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The story starts in Chapter 1 of "Play It Again": Chapter 1DavidI thought I was prepared to see him again. But the minute Chris walks... Donāt miss it!
Chapter 1
David
I thought I was prepared to see him again. But the minute Chris walks into the bar, my pulse kicks into overdrive and the hair on my arms and at the nape of my neck springs to attention. Heās the only guy Iāve ever loved, and heās here. Our eyes lock when he spots me, and then heās crossing toward me, my heart hammering with every step he takes.
My fingers stumble on the keyboard of the Steinway baby grand I play every Thursday through Sunday from nine to midnight. Itās not Carnegie Hall, but it pays the bills, at least until something better, like a gig with an orchestra or in a Broadway pit, lands in my lap. Fortunately, most of the patrons are too deep in conversationāor too drunkāto notice my slipup, and I segue seemingly effortlessly into the opening bars of āAs Time Goes By.ā
āMy favorite.ā Chris leans against the piano, a hesitant smile briefly lifting the corners of his mouth, and signals for a waitress. āYou remembered.ā
I did, but Iām not about to admit that to him. This time Iām keeping my emotions under lock and key. Like Fort Knox. āPeople love it. Itās good for tips.ā
As if on cue, a pretty, perky twenty-somethingāprobably a coed from one of the nearby collegesāsmiles at me and drops a five into the large brandy snifter I use as a tip jar. I nod my thanks and she goes back to her friends, leaving me free to study Chris as he orders his drink.
My fingers almost stumble again. Damn him for looking even better than he did in our conservatory days. Same intense, enigmatic hazel eyes, more green today than brown. Same aquiline nose. Same strong, square jaw, dotted with sexy, late-night stubble. But now the whole package reads more hot businessman than dancer-in-training. Although Iād bet my Yamaha DGX-660 portable keyboard that beneath his designer duds heās got the same buff ballet body he did back in school. Heād have to, as a principal dancer for the prestigious San Francisco Ballet.
Maybe itās the clothesāpale gray, slim-fit button-down shirt, tight, dark jeans, suede oxfords in a soft charcoalāthat make this man. Or it could be the glasses. Dark Harry Potter rims that give him an air of maturity.
Then thereās the hair. Itās a little longer than I remember, chestnut strands curling over his collar. I wonder briefly if his wife prefers it that way, then swallow the hard, bilious knot of jealousy that rises in my throat. What right do I have to be jealous? Chris made his choice five years ago. One kiss was all it had taken for me to know how good it could be with us. And for him to run as fast as his feet would take him in the other direction.
His drink comesāan old-fashioned, another thing thatās changed since college, when we downed wine coolers like they were water. The choice of cocktail is like a punch in my gut. Itās the consummate manās manās drink. Practically screams, āSorry, dude. Iām still straight.ā
āAny requests?ā I ask, determined not to let him see how rattled heās got me.
āCan you take a break? Iād really like to talk. Itās important.ā
It must beāor he must think it isāfor him to come all this way after all this time to see me. Still, I shake my head. āCanāt. I just got on half an hour ago.ā
āI can wait.ā He takes a sip of his drink then sets it down on a cocktail napkin. Not on the bare wood of the piano, like I warned him against at the conservatory more times than I can count. My stupid heart flip-flops. He may have wanted to erase me from his life, but he hasnāt forgotten everything.
āIt might be a while before I can get free,ā I say, mentally crossing my fingers at the white lie. My sets are only about an hour long, and I usually take a ten-minute break between them.
āIām in no rush.ā He runs a finger along the edge of his glass, then touches it to his lips. The unconsciously sexy gesture makes my damn disobedient dick twitch, and I say a silent prayer of thanks that itās hidden under the Steinway.
The final chords of āAs Time Goes Byā echo around us as my brain searches for another song. I donāt usually have this much trouble figuring out what to play next. My repertoire is pretty extensive. Plus, I keep an iPad with my favorite sheet music app handy for any songs I donāt know by memory.
But Iām finding it more than a little bit distracting having the love of my life standing not three feet from me, his mesmerizing hazel eyes tracking my every move.
He gives me a smile thatās incongruously both confident and nervous. āOf all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, I walk into yours.ā
I shake my head and start in on āFly Me To The Moon.ā Canāt go wrong with Sinatra. Itās always a crowd favorite. āExcept youāre no Ilsa, and Iām no Rick. You knew Iād be here. And I knew you were coming.ā
Thanks to the cryptic Facebook message he sent me last week. What I donāt know is why heās here. What does he want, after all this time?
Itās a question Iām too chickenshit to ask. So instead I decide to go for the cheap shot. It wonāt be my finest moment, but I tell myself itās his fault for showing up practically out of the blue, after five years of radio silence.
āHowās your wife?ā The last word comes out like a curse, leaving a sour taste in my mouth.
A shadow crosses Chrisās handsome face, and I immediately regret the low blow. āWe split up. Almost a year ago. The divorce was final in March.ā
Holy shit. He and Sonja are splitsville?
My mouth goes dry and my heart free falls to my stomach. Itās official. Iām the biggest douchecanoe on the planet.
āIām sorry.ā Itās not a lie. I am. I donāt wish divorce on anyone. Even the guy whoās the source of the biggest heartache of my 27-year-old life. And the girl he chose over me.
But Iād be lying if I didnāt admit that a small part of me is also curious as fuck. Why did they break up? Was that the reason for his visit?
Chris takes another sip of his old-fashioned. āTruth is, it was over a long time ago, but neither one of us wanted to be the one to pull the plug.ā