She shoved a few of the stainless-steel cocktail shakers to the side, and yanked at the hose that was connected to the nozzle in his hand. “What the heck’s the matter with this?”
She pulled harder, hand over hand toward the end of the hose…where she gasped as they came face to face.
“Oh my God! You scared me. What are you doing down there?”
The flashlight beam made another slow journey up her legs, stopping on a particularly sweet mid-thigh muscle. It flexed under his scrutiny.
“Adjusting my equipment,” he managed to say without unlocking his teeth. “And enjoying the show.”
She backed out of the beam. “I should step on you.”
That made him laugh and the flashlight fell out of his mouth. Slowly, he slid out from under the lower shelf and stood to his full height. She tried not to look at him, but failed.
He wiped at some grime on his jeans and held the sprayer toward her. “Soda, water or diet? They were getting all mixed into one messy flow last night.”
“Certainly didn’t affect the cash flow.”
He grinned. “Oh, so you counted it already?”
Over the past week, they’d started an unspoken exchange. He locked the pouch in the drawer each night, and left the keys on Diana’s kitchen table. She picked up the keys early the next morning when she walked Newman, while Deuce was still asleep. When her day was over—always a few minutes after he arrived—she took the pouch to the bank and left the keys on the desk for him. All the while, she managed to avoid spending any significant amount of time with him.
“As a matter of fact, I have a meeting with the architect in a few minutes,” she told him. “I was planning to make a cash drop at the bank on my way.”
“Oh, that’s why you’re dressed up?” He took another leisurely gaze over a silk blouse buttoned just high enough to make him want to…unbutton it. “I thought it was to impress me.”
“I don’t imagine a skirt and blouse are too impressive to you.”
He shrugged. “You look nice. But I’m kind of partial to leather.”
She rolled her eyes and opened her right palm to reveal two pills. “You’re not helping my headache.”
He retrieved a clean glass, filled it with water and handed it to her. As she put the pills in her mouth, he said, “Don’t blame me. I heard you fighting with Sophie.”
Her eyes popped open, but she managed to get the aspirin down. “I wasn’t fighting with her,” she denied hotly after she’d swallowed. “We were just working out some issues.”
“Sounded like she wasn’t happy.”
She sighed softly and spilled the remaining water in the sink, her gaze moving across to the computer area where Sophie worked at a terminal. “She’s not.”
“What’s the matter?”
“Just some coworker issues.” She settled a sincere blue gaze on him. “Nothing I can’t handle.”
“Well, maybe I can help,” he offered. “I know a little about teamwork.”
She regarded him for a minute, an internal battle whether or not to confide in him waged over her expression. “She just has some problems with newer employees,” she finally said. “Not everyone is quite as competent as she is and, well, she tends to let them know it.”
“Like the veteran and the rookies.”
She looked questioningly at him, then smiled. “Not all of life can be equated to baseball.”
“Yes it can,” he answered matter-of-factly. “Why don’t you put her in charge of training?”
“Training?”
“Give her responsibility for their success. Coaches do that all the time in the spring when they’re trying to build cohesion between the old, seasoned guys who know everything and the hotshots up from the minors who think they know everything.”
She glanced at Sophie, then back at him. “What do they do, exactly?”
“If you give her the job of training them, and tie their success to hers, she might be more prone to want them to succeed.”
“She does want them to succeed,” she countered. “She also wants everyone to be as good as she is. With the computers, with the customers, with everything. And some of these kids are just out of college.”
“Precisely.” He glided the sprayer hose back into place and twisted a faucet to wash his hands. “But make her feel like their accomplishments reflect her skills. Trust me. It’ll work.”
She said nothing as he soaped and rinsed his hands, then gave him that gut-tightening smile. The real one. The one where she let down her guard. “Thanks for the advice. Now what are you doing here at this hour?”
“I wanted to talk to you.”
“Oh?”
“I can’t seem to get you alone for five minutes.”
“I’m busy.” She lifted a shoulder of indifference, but the cavalier act wasn’t working. She was avoiding him and they both knew it. “I’m busy. You work nights. I work days. And, by the way, you’re making my life complicated.”
He managed not to smile. “I am?”
“All this money, Deuce. How can I make a compelling argument to your father that we shouldn’t have a bar in here?”
“You can’t. That’s the idea. And look at this place.” He gestured toward the computer stations, many that were taken with busy patrons. “You’re not exactly losing money while I’m making it.”
She nodded. “As a matter of fact, café and Internet access revenues are up, too.”
“Good, then you won’t mind investing in a pizza oven.”
“A pizza oven?” She backed up to stare at him. “Now you want to turn this place into a pizzeria?”
He swept a hand toward the wall of booze behind him. “They drink, they have to eat. I did some research and pizza is a very high-profit item. Especially per slice.”
She looked dubious. “I don’t know.”
“You might be able to serve it in the afternoon, too.”
“With coffee?”
He winked. “It’s best with beer.”
“Deuce.” Her shoulders sank. “I’m on my way to meet with the architect and you are changing my business plan by the minute.”