Coeur d’Alene was giving me quite the education in my own stupidity.
Next, Eric added ice, put the silver cap on the cocktail shaker, and shook it all up. He strained the mixture into a glass and garnished it with a slice of lemon and a cherry before placing it in front of me.
“What’s this?” I asked.
“Whisky sour.”
I took a sip. “Nice. Thank you.”
“Lydia’s got a sweet tooth and Nell’s a straight beer girl. But you, you’re different.”
The way he said it, along with the not so friendly look in his eyes, let me know it wasn’t a compliment.
“Is there a problem?” I asked, my chin rising.
“Don’t drag it out, Alex. Just go.”
I blinked, caught off guard.
“You seem all right,” he said. “This isn’t personal. But you need to go.”
“I do?”
“Whatever you think of Joe lying, pretending to be me, he’s a good person. Obviously he likes you and I don’t want him getting hurt.” With a small, false smile, he rubbed his hands together. “Okay?”
Christ. “You still think I’m playing games with him. Making him pay penance.”
One shoulder lifted. The same half shrug his brother did.
“I’m not,” I said. “I like your brother. We’re friends. Anything beyond that is none of your business.”
“Bullshit.” Eric leaned across the bar, getting all up in my space. And good God, the way he started looking down his nose at me. Intimidation-wise, his good looks still kind of worked. My shoulders rounded, making me small, making me feel like crap for no goddamn good reason. This was why I hated going out among people. People.
“No,” I said, my voice thinning out despite my best efforts. “It’s not.”
“Yeah. It is,” he stated, seeming a little bored.
“How do you figure?”
“Because you’re into me.”
A pause.
“What?”
“It was my picture on the dating site. I’m the reason you came out here.” His hands moved to his slim hips. “A few years back, I might have fucked around with you anyway. Not cared that it would hurt Joe. But we’ve all got to grow up sometime, right?”
Both my eyes and mouth were wide open. Maybe even perfect circles, such was my surprise. “Just to check: This is you grown up now?”
“My brother’s a better man than I’ll ever be. And I’m not just going to stand around, let you mess with him,” the idiot declared. “You know he’s worked with our dad, doing the carpentry. Keeping the old man happy all these years with his dreams of Collins and Sons when I turned Dad down. When I needed money to buy into the bar, Joe lent it to me. He hasn’t talked interest or pressured me to pay it back even once in three years. And from the moment I told him about accidentally knocking up Nell, he was there for me. He’s been nothing but supportive. There’ve been plenty of times when women wanted me and I played that up. Made sure he knew he came second. But those days are over. That bullshit behavior is over. Do you understand?”
“Yes.”
“Good. So, you’re cute in a weird, geeky kind of way, but … I’m not interested,” he declared, winding up his speech. “My brother’s a good man and he deserves the best. Go home, Alex.”
I had nothing.
Luckily, Eric didn’t require a response. He wiped his hands on a cloth and wandered off into the restaurant, leaving me to sip the whisky sour and stew over his words. I couldn’t dismiss them completely, as nice as it would have been.
“Everything okay?” The golden boy leaned across the bar. His hair was pulled back in a ponytail, making it much easier to see his face. I liked that. A lot. Sweet baby Jesus, I was liking a whole lot of things about him lately. And sitting here slowly getting tipsy while watching him move about the bar with such efficiency and ease wasn’t helping to dull my libido any.
“Ah, yes.” I resettled in my seat. “I’m drinking a whisky sour.”
“How’s that working for you?”
I took another sip. “Not bad.”
“I’ve been watching you,” he confided.
“You have?”
“Yep. You’ve talked to at least five real live breathing people that I’ve seen. Face-to-face, even. Not on the Internet. Good work.”
“Oh. One guy was just apologizing because he nearly spilled his drink on me.”
“Nope,” said Joe. “Dude was trying to hit on you. Your elbow sort of got in the way and then I guess he lost courage. Ice hitting your crotch will do that to a man.”
“Really?” My brows rose. “My human interaction radar must be on the fritz.”
“Sitting there in your tight black jeans and sweater, looking hot.” He grinned. “Thinking no one would notice.”
“You think I look hot?”
Joe studied me in silence. “Friends aren’t allowed to think friends look good?”
“Hmm. I guess that doesn’t break pal privilege.” I smiled. “You’ve got a customer.”
With a rap of his knuckles against the bar he wandered off to serve the latest comer. When he bent over to get a drink out of the fridges under the bar, the denim of his jeans outlined his ass in a very nice way. The backs of his thighs too. And when he reached up for a bottle of liquor off the top shelf the sleeve of his Dive Bar tee stretched around his … whatever all those muscles were called at the top of the arms just below the shoulder. Shit, what was the word? I knew it, I did. Great. Now his attractiveness was making me stupid. Stupider. Whatever.
Also, I had a feeling these drinks were encouraging me to take pal privilege too far. Ah, alcohol. The ultimate in social lubrication leading to suspect decisions. Especially when it came to members of the opposite sex.
He looked my way as he turned back around, giving me a quick smile. Next, a beautiful brunette with long flowing locks approached him. She set her hands atop the bar, gave him an award-winning smile, and leaned forward. As various women were wont to do. Words were exchanged and Joe poured her a craft beer from a tap. Then he took her money and put it into the till, gave her a nod. Transaction done. The beautiful brunette returned to her table of friends. Much flipping of hair ensued.
Meanwhile, Joe pulled down another bottle, mixing up a new drink. The ink on his arms danced when he shook up the concoction in the cocktail shaker. Cool. Then he poured it into a glass, garnishing it with a slice of lemon and a cherry.
“Ninth,” I said when he returned to my end of the bar, placing a fresh whisky sour in front of me to replace the now empty glass.
“Ninth, what?”
“That’s the ninth set of breasts you’ve been presented with since I’ve been here. And thank you for the drink.”
He laughed.
“I’m serious.” I stood, setting my hands on the bar and leaning forward. “You know they intentionally do this. How could you possibly miss it? Of course with me, you have to imagine I’m wearing a low-cut blouse, and that I have something to fill it.”