The Prenup - Lauren Layne Page 0,2

head. Nope. Too old.

Next.

I look all the way to my left and see a hot guy in the far corner that I’d somehow missed the first time around. His clean-cut good looks, broad shoulders, and dark suit are pure fantasy material, and a reminder that buttoned-up businessmen are one thing that New York does very well. Guys in California tend to be a bit more casual. His attention is on his phone, so I can’t get a good look at his face, but it doesn’t matter, because as yummy as he is, now is definitely not the time and place to be ogling.

I drag my gaze away from Hot Guy and continue my search. Cute old lady reapplying her red lipstick. No. There’s a couple giving off first date vibes. No.

Damn it! No man bun in the entire place. Maybe he did leave.

I pull out my phone to see if I have any missed messages, when I feel eyes on me. Not surprising, considering I’ve been standing in the middle of the crowded bar without taking a seat. What is surprising is who’s doing the looking. The hot guy in the corner’s attention is no longer on his phone. It’s on me.

His blue eyes are so piercing, so direct, so … familiar.

My stomach drops out.

Oh.

My.

God.

The hot guy is my guy.

Somehow it had simply not occurred to me that my brother’s lanky, awkward best friend from college would turn into … this.

My mouth is a little dry as his gaze holds mine. There’s no trace of a smile on his face, though I could swear there’s a hint of a smirk in his eyes … as though he’s very aware what I’m thinking and is amused by it.

No, no. We can’t have that.

I paste a confident grin on my face and make my way toward him. He stands when I approach, and I think we can say, without a doubt, he’s not lanky. Not anymore. He’s turned into male perfection: broad shoulders, lean waist, and long legs. If I had to bet, six-pack under the dress shirt. No, eight-pack.

Twelve-pack? Is that a thing?

I reach his table and he gives the slightest nod. “Charlotte.”

The voice is the same. Gorgeous and lilting, and every bit as Irish as I remember.

“I almost didn’t recognize you,” I say breezily, lifting my cheek to receive his kiss.

Damn. He smells good too. Expensive and clean.

Why did nobody warn me about this?

“Almost didn’t recognize me?” he says, lifting his eyebrows. “If I had to guess, I’d say you didn’t have the faintest clue who I was,” he says, pulling out my chair for me before settling back in his.

“Well, in my defense, you’re not on social media. And your picture isn’t on your firm’s website.” I know, because I’ve looked. “How was I supposed to know what you look like these days?”

“You could have asked your brother.”

“Right, because that’s something normal siblings do. Ask their brother for a picture of his best friend,” I say, picking up the drink menu in an effort to hide my nervousness.

A tuxedo-clad server comes over for my drink order and I opt for a martini, because strong sounds like just the thing for this particular moment in my life.

The waiter disappears, and for a moment, my brother’s best friend and I simply look at each other. He’s clearly taking me in, assessing, but I don’t mind because I’m doing the same, absorbing all the details I couldn’t see from a distance.

The beard’s gone, although there’s a hint of a five o’clock shadow that draws attention to the Superman-worthy jaw that really never should have been covered up in the first place. His hair is as black as ever, though ruthlessly short now.

“What happened to your man bun?” I ask.

He blinks. “I’m sorry?”

I gesture to my own messy knot. “You know. Before, you wore your hair long.”

I expect him to smile, but he doesn’t; his blue eyes lock on mine. “I cut it.”

I give in to the urge to roll my eyes. “Okay. Good talk.”

“You look …” His gaze trails over me, more calculating than sexual, which, let’s face it, is kind of insulting. “The same.”

I wrinkle my nose. “I’m going to choose to interpret that as you saying I look like I did when I was twenty-one. I thank you for the compliment.”

He shrugs as though he doesn’t care one way or the other how I take it, then exhales a long breath, the first sign that he’s as unnerved by all

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