She narrowed her eyes. “Storm.”
 
 “I haven’t been here in two weeks,” I said. “I never took you for a gambling woman, so who told you?”
 
 “Hamish texted me,” she said with a shrug.
 
 “Now you’re in cahoots.” I rolled my eyes.
 
 “I can see you’ve fallen back into bad habits, or are you still sautéing in them after our last conversation?”
 
 “What are you doing here?” I asked, ignoring her on purpose. “It’s been what? Almost a year and a half since you vowed not to grace The Underground with your presence?”
 
 “Look who’s keeping count.”
 
 “Is this an intervention?” I drawled.
 
 “Nah.” She waved a hand at me. “It’s a friendly chitchat.”
 
 “About?”
 
 “Callie.”
 
 I scowled and turned back to my beer.
 
 “How are things there? Did you fight?”
 
 “A little,” I muttered.
 
 “And?”
 
 “She believes me.”
 
 “Why are you so shitty about it then?” she asked. “That’s fucking great, you know.”
 
 “She was offered a job in Amsterdam yesterday,” I replied.
 
 “Amsterdam? That’s very specific.”
 
 “Some celebrity chef saw her cakes online.” I shrugged. “He’s opening a new thing there or something. Wants her to develop the desserts.”
 
 “And?” Lori raised her eyebrows, prodding for more information.
 
 “Why are you interested all of a sudden?” I asked, my hackles rising. “I apologized for the other week. I didn’t mean to drag you back here with a vendetta.”
 
 “It’s not a vendetta,” she retorted. “This is going to sound like complete and utter bullshit, but I saw something in you the other day. You’ve changed, Storm. You might be going about it the wrong way, but you care about other people now. That’s a huge deal considering who you used to be.” She turned to face me and smiled. She actually fucking smiled after giving me that awful excuse for a compliment. “I never used to think it was possible. That people could change the core of who they were. I thought you would be a dick for eternity, but deep down, you’re not. You need to stop all this bravado and just be that guy.”
 
 My scowl deepened. I was beginning to understand one thing about myself. I didn’t like taking criticism.
 
 “Your Callie seems like a smart woman,” she went on. “I doubt she would be with you if she couldn’t see over all the walls labeled ‘bastard’ that you’ve put up.”
 
 “Thanks,” I drawled, raising my beer in a mock salute.
 
 “If you don’t want her to go to Amsterdam, then tell her.”
 
 “It’s make or break,” I muttered.
 
 “Seems simple to me,” Lori declared.
 
 “Yeah? Enlighten me.”
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 