Next, his eyes dipped down and caught sight of my necklace. “You’re wearing my present,” he said.
I nodded.
“I thought you might have thrown it away.”
“I did,” I said. “My mom fished it out of the trash.”
“Good woman,” he said. “Do you like it?”
Slowly, I nodded.
If it was good to hear the voice after all this time, seeing the face was just short of ecstasy. It made me woozy to be so close. I didn’t have even one photo of him, and so I truly hadn’t seen that face in almost a year. I drank in the sight—those dark blue eyes that always looked a little sad, the Adam’s apple just above his tux tie, the jaw squarer than I’d remembered.
“What are you doing here?” I asked then.
“What areyoudoing here?”
“I’m here,” I said, gesturing at the rest of the guests on the boat, “for a wedding.”
“Your prick ex-fiancé’s wedding.”
“It hasn’t been that bad,” I said. Then I gave him a little grin. “It hasn’t been that good, either.”
He leaned forward and took my hands. “What could you possibly have been thinking?”
I shrugged. “My parents broke up, and Kit and I were trying toParent Trapthem back together.”
Ian frowned. “At your ex-fiancé’s wedding?”
“It was kind of a make-it-work moment.” I met his eyes. “Plus, I’d never been to Europe.”
“You should have come to Scotland.”
I couldn’t read his face. Did he know? “I was thinking about it,” I said.
He seemed surprised. “Were you?”
“I thought I might pop over there when I was done here.”
He studied my face. “Is that true?”
“Yes. Did you know that already? Did Kit tell you?”
“No. She didn’t.”
“’Cause I know you’ve kept in touch.”
He looked down. “I had to keep an eye on you.”
“I’m pretty sure the last time I saw you, you told me you never cared about me at all, so I’m not sure youhad to.”
“I was lying.”
“What?”
“I was lying to you when I said that.”
I squinted at him to get a better look. “Youdidn’tnot care about me?”