that some sort of food and drink. You could name the time and the place. We donât like what we hear, whatâs the harm?â
She dropped the hairpin in with her paper clips. âNow youâre negotiating.â
âIâm pretty good at it. I could just buy you a drink. Thatâs whatâthirty minutes? A lot of people spend more time than that picking out a pair of shoes. Half an hour after youâre finished work, or off-duty, whatever you call it.â
âI canât tonight. I have plans.â
âAny night in the foreseeable future you donât have plans?â
âPlenty of them.â She swiveled gently back and forth in her chair, studying him. Why did he have to be so cute, and so appealing? She really didnât have time for any of this. âTomorrow night, nine to nine-thirty. Iâll meet you at your bar.â
âPerfect. Which bar?â
âExcuse me?â
âYou donât want to go to Duncâsâweird after yesterday, and itâs loud and full of guys arguing over sports. Swiftyâs.â
âYou own Swiftyâs?â
âSort of. Youâve been there?â
âOnce.â
His brows drew together. âYou didnât like it.â
âActually, I did. I didnât like my companion.â
âIf you want to pick somewhere elseââ
âSwiftyâs is fine. Nine oâclock. You can spend part of the thirty minutes explaining how you âsort ofâ own a couple of bars and an apartment building.â
He used the smile again when she rose to signal his time was up. âDonât change your mind.â
âI rarely do.â
âGood to know. See you tomorrow, Phoebe.â
A mistake, she told herself when she watched him walk away. It was probably a mistake to make any sort of a date with a lanky, charming man with soft blue eyes, especially one who had those little tugs going on in her belly when he smiled at her.
Still, it was only half an hour, only a drink.
And it had been a long time since sheâd carved out half an hour to make a mistake with a man.
Â
Phoebe dragged into the house just after seven with a bag of groceries, a loaded briefcase and a serious case of frazzled nerves. The car she wasnât at all sure she could replace had limped to a shuddering halt a block from the station house.
The cost of having it towed would eat a greedy chunk of the monthly budget. The cost of having it repaired made the possibility of bank robbery more palatable.
She dumped her briefcase just inside the door, then stood staring around the elegant and beautiful foyer. The house, for all its grandeur, cost her nothing. And though nothing was a relative term, she knew even if it were possible to move, she couldnât afford it, on any terms. It was ridiculous to live in a damn mansion and not know how to manage to pay to repair an eight-year-old Ford Taurus.
Surrounded by antiques, by art, by silver and crystal, by beauty and graceânone of which she could sell, hock or trade. To live in what could be construed as luxury, and have a tension headache over a goddamn car.
Leaning back against the door, she shut her eyes long enough to remind herself to be grateful. There was a roof over her head, over her familyâs head. There always would be.
As long as she followed the rules laid down by a dead woman.
She straightened, buried the anxiety deep enough so it wouldnât show on her face. Then she carried the grocery bag through the house to the kitchen.
There they were. Her girls. Carly at the kitchen table, tongue caught in her teeth as she struggled over homework. Mama and Ava at the stove putting finishing touches on dinner. Phoebe knew the rule of thumb was that two women couldnât share a kitchen, but these two managed just that.
And the room smelled of herbs and greens and females.
âI told yâall not to hold dinner for me.â
As Phoebe stepped