First Date
AO3
Pre-outbreak/No-outbreak!Joel Miller x Home Depot Worker!f!Reader
Word Count: 5.5k
Summary: Working at Home Depot was lack-luster. The paint department brought in a variety of customers, the majority of them just buying their paint and leaving. Then Joel Miller comes in--looking to repaint his daughters bedroom.
Content Warnings/Tags: Pre-outbreak/No-outbreak, reader works at Home Depot, fluff, meet-cute, rude customer, Joel defends you, eventual smut (next part), eventual first date, no descriptions for reader, no y/n.
A/N: Got this as a request! There will be another part with smut.
âMore saving. More doing. Thatâs the power of the Home Depot.â
The wannabe gruff voice of the Home Depot narrator echoed throughout the large cement warehouse. It was Sunday, only two hours until close, and the store was virtually dead.
A large rectangular box of a warehouse was your place of employment for the time being. Orange decorated aisle after aisle, and employee after employee. Some employees decorated their aprons in paint and pins, showing their years of employment and dedication to their jobs. Others simply had their name written on their apron, just like how they simply showed up to work and left.
After moving out of the house you shared with your ex and into your own place, you needed the extra income to supplement your new rent and the remaining rent you owed on your shared lease.Â
Home Depot was hiringâand was desperateâbecause you got employed in the paint department.
Making paint wasnât hard at all. It was the shitty customers that ruined it. Customers would demand to see a manager after you told them their paint wasnât readyâeven though they asked for three five-gallon buckets, and ten single gallons, fifteen minutes ago. People would order the same amount in a color they swore they would love, and then attempted to return it the next day, even though NO REFUNDS was printed in bold on the Home Depot paint sticker.Â
But, working behind the paint counter had its perks. You could stay in one place in the store, telling customers who needed help with complicated items that you, âhad to stay and watch the desk.â Plus the desk had a phone, which allowed you to call any department, so your more knowledgeable coworkers could take over tough questions.
The only types of customers left at this hour were those that had emergencies, and those that liked to put things off until the last minute.Â
Getting tired of sitting behind the deskâs computer on your phone, you got up and walked the three aisles that made up the department. Your footsteps lightly tapped against the gray concrete of the floor. With each step, you scanned the shelves and the floor for anything out of place. Returning misplaced items was an easy task that helped you eat away at the remaining time of your shift.Â
A tube of caulk was placed right in the middle of the gallons of wood stainâclassic. You reached downwards to retrieve the tube and stood back up, pacing down the shelves of orange towards the caulking aisle. The music over the loudspeakers was just quiet enough to hear the surrounding conversations in the other aisles.
One voice echoed to you louder than the rest. Randyâs voice.
Randy was a retired mechanic. Most of his skills were applicable to the questions customers often had. The man had wiry, white hair that peaked out from this Home Depot baseball cap he wore everyday. His apron was covered in various stains of grease and dirt, his name scrawled in Sharpie on the upper right corner of the orange fabric.
From a couple aisles over, his gruff voice made its way towards you, âAh! Paint for a bedroomâŠWell letâs see, is this a kids bedroom?â
A deep, Texan drawl replied to Randy, âIt is, âs fer my daughter. She wanâed her room repainted for her birthday. Sheâs turninâ thirteen. Says she needs to get ridâa the âbaby colorsâ from when she was lilâ.â
Randy let out a hearty laugh, followed by a muted smack, likely from giving the man a pat on the back, âI know how that feels,â Randy paused to let out another laugh, âMy daughter is in her twenties now, but she was the same way as yours. Thirteen hit and she insisted she was allll grown up.â
You retreated to the paint desk with a small smile on your face, it was nice that the man wanted to repaint for his daughter. Your watch told you it was an hour and thirty until close. This customer just had to wait until the last minute, though.
The unknown man let out a chuckle at Randyâs anecdote. Slow, muted steps from both men made their way towards the paint departmentâs aisles. One of the men let out a deep sigh.
âThing is, I dunno a single thing âbout what colorsâll look nice together.â
The footsteps came closer and the two men appeared in your vision. One central aisle lined up with the paint desk, making somewhat of a runway for customers to walk on to come and request paint. Randy looked down the aisle and his gaze met yours, âOh! There she is,â Randy said your name to the man, âshe knows a ton about colors, Iâm sure she could help ya more than I can.â
Randy truly was a nice man. He helped you deal with rude customers. Showed you basic tips and tricks. Ate with you in the break room on occasion.
But, câmon Randy.
The old man continued walking towards the break room and left the man standing at the end of the aisle. You looked down, pretending you didnât hear the majority of their conversation. Organizing the paint samples became a very consuming task. Heavy steps made their way closer and closer until your peripheries were consumed with the navy blue color of the Texanâs shirt.
His large hands rested on the deskâs countertop. Thick digits were covered in calluses. Before you could observe his fingers more, he cleared his throat.
ââScuse me, miss. Sâwondering if you could help me wâ somethinâ,â the man drawled out.
Your eyes looked up from the desk, and they widened in surprise. The front of his shirt had orange letters displayed on the front: MILLER CONTRACTING LLC.Â
Most contractors that ventured into the paint department werenât asâŠput together as this man was. The usual paint covered pants and shirt werenât present on this contractor. The navy blue of his work shirt spanned across his wide chest and even wider shoulders. Sleeves hugged his biceps deliciously. If he moved his arms any more you were worried the sleeves would rip. Not that youâd complain.
Then you looked up to meet his eyes.
His eyes.
Brown irises held eye contact with you. They were deep, warm. Inviting. The color made you think of a teddy bear. Soft and comforting. Brown hair on his head and face matched his eyes. The hair on his head consisted of messy waves combed to one general side, probably from a sweep of his fingers. Short, dark brown hairs made up his beard and mustache. Each facial hair component framed handsome features. A strong jaw was framed by his beard, and plush lips were framed by the âstache.Â
The same lips were forming a smile spanning across his face. His eyes crinkled and displayed slight lines near the corners. Lines developed from years of laughter and smiles.
Realizing you looked at him blankly for a second too long, you snapped out of your trance, âO-of course! What do you need help with?â
His hands came up off of the counter and rested on his hips. âWell, yâsee, itâs my daughters thirteenth birthday cominâ up. Sheâs had this yellow color in âer room since she was a baby,â he let out a small sigh, as if he was reminiscing, âanâ she wants âer room repainted.â
You heard the conversation he had with Randy before, but you didnât want to come off as a creep for eavesdropping. âAh, ok! Thatâs nice of you, and seems easy enough! Do you know what color she wants?â
He let out another sigh. His eyes met yours. The man looked like a sad, lost puppy. âI know her favorite colors, pink and purple, but thereâs just so many options,â he turned and gestured with a broad hand towards the rainbow wall of paint swatches. âAnâ darlinâ, I tried to do mâown research, watchinâ some Martha Stewart shows, but then Martha started talkinâ about warm colors and cool colors,â he let out a chuckle accompanied by a broad smile, raising his hands in front of his chest, âand then she lost me.â
Darlinâ.
Other customers called you that condescendingly. When you didnât know the difference between one screw and another. But the manâs endearing use of the word made your heart melt.
You smile back at him and lean forward on the counter. âWell, I think the first step is just the color. After that, we can worry about warm tones and cool tones,â you gave him a playful smirk.
He chuckled once more. âSounds like a plan tâme,â he started walking towards the paint swatches. You snuck out from behind the counter and followed him to the pinks and purples.
âSo I was thinkinâ of doinâ both pink and purple, but I dunno what looks good together.â The man started reaching for a card of pink. You took the moment to admire his forearms. Thin, dark hairs covered the surface of his tan skin. Muscles flexed on the front of his arm, displaying the years of manual labor the man has endured.
A pink swatch, Valentine, appeared in front of your face, accompanied by a lavender swatch, Kiss and Tell.
Valentine was bright, Barbie pink. Kiss and Tell was a light purple, the color the wax of a lavender candle would be. You admired his dedication to doing both of his daughterâs favorite colors, but the pair didnât look too great together. The corner of your mouth perked up, displaying the thought you were putting into the pairing.
âNo?â The man asked, a tinge of disappointment in his voice. His brows slanted downwards and his eyes resembled those of a lost puppy.
âHmmm. Does she usually wear lighter colors,â you pointed towards the lavender swatch, âor brighter colors?â You gestured to the pink swatch.
He looked down at the swatches and his brow furrowed. The man was standing so close, you could smell cedar and musk from his cologne. His large biceps slightly brushed your upper arms as he turned to face you, âI reckon she likes the lighter colors.â
You took the lavender swatch, Kiss and Tell, from the man. Your fingers brushed against his thick, calloused ones as the card came into your possession. âOk, so weâll stick with the light purple! Letâs find a pink to match this one,â you smiled at him and he returned the expression.
Turning your body slightly towards the pinks, you started picking swatch after swatch off of the wall. Out of the corner of your eye you saw the man watching you in awe. Once several pink cards were in your hands, you went back to the paint desk.
You laid the cards out on a blank, white piece of paper. Five pink swatches were in a row on the paper with the lavender swatch below them. The man stood next to you and leaned over your shoulder to get a better look. A husky voice drawled in your ear, âSo which one dâya think, darlinâ?â
You bit your lip at the warmth in his tone. A small shiver traveled up and down your spine, leaving a tingling in its wake. His tone was warm, and so was his upper arm. It grazed against your arm and left it warm and fuzzy. Brown eyes scanned over the options and then locked with yours.Â
His gaze was incredibly soft. He looked desperate. The image of a lost puppy crossed your mind yet again. A small smile was spread on his face, roping you further into your tiny crush on the customer.
You give him a small smile, which his eyes crinkled further at, and you inform him, âUnfortunately, I can only give you my opinion. I canât make the decision for you.â One of the manâs eyebrows raised and he gave you a slight frown. âWhyâs that?â His voice lilted in question.
Giving him a slight shrug, you explain, âWell, Iâve made decisions for people before, and sometimes they come back and blame me for âruining their wallsâ. I can tell you what I think looks good! Buuut Iâm not going to decide for you,â you gave him a sweet smile.
Cedar and musk filled your nose again as he leaned closer. Your gaze dipped downard and followed one of his large hands. The calloused fingertips on his thick digits gripped the paper, and dragged in between the two of you.Â
His opposite hand was set next to yours. A strong arm brushed against you. The hand holding onto the paper spanned across the page, âWell, tell me whatâcha think, honâ?â
Honâ.
The feeling was quick, but intense. It washed over you like a soothing, warm bath. Ease seeped into your bones and then crept up into your cheeks. Your face felt hot at the term of endearment. Turning back towards the swatches, your lip found its way behind your front teeth once more.
You went through the details of each potential pairing. Telling him which ones you thought were too warm, too muted, or too cool. The best pairing was with a light, baby pink. The swatch read:
First Date
Reading the color name, of course Behr had a weird color name for a damn light pink, your face got even hotter. Your hands collected the other pinks and set the light pink and light purple next to each other.
The man picked the two cards and held them up to each other in front of his face. His gaze scanned the names of the two cards. âKiss and Tell,â he softly muttered, his eyes gliding across the other name, âFirst Date,â he gave a slight smirk. It was as if he read your mind, he bit his lip, then released it. His tongue darted out to soothe the pinch on his bottom lip.Â
âOk darlinâ,â he started, âhow much paint do I need for a ten by ten room?â
âWell, a gallon covers three hundred to four hundred square feet,â you trailed off, âdepending on how many coats you want to do, youâll need one to two gallons.â
His mouth scrunched up to one side and he hummed, âHow much is a gallon?â
Your mouth slanted in thought, âWell, it depends on what type of paint youâre looking to get.â
He smiled and tilted his head at your words, âTypa paint? Darlinâ, I thought there was just paint,â he softly chuckled out, âanâ I usually make my brother do the paint shoppinâ.â His confession brought a smile to your face. It wasnât uncommon. Whenever people bought paint, they were slightly taken aback at how many questions you needed to ask them.
You started to walk to the left, towards a mat laid out on the paint desk counter. The brown mat displayed different qualities and brands of paint, which increased in price as you looked towards the right end of the lineup. You took a breath to start your usual line of questions, âOkay, so how many coats of paint are you looking to do? These paints,â you slid your finger to the more expensive end of the lineup, âhave more primer in them, so theyâre thicker. The thicker the paint, the fewer coats you have to do. Some paints have a one coat guarantee,â you finished and looked to his eyes to read his expression.
His mouth repeated its action from earlier, scrunching to the side, âHmmm, I sâpose one coat would be less workâŠâ He went silent for a moment as he thought. You could almost see him running the numbers in his head. âAlrighâ, I think Iâll go with two gallons of the one coat,â he finished by placing one of his hands down next to yours on the mat. The manâs eyes twinkled as he looked into yours and gave you a soft smile.
The smile he gave you was returned with your own, âOkay! So what sheen do you want the paint to be?â His smile shifted into confusion once more. Lines on his forehead deepened due to his perplexed look. âSheen?â He asked.
You gave him a soft giggle. Reaching across him and towards a board of wooden paint swatches, you gave him a small, ââScuse me,â and his cologne filled your nose once more. Your shoulder brushed against his arm on your way back to your original positioning.
Facing the swatches towards him, you explained, âSo sheens are how shiny the paint is once it dries. You can have no shine, which is a flat sheen, and you can go all the way up to very shiny, which is a high gloss. Usually bedrooms are eggshell or satin,â you pointed to the corresponding wood pieces. Tapping one of the shinier samples, you added, âAnd the shinier the finish, the more durable it is, and the easier it is to wipe, if you wanted to clean the wall.â
You leaned towards him, pointing at one specific wood sample block, âIf your daughter likes to draw on the walls, Iâd get satin, or even a semi-gloss.â
He huffed in amusement at your suggestion. âGuess I forgot kids draw on walls,â he chuckled, âSarahâs ân angel, she prefers paper instead of drywall.â His wholesome anecdote made you giggle and look into his eyes.
The man gave you a small wink in response to your laughter. Taking a breath in, he pointed to a wooden sample a few spaces above the one you pointed at, âLets go wâ eggshell.â His finger dwarfed the block of wood as he gave the material two light taps with his fingertip. Gazing at his hands, they were calloused, but also well kept. Fingernails at the ends of his thick digits were trimmed short, utilitarian.
You smiled at his decision, âOkay! Well, Iâm going to go make labels for these two gallons and then Iâll mix âem up for you!â He beamed at your words and leaned against the counter, âSounds good tâme, sweetheart.â
Your face flushed with heat at his response, and you hurriedly went to the other side of the counter to enter the two gallons into the computer. A white screen filled your vision as you tapped the different buttons to narrow down which type of paint the computer needed to calculate formulas for.Â
As you tapped one button, the computer froze for a couple seconds. You frowned, âIt always does this,â you thought. Not having to focus on the options on the screen, your vision instead focused on the reflection displaying what was behind you. Your eyes landed on the Texan man.
And his eyes were on you.
You watched as he bit the inside of his cheek, his mind lost in his thoughts. His gaze remained on you until he nodded to himself and looked down. Though he wasnât observing the different paints on the mat, he was reaching into his pocket.
One of his hands sprawled out on the counter as he held down one of the paint samples and began to write on the paper in black sharpie, the item he retrieved from his jeans. The computer wasnât too far from the counter, and you were semi-able to see what he was writing.
It was a phone number.
Your eyes widened and you returned your focus to the computer's screen. It definitely loaded a while ago and you hadnât noticed. You pressed the, âPRINT LABELSâ button and tore the stickers from the printer. Not making eye contact with himâstill panicking over what you witnessedâyou made your way down the center aisle and found the cans needed for the paint colors.
But your lazy coworkers havenât been downstocking the cans, so they were just out of reach when you were on your tip-toes. You sprawled your fingers up towards the top of the can, hoping to find the handle with your finger tips.
Then heavy steps made their way over to you. The Texanâs signature cologne wafted towards you, âLemme help yaâ with that, darlinâ.â Before you could answer him, he reached and grabbed two gallons down from the just-out-of-reach shelf. He lifted them up so you could see the faces of the can, his face framed by two paint cans, âAre these the right ones?â You nodded, and he made his way back to the paint counter with them. Internally swooning at his help, you followed behind him, but returned to the opposite side of the counter as him.
He set the cans down with a, thunk, thunk, and smiled at you. You gave him a smile as you took the cans, âThank you,â you said to him. His smile broadened, ââCourse.â
You brought the open gallons underneath the tint dispensers, each gallon getting a small amount of tint. Hammering echoed throughout the store as you closed each gallon, then put them in the paint shakers to mix.
Looking up from the floor, where the paint shakers were, back to the counter, you saw the manâs thick fingers tapping on the surface of it. Your eyes traveled from his fingers to his face. His gaze met yours and his lips parted, âWhatâcha got goinâ on for the rest of the night?â
You had to force your mouth to not smile too wide as you answered him with a sigh, âJust finishing up my shift, then going home,â you paused to think about what else to say, âIâm just glad I donât have to work for the next two days,â you chuckled out.
His face and shoulders fell playfully, âOh, Iâm jealous,â he shook his head, âIâve gotta work the next four days, nâ then Iâm off for two.â He shook his head even more. Your lips slanted in sympathy and you were about to offer it, but the man continued, âNever become a contractor honâ,â he let out a breath, âIâs shitty hours ân shitty clients.âÂ
Brown eyes widened and then looked at you, he placed a wide palm over his chest, âSorry sweetheart,â he chuckled, âJusâ had a long day.â
You laughed at his apologetic behavior, it was endearing, âYou donât have to be sorry!â You continued to laugh, but then lowered your voice. Leaning towards him, you murmured, âHome Depot has shitty hours and shitty clients too,â you winked at him.
His teeth shined in the broad smile he displayed for you. A series of laughs left his chest. Two large hands both rested on the surface of the counter as he looked down and, more quietly, continued his chuckling. After a couple seconds, brown eyes peered back up into yours. The twinkles in his irises matched his smile.
âHope Iâm not a shitty client,â he joked, but his eyebrows faltered in sincerity.Â
Your head tilted at him with soft eyes. Scrunching your lips to one side, you decided to be somewhat bold, âI think youâre one of the best Iâve had in a while.â
His face relaxed and his soft smile returned. The lines between his eyebrows became more prominent as he gave you those brown, puppy-dog eyes. âWell thank yaâ, darlinâ,â he drawled. You held his eye contact until you caught movement in your peripheralâhis thumb brushed against the light pink paint sample. The dark mustache above his lip twitched as he bit the inside of his cheek again.
Click. Click.
The sounds indicated the timers on the paint shakers were up. And the gallons were done mixing. Breaking eye contact, you bent down to retrieve the gallons from the machines. Opening them up, you put your finger into each can and dotted the color on the top of the can. They were closed once more and you slid them over to the man across the counter.
He looked down at them, and then his face lit up. âOh! Dâya mind puttinâ these colors on my account?â You were equally lit up at his request, as customers usually didnât care about the paint accounts they could make to save their paint colors.
Using the computer closest to him, you tapped a few buttons and a series of fields popped up. You pressed on the field for a phone number, âWhatâs your phone number?â You asked him. Your face heated up at the meaning of the words in a different context.Â
He told you and you typed them in, pressing enter on your keyboard. One account popped up: JOEL MILLER. âHe definitely looked like a Joel,â you thought to yourself. âJoel?â You asked out loud to confirm it was his account. His name tumbling from your lips made his face light up. A charming smile was framed by a dark beard and âstache. âThatâs me,â he replied.
You clicked on the account and entered the colors under, âSarahâs Room,â Joel told you. The information was saved after a press of the âSAVEâ button. His hands came up to grip the thin, metal handles of the paint gallons. Sliding them off the counter, his mouth opened and then closed again. He bit his lip, then looked at you, âThank you darlinâ, have a good night.âÂ
Your brow dropped a bit, expecting for him to give you his numberâfor different reasons this time. Before he got too far, you replied, âOf course! Have a good night, Joel!â He threw you a wide, toothed smile over his shoulder. Joelâs smile was wide, but his eyes lacked the same enthusiasm.
â
No one else approached the counter after a couple minutes, so you retreated to the computer to âdo your trainingâ. You sat on your phone, letting the training video play in the backgroundâthis video was literally anti-union propaganda. Mindlessly scrolling on social media, your thoughts wandered.Â
You felt dumb for expecting him to give you his number. He couldâve just written something else down on the card. Sighing, you turned and meandered the paint aisles to keep yourself busy. With slow steps you wandered past can after can. You made it to the third aisle, and a man stood at the end of it.Â
He had dark brown hair, wore a navy t shirt, and was built like Joel. Your footsteps became faster to greet him, but then the man turned and looked at youâit was not Joel.
The man sighed and rolled his eyes, âFinally, Iâve been waiting here for five minutes looking for one of you.â
Your eyes widened, the tone of this customer sharply contrasted the one of your last. Joelâs kind eyes and comforting drawl made this manâs voice compare to nails on a chalkboard. Staring at him, you realized he didnât look like Joel at all. The rude manâs facial hair was unkempt and scraggly. His teeth must have had the same maintenance as this beard, as they were begging for a trip to the dentist. His hair had no style, not even a brushing of it in a general direction.
The awful whiny, rasp of his voice only heightened your disgust, âIâve been looking for this thing,â he held his phone out and pointed at his screen, âit says you have it in stock in this aisle but I canât find it.â
You hummed in response. After asking him to scroll down to view the products information, you typed the SKU for the item into your phone. The Home Depot app on your phone was the only way you could help people, otherwise you'd be lost. You typed the SKU into the app and made sure the app filtered for items in your store, not just the available items online.
OUT OF STOCK displayed under a picture of the item, next to your store name. You sighed, âIâm sorry sir, but it looks like we did have this item, but it's out of stock right now.â
The manâs eyebrows knitted together and he looked at you in shock, âWhat?â The word shot into your chest. Shit. You thought back to what you said to Joel earlier, âHome Depot has shitty hours and shitty clients too.â
You sighed, âDo you have the right store listed on your phone?â The man snapped his eyes to his screen confusedly. After a moment he held it back out for you to see, âI donât know, you tell me,â he sneered.
Reading the â130 IN STOCKâ on his screen, your vision trailed to the store next to it. That store was in a completely different area. Clearing your throat, you informed him, âSir, thatâs a store one hundred miles from here.â You braced for his reaction.
His screen faced him and he grumbled. âWell why doesnât your damn app update the location when I search?â He rudely asked. Your breath caught in your throat at his harshness. âCanât you look in the back if you have it?â He stated, like he worked here.
Another deep breath, âWe donât have a back sir, we do overhead stocking,â you looked up, âand I donât see the item youâre looking for up there,â you swallowed. Heat flushed into your face in anxiety at the customerâs attitude.Â
âFuckinâ useless,â the man spat under his breath at his phone, peering up at you. âCanât even find a damn item,â he trailed off. Your throat clenched at his words. A shaky breath left your nose.Â
Heavy footsteps came from behind you and a wave of distaste washed through your bones. You swore if it was another entitled customer, you were going to go insane. Probably cry. Maybe scream. Definitely asking to go home early.
Someone cleared their throat behind you, âYouâre beinâ quite harsh to âer for somethinâ that ainât âer fault,â a Texan drawl announced. Recognizing the voice, you turned to see Joelâs built figure make its way over to you and the shitty client. A huff from the rude, scraggly man came from your left, âThis ainât any of your business, buddy.â
Your head snapped towards Joel to see his response, âThe hell it ainât,â his voice got slightly louder, âYouâre the dumbass that canât jusâ say you were lookinâ at the wrong goddamn store.â Eyes wide, your gaze shifted from one man to the other. Joel stood tall, brows furrowed, and muscles bulging in the sleeves of his t-shirt.Â
Scraggly man must have decided the argument wasnât worth it, as he just grumbled and took his cart down the aisle and away from both of you. Joel sighed beside you, ââM sorry âbout that, sweetheart. I knew ya coulda handled that, but he shouldnât have been so rude to ya. Especially over his own damn mistake.âÂ
Relief flooded your body in the absence of the shitty client. Warmth from Joelâs presence began to fill the rest of the space that the relief couldnât. Then you started thinking, âHowâd you know he put the wrong store in the app?â You asked Joel.
The contractor froze. Eyes wide. Brows towards the ceiling. Lips pinched together. He looked down at the cement floor and then back up to you, âI may have been eavesdropping from the aisle over.â He cocked his head towards the aisle he came from.
Joel took a deep breath and then cleared his throat. The same brown, puppy-dog eyes from earlier met your irises. He dug his hand into his front jeans pocket and pulled out a piece of paper. Unfolding it, a light pinkâFirst Dateâsample card had a number in black sharpie scrawled across the color. âI came back to give ya this,â he held the paper out for you to take, and you took it from his large digits.
You stared at the card in shock. Okay. So he did plan on giving it to you.
He sighed and rubbed a broad palm over the back of his neck, âI was gonna give it to yaâ earlier but I got nervous,â he chuckled, âI, uh, I jusâ thought, uh, I think, that youâre very pretty, and funny.â He cleared his throat once more and continued, and you tore your gaze away from the paper to meet his eyes, âAnâ Iâd like to take yaâ out on a date sometime.â A heavy breath left his lungs.
A moment passed before you grinned at him and gave him a little chuckle, âIâd go on a date with you, Joel.â Broad shoulders covered in navy fabric slumped in relief. He grinned at you and his face flushedâhe was blushing.
He checked his watch and muttered, âShit.â Looking at you, his brows furrowed, âSorry, darlinâ, Iâve gotta run. Havinâ family dinner tonight.â Your heart throbbed at the care he had towards his family.Â
You waved a hand at him, heat rising towards your face at the loose plans you two had, âWell, donât let me make you late!â He nodded at you, âHave a good night, sweetheart,â he said before slowly walking backwards down the aisle and away from you. âYou too, Joel!â You replied before he turned the corner.
About to turn the corner, he shot you a grin with a wink.
Okay. Maybe working at Home Depot did have its perks.















