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“I am now.”

Laney eyes me.

I give her a slight shrug and hope she interprets it asif he were the same guy he’d been in Hawaii, I’d have a chance.

There are moments when I feel like he’s the same, quietly watching me and taking me all in. And then the next minute, he’s closed off and guarded.

No heart-stopping, crinkly blue-eyed smiles. No pushing to know more about me. No insisting he’s a truly terrible person at heart while he pauses to pick up a piece of trash or tell someone he loves her shirt.

“You ever talk to Chandler?” I ask Devi.

Her brown eyes sparkle in amusement. “So you’renottotally off gossip.”

“I haven’t seen him since the wedding. I haven’t even heard anyone’s seen him since the wedding, and I’m frankly pretty happy about that. Just wondering if—whenI should brace myself for a confrontation. Since the Bean & Nugget situation is his fault.”

“I’m on gossip,” Laney says to Devi. “You can tell me everything. Have you talked to him? I want to know how he set up this sale so quietly and how he knows this—ah!”

Jitter clamors to his feet under the table and bumps her leg.

“Jitter,” I say softly. “Down, boy.”

He ignores me and strains on his leash.

At the same time, I realize a slight hush has fallen over the restaurant.

And then there’s the tickle between my shoulder blades filling in the rest of the blanks before I spot the tall figure towering over everyone else.

Grey’s here.

He’s paused just inside the doorway, looking around at the clumps of people gathered between the tables like this is a private party.

“It’s the new café owner,” goes through the dining room in a lightning-fast whisper.

“Holyhotness,” Devi breathes as she turns to look.

“He is—wow,” Laney adds, twisting as much as she can with her leg still sticking out on a spare chair to get a better view herself.

“Personality,” I remind her.

She smirks. “Okay, Ms. Good Deeds.”

“Mr. Greyson,” Nani Parvati calls. “You come in. Come have dinner. Meet my grandson and granddaughter-in-law-to-be. Have dinner.”

“Nani, you said ‘have dinner’ twice,” Devi’s brother says.

“It’s the most important.”

Everyone laughs.

Everyone except Grey.

He’s in jeans and a button-down oxford under his thick wool coat, wearing gloves and his beanie and that beard that he’s growing out, and he’s more deer-in-the-headlights than I’ve seen him since I rescued him in Hawaii.

“Dammit,” I mutter while the locals descend on him.

“What’s he doing here?” Devi whispers. “You have food at Bean & Nugget.”

“He came from San Diego,” Laney whispers back. “He’s probably used to more options for dinner than soup, sandwiches, and pastries.”