if I’d known I’d get to sit by a pretty little thing like you, I’d have cut it short,” he adds with a teasing grin. Normally, the comment would roll right off me, but it’s combined with that sexy smirk and an over-the-top wink that makes my insides tighten. I can’t help but laugh before standing up from my seat to let him scoot past me. A few more muscular bodies follow him, each just as bombed as the last, while also equally attractive. They look older than the usual frat boys, so I’m going to assume they’re fans of the game or are alumni coming to root for their team. Just like my brother and me.

Brown Eyes surprises me by stopping on my right, making his friends inch past him to get to their seats instead of him taking one further down.

Interesting.

Casually, I look up the stairs to see if my brother is coming back yet, but they’re empty. Once the final guy scoots past me, I sit back down and try to act normal. Try being the key word. I feel like I’m about to break into a sweat just because a cute guy happened to sit next to me at a football game. I sit up a little straighter.

Don’t you dare look at him, Nora.

Don’t.

Even.

Think.

About.

It.

Cheeks blazing, I peek over at him. He’s looking at me with a full-blown grin plastered across his handsome face. Chiseled jaw. Straight, white teeth. Smoldering smirk that could melt the panties off a nun. It’s a heady concoction.

I snap my attention back to the field. When I realize I’m holding my breath, my mouth forms a tiny ‘o’ shape before I let out the pent-up oxygen in my lungs. I take another peek. Yup. He’s still looking at me. Still grinning. Still looking devilishly handsome.

And still driving me insane with his attention pointed directly at me instead of the game.

With a huff, I tuck my hair behind my ear and glance his way another time, only breaking eye contact when his cocky smirk almost makes me forget what I was going to say in the first place. “Is, uh…”––another peek––“is there a problem?” I ask.

“No problem,” he returns before tipping back his clear plastic cup and gulping down a bit more beer.

“Are you uh…you sure about that?” He’s still staring at me with the whole cat-who-ate-the-canary look.

“Positive.”

“Then why aren’t you watching the game?”

“Because you’re much more interesting to look at,” he quips. “Can I ask you something?”

I can’t help the awkward laugh that bubbles out of me before I mutter, “Sure. Ask away.”

“Will you marry me?”

Covering my face in my hands, I laugh. Hard and uncontrollably.

“What’s so funny?” he asks with faux outrage, though he’s clearly enjoying my insane reaction to his equally insane proposal.

I laugh even harder, my cheeks so hot with embarrassment that I’m surprised I haven’t burned up on the spot.

“Sorry, Gage.” His friend pats him on the back, sloshing a bit of his drink onto the ground. “I’m pretty sure that’s what you’d call rejection.”

“Ah, come on, Pretty Girl. You can’t reject me in front of my friends. They’ll never let me live it down.” With those same puppy dog brown eyes, he pouts for good measure.

“And what would you suggest I do?”

“Saying yes would be a good start,” he teases before resting his elbow on the chair arm that separates us.

“You’re charming when you’re drunk; I’ll give you that,” I reply. There’s a pinch in my cheeks from smiling so hard, but I can’t help myself.

“Charming, huh? I can work with that.” He tosses another wink my way before pointing out, “That wasn’t a no, by the way.”

I cover my mouth to prevent any more laughter from bubbling up, but it doesn’t stop the pinch in my cheeks from amplifying.

“Come on,” his friend interjects, leaning forward so that he can see me more clearly. “Throw the guy a bone. Say, yes, will ya?”

“I believe this is called peer pressure at it’s finest.”

“You wanna see peer pressure?” the stranger––Gabe?––asks with a mischievous grin. There’s a time-out on the field, so the crowd is relatively quiet, and our little interaction has slowly attracted the attention of the strangers surrounding us. I can tell he’s thriving on the attention, while I feel like I’m having heart palpitations from it.

When he stands to his full height, towering over me, I realize what he’s about to do.

No, no, no, no!

Reaching for his muscular forearm, I try to tug him back down, but it’s like trying to pull a statue down that’s been bolted to the ground.

Useless.

“Don’t you dare,” I whisper-shout, not opposed to begging if it’ll keep him from doing what I think he’s about to do.

Throwing his head back, he laughs, and the sound goes straight to my lower stomach. “Do you hear that?” he yells, demanding everyone’s attention. “This pretty girl doesn’t want me to propose in front of all of you on this beautiful day. You see, she isn’t usually one for being the center of attention, but she’s just too damn gorgeous to sit on the sidelines as she makes me the luckiest man in the world. Isn’t that right, Pretty Girl?”

I scowl up at him, though I know he can see my curiosity and barely-restrained amusement no matter how hard I try to bury it.

The combination only encourages him to proceed.

There’s no way he’d actually fake propose to me in front of all these people.

As if he can read my mind, he slowly lowers down to one knee before sliding my left hand into his.

“Will you, the most beautiful woman I’ve ever laid eyes on, the woman who captured my heart the moment we met…”––I snort before realizing the giant screen on the scoreboard is flashing with a live feed of his little speech––“will you marry me?”

The entire stadium is silent, holding its collective breath the same way I’m holding mine. I can feel everyone’s eyes on me. Hell, I can see it from the damn jumbotron.

“Come

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