Robertâs eyes meet mine. âSo he brought her here to make you jealous?â
âI donât know; itâs not working. Well, I am jealousâI mean, look at her. Sheâs wearing the same dress as I am, and she looks way better in it.â
âNo; no, she doesnât,â he says quietly, and I smile, thanking him.
âWe were getting along fine until yesterday. Well, fine for us. And then we got in a fight this morningâbut we always fight. I mean, we fight all the time, so I donât know what it is about this fight thatâs so different, but it is. Itâs different; it doesnât feel like the rest of our fights, and now heâs ignoring me the way he used to when we first met.â I realize that Iâve been speaking more to myself than to this stranger with curious blue eyes. âI sound insane, I know I do. Itâs the wine.â
The corners of his lips turn into a smile, and he shakes his head. âNo, not insane at all.â Robert smiles, which brings a little laugh out of me. With a nod at my table, he says, âHeâs looking at you.â
My head snaps up to look. Sure enough, Hardinâs eyes are on me and my new shrink, eyes that burn into me and make me literally flinch at their intensity.
âYou should probably go inside,â I warn him. Iâm expecting Hardin to get up from the table at any time, to rush out here and throw Robert over the deck and into the woods.
He doesnât, though. He remains still, his fingers wrapped around the stem of a wineglass as he looks at me one last time before lifting his free hand and resting it across the back of Lillianâs chair. Oh God. My chest tightens at his callous action.
âIâm sorry,â Robert says.
Iâd almost forgotten he was next to me.
âItâs fine, really. I should be used to it. Iâve been playing these games with him for six months now.â I cringe at the truth, cursing myself for not learning my lesson after one month, or two, or threeâyet here I am outside with a stranger watching as Hardin shamelessly flirts with another girl. âI donât know why Iâm telling you all of this. Iâm sorry.â
âHey, Iâm the one who asked,â he kindly reminds me. âAnd weâve got plenty more wine, if you want some.â His smile is kind and playful.
âI certainly will need more.â I nod and turn away from the window. âDo you get this a lot? Half-drunk girls whining about their boyfriends?â
He chuckles. âNo, actually, itâs usually rich old men complaining that their steak isnât medium rare.â
âLike the guy at my table, the one in the red tie.â I gesture to Max. âGod, heâs a jerk.â
Robert nods in agreement. âYeah, he is. No offense, but anyone who sends a salad back because it has âtoo many olivesâ is a jerk by definition.â
We both laugh, and I cover my mouth with the back of my hand, then worry that the laughter will bring some of my tears out.
âRight! Heâs so serious, too, like he gave us this massive speech on his well-considered reasoning about olives after that.â I deepen my voice to try to mimic the annoying girlâs annoying father. â?âToo many olives overpowers the delicate yet earthy taste of the arugula.â?â
Robert bursts out laughing, doubling over. Hands on his knees, he looks up, and asks in a voice much closer to Maxâs than mine was, â?âCould I have four? Three just will not do, and five is far too manyâit simply does not balance the flavor palate!â?â
I lose myself in laughter to the point that my stomach is aching. I donât know how long it lasts, but I hear a door open suddenly, and Robert and I both instinctively stop and look up . . . to see Hardin standing in the doorway.
I stand up straight, smoothing my dress. I canât help but feel like I was doing something wrong, even though I know that I wasnât.
âAm I interrupting something?â Hardin barks, commanding all attention.
âYes,â I respond, my voice coming out as clear as I was hoping. My breath is still staccato from laughing so hard, my head is swimming from the wine, and my heart is aching over Hardin.
Hardin looks to Robert. âApparently.â
Robertâs face still holds a smile, his eyes alight with humor as Hardin tries his best to intimidate him. But he doesnât falter, he doesnât even blink. Even he has had enough of Hardinâs shitâand heâs trained to always be nice. But here, out of earshot of the rest of the diners, he doesnât seem to have a problem showing his amusement at Hardinâs absurd attitude.
âWhat do you want?â I ask Hardin. When he turns to me, his mouth is pressed in a hard line.
âGet inside,â he demands, but I shake my head. âTessa, donât play these games with me. Letâs go.â
He reaches for my arm, but I yank it away and stand my ground. âI said no. You go back insideâIâm sure your friend misses you,â I hiss.
âYou . . .â Hardin looks back to Robert. âYou should really be the one to go inside. Our drinks are in need of refilling,â he says, then snaps his fingers in the most insulting way possible.
âIâm off, actually. But Iâm sure you can charm someone else into taking care of your drinks,â Robert says with a shrug.
Hardinâs stance falters momentarily; heâs not used to anyone talking back to him, especially not strangers.
âOkay, let me rephrase this . . .â He steps toward Robert. âGet the fuck away from her. Get inside and find something fucking else to do before I grab you by that fucking ridiculous collar and bash your head against that ledge.â