Layton settled the tab with the bar waitress and stood, placing his hand on my lower back as he guided me toward the hostess.
“Do you have room for two?” He waved two fingers in the air and either didn’t notice or ignored the brunette’s sneer. He wasn’t New York chic and wasn’t even trying to be, a fact she clearly didn’t appreciate.
“We don’t have a table for two open,” she said with a disdainful sniff. “Sushi bar only.”
“Sushi bar’s great,” I chimed in, narrowing my eyes at the rude waif. “My favorite, actually.”
“Fine. This way.” She grabbed some menus and led us through the labyrinth of a restaurant.
“Wait, one sec,” Layton called as we passed the signature Buddha. He winked at me and pulled me close for a selfie. “Say cheese,” he whispered in my ear. “And take a long time so we really annoy the hostess.”
I guess he did notice her attitude.
Seated at the sushi bar, we ordered another drink and a few rolls based on my recommendations. Layton begged and borrowed for an order of chicken spring rolls, which were not normally served at the bar. His quiet charm won out, and I watched him dip the crispy fried treats into duck sauce.
“About the sushi, I’m sorry. I suggested this place without thinking. I should have been more thoughtful. Italian or something would have been better, but this place, it’s a New York must, and I didn’t think about you.”
He brought his palm over my hand and squeezed. “It’s cool. I said sushi. No worries,” he said, and it felt genuine and honest.
This man was too good to be true. Like a fairy-tale prince, he was rescuing me, not from a villain but from a life of boredom and mediocrity. What if that wasn’t what I wanted? I’d worked so hard for so long for one thing, and one thing only. To get ahead.
So did I want to jump on his horse and ride away?
He enjoyed his food, savored it in a way no one I hung out with did. It was refreshing. I stared at his tongue dart out and lick his lower lip clean, and I had to mentally restrain myself from leaning forward and doing the job for him.
“Here, take one bite. It’s not going to kill you.”
Layton knocked me out of my trance, holding a small bite of spring roll in front of me. My tongue leaped at the chance to share the closest proximity with his fingers; it took every ounce of restraint in my body to keep it from running its tip along his thumb.
Only eat the spring roll
.
I closed my mouth over the morsel and I might have moaned at the salty, fried goodness bathing my tongue in calories—a poor substitute for Layton’s finger.
I should have told Janie what I was doing tonight; she would have talked some sense into me. Maybe I should have listened to my neurotic mother and met Garrett for a drink?
Because here I was having dinner with a man I met on an airplane, a happy-go-lucky, chummy type, warm and affectionate with eyes you could drown in. A guy who liked to make me laugh and shared witty banter; he ate fried food and had probably never taken a spin class in his life.
None of my attraction to him made sense. It was all a jumbled mess in my brain.
“Good, right?” Layton swiped his thumb across my chin, apparently removing a stray crumb.
“Really good.”
“You’re not going to run five extra miles tomorrow, are you?”
What’s with this guy? Does he spy on me?
“Truthfully, I’ll probably be tempted. I’m a fitness editor, Layton. Practice what you preach and all that.”
“I guess I don’t exactly fit the mold of who you normally share dinner with?”
He asked the question quietly, his eyes not meeting mine for the first time since I’d arrived. Instead, he concentrated on the mahogany bar in front of us, running his index finger along the edge—instead of on my knee.
“Layton . . .”
“I know. It was overly optimistic of me to presume I had a chance.”
This time he stared at me, his wavering confidence nothing like the Layton I’d seen thus far. I was beginning to think he wasn’t human with his super-confidence, and this glimpse of his vulnerability only made me want him more.
He lifted his gaze to mine and gave me a small smile. “I just felt like taking a leap, trying for something I really, really wanted. Not something . . . someone. And that person is you, but . . .”
I chugged a healthy gulp of cabernet and when I put down my glass, I released it and bravely forced my hand to move over the dark wood and settle on top of his. We’d been having all these light touches through dinner—our legs brushing against each other, his hand roaming my knee. This shouldn’t have felt electric, but it did.
My smaller palm barely covered his large hand, and the connection when we touched was explosive. Sparks flew between us, spurring me to lean in and kiss his cheek. I kissed the heck out of that cheek, my lips lingering on his scruff.
Oh yeah, did I forget to mention the scruff?
A thin smattering of stubble covered his chin and cheeks—dark and speckled, scratchy and silky, delicious and sinister. It had been calling to me all night.
And I’d just made the first move.
A fireworks display worthy of the Fourth of July above the Hudson erupted from just a kiss on the cheek.
“I’m glad you tried. You leaped,” was all I said, running my thumb over the top of his hand.
An ember burned in my belly, shooting warmth down to my core and back up to my chest. What would his lips taste like? I wanted desperately to know but wasn’t bold enough to make that move. Was I?
Would he?
His thumb wrapped over mine and held my hand steady. “Yeah? I mean, I want it to be true and I’ve been hoping all night. Each time you let me touch you, my confidence grew the tiniest bit, and . . . geez, listen to me running off at the mouth like a girl on Instagram.”
“I’m in a weird place, Lay, but this feels more right than anything else right now.”
“It’s not because I’m a conveniently nice guy, is it?”
He swallowed, and I watched the lump of fear pass his Adam’s apple.
I shook my head. It wasn’t—I refused to believe that’s what this was. I’d never wanted to settle. Now wasn’t the time.
Grinning, he leaned forward and murmured in my ear, “Then this calls for cake.”
“Cake? Really?”
“Really.”
“Well, if we’re going to go all out and I’m going to have run a bunch of miles in the morning to pay for it, how about one of those soft-serves in a cone? Have you seen them, the trucks all over Central Park? The best ice cream in America, and cheap.”
It was my favorite treat, especially on a hot day after a long, long, long run. The type where you set out to do ten miles but ended up doing twelve because it was just so freaking nice out. Never after a date, though.
“Sold. Let me grab the check and we’re out of here.”
Layton captured the attention of the server, paid, and stood again, guiding me out of my chair and out of the restaurant with his hand on my back.
Pushing through the door into the warm New York night, skyscrapers looming over us as we walked toward Central Park South.
“So, this is the real deal?” he asked. “This ice cream?”
Layton’s laugh echoed down the street, and I wanted to snatch it away from anyone else who might have heard it. I felt strangely territorial, wanting to keep his goodness all to myself.
“It’s pretty damn good. Come on.” I tugged his T-shirt, pulling him toward the corner. The hum of the food truck vibrated against traffic, horses clip-clopped and evening runners sped by us, and it was one hundred percent bliss.
“Two cones, swirl, please,” I said to the guy behind the counter, pulling my wallet out of my tote.
“Hey.” Layton swatted my hand. “I’m not that kind of guy. The going-Dutch kind.”
I tossed a twenty on the counter. “Well, I’m that kind of girl. Besides, what kind of Big Apple host would I be if I didn’t buy you a treat from a street vendor?”
I took a long lick of my cone, moaning as the creamy coolness made its way down my throat before I even put my change away.
“I’m not waiting any longer if it’s that good.” Layton brought his tongue out to meet the ice cream, mesmerizing me again.
“Want to walk?” he asked while I shoved my change away and grabbed a light sweater from my bag.
Chills were forming from ingesting the cold ice cream, coupled with the searing heat between us. I put one sleeve on while licking my cone and then switched. It wasn’t even close to being glamorous or seductive, but it was never about that with Layton.
With him, I could be the socially awkward girl who was way too ahead of herself, but was afraid to admit it.
We ended up walking up Central Park South toward Columbus Circle, eating until there was nothing left and swapping stories. Somehow we got stuck on the topic of peanut allergies, I think because of the nut vendors on the street and different people we knew with the ailment. We agreed that while it was serious, the whole not-serving-peanuts-on-an-airplane deal was overboard.
Then again, we weren’t parents, so what the hell did we know? Honestly, it was such meaningless banter yet heavily weighted with meaning, simply because we were doing it. Chatting like a longtime couple with plans for a future and kids with allergies.
At Columbus Circle, I stopped in front of the Time Warner Center. “Pretty sure this is you.”
“It is.”
We stood there quietly, no more laughing over peanuts and long-gone ice cream cones to busy our hands with. After an awkward moment, he broke the silence.
“We could have a drink. You could come up?”
As he watched me, waiting for an answer, I studied him back, nearly sighing at how his brown eyes looked like a warm honey amber against the twinkling skyline.
Oh. My. God. I was a cheesy girl falling for a guy, the star of my own romantic comedy.
“I’d like to,” I answered, grinning from ear to ear. “Want to play me some of the music you heard today?”
His face lit up like the Empire State Building. “You’d want to do that?”
“I would.”
He linked his hand with mine and practically dragged me into the hotel lobby and toward the elevators.
W
e rode to the seventeenth floor and made a right off the elevator. I should have felt awkward going to Layton’s hotel room, but I didn’t.
He stopped outside a corner suite and pulled a key card from his back pocket, then slipped it inside the door and popped the lock open. “Welcome to my humble digs.” He held the door for me, turning the privacy lock after we were both inside.
“Pretty sweet suite,” I joked.
For one or two beats, I wanted to run, to go home and snuggle with Lucy, but then Layton looked at me. Not with his usual smile, but an entirely different expression. It looked like hunger or a need to be close—a look I’d really never experienced before.
“Let’s have a drink.” He took my hand and led me to a small sofa in the sitting area. “Let me see what the minibar has in stock. Sit,” he said, commanding and calming my nerves, but doing little to cool my hormones. “There’s cab or a pinot noir, or would you like something stronger?”
“Cab is good.”
I watched his hands, the ones I was becoming more and more fascinated by, open the travel-sized wine bottle and pour it into a glass and then open a small bottle of Lagavulin and toss it into a lowball glass.
“I always think those minibottles are so cute, like they belong to Barbie or something.”
“I always think they could be a bit bigger,” Layton said, carrying the drinks to the couch. He sat and handed me my wine. “Cheers! Again, I’m damn happy it didn’t end like last time.”
“About that . . .”
“Don’t.” He winked. “Don’t ruin this with an explanation.”
“So, back to la-la land tomorrow?”
He nodded.
“Who’s with the infamous Harriette?”
I wondered if he had someone he was seeing in LA. He was the kind of guy someone snatched up and didn’t share, right? A good, dependable guy. Kind and considerate. Just the right amount of command and take-charge.
“My neighbor. She loves Harriette.”
I felt the corner of my mouth turn up and willed it to change direction. No such luck. Happiness ghosted through my veins.