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The Lost Fisherman (Fisherman #2)(85)

Author:Jewel E. Ann

I stepped onto his running board so I could lean into the cab and get my face up in his face. “Do you love me today?” I grinned, our mouths a breath apart.

He smiled. “I do.”

I kissed him and his hand snaked around my waist as he kissed me back. “Then buy me a burger and fries and tell me about your Thanksgiving plans. Tell me how your week’s been. Tell me anything.” I bit his lip and tugged it.

Fisher grabbed my ass. “We could get it to go. Drive back to my place. Eat and still have time to do other things.”

I ran my hand along his extra scruffy beard then my thumb traced his bottom lip. “Things, huh? You and your things.”

He bit at my thumb. “You like my things.”

I giggled. “I do. Too much, really. So let’s grab a table and a couple of Happy Meals and stay out of trouble for one day.”

His gaze swept along my face once before he dropped a final quick kiss on my lips. “You win.”

I hopped down and he followed me. Then he took my hand and led me inside. I wondered what he would do if he saw someone he knew … saw someone who knew he was engaged. My hand in his hand.

“What are you getting?” he asked as we approached the next open register.

“Duh, we’re getting Happy Meals.”

He chuckled. “Um … we are?”

“Yes. Hi. We’ll take two hamburger Happy Meals with apples, one with juice and one with a chocolate milk.”

“No fries?”

I glanced back at Fisher and his confusion over not having fries. Then I turned back to the guy at the register. “And a small order of fries.”

He laid down a ten. I handed it back to him.

“My treat.” I winked. Yup. Big spender for our under-seven-dollar meal.

We took our Happy Meals to a booth by the window. As I unpacked my stuff, including the Avengers toy, I noticed Fisher was staring into his sack but not pulling anything out. A confused look stole his face.

“What’s wrong?”

After a few slow blinks, he gazed at me. “You bought my work crew Happy Meals.”

As I’m sure Angie did with the slow return of Fisher’s memories, I waited for him to reveal just how much he knew before I rushed to fill in the blanks. Did he remember a piece? A chunk? Or everything?

“I did. Well, technically you did. I used a company credit card.”

Fisher continued to stare into his bag. “Why? Did you do it to be funny? Did I tell you to do it? Was I cheap?”

I giggled while unwrapping my burger. “No. You weren’t cheap. Had you been cheap, you wouldn’t have taken food to your crews at all. You were very generous. And I wasn’t trying to be funny. I was collecting toys for Rory. She used to collect Happy Meal toys before she went to prison. So I continued her hobby for her.”

Fisher glanced up at me again. “Do you still collect them?”

“No.” I grinned with a slight head shake.

“Then why are we eating Happy Meals?” He pulled out his sandwich and apples.

“Because I thought it might jog a memory. And it did.”

It was possible the memory I was trying to jog involved his workshop and zip ties. I so badly wanted to just tell him, but the part of me that wanted him to remember on his own was stronger. Maybe I would mention zip ties another day.

“Huh …” He relinquished a tiny grin. “Thank you.”

Tapping a sliced apple on my bottom lip, I grinned. “You’re welcome. So how was your week after Rory lost her head?”

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