things like that can stump me. I know thereâs something I shoulddo, and if it was on a multiple-choice test, I would recognize the answer. But sometimes I canât dredge up the information from wherever itâs sleeping in my consciousness.â
His chest was hurting again and he said the first thing that came into his head. âI admire you for being able to ask for help. That canât be easy.â
âIt isnât easy.â She finished preparing the coffee, then set the switch to On. âI donât want to need help. I donât want to admit I need help almost as much. But itâs a fact of life until I get more practice.â
She moved to the oven and set the timer, then turned to meet his gaze. âStrategies. Props. Thatâs how I get by. One of my strategies is to set a timer to remind myself to stay on task. Five minutes for coffee. When it goes off, Iâll check the maker. Without the alarm I might sit here for a while and never remember what Iâm waiting for. Unless I write it down in my notebookâanother of my favorite props.â
Her matter-of-factness was just something else to admire. No whining, no play for pity. The counselors at her rehab facility had told him about Lindaâs strategies and props in order to prepare him for helping her outâand theyâd also let him know that she was well on her way to needing them less and lessâbut they hadnât prepared him for how watching her use them would leave him feeling soâ¦
There werenât words for it.
So, ignoring that ache in his chest, he grunted again and pulled a section of the San Antonio paper in front of him. He didnât look up until the kitchen alarm went off and she was back at the table after filling up his mug and then her own.
âThank you,â he said.
âThatâs my line,â Linda replied. âI donât think I was that good at being grateful pre traumatic brain injury, but it seems to be another skill Iâm slowly learning to acquire.â
âYou donâtââ
âI am, Emmett. Grateful and beholden. To the Armstrongs. To you. I donât know how Iâll ever repay any of you.â
âLindaââ
âDonât tell me Iâm wrong. My brain isnât that dead.â
âWait a secââ
âOh, come on.â
âButââ
âEmmett, what could you possibly get out of this situation?â
âLessons in how to edge a word into the conversation when sharing the breakfast table with a woman?â
Her velvety blue eyes rounded over the rim of her coffee mug. Then she laughed. âOkay. Apologies next.â
âThose are unnecessary, too.â
âWell, Iâm certain you donât need practice facing women across a breakfast table.â
âWhat about across a kitchen table?â He leaned back in his chair to study her. âOutside of my mother, you might be my first, come to think of it.â
Her eyes registered surprise again. âNo wife? No ex?â
âNever married.â
âFiancée?â
He shook his head.
âNo lovers?â she asked, her eyes rounding even more.
âOf course Iâve had lovers!â Maybe she was joking around again, but he discovered his ego couldnât take the chance.
âAh.â That little smile playing around her mouth told him she had been joking after all. âBut no long-term lovers. Nobody you wanted to share a bathroom or a breakfast with.â
âIâm a pretty solitary guy. Have been my whole life.â
She nodded. âHow old are you?â
âThirty-one.â
âHah,â she said, that little smile reclaiming her pretty lips. She put one elbow on the table and leaned toward him. âIâm older than you. Maybe you can learn something from me.â
Such as how to control the lust that was rising in him like steam off the coffee in their mugs. The
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