Sugar Daddy Page 48


But ultimately, what Sela did was more of a fib than a lie. It was her terrible attempt to hide from me the fact she was feeling overwhelmed with everything that was occurring between us. Silly girl went for a walk to get her head on straight and didn’t think I’d understand or be sympathetic to her doubts.

All of life is filled with doubt. All of us make calculated risks in our choices, and while I’m not one to second-guess myself, I fully understand that Sela might be having some difficulties in accepting what’s going on between us. It’s okay though…I’m a patient man.

I’m not going anywhere.

“Beck?” Sela asks softly.

“Yeah?”

“You’re the first man I’ve brought home to meet my father.”

I’m not surprised by this, but I am deeply flattered. Still, I know this is a big deal for her, but she’s far too serious in this moment. I don’t want this to be stressful on her, so I joke, “I won’t embarrass you, I promise.”

“You couldn’t,” she assures me, the joke bouncing off her shadowed eyes. “I’m not even quite sure why you’re with someone like me.”

I tilt my head, squeeze her hand, and admonish her, “If this is a shameless attempt to get me to extol all your virtues, we’re going to be very late to dinner for me to take the time to do that.”

She laughs softly, places her other hand over the ones we already have clasped. “No, it’s just…sometimes on its face it’s hard to see us together, you know? Different backgrounds, life choices, paths. I mean…think about it. You are so out of my league, Beck. If we hadn’t met at that Sugar Bowl Mixer, chances are you and I would have never had the opportunity to even cross paths.”

“And I certainly wasn’t looking for a Sugar Baby,” I tell her with a chuckle. “And I’m the one out of your league.”

“But I was looking for a Sugar Daddy,” she reminds me primly, refusing to debate league status.

“You got way more than you bargained for.” I lower my voice so it sounds ominous, “I’ve enjoyed corrupting you, Miss Halstead.”

She snorts and releases my hands, grabs for the door handle. “I suggest you don’t go saying shit like that around my father. He has guns in the house and he’s just itching to play the role of overprotective father.”

Laughing, I get out of the car and follow her up the sidewalk.


William Halstead is a good man. I figured it out from the minute he met us at the door and pulled Sela into a bear hug, rocking her back and forth and cooing, “There’s my baby girl.”

It was confirmed when he finally released her and gave me a hearty handshake, clasping my hand with two of his and pumping it vigorously while smiling at me as if I was a knight in shining armor. Sela wasn’t kidding…I’m the first man she’s ever brought home, and this apparently made her father very, very happy. It again makes me wonder how this smart, beautiful creature went so long without any real relationship. With regard to me, it’s a no-brainer. My parents were terrible role models for what a healthy, loyal relationship should look like. But you can just tell that Sela grew up in a household with a lot of love and respect.

Perhaps, maybe like me, she was just waiting for the right one to come along.


I’m relieved that the conversation flowed easily throughout dinner. Sela’s dad is a gregarious man and a natural-born storyteller. His girlfriend, Maria, is more reserved, but that could simply be because William tends to dominate conversations. I wonder if Sela’s mom was that way as well.

“Can I get anyone anything to drink?” Maria asks as she walks into the living room. She had insisted on doing the dishes so we could all retire in here to talk and hang out for a bit before we headed back to the city.

“I’m good,” I say, and Sela chimes in with, “I’m good too.”

“I’m good, honey,” William says as he reaches out to touch his hand to Maria’s with a soft smile before she plops down onto the couch next to him.

Sela’s body tightens next to me, barely perceptible, but I’m very in tune with her mood since we got here. While she is open and friendly with her father, she’s a bit more reserved around Maria, and I know that has everything to do with the fact Sela fears this woman is replacing her late mother in her father’s affections. She’s not said much about it, but I can tell in the careful mask she keeps in place whenever she interacts with Maria.

“So tell me more about your business,” William asks me, his hands folded casually over his stomach. William Halstead is a big man, in height and girth. Sela told me he heads the janitorial staff for the local high school and has been working there for nearly thirty years now. I do believe he’s the first janitor I’ve ever known in my life, a thought that actually humbles me a bit.

“It’s primarily a Web-based dating site that focuses on pairing wealthy men with women,” I say, holding his gaze steady. Didn’t think it would be this hard to tell Sela’s dad what I did for a living, but I brace for censure.

“And it’s called the Sugar Bowl?” Maria asks with a polite smile on her face. “What’s that mean?”

Sela coughs slightly, and as she sits next to me on the love seat, I can see her from my peripheral vision put a hand over her mouth to hide a smirk. I think she’s enjoying my discomfort a bit.

“It’s a play on the words sugar daddy,” William says with booming voice. “I read an article online about it.”

“What’s a sugar daddy?” Maria asks, turning to look at William.

Sela nearly chokes and her dad shoots her a sly wink. He also saves me from having to explain by telling Maria, “Sugar daddy is a term used for a man who pays for everything for his woman.”

Maria turns her brown eyes my way. She’s an attractive Hispanic woman who made an amazing carne adobada for dinner and seemed to dote on Sela’s dad. You can tell she’s seriously in love with the man, but I could also tell that William holds something in reserve, sort of the way that Sela does with me. I wonder if Sela notices that and it makes her feel any better about him being with her.

“So, it’s like Match.com, but it focuses more on economic factors?” she asks me, turning my way.

I nod and smile. “That’s a good way to think of it.”

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