his mate was worth it. He’d show her however many times she needed that she’d never be alone again. “You ready?”
“Ready.” She slid her arm through his and grabbed her purse. “Ryan?”
“Yeah?”
For just a moment, she looked terribly sad. “I’m sorry.”
“For what?”
She locked her door before answering. “Do you know why none of my relationships have ever worked in the past?”
“Because you always leave before they do.” She glanced at him, obviously startled, as he led her to his car. “It’s not rocket science, SG.”
She blew her curls out of her eyes as she settled in the passenger seat. “You’re such a smart ass.”
He laughed as he settled into the driver’s seat. “Better a smart ass than a dumb ass.”
She glanced at him sideways. “But first you have to be smart, or you’re just an ass.”
“Oh, ouch.” He put his hand to his chest. “You wound me.”
Laughing reluctantly, Glory put on her seat belt. “Do I smell Chinese food?”
“Yup.”
“But I thought…” She trailed off, biting her lip.
“What?” Oh, God. Don’t tell me I screwed up on the first date.
“Nothing.” But she turned to look out the passenger side window rather than at him.
“I wanted us to be alone, so I arranged a surprise. Was I wrong?”
She looked back at him, her gaze speculative. “No, maybe not.”
Thank fuck. Because he’d have to ditch the food in the nearest trash can if she’d said yes, and he really liked Kung Pao chicken. “Then let’s get this party started.”
The mysterious smile that crossed her face scared the shit out of him, but it was too late now. He just hoped things went the way he’d planned, because he didn’t think he could survive it if his idea set him back to square one with her.
There was only one real place in town worthy of a first date: Noah’s, the best restaurant in town. So that was what she dressed for, expecting spaghetti carbonara and good wine, despite the fact that he’d said the date would be casual.
So of course, that wasn’t where Ryan had planned to take her, because Ryan rarely did what she expected. She should have known.
Hell. She should have worn sneakers.
“The park?” Glory shivered, glad she’d chosen to dress in her good black jeans and not the teeny skirt she’d originally intended. It was cold out, the sky that bright, pale blue that you only saw at the tail end of winter.
Ryan glanced down at her, amused. “You want to run into my family?”
Glory winced. The Bunsun-Williams clan was loud, boisterous and very much a part of Ryan’s life. She’d watched Tabby and Cyn struggle with the overwhelming family. None of the girls were used to having that kind of loving dynamic in their lives, and the adjustment was an ongoing process that sometimes left them exhausted. The Bunsun-Williamses had “accidentally” intruded on more than one of Julian and Cyn’s dates in the past. So perhaps having a picnic wasn’t such a bad idea after all. “Good point.”
“Just so you know, I can’t cook.” Ryan grinned. “I can’t boil water without setting something on fire, so unless you can cook we’ll be eating a hell of a lot of takeout.”
Glory took the hand he offered when her heeled boots sunk into the grass. Spring was definitely coming if the ground had started to thaw enough for that. “You think so, huh?” He was assuming an awful lot if he thought she was going to cook for him.
He chuckled. “Ask Bunny about the time I tried to barbecue. He still screams like a little girl when I mention pork chops.”
She helped him set up the blanket on the ground. “I thought barbecue was bred into the bone with guys, like football and setting farts on fire.”
He stared at her for a moment. “Farts on fire?”
She shrugged. She’d seen more than one butt burn when her brother was younger.
“Yeah. Not this guy.” He settled her on the blanket, taking a seat next to her. “I wasn’t kidding when I
Marina Dyachenko, Sergey Dyachenko