hadnât refused him, either.
It was enough to get him on the move again, and he slowly crossed the street. It gave him time to consider why he was so bent on taking that night theyâd shared out of the serendipitous column.
One answer: he hadnât felt right about the single shag aspect. His father always emphasized treating the opposite sex with the utmost respect, and buying a girl some birthday drinks, then sweet-talking her into a hotel room, and then basically going near-cadaver on her after the deed was done didnât feel very honorable.
Another answer: because something told him any subsequent nights with her might just be stupendous.
It was that simple.
Or not. Because when he opened the dinerâs door, Tilda stood in the frame, clearly on her way out. God, their timing sucked.
They both sidestepped to avoid a collision of their bodiesâbut they sidestepped in the same direction, their actions becoming a dance move.
That night, back in May, sheâd taught him how to two-step.
In sixth grade his mother had sent him to Mr. Prestonâs School of Manners. Honest to God, they called it that. Boys and girls had to put on fancy clothes and learn to address each other as if they were people from the era of Mad Men . Boys wore stiff shoes. The girls wore gloves.
There, heâd learned to fox-trot and waltz, keeping his body a precise number of inches from his partnerâand his elbow ached just remembering the required angle necessary to keep that precise distance. The music had come out of an old-fashioned boom box and not once after that sixteen-week experience had he ever danced again. At the dances after football games in high school heâd lounged at the back of the gym with his buddies.
In college, on Friday nights heâd hung in his dorm room or apartment and got buzzed on beer like every other normal student.
So last May, when sheâd pulled him onto the dance floor heâd been two left feet and very little rhythm.
But her laugh had distracted himâdelighted himâand it hadnât taken him long to get the hang of quick-quick, slow slow. Theyâd moved together counterclockwise around the dance floor and heâd not thought about his feet or the hokey country ballad or his odd outsider status.
Heâd only thought about getting closer to Tilda.
The same urge overtook him now.
As he moved closer, she moved backâdancing again!âand the door swung shut behind him.
Ash stared into her beautiful face, her cheeks just the slightest bit pink, making her green eyes stand out all the more. Her lashes were long and curly and her mouth... Oh, God, he remembered how soft and sweet it was to kiss.
The memory muddled his good sense.
All his life heâd been taught to use his head by the man he esteemed above all others. Think things through, Ash! his father always warned. Consider first, talk second had been drummed into him from an early age.
Strategizing had become second nature. But when it came to Tilda, he wanted only to obey his instincts.
Be with me. The words were on the tip of his tongue. Be mine.
But he curled his fingers into fists and exhorted himself to take it slow and not overwhelm the girl. Go out with me. Heâd start with that.
âTildaââ
âI never expected to see you again,â she said in a rush, preempting him. âEspecially not nowâin winter. Guys like you...theyâre summer guys.â
âSummer guys?â
She shrugged. âTemporary. Vacationers.â
âMy parents had a place here they primarily used in the warmer months. But upon retiring, last spring they bought a new house, and theyâve moved here permanently. My mom loves the mountains.â
Tilda crossed her arms over her body, hugging herself as if she were cold. âAnd your dad?â
âLoves my mom and will do anything that makes her happy.â It was his turn to shrug. âThey still have a
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