“You little fucker, I’m going to —”
“I’m good,” Astrid sounds flustered, and I’m sure she is Astrid now that she’s speaking normally.
“Since when do you come over on the weekend?” Levi asks.
“Since now. Find yourself another place. Don’t you have a flat?”
“Fuck you,” Levi tells him. “I’ll be here whenever I damn well please.” A pause. “What’s that?”
“I’m making breakfast,” Aiden says. “And stop eating my groceries. Fill the fridge when you come over.”
“Wait. You are making breakfast?” Levi asks in an incredulous tone.
“Yeah.” Astrid laughs. “What gives?”
Aiden doesn’t answer, then after a moment, he speaks. “Leave. Both of you.”
“Nah.” I can h
ear the grin in Levi’s voice. “We’re staying for that breakfast.”
“In your dreams.”
“Wait,” Astrid says in a suspicious tone. “Is Elsa here?”
“No.” Aiden doesn’t miss a beat.
Why is he lying about that?
“She is, isn’t she?” Levi laughs. “Princess, go search upstairs and I’ll search the downstairs.”
“Deal.”
Aiden grunts.
Footsteps come closer.
I run back to the room and close the door. I quickly remove my jacket and pretend to put it back on.
A knock comes through before the door cracks open. Astrid’s head peeks inside. When her sparkly green eyes meet mine, a huge grin breaks on her face.
“Found her!” She barges inside.
Her denim overalls are buttoned all wrong and her brown hair is dishevelled at best.
I try not to recall what I heard happen between her and Levi downstairs.
“Morning, Elsa.”
“Morning.”
She leans in, face scrunching as if she’s about to tell me a top-secret. “I have huge news. Aiden is making breakfast.”
I offer her an awkward smile. “Okay.”
“Okay? What do you mean by okay? This should go in the Daily Mail or something. Hell. Jonathan should use it for marketing.” She pauses, narrowing her eyes on me. “Wait. Your lack of reaction can’t be because he made you breakfast before, right?”
I nod.