Damien (Slater Brothers #5)(93)



Again, I nodded.

“Don’t look so worried.” The doctor smiled at me and my da. “This is a good day; the tumour was removed with no complications. Your mother and wife’s future is much brighter than it was this morning.”

Until I heard the words “no evidence of disease”, I didn’t think I’d stop worrying about my ma. Hell, I think I’d still worry about her even after I heard those all-important words. That was what you did when it came to people you loved. You worried about them just as hard as you loved them. That’s how you knew how important they were to you. If you couldn’t imagine your life without them, they were part of the pieces that made up your heart, and I was confident that my ma made up a whole half of mine.





Five days later …



“I thought you’d be in a better mood after seeing Hugh Jackman and Zac Efron singing and dancing their hearts out on the big screen.”

I looked up from my plate of food to Damien when he spoke, and I frowned.

“Dame, I’m sorry, I’m ruinin’ our first date.”

“No, you aren’t.”

“I am.” I sighed. “I keep thinkin’ about me ma.”

“Call her again if it will make you feel better.”

“I can’t,” I grumbled. “She said she’d reach through the phone and strangle me if I phoned ’er again.”

“Sounds to me like she’s perfectly okay if she’s threatening you with bodily harm.”

My lips twitched.

“It’s the overbearin’ protector in me,” I said with a small shrug. “It makes me a pain in the arse.”

“Really?” Damien grinned. “I had no idea.”

“Smartarse.”

He chuckled. “It’s been five days since her surgery, and when we saw her yesterday, you can’t say she didn’t look great because she did.”

“She did,” I agreed, “but she wouldn’t tell me if she was feelin’ shitty just to keep me from worryin’.”

“Alannah, your mom knows you worry either way, so she wouldn’t lie to you, babe.”

“I guess.”

I ate some more of my food then and glanced around the restaurant.

“I like it ’ere,” I said happily. “I’ve passed by it a million times but never came inside to eat.”

“I plan on bringing you here and many other places more often, so get used to it.”

I turned my attention back to Damien.

“I’d be just as happy eatin’ at home with you.”

“Speaking of your apartment, I have to get all my laundry together to bring back to Ryder and Branna’s to get it—”

“I already washed and dried it all.”

Damien blinked. “Excuse me?”

“I did all the washin’ this mornin’.” I shrugged. “It was really windy out today, so I hung your clothes out to dry on the line I have on the balcony in me bedroom. Windy weather is great dryin’ weather. Me ma always says that.”

Damien continued to stare at me, and I blushed under his gaze.

“Why’re you lookin’ at me like that?”

“You did my laundry?”

“Yeah, so?” I raised a brow. “I did mine, too. They were dirty so I washed them … it’s not a big deal.”

When Damien smiled, I couldn’t understand why.

“You’re bein’ really weird about me doin’ your washin’.”

He chuckled. “It just feels a little odd. Branna usually does it for me.”

“Branna is like your mammy,” I teased. “I’m your girlfriend, so I’ve inherited the task from ’er. You’re slowly becomin’ me man-child.”

Damien playfully rolled his eyes.

“I do it myself, too. I’m not lazy. Branna just does it before I have a chance.”

“She’s like me.” I shrugged. “We don’t let it build up. Line dryin’ is a huge thing ’ere, in case you haven’t noticed. When it’s a nice, windy day, all the washin’ is done.”

“Ryder used to dry our clothes in the tumble dryer until Branna went crazy at him about how much that would cost on the bills.”

“Trust me,” I said. “I have no idea people didn’t dry their clothes on a washin’ line out their back until a few years ago when Nico said you’d put soppin’ wet clothes into a dryer and just press start. That blew me mind. I put me clothes in the dryer for, like, ten minutes to soften them, and that’s it.”

Damien was watching with that weird look again.

“What?”

“We’re on our first date, and we’re talking about laundry, and the best method of drying said laundry.”

“The best method is line dryin’,” I pressed. “Don’t argue with me on this, buddy.”

Damien laughed good heartedly, and it drew attention from the group of women who were sitting a few tables over. I watched as they stared at my boyfriend and, not so discreetly, giggled and spoke to one another. Some of them looked at me. I watched as they looked me up and down and laughed, and I knew they had decided I wasn’t good enough to be at dinner with Damien. I narrowed my eyes, knowing exactly what was going through their minds when they turned their gazes back to him, because it went through mine whenever I looked at Damien.

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