her in summer school, not tagging around after some pastry chef.â
âI wouldnât worry about it,â Brad said, attempting to assure her. âWhat are the chances sheâll win?â
âSheâs an excellent cook. Baking is Amberâs specialty.â Lexi sounded defensive. âAnd if she loses, sheâll be disappointed, crushed.â
Cripes, Brad thought. There was no reasoning with women.
âI have an idea that might solve your problem.â
Chapter 4
Lexi followed Amber through the double-wide doors into Black Jackâs on Saturday. Amber had been so excited about lunch that sheâd changed outfits at least six times. Brad had persuaded Lexi that a visit to his restaurant and a tour of the kitchen during the hectic noon rush would show Amber that working in a restaurant wasnât glamorous. But what if he was wrong? Suppose the chaos and hair-trigger tempers Brad had so vividly described actually energized Amber?
âWow! This is awesome!â Amber made no attempt to hide her enthusiasm.
The place had a Caribbean style to it with dark wood floors and plantation shutters that filtered the light. High above their heads, ceiling fans shaped like palm fronds circulated the air above the wicker and bamboo furniture.
Lexi hadnât dated a lot, but she had been out enough to know there were ritzier restaurants in Houston. Amber had only eaten at fast-food places, so this had to seem highly sophisticated to her.
âYou must be the Morrisons,â said a perky blonde hostess when they walked up to her.
âYep. Thatâs us,â Amber responded with a beaming smile.
Lexi hoped they were suitably dressed. Sheâd worn a tan pair of slacks and a coral blouse with a thin tan stripe running through it. A conservative outfit but one that looked nice, she thought. Amber couldnât be talked out of a very short raspberry-pink skirt and a matching tank top that revealed her midriff whenever she raised her arms.
The hostess picked up menus the size of wall posters and led them to a corner table. âBrad will be right out.â
âLook at this menu! A-mazing!â Amber exclaimed after theyâd been seated. âRibs, steaks, chicken and zillions of yummy desserts.â
âInteresting salads and chicken dishes,â Lexi said. If she came out and told Amber to make a healthy choice, her sister would balk.
Amber didnât reply as she intently read the menu word for word. Great, Lexi thought. Amber would study a recipe or cookbook or menu as if it was a treasure map, but she could barely find the time to scan her schoolbooks. But now was not the time for that discussion, Lexi reminded herself.
âI donât see our red wave lettuce on the menu,â Amber whispered, even though no one nearby was paying any attention to them.
âThe waiter usually tells customers what the specials of the day are,â Lexi said. âThat way they donât have to reprint menus all the time. It would be too expensive.â
Amber gazed at her with something akin to respectâa first. âHow do you know? Do your dates bring you to places like this?â
Lexi had been receiving more and more questions from Amber about boys and dating. Aunt Callie hadnât allowed Lexi to date until she was sixteen. Lexi thought that was a good rule, but Amber insisted all the girls she knew were already dating. Soon some boy would ask Amber out and Lexi would be forced to make a decision. âIâve been to nice places like this a few times, but young guys mostly take you to fast-food places.â
âOh, yuck!â
âThink about it,â Lexi said. âIt costs a lot to have dinner and go to a movie. Most guys canât afford anything fancy.â
âMatt could.â
Matthew Hastens. Lexiâs former boyfriend. Sheâd broken up with him because heâd gotten too serious. At the time sheâd been barely nineteen and
Michael Bray, Albert Kivak