“Yes.” She swirled her wine around in her glass. “But my family lives close. Not as close as yours,” she said, grinning, “but close.”
“They do live close—too close sometimes.” I grimaced and lifted my beer again. “But I love having my nephew there. He’s so fucking cute. I took him to the park today.”
She placed a hand over her heart. “Awww. Did you?”
“Yeah, he loves the park. He never wants to leave.”
“So cute. And you’re so good with him—I heard you have the magic touch.”
Our eyes met. “The magic touch, huh?”
The blush in her cheeks deepened.
I looked at her lips, and my thoughts strayed into dangerous territory. It would be so easy to kiss her right now. So easy. My entire body tightened up, and I gripped the beer bottle tight.
I couldn’t. We were in public, this was a small town, and rumors would fly. They’d probably fly already, just because we were sitting together. I tossed back the rest of my beer, the moment passed, and she cleared her throat before taking a sip of wine.
Just talk to her, asshole. “You’ll be glad to know I apologized to Pete and Georgia. Told them I’d be willing to consider their ideas. Your ideas.”
She gasped as she set her glass down. “Did you really? That’s great—I bet they were so happy.”
“They were.”
Her head tilted. “Can I ask about the change of heart?”
I took some time with my reply. “I did a lot of thinking last night. Some of the things you said sort of sank in.”
“Really?” She sat up taller, her face lighting up. “What did I say?”
“You said something about changes making people happy, and I realized I didn’t want to be responsible for standing in the way of their dreams.” I studied the label on my empty beer bottle. “And I thought about what Steph would do if she were in my place.”
“Oh.”
I kept my focus on the bottle in my hand, tilting it this way and that. “I know she’d support them. She was completely unselfish.”
Margot took another drink of wine and said, “Tell me more about her.”
I blinked at her. Seriously? She wanted to hear about my late wife? Not only did it seem strange in light of what we’d done last night, but no one ever asked me about Steph. “What do you want to know?”
Margot shrugged and smiled. “Anything. I know she was short and cute and loved her boots, but what was she like?”
Exhaling, I tried to come up with words that would do her justice. “Feisty. Energetic. So damn smart. She was accepted at three different medical schools. Granted scholarships at all of them.”
“Wow! I didn’t realize she was a doctor.”
“She wasn’t. She didn’t go to med school, said she’d changed her mind.” Which her parents had always blamed on me, even if they never said it outright.
She drank again. “Tell me more.”
“She was stubborn as hell. Once she made up her mind about something, she never wavered. None of us could talk her into going to school.”
“She must have wanted something else more,” Margot said pointedly.
“I guess.” I shrugged, feeling guilty again. “Me. The farm.”
“I take it you feel bad about that?”
I rubbed the back of my neck. “Sometimes. But she had me convinced it really was what she wanted. And if she wanted something, she never gave up, and she didn’t care what people thought. She was a firecracker.”
“Ha. I like her.”
“Everyone liked her.”
She smiled again, a little sadly. “Were you high school sweethearts?”
“No. She was two years younger than me, and I thought she was a pest. I’d known her since we were kids, though. And I knew she had a crush on me, but I never looked at her that way until I was out of school.”
“Did you go to college?”
I nodded as the bartender offered me another beer. “For a year, but it wasn’t for me. I hated being in a classroom. I was restless and bored. Then 9/11 happened, and I joined the Army.”
“Really,” she said, as if she’d never heard of such a thing. “And how long were you in the military?”
“Eight years.”
“Wow. And she waited for you?” Her eyes went wide.
I nodded, smiling ruefully at the memory of her insisting she’d wait for me, even though I told her not to. “She did. Swore she would, and she did. I mean, she went to college while I was gone, but we kept in touch, saw each other when we could.”
“And you got married when you came home?”
I nodded, taking a sip of the new beer. “We got married after my dad died. About five years ago.”
She propped her elbow on the bar and her chin in her hand. “Tell me how you proposed.”
I grinned at the memory. “Actually, she proposed to me.”
Her head came off her hand, her lips opening in surprise. “Now way. Really?”
“Really. She knew we were right for each other and I wasn’t one for ceremony. I’d probably have just asked her in the chicken coop or something.”