door unlocked?”
“I don’t know.” I scowled at him. “I was too busy being accosted in my own home to remember.”
Midas paused between the door he shut behind him and me, and it opened a yawning pit in my gut.
Fear he would refuse to claim me in front of my family left a sour taste in my mouth. He could play this off easily as doing a security check on unannounced guests or wanting to touch base with me on city matters. With the locked status of the door in question, he could invent any excuse and leave.
As if reading my mind, Midas closed the distance, hooked an arm around my waist, and tucked me against him. Leaning down, he murmured in my ear, “Do they know?”
“Nope.”
Addie knew I was shacking up with Midas—her words, not mine—but Boaz was clueless.
Things were about to get interesting.
Gulp.
“I didn’t know you had a boyfriend,” Boaz said casually, his gaze zeroed in on Midas.
“I…” I wrapped my arms around Midas like Boaz might try to take him away from me, “…don’t.”
“Then what’s going on here?”
The words got stuck in my throat, and I don’t know why, but I couldn’t be the first to say them.
Understanding gentled Midas’s expression as he wiped his fingertips over my cheek. “She’s my mate.”
“She’s crying,” Boaz pointed out the obvious. “Why is she crying?”
“He makes her happy.” Addie popped him upside the head. “Look at them.”
Unable to articulate why it mattered so much, I pressed my face into Midas’s chest. “Thank you.”
Boaz loved me, had always loved me. The purity of his love was part of the reason why I never allowed our mother to overshadow our relationship. What she did to me was apart from us. That didn’t mean the stain didn’t bleed between my carefully separated layers at odd times, like this one.
It was hard feeling worthy of love, so hard, when I had learned early that it wasn’t given for free.
“You have nothing to thank me for.” Midas cradled the back of my head in his palm. “This is nothing.”
The tears started falling in earnest, and I strangled on old fear to say, “It’s everything.”
“You didn’t cry like that when we got engaged,” Boaz grumbled to Addie, unconvinced.
“I would have,” Addie said wistfully. “If I had known what I was getting into back then.”
“We were about to watch a movie.” Midas kept me close. “Care to join us?”
Addie and Boaz groaned in unison and leaned into each other.
“Depends.” She grimaced. “Who gets to pick the movie?”
With Midas holding me up, I found my own strength. “Our guests.”
“Have a seat.” Midas gestured to the living room, where one footstool was still wrapped in plastic. “We’ll go make popcorn.”
Addie’s face lit up like a kid at Christmas. “Linus popcorn?”
“Yes,” I said solemnly, aware it was a cult favorite for anyone who had tasted it. “Linus popcorn.”
Granted, I wasn’t nearly as skilled as him in the kitchen, but he had taught me how to make a damn fine bowl of popcorn by anyone’s standards.
Under Midas’s stare, I dug out my Dutch oven, cranked up the heat, and filled it with oil and kernels.
“I wasn’t hiding you from them,” I said when he didn’t make a peep. “I wanted to tell them in person.”
“I’m not upset.” His warm palm cupped my nape. “I’m…confused.”
“There are a lot of things about my childhood I haven’t told you.” I lowered my voice. “Or anyone else.” He glanced over his shoulder to where Boaz watched us like a hawk. “I want to explain it, to you, but…”
“Take your time.” He wrapped his arm around me again. “I’m not going anywhere.”
Vision wobbly, I gave the popcorn my full attention before I burned it and stank up the place.
A throat cleared in the living room, and I rolled my eyes. “Neither is my brother.”
“You could plead exhaustion.” Midas gave me a look that pooled heat in my middle. “Send them away.”
A smile tickled the edge of my mouth. “Do you really think that would work?”
“Probably not,” he confessed. “Boaz is going to want to stare me down a while longer.”
“That’s what I figured too.”
“How long does it take to make popcorn?” Boaz yelled right on cue. “Did you have to drive out to a field and pick the cobs yourselves?”
“Hush,” Addie hissed. “She’s a grown woman.”
His grunt of pain led me to believe she had smacked, elbowed, or otherwise hit him.
Not gonna lie. Her violent streak was one of the things I most admired about her. She