My mouth drops open, and my mind blanks. No right words are coming to me. Except one. “No,” I blurt out on a rush of air before I consider wording my refusal a little more considerately. I wince at the clear disappointment that jumps onto his perfect face. “I mean…” My damn brain is failing to load my mouth with anything that could redeem myself, and guilt is instantly crippling me for being the cause of his hurt.
“You are not staying alone.”
“I need to be at home.” My eyes drop, no longer prepared to face the pleading in his intense stare. He doesn’t come back at me with an argument, instead sighing and squeezing my little hand in his. “To Livy’s home, please, Ted,” he instructs quietly before falling silent.
I look up to see him staring out the window. He’s pensive. “Thank you,” I whisper, shuffling across the seat to curl into his side. I’m not encouraged or helped, and he doesn’t welcome me once I’m settled, keeping his eyes on the outside world whizzing past the window.
“Don’t ever thank me,” he answers quietly.
* * *
“Lock the door,” Miller says, my cheeks cupped in his palms, his worried eyes scanning my face as we stand on the doorstep. “Don’t answer to anyone. I’ll be back as soon as I’ve collected some clean clothes.”
My forehead wrinkles. “Should I expect visitors?”
The worry disappears in a flash and is replaced with exasperation. After our words in the car, I knew I had scored a victory, but I honestly never expected Miller to so willingly stay here. I want him to, of course, but I wasn’t about to test his already fraying patience. I’ve done that already by insisting I be here and that I be here right this moment. I wasn’t prepared to be dragged over to the other side of town so Miller could check his apartment and collect some clean clothes. It would have been an opportunity for him to lock me inside. And I’ve no doubt he would have. But I’m not delusional enough to kid myself that Miller staying here has anything to do with my fraught mind where Nan is concerned.
“Less of the sass, Olivia.”
“You love my sass.” I take his hands from my cheeks and return them to him. “I’m going to take a shower.” Reaching up on my tiptoes, I kiss his stubbled jaw. “Be quick.”
“I will,” he breathes.
I pull away and register his evident exhaustion. He looks drained. “I love you.” I step back until I’m in the hallway and take the door handle.
A strained smile tickles his lips, and he shoves his hands into his jeans pockets as he starts retreating backward down the path. “Lock the door,” he repeats.
I nod my acceptance and slowly shut the door, immediately bolting the locks and putting the safety chain on, knowing he won’t leave until he hears them all shift into place. Then I spend too long staring down the long hallway to the back kitchen, waiting for the familiar, comforting sound of Nan pottering around. Of course it never comes, so I resort to closing my eyes and imagining her there. After standing motionless for an age, I finally convince my depleted body to carry me toward the stairs.
But I pull to an abrupt halt when there’s a knock on the front door. With a furrowed brow, I move toward the door and go to unbolt the locks, but something halts me. It’s Miller’s voice telling me not to answer to anyone. I draw breath to ask who it is and quickly stop myself. Instinct?
Stepping silently back from the door, I sneak into the lounge and approach the bay window. My senses are all on high alert. I feel apprehensive, nervous, and I jump a mile when the door is rapped again. “Fucking hell!” I blurt out, probably too loudly. My damn heart bangs relentlessly in my chest as I tiptoe toward the window and peek past the curtain.
A face appears.
“Fuck!” I screech, staggering back from the window. I clutch my chest, heaving shocked breaths while allowing my eyes and mind to register a face I recognize. “Ted?” I gasp, my face screwing up in confusion. He smiles that fond smile and gives his head a little flick toward the front door before he’s gone from view. I roll my eyes and swallow in an attempt to push my heart down from my throat. “Trying to give me frigging heart failure,” I mutter, making my way to the front door, knowing for sure that he’s been here the whole time since Miller left, on lookout.
I unbolt the door and swing it open. A body barrels toward me, and I barely jump out of the way in time. “Shit!” I cry, pinning myself to the wall of the hallway. My poor heart hasn’t yet recovered from the shock of Ted’s face at the window.
Miller pushes past me with his suitcase and dumps it at the bottom of the stairs.