Page 63 of Until It Was Love


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She grins, and the grin turns into a snicker, which turns into a full-on body-rolling laugh.

I lounge back in my seat. “You knew I’d say no.”

She doesn’t answer.

She’s giggling too hard.

Not that she knowswhyI’m saying no.

Dancing with her while I have the rash from hell?

Nope.

Not a fucking chance.

The bottles of wine on our table are empty. I grab her glass. “You want more?”

“Yes, please.”

She doesn’t tell me we can leave.

She doesn’t tell me I have to dance.

She sits there smiling at me as I walk away, looking more relaxed than I’ve seen her all evening.

If I said I had a personal problem, we’d go. But so long as she’s happy here, we’ll stay.

I chat with a former boy band guy and his wife while I’m getting drinks. Neither of them are athletes, but the guy still has visibility because of a solo career, even if it’s on hold for a few years while he puts his family first, so I give him my pitch for getting more attention for the Pounders.

He says he might come to a match.

I leave it at that.

There’s a time to push and a time to shut up.

With my ass itching more by the minute, I’m nowhere close to my most charming.

By the time I get through the line and turn back to the table, Goldie’s not there.

I scan the room and don’t see her.

Bathroom?

Or—no.

There she is.

By the dance floor.

Rigid as the stick up her brother’s ass, talking to a man who’s crowding her too closely and backing her toward a wall.

I see red.

No, red’s too good of a color. Tootame.

Whatever I see, it’s the hellscape version of blood red. A burnt burgundy that I borrowed from the devil himself.

I don’t know where Goldie’s wine goes.