Chapter 26

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"You sure about this place, babe? How come you don't just wanna grab some coffee from The Grind and go back to crash on the couch at home?" I asked as Colton pulled open my passenger side door to walk hand-in-hand with me down the sidewalk.

Luckily, I cautioned Tia's persistent advice at dinner last night, and limited myself to only three glasses of wine, and one measly shot of Patron. So, Colton's 7 a.m. feisty bite to the exposed skin of my cheek wake-up call, wasn't ruined with a blistering hangover. He was adamant about taking me to some diner he'd heard about from one of the guys at the bike shop to try their German potato pancakes that he was just so certain I'd love, and I was a sucker for a languid, sweatpants breakfast date every now and then.

"It'll be fine, Livvy. Let's enjoy some good grub, then I promise we'll squeeze in a nap before we head to the gym later. Deal?"

He kissed the fingers that were interlocked with his own, then smiled mischievously as we slipped inside, escaping the rustling winds of the morning. We didn't stop at the 'wait to be seated sign', instead Colt scanned the room, peeping over the full booths and tables around the room.

"C'mon, I see an empty table over here, babe." he pointed, tugging me not so gently to the left of the hostess stand.

"Colton, we have to wai-," I started to argue with his bullish, bizarre behavior, but before I could state my objections, reality slapped me across the face.

Seated with their backs to us, both sipping on a black cup of the house blend, were two Indiana natives, very far from home. Mom turned around to investigate the bustling approach over her shoulder, and stood to push herself from the seat with an unsure smile.

"Wh-how did you guys get here? What's going on?" I babbled wrapping a halfhearted, confused embrace around her neck, searching for an explanation from someone in the party of three.

"It was all sweet, Colton, Liv honey. He arranged the whole thing. He insisted we come." Mom confessed, admiring Colton with a look of appreciation.

"I wanted 'em here to see you fight, baby. And to see the house and everything. They got here yesterday afternoon, and I got them all set up at Westin, and ate dinner with the both of 'em last night to get familiar."

The pieces started to connect then. Why Tia was so snarky with keeping me away from the bottle, why Colton was so incessant about dragging me out of the house before 9 a.m. this morning, and why there was a button-down dress shirt discarded into the hamper when I did laundry after a late return home last night. I internally tipped a hat to his successful undercover moonlighting, though.

"Kid wouldn't take a dime from us, either. Paid for the tickets, a ride from the airport, and our room, too. Seems we owe this one, sweetheart." I heard dad say as I took one of the empty seats across the table from he and mom.

Their visit may not have been on my terms, or my timing, but I did feel complete having them here. Although there was a suitcase of nerves that landed on that plane along with their arrival to Pittsburgh, it just felt, right. The four of us, together, all in one place had me swelling with a sense of gladness and completion, all courtesy of the mysterious man in blue seated to my right.

"I can't believe you did all this, Ritter. I expect a play-by-play when we get home, ya' big box of lies." I leaned to kiss him sincerely.

"I'm pretty impressed with myself to tell the truth."

The meal consisted of bacon all around, mom whining about the cold temperature, those potato cakes Colton was correct about me losing my mind over, and a general calm, steady flow of conversation. I was impressed at how normal and interested Tony and Liz seemed to be the entire time. Dad never brought up a single utterance of basketball, and mom pounded me with questions about my match, and what it would be like. I felt a connection so genuine that had been minuscule for so many years, and I knew Colton played a tremendous role in the healing psychological wounds.

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