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A Will and a Way

Page 5

by Maggie Wells


  They’d just rented both sides of the duplex when Bobby Sr. passed away from a massive coronary and all hell broke loose.

  Out from under his father’s thumb, Junior took over the business. With a vengeance. He’d fired Will within a week, but that wasn’t much of a surprise to anyone as they’d never gotten along. But a few months of sporadic unemployment ended up being nothing compared to the frustration of watching a guy take everything his old man had worked for all his life and flush it down the drain. Or snort it up his nose.

  Will had found another job with another outfit, but this time he paid more attention when Greg rambled on about investments and savings. Using his childhood home as collateral, he secured loans through small business assistance programs and the local bank. The day before Mason Construction closed its office doors, he’d offered Junior’s wife cash for the equipment. Smart woman that she was, she took it, knowing he was paying more than she’d get at auction. Two years later, Greg took the leap and Tarrant and Stark Building and Design was born.

  Will waved as their neighbor, Mrs. Walker, bustled past, dragging her battered two-wheeler behind her. The old woman’s trips to Taylor’s Market could be charted like the stars. Her routine hadn’t altered since he was a bag boy there. First, she’d disparage the selection in the bakery, then, she’d badger poor Mattie at the butcher counter into cutting and re-cutting her single chop until he’d achieved pork perfection. Once she laid waste to the snack aisle, she’d park herself at the register where she’d tussle with Mr. Taylor over the price of every can of beans and leaf of lettuce while plucking cheese curls from an open bag and eating them one by one. In the end, she’d pay the extra dollars for the fancy cat food because her cat, Purrsilla, showed a marked preference for it over the cheaper brands.

  Like a lovesick teenager, Will had spent the last two days skulking around the neighborhood and checking for Betty nearly everywhere he went. The Pump wasn’t exactly a tourist trap. The fact that she’d walked into the gin joint of his choice meant she had to live nearby. And as big as Chicago could be, the neighborhood was very small. Which was why he couldn’t ask about her outright. Any questions would certainly be noted, reported, and dissected over coffee cake from Harter’s Bakery.

  With Greg’s wedding fresh in everyone’s mind, they’d be primed and pumped to relieve Will of his freedom. The past few months had been like reliving his twenties and thirties all over again. The minute Greg fell for Josie, every match-making mama with a divorcée daughter decided Will was ripe for reappraisal. Those few years when they’d written him off as irredeemable had flown by so quickly. One little wedding, and decades of ruthlessly flaunted bachelorhood were forgotten. His good buddy’s relentless need for home and hearth had put him squarely back on the block.

  Thankfully, what happened at The Pump didn’t count. Bar behavior and bad behavior were expected. He didn’t earn his reputation as the neighborhood womanizer overnight. No, he’d notched every notch, leaving his lady friends satisfied, if not a little bewildered by his quick escapes. And he was careful. So damn careful. He hadn’t slept with a neighborhood girl in two decades. Hadn’t let himself be roped into anything remotely resembling a ‘plus one’ situation in nearly that long. He didn’t talk about the women he dated, and he never, ever brought them back to his place. One whisper of interest stretching beyond the bedroom and the banns would be published in the next church bulletin. Thanks to Sister Laurent, no doubt.

  The coffee maker beeped just as the outer door to the office opened. The cavalry had arrived. He hoped this temp could at least work the phones.

  “Hello?”

  Something in the woman’s tone made the fine hairs on the back of his neck ripple, but he dismissed it as a symptom of caffeine withdrawal. Needing to prove, if only to himself, that his priorities were in line, Will turned his back on the computer. He’d choose coffee. Every time.

  “I hope you know how to work these programs,” he called over his shoulder. “The one they sent the other day barely knew how to turn the damn computer on.”

  “I’m familiar with most business applications.”

  The woman’s soft drawl climbed his spine like a vine. Gripping the handle on a coffee mug that proclaimed him to be a pothead, he straightened but kept his back to her as he administered the test he’d developed to pre-screen candidates before allowing his hopes to enter into the equation.

  “Can you spell cat without using any numbers?”

  “Last I checked, it was only C, A, and T.” She waited a beat before asking, “Is that it? Did I pass the test? Do I get the job? I have to say, you might wanna consider raising your standards just a teensy bit.”

  The amusement in her tone was too much. He turned. Slowly. The last thing he wanted to do was startle her into running. He watched her smile fade and her eyes widen. Big, beautiful, and blue eyes flecked with a surprising amount of green. They were also cooling by the second.

  He forced a smile, but it felt like a wince. She looked gorgeous. The wild waves of sunshine-colored hair were tamed into a smooth coil at her nape. She wore pink lipstick, but it was nowhere near the shade of her hideous coat, which, thankfully, was out of sight. Thank God Mother Nature received the memo on the calendar change. The jacket of her neat suit nipped in at her waist and flared over slim hips. She clutched a leather portfolio to her chest like a shield.

  “Hello, Betty. Funny meeting you here.”

  She bit down on her bottom lip, and he almost snapped the handle from the coffee cup. He wanted to bite it, too. Hard. Then lick it until she begged for more. Knowing she probably wouldn’t welcome such an assault, he chanced a tiny sip from the steaming mug. He needed it. Bad.

  “So, uh….” he peered at her over the rim of the thick ceramic, “…yeah. You’re hired.”

  * * * *

  Heat—searing, painful, nuclear meltdown heat—flooded every millimeter of Betty’s skin. She wanted to press her hands to her flaming ears, but she couldn’t move. The wicked gleam in Will’s dark eyes paralyzed her. Shock turned her feet to clay. “You?”

  He cocked his head, that lopsided smile spreading like lava. “I’d be the T in T-A-S,” he explained. “Will Tarrant.”

  The last bit he added with an extra-helpful nod. As if she’d need reminding.

  Did he think she engaged in heavy petting with every man she met in a bar? Oh, my God. This man’s hand had been in her pants. She glanced at the door, then Will, then gave in to the urge to scan the room for cameras. This had to be a set-up of some kind. What were the odds of walking into her first-ever temp job and finding this man? How was that possible in a city this size? She spotted nothing more than a few potted plants gasping for life, a dust-covered desk she assumed she was meant to occupy, and…this man. Will of the wicked smile, hot kisses, and stolen caresses that made her feel positively wanton. But no cameras. No possible reason why their paths might cross again. Well, no reason other than the one he’d so cheerfully latched onto in the bar the other night.

  “It really must be Fate.”

  Closing her eyes, Betty shook her head in fierce denial. “This is not possible. You should not be here.”

  His nostrils flared and his mouth twitched. She can tell he was fighting back a smile, and that only added fuel to her fire. She opened her mouth to speak, then promptly closed it. What the hell was one supposed to say in this situation?

  “There are articles of incorporation with my name on them around here somewhere,” he said blandly. “But we can sort all of that stuff out later. I have more urgent needs at the moment.”

  Mortification washed over her. It was one thing to come face to face with a questionable choice. It was another thing entirely when that choice held all the cards. A fairly irrational but utterly feminine spark of indignation flared. She stared down her nose at him with exactly the same double dose of disdain her mama used to use on her daddy. “Is this some kind of revenge? Did you arrange this little…unhappy cir
cumstance?”

  He blinked. “Unhappy circumstance? I’m very happy to see you.”

  The simple declaration went a long way toward squelching her indignation, but not quite far enough. “I don’t appreciate having my time wasted—”

  His jaw tensed as he set the coffee mug aside. When he looked up, his dark eyes were as cold as obsidian. “I don’t appreciate a cock tease, but I can promise you I didn’t arrange anything more than some temporary office help.”

  Just like that, the starch went out of her. “I’m sorry. It’s just….” She took a steadying gulp of air. “I don’t do what I did that night.”

  “We didn’t do much of anything. At least, nothing more than any teenagers do on their parents’ couch.”

  True. She knew that was true, but that didn’t make her behavior in the bar any less disconcerting. “We weren’t on a couch. And we’re not teenagers, are we?”

  “Thank God,” he said with undue reverence. Those bottomless eyes warmed and a hint of a smile teased the corners of his mouth. “I am happy to see you. You walking in here today saves me a whole lot of embarrassment.”

  “I’m glad it saves one of us some.”

  Will laughed and gestured for her to take a seat. “I was going to have to shake the grapevine to see what information I could score.”

  His obvious pleasure in seeing her was a boost to her equilibrium. At least, that was what she told herself. In truth, he made her feel just as off-balance as he had at the bar, but the sensation wasn’t entirely unpleasant. She’d returned to her tiny apartment that night chilled on the outside but raging fire-hot on the inside. A part of her wanted to thank him for backing her up against that bar and waking something inside her. Something she was afraid might be comatose after all these years. She’d been completely unlike herself that night. And she liked it a little too much.

  Eyeing him curiously, she asked, “Information about me?”

  “Of course. You took off on me.” The gruff reminder was paired with a piercing glare, but the effect was shattered when that irrepressible smile broke through again. Dropping into the other guest chair, he held his hands out in a gesture of helpless futility. “Just disappeared. One minute I had you, the next you were dashing out the door muttering under your breath like the white rabbit.”

  “The white rabbit?” She laughed, wondering if this man with the devilish smile and too sharp eyes could be for real. “You’re not going to invite me to tea, are you?”

  “That was the Mad Hatter,” he said, in all seriousness.

  “I can’t believe any of this is happening. Maybe I did fall down the rabbit hole.”

  His solemn expression melted away. Those dark eyes sparkled. “You’re the rabbit.”

  Since she seemed to have ditched all hope of dignity in her dealings with him the minute he’d kissed her senseless, she tried to muster up some good old-fashioned Southern sass. “I’m nobody’s bunny.”

  “I’m happy to see you,” he repeated, staring straight into her eyes.

  Ducking her head, she broke from his hypnotic gaze. His fingers twitched. This time he followed through with the caress. He tucked her hair behind her ear, the pads of his fingertips lingering as they grazed the tender skin, leaving a sizzling trail of sensation in their wake.

  “I knew I should have slept with you when I had the chance.”

  He blinked in surprise, then a deep, throaty chuckle wound around her like smoke. He took the leather folder from her hand but otherwise completely ignored it. “I wish you hadn’t bolted on me the other night.”

  “I was embarrassed.”

  “You were magnificent.” Their gazes locked. “And you can have as many chances as you want.”

  “Ah, but now I can’t. You’ve offered me a job.” A rueful laugh escaped her. “Just when you think there’s nothing more awkward than getting caught by a nun making out in a bar with a stranger…I can’t very well risk shagging the boss.”

  A frown darkened his handsome face. “I take it back.”

  “That’s a bit unethical, don’t you think?”

  “More unethical than sleeping with my employee or less?” He leaned in. “Either way, I think I’m okay with it.”

  “You are morally corrupt.”

  He grinned. “Undoubtedly, but thank you for noticing.”

  “Too bad I need the job.” She thrust her résumé and the temp agency paperwork at him.

  A puzzled frown took up residence between his eyes. “For real? The agency really sent you here?”

  “Did you think I just dropped out of the sky?” The genuine puzzlement on his face made the flame of indignation that burned constantly in her belly flare. “Or what? You think I came looking for you?”

  The undisguised disappointment she saw in his eyes was all the answer she needed. But before she could take that massive ego of his down a notch, he shot from the chair, rubbing his jaw with one hand and raking the other through his hair. When he reached the window, he turned back, an odd, almost tortured expression on his face. “You need a job?”

  She stood, curling her fingers into her palms to stifle the urge to smooth the furrow between his inky brows. “A temporary one.” The corners of his mouth pulled into a fierce scowl. Betty held her head high. “The agency said you all needed some general office help, and I need some income while I look for something permanent.”

  “Office help,” he repeated, searching her eyes.

  “That’s why I’m here.”

  He placed his hands on her shoulders then smoothed his palms down her arms. The facile fingers she remembered all too well curled around her elbows. He drew her closer, and despite her best intentions, she surrendered a few centimeters. “That can’t be the only reason,” he said, almost to himself. “There has to be more.”

  “I told you, I don’t believe in Fate, and I want to assure you that I have no grand design on you, Will.”

  He stiffened almost imperceptibly, then he smiled, that edgy glint back in his eyes. “No? Well, what if I have one on you?”

  “I doubt that.”

  “You have no idea what I’ve been cooking up in my head over the last couple of days.”

  She wet her lips, but the second his gaze dropped to her mouth, she knew she made a grave mistake. “I need the job.”

  He tilted his head, telegraphing the intent to kiss her. “How about a kiss instead?”

  Regaining a shred of sense, she placed a hand on his chest to stop him. “Like a consolation prize?”

  Irritation flashed across his face, but he quickly masked his impatience. “Would you prefer a years’ supply of car wax?”

  Gently disengaging herself from his grasp, she spared him a wan smile. “If it were something edible I’d think about it. Not that your kisses aren’t delicious, but without this job, I think I’d have to start shopping the cat food aisle.”

  He conceded to her need for breathing room with a single nod then leaned back against the desk. The smile he gave in return was a pale shadow of its predecessors. Its faded brilliance made her gut twist. “Is that where the single people meet these days?”

  She tugged at her suit jacket, using the space he created between them to find her footing again. “Well, the single women. I tend to avoid the men I find there.”

  He laughed and her heart gave a disturbing lurch. “Seems sexist and more than a little cheap.” Folding his arms across his chest, he bent at the waist and leaned in conspiratorially. “I’m a bit ashamed of you.”

  Betty let her gaze travel slowly up the length of him, reacquainting herself with his long legs, lean torso, and broad shoulders. He wore a white dress shirt with a thin blue stripe and the sleeves rolled up to his elbows. Silky strands of dark hair dusted muscular forearms and curled around thick wrists. She spotted a hint of the same dark hair at his collar, and her tongue curled in appreciation. She’d licked that smooth, vulnerable skin just beneath his Adam’s apple. That perfect spo
t where the stubble of his beard stopped.

  Tearing her eyes from the hollow of his throat, she met his gaze directly. “No more than I am of myself.”

  He flinched as if she’s slapped him. “Don’t be. Don’t apologize for that night.” He straightened to his full height and stalked over to the desk. “It was the most memorable night I’ve had in a long time.”

  “I doubt that.” She gave him a wry smile. “I haven’t done anything like that…I’ve never…I feel like a—”

  “Don’t. Because if you do, I have to feel like one, too. Damn it, I like feeling like a stud better.”

  “A stud, huh?”

  “Don’t apologize for being who you are, Betty.”

  “The woman you met the other night is not at all who I am.” The denial came too fast. Too easy—like she’d been in that bar. The problem was, she didn’t hate that woman.

  “I think maybe she is.”

  The assertion flew all over her. She reared back, incensed that this stranger would presume to know who she was when she barely had the foggiest idea herself. “How would you know who I am?”

  “I have eyes and a brain. And my gut. You’re a beautiful, vibrant woman.” His eyebrow arched as he gave her a frank perusal. “A damn sexy one, too. My gut tells me you’re a pretty brave one as well.”

  The last bit sucked the annoyance from her sails. “How do you figure?”

  “You walked into a nest of strangers and damn-near owned the place.”

  “Hardly.”

  “There’s nothing wrong with taking what you want from life.” He challenged her with a sly smirk.

  “By any means? Even if it means rescinding a job offer in hopes of getting laid?” she shot back.

  Will treated her to a patently unrepentant smirk. “Yeah, well, what can I say? I really wish you would have slept with me.”

  She couldn’t hold back a laugh. “Now we’ll never know.”

 

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