starving, my little grasshopper. The poor things were barely able to move from hunger,” Jason said, trying to look innocent as he shifted closer to the grill so that she wouldn’t see the plate of chicken bones that he forgot to hide.
“Those poor things conned Mitch out of the two plates of peanut butter cup bars that Mary brought twenty minutes ago,” Haley informed him, chuckling.
“They what?” he snapped, causing everyone around them to jump.
He ignored them as he turned a glare in the direction his children headed.
The sense of betrayal hit hard. Not only had they conned the softhearted Mitch out of delicious baked goods that were meant for him, but they’d failed to give him his customary cut of the action, fifty percent.
“Yup,” Haley said, walking past him to grab a cold soda from the cooler.
She rolled her eyes when she spotted the chicken bones and perched her cute little ass on the end of the picnic table.
“As soon as he walked in and put the baby down, they hit him with ‘I love you, Uncle Mitch’ and hugs and he was a goner.”
Jason’s glare shifted to his best friend, who was lounging in a chair with his wife, Mary, Haley’s best friend, on his lap. Their baby played in the sandbox close by as their two oldest children ran around with the other kids playing tag.
Ten years ago, Mitch would have simply taunted and teased the kids with the baked goods until someone hit him upside the head and made him share, but that had all changed when Haley asked the bastard to do her a favor.
Back then, Mary had been a struggling single mom of a newborn and was barely getting by on less than an hour of sleep a night.
As a favor to Haley, and after much manipulation on Haley’s part, Mitch reluctantly volunteered to run some food, formula, and diapers over to Mary’s small apartment.
Mary opened the door with messy hair, dried spit-up on her clothes, looking exhausted, holding a screaming baby girl in her arms and Mitch had fallen hard.
Almost overnight, the old Mitch had disappeared, and the new softhearted family-oriented man had taken his place.
He’d started spending all his free time helping Mary, making sure that she got enough rest, and taking care of little Tabitha, much to everyone’s shock.
Everyone knew that Mary had fallen equally hard for him, but she’d held back, too afraid to end up hurt again.
It took some time, but Mitch eventually wore her down and within a year, they were married and expecting their second child.
“Did no one try and stop him?” Jason demanded, turning his attention back on his little grasshopper, who was helping Brad’s son, Aaron, make up a plate of food.
Haley chuckled softly as she sent the little boy on his way. “Everyone was too busy laughing.”
“Those were my peanut butter cup bars, woman!”
“But,” Haley said with an innocent little pout, “the poor things were starving.”
“You’re mocking me, aren’t you?” Jason asked, his lips twitching as Haley walked into his arms. He put an arm around her shoulders and pressed a kiss to the top of her head.
“Yes, yes, I am,” Haley said, sounding proud as she snuggled closer.
He held her for a few minutes, simply enjoying having his little grasshopper in his arms before he asked the question he hated asking, “Did they show up?”
“No,” she mumbled against his chest.
Jason leaned back and cupped her face in his hands. “I’m really sorry, my little grasshopper,” he said softly, pressing a kiss to her forehead. He hadn’t really expected them to show up to celebrate their tenth anniversary, but he had hoped that they would for Haley’s sake.
No matter how many years passed, he still couldn’t rid himself of the guilt he felt every time her family disappointed her.
After they’d announced their elopement, her family had gone a bit hysterical.
They’d screamed, ranted, and begged Haley not to throw her life away on a loser like him.
They hadn’t cared that he’d been in the room at the time.
Finally, Grandma had put an end to the bullshit and started swinging that cane of hers.
Ten minutes later, while Mr. Blaine was rubbing a sore knee, he wrote a check in Jason’s name for a hundred thousand dollars and all he had to do was walk away from Haley.
Turning down that money had been the easiest decision he’d ever made.
He just wished Haley and the kids weren’t the ones suffering because of him.
They’d completely cut Haley off and refused to have anything to do with the kids. He knew that it hurt Haley, but she never let it show. Thankfully, he had enough family to more than make up for the loss.
“It’s okay,” Haley said, forcing a smile.
“The hell it is!”
They both looked down and smiled as Grandma glared up at them from her new electric wheelchair. With a flick of her hand, she gestured for Jason to load her up. With a smile, he did just that.
Having Haley’s grandmother move in with them five years ago when Chris retired, and they’d finished building this house, had probably made up for her family’s neglect.
Haley and the kids loved having her with them and Grandma loved having her own in-law apartment and the freedom to harass them any time she felt the need arise.
“I don’t know why you keep inviting them, Haley,” Grandma said, gesturing for Jason to add another hot dog. “They don’t deserve you.”
Haley shrugged. “It wouldn’t feel right if I didn’t.”
Grandma gave Haley a sad smile. “I know, kiddo.”
“Here you go, Grandma,” Jason said, placing the plate on one of the tables the guys had set up that morning.
She reached out and gave Haley’s hand a squeeze before she rode over to the cooler and grabbed an ice-cold beer.
With a long-suffering sigh, Jason grabbed the beer away from her, ignored her glare, and handed her an ice-cold root beer instead.
Haley couldn’t help but smile as the two got into a bickering match over Grandma’s right to have a beer at a barbecue. Jason reminded her that her doctor said no alcohol and Grandma reminded Jason that she’d take him over her knee if he didn’t give her the damn beer.
In the end, Grandma grumbled as she ate her meal with an ice-cold Coke. She threw Jason a fond smile when he wasn’t looking. Five minutes later, the kids were happily skipping out of the woods with an exhausted Megan pulling up the rear.
“Grandma!” they said excitedly as if they didn’t see their great-grandmother every day.
Grandma didn’t bother hiding her pleased smile as all three children sat down with her and shared their latest adventures with her.
Megan grabbed a beer and headed for the pool, muttering something about needing a vacation.
Haley leaned against Jason as he flipped burgers. “You okay, my little grasshopper?”
She wrapped her arms around his waist and snuggled into his side. “More than okay.”
“I love you, Haley,” Jason said, leaning down to brush his lips against hers.
“I know,” she said, smiling against his lips.
He pulled back to grin down at her. “You know?”
“Mmhmm,” Haley said absently as she ran her fingers through his hair, smoothing it back.
“Mmmhmm?” he repeated back, sounding amused. “You love me and you damn well know it.”
“Maybe,” she said with a shrug.
“Maybe you should just admit that you’re crazy about me,” Jason said, leaning in to kiss her again.
“And why would you want me to do that?” Haley asked, still smiling.
“Because I’m playing for keeps, my little grasshopper.”
Thank you for reading Playing for Keeps I hope that you enjoyed reading Jason and Haley’s story as much as I enjoyed writing it.