Page 39 of Hold the Line


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"I've never been on one."

"A date?"

"With a guy, I mean."

The sentence sat between us. Simple, yet enormous.

"Me neither," I said.

"So this is our first date." Liam smiled.

"Technically our first date was Penny's."

Liam's head whipped toward me. "Penny's was not a date."

"You took me to your favorite restaurant. You ordered for me. You wiped syrup off my face with your thumb," I said.

Liam squeezed my hand. "That was—I was being helpful. You had blueberry all over your—"

"You touched my face."

He was grinning. Fighting it, losing. "Penny's was not a date. We were friends."

"We were coworkers who couldn't stop staring at each other." I shot a look towards him. "And you told her I was just a coworker. Not even a friend. Coworker."

"You were both."

"Either way Liam, you wiped food off my face."

"You keep coming back to that."

"Because it was the moment I knew."

That stopped him. The grin fading into something quieter. He looked at me.

"Knew what?" he asked.

"That you were going to be a problem."

He was quiet for a second. The road humming under us. Trees blurring gold.

"The pancakes were life-changing though," he said finally. "I wasn't wrong about that."

"You weren't wrong about that."

"So fine. Penny's was... a pre-date. An audition."

"An audition."

"Yeah. And you passed."

"Damn straight I passed."

"Barely." He squeezed my hand. "But yeah. You passed."

I squeezed back. The road stretched ahead of us.

He was grinning. But then it faded—not into sadness, just into something more honest.