about it, but he didn’t argue.
“Are you in a hurry to get home now?”
“Well, yeah, since now they know what we’ve been up to. Every minute longer I’m gone after work, they’re more sure that we’re out…This is bad. So embarrassing.”
“We’re not in middle school anymore. We’re consenting adults.”
“Who still live at home.” I groaned. “How am I going to look them in the eye when I get back?”
“They’re not naïve. They already knew.”
“But I didn’t know they knew.”
“You’re confusing me.”
“I don’t want them to think I’m a bad person.”
“You’re not. And they don’t,” he quipped, looking away. He was holding something back.
“You’re being weird. What aren’t you telling me?” I asked.
He shrugged, clearly uncomfortable with what he was about to say. “They knew about Alder and me. They weren’t thrilled, but they didn’t freak out.”
“I’m sorry I asked.”
“Me too,” he grumbled.
We took our Fantas to the cab of the truck and rode home in near silence. Once we pulled into the drive, I peeked at the house as if there were a monster waiting inside.
“They’re not going to yell at you.”
“I’m not used to all this pressure, or worrying about what parents think of me, or disappointing someone. It’s stressful.”
“Welcome to my life…and pretty much everyone else’s,” he said with a nudge and a wink.
I climbed down to the concrete, and Weston handed me my backpack. “Why did you put your apron back on?”
“I don’t know. Not coming home with it on feels like the equivalent of having my shirt on backward.”
“Good thinking. I’m going home and taking a cold shower.”
“If Julianne and Sam are waiting at the kitchen table when I walk in to talk about periods or something, I’m blaming you.”
Weston threw his head back and laughed. “It’s just part of that catching you up you get to do.”
My mouth pulled to the side. “It used to baffle me how ungrateful Alder was to have them. Now listen to me. I’m lucky they’re not sitting in there with a case of beer, cussing at me to bring them cigarettes.”
“There is no right way to do this, Erin. Stop putting so much pressure on yourself.”
I nodded and slid the nylon strap over my shoulder, smiling when the Chevy didn’t pull away from the curb until I had a foot in the front door. I started to walk up the stairs but noticed the kitchen light was on.
“Erin?” Julianne called, her voice shaky.
I left my backpack at the foot of the stairs and walked down the hall, leaning against the doorjamb. Julianne was sitting at the island on the first stool, her hair pulled back into a tiny ponytail at the nape of her neck. She was wearing one of Sam’s T-shirts and navy-blue lounge pants. She was babysitting a coffee mug, but the liquid inside was milky brown, with a pile of marshmallows floating on top.
“How was school and work?” she asked.
I pulled my apron strap over my head and tugged at the knot at the small of my back, untying it with one hand. I rolled it up and shrugged.
“Both good, actually. How was your day?”
“Good. A bit boring. I cleaned the house, and by that I mean put the breakfast dishes in the dishwasher and took out the trash, because Sam’s kind of a clean freak, as you might have guessed. And then I watched Days of Our Lives . That EJ is a beautiful, evil genius. I wish he and Sami would get their crap together.”
I wasn’t sure who EJ and Sami were, but she seemed irritated by their lack of togetherness.
“I could help with the dishes and trash. If you just show me what buttons to push on the dishwasher. I’ve never used one before, but it can’t be that hard.”
Julianne waved me away. “Please. I barely have enough to keep me busy as it is.”
“Have you thought about going back to work?”
She looked at the fridge, but wasn’t really looking at it. “At the clinic? I don’t know. I’ve been a stay-at-home mom so