Second Chance Summer. Irene Hannon
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There’s your out, Fletch. Take it.
But once again, foolish words slipped out.
“Eat it for lunch tomorrow.”
What was going on here?
Before he had a chance to ponder that question, Rachel did that distracting lip-moistening thing again, drawing his attention to the soft curve of her mouth. The woman had great lips. Lush and full and very kissable...
“Okay.”
He jerked his gaze back to her eyes. “What?”
“I said I’d have dinner with you.”
Dinner. Right.
Fletch did his best to keep the heat on his neck from creeping above the collar of his sport shirt. “Great. Any recommendations? Everything was shut down when I came at Christmas, and I’ve only been here for a few days this trip.”
“Fins is pleasant. It’s on the other side of the island, but Shell Road cuts straight through. It has a deck that overlooks the beach, if you like to eat outside.”
“Works for me. I’ll follow you.” Fletch gestured across the parking lot. “I’m in the black Explorer.”
Rachel eyed it. “That looks very tactical—which seems appropriate for a former Navy SEAL.”
He folded his arms. “You know my background?”
“Only a few basics. Aunt El’s been dropping crumbs since Sunday. In case you haven’t figured it out, it was no accident we were both on that otherwise empty beach.”
“I figured it out.” But Gram had been far less forthcoming with information about the woman standing in front of him. It was hard to blame her, though, given his clear back-off messages. “What else did she tell you?”
Rachel lifted one shoulder. “Very little. I didn’t encourage her for fear I’d send the wrong message.”
“Which would be...?”
Her cheeks pinkened again, but she didn’t shy away from the question. “Aunt El’s decided I need some romance in my life, even though I’ve told her I’m not in the market. I have a feeling she’ll latch on to anyone I show the remotest interest in—especially if that person is someone she’s already decided might be suitable. So I’ve been playing down our meeting. All I know is that you lost your leg in the Middle East, you live in Norfolk and you’re involved in some kind of security work.”
“I know less about you. It seems I have some catching up to do.” Like finding out what had happened to her husband. He couldn’t ask Gram for the same reason Rachel couldn’t ask Eleanor about him, but maybe the woman herself would tell him.
She shifted and tightened her grip on her purse, her taut posture suggesting otherwise. “I lead a very quiet existence as a grade-school art teacher in Richmond. You’ll fall asleep in your seafood chowder if I tell you my life story. But I wouldn’t mind talking through what happened today, if you’re still willing to listen. It’s been eating at me for hours.”
Her message came through loud and clear: personal stuff wasn’t on the dinner menu.
And he couldn’t fault her caution. They were both here for brief stays. Their homes were in cities a hundred miles apart—not exactly convenient commuting distance. She was “geographically undesirable for dating,” as one of his buddies used to put it. Rachel, by her own admission, wasn’t interested in romance. The odds were against them even without throwing his own issues into the mix.
Yet he wanted to know more about her—out of curiosity, nothing more. And if he listened to whatever was on her mind about today, maybe she’d open up a little about the rest of her life.
“I’m still willing.” He circled her car, and she sent him a surprised look when he pulled the driver’s door open. “Gram reprimanded me for my lack of manners on Sunday. I feel compelled to prove I remember a few of the etiquette lessons she drummed into me in my youth.”
Without a word, Rachel slid into the car.
“See you in a few minutes.” He shut the door, worked his way back to his car...and found himself looking forward to sharing dinner with the lovely blonde.
Strange.
Much as he’d been annoyed at Gram’s and Eleanor’s orchestration of Sunday’s beach encounter, he suddenly wished he’d met Rachel Shaw under different circumstances—and that she wasn’t so averse to considering a new relationship.
* * *
Why in the world had she agreed to have dinner with Louise’s grandson—especially after he’d hinted he’d like to know more about her background?
Rachel guided her Focus along Shell Road, under the canopy of Spanish moss that clung to the towering live oaks, past the hotel’s golf course, alongside a family of bicyclists on a carefree holiday.
That was the kind of holiday she’d expected to have.
Instead, she was dealing with a well-meaning but misguided aunt who’d decided it was time for her to reenter the social scene, a forlorn little girl who was in desperate need of some TLC, and the tall, dark-haired man close on her tail whose sharp, insightful eyes told her he wouldn’t hesitate to introduce subjects she didn’t want to discuss and ask questions she didn’t want to answer.
Maybe she could just order a soft drink and an appetizer and make a quick exit—even if leaving him in the lurch to finish his dinner alone wasn’t the most polite thing she’d ever done.
But it would be safer. She knew that intuitively...and she trusted her instincts.
Settled on that strategy, Rachel pulled into a parking place, locked up and waited at the back of her car as Fletch angled in beside her.
As soon as he joined her, she started toward the restaurant. But at a touch on her arm, she stopped and turned.
“You know, it occurred to me during the drive here that we’ve never been officially introduced. I think Gram assumed we’d exchanged names on the beach.” He extended his hand. “Jack Fletcher. Fletch to my friends.”
She regarded his lean fingers. The mere thought of touching him set off a warning bell in her mind, but what choice did she have?
“Rachel Shaw.”
His fingers closed over hers—firm, strong and confident. It was the sort of handshake her father always referred to as a “John Wayne grip.” The kind that said I’m here, I’m wearing my white hat and everything’s going to be all right.
So why did she sense danger?
Taking a shaky breath, she tugged her hand free. “Nice to meet you.”
“Likewise.” He gestured toward the restaurant. “Shall we?”
Without waiting for her to respond, he took her elbow and guided her up the slanting concrete walkway that led to the patio. It was a polite gesture, nothing