her on the ground?”
Wow. Kids really are naïve these days.
Thank god.
“What are you doing, trying to be a lawyer? I thought you wanted to be a vet—stop cross-examining me like I’m on the witness stand.”
Witless stand is more like it.
I’m the idiot who got caught with my hand in the proverbial cookie jar.
“Just answer the question.” The teen has no tolerance for my bullshit and isn’t going to let this matter drop. “I want to know about boys.”
“No, Molly, you do not. Trust me, we’re all bags of shit.” Her eyes go wide at my choice of words and I retract the statement with a tamer, “Er, I mean, we’re all scum.”
Her eyes roll. “Not every guy is a bag of shit.”
Fuck, now she’s swearing. “No cursing.”
“You just did.”
“Yeah but I’m old.”
“Duh.”
I don’t know if I should be offended by that or glad she seems to have dropped the subject.
“Shouldn’t you be leaving? I have shi—stuff to do around here.”
“Yeah, yeah, I’m going. Just tell me how you ended up on the ground. It makes no sense.”
I eyeball her skeptically, giving her my most intimidating stare so she’ll fade away like I want her to. “Do your parents know you’re like this?”
“Yes.” She sighs as if I’m the most exasperating person ever. “They made me this way.” Duh. “So how’d you end up down there?”
“I can’t remember.”
Eye roll. “What’s her name?”
“Doesn’t the article tell you?”
Molly shrugs as if the answer is obvious. “I don’t believe everything I read.”
Smart kid—so I throw her a bone. “Her name is Chandler.”
“Like Chandler Bing, from Friends?” Molly nods, recognition lighting up her eyes. “So it’s the girl who flipped you at your brother’s wedding—that was all over the news, too. My dad thought that was hilarious.”
I bet he fucking did, the jackass. “Could you not bring that up?”
“I’m sorry, was it a secret?”
Wow. “You sarcastic little shit.”
“Little?” She stands straighter. “I’m fifteen.”
“Big whoop, we were all fifteen.” No longer in the mood for brew, I dump the contents of my mug into the sink and run the water. “Besides, it was a figure of speech.”
Molly thinks of her next question. “Do you like Chandler?”
“Yeah, she’s alright I guess.”
“No, I meant, do you like her like her?”
“I’m too old to like like someone.”
The neighbor girl studies my face. “What are you, forty?”
“Hey, watch it,” I snap. “I’m only twenty-eight.”
“Could have fooled me—you act like my dad.” She’s scoffing at me, the barb hitting right where it was intended to strike—my overinflated ego, which deflates a few notches thanks to her.
I can’t help feeling a tad insulted by this teenage girl—who should have left with the dog minutes ago. We shouldn’t still be standing in my kitchen arguing about my nonexistent love life like two giggling girlfriends sharing gossip.
I am not going to be the dude to teach her men are assholes.
“I thought you were for sure as old as my dad,” she goes on, oblivious to my ire. “At least. But I suppose they don’t let old guys stay in the NFL—they’d fracture bones because of arthritis and stuff.”
“Just stop.” I shoot Molly a perturbed look. “Shouldn’t you already be halfway to the dog park?”
She leans against the counter. “How did you end up on the ground in the first place? I know she didn’t have to give you CPR because there are no photos of an ambulance.”
“That’s private.”
“Did she use karate on you again?” Molly hits the nail on the head, standing straight up when she realizes it, too. “Oh my god, she did, didn’t she?”
“Pftt,” I scoff, snorting. “What makes you say that?”
“Duh. She’s already done it once and why else would you be on your back in the dark on the wet sidewalk? It’s not like you would voluntarily lie down.”
“Are you sure you want to be a veterinarian? You’d make a good detective.”
“Am I right then? She used karate on you?”
I will neither confirm or deny. Instead, I offer her a bagel. “You want one?”
“Nah. I ate already.” She sniffs, annoyed I’ve changed the subject. “Thanks though.”
“Are there any other questions you want to ask before you go? How tall I am, what my favorite color is, what I’m having for dinner, where I was born?”
I’m being sarcastic, but Molly takes a seat at the kitchen counter.
“Whoa, whoa, whoa, I was kidding. There will be no getting comfortable at the counter. I was joking.”
She smiles. “You’re not funny. Like, at all.”
“Gee, thanks.”
“Like—not even a little.”
“Thanks. I get it. Now get out.”
She