play.”
His face pales slightly, but it’s restored seconds later. “Yeah, I could
have gone to Mike, but I like your work, Leah. You’re the best in town
for restoration, and everyone knows it. Besides, you’re the only one
who knows how to do the best engine upgrades. If anyone is going to
get me the car of my wedding dreams, it’s you.”
“Yeah, keep sweet-talking me. It’s not going to make me do another
favor for you.”
We share a laugh for the first time in a while, and it’s less tense than
it normally is. I know he’s here for something, not just to stop in and
see if I screwed him over on this deal. He knows deep down I
wouldn’t do that. I’m better than that.
In fact, I’m better than I have been lately, and I know I should
mention it.
“Hey, about last week,” I say under my breath. “I’m sorry for yelling
and… and for throwing the cup. I wasn’t throwing it at you, but I was
mad.”
His features settle somewhere between shocked and confused; it’s
hard to read him. “What are you talking about, ladybug? The whole
thing last week is in the past. No hard feelings.”
“Yeah, but I should have kept my cool. I shouldn’t have an outburst
like that, and not when you’re offering me money. I’ve been in a bind
lately, and with everything going on on top of that—it’s been hard.”
His head falls slightly, and he sips his water, almost as though it’s a
shield to him. “Yeah, I know it has been. I’m sorry to spring this all
on you, too. It’s not that I wanted you to work on the car to make it
awkward, but I truly thought we could be friends through all of this.”
For a minute, I want to take back my words and strike him between
the eyes with my water bottle, but I refrain for now. “Ryan, how
could we be friends? It was a decade of being together. We were