Chapter 1 #2
“They’re Washoe,” Nessa adds, elbowing me in the side. “Mira and Zach go way back. Their families have known each other for, like, a hundred generations.”
Zach adjusts his hat and scratches his forehead, his thick brown hair peeking through the hole of his backward ball cap. “Why do you always refer to us as Washoe?”
“It’s interesting.” Nessa shoves him playfully and walks back into the kitchen.
He shakes his head at her retreating figure, but there’s appreciation in his eyes.
Zach empties the Quarters glass. “Join us, Gen. Have you played before?”
“I have, but I’m driving. You mind that I’m not drinking?”
“Nope,” he says. “You can help me get Mira toasted. She isn’t nice until she’s had a few.”
His comment receives a scowl from Mira that resembles a runway pout, because the girl’s face is stunning.
Her dark-chocolate hair hits mid-back and tapers around a face that’s not quite heart-shaped, not quite oval.
It’s symmetrical and interesting, and I’m seriously jealous of her defined cheekbones.
I sit in one of the granny-style wooden dining chairs, and Zach slides a quarter my way. Holding it between my thumb and forefinger, I glance at the cup in the center. I line up my shot, and slam the side of my palm onto the high-gloss wooden surface.
The quarter bounces off the table and sinks into the empty juice glass.
“Nice!” Zach smirks in Mira’s direction. “We have a ringer.”
In college, we used a wide-rimmed cup to catch as many quarters as possible—hence, getting people drunk quickly. The small, respectable glass in the center of Zach’s table is so sophisticated. I feel very grown up.
He hands me another coin, and I prepare my next shot. “So, Washoe? You’re Native American?” The next quarter lands in the cup as well, and I gesture for Mira to take a drink.
She shoots me a look that burns my corneas. For someone so pretty, she has a hell of an evil eye. I hope Zach is right about her demeanor improving with liquor.
He nods. “We’re all part Washoe, the local tribe, including Lewis, who’s running late.
Mira’s the only true blood. Both her parents came from the Dresslerville reservation.
Though I’m sure somewhere along the line one of Mira’s relatives hooked up with an outsider.
” He winks at Mira and she rolls her eyes.
“Whatever,” she says. “You wish you were full-blooded.”
Zach looks at me and shakes his head as if to say, You see what I’m dealing with?
He frowns at the full margarita on ice in Mira’s hand. “If Gen lands the next three in a row, you drain your girly drink.”
Her eyes narrow. “Make it five.”
Five? Child’s play.
Mira is stunningly beautiful. Guys wouldn’t notice other girls with Mira in the room. She’d be the perfect buffer at parties, and since I’m all about hiding from the opposite sex after my last boyfriend, that sounds excellent. But crap, the girl needs to smile a little.
Mira huffs out a sigh. “Lewis is such a workaholic.” The first of my five quarters sinks in the glass. Yes. “I can’t believe he’s not here yet,” she says.
Zach glances at the time on his phone. “He’ll come.” Ping. Quarter number two goes down. Three more left. “He doesn’t leave the office until now.”
My highest sequential quarter dunking was seventeen—and I was half drunk that night. I slam my fist on the table, and the third coin lands in the cup. I’m just getting warmed up.
Mira frowns at Zach. “That’s not funny. He said he’d be here.”
Is she pouting? Lewis must be Mira’s boyfriend—and number four drops in the empty glass.
“His dad’s gotta be happy.” Zach looks at me, and I pause before tossing in the ringer. “Lewis works for his dad’s construction business. Practically runs it for him now that he’s back in town.”
I raise my hand for my final shot, but the sound of the front door creaking draws my attention. A guy nearly as tall as the doorjamb enters the house.
“Speak of the devil,” Zach says. “Gen, this is Lewis.”
For a split second my mind scatters.
Lewis closes the front door, broad shoulders filling out a plaid shirt, the sleeves rolled and shoved above his elbows. His shirt hem gapes on one side, as if he tucked it in the front in haste. He has high cheekbones, a square jaw, and dark brown hair that looks like it’s been fingered back.
He’s more than handsome. He’s striking. As in, strikes you dumb and mute.
My eyebrows pinch together, my mouth pulling down into a frown. What am I doing? I stopped noticing men months ago. After I decided it’s best to avoid them.
Mira beams as Lewis walks into the room, and I give myself a swift mental shake. I grip the last quarter and slam it on the table, watching it fly toward the target.
The coin rims the edge of the juice glass and falls on the table.
I stare at it in disbelief.
When I glance up, Lewis is watching me, his brow furrowed infinitesimally. He scans down, and my breath catches. I’m sitting and he can’t see much, considering I’m wearing a white button-down, open at the throat, but my heartbeat increases.
Which is weird. My normal instinct is to curl my shoulders and hide when I’m being checked out.
Lewis’s eyes return to mine, and they are dark—black—deep like the lake this area is known for. My face heats and suddenly my rapid heartbeat flutters and bobs in my chest.
What the hell? I’ve avoided guys for weeks. This one is good looking, but so are a lot of men.
“Hey, Lewis,” Zach calls. “Quarters on deck. Gen, here, is kicking our asses. Almost made your girl pound her drink.”
Lewis’s eyes flicker to Mira, then back to me.
Zach referred to Mira as Lewis’s girl. Obviously, they’re together. No way am I going near Lewis, even if I were considering it, which I am not.
I roll a fresh quarter between my fingers, thumb a nick on the table, glance at Nessa in the kitchen—distract myself with anything but Lewis’s approach. And I’m doing a good job too—until he lifts his arm and tugs his fingers through his hair.
My gaze snags on the ridges of muscles showing below the rolled-up sleeve of his shirt.
I blink. I’m checking out the guy’s arms now?
I must have looked too long, because when I glance at his face he’s staring at me staring at him.
My heart’s an irritating pulse in my ears, blocking out sound, cheeks warming to flaming. I cough into my elbow to hide my face.
Hot, edgy; I don’t like this sensation, like my skin’s about to jump away—or toward something. I should leave. I’m not feeling well. But I can’t bail this early. We haven’t even eaten.
Mira springs from her seat and catches Lewis around the waist before he makes it to the table. She hugs him, and he returns it with one arm while gazing at me.
That’s his girlfriend in his arms. Why is he looking at me? Damn men.
“Zach,” Nessa says, and shifts a pot on the stove in the kitchen. “I don’t know what to do with this chicken.”
“To be continued later.” Zach smiles and sweeps the quarters into his hand. He walks into the kitchen and takes over for Nessa.
Zach’s grin is friendly. Not hot, or lecherous, just uncomplicated. Kind. Not that Lewis’s gaze was lecherous. It was… curious.
I don’t like curious. Curiosity leads to interest, which leads to things I’m staying away from.
It’s disturbing that my radar pings around this guy. He has a girlfriend, and unfortunately, that seems to be the only kind of men I attract.
Being in a relationship back home—which he failed to mention—never stopped my ex from pursuing me, or Cali’s boyfriend from making a pass, or any of the men my mom brought home from flirting and letting their hands wander when they hugged me.
“Clear the table, peeps,” Nessa calls. “Dinner is on.”
She delivers homemade tortillas, along with a bowl of spiced, shredded chicken.
Zach reaches for a beer from the fridge and Lewis walks up behind him. He slaps Zach on the back and looks at me expectantly.
Zach glances between Lewis and me, then reaches for a bottle opener. “Gen is Nessa’s friend from work,” I hear him say while popping the top off his Corona.
Lewis studies my face as if he’s searching for something.
What is his problem? He can’t stare at me like that. His girlfriend is in the room.
So I ogled his arms. They were out there! And kind of hot. Sue me. I don’t recall checking out a guy’s body like that before—apparently, lusty thoughts can come on later in life. But women check out men all the time. Considering Lewis’s looks, he should be used to it by now.
“Sit next to me, Gen.” Nessa sets a bowl of Spanish rice on the table and pulls out a chair at her side.
I follow her lead and carry over a bowl of salad, then sit beside her.
“Food looks great,” Lewis says.
His voice, like a silky blade, cuts through my better sense, snaring my attention.
He’s shoveling half a taco in his mouth in praise of the food, or because he eats like a horse. I follow the flex of his square jaw, the thick muscles along his throat, which suddenly still.
I look up. He’s watching me stare—and he looks intense.
What am I doing? I’m making it worse.
Mira’s gaze darts to mine, and the look on her face is more than angry. She swallows, and I’d swear there’s anxiety in her eyes.
I take a small bite of rice, willing saliva into my dry mouth.
I’ve never wanted to escape a situation more than I want to escape this dinner party.
My heart’s jumpy and my face won’t drop below a thousand degrees.
My fingers, which have never failed me in skill or coordination, can’t keep the stupid rice on the fork.
“So you’re here for the summer?” Zach says, his muscular leg brushing my calf as he aggressively loads food onto his plate. His narrow grandma table, which matches his thrift-store velvet couch and eighties parquet coffee table, makes dinner unintentionally intimate.
I take a sip of water and clear my throat. “I’m returning to Dawson in the fall for a graduate program in psychology.”