“I think she likes you, bro.” Zane winked at me and I shook my head.
“Yeah, right.”
“I bet she wants to take you in the back and—”
“Zane!” Lucky’s voice was impatient. “Is that what you thought about me when you first starting coming to Lou’s?”
“Of course.” He grinned. “I knew you wanted to do me the first day you met me.”
“You’re gross.” Lucky punched him in the arm. “More like you wanted to do me.”
“Of course.” He laughed. “I saw you doing the cha cha cha, and I was hooked.”
“I was learning salsa steps.” Lucky smiled at him indulgently.
“Yeah, whatever.” Zane pulled her towards him and kissed her. “I don’t care what steps you were doing, all I knew was that I wanted to be the one you were doing them with.”
“So you wanted me to take you to the back and have my wicked way with you.”
“I would have been overjoyed.” He grinned.
“What about your date?”
“What about her?” He laughed again and kissed her on the nose. “Now, what’s this about you not wanting to share a bleu cheese burger? I thought you loved them.”
“I do love them and we can share, but you can’t just place an order and expect that I’m going to be okay with it without you asking me first.”
“Are you joking right now?” Zane’s eyes popped open and he spoke slowly. “You do want to share and you do want the bleu cheese burger, but you sent Robin away because you wanted to be difficult.”
“I wasn’t being difficult,” Lucky rolled her eyes at him. “I wanted you to ask …”
“Okay, okay.” Zane raised his hand and put on a puppy-dog face as he cut her off. “I get it.”
“You guys done?” I interrupted them both. “I’ve a feeling Robin is going to have a heart attack if we don’t order and get out of here soon.”
“She does seem a little bit intense.” Lucky giggled and made a face.
“Hey, guys, are you ready?” Robin walked back up to the table and dropped off a basket of bread. “I thought you guys could have some French rolls on the house.”
“I told you. She wants you.” Zane mouthed at me and I tried not to laugh. “You should ask her out.”
“Ask her out to do what? Kill me?”
“Ask her out on a d-a-t-e.”
“Yeah, right.” I grimaced. “That’s never going to happen.”
“I have a friend that you may …” Lucky started and Zane gave her a look. “Okay, okay. Leeza’s out.” She half sighed and gave me a smile. “So what kind of girls do you like, Noah?”
“Ones that don’t want to kill me.” I joked, but I couldn’t laugh. My mind drifted back to Palm Bonita and Skylar. I could still see the pain in her eyes at our last meeting. I’d never forget our last conversation.
“Do you love me?” Her words were soft but sharp, as her eyes had stared into mine with intensity.
“I love you.” I had said simply and honestly.
“Then take me with you.” She’d pleaded, and her eyes were moist.
“I can’t do that.” I shook my head and turned away from her.
“I hate you,” she’d whispered, and then she’d pushed past me and run away from me. I hadn’t tried to stop her, even though I had wanted to. I wanted to run after her and beg her to understand that my decision wasn’t one I wanted to make. It was one I had to make. But I knew that in her world, it didn’t make a difference. I’d broken her heart and betrayed her, like every other man. And I’d just walked away. That was the thing with love: sometimes, no matter how badly you wanted to be with someone and take care of them, there were obstacles that were beyond your control. Sometimes you had to know when to walk away.
“Noah, you okay?” Lucky reached across the table and squeezed my hand. I looked up at her and blinked a few times to remember my bearings. “You drifted away there for a moment.”
“Sorry.” I said weakly, all humor gone from my tone. “I was just remembering someone.”
“Someone special?” Lucky and Zane both looked at me with curious expressions, and I was about to answer when Robin came back to the table. I waited until she had taken our orders before I continued.
“A girl I met while I was away.” I nodded. “The day I arrived, actually.”
“Will you tell us about her and about Palm Bonita?” Lucky bit her lower lip and stared at me searchingly, hoping that I was willing to give some answers.
“Palm Bonita is one of those cities that you think of when you think of old Wild West movies.” I stared at her, as I started talking. “It’s this small town that seems to be stuck in the early 1940s. There’s this air of terror and anarchy in the city. Nobody cares about rules, yet nobody wants to be seen to not care about the rules. The people who move to Palm Bonita are the dregs of the country.”
“You moved there and you’re not the …” Lucky started and I smiled at her ruefully.
“I’m not a saint, but you’re right, I didn’t fit in with the other people who had made Palm Bonita their home. And they could tell.” I sighed as I thought back to my many acrimonious interactions with people from Palm Bonita. “But I met someone pretty early on, and she was a bright light in a very dark town. A town that was made darker because I was in a bad spot in my life.” I stared at Zane. “I’m still not sure if I made the right decision by doing what I did, but it’s all done now. I can’t change it.”
“If that’s an apology, it’s pretty weak, Noah.” Zane raised his eyebrows at me and I knew he still hadn’t forgiven me.
“It’s not an apology. I’m just saying I was in a bad place when I got to Palm Bonita. I wasn’t sure how long I would have to stay there, and it was a weird experience having to disappear.” My eyes glazed over as I spoke and thought about the loneliness and boredom that occupied my mind in the first few months. “Anyways, I met someone and she gave me some hope, and a life. We became friends and pretty quickly we became more than that. But she wasn’t who I thought she was.”
“A wolf in sheep’s clothing, huh?”
“No,” I shook my head. “She was a wolf in wolf’s clothing.” I laughed bitterly. “She didn’t try and hide who she was. I was the idiot for thinking she was someone different.”