Four Weddings and a Swamp Boat Tour - Erin Nicholas Page 0,10

she wanted. Ever.

He started to shift the truck back into drive, but her gaze landed on the car parked across the road from his house. Her car. That was full of cats. Oh, crap. He’d totally distracted her from her cats.

“Mitch.” She grabbed his arm. “Wait.”

“We’re T-minus eight minutes here,” he said.

“I know. I… brought some…” She’d brought cats. Five cats. To his house. To stay for a few weeks. Without asking.

“Some?” he prompted.

“I have some stuff in my car I should take inside.”

“We’ll get it all later on,” he said, again reaching for the gear shift.

“They probably should go in now.” She pulled her bottom lip between her teeth.

“They?” he repeated. Then he looked at her car. And huffed out a laugh. “How many did you bring with you?”

Paige felt herself smiling. “Five.”

He shook his head, but he was smiling too. He pulled the truck over to the curb in front of his house and shut it off. “We’d better get them in the house then. But hurry.”

She scrambled down from the truck and headed for her car.

Five minutes later, they had all five cats and their supplies inside. Kennedy had already left, sans bra, as the dryer was still running, and they knew that meant the clock was ticking.

“We can just shut them in the bathroom or utility room or something,” Paige said. “We’ll put their food and water and litter box in there, and they’ll be fine. Then they won’t be roaming all over the house.”

He shook his head and opened the door of one of the cat carriers he’d set on his living room floor. Fred and Bernie both shot out. Paige opened the one she’d carried. Eddie crept out more slowly.

“They should explore their new home,” Mitch said.

Paige started to correct him with something like “their temporary new home,” but she couldn’t make the words come out. He knew where she stood on everything. And it didn’t really matter if he didn’t, or if he didn’t totally believe her. She just had to remember it was temporary, and she wasn’t interested in settling down or falling in love or making any promises to anyone.

Especially the promises part. She’d made promises in the past. Promises she’d felt compelled to make. Promises that seemed like the right thing to do.

Those promises had broken a lot of hearts and changed her relationship with her mother permanently. Paige didn’t think she and her mom would be totally good again until Paige was married.

She wasn’t going to make any promises of any kind to anyone unless she was one thousand percent sure she could keep them.

“Are you sure?” she asked as Bernie immediately jumped up on the coffee table in front of Mitch’s long brown couch and reached for a half-full glass of water.

She grabbed it quickly, knowing exactly what was about to happen. Bernie knocked over every glass that he found. Full, half-full, or empty. It was as if upright drinkware personally offended him.

He’d ruined two computer keyboards, and stained at least three shirts doing that at home before she had finally been trained to attend to or pick up all glasses.

“I’m sure.” Mitch sounded amused as he watched Tiny Tim jump from the floor to the seat of the armchair near the fireplace and then eye the mantel as if trying to figure out how to get up there.

She heard a cupboard door slap shut in the kitchen. She shook her head.

“Fred found a low cupboard with a light door on it,” she said.

“He likes cupboards?”

“Yeah. He can hook a paw around the door and pull it open, and then push it open from the inside when he’s ready to come out.”

“That’s kind of impressive.”

“He usually only does it when it rains. He hates the rain,” she said. “But he’s probably kind of freaked out right now. He’s really pissed about the long drive.”

“He’s fine,” Mitch said. “There’s nothing in those lower cupboards he can hurt. Just small appliances mostly.”

“You don’t mind cat hair in your toaster?”

“My toaster’s on the countertop. But I can wash the blender and food processor and ice cream maker out if I need to use them.”

“You have an ice cream maker?”

“I do. Used it once.”

“You don’t like ice cream?”

“Love it. But Ben and Jerry do a fine job of making it, and it’s a lot faster and easier to let them do it.”

They stood smiling stupidly at each other for a long moment.

“So the cats are really okay here?” she asked.

“Of course.”

Eddie was

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