Kayla knows a thing or two about making love connections. As the owner of Blind Date, a popular app and restaurant that creates a safe and completely dark environment to meet, date, and find love, she’s successfully helped others find love, but she’s never used it to find love for herself.
Evan is thrilled by the public’s reaction and the revenue its generated. As a silent partner, he gets to reap his share of the benefits while staying completely out of the way. A friend found love with Blind Date, but Evan doesn’t put much stock in finding it for himself. His friends, however, convince him to give it a shot. All he has to do is survive four dates, and if it doesn’t work out, he can walk away.
After two disastrous dates, he’s ready to back out of the deal, but he’s not a quitter. Remarkably, the third date is a charm. Things go so well; it almost feels familiar. There’s just something about date #3, but he can’t figure out what.
When she suddenly stops replying, he’s dumbfounded. He doesn’t where he went wrong, so he seeks a woman’s perspective from Kayla. Her reaction isn’t what he expects and turns the whole blind dating concept on its head.
What happens when business partners realize there may be more to their partnership than meets the eye?