“Just a lot on my mind.” Like the article. Like Gage. The more she thought about him, the more she wished she didn’t, because it was consuming. She’d waited for him to show up tonight…and he hadn’t. Of course, she hadn’t invited him to come to the bar. And he hadn’t said he would. Yet here she was waiting for him.
She felt like she had rocks on her chest—God, she was worse than a teen waiting for her crush to call.
Why had she gone out with him? She should have stuck to sex, but no, he’d insisted and she’d given in to the date and romance. And now she was pining.
“I hate this feeling,” she whispered. Hope was a dangerous thing, and so was wanting too much. Chloe had learned early on that people always leave, so it was best not to get attached. Yet right now, the one guy pursuing her was doing what she wanted—staying away. And it hurt anyway.
Truth was, she didn’t want him to stay away—but she didn’t want him too close.
“You thinking about the hottie in camo?” Natalie said.
“Kind of.”
Natalie smiled. “Sometimes admitting what you want isn’t so bad.”
“It’s more complicated than that.”
“Yeah, he wants to spend time with you out of the sack, only to get you back in the sack when you’re done. Isn’t that all…good?”
“You’d think so.” But it wasn’t. Not for Chloe. She wanted to maintain some level of indifference—it was safer, even if she had to fake it. Being the fantasy and a little unobtainable kept people interested longer. And she wanted Gage to stay interested. But if it became too real, all their stuff would come out—emotions. The kind that came with claws and wanted to attach to things.
“What would be so bad?” Natalie said. “You may like him.”
“I do like him,” Chloe countered. “That’s not the problem.”
“Oh, I see. You don’t want to like him too much.”
Chloe nodded. “Something like that.” It was the first time she’d admitted it out loud.
“Ladies.”
Chloe’s heart leaped out of her chest as she turned and saw the owner of the voice. Gage. He was here—he’d come after all. And the only thing that matched her happiness at him showing up was realizing how sad she would have felt if he hadn’t.
Gage walked up to the bar with a small box under his arm.
“You really are stalking me,” she said, trying for mock irritation.
“Hard to call it stalking when everyone knows you work here. Not exactly detective work, sweetheart.” He dropped the box on the counter.
Natalie hopped up and winked at Chloe as she scurried to the bathroom. Her friend wasn’t exactly subtle.
“What’s in the box?” she asked Gage.
He rested an arm over the top. “It’s for you.”
“If it’s a severed head I’m going to be pissed.”
He grinned. “Nah, nothing so dramatic. Why don’t you open it and see?”
She hesitated, lifted the lid, and—
“How…what…how?” Chloe glanced between him and the box. She reached in and grabbed the stack of inserts from the newspaper. At least twenty copies of the anniversary article.
“This has been out of print for at least a few days…” She couldn’t believe it—not only did she have more copies than she’d ever need, but the papers were brand new. A stack of starched, pressed, crisp inserts. How?
Gage shrugged. “Had a chat with the head of the paper.”
Her eyes widened. “What, you walked in and—”
“It took some persuading, but this is what you wanted, right?”
She looked at the stack. He hadn’t just found her a copy. He’d found her twenty.
“Yes,” she whispered. After everything, Gage had come in and saved the day.
And that reality hit a spot between her ribs that made her heart soften for him.
He ran a hand along the back of his neck. “I thought maybe some extras would be smart, so you could give them out or scrapbook them or something…”
Was Gage actually…nervous? Like he was worried about whether she would be happy with his gift. The need to hug him came flooding back double time. Not to mention—he thought she scrapbooked? Adorable.
“Thank you.” She ran her palm over the stack again. “This is really amazing.”
He shrugged but leveled his intense gaze on her. “It’s my job to find things, sweetheart. Making you happy is a bonus.” He patted the counter and turned to leave.
“Gage?”
He glanced back.
Chloe bit her lip. She could do this. Deep breaths. “Would you, um, want to have dinner with me tomorrow night?”
Gage’s eyes widened and his eyebrows arched. “Are you asking me on a date?”
“Yes…looks like I am.”
He smiled. “I’d love to.”
Chapter Seven
Chloe knocked on Gage’s door, her heart hammering in her chest. She ran her palms down her simple blue dress and waited. Usually, Gage had stayed in a hotel for the times he’d come to town previously, but that was a weekend at a time. This time he’d rented a studio apartment overlooking the water.
She was on a date. Again. And this time, it’d been her idea. But he’d been way too thoughtful—romantic even—for her to let him walk away with nothing. And now she had to figure out how to get through tonight with her panties intact.
Gage opened the door, and her breath caught. Even in a simple white button-up with rolled-up sleeves, dark jeans and barefoot, he was stunning.