The Gallaghers of Ardmore Trilogy
trouble, badgering me, poking at me, and breaking me fucking nose.”
“That’s got you, doesn’t it?” Shawn slid the golden hunks of fish and servings of chips onto plates, added a scoop of slaw, and garnished them with a bit of parsley. “That after all these years and all the fine battles, it’s a woman half your size who did the deed.”
“’Twas a lucky punch,” Aidan muttered as his pride throbbed in time with his nose.
“Sucker punch, more like,” Shawn corrected. “And you’re the sucker,” he added as he swung out the door with the orders.
“So much for family loyalty.” Disgusted, Aidan got up to root through cupboards for some aspirin. His face ached like a bitch in heat.
Under other circumstances, he supposed he’d have admired Jude for her fine show of temper, and her aim. But he couldn’t find it in him at the moment.
She’d hurt him, face, pride, and heart. He’d never had a woman break his heart before, and didn’t know what the devil to do about it. He’d understood, at least in part, that he’d bungled things the night of the ceili . But he’d been so sure, so confident, that he had fixed all that the night before.
Romance and teasing, perseverance and persuasion. What else did the damn woman want, damn it to the devil and back again? They fit together, anyone could see that.
Everyone, it seemed, but Jude Frances Murray herself.
How could she not want him when he wanted her so much he could barely breathe? How could she not see the life they’d make together when he could see it clear as glass?
It was all to do with that first marriage of hers, he thought darkly. Well, he’d gotten over it, why couldn’t she?
“She’s just being stubborn,” he said to Shawn when his brother came back in.
“That makes her a perfect match for you, then.”
“It’s not being stubborn to go after what you know is right.”
Shawn shook his head and began to build the sandwiches needed out in the pub. The place was a madhouse, he mused, with people staying long past their usual time, andothers coming in as they got word of the situation. They’d asked Michael O’Toole and Kathy Duffy to lend a hand at the bar, and Brenna was on her way. He didn’t think Aidan would be in the mood for pulling pints and making conversation for a bit longer yet.
“No, I suppose it’s not,” he said after a moment. “But there are ways and ways of going about it with a woman.”
“A lot you know about women.”
“More than you, I wager, as I’ve never had one plant her fist in my face.”
“Neither have I up till now.” Even half frozen from the ice, his nose was pounding like a kettledrum. “It’s not the reaction a man expects when he asks a woman to marry him.”
“It wasn’t the asking, I’d say, but the way of asking.”
“How many ways do you ask?” Aidan demanded. “And why is this my fault, I’d like to know?”
“Because it’s pitiful obvious that she loves you, and needs love in return. So if you hadn’t made a mess of it, she wouldn’t have said no and broken your nose.”
While Aidan gaped at him, Shawn strode out to deliver the next order. He started to leap up and follow, then calculated he’d spread enough of his personal business out into the pub and village that day. So he paced impatiently and waited for Shawn to come back in.
He carried empty plates this time and slid them into the sink. “Make yourself useful and wash up, would you? I’ve more fish and chips wanted.”
“Maybe I made a mess of it the first time,” Aidan began. “I admit that. I even talked it over with Darcy.”
“Darcy?” All Shawn could do was roll his eyes to heaven. “Now I can say without a doubt you are an idiot.”
“She’s Jude’s friend, and a woman.”
“Without a single romantic bone in her body. Forget thewashing, I’ll tend to it later,” he continued as he dredged fish in flour. “Sit down and tell me how you went about it.”
He wasn’t used to his younger brother issuing directions, and he wasn’t sure how it sat with him. But he was a desperate man ready to take desperate measures. “Which time?”
“However many there were, starting with the first.” Shawn slid the fish and potatoes into the oil and began to make a fresh batch of slaw.
He listened without a word while he worked. When the order was finished before his brother was, he held up a finger, surprising Aidan into silence, and went out again to serve it.
“Now, then.”
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