“They might,” Elle replies.
“Great. I like lobster.”
I spot a parking space right in front of the restaurant and take it. Climb out of the car quickly and frown when I see Elle already has her door open.
“You were supposed to wait for me to open it,” I grumble.
This is our first date. I’m trying to do everything right.
Elle smirks.
“I’ll be right back,” I tell her, jogging toward the closest meter.
This night doesnotneed a parking ticket.
I’m waiting for the paper for the dashboard to print when I hear, “James.”
I glance away from the meter, stilling when I realize who’s walking toward me. I haven’t seen Zane in years, not since the fateful night I accepted Phoenix’s offer of a ride to Hathaway’s party.
“Hi, Zane,” I say carefully.
“I heard you were out. Nice to see you, man.”
I nod, knocking the fist he offers.
He glances past me, his smile widening when he spots Elle waiting by her car. Whistles. “Damn. Elle Clarke. I guess things kinda worked out for you, huh?”
My guard goes up. “What do you want, Zane?”
He lifts his hand in a placating gesture. “Nothing. I’m out of all that shit. Have been for years. I just saw you and wanted to say hello. Always felt bad you got the short stick with none of the perks.”
“You keep in touch with Phoenix?” I ask. More for Reese than myself.
Zane shakes his head. “Haven’t talked to him in years. He was in California, last I heard.”
“With Cruz?”
He shrugs. “No clue.”
“He set me up?” I ask.
That’s always been a nagging uncertainty in the back of my head. It seemed too … convenient, how the one time Cruz’s suppliers were tailed were when they delivered to my trailer, not his.
“If he did, he didn’t tell me,” Zane replies. “Wasn’t much of a democracy, but he didn’t usually keep us in the dark.”
My nod is slow. Maybe it was just shitty luck. “You still live around here?”
“Nah. Just visiting. Not a bad place, in certain circles.” He glances at Elle again. “Guess you know that.” His gaze lands back on me. “I’ll see you around, maybe.”
I nod.
Zane continues walking, right past Elle.
I finish paying the meter, then head back toward her. “Ready?”
“Who was that?” she asks.
“Just a guy I used to know.”