Opposites Ignite Sadira Stone (drm ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Sadira Stone
Book online «Opposites Ignite Sadira Stone (drm ebook reader .TXT) đ». Author Sadira Stone
While Eddie hurried off to do Dawnâs bidding, she turned to Rosie. âBoth the mamas here? You two making an announcement tonight?â
Rosieâs heart stuttered to a standstill. âWhat? No! Weâre justââ
âDonât give me that âjust friendsâ bullshit.â Dawn snorted. âMust be something in the water here. First Charlie and River, now you two.â
âI swear, Dawn, thereâs nothing going on between Eddie and me. Yesterday, my mom was telling me about how she loved coming here back in the day, and tonight she just showed up with her work friend.â
âFeels like Iâm the captain of the freakinâ Love Boat.â She waved Rosie off. âGo on, get to your customers. Hopefully, they donât want any gin.â
Biting her lip, she returned to her station, sending Charlie to take care of her momâs table.
âThey okay over there?â Rosie asked when Charlie returned to the server station.
Charlie flashed a wry grin. âReal chummy. Your mom didnât know you were dating Eddie. Mrs. Volkov cleared that right up. Seems real fond of you but a little freaked out about your ink.â
âGod help me.â
An hour later, the moms were still chatting and laughing, though Ms. Watson had left.
Lana passed, her tray filled with empties. âWhereâs Eddie? These tables are a mess.â
Good question. He must be hiding out from his over-protective momânot that she blamed him. She glanced around. No sign of him, butâoh crap. Dawn had joined the moms at their table. She waved her ball cap and hollered, âRosie.â
Rosie gulped and made her way toward them, her mind racing from stupid explanation to pointless excuse. Her lies had come home to roost.
Dawn rose from her bar stool and thumped Rosieâs back. âDarlinâ, get these fine ladies a plate of tots on the house.â She slung her arm around Rosieâs shoulders and towed her toward the bar. âThose two are getting pretty tiddly on gimlets. Some greasy carbs will stop the slide. And you better get your man over there and answer some questions. The longer you wait, the worse itâll be.â
âDawn, I swearââ
âGet your stories straight.â
Like a wide-eyed prairie dog, Eddie popped up from behind the bar, spotted the boss and Rosie whispering, and ducked back down.
Dawn clucked her tongue. âEddie, get your skinny ass over here.â
Shoulders hunched, he shuffled toward them.
Dawn slung her other arm over his shoulders and drew the two of them into the hallway. âListen, you two, youâre grown-ass adults and responsible for your own decisions. But I do not appreciate being lied to.â She drilled each of them with a stern glare. âYouâre more than employees, youâre family. And while I donât approve of coworkers dating, Iâm not going to fire you for it. Unless it gets in the way of your work. When youâre here, minds on the customers. No drama. Got it?â
They both nodded.
âNow go sort things out with your mamas before they get so drunk they fall off their barstools.â
Eddie croaked, âBut you just saidââ
âGet the tots and go.â Dawn strode back to her office.
âNow what?â Eddie clutched his head as if trying to keep his skull from exploding.
âWe tell them the truth?â
âWhat truthâthat we spent one drunk night together?â
Her chili dog curdled in her stomach. âWell, that is the truth, I guess.â
He grasped her shoulders. âRosie, my parents are old-fashioned. They wonât understand.â The plea in his chestnut eyes plucked hard at her guilt strings.
âSo, whatâwe pretend to be dating? For how long?â
âI dunno. A few weeks? Long enough for me to think up a good reason for us to break up.â
âYou mean, like how weâre as different as two people could possibly be?â
âSomething like that.â He grasped her hands and wove his fingers between hers, filling her chest with happy, buzzing bumblebeesâtotally inappropriate, and not at all helpful. When would her body catch up with her brain and realize Eddie was not the guy for her?
âCome on, Rosie, my grandmother saw us together in my apartment. If we break up now, sheâll think I used you for a one-night stand. Sheâll lose all respect for me. Please, just play along a little longer.â
She untangled her fingers from his and huffed, âOkay, okay. I helped caused this mess. Iâll help clean it up.â
Grinning, he pecked her cheek. âItâll work out. Now, whatâll we tell them?â
After a moment of strategizing, they linked hands and made their way across the bar floor. As they passed the front door, Jojo snorted. âJust friends, huh?â
Rosieâs mom slapped the table when she caught sight of them. âHere they are, our sweet babies.â
Dawn wasnât kiddingâthese women were well sauced. Empty glasses littered the table. She hadnât seen her mom this plastered since the last presidential election.
âShh, Ma. No need to yell.â She squeezed Eddieâs hand for good luck. âThis is Eddie. Weâre, uh, kind ofââ
âIn love!â Alina hooted. She lifted her glass, hooked her heels on the rungs of her barstool, and rose, wobbling precariously. âA toast, to young love.â
âMama, sit down!â Eddie hissed through clenched jaws.
Too late. All around them, customers raised glasses in a toast to their make-believe love affair.
Rosie groaned and dropped her head onto Eddieâs shoulder. âWe are in deep shit,â she murmured.
âLeave it to me,â he whispered, then extended his hand. âMrs. Chu, itâs an honor to meet you.â
She waved away his formality. âItâs Diana. And I go by Callas, much to the dismay of my in-laws.â
Alina nodded. âWhy not? Nothing wrong with a woman using her own name. Itâs the twenty-first century, right?â
Diana leaned an elbow onto the table. âWhatâs your family name, Alina?â
âPreobrazhensky.â She hiccupped, then giggled. âVolkov is easier. So, Miss Rosie, tell me about all these tattoos.â
âOh, I, uhââ
Mom sighed. âI told her to keep them in places she could cover up, but did she listen?â Her speech had developed a distinct slur. âBaby girl, people are gonna get the wrong idea about you. Theyâll think youâre some kind ofââ
Rosie felt her jaw tighten. âSome kind of what, Ma? Criminal? Drug addict?â
Eddie wrapped his arm around her shoulder. âI think theyâre
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