Girl Gone Viral (Modern Love #2) - Alisha Rai Page 0,108
his vitals?”
His stepfather’s face went blank, but his gaze darted around the hallway, which was a dead giveaway that he was looking for his wife. He scratched his head. “Uh . . .”
“This is completely ridiculous. I expect this sort of thing from Mom and Grandpa, but you? You drove all this way from the city for these shenanigans?”
Gurjit winced, but didn’t confirm or deny anything. At some other time, Jas might admire the man’s loyalty to his wife, but not today.
The nurse opened Andrés’s door and smiled at them. “You can go in.”
“How much is he paying you for this farce?” Jas demanded of the nurse, and her eyes widened.
Gurjit’s laugh was strangled. “Sorry, ma’am.” He herded Jas inside the room and shut the door behind them.
Andrés smirked at them from his bed, clearly having heard Jas. “Done embarrassing yourself, boy?” He coughed.
It was the fakest cough Jas had ever heard. “You are not sick, and I want to know what’s going on.”
“I am sick, and you can ask my doctor, if you want. The nurse said he should be by shortly.”
“You know what?” Jas rocked back on his heels. “We don’t have to wait for him. I’ll go ask one of the other doctors. Or at the nurses’ station. Surely they can tell me all about my dear grandfather’s flu.”
Andrés glared at Jas, and Jas glared right back, both of them silent.
Gurjit’s exhale broke the standoff. “Andrés. I think the jig is up.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Andrés tried.
“He’s going to go out there and find a doctor who isn’t your old housekeeper’s son, Andrés. Or a nurse who wasn’t in the delivery room when Tara was born. Tell Jasvinder the truth now.” This was probably the same tone Gurjit used on his most mischievous students.
Jas strode to his grandfather’s bedside. “You better have a damn good reason for—”
“I was scared you wouldn’t come back!”
Jas’s mouth gaped open at that admission. “What?”
His grandfather folded his arms over his chest. He looked decidedly not sick now. “I said, I didn’t know if you’d come back. For the awards ceremony.” His voice dropped. “Or ever.”
Jas sat down in the chair with a thunk. “So you were going to pretend to be bedridden until the awards ceremony?”
His grandfather nodded.
“This is the most outrageous thing you’ve done in a long time. I hope you know that. I am so angry with you.”
“I told them it was a bad idea,” Gurjit interjected. “So did Bikram.”
“Damn it, Grandpa. I said I would try. How could you—” He closed his eyes, hearing Katrina’s voice in his head.
He hadn’t told anyone in his family what was really going on in his head for over a dozen years. He had deliberately avoided spending extended time with them, even when it was a huge occasion, like Bikram’s engagement. How could Jas think one dinner would make his grandpa trust he would actually try to come for this thing that was so important to him?
He clasped his hands between his knees. “I’m sorry I’ve disappointed you so much over the years—”
“No.” Andrés cleared his throat and shot a glance at Gurjit, who nodded his encouragement. “I was disappointed you weren’t a carbon copy of me, it’s true.” His smile was the gentlest Jas had ever seen it. “You know, the first generation that comes here, the immigrants, they keep their head down. They do their best to fit in. And then the first generation who are born here, I think we feel like we have so much to prove, we have to make all of our parents’ sacrifices worth it.” He sniffed. “I got so caught up in proving my family’s worth, I lost sight of what we want for the ones who come after us. The American Dream, eh? Pursuing whatever they want. Even if that means it’s not what I want.”
Jas cleared his throat. Now he was the one who sounded hoarse. “You didn’t let me finish. I know I’ve disappointed you by not communicating with you as well as I could have. I’m going to be better, more honest. I want to be in your lives more.”
Gurjit coughed. His eyes were suspiciously misty. He squeezed Jas’s shoulder.
“If you do come to the parade, I got you some really good noise-canceling headphones,” Andrés said gruffly. “So it won’t be too loud. And I already cleared it with the committee to keep the backstage area clear so you can watch from the wings. You won’t have