caught a glimpse of gold on the other side of the room, was that when Dan had left, he hadn't bothered to take his wedding band with him.
Justine couldn't concentrate on banking. Already she'd made two mistakes and it was only eleven o'clock. This was not the way she wanted to start her work week. The problem had to do with her class reunion. The planning committee had gotten together Friday night for an informal dinner and discussion. Everything had been set in motion weeks earlier and the reunion was less than a month away.
Justine had never intended to get this involved. She blamed Lana Rothchild for being so eager to enlist her help. And she blamed her mother for encouraging her. Before she could back out, Lana had her collecting the money and paying the bills. At the last meeting, Justine discovered she was also expected to be part of the decorating committee. Now it would be impossible not to attend.
It wasn't only the reunion that was getting her down. Seth was on her mind constantly, although she hadn't heard from him since the night Warren proposed. Not one word. For a man who claimed to be so crazy about her, he did damn little to show it.
She'd thought... She'd hoped... The hell of it was, Justine didn't know what she thought anymore. Not about Seth and certainly not about Warren.
She and Warren weren't getting along, either. It'd serve Seth right if she did accept Warren's proposal. Even as that idea went through her mind, she knew it was the worst thing she could possibly do.
"Looks like you've got company," Christy Palmer whispered as she walked past Justine's desk.
Seth. It had to be Seth. Her head shot up with a smile she couldn't restrain.
Only it wasn't Seth who strolled into the bank, but Warren. He carried a huge bouquet of fresh flowers in a glass vase. Every eye in the room turned to him as he headed directly for her office.
If Justine could have slid out of her chair and hidden beneath her desk, she would have. She'd promised an answer to his proposal, and the deadline had come and gone, and still she didn't know what to do.
"Hello, baby." Warren greeted her loudly enough to ensure that everyone in the bank heard him.
"Hi, Warren," she returned without emotion.
"I came to invite you to lunch."
"Sorry," she said, fighting the urge to be flippant, "but I have a noon meeting." That was true enough, but she didn't mention it was a meeting with one of the tellers and would take all of five minutes. If that.
Warren sighed. "I'm still waiting, you know."
"For what?" She closed the file she was working on.
"You still haven't given me your decision."
"I told you," Justine said impatiently, lowering her voice, "that if you pressure me, the answer is no."
"Hell, I figure we might as well get married, seeing that all we've done lately is argue. Is that what you want? What's happened, baby? We used to be close and now all of a sudden, it's like I'm not good enough for you."
"That's not it." How could she explain something she didn't fully understand herself?
"It's that high-school reunion of yours, isn't it?"
Justine didn't know how many times she'd had to tell him otherwise.
"If that's not it, then it has to be that old boyfriend you met up with."
Seth wasn't an old boyfriend. "I never went out with him."
"But you wanted to."
"No." Not when she was in high school, at any rate. The problem was a more recent one.
"We need to talk," Warren said urgently.
"Warren," she began, doing her best not to show her frustration, "I can't just take off in the middle of the day because you want to chitchat."
"You could if you married me - you wouldn't have to work."
Justine narrowed her eyes. "Don't say another word."
"All right, all right." He held up one hand, smiling. "Come on, this'll only take a moment." He set the flowers on the corner of her desk and pleaded with his eyes.
It wasn't like Warren to be humble. She realized this must be important, at least to him. Normally he went out of his way to act arrogant.
"Fine," she said, motioning for him to sit down.
"I'd rather do it someplace more private," he whispered, glancing over his shoulder.
Justine darted a look at her watch. "Listen, I have an appointment in ten minutes. I can leave after that. Would you like to meet outside? We could talk there."