“So, what did you do?”
“I set out to court her. Back then, we didn’t fall in bed together on a first date. We worked at it. We took things slow and steady, and got to know one another. I walked right into that diner, tugged my hat from my head…” He rubbed his balding pate. “I had more hair back then.” He laughed. “I shoved my hat in my back pocket and walked into that diner like I owned it. I stood there looking down at her, and when she didn’t look up from her book, I got an idea. I walked out, went two doors down, and I bought the same damn book from the tiny bookshop on the corner. Then I went back. She jumped when I pulled the chair out across from her. She asked me what I was doing.
“I held up my book as I sat down across from her. I told her I couldn’t talk to her right then, because I had a book I wanted to finish. She didn’t say a word. She just stared at me. I sat there across from her, and I took out that stupid book and started to read. She did the same. We didn’t talk. She didn’t shoot any daggers at me with her eyes. After about an hour, I started to inch my foot close to hers. Then I let my shoe touch the side of hers. She startled and tried to pull her foot back, but I rested my other foot on the other side, and held her foot tightly between mine.”
He laughed. “Looking back, I’m glad she didn’t kick me in the balls. I deserved it. After a few minutes, she settled down, and I sat there for two hours, drinking coffee and reading, with her foot nestled between mine. And she let me. We read quietly, and finally she looked up at me. And if I wasn’t already in love with her before that, I would have been right then. She said, ‘Is the offer for dinner still open?’
“My heart nearly leaped right out of my chest. I stumbled across my words, just trying to find out the way to say yes. I didn’t care if I seemed overeager. I didn’t care if she knew how desperately I wanted to spend time with her. Because that’s what love is all about. It’s about being vulnerable with someone else. And I was as vulnerable as I’d ever been.
“That night, she let me hold her hand as I walked her home. And I kissed her on the cheek outside her door. ‘I’m going to marry you one day,’ I told her. I’m telling you, when she smiled, she lit up my whole world.”
“How long before you married her, Henry?”
Henry’s face fell. “Oh, it was about two years. She had an ex-boyfriend who showed up a few weeks later, and she ended what she had going with me. Dropped me like a hot potato.”
“But it all worked out?” I asked.
“It did. But love is a job, just like anything else. You have to work at it if you want to be successful.”
Henry cleared his throat. “When my Nan died, I thought I’d die with her. Some days, it’s still hard to live without her.” He turned his gaze on me. “When you find a love like that, you have to be willing to work for it. You have to fight.” He shrugged. “Of course, none of it’s worth a damn if you don’t really want it. You have to want it bad, or it won’t be worth having in the end. I wanted her more than I wanted to breathe air. Still do. Always will.”
He shook his head like he was shaking memories out of his way. “Moral of the story is that if you want it bad enough, you’ll figure out how to make it happen. Nothing worth having in life comes easy.
“Wren is worth the effort, if she’s what you want. You just have to remember that she lost something precious, and at the same time she is grieving a relationship that never should have been.”
“So, what do I do, Henry? Tell me how to win her over. Do I need to give her time to get over it?”
“Start by being someone she can fall in love with, son.”
We sit down at the booth, order food, and all I can think about is how quickly I can catch her foot between mine. She smiles at me over her pancakes and tilts her head. “What are you thinking about?”
I was thinking about how damn beautiful you are. “Oh, nothing,” I say.
“You’re sure?” She stares hard at me, her eyes intent.
I nod and lift a piece of bacon to my lips. Wren surprises me when she grabs for my wrist and jerks it to her mouth. She stares into my eyes and bites a hunk of my bacon off. Then she grins, covers her mouth with her hand, and talks around it.
“I’ve been wanting to do that ever since the food got here. Sorry.”
“If I’d known you like bacon so much, I’d have offered to share.”
Her cheeks turn pink.
“What?” I ask. “Did I miss something?”
She swallows. “It’s nothing. Just a story that Henry told me when we had lunch the other day. He told me about the time he took his wife out to breakfast, and she stole a piece of his bacon. It was really sweet.”
“Funny,” I say. “Because Henry told me a story last night too.”
I adjust my feet so that my shoes outline one of hers, holding it tightly but gently. She startles, but she doesn’t move. “What are you doing?”
“Henry told me a story about the day that his wife finally took notice of him. They were sitting at a diner a lot like this one, and he caught her foot between his, and he held it there.”
“I’ve heard that story.” She shakes her head. “But I’m pretty sure that BFFs don’t put the moves on one another with their feet.”
I arch my brows at her. “So, they just do it by stealing bacon?”
Her cheeks turn pink again and she looks down at her plate. “I don’t…I don’t know,” she replies softly.