“Well, that’s a rude thing to say, even if it might have some truth to it.”
Great. Suzanne thought she was uptight, too. “Am I really that annoying?” she asked in dismay.
“Oh, shit, come on now. I never said you were annoying, and I’m sure Ty doesn’t feel that way either. The man asked you to marry him! But you have to admit, you like to people-watch, not dive into the fray yourself. It’s not a flaw. It’s not like you’re living in a bubble. It’s just your personality. If he doesn’t like that, he can go f**k himself.”
“I don’t know what he likes. I think he loves me.” She wanted to believe that, she really, really did.
“So wait for him to calm down and then go and work it out.”
“But maybe this is just a way to walk away before we both regret it even more further down the road.”
“So let sleeping dogs lie, then.”
“But I don’t know if that’s what I want.”
“You need to decide whether you’re willing to risk being hurt, plain and simple. You can go for it and have a wonderful relationship. Or you might go for it and crash and burn brilliantly. It’s up to you if you want to take that risk, up to you if it’s worth it or not.”
Her brain hurt. Her heart hurt. Her stomach hurt. Her vision blurred and she swallowed hard. “I don’t know.”
“So take some time and think about it. He’s not going anywhere, honey, and his feelings for you aren’t going to disappear overnight. You get your head on straight, and maybe he’ll do the same.”
“You think so?”
“Yeah. And if that doesn’t work, throw another pillow at him.”
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
TWO weeks went by, and each day sucked a little bit more than the last. At the beginning, Ty could have sworn that wasn’t possible, but by the time he was heading to the pits for qualifying in Miami for the final race of the season, he was amazed to find it was true. He hadn’t spoken to or called Imogen since their fight. Imogen hadn’t called him.
And every day the pain got a little deeper and he got a little crankier.
Especially every time someone congratulated him on his engagement.
Or asked where his beautiful fiancée was.
Generally, when anyone talked to him at all, he wasn’t happy about it.
Ty wanted to be left alone, to wallow, to reflect on his own stupidity, to contemplate a course of action. It wasn’t working because no one, no one, could ever seem to leave him alone.
“Ohmigawd, Ty, hi!” a chipper voice said to his left.
Glancing over, Ty tried to force a smile onto his face, no matter how much of a struggle it was. Then he saw it was Nikki and gave up the effort. “Hey. How are you?”
“I am awesome!” she declared, falling in step beside him in a sundress and high heels. She held her ring finger out for him. “Did you see my engagement ring? It cost fifty thousand dollars.”
Thinking that announcing the ring price was about the most vulgar thing he’d ever heard, Ty glanced over at the rock. Damn, it was ugly. That somehow made him feel better, though he couldn’t help feeling a tiny bit sorry for Strickland shelling out that kind of cash on a gaudy ring. It wasn’t even a diamond, the thing was yellow.
“It’s a yellow diamond,” she told him.
Wow. He didn’t even know they made those. “Very nice.”
“I heard you got engaged, too,” Nikki said, clearly not picking up on his lack on interest. “Congrats.”
“Thanks.”
“I can only hope that you’re as happy with her as I am with my snooky-wookums.”
That brought the closest thing to a smile to Ty’s face in days. He just might have to call Jonas Strickland snooky-wookums next time he bumped into him. Making a noncommittal sound, he glanced around. He wanted to be saved from this conversation. Ridiculous nickname aside, it was not feeling so great to think that Nikki was riding off into the sunset of her happily ever after and he had screwed his up royally.
He shouldn’t have called Imogen uptight. That was unfair and hurtful. Yes, she was logical. Yes, she was cautious. But she wasn’t uptight. She was willing to try new things like camping and a wide variety of sexual positions.
Anyone who could have an orgasm in an inner tube was not strictly an observer in life.
He should apologize. He should call her.
Beg for forgiveness.
Because goddamn, it sucked not having his Emma Jean in his life.
“How much did the ring you got for Imogen cost?” Nikki asked, holding her hand out and admiring her bling again.
Ty stopped walking and just looked at her, appalled. “I didn’t buy her a ring,” he said. “She’s not materialistic, and you can’t put a price on our relationship. I’m going to give her my grand-mother’s ring.” He didn’t know where the idea popped into his head from, but once it was there, he liked it.
Nikki sniffed. “Well, I’m sure that will just thrill her. It’s not like a boring professor has anywhere good to wear quality jewelry anyway.” Then she smiled. “I’ll send you an invitation to our wedding. I’m sure we’ll beat you to the altar. Bye!”
As he watched her walk away, he concluded that he could take a page from Imogen’s book. If he wasn’t so damn impulsive, he never would have dated Nikki, and he could have filled hours of his life with something—anything—of substance.
The thought didn’t improve his mood, nor did the sight of his crew chief.
“Are you ready to pull your head out of your ass?” Sam asked him, meeting him on the thoroughfare to the pits.
“I wasn’t aware that’s where it was,” Ty lied. “No wonder I’ve been having neck pain.”
“I’m serious,” Sam said. “It’s all on the line here and you’ve been distracted for a month.” He shot Ty a long look. “I guess love will do that to a man, but I wish you had waited until December to fall for a woman.”
“I’m fine.” And he was a big fat f**king liar.
Especially given that ten minutes later the sight of Evan Monroe soured his mood even further. The guy wasn’t doing anything, he was just waiting to run his qualifying lap like Ty, but it irritated Ty to think the guy had wanted to date Imogen. Evan was not her type.
Then again, neither was Ty.
That thought really set him on edge, and he almost groaned out loud when Evan approached him and said, “Is it true you and Imogen broke up?”