Her cell phone began playing the theme song from The Pink Panther. She grabbed it out of her briefcase. “Hey, Mere. What’s up?”

“Didn’t see you at church this morning and you didn’t come to family dinner, so I wanted to make sure you’re okay,” Meredith said.

Anne arched her back to ease her bunched muscles and found a more comfortable position in the cushy chair. “I overslept, so I slipped into the back, and then I had lunch with David and Amanda before they left town.”

“Stayed up too late partying last night, huh?” A crackle of static sounded through the phone connection as lightning flashed outside.

“It’s not every day one of my friends gets married. Even a wedding planner is allowed to cut loose once in a while.” Anne tore out a page that listed restaurants that had catered celebrity events.

Meredith chuckled. “It was a gorgeous wedding. I thought it was so sweet that David got choked up when he was repeating his vows.”

“It was the first wedding in a long time where I’ve shed a few tears. They’re so cute together.” She pressed the phone to her ear with her shoulder to free her hands and cut out a photo of a gorgeous wedding cake that Aunt Maggie would adore trying to recreate.

“Hey.” Jenn’s voice replaced Meredith’s. “Do you have plans for dinner tonight?”

“I’m not going on another blind date.” Anne pulled the magazine closer to try to see someone in the background of a picture.

“What makes you think I’m trying to set you up on a blind date?” A hint of laughter betrayed the falsely innocent tone Jenn tried to adopt.

“Because you asked if I have ‘plans for dinner.’ That’s what you always say when you’re trying to set me up. What an awful dress.” Anne tore the page out of the magazine for her file of what not to do.

“What are you talking about?” Jenn asked.

“Oh, it’s a celebrity who got married in a dress that looks like strips of toilet paper strung together with silver shoelaces.”

Jenn’s laugh mixed with the static crackling through the phone. “Annie, he’s a really nice guy. He works in Forbes’s law firm.”

“No, Jenn. I…” Why not? She wanted to get married, didn’t she? Then why did the thought of another blind date set off her panic alarm? “This is the busiest time of the year for me. You know that. I don’t have time to think about dating right now.”

“Okay. You just remember that was your excuse this time. Come fall, you won’t be able to use that one.”

Anne laughed. “I’ll remember. I’ll think of a better excuse by then.”

“I know you will. We’ll catch ya later, gal.”

“Bye.” She closed the phone and dropped it back into her bag.

Outside, thunder rumbled, vibrating through the building. Anne nestled down into the chair and sipped her latte, amused by the amount of money celebrities were willing to spend on simple items. Dresses that cost more than most normal people’s entire weddings. Florists who charged more for one event than most flower shops’ annual incomes. Imported crystal and china. Flamboyant gifts for attendants. And all of this for marriages that would last only a few years before they did it all over again with someone else.

Lord, thank You that Cliff broke off our relationship before we actually got married. I don’t think I would have survived a divorce. It was a painful reminder that people aren’t trustworthy, but I’m glad I learned it sooner rather than later.

“May I join you?”

Startled out of her prayer, she looked up. George Laurence stood in front of her, a shopping bag tucked under one arm, a grande cup in his free hand. His hair was damp, and he wore jeans, a dark T-shirt, and a long-sleeved denim shirt. Water spots on his shirt and pants betrayed his lack of preparation for the unpredictable Louisiana weather. Anne swallowed hard. He was even handsomer dressed down than in his expensive, tailored suits.

Her skin tingled. She should say no. She should remind him that he had a fiancée. She should insist their meetings be chaperoned. “Yes, please do.”

“Catching up on some reading?” He nodded toward the stack of magazines beside her chair.

She showed him the wedding-themed front of the one in her hand. “Research.”

“Ah. No one gets married like the rich and famous.” He settled down onto the adjacent love seat.

“Been to many celebrity weddings, have you?” She had to know who this guy was and for whom he worked. Coming right out and asking wouldn’t work.

“I’ve witnessed several—shall we call them events?—in my time.” He grinned, and Anne tried to keep her heart from flipping out of her chest. “Of course,” he continued, “the weddings here are much different than those I’ve seen in England.”

“Did you do the same type of work there?” She laid the magazine on her lap and sipped her latte.

He crossed his legs, his left ankle resting on his right knee. “In a way. Working for a member of Parliament is much different than working for someone…not in government service.”

He didn’t work for a politician. She hadn’t thought so, but it was nice to know for sure. “Which do you enjoy more?”

His expression turned thoughtful. “It’s hard to say. In the years since I’ve worked at this level, I’ve enjoyed postings because I liked the person I worked for, or I’ve enjoyed postings because of where I lived, or I just haven’t liked postings at all.”

“Postings? Does that mean that you get assignments as to whom you’re going to work for?”

“Oh, no.” He sipped his coffee and pulled a hardback book from the shopping bag. “I suppose it’s just a difference in British and American terminology. A posting is the same as a job, a position.”

She grinned. “I’ll bet there’re a lot of differences in what you’re used to in England and how we do things here.” To see him like this—relaxed, casual, and chatty—was addictive. She could imagine spending every Sunday afternoon like this with him. He’s engaged to Courtney Landry.

“Most of the cultural differences are minor. Though the distances one has to travel to do anything—and the lack of public transport in most places—was a rather difficult transition.”

Anne slipped off her shoes and pulled her feet up under her. “What would you say is the strangest thing you had to get used to over here?” Get up. Leave now. He’s not available. He’s already spoken for.

“Drive-throughs.”

She stared at him a moment. “Drive-throughs? Restaurants? You don’t have drive-throughs in England? But haven’t all of the American fast-food places opened up over there?”

The lines around his eyes deepened; the corners of his lips pulled up with such warmth Anne nearly started fanning herself. “They have, but you walk in and either dine there or order takeaway. And I’d never heard of such a thing as driving up to a window to collect dry cleaning or even prescriptions.”

She laughed, her heart racing. She really needed to get out of here. “Yeah, that’s the old, lazy American mentality at work. Drive-through everything, pizza and groceries delivered to your door— and now we don’t even have to go out to rent movies. Just get online and click a button and wait for it to come in the mail. Same thing’s happening to our language. Laziness has turned to ignorance, and what used to be incorrect is now ‘acceptable usage’—” She stopped, embarrassed, at the odd expression on George’s face. Why did she become such a geek around him, running on about something that no one she’d ever known—outside of her professors—had ever shown the least interest in?

“Please continue. Your conclusions are fascinating. It sounds as if you’ve spent a lot of time thinking about this.”

Her pulse did the jitterbug. Was he serious? “I used to. My master’s thesis was on the impact of the popular culture of the 1970s and ’80s on American English.”

“You’ve a master’s degree in English?” George set his book aside, shifted to the edge of his seat, and leaned forward, elbows resting on his knees.

She tried to swallow the emotion that threatened to cut off her breath. She’d ventured into treacherous territory; he belonged to someone else. I have to get out of here. I have to put an end to anything but a professional relationship between us. “Linguistics—though I was about ten hours from finishing when I had to leave school for financial reasons.”

“I’d be interested in reading your thesis sometime. The study of language has always fascinated me.” He couldn’t be for real. No one—not even a family member—had ever asked to read her work.

The sincerity and warmth in his gaze made Anne want to cry. “I’ll see if I can dig it up.”

He leaned back again. “I enjoyed dinner with your family Thursday evening.”

“I’m sorry they gave you such a hard time with all those questions.” Her cheeks burned in memory of some of the things said at dinner a few nights ago.

“Don’t fret about it. My brothers would probably be much worse. Do you eat together every week?”

“It’s a long-standing tradition. Forbes, Meredith, and I started it a couple of years ago to help support Jenn’s restaurant.” She remembered Jenn’s request. “How many brothers do you have?”

“Two, both younger.”

“And do they both still live in England?”

“Henry just moved to Australia. Edward still lives in London. My mum writes occasionally to say they’re doing well.”

“It must be hard to be so far away from your family.” She would never want to live anywhere but within a short drive of her relatives.

He shrugged, and the sadness in his gaze tore at her heart. “I left home at sixteen for a live-in apprenticeship. Henry and I have grown closer since the advent of e-mail, but I don’t have much contact with Mum or Edward.”