âIâll give you a few minutes to look over the menu, and if you have any questions about the dishes, my name is Robert,â the server says. His eyes meet mine, and his mouth opens slightly before he looks away quickly, only to look back at me. Itâs this dress and the damn cleavage. I offer a small, awkward smile, and he returns it, red creeping up his neck and spreading to his cheeks.
I expect him to look at Hardin, but then I remember that due to the way weâre seated, itâs Landon and I that look like a couple, and Hardinâs with Lillian. My stomach flips again.
âHey, man. Take our order, or go,â Hardin says, interrupting my thoughts.
âS-sorry,â Robert stammers and leaves the table in haste.
All eyes move to Hardin, mostly showing disapproval of his behavior. Karen looks embarrassed; Ken, too.
âDonât worry, heâll be back. Itâs his job,â Max says with a shrug. He would think Hardinâs behavior was acceptable.
I scowl at Hardin, but he doesnât seem to care, heâs too infatuated by those damn blue eyes. As I watch him with her I feel like heâs a stranger to me, as if Iâm intruding on some private moment shared between a loving couple. The thought causes bile to rise in my throat. I swallow it down, and Iâm thankful when the server, Robert, returns with the wine and ice buckets, this time bringing another server along, likely for moral support. Or protection.
Hardin watches him the entire time, and I roll my eyes at his audacity: glaring at the poor guy when here he is, acting as if he doesnât know me at all.
Nervously, Robert fills my glass to the brim, and I quietly thank him. He smiles less shyly this time and moves to fill Landonâs. Iâve never seen Landon drink except at Ken and Karenâs wedding, and even then he only had one glass of champagne. If I wasnât so distraught over Hardinâs behavior, Iâd turn down the wine and not drink in front of Ken and Karen, but Iâve had a long day, and without the wine I donât think I be able to make it through this dinner.
Ken covers the top of his glass and says, âNo, thank you,â when Robert comes his way.
I look up at Hardin to make sure he isnât readying a snide remark about his father, but once again heâs talking quietly to Lillian.
Iâm so confused right nowâwhy is he doing this? Yes, we were fighting, but this is too much.
Taking a big sip, I find that the wine is cool and crisp and deliciously sweet on my tongue. Iâm tempted to just gulp it all down, but I have to pace myself. The last thing I need is to get drunk and emotional in front of everyone. Hardin doesnât decline the wine, but Lillian does. He rolls his eyes at her, teasing her, and I force my eyes away from them before I turn into a puddle of tears on the beautifully stained hardwood floor.
â. . . MAX WAS scaling the wallâhe was so drunk that he had to be pulled down by campus security!â Ken says, and everyone at our table laughs.
Everyone except Hardin, of course.
I twirl my fork around my pasta and take another bite. I focus on how delicious the freshly made noodles are, and how they look wound around the tines of the fork. Otherwise Iâd have to focus on Hardin.
âI think you have an admirer,â Denise says to me. I look up and follow her eyes to Robert, who is clearing the dishes from the table beside us, his eyes on me.
âDonât pay him too much attention; just a waiter wanting what he canât have,â Max states with a sly smile, surprising me with his callousness.
âDad.â Lillian glares at her father.
But he just gives her a smile before cutting into his steak. âSorry, sweetie, Iâm only stating the truth . . . A girl as beautiful as Tessa here shouldnât be looking at anyone working in hospitality.â
If only heâd stopped there, but obliviousâor immune toâour discomfort, Max continues his degrading remarks until I finally drop my fork onto my plate with a clatter.
âDonât,â Hardin says to me, speaking to me for the first time since I arrived.
Shocked, I look at him, then back to Max, weighing my options. Heâs being a jerk, and Iâve had almost an entire glass of wine. I should probably keep my mouth shut, like Hardin said.
âYou canât talk about people like that.â Lillian looks at her father and he shrugs.
âFine, fine,â he grumbles, waving his knife a little and chewing on his steak. âFar be it from me to upset anyone.â
Beside him, his wife looks embarrassed as she wipes the corners of her mouth with a cloth napkin.
âIâm going to need more wine,â I tell Landon, and he smiles, sliding his half-empty glass over to me. I smile at the gesture. âIâll wait for Robert to come back to the table. Thank you, though.â
I can feel Hardinâs eyes on me as I search the restaurant. I donât see the serverâs blond hair, so I reach over, grab the bottle myself, and fill my glass. I half expect Max to make a comment about my manners, but he refrains. Hardin is staring coolly across the room, and Lillian is talking to her mother. Iâm in my own world, a hallucination in which Hardin is sitting next to me, his hand on my thigh, and he leans in to make some cheeky comment that makes me laugh and blush feverishly.
My head is a little fuzzy as I clear all of the food off my plate and finish off my second glass of wine. Landon is in conversation with Max and Ken about sports, of course. I stare at the printed tablecloth, trying to find faces or pictures inside the black and white swirls. I find a cluster that resembles an H, and my finger traces the pattern repeatedly. Suddenly I stop and look up quickly, paranoid that he may have seen me tracing the letter.