anyone ever told you that you wear your every thought on your face?” He definitely seemed capable of reading her mind. “You’ve not got a deceptive bone in that beautiful body.”
Ignoring the flash of pleasure shooting through her so-not-beautiful body, she went for bravado, knowing she was about as good at bluffing as Wally would ever be at roller-skating. “I don’t know what you mean.”
He grinned, but didn’t call her on the lie, since his drink was just being delivered. Drawing a deep sip, he winced as he lowered the glass to the table.
“Not good?”
“It loses its flavor with every mile it’s shipped away from Dublin, and the bartender drew it far too quickly.”
“So you are from Ireland. Not just of Irish descent.”
“I was born in San Francisco, actually. My mother’s American. But after their divorce, when I was just a tot, my father took me back to Ireland.” Though his tone remained easy, his body had stiffened. She understood why when he added, “And that’s as much as we’re going to talk about that.”
“Sorry,” she said, realizing the subject was a touchy one.
Maybe Sean had family issues, too. She couldn’t be the only person to come from a big, obnoxious, pushy clan. Even if it sometimes felt that way, given the reactions of many of her friends here in Chicago. They generally listened with fond amusement to the stories of her childhood, then treated her like she was the only refugee from the planet of 1950s Small-Town Hell.
Annie reached for the small bowl of nuts the waitress had deposited on their table, carefully picking one up and lifting it to her mouth. “I guess you’d like to know about the weekend now.”
“I would.”
“Then you can decide if you want to back out.”
“I will not. I told you last night I’d accompany you.”
“But I thought we were meeting so I could convince you.”
He reached across the table and stroked the back of her hand with his warm fingertips. “We’re meeting because I couldn’t stand to wait four more days to see you again.”
Wow. Talk about words going straight from one person’s mouth to another person’s heart. Or stomach. Or anywhere else…. Annie’s thighs clenched below the table, and she scooched her legs together, suddenly very aware of the tight seam of her pants.
Because the words—plus that touch, and the intimate look in his eye—had definitely landed there.
“Since we’re here, however, you might as well fill me in.” Smiling slightly, he averted his gaze and let go of her hand. “Though, I think I might be able to venture a guess.”
“Oh, really?” Her tone held unspoken challenge.
He tilted his head, thinking about it. “It’s your highschool reunion and you’re the last unmarried prom princess?”
She rolled her eyes. “I wasn’t the prom princess type.”
More the dairy princess. But she didn’t want to mention the cows again until it was absolutely necessary.
Sean tried again. “Your ex-boyfriend’s getting married and you can’t stand to show up alone?”
“Not even close,” she said. “My only ex-boyfriend back in my old hometown can’t get married legally, at least not in this state. Though he and his partner seem very happy anyway.”
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