smile.
Seb dropped down beside her. âAre you okay?â It took everything he had not to gather her in his arms. He worriedly ran his gaze over her, searching for any sign of injury.
Mila stretched out both her legs experimentally, then wiggled her ankles in a circle.
âAll seems to be in order,â she said, looking up at him.
âNot quite,â he said, and it was impossible to stop himself from reaching out and turning her arm gently, so Mila could see the shallow scratches that tracked their way along the length of her arm. Tiny pinpricks of blood decorated the ugly red lines.
âThat looks worse than it feels.â
âYou are one tough cookie, Mila Molyneux,â he said.
She smiledâjust a little. âSometimes.â
Like yesterday, their eyes met. And once again Seb found himself lost in her incredible blue eyes. This time there was no pretending he was being objective, that he was admiring Mila simply as his strong, beautiful friend.
No, the way he felt right now had more in common with his fourteen-year-old self. Like then, his hormones were wreaking havoc on his body, his brain firmly relegated in the pecking order.
Heâd forgotten. Forgotten what it was like to look at Mila this way, to see her this wayâto want her this way. It had been so long.
But how was she looking at him ? Not with the disgust heâd expected, that he deserved for ogling his friend . More likeâ
A loud whoop from the neighbouring court ended the moment before it had fully formed. Seb looked up. The two young guys had finished their match, and the shorter of the two was completing a victory lap around the net.
Meanwhile Mila had climbed to her feet.
âThree-one,â she said firmly, with not a hint of whatever he might have just seen in her eyes. âMy serve.â
CHAPTER FIVE
M ILA â S PHONE VIBRATED quietly beneath the shop counter as she carefully wrapped a customerâs purchase in tissue paper.
The older gentleman had bought a quite extravagant salad bowl, with an asymmetrical rim and splashes of luminous cerulean glaze. For his granddaughter, heâd said, who had just moved out of home along with a mountain of the familyâs hand-me-down everything. âI want her to have a few special things that are just hers alone.â
After heâd left, Mila retrieved her phone and propped her hip against the counter. It had been a busy Friday, with a flurry of customers searching for the perfect gift for the weekend. She still had half an hour before Sheri arrived to take over the shop while Mila taught her afternoon classesâand so half an hour before sheâd get to eat, as her rumbling tummy reminded her.
Lunch?
The text was from Seb, as sheâd expected.
Sure. Pedroâs?
Text messages from Seb had become routine in the two weeks since their... Mila didnât even know how to describe it.
Strained? Tense? Awkward?
Charged .
Yes, that was probably the correct word to describe their tennis match.
Fortunately Sebastian seemed equally as determined as she was to pretend nothing charged had happened, and instead had determinedly progressed his quest to repair their friendship.
That, it would seem, involved regular deliveries of her favourite coffeeâdouble-shot large flat whiteâand just a few days ago had escalated to a lunch date.
Theyâd had lunch at a noisy, crowded, trendy Brazilian caféâPedroâsâa short walk from her shop and his building site, and the impossibility of deep conversation or privacy had seemed to suit them both just fine.
Not that Seb showed any hint that there was anything more to their friendship than...well, friendship. And a pretty superficial friendship, if Mila was honest. They werenât quite spending their time discussing the weather...but it wasnât much more, either.
At times there was the tiniest suggestion of their old friendshipâtheyâd laugh at each