Total pages in book: 32
Estimated words: 29895 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 149(@200wpm)___ 120(@250wpm)___ 100(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 29895 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 149(@200wpm)___ 120(@250wpm)___ 100(@300wpm)
I use every one of the nice fluffy towels Nellie talked me into getting. I didn't see why I needed more than two towels when she made me get them, but once again she was right. I’m thankful for all of them as I jam them into my washing machine.
When I come back to the kitchen I take in what’s left of the mess I’ve made. All the water is cleaned up, but I know a lot of this stuff is going to need to be ripped out. I feel guilty for all the work I ruined and I should be super mad at myself. But when my mind drifts back to Butch and knowing he’ll be here again, I can’t be sorry. If I hadn’t broken the pipe I wouldn't have met him.
Maybe that will get Nellie to not be so mad at me for destroying my kitchen. She’s always trying to get me to show interest in some guy. I’m showing interest right now, but he’s a man and he might be too much for me to handle.
I look down at my clothes that are once again soaked through and I remember that Butch thought I lived with my parents. I groan, hating that he didn’t see me as a woman. When I went into my bedroom to change I tried to find something I thought might be sexy and would maybe make me look a little older. He just looked mostly annoyed after that. I think the boys noticed, though, since their eyes kept drifting to my breasts.
I pull my dirty shirt off and hang it in the bathroom. I hadn't put a bra on earlier because I hate them even though I know I need one. I’m so top heavy and I’ve been this way my whole life. When I’m home I never wear one. Nellie says it’s bullshit I never show them off, but I tried and Butch didn't take notice.
When I walk into my bedroom I pull off my shorts and grab a pair of sleep pants and a thin T-shirt. I decide to go back to the living room and try to get lost in my work for a while and stop thinking about calling the number on the card. I want to hear his deep voice again because it made my whole body tingle with awareness.
My phone rings on the kitchen counter and I run over to grab it when I hear Nellie's ringtone. I don’t know why I thought it could be Butch because he doesn’t have my number.
I have to answer or she’s going to show up over here. I have enough to think about right now without her standing in front of me with five million questions. I need to focus on things like what I should wear tomorrow and I don’t need her here yelling at me. Okay, maybe not yelling, but giving me the look I always get from her, my aunt, and my mom. The look that always wonders how I end up knee deep in something. Today it’s water.
“Hey,” I chirp a little too loudly, knowing I gave myself up.
“Oh god. What did you do?” I hear a trace of horror in her voice. “You’re so lucky you have money to burn,” she adds, and I think she’s trying to reassure herself and not me.
“Maybe my bathroom needs to be redone, too,” I throw out as a distraction.
“Oh, I saw these cool new toilets that have seat warmers.”
I breathe a sigh of relief that it worked and I’ll be honest that does sound kind of cool. But my small victory is short lived.
“Wait a second. I know what you’re doing.”
“I broke the pipe,” I admit as I rip the Band-Aid off and get it over with.
If redoing my bathroom isn’t going to work, nothing will. Maybe it will soften the blow when she sees the place. This way she’ll kind of know what she's walking into tomorrow. It won’t all be dropped on her head at once.
“Of course you did, Harlow. Let me make a call I’ll see—”
“The property manager sent someone to come stop the flooding.”
“Flooding!” she yells through the phone.
“Soft flow of water coming from the pipe?” I try rewording it to see if that helps.
“I can’t with you.” At least she laughs when she says it.
“The guy who came over was hot,” I say, and that stops her from laughing.
“Oh my. He must really be hot if he got your attention.” I walk over to the sofa and sit down, picking up his card again. “Did he ask you out?”
“No,” I admit, and it sucks because I’ve never gone on a date. They look boring if you ask me. Two people who don't know each other having to be awkward face to face. “He gave me his number?”