he lives only a mile or so away from the bar. “My brother is gonna pick me up,” I tell Ethan, texting Laney now before I forget. I set the phone down and take another bite of the muffin. “Thanks for being nice to me.”
“As opposed to being mean to you?”
I laugh. “You could have kept walking. I would have been fine out there.”
The smirk disappears from his face. “You looked like you might walk right into oncoming traffic.”
A weird sense of anxiety is coming off of him, and he looks out the large window next to our booth.
“I suppose you’re right. So, uh…what do you do?”
“Not much of anything right now,” he admits. “Since I’m helping my dad.”
“Oh, right.” His reply doesn’t make much sense, right? Or am I still too drunk to follow along?
“Before, I taught martial arts.” That explains why he’s in such good shape. “What about you?”
“I’m a vet-tech and part-time riding instructor.”
He nods and points to my forehead. “You mentioned a horse.”
“Yeah. Mystery. That’s my horse.” It takes everything inside of me not to start showing Ethan photos of him. Instead, I grab several sugar packets and add them to the black coffee. “I don’t like the taste of coffee,” I say, compelled to fill awkward silence and usually make it even more awkward. “But I need it to function.”
“This coffee doesn’t smell the greatest, but I need it too. I always question people who don’t drink coffee.”
“Me too. Like what do they do, get eight hours of sleep a night?”
Ethan laughs. “I don’t know what that feels like.”
“I would if I didn’t stay up late most nights. The veterinary clinic opens at seven so I have to be at work by six three days a week. I work twelve-hour shifts,” I explain.
“What do you stay up late doing?”
“Reading or watching TV,” I reply and add creamer to the coffee. It helps a little, but I still grimace from the taste. “Nothing too crazy. I’m kind of boring.”
“You haven’t bored me yet.”
“Fine. I’m interesting in the most unexpecting way you’d expect. And I just said expect twice.”
Ethan chuckles. “That piques my interest even more. What do you mean?”
I wiggle my eyebrows. “You’ll just have to wait and find out.”
Ethan holds my gaze, and there’s something intimate in the way he looks at me. It’s like he can see right through me, and it makes me feel vulnerable. I take a big drink of coffee, using it as a distraction, but then look at him too.
He has a scar along his hairline, similar to where my cut is, but this was from a much graver injury. I run my eyes down him, noticing another straight, long scar on his forearm.
“Did you break your arm?”
He looks down. “Yeah, a couple of years ago. Had to have surgery to fix it.”
“That’s what I was going to ask next. I’ve never broken a bone, you know.”
“Even though you fall off your horse?”
“I don’t usually fall off my horse,” I press. “It was kind of my fault for not paying attention and letting my guard down. Usually, I can handle anything I ride.”
Ethan’s lips pull into a smile and his brows go up. “Really?”
I cover my face with my hand. “Any horse I can ride,” I laugh. “At least I didn’t say fifteen hands between my legs is no big deal.” I bring my hand down, resting it on the table. “Horses are measured in hands. Mystery is fifteen hands tall.”
“The more you know,” Ethan laughs. “That guy who said you’re un-bangable is a fucking dumbass, you know. Because you’re quite—”
“Anora?” Harrison stops short at our table. I didn’t even see him come into the café.
“Hey, Har.”
“Is everything okay?” He looks from me to Ethan.
“Yeah. Why wouldn’t it be?”
He raises an eyebrow. “You left hanging out with Laney early and asked me to come get you.”
“Right. I did.” I shrug. “Remember Travis what’s-his-face from school?”
“Travis Morrison?”
“Yeah. That’s the one. He’s an asshole,” I say with a sigh.
“He’s always been one. Why are you—did you run into him at the bar? Did he touch you?”
“Pshhh. He wishes. It’s fine. I’m fine now. Thanks to—oh, this is Ethan.” I motion to him. “He’s not a vampire. And he knows I’m not either because I bleed.”
“Hi,” Ethan says somewhat awkwardly.
“How much have you had to drink, Annie?” Harrison asks.
“More than I usually have,” I admit with a grimace. “Don’t be a Judge Judy.”
“I’m not,” he tries to assure me, standing at the table