problem, I’ll let you know, all right? I’ll pull on my ear or something. I don’t need you playing Batman on my behalf.”
“I’m more of an Iron Man.”
“So I’ve been told. I got this.”
Without waiting for a reply, she dives back in. I make up some bullshit about letting the wine in my decanter breathe for an extra minute, giving me the excuse to stand watch over the table.
But the only person I watch is Emma.
I may be protective, but I never get protective over girls I’ve just met, and I definitely don’t get possessive.
But I feel a surge of both as I watch Emma approach the guy. She expertly trades her decanter for a pitcher of water from a passing server. Holding her body away from him, she tops off his water glass. He turns his head to look at her, and my pulse kicks up a notch when he lifts his empty wineglass, asking for more Rioja.
Emma politely but firmly refuses the request, suggesting a coffee instead.
That’s when shit hits the fan. The guy digs a dollar bill out of his wallet, and he tucks it into Emma’s lapel.
Somehow my spidey senses kick in, and I’m able to hear him say, “For your services. Because that’s how much they’re worth. A wine expert? What a joke. You may wear your little Lois Lane suit, but I think we all know what your real job is here. Which, yeah”—his gaze rakes over her curves—“I’ll pay more than a dollar for that.”
She stiffens, her cheeks burning pink.
But I see red. Is no one else catching this? The rest of the table is absorbed in other conversations. Every so often, Eli will shoot the guy a warning glance, but then someone tugs on his sleeve or calls his name, and he gets distracted.
I stare at Emma, silently begging her to look at me, to give me permission to suit up and kick some bad-guy ass. But she asked me not to intervene unless she gave me the signal. She’s been so considerate today—all week—and returning that favor is the least I can do.
It goes against my every impulse, though. I set down the decanter I’m holding because I’m squeezing it so hard I’m worried it’ll shatter. Emma steps back so that she’s out of fourteen’s reach. His hand falls and so does his face.
She removes the dollar bill from her lapel and slides it onto the table beside his plate.
“Trust me when I say you need that coffee now, sir,” Emma replies steadily. I watch, pulse pounding, as Emma turns and heads to the back of the pavilion. She sets down the pitcher at the service station and slips out of the side entrance, which leads to the smoking patio.
My stomach drops. I may only have known the woman for a week, but I can already tell tucking tail and running isn’t like her.
Fourteen’s clearly hit on a soft spot.
My feet move before my mind does. I don’t know what I’m going to do or how I’m going to fix this or even if me following Emma outside is the right move. What if she just wants to be left alone?
But I do know I can’t let some dickhead make her feel like an idiot for being real.
For being herself. Because now I understand the kind of bravery that takes.
Chapter Thirteen
Emma
I know better than to let that douchebag get under my skin.
I’m thirty-one years old, for crying out loud. I’ve been in this business for almost a decade. Drunk assholes poking fun at who I am and what I do is nothing new. Usually, I can let their comments, their looks, roll right off my back. I’m good at my job. I’m passionate about it and proud of what I’ve accomplished.
But today’s barbs are sticking. Maybe because something is going down between Samuel and me, something good and real and important, and it’s got me feeling soft and mushy. He’s opening up in a way he hasn’t before, and it’s incredibly satisfying to see how the Charleston Heat guests are connecting with that.
His vulnerability is making my own that much more poignant. That much softer. And since I’m so soft, this guy’s jabs land hard.
What if this profession is a joke?
What if I never make it because finding success as a sommelier only happens for a chosen few?
What if I’m trying too hard?
Eyes burning, I make a beeline for the smoking patio.