Match Me If You Can (Chicago Stars #6)(35)
The Little Mermaid clock on her desk ticked away. Heath would be picking up Rachel about now. They were going to Tru, where caviar appeared at the table in a miniature glass staircase and dinner for two could easily run four hundred dollars. Not that she’d ever been there herself, but she’d read about it.
She considered visiting a couple of local coffee shops to pass out her business card, but she didn’t have enough energy to change clothes. Friday night. No hot date. No prospects for a hot date. The matchmaker needed a matchmaker. She wanted to get married, wanted a family, a job she loved …Was that too much to ask out of life? But how would she ever find a man of her own if she had to keep giving the best ones away? Not that Heath was the best. He was husband material only in his own mind. No, that wasn’t entirely fair. Whatever he did, he did well, and he’d give marriage his best effort. Whether or not that would prove good enough remained to be seen. Fortunately, not her problem.
She pulled out a DVD of Waiting for Guffman, then remembered it belonged to Rob and chose Freaky Friday instead. She’d just gotten to the part where Jamie Lee Curtis and her daughter switch bodies when the phone rang.
“Annabelle, it’s Rachel.”
She hit the Stop button. “How’s it going?”
“I’m out of my league.”
“What do you mean? Where are you calling from?”
“The ladies’ room at Tru. The date’s not working. I can’t understand it. Heath and I had so much fun together the night you introduced us—you remember—but now everything feels flat.”
“I knew he’d do this. He’s been on his cell all night, hasn’t he?”
“He hasn’t taken a single call. In fact, he’s been a perfect gentleman. But we’re both working too hard to keep the conversation going.”
“He’s been traveling all week. He might be tired.”
“I don’t think it’s that. It’s just—Nothing’s happening. I’m really disappointed. I felt sparks that first time. Didn’t you?”
“Definitely. Ask him about his work. Or about baseball. He’s a Sox fan. Just keep trying.”
Rachel said she would, but she didn’t seem optimistic, and when Annabelle hung up, she felt deflated …and relieved.
One more reason to be depressed.
Chapter Eight
Moths swarmed in the caged lights over the doors. The bar, located in a former warehouse just off North Avenue, was named Suey, and the sign featured a giant red pig wearing a trucker’s cap. “Charming,” Portia drawled.
Bodie gave her a dumb, cocky grin, which went right along with his menacing shaved head, intimidating tattoos, and hit man’s muscles. “I knew you’d like it.”
“I was being sarcastic.”
“Why?”
“Because this is a sports bar.”
“You don’t like sports bars? That’s weird.” He held the door open for her.
She rolled her eyes and followed him in. The place was huge and noisy, smelling of stale beer, french fries, and aftershave, all topped off with eau de gym. The bar opened into a bigger room with tables, games, and cinder-block walls displaying the logos of the Chicago teams. She glimpsed an even larger area in the back holding metal lockers and a sand volleyball court surrounded by orange plastic fencing. Blow-up sex dolls, beer signs, and Star Wars light sabers hung from the open rafters. Boys would be boys. Thankfully, not the sort of place her friends would be prone to hang out.
She’d dressed down for the evening, digging out an old pair of magenta cotton slacks, a clingy navy top with a built-in bra, and flat sandals. She’d even traded in her diamond studs for simple silver hoops. She followed Bodie past a rowdy group of twenty-somethings who were ignoring the overhead televisions to do tequila shots at the bar. As the crowd parted, she grew conscious of the women’s eyes on Bodie. A few greeted him by name. Muscle-bound men always tended to look sloppy, but his espresso brown polo shirt and chinos couldn’t have fit him better, and every woman in the place noticed.
She slipped into his wake, which was large enough to keep people from bumping against her, and let him lead her to a table that afforded a view of a mechanical bull and the volleyball game in the next room. Ordering either wine or a mixed drink struck her as high risk, so she settled on a lite beer, but asked that it be served in the bottle. Easier to guard against roofies.
He kicked back with his own beer and openly studied her. “How old are you?”
“Old enough to know this is the worst date of my life.”
“Women like you are hard to figure. Your skin is great, but you’ve got old eyes.”
“Anything else?” she asked coldly.
“I figure forty-three, forty-four.”
“I’m thirty-seven,” she snapped.
“No, I’m thirty-seven. You’re forty-two. I did some research.”
“Then why did you ask?”
“I wanted to see if you give yourself away when you lie.” Amusement danced in his pale eyes. “Now I know.”
She resisted taking the bait. “Is this date over yet?”
“Just getting started. I think we should wait till after we play to eat, don’t you?”
“Play?”
Susan Elizabeth Phil's Books
- Susan Elizabeth Phillips
- What I Did for Love (Wynette, Texas #5)
- The Great Escape (Wynette, Texas #7)
- Lady Be Good (Wynette, Texas #2)
- Kiss an Angel
- It Had to Be You (Chicago Stars #1)
- Heroes Are My Weakness
- Heaven, Texas (Chicago Stars #2)
- Glitter Baby (Wynette, Texas #3)
- Fancy Pants (Wynette, Texas #1)