“Why should you be sorry?” I shrugged and swirled the ice in the glass while I glanced around for Wes. He was taking a shot with his friends, and a girl was leaning on his arm. It was another indicator that this was casual flirting between us and nothing more.
She sighed. “Because she’s rude, and she’s my sister. So, I should probably teach her some manners.”
“She’s old enough to know.” I pushed the waves out of my face and smiled. “I learned manners like that the first time I listened toBambi.”
“Listened?” Clara tilted her head and her dark red curls fell from her shoulder.
I couldn’t help but smile at the fact that Clara was attempting to talk with me even knowing her sister wouldn’t like it. “My mom was weird about TV and movies. So, I listened on headphones to them.”
She gave me a once-over. “That makes a lot sense.”
I waited for her to elaborate.
“You do this”—she motioned in front of me—“a lot.” Again, I waited. “You don’t fold in a moment of awkward silence, like you have a much more controlled attention span than we do.”
I laughed at the assessment. “I’m just waiting for you to finish.”
“No. no. It’s really true.”
I glanced at a woman laughing near the pool, reluctant to get in. “I was homeschooled for a long time and not around other people much. Makes me a bit awkward, I guess.” I wasn’t ashamed of that anymore. “I had my mom and a few friends that came to her small yoga studio, but that’s about it.”
“Were you lonely?” Clara whispered, like she shouldn’t be asking.
“Sure. I wanted…” I sighed. Carl used to send cards of him with his new wife and the children she’d had with her first husband. I’d have those childhood dreams of Christmases together, that I would have sisters, that my mother and their mom would become friends. Yet, I’d overheard my mother asking, heard her agree with my father that maybe it wasn’t such a good idea. I saw Anastasia glance over at us and roll her eyes. “An only child gets lonely sometimes, but I also learned a person can keep themselves company probably better than anyone else can.”
“Clara, get over here!” Anastasia yelled, waving her manicured hand in the air for Clara.
“I see.” Clara leaned in and whispered, “Well, sometimes having Anastasia as a sister can get lonely too.” Before I could pick apart what she’d said, she nudged my shoulder. “Oh, don’t start reading into it, Evie. We’ll talk later. Come to the bakery sometime next week.”
I couldn’t help but smile at the idea until she stood up and gasped. I followed her line of sight. “What?”
“Probably won’t talk later since he’s coming this way.”
I heard whispers, felt the air in the room shift, and like a parting sea, saw how the crowd moved for him.
He towered over most everyone as he paced through the room, straight up to me without looking away. Anastasia murmured something to him, but his laser focus couldn’t be deterred.
“Everly.” Declan breathed my name out sternly as he came toe-to-toe with my running shoes.
Why hadn’t I changed again? Sitting there in my workout gear with one of Wes’s jerseys draped over me now felt a bit ridiculous as he glared down at me. “Yes?”
“Get up. I’m taking you home.”
Commands from a man that didn’t have any authority over me. Couldn’t he see that people were listening, were watching, that he had no claim on me whatsoever?
He’d done this once before, come to Wes’s and told me to leave. It’d been with far less people to witness it though. This was beyond disrespectful. I’d made that clear to him. So crystal clear it was freaking transparent. He might have been business partners with my father, but he wasn’t my dad. We weren’t even friends. We were barely even colleagues.
“Hardy, man, you come to have a good time with the wrong team?” Wes called out from behind the counter. He’d had enough to drink that it seemed he was willing to put all rivalries aside.
“No. I came to take Everly home,” he growled.
An hour. I’d been gone from the gym for an hour. That meant he’d found out and came straight here. No hesitation, no thought of the repercussions. Not one ounce of consideration for how embarrassing this might be for me.
I stood up and Declan gave me a once-over, his eyes widening before he pinched the bridge of his nose through a grimace. I saw how his cheeks blew out, too, like he needed a couple deep breaths. “His jersey, Everly? Jesus fucking Christ.”
“Mr. Hardy,” I ground out his name. “Thanks for stopping by, but I’ll take an Uber homeifI leave. But you being here is completely unnecessary,” I whispered angrily, trying to reason with him without everyone hearing.
“You being here when your father forbade it is even more unnecessary.” He folded his arms over his chest.