you.â
She took the lobster, used the shears to cut it down the middle of the tail, pulled the chunky white meat out. âThis is the best part, in my opinion. Iâll show you how to do the claws later.â
âGuess Iâm not a real Alpha Male.â Cutting off a piece, he dipped it in the butter and ate it. âMmmmm, delicious. Thank you.â
âYouâre welcome.â She did the same with her own lobster and had a huge, buttery mouthful. âAre your parents upset that you moved over here?â
âMy parents are dead.â
She was wiping the butter off her mouth with a napkin when he said it.
âIâm so sorry. Oh, God.â She put the napkin down, her stomach turning. âThatâs terrible. Iâm so sorry, Jack.â
âThey died in a car crash when I was eighteen. Itâs a conversation stopper, I know.â He pulled off one of the little side legs, stared at it. âIâve never worked out whether you eat these things or not. Whatâs the idea? Are you supposed to suck them?â
âMy parents both died tooâwhen I was twenty.â
He looked up at her then, held her brown eyes with his blue ones, his gaze so compassionate she felt they were trading worlds of unspoken emotion.
âIâm sorry too,â he said softly.
âThanks. You must miss them horribly.â
âThereâs something you should learn about Englishmen, Holly Barrett. We donât talk if talking involves any emotion. We change the subject or we make a joke or we order another drink.â
âReally?â
âAbsolutely. But we can talk about books or movies or sports. Whoâs your team in the Premier League?â
âWhat?â
âA bad joke. OK, whatâs your favorite movie?â
â Notorious âitâs an old Hitchcock movie with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman.â
âI know it. Great choice. Mineâs A Beautiful Mind . Have you seen it?â
âNo, I always wanted to, though.â
âRussell Croweâs brilliant. He was once on an Australian soap that has a kind of cult following in Englandâcalled Neighbors . Anyway, what about books? I know itâs an obvious topic of conversation, but films and books are a shortcut to getting to know someone, arenât they?â
Bryan Adams was belting out âSummer of â69â in the background, numbers kept being shouted out, but Holly and Jack managed to have an intense conversation about books and movies. She was surprised by how much heâd read, embarrassed that she hadnât heard of some of the authors he mentioned.
âDid you major in English at college?â
âDidnât go to collegeâuniversity. I had to work. But listen, you know what Iâd like to do?â He was leaning back against the booth. One hand was resting on the top edge of the seat. âDo you know somewhere we could take a walk by the water? Iâd really like to get out by the sea. Oh, Iâm sorryâthatâs rudeâI havenât asked you if youâd like dessert.â
âNo, I donât want dessert, thanks. And yes, I know a place we could walk by the water. Thereâs a beach right next to my house.â
âExcellent. Can you drive me? I caught a lift here.â
âAbsolutelyâwe can go together in my car. Iâve only had one glass of wine, so Iâm fine to drive.â
âWeâve already paid so we can go now, canât we? Thatâs one of the advantages of a place like thisâyou donât have to wait around for some recalcitrant waiter like me to bring you the bill.â
âRecalcitrant?â Holly slid across the booth and got out. âI guess with all the reading you do, itâs natural to use a word like recalcitrant.â
âIâm just trying to impress you.â He grabbed her hand and held it as they walked out.
âHang on a second, will
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