Read A Small-Town Homecoming Online

Authors: Terry McLaughlin

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Fiction - Romance, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance: Modern, #Romance - Contemporary, #Suspense, #California, #Women architects, #Woman architects, #Contractors, #City and town life

A Small-Town Homecoming (5 page)

BOOK: A Small-Town Homecoming
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“Yes, he has. It’s all terribly distressing, all the trouble and expense involved in setting things right. But he assures me there won’t be any delays. And he’s handled everything quite satisfactorily, with no need for your attention.”

“He may not have needed it, but he got it.” Tess picked up one of her shoes and began to scrub at the stains. “Finding out from one of the shopkeepers downtown that the police had been called to Tidewaters got my attention pretty damn quick.”

“Really, Tess, must you use that kind of language?”

“I beg your pardon. Sorry.” She chipped a nail on her shoe heel and swore under her breath as she tossed the soiled, crumpled tissue toward her waste bin. The wad bounced off the rim and tumbled to the floor. This just wasn’t her day. “I tend to get upset when my job site is the scene of a criminal investigation, and I’m not notified.”

“Although I appreciate your enthusiasm for this project,” Geneva said in a terrifyingly frigid tone, “I must remind you that Tidewaters belongs to me, not to you.”

Tess stiffened and dropped the shoe. “Yes, Mémère.”

“You may be my granddaughter, but you are also, where Tidewaters is concerned, my employee.”

It was that fact, more than her grandmother’s scolding, that heated Tess’s cheeks with embarrassment and guilt. An angry phone call wasn’t the best way to display her professional abilities to her biggest client to date.

She detested being caught making an error in judg
ment. She despised weakness, especially in herself, and she loathed the shriveling remorse that swamped her at times like this. That was why she worked so hard, took such care, fussed over the details. Stayed in control. There were fewer mistakes that way.

She shut her eyes and rubbed her forehead. “I want—I
need
—to be kept in the loop. I have to be a part of this, each step of it, all the way through. It’s not just the way I want it. It’s my job. And if I’m going to do a good job, I need to be informed about everything—all the progress and all the problems.”

“I don’t suppose,” Geneva said, “it would do any good to ask you to be civil to Quinn when you discuss this with him.”

“I can be civil.” Tess slowly sank into her chair. “I can be anything I want to be.”

“Except punctual.”

“Except that.” Her smile was faint. “But I’m working on it.”

“Good. Now,” Geneva said with a brisk change of tone, “I have some unrelated news I think will please you.”

“About Charlie’s wedding shower?” Tess had left an earlier phone message asking if she could host the party at Chandler House. Tess’s own house was too small for the event she had in mind, and Addie’s apartment was literally a hole in the wall behind her shop.

“About her wedding,” Geneva said.

“Her wedding?”

“I’ve offered Maudie the opportunity to hold Charlie’s wedding here. There’s plenty of space in the garden, near the pergola.”

“I’m sure she was thrilled. Charlie will be, too.” Tess swiveled in her chair and stared out her windows, seeing
white chairs in neat lines and pastel ribbons twined with wisteria instead of the pale wisps of late-afternoon fog drifting across Main Street. “And that means the pressure’s on now. Charlie will have to choose a summer date.”

“That’s what Maudie and I thought, too.”

“She didn’t have a chance, not with you two plotting against her.” Tess grinned. “Besides, who wouldn’t want a wedding at Chandler House?”

“My granddaughter, for one.”

Tess released a silent sigh. They’d had this discussion before. “I never said I didn’t want to get married there.”

“You never said you wanted to get married.”

“There are things I need to do before I’m ready to think about it. And one of those things is finding a man I want to marry.”

“Find one,” Geneva ordered as if she were instructing her gardener where to place a rosebush. “Before I get too old to dance at the reception.”

Tess grinned. “Yes, Mémère.”

CHAPTER FIVE

Q
UINN GUIDED
his pickup to the curb outside Tess’s office door a few minutes before five o’clock and switched off the ignition. He sat in the cab for a moment, banking his temper. It had been a long, frustrating day, and there was plenty of it left—he still had to fix dinner, start a load of laundry and deal with Rosie. But first he had to go another round with the only woman he knew who could scramble his thoughts and senses until he forgot how much he wanted a drink.

She’d been wearing a dark blue suit today, and something that made her smell like a bucket stuffed with flowers. Fresh, white flowers drooping with early-morning water drops, like those tiny, bell-shaped flowers sprouting up from a mass of fat, grassy green in the shade under Mrs. Brubaker’s maple tree.

And pearls, for God’s sake. On the site. Dangling from her pretty pink ears and slipping and sliding between her breasts. With the rumble and clang of Trap’s excavator and the diesel stench of Wylie’s bulldozer failing to block the punches she’d landed on his senses.

She sure knew how to push his buttons—coming to the job in that getup, distracting his crew, arguing with him in public, questioning his judgment. And crawling under his skin, making him so hard he’d had to keep bending
over and peering through the level’s scope as if his life depended on what he could see across the footings.

Once she’d left and he’d cooled off, he’d had to acknowledge her point. But the fact was, he’d owed Geneva a phone call. She was the client. The owner. He’d need to meet with her later, to discuss the details and negotiate the financing for the site’s security.

Still, he supposed he should have called Tess.

Which only pissed him off again.

With a curse, he exited his truck. Rue Matson waved as she locked up her tiny gardening shop, and he nodded as he stepped up onto the curb. How someone could make a living selling birdseed and fancy shovels was a mystery. “Evening, Rue.”

“It’s a pretty one, isn’t it?” She squinted at a faded blue sky dotted with dingy white clouds and then glanced at the flower boxes tucked below Tess’s three-sided office window. “Nearly as pretty as those arrangements. Tess sure knows how to put a planter together. There’s a trick to doing it right, you know.”

“Is there?”

“Oh, yes.” Rue rambled on in her friendly shopkeeper voice about color and texture and layers and a bunch of other things Quinn didn’t care about. But he had to admit, as he waved goodbye to Rue, that they were pretty planters. As sassy and colorful as the woman who’d planted them.

And he had to admit, as he stalked through her door, that Tess had made her office space pretty, too. Not too fussy, not too plain. Not too much emphasis on the business, but enough drawings and models to give a quick impression of competence and skill. Just right, just the way an architect’s office should look. The woman had class.

She was also sitting too close to Don Gladdings, who had pulled a visitor’s chair to Tess’s side of the desk. Don was taking advantage of his maneuver to lean over her shoulder and peer at something on her computer monitor, while she made her pitch for redrawing a section of his new car dealership. Clever phrases delivered with a subtle appeal to Don’s pride in his business—architectural design as ego gratification.

Quinn wondered whether Don was enjoying that white-flower smell, too. He cleared his throat in an overly loud cough.

Tess raised her eyes to Quinn’s, and his temper shifted into a lower gear, somewhere near basic agitation. Hard to stay ticked off at a woman who could aim a scorched-dagger glance while wearing ice-cool pearls.

“I’ll be with you in a few minutes,” she said.

Quinn grunted a response and tucked his hands into his pockets as he started a slow turn of the outer office area. It was a waste of energy staying angry about small, stupid things. There were far more important items needing far more of his energy at the moment. Rosie. Security at the job site. Scheduling around the equipment hassles.

If Tess wanted to drag him down to her turf, to stage a showdown on her own territory, he could shrug it off. After all, it was a smart move. He’d have done the same, in her place.

He sneaked a glance at her and watched her direct Don’s attention to some detail on her monitor with polish-slicked nails on the ends of long, ringless fingers. The lady had spunk.

And talent to spare. Quinn paused to study her model of Tidewaters, once again admiring the blend of sleek
lines and traditional charm, the clever use of space and the integration with the setting. Why she chose to squander her gifts on projects here in Carnelian Cove, he wasn’t quite sure.

But he sure was glad she’d decided to stick around for a while.

The realization rattled him. He waited for his feelings to sort themselves out and settle down inside, worried that this latest complicated thought might mess up the points he intended to make about this morning’s argument. Well, he’d find a way to shrug off this sneaky soft spot, too. When it came to Tess Roussel, he’d be wise keeping his edge.

Besides, he didn’t know all that much about her. He’d heard she came from money on both sides, but from what he’d observed, she didn’t seem to have much of her own. There were nicer offices available in the Cove. And he knew—because curiosity had driven him past it one night—that she’d settled for one of the basic tract houses lining the streets in the newer section east of town. Her car was anything but basic, but it was an older model.

Maybe she needed this job as much as he did. Maybe that explained the flicker of desperation he thought he’d detected behind that bewitching stare of hers.

Don stood and dragged his chair back into place, and Tess walked him to her door. “Gotta watch out for this lady,” Don said as he passed Quinn. “She’ll have you wanting things you never knew you needed until she mentions them.”

“But you do need them. And isn’t it nice to have someone fuss over all those details for you?” Tess gave Don a dazzling smile, and his face lit up in obvious agreement.

Poor sucker.

She waved goodbye to her customer, closed and locked her door, flipped the Open sign to Closed and turned to face Quinn. “Thanks for coming,” she said in her crisp, uptown voice. “Can I get you something to drink? Coffee?”

“No. Thanks.”

She gave the bottom of her shiny blue jacket a sharp tug in the habit he recognized as her down-to-business attitude adjustment. Moving to the scrawny counter suspended on the wall behind her desk, she poured something into a pretty cup painted with little purple flowers.

“Only kids drink stuff like that,” he said as she added a ridiculous amount of sugar.

“I have a sweet tooth.” She settled her hip against the desk’s edge and raised the cup to her lips. “And a metabolism that lets me indulge it.”

He watched her full red lips pucker around the cup rim, and his own system kicked up a notch. “You’d better make this fast,” he warned, “’cause I’ve got plans for this evening.”

“Plans involving the security at the site?”

“That’s right.”

“What are you going to do, exactly?”

He pulled his hands from his pockets so he could curl his fingers into fists. “You didn’t ask your grandmother?”

“I’m asking you.” She blushed and lowered the cup to its saucer, and the china rattled as she set down the pieces. “Geneva Chandler may be my grandmother, but on this job she’s my boss.”

“That’s a cozy arrangement.”

“In case you haven’t noticed, she doesn’t play favorites.”

“No, she doesn’t,” he said. “When it comes to business, she’s too smart to play any kind of game.”

Her breath snagged with a tiny flinch, and he caught a glimpse of a shadowy flicker in her eyes—a brief softening that hinted at a vulnerability that intrigued him. And in the next moment, before he could guess at its cause, it was gone.

He’d figured she didn’t have too many chinks in her armor. And now that he’d found one, he was sure to regret it. He preferred the straightforward Tess, the model-in-the-window version who could be relied on to keep her chin up and her talk on target.

While he considered the flaws in his theory, he discovered they’d somehow shifted closer to each other during their conversation. Too close. He needed to take a step back, but he didn’t want to give any ground.

He narrowed his eyes, daring her to make the first move, to retreat or…something else. But then her lips curled up at the edges, and he knew she wouldn’t give him the satisfaction. She crossed her arms beneath her breasts, one wrist brushing against him as she built her little barrier, staying within firing range while giving him a shot of her perfume.

Potent stuff. He crammed his hands back into his pockets so he wouldn’t put them somewhere they didn’t belong.

“There are two businesswomen in this deal,” she said. “You might have an easier time on this job if you remembered that fact.”

“Believe me, that fact is a tough one to forget.”

He inched back, giving them both some space. What he was about to say required some distance. “And so is the fact that I want you.”

“I know.” Her catlike smile reappeared. “I’d prefer it if you respected me, or cared—just a bit—about me. But I can work with a simple case of lust.”

“Good to know.”
Damn.
He sure did like her direct approach and her feisty attitude. And he supposed he liked Tess a bit, too. He hadn’t been ready to confess to that particular fact, but there it was, right up front. Just like her.

A guy had to appreciate a woman who could lay it out straight and level.

“Good to know that fact won’t be keeping you up nights,” he said.

“Oh, but I’m hoping it’ll come to that.” She tilted her head to one side, toying with him. “Aren’t you?”

“Is that an invitation?”

“Do you have to ask?”

“No.” He smiled, enjoying this particular game.

She glanced over his shoulder and frowned. “Oh, hell,” she said as she dashed toward her door. “I’ll be right back.”

He walked to the front of her office to watch the scene outside the bay window. Tess paced a tight circuit on the sidewalk, her temper on display as she gestured from her car to the meter near one headlight. It was obvious her arguments were failing to score any points with the uniformed woman calmly filling out a form on her notepad. Tess took the piece of paper, gave the woman a parting scowl and stomped back inside.

“Parking ticket?” Quinn asked as the slammed door set the tiny bell overhead dancing and ringing.

“Clever deduction.” Tess wadded the paper and stuffed it in a pocket.

“Why don’t you park in one of the alley spaces?”

“I don’t have one.”

“One should come with the lease.” He frowned. “Talk to your landlord.”

“I did. He needed the space for another tenant, and I traded for a reduction in my rent.”

“Seems to me you’re spending your discount on fines.”

“I don’t need you to point that out.” She batted her hair out of her eyes with a disgusted sigh. “Besides, it’s the principle of the thing. There shouldn’t be any parking meters in the marina district.”

“I thought the meters raised revenue for the city.”

“But this is a tourist area. We should be encouraging tourism—and trade—in the city’s most historic area.”

“Doesn’t seem to me the meters are as much of a hindrance to the tourists,” he said, “as are the merchants who take all the available curbside parking.”

The look she gave him nearly blasted a layer off his hide. “As I said,” she reminded him, “it’s the principle of the thing. And I didn’t bother setting my alarms because I didn’t think I’d still be here this late.”

With an effort, he suppressed a smile. “Alarms?”

“Don’t ask,” she said with another hide-threatening look.

“All right.” He shrugged. “You’re the one who called this meeting, not me.”

“Thank you so much for pointing that out.”

His smile faded. “I’m thinking of fencing in the site.”

Her expression went blank for a second, and then she straightened and gave her jacket another tiny tug. “How much is that going to cost?”

“More than what was budgeted.”

“There’s nothing budgeted for a fence.”

“There you go,” he said.

“How will you pay for it?”

“The only way I know how.”

“Geneva.”

He didn’t answer, and he could practically see her squirm. She didn’t want to go begging to her grandmother any more than he did. But one of them would have to do it.

“It probably won’t prevent any more vandalism,” he said. “Anyone serious about getting in and causing trouble will still be able to do it. But it would make it a hell of a lot easier to collect on an insurance claim if anything else happens.”

“Right.” She sighed and nodded. “Okay. Make sure I get a key.”

He nodded and turned toward the door.

“And don’t forget to keep me updated on everything.
Everything,
” she added as she scooted past him to grab the knob. “Quinn.”

He stopped and stared at her, allowing himself to imagine lapping her up as if she were a sugary drink. No harm in looking. No harm in talking, in playing the kind of game where two adults laid their cards on the table. They both knew the score. “Yeah,” he said. “I know you want me, too.”

“Good to hear,” she said as she turned the knob. “I like to keep things neat and tidy.”

He inhaled deeply as he passed her, breathing in her white-flower scent as he stepped into the street. And then he climbed into his truck and made a fast U-turn and a faster getaway.

BOOK: A Small-Town Homecoming
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