Accidentally Engaged(20)



Shayne shook his head. “Nope. At lunch Anderson told me he saw the name Reena on the list of finalists. He remembered your first name from when I asked him about it. I got him to double-check the last name when he was back at work, and yup. Reena Manji. Of course, I swore to him I wouldn’t tell you, but here we are.”

Reena cringed. “There’s no way…We didn’t enter the video…”

Shayne looked at her with a wide grin. “So, you did make a video then? We need details. Who was your husband?”

The sound of bagpipes filled the room. Reena had a text. She put down her chicken and wiped her hands before checking it.

Nadim: I’ve been sneezing all week. Thank you.

Crap. He did remember she existed. She ignored the message and put her phone facedown near her plate.

“Honestly, Shayne,” Reena said, “it was silly. I was drunk when we made the video. But I can’t be a finalist. I didn’t actually enter it…” Then again, she didn’t remember much from the end of the evening.

Another text. She flipped the phone over to look.

Nadim: And I have a newfound love of gin gimlets. You are rubbing off on me.

Reena couldn’t let this go. “One minute, guys, I need to answer this.”

Reena: World consumption of gin has risen steadily for the last couple of years. It is predicted it will surpass bourbon as the hipster’s drink of choice. So, not my fault.

Nadim: And the cold? You going to take responsibility for that?

Reena: It’s cold and flu season in Canada, and your African/British immunity is not prepared for hard-ass germs. Also not my fault.

“Excuse me…” Shayne said, voice clipped. “I assume, based on you looking all doe-eyed at those texts, that you’re talking to this British boy toy of yours. Is that who you made the video with?”

“I do not have a boy toy.”

“I saw you leaving his room at six a.m. with your shoes in your hands. Don’t tell me you were there to borrow a cup of sugar.”

Bagpipes sounded again.

Nadim: You calling me a hipster?

Reena: With that tall hipster hair and precision beard, yeah, I am. You, sir, are a hipster.

She heard a snort behind her. She looked up to see Shayne standing there reading her texts over her shoulder. “She is texting that British dude. About his hair.”

She put her phone facedown again and glared until Shayne went back to his seat. “Okay, fine. Yes, I made the video with Nadim. But it was a middle-of-the-night, drunken mistake, and it won’t be repeated.”

Shayne had his hand out and was about to say something when Reena shot him down. “And if anyone points out that sounds like most of my relationships, then no more rye bread for either of you.”

Marley tilted her head sympathetically. “So, you did enter then?”

Reena sighed. “We may have. I don’t remember much from the end of the night.”

“Did you hook up with him?”

“No! Nothing happened! I’d remember that. I bumped into him at the Sparrow and we started drinking. And then drank more at home. And recorded a video of us making potato bhajias together. Perfectly innocent, calorie count notwithstanding. I had no intention of entering the thing.”

“Well, seems either he did without telling you, or you two did some drinking and contesting. You’re finalists, so the drunk video must have worked,” Shayne said. “I would advise you to do the next one sober, though.”

No. There wouldn’t be a next one. She absolutely couldn’t spend her time making cutesy cooking videos for a web contest now. She needed to be job hunting. Her severance wouldn’t last forever. It ran out months before she found a job last time. She couldn’t let that happen to herself again.

“Reena, are you okay?” Marley said, voice laced with concern.

Reena wiped a rogue tear that escaped her left eye. “Yes…No.” She sighed. “Just my cold. And…life is just really heavy. I can’t do this right now. Honestly.”

Shayne smiled warmly. “You can. You deserve this. I’ll do the camera work, and Marley will help you look your best. I know you want that scholarship. You’re doing it.”

The bagpipe melody filled the room again.

“Jesus, Reena, can you change that? Unless there’s a man in a kilt somewhere, the Highland pipes are a bit much,” Shayne said.

Reena checked the phone.

Nadim: I googled hipster for the North American definition. I don’t think you meant it as a compliment.

“Tell him you made the contest,” Shayne said. “We need to all get together and plan the next video.”

“I’m not telling him,” Reena said, turning the ringer off the phone. “Why would he do this with me?”

“Didn’t he already do it with you?” Marley asked.

“No. Well, sort of. He didn’t know we were supposed to be a…you know…a couple. Engaged. I just told him it was supposed to be two people.”

“Of course he’ll do it!” Shayne said. “You spent the entire night with him, and don’t tell me that the only cooking you two were doing was in the kitchen. You’re totally into each other. Drinking together, making midnight snacks. Not to mention he won’t stop texting you! You’re already as good as engaged, according to your parents. He has both the face and the voice for TV. Wouldn’t mind him in a kilt at all.”

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