Waking Up to You Overexposed - By Leslie Kelly Page 0,100
like Mac. Maybe you and he can find a way to make it work, even if you think there’s no way it ever could.”
And maybe she was a sucker who should still be reading fairy tales. But hey, it didn’t hurt to dream, did it? Even if she was dreaming on behalf of someone else.
Once Lilith was gone, the other woman, Seline, approached the counter. Even her walk was feline—sultry—and Izzie wondered if she’d ever danced before.
“Here,” Seline said. She put a one-hundred-dollar bill on the counter. “For her tab. I sense that she needs the money more than I do. And I don’t have to be psychic to figure that out.”
Stunned, Izzie murmured, “Thanks.” She opened her mouth to say more—to offer the money back—but the mysterious woman in black had already turned toward the door, her coffee in hand. She walked out into the bright sunshine without another word, got onto her sleek motorcycle and roared away down the street.
* * *
BRIDGET DONAHUE HAD always known she would never be wildly sexy and self-confident like her cousin Izzie. But there were times when she allowed herself to think that, maybe, since they were related, Bridget had a tiny bit of Izzie-power trapped deep inside her. So ever since she was a kid, she’d played a game. WWID, aka What Would Izzie Do? And then she’d try to do that.
Asking Dean Willis to go out with her one day at lunchtime had definitely been a WWID moment. And Bridget still couldn’t believe she’d gone through with it. But if she hadn’t, she wouldn’t now be sitting at a coffee shop, looking across the table at his handsome face. Make that staring at his face.
Staring. Izzie wouldn’t stare. Bridget ducked her head down, focused on her cup of Earl Grey tea. Not the double-shot espresso she probably needed—because of her “I don’t drink coffee” fib—but okay...mainly because of the company.
“You ready for a refill?” Dean asked.
Bridget shook her head. “I’m fine, thanks.”
They weren’t at her uncle’s bakery, but at a big chain place not far from her apartment. Bridget had chosen the spot, which seemed safe, neutral and impersonal. Not the kind of place that said she thought they were on a date. Not the kind of place where a date would be absolutely out of the question.
God, she sucked at this. Izzie would have met him at a hotel bar.
Small steps, she reminded herself. Asking a man out was a first for her. It wasn’t that she’d never dated—or that she was completely inexperienced. But if Izzie was on the top rung when it came to dealing with men, Bridget was still pulling the ladder out of the cellar.
They sat in an alcove by the front window. Bridget had her chair pushed back from the table, to accommodate the length of his legs beneath it. He looked crowded—bunched up in the small chair and the small corner—but he hadn’t complained.
“You must be tired of hearing me rattle on about my landlord problems,” she said as the conversation lagged. “I haven’t seemed to shut up.”
He shook his head. “You’re easy to talk to.”
“You haven’t been doing much talking...just listening.”
“You’re easy to listen to,” he replied with a small smile.
Nice answer. And it was mutual, because he was also very easy—easy to like. But she still didn’t feel like she knew anything about him. “So how do you like working for Marty? You’ve sold more cars in the month you’ve been there than any other salesman has sold in the past three.”
He shrugged. “It’s not hard when you have good products to sell.” Lowering his gaze, he reached for his cup. “I guess you’d know that since you’ve worked for Marty longer than I have.”
Sighing, Bridget shook her head. “Not much longer.”
“Really?”
“I started just a couple of months before you did so I don’t know much of anything, either.”
He frowned. “But you keep the books, surely you know how things are going. I bet the place is raking in the bucks, huh?”
Grunting in annoyance, she admitted, “I have no idea. I see just enough to keep the books balanced and not much else.”
Dean stopped stirring his tea and lifted his eyes to hers. Leaning forward over the table, he asked, “You don’t know anything about what’s going on at Honest Marty’s Used Cars?”
“I know Marty’s a bit of a con artist,” she said tartly. “Honesty is just one of his...embellishments.”
She suspected her boss also embellished some other things—like stuff he told