at his passenger. Amanda had never said a word about riding in the pickup, but she was obviously comfortable. Even strapped in, sheâd managed to curl her legs under her, had slipped off a sandal.
âThis has been the best day,â she murmured.
âYouâre not kidding.â Heâd been both wary and willing of playing hooky with her. Wary, becauseshe already inspired too many wrong ideas and hormones. And yet willing, becauseâ¦well, because after his ex-wife drove off, heâd still felt the rug burns on his ego.
Nancy had never said the exact words, but her opinion of him was clear. Lawyer or not, great education or not, he was still hopelessly rough-edged. Too earthy. Too physical. Too sexual. Her choosing âGeorgeâ pretty obviously underlined everything sheâd found wrong with him. Maybe heâd achieved stature in a notable law firm, but that didnât give him elegance or taste by her standards.
Amanda was distinctly a woman of elegance and taste. So chances were sheâd discover those rotten qualities and back offâ¦or his own rug burns would make him too wary to get further involved.
All of which was to sayâ¦heâd been able to relax with her today.
Maybe even more than relax. Theyâd had just plain old ordinary fun. Sheâd picked the lunch spot, a place where she got to choose lobster bisque and he could vote for a raw red steak. Their entrees echoed how different they were, but that didnât seem to matter. The restaurant was packed with a professional lunch crowd. All adults. No spills, no screams, no, âI donât want this!â or âAre we done yet?â or âIâm bored, Dad!â
The movie was even better. Sheâd picked the restaurant, so heâd picked the movie. It was the first flickheâd seen in ages that had some skin, some blood, some action. She could eat the chocolate she wanted. He could have his own popcorn. No one whispered in his ear. No one claimed they had to go to the bathroom three times. He actually got to see a movie from start to end.
Itâs not as if this were a dateâ¦.
He wasnât aware heâd spoken aloud, until Amanda chuckled. âOf course it wasnât a date. Weâre not dating. We just had a grown-up afternoon.â She sighed with contentment. âNo Bambi. No comic-book characters. And I had the whole chocolate bar.â
He laughed. âYou had two, I believe.â
âYeah, I admit I went overboardâbut I havenât had a whole chocolate bar to myself inâ¦well, in years. Iâm always trying to think about setting the right example.â She smiled at him again. âThatâs the best part. A whole afternoon without any âshouldsâ or âhave tosâ.â
Damned, if he didnât feel exactly the same way. It was funny, but he hadnât been easy in his own skin for a long time now. Certainly not when he was married. There always seemed to be something he was doing or saying wrong, something that was going to get analyzed and criticized.
It seemed unbelievableâif not downright crazyâthat he could feel that rare sense of easiness with her.
By the time he pulled in his driveway, she was stillsmilingâ¦and so was he. âWe have a couple of hours before the kids are due home,â she said.
âYeah. Both of us might even catch a nap or some reading time.â He climbed out at the same time she did, stretched. Cat and Slugger burst out of the pet door as if they hadnât seen him in a decade. Cat slapped Slugger with a paw when the hound tried to reach him first. Slugger immediately howled, but he couldnât have been hurt too badly, because he kept galloping, ears flapping in the wind.
Amanda laughed and then kept on laughing. âIâm afraid Iâll be greeted the same way when I walk in the door.â
And she turned that wayâ¦but she didnât seem in any rush to race
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