The Wrong Text That Made A Dangerous Lawyer Lose His Smile At Dinner-hothiyenvy_5

Laya Hart did not understand at first how quiet real fear could be.

It was not a scream.

It was not the scrape of a chair or a hand slamming on a table.

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It was the soft click of ice in a water glass while Nolan Whitmore smiled at her and said, “You’re not leaving until we finish this conversation.”

Eclipse glittered around them from the twenty-second floor of a glass tower in downtown Chicago.

The restaurant looked like a place where nothing ugly could happen because every surface was polished, every candle was low, and every server moved with practiced calm.

Garlic and butter drifted from the kitchen.

Red wine stained the bottom of Nolan’s glass.

Jazz slipped through the room in a soft, expensive ribbon, the kind of music people used to pretend they were safer than they were.

Laya sat in the corner booth with her purse trapped between her hip and the wall.

Nolan had not shoved her there.

That would have been easier to name.

He had done what men like Nolan did when they wanted control but still wanted witnesses to see them as civilized.

He slid into the booth beside her.

He put her phone on his side of the table.

He rested one hand near her wrist, not hard enough for anyone to gasp, but close enough that her body knew what it meant.

Three dates.

That was the part that embarrassed her later, even though it should not have.

Three dates were not enough to know a person.

They were enough to be fooled by a person who had studied how to seem safe.

On the first date, Nolan had been attentive.

He asked about her design work and remembered the name of the coffee shop where she worked mornings.

On the second date, he had seemed protective.

He noticed when a man at the next table kept looking over, then praised himself for making Laya feel “looked after.”

By the third date, the praise had turned into corrections.

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