Читать книгу The Man Behind the Pinstripes - Melissa McClone, Melissa Mcclone - Страница 8
CHAPTER THREE
ОглавлениеBY THE TIME Caleb changed into a pair of shorts and a T-shirt and then returned to the patio, the table had been transformed with china, crystal glasses and a glass-blown vase filled with yellow and pink roses from the garden. Very feminine. Very Grams. “You’ve gone all out.”
“I enjoy having company.” Beaming, Grams patted the seat next to her. “Sit and eat.”
Caleb sat next to her. He stared across the table at Becca.
What was she doing here?
He wanted to speak to Grams alone, to talk about Becca and his concerns about the so-called dog consultant and if she was exploiting his grandmother’s generosity.
Sneaky scam artist or sweet dog lover? Becca seemed to be a contradiction, one that confused him.
On their way to the kennel, he’d sensed a connection. Something he hadn’t felt in over a year. Maybe two. Not since … Cassandra. But he knew better than to trust those kinds of emotions with a total stranger.
Becca wasn’t his usual type—Caleb casually dated high-powered professional women—but he’d found himself flirting and having fun with her until she’d had to ruin the moment with her ridiculous grandmother-is-lonely spiel.
Becca was wrong. He couldn’t wait to prove how wrong.
He sliced through his cake with his fork. The silver tines pinged against the porcelain plate.
As if he wanted or needed anything from Becca Taylor other than her lint roller.
“You must be hungry,” Grams said.
Nodding, he took a bite.
Becca drank from her glass of ice water.
“Do the dogs usually stay in the kennel all day?” he asked. A rivulet of condensation rolled down her glass. She placed it on the corner of the yellow floral placemat. “No, they are out most of the time, but if they were here they’d be going crazy over the cake.”
“Dogs eat cake?” he asked.
Becca refilled her water from a glass pitcher with lemons floating on the top.
A guilty expression crossed Grams’s face. “I never give them a lot. Never any chocolate. But when they stare up at me as if they’re starving, it’s too hard not to give them a taste.”
“Those dogs know exactly how to get what they want.” Laughter filled Becca’s eyes. “They’re spoiled rotten.”
“Nothing wrong with being spoiled and pampered,” Grams agreed.
“Not at all.” Becca sounded wistful. “I’d love to be one of your dogs.”
Her words surprised Caleb. She didn’t seem like the primping and pampering type. But what did he really know about her? He sipped his iced tea.
She picked up her fork and sliced off a bite of cake. Her lips parted.
Fair Face made a lipstick that plumped lips, making them fuller and, according to the marketing department, more desirable. Becca’s lips were perfect the way they were.
She raised the fork.
Like a moth to a blowtorch, Caleb watched her, unable to look away. He placed his glass on the table.
She brought the fork closer to her mouth until her lips closed around the end.
The sweat at the back on his neck had caused the collar on his T-shirt to shrink two sizes in the past ten seconds.
She pulled out the empty fork. A dab of enticing frosting was stuck on the corner of her mouth.
A very lickable position.
What the hell was he thinking? Caleb wasn’t into licking. At least not his grandmother’s employee, one who claimed to know more about Grams’s than he did.
The woman was dangerous. Caleb forced himself to look away.
If making him feel worse had been Becca’s goal, she’d succeeded. Not only worse, but also aggravated. Annoyed. Attracted.
No, not attracted. Distracted. By the frosting.
His gaze strayed back to the creamy dab on Becca’s face.
Yes, that was it. The icing. He placed his fork on the plate. Not the lick …
“Please don’t tell me you’re finished?” Grams asked, sounding distressed he hadn’t eaten the whole slice.
The last thing Caleb wanted was more cake. He needed to figure out what was going on with Becca, then get out of here. “Letting the food settle before I eat more.”
He sneaked a peek at Becca.
The tip of her pink tongue darted out, licking her top lip to remove the bit of frosting before disappearing back into her mouth.
Caleb stuck two fingers inside his collar and tugged. Hard. The afternoon heat was making him sweat. Maybe he should head to the gym instead of back to work. Doing today’s workout at the gym might clear his head and help him focus on the right things.
He wiped his mouth with a yellow napkin. Becca should have used hers instead of her tongue to remove the icing.
Maybe Becca was trying to be provocative and flirty. Maybe Becca saw dollar signs when she looked at him as Cassandra had. Maybe Becca didn’t want him to object to her involvement with Gertie. His grandmother had to be the mark here, not him.
“The cake is delicious. Moist,” he said. “The frosting has the right amount of sweetness.”
Eyes bright, Grams leaned forward over the table. “I’m so happy you like it. I’ve been working hard on the recipe.”
With a sweet grin that made him think of cotton candy, Becca motioned to her plate. Only half the slice remained. “I think you’ve perfected it.”
Grams chuckled. “Took me enough attempts.”
“I’ve enjoyed each and every slice.” Becca patted her trim waistline. “As you can tell.”
“Nonsense,” Grams said. “You have a lovely figure. Besides, a few slices of cake never hurt anybody. Men like curves, isn’t that right, Caleb?”
He choked on the cake in his mouth. Becca’s curves were the last thing he should be looking at right now. Not that he hadn’t checked them out before. “Mmmm-hmmm.”
“See,” Grams said lightheartedly.
Warm affection filled Becca’s eyes. “I’m sold.”
Caleb’s gaze darted between the two women. Grams treated Becca more like a friend than an employee. That was typical of his grandmother’s interactions with her staff, including the dowdy Mrs. Harrison, a fortysomething widow who preferred to go by her last name.
Still, Grams and Becca’s familiarity added to his suspicions given the differences in their social status, personalities and ages. His grandmother always took in strays and treated them well. Becca seemed to be playing along with her role in that scenario, but adding a twist by making sure she was becoming indispensable and irreplaceable.
Something was definitely off here. “Grams is an excellent baker.”
“You should have been here on Monday,” Becca said. “Gertie knocked it out of the park with her Black Forest cake. Seriously to-die-for.”
“Black Forest cake?” he asked.
Grams nodded with a knowing gleam in her eyes. “Your favorite.”
That had been only three days ago. Caleb stared at his plate.
Carrot cake was Courtney’s favorite. Grams had made his favorite earlier in the week. Puzzle pieces fell into place like colored blocks on a Rubick’s Cube. A seven-layer lead weight settled in the pit of Caleb’s stomach. “How many cakes do you bake a week?”
“It depends on how long it takes us to eat one,” she answered.
The question ricocheted through him, as if he were swinging wildly and hitting only air. “Us?”
“Becca. The estate staff. My lab assistants. Whoever else happens to be working here,” Grams explained. “Sometimes Becca takes the leftovers to the vet clinic when she covers shifts there.”
Wait a minute. He assumed his grandmother paid Becca well and allowed her to live in the guest cottage rent-free. Why would Becca work at a vet clinic, too? Especially if she was running a con?
“Sounds like a lot of cake.” Caleb tried to reconcile what he was learning about Becca as well as Grams’s cake. “I didn’t realize you enjoyed baking so much.”
Grams raised a shoulder, but there was nothing casual or indifferent in the movement. “Can’t have one of my grandchildren stop by and not have any cake to eat.”
But I also think she wants me here because she’s lonely.
Damn. His chest tightened. Becca was right. Grams was lonely. Regret slithered through him.
Thinking about the number of cakes being baked with anticipation and love and a big dose of hope made it hard to breathe. He figured Grams would be out and about doing whatever women of her age did to pass the time. Lunches, museums, fundraisers. He’d never thought she would go to so much trouble or imagined she would be sitting at home and waiting for her grandchildren to stop by.
His promise and his efforts blew up like a fifty-megaton bomb.
So much for taking care of Grams. He’d failed. He hadn’t taken care of her. He’d let her down.
Just like his … dad.
Guilt churned in Caleb’s gut. He opened his mouth to speak, but wasn’t sure what to say. “I’m sorry” wasn’t enough. He pressed his lips together.
“Did you have something you wanted to say?” Grams asked.
Caleb looked up. His grandmother was speaking to Becca.
Of course that woman would have something to say, a smug remark or a smart-aleck comment to expose his failure aloud. Anything so she could rub a ten-pound bag of salt into the gaping hole over his heart.
“No,” Becca said, but that didn’t soothe him, because she had an I-told-you-so smile plastered on her face. She looked pleased, almost giddy that she’d been proven correct.
How deeply had she ingrained herself in Grams’s life? He was concerned how well Becca could read his family. He needed to find his grandmother a new consultant, one with a better education, wardrobe and manners. One he trusted.
Becca’s silly, sheep-eating grin made the Cheshire cat look as if he were frowning. She raised a forkful of cake to her mouth. Each movement seemed exaggerated, almost slow motion as if she knew he was waiting for her to make the next move and she wanted to make him suffer.
Good luck with that.
Caleb couldn’t feel any worse than he was feeling. He had to do something to make this up to Grams.
“You can have another slice after you finish yours,” Grams said.
“One is enough for today,” he said. “But let me know when you bake another Black Forest cake, and I’ll stop by.”
A dazzling smile on his grandmother’s face, the kind that could power a city for a day, reaffirmed how lonely she must be in spite of her money and friends. That loneliness made her vulnerable to people who wanted to take advantage of her, people like Becca.
“I’ll do that,” Grams said.
He ground the toe of his running shoe against the tile.
In spite of his thinking he’d been a doting grandson, his phone calls, text messages and brunch on Sunday hadn’t been enough. Grams wanted to spend face-to-face time with her grandchildren, to chat with them and to feed them.
Caleb’s overbooked calendar flashed in his mind. His arm and shoulder muscles bunched, as if he’d done one too many Burpees at the gym.
He was so screwed.
No, that wasn’t right.
This was his grandmother, not some stranger.
He’d made a promise, one he intended to honor if it killed him. And it might do that unless Caleb could figure something out. A way to spend more time with Grams. Make more time for her. Find time …
Becca’s fork scraped against the plate.
Food.
That gave him an idea.
He had to eat. So did Grams.
Mealtimes would allow him to eat and appease his grandmother’s need to see her grandson at the same time. The question was how often. Brunch was a standing date. Dinner once a week would be a good start.
“Let’s have dinner next week on Wednesday. Invite Courtney to come,” he suggested. “I’m sure your cook can whip up something tasty for us. You can make dessert.”
Grams shimmied her narrow shoulders, as if she were a teenager bursting with excitement, not an elderly woman.
Maybe once a week wouldn’t be enough. His chest tightened.
“That sounds wonderful,” Grams said. “Do you think Courtney can make it?”
The anticipation in Grams’s voice made one thing certain. His sister would be at the dinner if he had to buy her a pretty, expensive bauble or a new pair of designer shoes. Grams was worth it. “Yes. She’ll be here.”
Grams looked as if she might float away like a helium balloon. “Excellent, because I can’t wait for Courtney to meet Becca.”
Caleb rolled his shoulders, trying to loosen the knots. He didn’t want Becca at dinner. The woman had overstayed her welcome as far as he was concerned. This meal was for his family, not employees.
He flashed her a practiced smile, so practiced people never saw through it. But the way Becca studied him made Caleb wonder if she was the exception to the rule. He tilted his head. “Join us for a glass of wine on Wednesday.”
Becca brushed her knuckles across her lips. “I don’t want to intrude on your evening.”
“You aren’t intruding,” Grams said before Caleb could reply. “You’re having dinner with us.”
“No,” he said at the same time as Becca.
His gaze locked on hers for an uncomfortable second before he looked away. Only ice remained in his glass, but he picked it up and sipped.
The woman was … unpredictable. One more thing not to like about her. He was more of a “load the dice ahead of time so he knew what he was going to roll” kind of guy. He didn’t like surprises. He’d bet Becca thrived upon them.
Grams’s lip curled. “Caleb.”
Becca studied her cake as if a magic treasure were hidden inside. “It’s okay, Gertie.”
No, it wasn’t. Caleb deserved his grandmother’s sharp tone. “What I meant is Courtney is a lot to take in if you’re not used to being around her. I have no doubt they’ll name a Category 5 hurricane after her one of these days.”
“Your sister can be … challenging at times,” Grams said.
Understatement of the year. Courtney was the definition of drama princess. The rest of the earth’s population was here to make his sister look good or help her out. Nothing he tried stopped her from being so selfish. Not even making her work at Fair Face in order to gain access to her trust fund. “We don’t want Courtney to overwhelm Becca and make her want to hightail it out of here.”
On second thought getting Becca out of the picture was exactly what he wanted to happen. No way would Grams start a business venture on her own. Caleb might have to rethink this.
“Becca won’t be overwhelmed. She’s made of stronger stuff than that,” Gertie said.
“Thanks, but you need this time alone with your grandchildren.” Becca’s eyelids blinked rapidly, like the shutter on a sport photographer’s camera. “I can’t make it anyway. I’m covering a shift for a vet tech at the twenty-four hour animal hospital on Wednesday.”
“That’s too bad,” he said.
She toyed with her napkin, her fingers speeding up as if someone had pressed the accelerator. A good thing the napkin was cloth or it would be shredded to bits.
“It is,” Becca said. “But I’m sure you’ll have a wonderful time together.”
Her saccharine sweet voice sounded relieved not to be a part of the dinner. Maybe she had seen through him. That would be a first. “You’ll be missed.”
As much as a case of poison oak.
A dismayed expression crossed Grams’s face, washing over her like a rogue wave. Her shoulders hunched. “You’re working that night, Becca?”
The tremble in her voice sent Caleb’s pulse accelerating like a rocket’s booster engine. Unease spiraled inside him. He reached for his grandmother’s hand, covering hers with his. Her skin felt surprisingly warm. Her pulse wasn’t racing. Good signs, he hoped. “Grams? You okay?”
She stared at her hands. “I forgot about Becca working on Wednesday. I do have an assistant who reminds me of things, but …”
Grams shook her head slowly, as if she were moving through syrup not air.
Caleb understood her worry. His grandfather had suffered from Alzheimer’s, a horrible disease for the patient as well as the family. Being forgotten by the man who’d held their lives together for so long hadn’t been easy. But even at the worst of times, Grams had dealt with the stress of the disease with raw strength and never-ending grace and by making jokes. He’d never seen his grandmother act like this. Not even when she’d been stuck in bed with an upper respiratory infection over a year ago. “No worries. You’ve had a lot on your mind.”
“That’s right,” Becca agreed.
Caleb wondered if she knew something about Grams’s health, but hadn’t told anyone. Except Becca looked genuinely concerned.
Grams gave his hand a feeble squeeze. “I should be able to remember a detail like Becca’s work schedule.”
“I never told you about next week’s schedule.” Becca’s voice was soft and nurturing and oh-so-appealing. “I received the call this morning about what shifts I’ll be covering. You haven’t forgotten anything.”