Jamal was wearing a white shirt, tie and dark pants. He was also carrying a stack of papers.
âYou told me to make these copies, man,â he complained.
Then he saw Dara and froze, his mouth dropping open.
Mike struggled not to laugh at Jamalâs stupefaction. Dara could certainly make a first impression.
âJamal, this is Dara,â he told him. âSheâs our intern for the next few months. Be nice to her. Show her around. Help her out.â
Jamal took her all in with one sweeping glance. Then he broke into a grin as he came around to Daraâs side of the desk and shook her hand.
âYouâre beautiful,â he told her.
âMan, get your hands off her,â Mike snapped before Dara could respond. âAnd donât try any of your sorry moves on her, either. Iâve already warned her about you.â
Jamal hung on to Daraâs hand and grinned at Mike. He had the kind of speculative gleam in his eye that always put Mike on his guard. The kid saw way too much for a youngster.
âI can pull more little shorties than you any day of the week, Pops,â he said to Mike over his shoulder.
Dara laughed.
âGet out,â said Mike, annoyed now, his eyes on Daraâs hand still wrapped in Jamalâs. âYou got those copies finished yet?â
Jamal looked back at Dara and jerked his thumb at Mike. âYou see what weâre dealing with? Iâm outta here.â
Dara laughed again as Jamal left. âWhen do you two take your act on the road?â
For the life of him, Mike couldnât think of anything to say.
Not when she smiled at him like that.
âWell,â he finally said, standing. âI should let you get back to work.â
âOh,â she said, her smile wavering. âOkay.â
âHere you are!â said a voice from the hall.
Seanâs voice.
Frozen with guilt-induced paralysis laced with a healthy tinge of annoyance, Mike recovered enough to take Seanâs hand when he walked in and settled on the edge of Daraâs desk as if he owned the place.
âI heard about the acquittal, man,â he told Mike over his shoulder. âCongratulations.â
âThanks,â Mike said tightly.
Sean had obviously come to collect Dara for their
friendly
evening together, Mike thought. Realizing heâd balled his hands into fists, he shoved them in his pockets.
âWhat are you doing here?â Dara asked Sean.
There was a hitch in her voice, Mike noticed, and she fidgeted in her chair.
Sean smiled down at her. âI thought we could grab dinner at the new sushi place on the river, if youâre finished here.â
Yeah, okay. Mike needed to get out of there before his head exploded. âIâll see you two later.â
âWhat about basketball next week?â Sean called after him.
Mike stared at his brotherâs face and tried not to think about punching it.
âYeah,â he told Sean as he left. âIâll call you.â
Dara watched Mike go, feeling rattled. She really needed to work on getting used to his physical presence. He was such a huge creature. So tall, so imposing, so disturbingly ⦠masculine. The room seemed to shrink when he came and grow when he left. And the energy felt differentâmore chargedâwhen Mike was there. It was like having a tiger come and go.
And his commitment to helping others, like Jamal, surprised her. Sheâd thought reputable attorneys, like Mike, the ones with expensive suits and nice offices, somehow sniffed out the thugs and only represented the Truly Innocent. But Mike wanted to make the legal system available to everyone, and she admired him for that.
Admiring him did funny things to her insides.
âDara,â Sean said, waggling his fingers at her. âHell-o-o! Anybody home?â
As usual, his dimpled smile was contagious. She couldnât help but laugh. Thank goodness heâd resigned himself to being friends
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