he wasn’t there. Something that could have been his voice floated down the stairs. He’d given me the finger to ask me to wait for him…
But that had been an hour ago.
Who the hell talked on the phone for that long? Okay, maybe me with my sister, but I’d get off the phone with her if I had something to do or someone was visiting.
It’s probably something really important, my brain tried to reason.
But….
I did have things to do. And apparently so did Zac.
Things that didn’t include me after all.
Chapter Six
I spent the entire ride to the grocery store trying my best not to be disappointed about what happened at Zac’s place.
More like… what hadn’t happened.
But like most things, it was easier said than done, like when my New Year’s resolution was to wake up at five in the morning every day to work out before my shift. I hadn’t taken into consideration that I rarely went to bed before two in the morning.
The truth was, I was disappointed in how disappointed I was.
I knew better.
I had gone there with the intention of apologizing, and I hadn’t done that.
Because I’d been forgotten. For not the first time in my life.
My stomach felt off no matter how much I “understood” that Zac was “famous” and probably had a ton of things going on. He was busy with his own life. I was busy with my life, and of course he was even busier than me. He’d invited me when he’d thought he had a moment and didn’t I know things came up? Of course I got it. There had been plenty of times when I’d had to pull over or go straight home from work because something had happened to my website, or if I got an email about a mistake someone had found on a video or a post and I had to do damage control.
I told myself that Zac had asked me to come over because he’d wanted to see me.
And I was disappointed because I’d literally seen him for maybe five seconds from a distance.
If something wouldn’t have been happening, he would have come down. But I’d met CJ, and he’d known who I was and had even made one of my recipes. That should have been enough. It would have been more than enough in any other situation.
But my stomach—and my heart—didn’t give enough of a shit.
Because that molasses-like layer of “my friend had bailed on me” didn’t really go anywhere on the drive or during my shopping trip.
Telling yourself something and believing it were two totally different things.
But the call that came to my cell while I was in line at the checkout counter had helped. Some.
I’d been surprised as shit when my phone started ringing while I was loading my groceries onto the conveyor belt and taken a peek at the screen to see 512-555-0199 flash across the screen.
I looked at the number for a second and thought about not answering it. But I did it anyway, because I wasn’t an asshole. Because I had wanted to try.
I just wasn’t going to put much weight into any of my interactions with Zac, mostly because I wasn’t going to expect anything.
If you didn’t have expectations, you couldn’t be let down.
Before I could second-guess myself, I answered the phone… and kept loading my groceries.
“Hello?” It wasn’t like I didn’t know it was him, but my feelings were a little hurt regardless of knowing better.
“Aww, darlin’, I’m so damn sorry,” the voice that was only still familiar because I’d heard it on television piped up over the line just as I set my vanilla creamer onto the conveyor belt.
I made a face to myself and glanced up to see the cashier watching me. I forced a smile.
“Are you close? Can you come back?”
Go back to his house?
Some part of me was tempted to say yes. I would have liked to talk to him. Listen to that voice that had felt like a warm hug back in the day. Watch a face that had smiled at me what felt like a hundred thousand times. Maybe hear a laugh that I’d heard almost as much. And say I was sorry for being so weird at dinner.
But what would you really have to talk about? What’s the point? My brain tried to whisper… and I couldn’t exactly ignore it.
My heart gave this painful little twist I tried to ignore, but failed at doing so.