Page 9 of Patriot


Font Size:

Assuming I remembered the difference between hot and attractive.

* * *

I got to Bottle Evolution at the same time that Michael did, a fact that was not lost on him.

“You’re good with timing, huh?” he said.

“I’m good with doing what I say I’m going to do,” I said. “I told you I was headed there, and here I am. I’m not one of those girls who’s going to play games and say I’ll meet you somewhere and then make you wait half an hour.”

“Well, I appreciate that.”

“Don’t let it go to your head,” I warned. “You’re nice and handsome, but you’re also part of a biker gang.”

“Club.”

“And I’m a doctor but get paid as a nurse,” I said, rolling my eyes.

“I mean, I’ve always had a thing for nurses, but…”

Michael cut himself off, cleared his throat, and apologized.

“That was a bad joke. You didn’t deserve that.”

It was. But it also lodged in my head for some reason.

I had probably been a little too mean right there. I didn’t mind talking shit to guys who deserved it, but Michael had treated me well so far. If he wanted his group to be called a club, well, Michael might have deserved it.

No one else, though.

And the Black Reapers were still a gang, as far as I was concerned. I would just hold my tongue around this guy.

When we got inside, I went immediately for my apple-flavored cider. Michael spent a few minutes looking around, so I told him I would wait for him at a table out back. I quickly paid for my cider before Michael got any ideas, went to the rear, cracked open the bottle at a wooden, long table, and took a sip.

How did I agree to this again? Because I had sympathy for Michael being a nice guy? Now I’m wondering if he and LeCharles planned that on purpose. A whole good cop/bad cop sort of routine.

Just remember to end it all here, and you’ll prevent them from ever talking to you again.

I hope.

I told myself to stop the harsh internal monologue. Being aggressive and firm in what I stood for was fine; choosing to believe nutty, improbable theories because it bolstered my position was walking down a line I didn’t want to find myself in.

Michael came out a few moments later and sat across from me, a smile on his face. Now that I saw him fully before me, no motorcycle equipment on, with his full attention on me, I realized that, well, he was really handsome.

I wasn’t about to admit that out loud, of course. And that didn’t mean anything about how I felt. To me, it was like being in a rich person’s home and seeing a nice painting—I could admire the aesthetics of it, but that didn’t mean I was going to demand to buy the painting.

Remember. Hot? Or attractive?

“Quite the nice night, huh?”

The personality, though, was going to be a little bit tougher to ignore.

“It is,” I said in agreement. “Most of my nights, I just go home and relax.”

“As do I,” he said.

“Really?” I said suspiciously. “I thought bikers got most of their ‘work’ done at night.”

Michael just shrugged casually as he sipped on his porterhouse beer.