little shake and closes the door behind him. “Right. Is he in his room?”
“He was asleep the last time I checked.”
I can tell that this whole situation amuses Thayden to no end, but I don’t know exactly why. I wonder if Gavin has ever talked about me, and that’s why Thayden seemed to have some recognition when I said my name.
Oh, please say that Gavin talked about me. Pretty please.
Thayden knows his way around the house and disappears toward Gavin’s room. I look down at Ella, who recovers enough to pull out of my grasp.
“You said you might want to swim today. Delilah brought my suit for me, so you want to go out?”
Ella lifts her nose and sniffs. “I’d rather not. I’ll be in my room watching movies if you need me.”
Is that all this child does? How many hours is she glued to her tablet each day? Is that the new nanny—electronics? And how does she somehow seem so old and so young at the same time?
I want to argue, but Ella isn’t my kid. And it hasn’t gone well when I’ve tried getting her to do anything. This whole weird babysitting gig is temporary. Gavin can figure it out later.
That thought feels like a fire poker shoved right into the center of my chest. I don’t know him well enough to know if he ever wanted kids or not. But I know how much it would have shaken me to suddenly have one dumped unceremoniously on my doorstep.
How did he not know? Why did his ex tell him now? And why leave Ella here? There have to be laws and child support payments and all kinds of things mixed up in this.
There are so many more questions in my mind. Questions I don’t really deserve answers to, considering Gavin and I are not even really friends. I don’t get to count anything that happened in the fever bubble.
Not the way it felt to be in his arms. Not the way it made my heart leap into a series of complicated cheerleading jumps to hear him call me butterfly. Not feeling needed by this man that I’d respected, admired, and crushed on for so long.
Nope. None of it counts.
Still, I have this intense protectiveness that surged in my chest when I think about Gavin recovering only to find out about Ella. And that his ex left her here. Just thinking about it again gets me all riled up.
I need something to focus on, so I start cleaning up the mess from the kolaches and donuts. I might have stress-eaten a few more than usual, and there’s powdered sugar dusting the smooth marble. Wiping it down so it shines again calms my nerves a fraction. Until I hear a scream.
I go running down the hallway to Ella’s room, where I find her stomping and shrieking in the middle of the room. I’m relieved that there’s no break-in, no small fire, and no sinkhole opening in the floor. I can’t actually assess any danger. It just looks a little like her suitcase exploded with pink and purple girl clothes everywhere.
“What’s wrong? Ella?” Maybe going running three times a week isn’t enough, because I’m breathless.
“It’s out of batteries!” she shouts in a voice that sounds far too much like the Exorcist for me.
“What’s out of batteries?”
She turns to me with wild eyes. She’s feral. Not a woodland creature but a rabid hyena. Do they get rabies?
“My tablet,” she growls, and if I had holy water, I might be tempted to toss it on her, just to cover all my bases.
“We can just charge it,” I say in my most soothing voice.
“The cord isn’t in my bag!” Ella throws back her head and screams before stomping her feet, kicking at the furniture, her bag, at me.
I’m concerned for about half a second until I recognize this for what it is. This is what it looks like when an eight-year-old throws a temper tantrum.
Maybe I’m not cut out to be a parent. But I know exactly what to do.
Picking her up so her arms are restrained, I march her through the house, ignoring her screams and the kicks that land on my shins, and I dump her unceremoniously into the pool.
It would have been a lot more satisfying if I hadn’t fallen in after her.
From: ToldYaSo@DrLove.advice
To: DrLove@DrLove.advice
Dear Dr. Love,
My boyfriend of almost a year cheated on me with other girls, so we broke up. I cried my eyes out to my so-called “best