Read Racing to Love: Eli's Honor Online

Authors: Amy Gregory

Tags: #romance, #contemporary

Racing to Love: Eli's Honor (19 page)

BOOK: Racing to Love: Eli's Honor
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Relief and questions flooded her mind, at the same time vying for space that blame was taking up. Dyslexia? She’d heard of it, knew it wasn’t anything to fear medically, but could it really be the answer to all of her son’s struggles? Something he could overcome with help? Something his tiny school missed? Had her son fallen through the cracks on her watch?

Eli made it sound so simple, so easy, as if there weren’t any other worries to be concerned about with
Dallas’s education. It was as if he held another magic answer in his hand for yet another one of her problems. All she had to do was reach out and accept it.

Damn it, he was stepping in and saving the day—once again. She didn’t like to depend on people. Hell, she liked to think she could handle it all by herself, with no help, especially from a man. Sitting at his kitchen table this morning proved she couldn’t. Her son needed a real teacher who could reach him in ways she couldn’t. Honor blinked multiple times trying to figure out the man in front of her.

Curls that had worked loose from her long ponytail blew in her face in the gentle morning breeze. He tucked them back behind her ear. Without thinking, she reached up and grasped his wrist. She leaned her cheek into his palm wanting the connection, but was petrified of what to do next. Honor didn’t want to have to think about leaving, she didn’t want to have to worry about the
what ifs
.

He closed the gap like she knew he would, letting the backpack slide off and down to the ground. His arms encircled her, and he tucked her head into the crook of his neck. She felt his palm rub her back soothingly, but there was something in his mannerisms that spoke of something deeper. More than just a simple hug of friendship, understanding, or even just support.

“It’ll be all right, Honor. I’ve got you.”

Honor pulled in a deep breath and let it out slowly, trying to keep the panic from making her do something stupid like she’d done earlier.

“We can do this. You just have to trust me.”

Honor wished she could believe him, take his enchanted words and the happily ever after, while riding off on a white unicorn with pretty pastel ribbons tied in its hair. But this wasn’t a
fairy tale. Real life was messy, painful, and sometimes, downright ugly. He wasn’t seeing the ugly—the part where they both got hurt and Dallas was crushed.

The problem was he was making it hard for her to not believe him.

His actions, time and time again, were perfect. Not just for her, but for her son, too. Standing in the driveway of the one person he seemed to think could help her son with his schoolwork proved Eli could be counted on, that she could trust him. To know he’d thought about Dallas’s schooling ahead of time, and worked out any kinks should they arise, was just another gesture to add to the list, making it harder and harder not to fall for him.

If there just weren’t so many damn miles between
Pennsylvania and Tennessee, she might have a different outlook.

Honor heard footsteps crunching the small pebbles on the slate walkway.

Eli started to pull away, but not before kissing her on the cheek. Leaning in closer to her ear he whispered, “I’ll take care of you, baby.”

His words were one thing, the nip at her earlobe sent
a shockwave through her system. Honor hissed as Eli pulled back, and she saw his wicked grin. All she could do was stare at him. She gave an inch, and the damn devil incarnate took more than a damned country mile.

“Hey you two,” James chuckled. “Honor, sweetie, you mind if I steal your guy from you?”

She swallowed hard and damn it all to hell if Eli’s smile didn’t turn even more sinful. The ass knew he had set her on fire. Then James had to go and refer to him as
her guy
…right in front of Eli.

“Please, before I kill him,” she said teasingly to James, but without breaking eye contact with the ass taking way too much pleasure in her discomfort.

Said ass wiggled his eyebrows at her before she turned and tried to make her way up the walkway toward the French doors off the kitchen. Honor could feel the heat radiating off her cheeks. Putting one foot in front of the other, she slowed her breathing down and tried to get the blush to fade before entering Karen’s kitchen. Easier said than done when she could feel his eyes on her the entire way.

As she closed in on the French doors, Karen waved her in to join them at her large farm-styled kitchen table. Her son was already sitting there with a plate of homemade cookies in front of him, a glass of milk, and a huge smile smeared across his face.

Karen reached out toward the backpack Honor carried the rest of the way in. “Well, guys, let’s see what his class is working on, then we’ll go from there.”

Her face wasn’t giving away any clues, and
Dallas was on his second cookie when Eli walked in, plopping down in the seat beside Honor. Stealing three cookies from the stack and wiggling his eyebrows at Honor, he offered her one. Rolling her eyes, she accepted it as Karen looked up.

“If you promise to eat dinner for your mom and Eli, you can take that whole plate home with you,” Karen said with a grin, “but can I have you do something for me?”

“Sure.” Dallas nodded enthusiastically, until she continued on. Then his face became overcome with his expression of hopelessness and utter embarrassment. Looking between the textbook and Karen and back, Honor’s heart broke as he lowered his head.

“Honey, it’s okay. Just read a few paragraphs out loud, starting right here.” She pointed to a spot on the page. “I just want to see where to start. There are no wrong answers here. I promise.”

Honor sat still though her insides churned, listening to her son painfully struggle through the paragraph. A couple of times, he figured out the meaning and went back to fix his errors, but she knew it wasn’t because he knew the word, as much as he remembered when they’d worked on that paragraph earlier that morning.

“Okay, now see if this is a little more interesting.” Karen winked as she slid a magazine to
Dallas—an older one that had Eli on the cover.

“Where did you come up with that?” He laughed.

“I’ll never reveal my secrets to you boys.”

She opened it to Eli’s article, and although Karen didn’t know it, Honor had read it aloud to him countless times over the years. As she sat close-by,
Dallas read it word-for-word. Every number, every letter, every detail—perfectly.

“That’s what I wondered. Son, you’re absolutely the most brilliant child in the whole world.”

Dallas’s eyes went wide, and slowly Honor saw relief wash over him before he glanced to Eli with a smile.

“Can you tell me what you see here?”

With a skeptical eye, he didn’t answer.

“I thought that was probably the case. You’re still amazing and brilliant, and you should be in medical school by now.”

Her son didn’t answer, but his cheeks were turning bright pink.

“Do any of your friends have trouble in school?”

“I don’t really know?”

“That’s okay. I was just wondering if you ever heard anyone complain that maybe sometimes things looked backward or maybe out of order? It can make trying to read or learn something a lot harder than it has to be. But you know what? It’s really easy to work with it, when that person is as smart as you are.”

Turning to her and Eli, Karen continued on with a nod and a reassuring tug at her mouth. “I believe you’re absolutely right, Eli, but—the other half of the equation is what is so interesting. Dallas, you could very well have a photographic memory. Which makes you a genius in my book—and nothing is going to slow you down one bit. Not even a tiny thing like dyslexia. You’re quite capable of seeing things done and learning hands on. That’s hard for one teacher to do for every subject with a classroom full of students. But, you and I…we’re going to work together, and I’ll teach you some tricks that will make homework a lot easier. Even reading. How’s that sound, honey?”

Honor sat for a long minute watching her son’s face, the lines deepening as he questioned what he’d just heard. Then without any preamble, he was out of his chair, his arms wrapped tightly around Karen, whispering words to her that Honor couldn’t quite make out. Hers weren’t the only eyes to well up with tears—Karen’s matched as she held
Dallas close to her chest, patting his back.

She didn’t let loose of her hug as she spoke over
Dallas’s shoulder, “I’ve got a friend who is a neuropsychologist. He’s amazing and I’d really like for him to meet with you and Dallas to confirm our suspicions.”

Dabbing her eyes, Honor nodded as Eli pulled her to his side and laid a kiss on her head. He’d done it—again.

****

“All right,
Dallas, time for bed.”

“But Mom—”

All it took was a slight raise of her eyebrow and Dallas folded. Eli did his damnedest to hold in the snicker, but one look in his direction and Dallas’s cheeks flashed red.

His shoulders sagged, but
Dallas stood, gathering his empty glass off the coffee table before heading to the kitchen.

Eli pointed the remote at the television, turning the channel from rolling movie credits to the country music video channel he knew Honor liked to watch now and then. He liked to make her happy, but it was more of a ploy to keep her from calling it a night.

“It’s been a couple of days, I’m going to go down and tell him goodnight, and double-check that the lower level hasn’t been turned into a wasteland courtesy of hurricane Dallas.” Honor grinned, a light teasing to her voice.

“It’s really okay, Honor. He can’t hurt anything.”

“I know, but…I just want to make sure he respects your property.”

“Honor,”—Eli reached out for her wrist as she stood—“don’t worry about it. I’m not. I promise. Just let him be a kid, and kids…well, they trash bedrooms. It’s just a fact of life. Ask my mother, I think I about pushed her over the edge when I was growing up. And I turned out okay,”—he smirked—“at least I like to think I did. Please, I love having you both here…relax, sweetheart.”

The corner of her mouth tipped, but she shook her head and headed for the staircase.

He knew he’d never convince her. They were in his space, but Honor made every attempt to leave things more immaculate than she’d found them in the first place. It was wasted breath to tell her to relax. Her own home had been spotless when he was there, and she was sweet and an overly respectful person when it came to other’s belongings. But just as she wasn’t going to quit worrying about it, he wasn’t going to quit telling her to consider his home as hers.

She hadn’t returned back to the living room yet so he took the opportunity to stretch his back. Twisting side-to-side, looking for relief, he found none. Giving up, he bent over, resting his forearms on his thighs. With his eyes staring at the colors in the rug below, he released a slow breath.

Closing his eyes, he concentrated on his breathing. The trick, taught to him by a night nurse in the hospital after his surgery, was a sad attempt at meditating the pain away. However, it would ease the radiating line of fire just enough to make it to the kitchen for medicine. Without sitting up, he arched his back, grunting as the mistake sent a thousand pinpricks across his left side.

He felt the soft skin of her gentle hand rub his arm.

“Eli,” she whispered. “Would it hurt too bad to lay flat on the floor?”

Squinting at her, he saw not only worry, but fear in the eyes of the woman kneeling between him and the coffee table. Her other hand held his much needed ibuprofen from the cabinet he was trying to get to, along with a small glass of water on the table.

Shit.

The woman could be so stealthy. Probably years of motherhood added to the quiet grace of ballet. Eli hadn’t meant for her to see. He hadn’t wanted her to worry any more than he knew she already did.

Her hand rested delicately on his forearm, but she was still, almost as if she was afraid to move. Her head tilted as she silently waited for his answer. Eli ran a palm across her cheek, cradling her neck with his hand. She tried to smile, but he could tell it was forced for his sake, and it never made it to her eyes. The deep purple still held too much concern.

“I’m okay.”

“No…you’re not. What can I do?”

“Just being here helps. And you always seem to know when I need that.” He tipped his head at the bottle she held in her hand.

“Do you think you can lie down, or would it hurt too badly? I don’t want to make it worse.”

The floors throughout the house were wood, with area rugs used to warm the space. He followed her eyes to the thicker and much softer rug near the fireplace.

“I could rub your back for you. I mean, well, if you want?”

“Honey, you don’t have to do that.”

Squeezing the safety cap of the bottle, she shook out the round pills into her palm. With a timid smile, she glanced back up at him. Eli watched her bite her lip, and as she dropped the pills in his outstretched hand, it appeared as if she was searching for the right words.

“I…want to do something to help. I need to.” Her eyes back on the pills in his hand, she hesitated before making eye-contact again. “You’ve done so much, Eli. It’s the least I can do.”

BOOK: Racing to Love: Eli's Honor
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