It’s Gwen. The knocking becomes more insistent. “Guinevere, open the door.”
“Go away,” I say quietly but I know he hears me.
The door opens. I pull the blanket tighter around my head.
“Stop moping and come and eat.” He demands, his tone showing his annoyance.
I don’t respond. I don’t want to eat with him. He needs to leave me in my cave of woe in peace.
He sighs and I hear his footsteps get closer. “Gwen.”
“I’m tired.”
I squeal when the blanket is ripped away from my body and Nathan looms over me, looking every bit as pissed off as I now feel. “This isn’t healthy.”
I try to bury my head under the pillow but he takes that too.
After a moment of squeezing my eyes shut and burying my face under my arms, I’m airborne. “Put me down,” I order, not daring to wiggle as he cradles me to his chest for fear of him dropping me. “Now.”
“Eat and then you can wallow all you want,” he says calmly and carries me from my room. My arms automatically wrap around his shoulders. “You’re very light for someone who’s pregnant.”
“Didn’t realise you made a habit of carrying pregnant women,” I remark.
“You’re also extremely frustrating.”
“I am not.” Maybe only a little bit, but who can blame me?
He lets out a breath and begins to walk carefully down the stairs. “I apologize for upsetting you this morning. Jeanine was rather insistent that I should never take food from a pregnant woman. I’ll try to be more reasonable in the future.”
What the hell should I say to that? “Okay.”
He doesn’t speak, only takes me into the dining room and places me gently on the chair beside his. My nose picks up the aroma of garlic and beef before I even see my plate and my mouth waters at the sight of the stew.
“You cooked this?” I question, impressed with the food.
He gives a little shrug. “It’s just stew.”
“Caleb could barely cook a frozen pizza,” I point out and dip a piece of fresh bread into the broth. Oh my god. “This is better than mine. Thank you.”
His eyes wander over my face for a moment before he begins to eat his own. “I see you’re not religious.”
“Did you want to pray?”
“No.”
“So…”
“It was just an observation.”
I quirk a brow at him. “You observe strange things.”
“Is it wrong of me to want to know the woman who now lives with me a little better?” His eyes fall to his food and his lower lip slips beneath his teeth.
“I suppose not.” I swirl my spoon around the wonderful mixture and pick out a piece of beef and potato. “Well I’m not religious. I wasn’t raised religious but I do believe in God.”
He nods slowly but doesn’t seem all that interested. His face is a mask of indifference and we fall into silence. It’s an uncomfortable one.
I clear the table, just to have something to do while he sits and speaks loudly to somebody on his mobile. My ears perk up when he starts talking about his dad so I wash the dishes in the kitchen, giving me a reason to linger. All I hear is, “Yes, well, what my father says clearly goes.” And then he moves onto talking about stocks and shares and other boring things.
When he’s finished, he steps into the kitchen and loosens the blue tie around his neck. “Thank you for doing the dishes.”
“No problem.” My nesting instinct wouldn’t let me leave them anyway.
“Can I trust you to be present for breakfast in the morning?” I shrug in response. “I’ll take that as a yes.”
“Okay.”
“Goodnight, Guinevere.”
“It’s Gwen and it’s only seven. You’re going to bed already?”
I hear him take a few steps closer. “What I do isn’t your business… Gwen. Remember that.”
Wow. Seriously? He’s going to be that rude? “I was just making an observation.”
“Don’t. You won’t like what you observe,” he states coldly and stalks out of the room. The entire time I didn’t look at him and felt no desire to either, until his parting comment. Now I can’t take my eyes off his back as he walks away.
What the hell did he mean by that? What won’t I like? Not that I’m trying to like anything or looking for something to like.
I wake up in the morning earlier than usual. Stupid morning sickness should have stopped by now. It hasn’t. I race to the bathroom and fall to my knees in front of the toilet. Yuck. Luckily the sickness subsides after the first emptying