By the time he paid and closed the door, I was standing next to him. I took one of the bags and we headed toward the kitchen.
“You’re quiet tonight. You barely even said anything in the car.” I only realized how hungry I was when the delicious smells coming from the containers had my stomach growling. A little embarrassed, I stepped away from him to put some distance between us and opened the fridge to take out two water bottles.
“I have a little headache,” I mumbled. The fact that I had a headache wasn’t a lie in itself, but something else was wrong. I had no idea what had happened, but I was feeling even more awkward next to him than I had before that day. Maybe it was the lingering kiss or the multiple hugs or maybe it was the thought of Joshua.
His eyes cut to mine, but I avoided his gaze as he took down two plates and we started to spoon out a little of everything.
“Rice?”
I nodded, and he dumped some on my plate. Then, grabbing both our plates, he walked straight out of the kitchen. “Let’s eat at the table. I’m tired of sitting at the kitchen island alone.”
Wordlessly, I followed him and stood in the doorway as he stopped next to the dining table. I watched him put down our plates, pull out a chair, and look at me with a raised eyebrow.
“Will you join me?”
As a kid who had taken most of her meals in the kitchen, a dining room table always reminded me of one thing.
Family.
Which I’d never had.
I walked toward him and sat down as he pushed my chair forward.
He sat across from me, reaching for his chopsticks.
I was staring straight into his deep blues.
Shaking my head, I got up and just as I was going to walk past him, his hand gently curled around my wrist, his thumb gently sweeping up and down, effectively stopping my forward movement. My words got stuck in my throat and I just stared down at him, at his eyes.
“Rose.” He spoke softly, as if he was talking to a kid. “Are you sure everything is okay?”
“I forgot the water.”
Deeply conscious of the way his presence and his hand on my skin were making me feel, I waited for him to let go of me. It took a few seconds, but when he did, I almost ran to the kitchen.
Back in my seat, keeping my hands under the table, I rubbed my wrist, trying to get rid of the weird tingles.
The silence and familiarity calmed me down, and I realized it was normal now, being with him, like this. We were just two strangers who had gotten married for the wrong reasons sitting at a big, ten-person dining table, and it felt normal and good.
As soon as my plate was cleared, I rose, and Jack pushed up to his feet with me even though he wasn’t done yet.
“You’re going?” he asked, something that sounded very similar to disappointment in his voice.
“I…should go to bed. Tomorrow is going to be another long day. I’ve been getting these little headaches recently, so it would be better, I think, if…”
“I understand.”
I took my plate and again tried to walk past him, but he touched me again.
“I’ll take care of it.”
“I can—”
“Rose. Go away. Get some rest.”
I gave him a smile. Exactly when had my name become so…so effective in making me break out into goose bumps?
I felt the ghost of his touch and the warmth of his fingers on my skin almost up until I fell asleep.
The number of times Jack Hawthorne smiled: not even a single one.
Chapter Ten
Jack
For two strangers who had met and gotten married roughly a month and a half ago, we had fallen into a routine faster than I’d expected. Day after day, I found myself helping Rose at her coffee shop. Even when I didn’t intend to drop by, or let’s say even when I knew I shouldn’t drop by, I still found myself on her doorstep. I’d lost count of how many times I’d lied and said I had a meeting nearby or found other convenient lies. I don’t think she believed them anymore. Maybe I needed the lies for my own sake.
By the time her place was ready to open, it had felt like she had destroyed the small barrier I’d tried my best to put up between us. Something had shifted. It was there in the way she looked at me,