Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 78313 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 392(@200wpm)___ 313(@250wpm)___ 261(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 78313 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 392(@200wpm)___ 313(@250wpm)___ 261(@300wpm)
Matt studies Kennedy. “You know, you would make a pretty good Kenickie.”
Kennedy smiles. “I know.”
“And we’ve got Danny Zuko here, who won’t tell us if Sandy put out under the dock.”
“Made out under the dock,” I correct, before I can think better of it. “The line is made out under the dock.”
“Ooh! Did you stay out till ten o’clock?” Kate asks, entering the office and shutting the door behind her.
At my look, she waves her hand. “Never mind. I’ll ask Sandy. I mean Lara. Can I be Rizzo? She’s my favorite.”
“No,” Kennedy says.
She glares at him. “Why not?”
“Because I’m Kenickie.”
She snorts. “Yeah. Okay.”
Kennedy’s glower grows darker. “Who do you think I’d be?”
She snaps her fingers and pretends to think. “What’s the principal’s name?”
“You’re thinking of the gym teacher,” Matt says. “The principal’s a woman.”
“No, no, I know,” Kate says with a sweet smile. “I was definitely thinking of Kennedy as the principal. Uptight, a little prudish . . .”
Matt hides his mouth with his hand, and I roll my eyes to the ceiling to keep from laughing and, thus, earning Kennedy’s full-on wrath.
“Annnnyway,” Kate continues, shifting her attention back to me to dodge Kennedy’s scowl. “You’ve got to give us something, Ian. You saw her on Friday, and then none of us heard from you. Not even Sabrina.”
“I was busy.”
“Did she—”
“No more Grease lyrics,” I say, pointing a finger at Matt.
He resumes his baseball toss as punishment.
“Was it a date? Are you dating now?” Kennedy asks.
“It’s a very crucial distinction,” Kate says in agreement, coming and sitting on the arm of Matt’s chair.
“Hell if I know,” I mutter.
Lara left my place late last night, much to my displeasure, and I haven’t heard from her all damn day. For the first time ever, I’m on the other side of the equation—the one waiting by the phone, rather than the one avoiding it.
I don’t like it.
“Oh. My. Goodness,” Kate says. She covers her mouth in a pathetic attempt to stifle her amusement on my behalf. “Are you guys seeing his face?”
“Whipped,” Matt says in concurrence.
“Smitten,” Kennedy agrees.
Kate points at him. “See? Smitten. He is like the principal in Grease. Old-fashioned and—”
“Oh, for God’s sake, just because I’m not a childish—” He breaks off.
Kate crosses her arms and lifts her eyebrows. “Yes? By all means, Kennedy, please finish that sentence.”
I scrub my hands over my face. “I need coffee.”
“I already brought you a quad shot this morning,” Kate points out.
“Okay fine, I need . . .”
My three friends await my answer, their expressions a combination of amusement and dismay. Because we all know what I need. Or at least what I want.
Lara.
I want to know where things stand with us, but how can I expect her to provide clarity when I’m not even sure what I’m looking for?
I don’t do this. I don’t even know that I want to do this. I know how people see me. I know because I’ve deliberately cultivated the image.
The consummate playboy. The overgrown frat boy. The order the most expensive champagne just because I can guy. The one who never calls the next day.
That’s who I am. And it’s by no means the kind of guy Lara McKenzie wants or needs. At least not for the long haul.
“You guys want to go out tonight?” I ask Matt and Kennedy. The invitation sounds hollow and forced even to my ears.
“Ian,” Kate says in a disappointed tone.
Kennedy shakes his head, and Matt just looks at me.
“All right, you win,” I say, throwing up my hands. “I don’t know what the fuck I’m doing. You guys happy now?”
“Do you like her?” Kate asks.
“Obviously,” Kennedy snipes.
“Ian knows what I mean,” Kate says, not looking away from me.
I nod. “Yes. But I don’t know how to tell her that I want to try for real. I don’t even know how.”
“Harry Winston,” Kennedy suggests.
“Nah,” Matt says. “Jewelry’s too intense. Go with bags. Women like a good handbag. Louis Vuitton.”
“Oh my gawd,” Kate says in exasperation. “No wonder the lot of you are single. Hold on.” She leaves my office, comes back a minute later, and slaps a business card in front of me. “Call this number. And no, I won’t call it for you. There are some things a man ought to do for himself.”
I pick up the card. “Flowers?”
She nods. “They’re nice. Women like them. And they’re more first-week-relationship appropriate than a thousand-dollar handbag or diamonds.” Kate lightly slaps both Matt and Kennedy on the back of the head as she says it.
“Well, it’s technically only been a weekend, but we’ve sort of had something going on longer than that,” I say, tapping the card against my palm.
“So make it a really big bouquet.” Kate glances at her watch. “It’s nearly one. Kennedy, Matt, you both have investors coming in. Ian, you’ve got an open hour, but you should call Vanessa Lewis to let her know you won’t be needing her services anymore, and—”