My cheeks were burning. “No...one but Carl and Rosa know about it.”
He stared at me then looked back into the cabinet. “Mallory, that’s pretty amazing.”
I lifted a shoulder. “It’s just...soap.”
“It’s soap you carved into very recognizable things,” he said. “I can’t do that.”
“But you can spray-paint and draw and—”
“And I can’t do this,” Rider repeated. “Those carvings take just the same amount of skill as spray-painting does.”
I was going to have to disagree with that. Uncomfortable with the attention, I gestured toward the kitchen. “You ready?”
He watched me a moment longer then nodded.
Carl and Rosa waited at the kitchen table.
“This...this is Rider,” I said, twisting my hands together. “And this...this is Carl and Rosa.”
Rosa’s brows lifted and there was a slight widening of her eyes.
Carl eyed Rider from the scuffed toes of his boots to the top of his messy blackish-brown hair, and his brows slammed down.
And that was the moment I knew this dinner was going to be all kinds of awkward.
* * *
It started with the food.
And then the questions.
Both things were related. The moment we sat down, Carl began grilling Rider. Caught off guard by the tactic, I only managed to cut into my slice of roast and eat a chunk of potato.
Rider also hadn’t touched most of his food, probably because Carl was apparently interviewing him. When there was a break in the Spanish Inquisition, Rider turned to me. “Are you going to eat?”
I nodded as I speared a potato. Rider watched until I actually ate the vegetable, and I resisted the urge to roll my eyes only because I knew what drove him. Like the times at lunch, he always made sure I ate. It was hard to break the habit after years of sharing scraps and leftovers. I ate another potato and Rider spooned up chickpeas.
Cutting into the pot roast, I glanced up and across the table. Carl and Rosa were staring at us. Knowing they probably didn’t understand the exchange, I flushed.
“So you work at some kind of body shop?” Carl cleared his throat. A piece of perfectly cooked pot roast dangled from his fork. “Part-time?”
I closed my eyes.
“Yes, sir. At Razorback Garage. The owner calls me in to do custom paint jobs,” Rider answered patiently. He’d been patient throughout the whole—the whole ordeal.
He answered every question Carl posed. How long was he in a group home? What neighborhood did he live in? What subject in school was he most interested in? Which, not surprisingly, turned out to be art class. The questions kept coming and coming, so much so that Rosa didn’t get a word in edgewise.
I was so embarrassed.
And so incredibly disappointed.
“What do your foster parents do for a living?” Carl asked.
My fingers tightened around my fork as I breathed through my nose. This...this was getting out of hand.
Rider was unfazed. “I only have one foster parent. Mrs. Luna’s husband passed away before I came into the picture. She works at the phone company.”
“And what do you plan to do when you graduate high school?” Carl kept on firing. “You’ll age out of the system and I assume you don’t plan on staying with Mrs. Luna. Are you heading to college?”