wasnât particularly surprised. âOuch,â he said lightly. âDonât feel you have to pull any punches.â
âI donât. I wonât.â
âI noticed.â He still wasnât giving up. âYou do believe Iâm an okay guyâat least, essentially, right?â
âYes, butââ
âForget the buts. Just go with that. After all, itâs only a second date. Being essentially a good guy should be enough to get me a second date with youâI mean, given the all-important presence of the spark.â
âYou are incredibly persistent, you know that?â
âI can be, when I want something bad enough.â
She moistened her lips. âUm, how bad is bad enough?â
He thought again about another kiss. But he didnât try for one. He only gazed down at her, steadily, trying his best to look both determined and hopeful.
She sighed. âYouâre right, I suppose.â
âOf course I am,â he declared with firmness. And then he arched a brow at her. âEr, right about what?â
That soft mouth was trying really hard not to smile.âWell, that itâs only a second date. And there is the sparkââ
âExactly. Come with us on Sunday.â
She did smile then. For Connor, that smile was like the sun coming out on a rainy day. âYes,â she said. âAll right.â
Now he had what he wanted, he almost couldnât believe it. He stared down at her, speechless. âWhat are you thinking?â she demanded, when several seconds had passed without a single word from him.
âYou said yes.â
âYouâre surprised?â Her eyes sparkled.
âI guess I am.â
âWell, Connor, you were very convincingâbut there is a condition.â
âName it.â
âIâm inviting Jerilyn, too.â
Chapter Four
C onnor drove home in a pleasant haze of satisfaction. In spite of her objections, Tori had agreed to a second date. He felt pleased all out of proportion.
And Sunday wouldnât be the end of it. There would be a third date. And a fourth. And more after that. He was certain of it. The summer ahead was looking potentially brighter and more enjoyable than he ever would have imagined.
Until tonight, heâd seen this summer as a series of unpleasant but necessary steps, of things that he needed to do to get his life back on track: to try to get to know his son, to be a better brother to his sister. And to acquire a new property in tough times and make that property profitable in spite of everything.
Now, there was pleasure involved, too. Because ofa certain strawberry-blonde schoolteacher with a cute smattering of freckles across her nose.
At home, Gerda, his live-in housekeeper, was already in bed. Light bled out from under the door of CJâs room. Connor listened for the sounds of weapons firing and objects exploding.
Nothing. Just silence. CJ probably had his headphones on.
He looked at his watch. Almost one.
With a weary sigh, he tapped on the door. No answer. He tapped again, louder.
âWhat?â Muffled, annoyed, from inside.
Connor pushed the door open and went in.
As expected, CJ sat on the end of the bed, fully dressed, wearing headphones and working a controller. âWhat?â Eyes on the screen, thumbs flying.
Connor said nothing. He went over and sat next to his son on the bed. He watched the violence on the silent screen while CJ continued to play his game.
Several minutes passed. Connor felt his own impatience rise. He ignored it. He breathed slowly and evenly and he stared at the screen, sitting absolutely still.
Finally, CJ paused the game, took off his headphones, and glared at him. âI asked you, what?â
Connor spoke in a friendly tone. âI had a date with Tori Jones tonight. Had a really good time, too.â
CJ gaped. For some reason, Connor found his sonâs surprise inordinately satisfying. âMs. Jones?