4.
The girl was seriously kicking his
ass. The effect of her second-skin black dress was compromised by the bowling
shoes, but only a little. It softened her just the smallest touch, made her
seem less intimidating, but clearly she didn’t believe in playing the helpless
female on a first date.
Mike watched her toe up to the line
and turn her ball loose with a long, smooth, practiced motion. She’d bowled
before: enough to be proficient. The ball went right down the middle of the
lane and clipped the two pins left standing from her first throw, giving her a
spare to put up alongside her three strikes.
“If I’d known this,” he said as she
returned to her seat. “I would’ve taken you on a more traditional date.”
“Oh, so it’s a ‘date’ now?” She gave
him the eyebrow lift as she settled back in her plastic chair and snitched one
of his onion rings off the fold-out table between them. “I thought it was just
dinner.”
She’d loosened up, and he didn’t
know if that was the beer, or if she was actually having a good time. “You
can’t have dinner in a bowling alley.”
She reached for another onion ring,
dabbing at the grease on her bottom lip with a manicured finger. He thought she
might have been holding back a smile. “So you lied to me then.”
“Misled you. Very different.”
“Uh-huh. You’re up.”
“Don’t eat all my onion rings while
I go make a fool of myself.”
“No promises.”
**
Delta never drank beer. She never
ate onion rings and hot dogs. She never hooked her knees over the arm of her
chair in a public place while wearing a dress. She also never had fun on dates.
It scared her to think it, but when she stopped sighing and rolling her eyes,
when she got a little beer in her, Michael – Mike – was maybe…sort of…perhaps a
little bit fun. If she admitted it. Which she hated to. But hey, she was
drinking Bud Light and eating deep fried grease and bowling. It was such a shock compared to all her candlelight dinners
with Greg; forget letting her guard down, it had been knocked down. And she was
starting to think that Mike being six-foot-whatever he was and big-shouldered
was terribly attractive.
“I can’t believe you’re beating me,”
he said as he returned to his seat and made a dramatic show of throwing himself
down into it.
“You’re going to go there?” she
reached for her beer. “That whole beat by a girl pouting thing?”
He gave her a sideways look as he
punched his score into the touchscreen. “No. Both my sisters can out-bowl me.”
Delta felt a smile tugging and tried
to stop it. Something about knowing he had sisters – sisters who were better
bowlers – sent a small shot of warmth through her. Guys didn’t talk about
siblings if they were just out to get laid in a hurry.
“But I didn’t figure you would be able to.”
“Why?” she gave him another
arched-brow look and took the last onion ring.
His grin was shameless. “You’ve got
that whole princess thing going on.”
“And princesses can’t bowl?”
“Not in my experience, no.”
“You’re rude, you know,” she said,
smile still threatening. He was rude,
but in a way, he was brave too. He’d flirted with her over his perfume
disaster, had come back the next day, dogged in his pursuit. And he was bold
enough to tell her what he thought.
“I know.” He tapped the screen in
front of him. “Your turn.”
“I have a question,” she lingered in
her chair. His eyes came to hers when she didn’t speak right away and stayed
there. He paid attention, this one. Was attentive without putting any effort
into it. And his eyes, she noted again for reasons she didn’t understand, were
very green. “Why did you buy that red dress yesterday?”
He feigned casual, but the slightest
hint of color came up along his cheekbones. “You already know, so why do you
have to even ask?”
“I don’t know,” she mused, smiling.
“I think I just want to hear it.”
“Like I said – princess.”
“Manipulative playboy,” she
countered. She was smiling like an idiot.
She put a fingernail between her teeth in hopes of at least covering it a
little.
“Playboy?” he sat back in his chair,
offended.
“You were buying perfume for someone
and now we’re here.”
“Yeah, okay,” his hand went back
through his blonde hair, leaving it messy.
“So the dress,” Delta prompted, and
twirled a foot as she waited, still smiling.
“Well you wouldn’t have gone out
with me if you thought I was a cheapass, would you?”
“Oh, so now I’m materialistic?”
“High maintenance at least.”
She felt a giggle coming up the back
of her throat. A giggle – like she
was in high school. She managed to turn it into a more appropriate laugh, but
she couldn’t stop it. She didn’t know which was more remarkable – laughing on a
date, or laughing on this date, with this guy, in particular.
“Alright,” Mike got to his feet and
picked up both their empty mugs. “Go kick my ass some more and I’m gonna get us
refills. You want more onion rings?” He grinned. “Since you ate all of mine.”
“Yes, please.”
**
Reality descended in the parking
lot. Delta snatched the halves of her coat together against the bite of the
late November wind and felt the first prick of guilt. Greg had called her twice
at the bowling alley and she hadn’t taken either of them. What was she doing?
Greg was more or less her boyfriend, and here she was out with…
She glanced sideways at Mike as they
stood on the curb. Even in heels, she would have to stand on her tiptoes to
slide her arms around his neck. Which she was
not thinking about.
…the most obnoxious blonde doofus
ever. She sighed and Mike glanced down at her.
“You cold?”
“Yes,” which wasn’t really a lie.
He had his hands in the pockets of
his awful brown bomber jacket; the thing was worn and cracked in places. Delta
had a fleeting wonder if it had belonged to his dad or an uncle originally. It
wasn’t new. And then she scolded herself for being curious. What did she care?
It was hideous. “Where’s your car?” he scanned the lot. “I’ll walk you over.”
The urge to smile had faded completely.
For the past two hours, Delta had felt herself begin to fill with this fizzing
sort of warmth. Not excitement, not happiness, but something in between and very
similar to both. Now it was gone, like a valve had been opened and it had all drained
away, leaving her cold and hollow and aggravated.
“That way,” she nodded and stepped
off the curb, fishing her keys out of her pocket.
Mike was a step behind her, but
caught up. “You alright?”
She hit the remote on her key fob
and the Volvo’s interior lights came on. “Fine.” She went to the driver side
door and stared at her own dark reflection in the window, fiddling with her
keys. He wasn’t going to handle her quick getaway well.
“A Volvo?” he said over her
shoulder. “Wasn’t expecting that.”
She folded her arms across her
middle and turned to face him. The neon signage on the alley threw red and blue
shadows across his face, put highlights in his hair. Greg was handsome in a
reserved, generic sort of way, but Mike was all demonstrative expressions and
too-big smiles. The contrast shouldn’t have mattered, but it did.
“I had this mental picture of a red
Ferrari.”
“Michael,” she said on another sigh,
and his blonde brows pulled together.
“How are we back to ‘Michael’? I
thought I was making progress in there.”
“We were. You were. I -,”
“Was it the Volvo thing? I take it
back. Awesome car, babe.”
“That,” she said, and felt her
expression tightening. “That’s the problem.”
“And ‘that’ is…?”
“’Dollface’. ‘Sweetheart’, ‘babe’. ‘Smokin’
hot’. You can’t just…I really am seeing someone.”
He stared at her a long moment, face
going carefully blank. “I think,” he said, “that if you wanted to be seeing
whoever your ‘someone’ is, you wouldn’t have come out with me tonight. Right?”
There was nothing more infuriating
then being told what she thought/felt/wanted. Delta kicked her chin up in
defiance. “I came tonight so you’d stop harassing me at work.”
It was a lame excuse, both of them
knew it, and his snort was unhappy. “You didn’t have a good time?” he edged in
closer to her and she had to tilt her head back to maintain eye contact. “You
were, what, laughing under duress?”
She bowed up. “You are -,”
“An asshole,” he supplied, his smile
tight. “Yeah, I get that a lot. But I didn’t force you to call me. I didn’t
force you to meet me here. If you don’t wanna see me again,” he shrugged, “fine.
But don’t pretend you came here for any reason besides the fact that you wanted
to.”
She took a deep breath and let it
out through her mouth, trying to temper the snap in her voice. “You are an asshole.”
“I know,” a grin stole across his
face. “Some people think it’s kinda hot.”
“No one thinks that.”
“You’re right. No one thinks that.”
Delta bit down on the inside of her
cheek. She couldn’t understand the competing urges to slap him and burst into
laughter, and she felt so, so guilty about Greg. But, then again…not that
guilty. God, she clearly didn’t handle blondes well.
“I really am seeing someone,” she
said with a groan, reaching to push her hair behind her ears.
His eyes went to her hand, to her
naked ring finger. His mouth twitched to the side, thoughtful. “Is it serious?”
“I…I don’t know,” she admitted. “It
probably should be.”
“But you’re not exactly crazy about
him.”
“No,” she said with a wince, and
before she could stop herself: “he bought me this book, and I love books, I’m a
book-aholic, but this book…God, I
just…” she finally got control of herself before she said too much.
“Well,” Mike scratched at his hair. “So
it’s not too serious, then.”
“And what if it’s not?”
He leaned forward and the hand he’d
pushed through his hair reached out to land against the roof of her car. She
wanted to tell him he was leaving fingerprints on the clean paint, but his arm
was bigger around than both of hers put together and it was hemming her in,
bringing them too close together.
“That’s your call,” he said with a
smile she hadn’t seen yet. Not the cheesy Captain America smile or the guilty,
sheepish smile. It was quieter than those. “Do you want me to walk away – get in
my really sweet BMW -,”
“Oh, God.” She rolled her eyes.
“ – it’s got heated leather seats.
Way cooler than your ride. I can get in it, and drive away, and lose your
number. Do you want that?” The wind pushed against her face, bringing with it
the subtle, smoky smell of his cologne. “Or do you want him to have some
competition?”
Her mind went to the night before,
to Greg’s mindless inquiries over a steak she didn’t want. The purr of his Jag’s
engine. The confusion in his eyes when she’d curled her lip at his gift. Thinking
about Greg sent nothing but guilt through her system, and guilt didn’t affect
her pulse. Guilt didn’t frustrate the hell out of her and make her smile. Guilt
wasn’t towering over her and smelling nice and leading her to make decisions
she would probably regret.
“I’m waiting…”
“Competition,” she said, already
kicking herself. “If you’re up to it, that is.”
His grin was evil. “Oh, I’m up to
it.” He leaned in and she thought he might…
But then he said, “call me when you
get home so I know you got there safe,” and pulled away.
Delta stood against the side of her
car, watching him start across the parking lot, and wondered what the hell was
wrong with her.
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