any trouble. Still, to be on the safe side, he grabbed his phone, having thought of a plausible reason to text her. He would say that he planned to install a new faucet and towel bar in his master bathroom, and wanted to make sure this wasn’t an inconvenient time for her since there would be a lot of noise. It was a short, polite question, and she would write back some short, polite response. And then he would know she was okay and could move on with his day.
He was halfway through typing the message when he heard her front door open.
Thank God.
He exhaled in relief—both that she was safe and that he didn’t have to go dig out the towel bar in his closet and start drilling away in order to maintain his cover story. Realizing he never had grabbed that lunch, he stuck his wallet, keys, and phone in the pockets of his jeans, tucked his sunglasses into his shirt, and headed out.
As he was shutting his door, Victoria’s door opened. She stepped out into the hallway carrying a bag of garbage.
And wearing the same shirt and jeans that she’d had on the night before.
She spotted him and blushed, her hand instantly smoothing down her wild-ish, wavy hair. “Hi.”
Feeling as though the wind had been knocked out of him, Ford momentarily had no words.
Right.
Understood.
Judging from her hair and clothes, it was pretty clear that Victoria the Divorce Lawyer had not, in fact, slept in her own bed last night.
He somehow managed to keep his tone casual. “Hey there.”
She smiled hesitantly, probably worried he was going to say something that would make this really uncomfortable. “Heading out?”
“Uh, yes. I’m meeting someone for lunch, actually.” He even threw in a sheepish smile, as if he, too, was acknowledging the awkwardness of the situation. Because at this point, screw it. He might as well let her think he was dating Samantha. It was better than letting her think the alternative—that he was the fool who’d been worrying and waiting for her to come home all night.
“Oh.” She shifted the garbage from one hand to the other. “You know, I was—”
“Sorry.” He cut Victoria off, feigning an apologetic smile. He wouldn’t make a scene, or say anything to make her feel awkward. But he couldn’t stand there, talking like everything was normal. Not right now. “But I’m actually running a little late, so . . . ” He pointed to his watch.
“Right—of course.” She swallowed and waved him on with her free hand. “Have a good lunch, then.”
“Thanks.” With a nod in good-bye, he headed down the hallway. Not bothering with the elevator, he pushed through the stairwell door and kept walking, down four flights of steps, and then out the building’s front door and into the bright summer sunshine.
He put his sunglasses on as he headed down the sidewalk, ignoring the ache in his chest.
So much for that last shred of fucking hope.
Thirty-one
THE NEXT MORNING, there was an unexpected knock on Ford’s front door. When he answered, he found Brooke standing there, one hand on her hip and the other one holding a ticket.
Ford frowned. “Didn’t you get my text? I said I’ll pass on the game.”
“Oh, I got your text.” Without waiting for an invitation, she bulldozed her way into his place and walked straight into his kitchen. She grabbed his phone off the counter and used it to turn on a satellite radio station. Music suddenly filled his entire loft, piping through the built-in speakers.
He raised an eyebrow. “Are we . . . having a party?”
She nodded in the direction of Victoria’s place. “Background noise.” She set his phone down. “Free skybox tickets to today’s Cubs/Sox game and you’ll pass? There isn’t a man in Chicago who would turn that down.”
“With you and Cade, Vaughn and Sidney, and Huxley and Addison? No, thanks—it’s all couples.” And while normally he would jump at the chance to watch the Crosstown Classic from one of Wrigley Field’s luxury suites, today he wasn’t in the mood to be the odd man out with a bunch of happily married or engaged twosomes.
“Fine. I’ll invite Charlie and Tucker, too,” she said.
“They might as well be a couple,” he said dryly.
She looked at him for a moment, and then pointed. “You told me men don’t do this.”
“Do what?”
She walked around the counter, speaking animatedly. “Two years ago. We were at Firelight, having drinks. Cade and I had split up and you said that men don’t