The Matchmaker's Playbook (Wingmen Inc., #1)(32)
Damn it! I was ruining everything. I was her first kiss? Me? The certified whore? The guy she was paying? Not the one she was in love with.
And that was the kicker.
She was saving herself for someone important, while I’d never saved myself for anyone, ever.
The thought haunted me the entire walk to my car.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Shell sat close to me while we pretended to study at the coffee shop. We exchanged a few hand grazes here, longing looks there, and a strategic pen drop, where it looked like I was staring down the front of her top.
And boom—like magic, Jealous Barista appeared. Tom. Shit, I hated Tom. Not because he was an ass, but because he refused to move past the bossy “I know what’s best for you” face. And that was seriously starting to piss me off. It was the last phase, the one where the guy stopped being protective and moved on to actually doing shit about it.
Shell didn’t deserve to be in limbo. She’d done a hell of a job, and if he couldn’t see her for the woman she was, then she and I were going to have to have a heart-to-heart, and I’d only done that with a client once in my career. I didn’t want it to start becoming a thing.
Plus, the sooner I finished with Shell, the sooner I could . . .
I frowned. What? Finish with Blake? Is that what I wanted? My teeth chewed the straw in my smoothie until it was useless.
“Can I get you guys anything else?” Tom referenced both of us. He used plural references and all, but he was completely ignoring my existence, his lazy-ass brown eyes fully focused in on Shell.
“Actually”—Shell yawned, stretching her arms above her neck and, like instructed, starting to massage the back of her neck—“I don’t suppose you moonlight as a massage therapist?”
Well done. The line was delivered perfectly, like it had been rehearsed, which it was, considering the first four times she repeated it back to me she’d stuttered and nearly shouted “massage therapist,” then snorted with a nervous laugh. I hid my smile behind my pen as I scribbled down more nonsense about business ethics. The irony wasn’t lost on me, believe me.
Tom smiled brightly. “No, but I’m still good with my hands.”
I glanced up at his weak-looking hands. Doubtful, very doubtful, man. I was pretty sure, given the chance to rock her world with said hands, she’d most likely cross things off her grocery list while he still fumbled to get a rise out of her.
Tom moved his hands to her neck and started massaging while Shell glanced up at me behind her long bangs and mouthed Yay!
I pretended to be too immersed in my studying to care.
Tom inched his way closer to her body, his chest pressed against her back. Then he leaned forward and whispered, “I’m clearing your schedule.”
“You’re clearing it?” Shell said, sounding surprised. “I don’t understand.”
“Look at him.” I knew I was the “him” he was referencing. “I’m all over you, and he doesn’t even care.”
He was right. I cared more about the cramp in my hand from writing and the ache in my back from hunching over my book.
“Shh.” Shell shushed him. “He’s really great when you get to know him, and—”
Showtime.
“Shell,” I barked. “Let’s go.”
I stood and started gathering my stuff.
“What if she doesn’t wanna go with you?” Tom crossed his arms, just as expected, and his protective stance said it all: Touch her and I’m going to rip your head off. Or in his case, he’d conduct a poetry slam and use his words, because violence was so uncool. World peace. Save the whales. Soy milk. The end.
“Shell”—I furrowed my brows—“what’s going on here?”
She stood on wobbly legs. “Ian, it’s fine, we should go and—”
“Shell!” Tom grabbed her by the elbow and pulled her protectively into his embrace. “He’s your study partner, not your boyfriend.”
“Actually . . .” I smirked.
Tom’s face turned a funny shade of purple. “Not anymore.”
“Not anymore what?” Damn, my back ached. Why did it always take the guys this long to stake their claim? To finally plow the land, plant the flag, and sing the victory song.
His eyes darted between Shell’s and mine.
And then the anger disappeared. There we go. In, three, two, one.
“Shell.” Tom grabbed her by the shoulders and turned her toward him. “I like you. I’ve always liked you.”
Thank God, a confession!
“Remember when you used to always order coffee but never tried it with a splash of milk and honey?”
And there’s my exit. Someone save me from the “I’ve finally discovered it’s been you all along” speech.
She nodded, tears pooling in her eyes.
“And when you stayed really late, fell asleep on your book, and I woke you up and you said—”
“Just one more cup!”
They laughed in unison.
Holy shit, pretending to be pissed was hard when I was on the verge of getting a headache as they traveled down courtship memory lane.
“He doesn’t even know you like I do.” He pulled her closer to his chest, his hands twisting around hers like his fingers were trying to mate with her palms. “Leave him.”
Rachel Van Dyken's Books
- Kickin' It (Red Card #2)
- All Stars Fall (Seaside Pictures #3.5)
- Risky Play (Red Card #1)
- Summer Heat (Cruel Summer #1)
- Co-Ed
- Cheater (Curious Liaisons, #1)
- Cheater (Curious Liaisons #1)
- Waltzing with the Wallflower
- Upon a Midnight Dream (London Fairy Tales #1)
- The Ugly Duckling Debutante (House of Renwick #1)