“Sure you could.”
“No, Christos.” I dropped into the driver’s seat.
He squatted down beside the open door and smiled at me with his comforting blue eyes.
Why was I panicking? The man I was desperately in love with was asking me to live with him. Wasn’t I supposed to be excited and thrilled instead of scared? Maybe if he’d asked five months from now.
“Why not?” he asked, his brows tight.
Despite all the things Christos and I had been through together, it just seemed too soon.
To say that my life had become a whirlwind of change, both good and bad, was the understatement of my short life. I don’t think I’d experienced so much dramatic change so quickly ever before.
Why was Christos’ offer making me so nervous?
For one thing, I imagined there’d need to be some kind of Manos family conference where everyone sat around in a meeting hall voting on whether or not the family could withstand the terrible impact of me moving into their house.
At least, that’s what I imagined would happen if I asked my parents to let Christos move into their house. Not that I’d ever subject Christos to such a horrid punishment.
Maybe the other thing that bothered me was that if I’d ever entertained thoughts about living with Christos, it was picturing him in my little one bedroom apartment. A romantic little place for a romantic little couple making their way in the world together.
But that wasn’t reality.
Reality was the Manos Mansion and Christos’ family having buckets of money to throw around, and they were already pouring some onto my head. Sure, taking a cash bath under a shower of Benjamin Franklins had a certain appeal. But, I don’t know, I somehow felt indebted just thinking about it. And look where that had gotten me with my parents.
They’d hung me out to dry while the family greenbacks evaporated under the heat of their ultimatums. I think my long face betrayed my sadness and sense of parental abandonment to Christos.
“Look, Samantha,” Christos soothed, “my grandfather has plenty of room. He’s always talking about how the house is too big for just me and him.”
“Oh, I couldn’t impose.” It sounded like a weak excuse.
“You saw him in there. He loves you, Samantha. He’s basically calling you his daughter. How much more of an invitation do you need?”
I couldn’t deny his logic. But it felt wrong. It felt scary. The question for me was whether I was scared for a good reason, or scared simply because this was all so new and overwhelming. Was it possible that unconditional love could make a person nervous? Probably. It was doing it to me. I’d never felt it so strongly since meeting Christos, and now I was getting it from his grandfather. I mean, both of them had set up that studio space for me.
For me.
I was freaking out.
My heart jackrabbited into my throat.
I needed to get out of there before I had a heart attack.
“I’m sorry, Christos,” my voice quivered. “I really need to go. I need some time to think about all this.”
“Take all the time you need, agápi mou,” he said softly. “I’m not going anywhere. You still have the key to the house, right?”
“Yeah.”
“Let me see it.”
Did he want it back? I panicked, despite my confusion and reluctance. Giving it to him would either be a relief or the biggest disappointment of my life. I fished it from the pocket of my jeans and handed it to him with a shaky hand.
He took it and also took my key ring from my hand. Then he worked the Manos house key around my key ring. “For safe keeping,” he said. “I love you, Samantha. Whatever you decide, whenever you decide it, will be perfect. I will wait as long as you need me to.” He cracked a dimpled grin. “Besides, you live so close, we’re practically next door neighbors.”
He handed my keys back to me.
“Okay,” I said randomly. I twisted my car key in the ignition and started my VW. The engine purred to life. “I should go.”
He leaned into the car and kissed me softly on the forehead.
“You sure you don’t want me to come over and help you look for a job at your apartment?”
“I—”
“Or, we could go to a coffee shop someplace close, for a change of scenery. They’ll have wi-fi.”
I winced. “I don’t know, I just, I—”
He stroked my cheek lovingly. “Samantha, remember. You have options. You don’t need to stress about getting a second job. One is plenty. You have a ton of work ahead of you with all your classes. You shouldn’t spend half your waking hours working in a convenience store or an office supply store, or whatever, when you shouldn’t have to. You should be focusing on your studies more than anything else.”
“I know, but—”
He held a finger to my lips. “It’s okay,” he nodded reassuringly, then stroked my chin with his thumb. “I totally get it. Go home, relax, do what you need to do.” He smiled at me confidently and stood up. “Drive safe.”
I gave him a wave and he closed my door.
I drove home and pulled out my laptop. I searched the job websites with fresh confidence.
Knowing I had some kind of a safety net had filled me with renewed vigor, but I wanted to do this on my own. I needed to prove to myself, and to my parents, that I could handle all my classes and studies, and find a decent part-time job that would allow me to pay all my bills myself, all while maintaining a relationship with the most wonderful man in the world.
Things were going to be great. I was going to show my parents what I could do when I put my mind to it.
I shook my head and laughed to myself.
I mean, seriously, what were the chances I’d be stuck working the late shift at a fast-food joint or some crappy convenience store?
I was totally going to find an awesome job.
Chapter 18
SAMANTHA
Ten days later, I stood behind the counter of the local Grab-n-Dash, an all night convenience store. It was still early in the afternoon, but I was already zombie-tired and had raccoon circles around my eyes.
When the manager had hired me, he’d said I couldn’t work the late shift because it was too dangerous. So he gave me the afternoon shift.
Nothing like two jobs and four classes and tons of homework to tire a girl out.
The neon-urine colored uniform shirt with the Grab-n-Dash logo I had to wear was a nightmare unto itself. Made from some sort of material that only bunched and wrinkled, it made me look like a Chinese paper lantern, or the person with the lowest score on Project Runway’s alternative materials challenge.
So not flattering.
Worse, the shirt trapped odors like a sponge, and I had to hand-wash it in my kitchen sink every night after work or else it smelled like grilled hot dogs.
My manager said the bright color was exciting for the customers. Yeah, maybe if it triggered seizures. I’m telling you, looking at it too long made your eyes vibrate. Beyond that, I couldn’t see what was so exciting about it.
Oh yeah. I forgot to mention the equally glowing Grab-n-Dash baseball cap. My pony tail stuck out the opening in the back.
Super sexy.
But hey, I was getting paid nine bucks an hour to whore out the Grab-n-Dash mantra to everyone who walked through the doors.
“Welcome to Grab-n-Dash. How can I brighten your day?”
I had to say it every damn time.
Wasn’t the blinding yellow shirt and cap enough?
My customers were teenagers off from school during the first half of my shift, and people coming home from work during the second.