: Chapter 13
The Love Wager
Hallie closed her apartment door and hit the dead bolt. As she kicked off her shoes and dropped her jacket on the floor, she realized she was still smiling. Alex had left her at the door five minutes before, yet the smile was still on her face.
She didnât see Tiggerâheâd been with her for a week now, and every time she came home he was asleep on her pillowâbut that was easy to fix. She walked over to the kitchen, opened the utensil drawer, and took out the can opener. From the bedroom she heard the telltale mrrreow before heavy paws landed on the wood floor and he hightailed it in her direction.
Yes, Tiggerâs superpower was that he could literally hear the clicking sound of the can opener from anywhere on the planet.
âHello, Tiggy,â she said as she crouched down and petted his fuzzy orange head. She still couldnât believe she had a cat, but she was grateful to Ruthie for the whole weird moving-out debacle, because she was head over heels obsessed with Tigger. âLetâs get you some tuna.â
She opened the can and poured the contents into a saucer. Her phone buzzed in her pocket as she turned to toss the container. She expected it to be Alex, but it was Jackâwhoâd been weirdly quiet over the past few days. But perhaps he was as smitten with his PhD girl as she was with Alex and didnât have time to text.
Jack: How was dinner?
She took the phone into the bedroom and plopped down on her bed. OK, so listen to this. I told you Alex made reservations at the Aquarium, right?
Jack: Yepâso fancy.
Hallie: Well, we got there, and there was no reservation and no tables. Alexâs face got all red and he looked pissed.
Jack: Did Jekyll become Hyde over expensive fish?
Hallie: No, Jekyll became fucking Romeo.
Jack: He poisoned you?
Hallie: He went outside and made a phone call, and then asked if I minded going on a walk for a bit.
Jack: So he called his mom to talk him off the rage ledge.
Hallie: Shut up and wait for it. We took a walk, and then after like thirty minutes he led me to an igloo in the park. We went inside and there was heat, twinkling lights, and a picnic blanket on the ground with to-go burgers and fries.
Jack: Shut the fuck up.
Hallie laughed and still couldnât believe it. Right?!
Her phone started ringing as she looked at it, and the second she raised it to her ear she heard Jack say, âAre you telling me that when your reservation fell through, the blond clown arranged a burger picnic in the park?â
âThat is exactly what Iâm telling you!â Hallie flopped back on her bed and closed her eyes. âCan you believe how charming that is?â
He made a noise that sounded like a snort. âIt sounds to me like the guy knew he couldnât get a table and made up the whole reservation story just so he could look charming.â
Hallie opened her eyes and stared up at the ceiling. âThat is ridiculous.â
âAnd youâre home at ten, TB, so obviously there isnât a lot of sexual chemistry there.â
âI know you want that stupid World Series ball, but donât ruin this for me.â Things with Alex were amazing and perfect so far and were exactly what sheâd been looking for. But Jack was a tiny bit right on that front. On paper, Alex was perfect. But sheâd yet to feel any sort of burn for him.
She liked it when he kissed herâhe didnât cram his tongue down her throat or lick her face offâbut it definitely didnât have the these-clothes-must-come-off vibe sheâd had with Jack during that drunken elevator ride.
But that would come.
And probably wasnât all that important to the overall relationship, anyway.
âSorry, sorry.â She heard him clear his throat before he said, âHowâs Tig?â
Hallie rolled over onto her side and grinned. âEverything I could ever want in a bestie.â
His chuckle was deep and raspy, like he was tired. âI should bring him some catnip. I canât give it to Meowgi anymore because he gets too hyper.â
She loved the way he sounded annoyed and in love all at the same time whenever he talked about his kitten.
âYou should. He misses you.â Hallie kind of felt like she did, too, because they hadnât hung out in a while. âHe wants to show you his new place.â
When sheâd gone back to the shelter with Alex to officially adopt Tigger that day, sheâd been shocked to see Jack after sheâd told him he didnât have to come. He said that he was on his way home and just thought heâd swing by to see if she needed any help, and then heâd been surprisingly friendly to Alex as the three of them got her fluffy boy into his carrier.
It had been unexpectedly sweet, and she honestly hadnât known what to make of it.
He said, âIâll be in Minneapolis for the next two weeks on business, but Iâm having dinner with Kayla the Friday I get back. Maybe Iâll swing by afterward.â
âSounds good.â She looked over at the window and at the darkened city beyond it. âHow are things going with Miss PhD, by the way?â
âGood.â He cleared his throat and said, âWeâre both so busy with work that we havenât talked a lot, but good.â
âDinner is promising, though, right?â she asked, wishing heâd share a little more about Kayla. He said things like She seems great, but he never really went into any detail.
âYeah, itâll be great,â he said. âI imagine Iâll be over at your place around ten, if that works.â
Itâll be great. What did that mean? She said, âWe can DoorDash ice cream and watch a movie.â
âItâs a date,â he said.
Hallie turned her eyes back to the ceiling. Itâs a date. She wondered, not for the first time, if she was being honest, what it would be like to actually date Jack. She didnât want toâshe loved their friendshipâbut sheâd be lying if she said she didnât think of their hot hotel sex and their Pride & Prejudice moment in her living room from time to time.
They ended the call not long after that, and then Alex called her.
She liked talking to him, really, but she couldnât help but notice their conversations lacked the fun that always accompanied a call with Jack. It was probably an unfair comparison, though, because no one had the easy banter she and Jack had. They were friends, which was what made it so comfortable and natural, and she and Alex were still becoming something.
It had nothing to do with Jack, and everything to do with their newness.
Easy explanation.
Jack was waiting for the hotel elevator when his phone buzzed. It was Hallie.
Hallie: Help! Going to dinner and canât choose.
The picture that followed was of two pairs of shoesâ high-heeled black boots and a pair of black pumps.
The elevator doors opened, and Jack stepped inside before texting her back.
Jack: Depends on the outfit.
Hallie: Okay, one sec.
As he rode the elevator down to the lobby, he had a hard time not smiling, picturing Hal hopping on one foot as she tried putting on her shoes quickly.
She texted: Option #1.
It was a picture of the whole outfit, and he did smile then. Hallie looked gorgeous in a black dress, tall boots, and red lipstick, but her tongue was out and her eyes were crossed.
The doors opened and Jack started walking toward the lobby.
Jack: Boots are sexy, that face is not.
Hallie: How about this sexiness?
She included a close-up of her ridiculous face.
Jack: Hot. #2 please.
Jack exited out into the chilly fall evening and started in the direction of his favorite bar. Heâd always loved downtown Minneapolis, and for some reason, it smelled and felt even better while he was texting Hallie.
He didnât know how itâd happened, but sheâd completely taken over his brain.
Every morning when he went for a run, she was what he was thinking about.
And he spent way too much time every day trying to figure out what the hell to do about it. Because the bottom line was that even though he had feelings for her beyond friendship, it might not be worth it to do anything about it if that meant risking everything else they had.
Which explained why he was helping her get dressed for a date instead of asking her to go on one with him.
He was halfway to the pub before she texted back: Hereâs #2.
It was a photo of Hallie wearing heels, the outfit both elegant and smoking hot. Her eyes were half-closed, in an exaggerated sexy face and ridiculous pout.
Jack: #1 is my fave but #2 is classy if youâre going for that. And also donât make that face.
Hallie: I will go with 1 because itâs just dinner. And I thought I looked sexy AF.
Jack gritted his teeth as he remembered what this was for. Duh.
Jack: Going out with Alex?
Hallie: I really think youâd like him if you gave him a chance.
He dialed her number, and she was laughing when she answered. âYou would, Jack.â
God, it was pathetic, the way the sound of her voice shot through him like a buzz. âDoubtful. Where are you going?â
She said the name of a restaurant heâd never heard of, and he said, âNo matter how good the food is, donât put out. The third-date rule is bullshit and you shouldnât cave to that pressure.â
What in the fuck was that? He kind of wanted to punch himself in the face for that one.
âWhat are you, fifteen?â She was laughing and outraged all at the same time, he could tell. âI will put outâgross, by the wayâif I feel like it, thank you very much.â
He knew it was immature, but the thought of her kissing Alex made his gut hurt. Hell, the thought of her kissing any man made his gut hurt. He wasnât sure how heâd gone from zero to full-bore feelings for Hal, but it made him feel like a bit of a shit show. âI just meant that he seems a little slick to me and I want you to be careful.â
âAwww,â she said, her voice teasing and quiet. âItâs so adorable when you make me want to hug you and throat-punch you all at the same time.â
âThatâs my sweet spot,â he said, trying to force himself to stop thinking about her and Alex.
âWhat are you doing tonight?â she asked.
âWalking to a bar to eat in solitude.â
âMaybe youâll meet someone,â she said, sounding ridiculously cheery.
âNah,â he said.
âWhy not? You donât like Minnesota girls?â
âI donât like meeting strangers in bars.â
âIâm sorryâwhat?â
âSeriously.â
âThe judges need clarification. Jack Marshall, man known to get freaky in hotel elevators with red-hot bartenders he doesnât know, doesnât like picking up chicks in bars?â
âIâve always thought it was creepy.â
She sounded amused when she said, âPlease explain.â
âIt just seems idiotic to see someone and decide you like their appearance enough to start a conversation. It feels so . . . ?â
âSuperficial?â
âBingo.â
âI have to go put on makeup, but Iâm intrigued by this side of you. So youâre saying it seems wrong to select a possible mate by their looks without considering their brain first?â
âYou have a way with words, and yes.â
âWow, I might be a little turned on by this feministic outlook on the bar scene,â she teased. âText me later if youâre bored, okay?â
âOkay.â He cleared his throat and said, âHave fun.â
âBut not too much fun, right? Not putting out fun?â
âYouâre such a little shit,â he said with a laugh.
He ended the call as he walked into McKennaâs. He bellied up to the bar, where heâd always sat with his uncle Mack, and ordered a burger and a beer.
He looked aroundâit was starting to get busy for happy hourâand thought how weird it was being there without him.
In the past, Jack had loved it when work sent him to the Twin Cities, because itâd been an excuse to stay with his favorite uncle and hang out. Mack lived in the building above the bar, so McKennaâs had felt like his own personal kitchen. Every time Jack crashed there, he and Mack hit the bar for nearly every meal.
Everyone who walked through the door seemed to know Mack, and everyone who worked there treated him like family. He was like a beloved icon, the person who made life come alive when he entered a room.
And every time Jack visited, Mack had had a different girlfriend.
They all had one thing in common, though: They were fun.
Every girl Mack had ever introduced him to had been beautiful, funny, and down to have a good time. Jack had grown up watching the guy and wanted to be just like him. Heâd wondered countless times over the years why anyone would rush to get married and settle down when you could live like that.
Mack wasnât the life of the partyâMack was the party, wherever he went.
âHere.â The bartender set down Jackâs food and said, âNeed ketchup?â
Jack looked at the man and didnât recognize him. âNo, thanks.â
As he unrolled the utensils with the napkin wrapped around them and watched the TV behind the bar, he found it surreal that there wasnât some sort of accounting of the time his uncle had spent there, some kind of tribute to the man whoâd been more mascot than customer.
A plaque, a picture, a retired barstoolâthere was nothing.
No evidence Uncle Mack had ever been there.
It was like heâd never existed.
Taking a long pull from his pint, Jack thought back to the wake. The whole family had been at the mortuary, hanging out at the visitation and sharing stories, but no one else had shown up. He hadnât realized at first because the family was so big, but none of Mackâs friends, no one from the bar, none of his girlfriendsânot a single person from Mackâs daily life had shown up to pay their respects.
It still pissed him off, and as he ate his dinner and the place thrummed with early-evening energy, he got more pissed for Mack. It was honestly depressing, that his uncle thought heâd been tight with his friends and this bar. Had he been wrong? Had they all humored him but didnât really give a shit? The women who had fawned over himâwhat were their stories? Where had they disappeared to?
As much as his mom liked to refer to her brother as a âhopeless bachelor,â Mack had been more than that. Heâd been the kindest, funniest, most generous person Jack had ever met, but since heâd chosen not to settle down, his life was just written off as less valuable.
Damn, Jack thought. He was getting far too introspective sitting here alone, and he needed more beer.
He finished his dinner, pounding a few beers while glaring at everyone who dared to hang out in that bar and watch football. All of a sudden, the place heâd considered to be one of his favorite restaurants in the world sucked. He didnât want to be at that asshole bar anymore, so as soon as the game ended, he paid his tab and went back to his hotel.
He was walking into his room when Hallie texted.
Hallie: Whatcha doin?
He dropped his key card, stepped out of his shoes, and fell back onto the bed.
Jack: Just got back.
Hallie: That was a long dinner. Did you meet someone?
Jack: The only person I met was the bartender who took my order.
Hallie: That sounds lonely.
Her text made him feel a little lonely. He texted: The whole night was weird. I donât really want to get into it, but letâs just say I used to love this place because my uncle was here, and now heâs not, so it feels like shit.
His phone started ringing, and it did something to his chest when he saw her name on the display. He answered with, âPiper. I said I donât want to talk about it.â
âI know,â she said, and he could hear the smile in her voice. âWhich is why Iâm calling. I thought Iâd tell you about my night.â
âLay it on me.â He got up and walked over to his suitcase. âTell me everything.â
âOkay. So.â She cleared her throat, and he heard her cat meow in the background. âAlex picked me up and took me to the restaurant. It was nice, the wine was good, and then he ordered a vegan cheese ball as an appetizer and wanted me to try it.â
âIs he vegan?â
âNo, heâs just had it before and itâs really good.â
âYou didnât try it, did you?â There was no way that picky Hallie had tried a vegan cheese ball.
âHe really wanted me to take a bite, so I did. I took the teeniest, tiniest little bite.â
âAnd . . . ?â He pulled his shirt over his head and reached for the button on his jeans. âHow was it?â
âI donât know, because about thirty seconds after I tried it, my throat got scratchy. Then my cheeks got red and my neck got blotchy.â
âYouâre allergic?â Jack stopped undressing. âAre you okay?â
âIâm okay now.â She sounded tired. âBut I learned tonight that Iâm violently allergic to cashews, which were apparently a core ingredient in the vegan cheese.â
âHoly shit.â He shucked off his jeans, dropped them into his suitcase, and went back over to the bed. âWhat happened? You sure youâre okay?â
âAlex had to take me to the ER, and Iâm pretty sure he heard me puking my guts out into a barf cone as I waited for the doctor.â
âHoly shit,â he said, wishing heâd been there to help her. âAlso, what is a barf cone?â
âThe nurse handed me this thing that was like a cardboard circle with a long, latex reservoir attachedâbarf cone. Vomit condom.â
He started laughing, in spite of his foul mood and the fact that sheâd had a health scare. âIâm so sorry you had to use the retch receptacle.â
âItâs okay . . . that I went HAM on the puke pocket.â
âI wouldâve held your hair,â he said, still laughing. âIf Iâd been there.â
âWell, I wouldâve eaten with you so you werenât lonely, if Iâd been there,â Hallie said, and her words did something to him. For fuckâs sake, she did something to him.
He cleared his throat and said, âSo howâs the cat?â
âJack, heâs amazing. How is it that I lived my entire life without him, but now, just like that, I canât even remember the before? Does that sound crazy, to be attached that fast?â
âNo,â he said, sitting down on the bed. âIt doesnât sound crazy at all.â