Avril Tremayne – The Dating Game (страница 8)
‘Yes your eyes are
‘They’re the colour of a bruise,’ David said, looking away from her suddenly. ‘So you can call me Bruiser—a good alpha male name.’
‘Alpha? A-ha.’
‘Remember, my eyelashes are not tinted, brat.’
‘But it’s not very romantic. Bruiser.’
‘Neither am I—just for the record. Now come on, it’s time to text.’
‘What am I going to say?’
‘Depends.’
‘On …?’
‘What he means by the “cultural divide” he says is between you. Is he from overseas? Different religion? A lot older? Surely not younger—you only look sixteen yourself.’
‘I’m twenty-four, thank you. And he’s twenty-eight, which is in perfect proportion. Plus he’s agnostic. And he’s lived all his life here in Sydney, except for three months in Tokyo.’
‘Then I don’t get it.’
‘He means cultural as in him liking
‘Oh God, the vision in my head!’ David choked out. ‘He wears a yukata? A
‘Is that what it’s called?’
‘Yep. And I’m guessing that’s his way of pretending he knows all about Japanese culture because he lived in Tokyo for a few months when he probably knows squat.’ He started laughing again, and that set Sarah off too. He tried to take a breath, failed, tried again and managed it. ‘Sorry.’ Another quick breath. One more. ‘Okay, I think I’ve got it under control—now
‘Okay,’ she managed, in a strangulated wheeze of a voice.
‘Sarah!’
‘Sorry.’ Choke, breath, choke,
‘So that ludicrous message of his is basically saying you’re not
‘To be fair, he has a point,’ she admitted. ‘Oh, don’t get me wrong. I read literary novels, just not
David’s eyes were heading into fascination territory again.
‘Anyway,’ she went on decisively, ‘it’s now your job to make me worldly.’
‘If you want to present yourself to the world as a
‘Have you ever read a book by Agatha Christie?’
‘No, but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t.’
‘Ha! You wouldn’t.’
‘Seriously, I would.’
‘Ha!’
‘Enough already with the “Ha!”’
‘So what do you like?’
‘I like pizza, same as you. I prefer wine over beer, cocktails and whisky, and blues over either opera or pop music. And most importantly, I do
‘Shoot you dead,’ she said, eyes brimming with laughter again. ‘Just don’t stab you.’
‘Brat! Still, knowing about the yukata and the
‘That was quick!’ Sarah said. ‘What did you— No, what did
David held out the phone for her to take. The message was short.
Sarah gazed at David in frank admiration. ‘I don’t swear—not when there are so many more fabulous words available—but I have to say, I like that.’ She looked down at her phone again. ‘That’s that bridge burned, then.’
‘Do you care, bluebell?’
‘Not in the slightest.’
‘Good. Now, before we go any further, just for future reference, in the normal run of things you shouldn’t denigrate one guy’s sexual performance to another guy. That’s one for the manifesto.’ He frowned. ‘You know what? I’ll bet Loser Liam would call something a “manifesto”, so we’re going to go for something simpler. What about the rulebook?’
‘The rulebook. Done.’
‘And I hope you appreciate that I’m batting above the average here when it comes to the rules. We haven’t even left the room and you’re up three lessons.’
‘Are we really?’
‘Don’t talk your head off; no dissing a guy’s bed performance to other conquests; be as mean as you like when responding to break-up text messages,’ he said, holding up a finger per point. ‘And on that note, I’m going to block Lousy Lustless Liam, so hand over your phone again. And then I’m going to put my number in there, et cetera, et cetera.’ He busied himself with her phone, then used it to call his own number. ‘There, now I have your number too.’
‘Okay, so now what?’ Sarah asked, taking her phone.
‘
‘Oh, we’re starting now?’ She looked at the exit. ‘Out there? Together?’
‘We’re on a tight deadline, bluebell. No time to lose.’ He looked curiously at her when she didn’t move. ‘A few minutes ago you couldn’t wait to absquatulate. What’s the sudden problem?’
‘It occurs to me that I may have got carried away in here. With just you and me, it seemed easy. You have a way of …’ She trailed off, not quite brave enough to suggest he was a master manipulator. ‘Of putting women at ease.’ Nice save, if she said so herself. ‘But Lane and Adam are out there and that … changes things.’
‘Changes things how?’
‘I have no idea how they’ll interpret what’s going on with us.’
‘It’s straightforward. There’s nothing to interpret.’
‘Think of the relationship intricacies. What if Lane doesn’t end up with Adam? What if she decides she wants to pick up with you where she left off?’
‘I told you—past tense.’
‘But Adam won’t want me anywhere near you,
‘I think you mean red flag at a bull.’
‘Trust me, I mean tank. And I don’t want to have to watch him kill you over something to do with me.’ She covered her face with her hands. ‘And I know I’ll end up hating you if you hurt my brother—if you hurt him
‘Thank you for that vote of confidence.’
‘I might end up hating Lane, too. And even though I want to
‘So just wait it out for six weeks and don’t hate either of us until our time’s up. You won’t have to see me again and you can mop up the rest any way you want. I’ll even help you do it.’
Her hands dropped, and she regarded him with disbelief. ‘It doesn’t work like that with feelings. You hate people, you like them, you love them, but you do it unconsciously. Even if you’re ambivalent, it’s not something you decide, it just happens.’
‘In my experience, feelings can be controlled.’
‘I don’t believe that.’
‘I’ve seen it, first hand. In fact, I’m adding that topic to the rulebook—controlling one’s emotions. Meanwhile, bluebell, the choice is yours: confess all, or keep me a deep dark secret. Won’t bother me either way.’