Page 121 of The Vacation Mix-Up

Page List

Font Size:

Riles snatches up the menu and reads over it again, confused.

“Whiskey,” I insert.

He scans our lanyards and leaves.

“I was worried for a moment,” she says, setting down the menu. “I thought he meantmycocktail was the one with either bourbon or whiskey. Yuck. Thank God it was yours.” She winces.

I nod.

She smiles nervously.

I smirk.

“Sooo…” Her pretty eyes divert from mine to scan the room. “This bar is lovely.”

I rub my beard, enjoying that I’ve made her nervous… in a good way. “You said that already.”

“Did I?” She uncrosses her legs and then recrosses them.

I nod again.

“Well, it is.” She points up. “Look at that sunset.”

Arcing my head back, orange hues illuminate the sky beyond the glass-domed ceiling above, ornate pendant lights hanging from mirrored beams separating the many windows curving around us.

I have to agree with her; the bar is impressive—nineteenth-century décor with a modern twist. But I’m more concerned with the response she never gave me.

My eyes meet hers again. “You’re avoiding my question.”

“What question?”

“About how you think I’mnotold-fashioned.”

Her mouth quirks. “Oh yes, that.”

“Well?”

She twirls her hair again. “Well… you just seem not old-fashioned too.”

I chuckle. “Come on, Riles. You’re a publisher. You can do better with words than that.”

Huffing, she relents. “Fine. If you must know, you seem old-fashioned because you respect the simple things in life. And you’re kind, caring, mostly well-mannered?—”

“Mostly?” I interrupt, pretending to be offended.

“Yes, mostly. You’re… chivalrous, I guess, but you’re also unabashed, impudent, and… liberal.”

Regretting telling her to use her “publisher” vocabulary, I have no idea what she means, so I just go with it. “And that’s a bad thing?”

“No, I never said that. There’s nothingbadabout you.”

I grin like the Cheshire cat. “Nothing? Is that because youcareabout me more than you should?”

She squirms in her seat.

“What did you mean by that, exactly?” I ask, throwing her question back at her.

She straightens her shoulders. “What didyoumean by it? You said it too.”