Sea Glass Island (Ocean Breeze) - By Sherryl Woods Page 0,12
Hurry up, honey bun. I don’t want him to get too suspicious.”
“Something tells me that ship has already sailed,” Emily said. “But we’ll be there as quickly as I can round up Samantha and get her out the door. She seems just a little obsessed with playing with the baby. I think her biological clock started ticking the second she picked up Daniella Jane. Frankly, I recognize the signs, because that kid does the same thing to me.”
“All the more reason to see that Samantha and Ethan fall head over heels for each other by the time you and Boone head off on your honeymoon,” Cora Jane said.
She hung up on Emily, found the server assigned to Ethan’s table and warned her to take her time placing their order, then plastered a smile on her face and walked over to say hello.
“Good to see you, Greg,” she said to Ethan’s companion. “Ethan, I have to say I’m surprised to see you here. Did you finally come by for that meal I promised you after you took such good care of Rory Templeton and helped him get the rehab he needed so he could go back to work?”
Ethan gave her a sour look. “I’m here because I lost a bet,” he admitted.
Greg grinned. “I outran him,” he explained. “The man’s so arrogant, he didn’t think I stood a chance.”
Cora Jane chuckled. “Well, whatever brings you by, I’m happy to see you, though I imagine you’ll be around quite a lot over the next couple of weeks.”
“That seems to be the plan,” Ethan said, clearly not overjoyed about it.
“What he meant to say, Cora Jane, is that he’s looking forward to the wedding,” Greg interpreted. “We’re still working on his manners now that he’s back in polite society.”
“Bite me,” Ethan murmured in an undertone, though he managed a contrite look for Cora Jane’s benefit. “Sorry.”
“Don’t apologize on my account. I’ve heard plenty worse. Now, tell me, has your waitress taken your order?”
“She has,” Greg said cheerfully. “She told us it should be right out.”
Cora Jane nodded. “Let me check on it. The kitchen’s been pretty backed up today. I’ll have her refresh your drinks while you’re waiting.”
As she was walking away, she overheard Ethan say, “She’s up to something. You mark my words.”
No sooner had he made the statement than he added, his tone a mix of triumph and dismay, “And there she is now!”
Cora Jane turned in time to see Samantha being nudged along by Emily, Samantha’s expression just as dour as Ethan’s.
“Well, look who’s here!” Emily said cheerfully. “Mind if we join you, Ethan?”
Without waiting for a response, she pulled two chairs up to the table and gestured for Samantha to sit in one of them.
“I’m going to wash my hands,” Samantha said, stalking off.
Cora Jane intercepted her as she headed, instead, straight for the front door. Samantha whirled on her.
“Don’t think I don’t know you’re behind this,” she said irritably. “I heard enough of that call you made to Emily to know she was up to something. What I can’t figure out is why she’d take the chance of me strangling her not a half hour after I’d told her to stay out of my personal life. You must have been very persuasive.”
“We just love you, honey bun,” Cora Jane soothed. “We want you to be happy.”
“Shoving me down the throat of a man who’s not the least bit interested is not the way to accomplish that.”
“Oh, posh!” Cora Jane said. “Of course he’s interested. You didn’t see the way his eyes lit up when you walked in the door just now. I did.”
“What you saw, if anything, were sparks of anger over the meddling,” Samantha told her.
“I know what I saw,” Cora Jane insisted. “And you don’t want to offend the best man and create tension before your sister’s wedding, do you? Now, go on over there and be nice.”
“Is that an order?” Samantha asked.
Cora Jane leveled a look into her eyes. “Does it need to be?” she inquired, holding her granddaughter’s gaze.
Samantha finally sighed. “I’ll go, but I won’t like it.”
Cora Jane knew it wasn’t smart, but she couldn’t help chuckling. “You sounded exactly like that when you were a toddler and we forced you to do something you didn’t think you wanted to do.”
“If you’re trying to insult me by suggesting I’m behaving like a child, I don’t much care.”
“Actually I was just trying to remind you that in just about every one of those instances,