Page 10
Story: Forget It (The It Girls #2)
“I’ll just tell them for now,” he says with a smile. “But it’s kind of an all-or-nothing thing with my family. We’re not the best at family secrets.”
I smile softly. “They sound amazing.”
He grins. “Yeah, they are.”
He takes a seat on the sofa, his large body making the cozy two-seater look like a child’s play furniture.
“Let’s play this game. Where’s the controller?”
It only takes him a few minutes to get the hang of the rules and we spend the next forty minutes side by side and playfully nudging each other .
Eventually my alarm blares, the opening chords of the Strictly Come Dancing theme song making me jump.
I fumble with my phone until I turn it off, returning my attention back to the screen.
“You good?”
“Yeah!” I say brightly.
“What’s the alarm for?” he asks, gesturing to my phone.
“Oh, it’s uh—Strictly Come Dancing, the dancing show?
I used to watch it every Saturday with my Nanny and so I still watch it even though she’s, well, y’know.
When I speak to her on Sundays we talk about it and guess who’s getting voted out that night.
I have an alarm when it starts so I don’t miss it. ”
Without missing a beat, Jackson saves the game and sets the controller on the coffee table.
“Put it on,” he says, leaning back into the sofa and handing me the TV remote.
“Oh no, we don’t have to.”
I put the remote back on the table. Suddenly it’s back in my hands with Jackson’s larger ones wrapped around mine.
“I want to watch it with you, Rosie.” His hands are so large around mine, and I shiver as his fingertip grazes my wrist. “Unless you don’t want to.”
I blink up at him a few times before I remember what he just asked me, “Uh, sure.”
I switch the TV on and flick through to the right channel. The opening song starts as they start listing all the acts.
“Shall we get a pizza?” He asks, pulling his phone from his pocket. “You do like pizza right?”
Pizza, I think my mouth waters at the thought. “Oh, uhm, it’s not really in my budget.”
Jackson laughs. “Rosie, if you think I’m going to barge into your home and demand you pay for my dinner, I’m doing something wrong.” He places a hand on my thigh and squeezes. “Plus, you’re cooking my baby, so feeding you is literally my main job.”
“Okay fine,” I acquiesce, as my gaze gets caught on his large hand. “Because your baby is craving a veggie pizza right now.”
I leave him with my order and head to the kitchen, spinning back to him before I cross the threshold. “I still have the wine you brought, but you’ll have to drink it alone.” I gesture to my midriff. “Or you can have a Diet Coke.”
“I’ll go Coke. We can save the wine.” He winks at me as he takes the cold can out of my hands. I almost jump at the tingles that erupt at my fingertips. It’s from the cold can, that’s all, I tell myself.
I settle beside him on the sofa. It is definitely too small for him, his arm stretching across the back showing me the taut line of his side and feeling his hand resting behind my head. I reach forward and turn the volume up.
“Who are all these people?” Jackson asks, taking a sip of his drink.
“You wouldn’t know any of these guys,” I giggle, as a TV Chef, News Presenter and pop culture icons that no one outside of the British Isles would know about dance onto the screen.
He wiggles in his seat along to the music and I can’t help but laugh as I readjust on the sofa with my legs curled underneath me, my knee facing his. “Do you want to know the Taylor rules?” I ask.
“Absolutely,” Jackson says seriously.
“Okay, in the first episode you have to pick your favorite, your winner and your dark horse and then throughout the series whoever has the winner wins.”
“What’s the prize? ”
“Well, they play for the glitterball trophy but we’ll just play for glory,” I shrug.
“Oh, I am all the way in, pretty girl.”
“Absolutely not,” Jackson insists forty minutes later around a slice of pizza. “You think two left feet Patrick and Kat are going to win over Thatcher and Julianna? You need to up your prescription, pretty girl, because we should be worried.”
I laugh as I pick a pepper off my slice, “Trust me he’s going to be the best one there. I’m a seasoned pro at this now. One year, a fifty-seven year old retired news anchor won, but he had the best Charleston.”
“What’s a Charleston again? The slow one?”
“No, this one,” I say, shaking my hands in a poor imitation of the moves.
“What was that?” he laughs.
“That’s what they do! It’s a lot of hand shaking and leg pumping. Watch.” I tug the remote off the table and pull up a compilation of the best dances. “Prepare to be educated.”
It’s gone midnight by the time we’ve got through nearly every season of Strictly showing all of my favorites and I have to stifle a yawn behind my hand.
His eyes crinkle. “You should go to bed, Rosie.”
“No no, I’m sorry, I’m just not used to being up this late. This pregnancy is not for the uncaffeinated.”
“I’ll leave you to it,” Jackson says, fishing his phone out of his pocket and stifling a yawn of his own.
“You can uh—you can stay if you like,” I offer lamely. I wring my hands together as I glance around the room awkwardly.
Jackson’s fingers freeze on his phone.
Oh my god, did that sound like a proposition? It did. It sounds like I just asked to sleep with him .
“I mean the sofa’s not too bad and I have a spare blanket and everything,” I stumble out.
Jackson stands up gently taking my hand and halting my fidgeting. “I need to get back, I’ve got an early morning training session.”
“Oh, okay,” I say awkwardly. Of course he doesn’t want to spend the night on my sofa. It’s practically half the size of him.
“Can we have dinner or something this week maybe?”
“Uh, I’m working late all week,” I spin awkwardly in place and start sorting through our leftovers, stacking pizza boxes and wrappers.
“Saturday then?” He follows me into the kitchen. “I’ve got to watch the next episode. Got to support my boy.”
I place the plates on the counter, “Uh—” The man wants to come and watch Strictly with me. I should say no, I should reaffirm some boundaries although it’s clear I’ve already lost control of my senses. I have spare blankets and everything . Ugh!
But the thought of not spending another Saturday night alone…
“Sure.” The word falls from my lips before I can stop them.
Jackson grins. “It’s a date.” He slides his jacket off the kitchen chair.
“It’s not a date.” I follow him around the kitchen as he steps into his boots and turns to the door.
“Sure it is, pretty girl.”
“It’s not a date.” I insist one more time.
He pauses with his hand on the doorknob before shooting me a wink, “See you, Saturday.”
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10 (Reading here)
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
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- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52