gone,â Gabby replied quickly. âThey left a half-hour or so ago. They had to get up in the morning. I decided to stay and finish my drink. I was gonna head out right before you sent this over.â
âWell Iâm glad you stayed. And I have to say, I think I like the crowd in here.â He didnât look around when he said it â his dark chocolate brown eyes never left hers. Mesmerizing, bright flecks of amber and gold lit his pupils.
Gabriella blushed. He was handsome â Reid. Not in an obvious way, like Ab Man. He had a bit of a big chin, but a nice smile that took over his whole face when he flashed it, and thatâs what she really noticed. His teeth were straight and super white, like a toothpaste modelâs. No gums in sight. Some girls were attracted to abs or curly hair or eyes or big muscles, but Gabby went for the smile every time. She used to think sheâd marry a dentist until she realized a lot of them actually had terrible teeth. What was that proverb? Physician heal thyself? Dentist fix thy overbite. As Gabby studied Reidâs rugged, fair face, set against the backdrop of a raucous Spring Break-aged crowd, she thought perhaps his very best feature right now was the fact that he
wasnât
twenty-one. She guessed late twenties, but didnât want to ask, because she didnât want to be asked that very same question and then watch for the disappointment on his face. Demi Moore mightâve broken ground with Ashton Kutcher, but for most female earthlings who didnât have movie-star looks and a celebrity-sized bank book, it wasnât so easy to bridge even a small age gap with a handsome guy. And definitely not in a place like this. Most men heard âtwenty-eightâ, swore the woman said âthirtyâ, and pictured the thought-bubble above her smiling, anxious head that read, âLooking for marriage, a house and a baby!â Thatâs when they excused themselves to use the bathroom and you never saw them again. Maybe she was being silly and down on herself, but tonight she didnât want to take any risks with having fun. She just wanted to have it. âIâm an accountant with Morgan and Tipley,â Gabby replied. âItâs a really small firm in Midtown. Lex and Forty-third. Youâve never heard of it, trust me. Iâve been there a couple of years now. I like it.â
âAccounting ⦠ooh. Sooo not what I pegged you for and sooo not my strong suit. Iâm good with my money â not so sure Iâd be good handling other peopleâs. I might get jealous.â
âYou donât actually get to touch it, which takes away some of the temptation.â Gabby sipped her drink. âInteresting. What did you peg me for?â
âOh, I donât know ⦠an astronaut? A rocket scientist? A nuclear physicist?â
âDo I look that smart? Itâs the suit, I tell ya.â
âNah. I really thought that you might be a lawyer or a paralegal. Something with the law. Maybe an FBI agent or a cop or maybe a spy. Just a wild guess. You look too fun to be an accountant.â
âAccountants can be a lively bunch. The life of the party. Especially on April sixteenth.â
âReally? Mineâs named Sy, he works for H&R Block, and I donât think heâs been to a party in a few decades. So tell me, what do you like about it, Gabby? Accounting?â
âHmmm ⦠good question. Let me think. Well, for starters itâs not subjective, like a lot of careers are. My friendâs a writer and I could never do what she does, because she never knows if itâs good. I mean, thereâs always someone telling her what she wrote sucked, even if a hundred other people tell her sheâs the bomb. It makes no sense. She ends up banging her head against the wall. Same for my friend whoâs a publicist. Someone always second-guesses what she did. Claims they could have done it