Total pages in book: 25
Estimated words: 23595 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 118(@200wpm)___ 94(@250wpm)___ 79(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 23595 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 118(@200wpm)___ 94(@250wpm)___ 79(@300wpm)
He laughs into a sip of his drink. “Sorry to disappoint you. I’m just a normal, boring, run-of-the-mill insurance salesman.”
“Normal isn’t a bad thing,” I say honestly. “In fact, I think normal is the best thing.”
“Do you?”
I nod slowly.
We simply look at each other, the day passing in flurry of color around us, but our bodies remaining perfectly unmoving. “So…” I whisper. “About this gossip.”
“Right,” he growls, though it quickly turns to a cough. He must have had something stuck in his throat. “Let’s start with the man operating the barbeque. He’s obsessed with his lawn. I once caught him in the middle of the night on his belly, trimming it with scissors.”
My mouth falls open. “No, you didn’t.”
“I did. And it’s all because the man who lives across the street is his high school football rival. You didn’t realize we were living in a sitcom, did you?”
“I had no idea. Competing lawn care fanatics. Now that’s a show I would watch.”
“Me too.” He glances back over his shoulder and I take a moment to appreciate his physique. For a man who sells insurance, he is obscenely fit. Like cut triceps and flexing shoulders and hands that look like they do a lot more than tap at a keyboard. He must do CrossFit after working hours. Otherwise he’s very naturally gifted.
This is healthy, right?
Noticing men and their attributes?
I’m already excited to talk to my therapist about it.
“Okay, next up is the older woman holding court by the snack table. You see her? Fire engine red hair. Hard to miss.”
This time, I can’t stop my giggle. “I see her.”
My laugh seems to distract him, but he swallows and keeps going. “She dyes her poodle’s hair pink and posts pictures of it in costumes on the town’s online bulletin board.”
“Oh, please say she dressed it like an old timey sheriff.”
“A sheriff, a mermaid, a milkman, a flapper…”
I almost choke on a sip of my drink. “No insurance salesman? What a terrible oversight.”
“Right?” He shakes his head sadly. “We get no love.”
“Are you…” Don’t ask. Even if there’s an odd sense of connection here, you could be imagining it after such an upheaval and departure from regular society. And it’s too fast. Too soon. “Are you…looking for love?”
A light of awareness comes on in his blue eyes. Until his finger traces the small of my wrist, I don’t realize his hand is close enough to touch me. “I’m looking at you, Jolie.”
It’s suddenly hard to breathe.
That rough fingertip of his travels into my palm, moving in a circle and there’s an answering wetness between my legs. From such a simple touch.
My nipples ache in my bra.
I’ve never been this drawn to someone. Not in my entire life. Never knew it was possible. But I find myself allowing Christopher to weave our fingers together, holding my hand across the table. Like we’re a couple. Like we didn’t just meet minutes earlier.
And I’m shocked at how right it feels.
Maybe the newspaper headline was a sign.
At the reminder of my trauma, the sounds of a hysterical male voice filter into my thoughts, along with the sounds of me begging, sobbing, wood splintering.
I suck in a breath and take my hand back, standing abruptly and knocking a hip into the table. Christopher shoots to his feet as well, shoving long fingers through his hair. “I’m sorry. I’m…please. That was too much.”
“No, it’s me. It’s…” I look around, my cheeks turning numb when I realize the sun has almost completely gone down. How long was I sitting at this table, looking into this man’s eyes? Did I leave the house later than I thought? It’s possible. I spent a long time trying to psyche myself up to go outdoors. And now. And now…I’ll be walking into my house after dark.
My worst fear.
“Jolie,” Christopher says in a calm, resonant voice. “What is it?”
I turn in a circle, alarmed to find that most of the neighbors are heading back inside, the music has stopped and the barbeque is no longer smoking. “I just, um…” I wipe my perspiring palms down my dress. “I don’t like coming home after dark.”
“Why?”
“You really don’t know?”
His brows pull together. Slowly, he shakes his head.
I lower my voice. “I was taken from my home. Kidnapped. After work one night. He’d been hiding in my bedroom for days. The…the man was an older co-worker of mine. He’d formed some kind of…infatuation with me and imagined this whole relationship between us. There was nothing, um…sexual. It was almost like he was courting me.” I stop for a breath. “I played along until he let his guard down. Until I could call the police. It…it was in the news.”
I wish I didn’t have to talk about this out loud. Not to this normal, good-looking man who has every right to avoid a girl with baggage like mine. Not when he made it possible for me to feel light for a while. To be the kind of girl who flirts and has drinks with cute, easy-going insurance salesmen.