PENNY JACKSON KNEW that it was probably wrong to be so excited to see her ex-husband come crawling back, but she was willing to live with the character flaw.
âYou know heâs going to want to hire you,â her friend Naomi said.
âOh, yeah. The sweet smell of validation.â Penny leaned back in her chair and considered the possibilities. âI want him to beg. Not in a vicious, I hate your guts way, but more as aâ¦â
âShow of support for divorced women everywhere?â Naomi asked.
Penny laughed. âExactly. I suppose that makes me petty and small.â
âMaybe, but youâre looking especially fabulous today, if that helps.â
âA little.â Penny smoothed the front of her loose sweater and glanced at the clock. âWeâre meeting for lunch downtown. A neutral locationâno memories, good or bad.â
âStay away from the good ones,â Naomi warned her. âYou always were a sucker where Cal was concerned.â
âThat was so three years ago. Iâm completely over him. Iâve moved on.â
âRight.â Naomi didnât look convinced. âDonât think about how great he looks in his clothes, or out of them. Instead remember how he broke your heart, lied about wanting children and trampled your fragile dreams.â
Easy enough, Penny thought, a flicker of annoyance muscling in on her good mood.
Nearly as bad, four years ago sheâd applied for a job as a cook in Buchananâs, one of Calâs familyâs restaurants. The job had been strictly entry-levelâshe would have been in charge of salads. There had been ten other applicants. Worried she wouldnât make the cut, Penny had asked her then-husband to put in a good word for her with his grandmother. Heâd refused and she hadnât gotten the job.
âThis time the job is coming to me,â Penny said. âI intend to take advantage of that. And him. In a strictly business way, of course.â
âOf course,â Naomi echoed, not sounding the least bit convinced. âHeâs trouble for you. Always has been. Be careful.â
Penny stood and reached for her purse. âWhen am I not?â
âAsk for lots of money.â
âI promise.â
âDonât think about having sex with him.â
Penny laughed. âOh, please. That isnât an issue. Youâll see.â
PENNY ARRIVED EARLY , then stayed in her car until five minutes after the appointed time. A small, possibly insignificant power play on her part, but she figured sheâd earned it.
She walked into the quiet leather-and-linen bistro. Before she could approach the hostess, she saw Cal standing by a booth in the back. They might have friends in common, and live in the same city, but since sheâd done her darnedest to avoid close proximity to him they never ran into each other. This lunch was going to change that.
âHi,â she said with a breezy smile.
âPenny.â He looked her over, then motioned to the other side of the booth. âThanks for joining me.â
âHow could I refuse? You wouldnât say much over the phone, which made me curious.â She slid onto the seat.
Cal looked good. Tall, muscled, the same soulful eyes she remembered. Just sitting across from him caused her body to remember what it had been like back when things had been good and theyâd been unable to keep their hands off each other. Not that she was interested in him in that way. Sheâd learned her lesson.
Plus, she couldnât forgive the fact that in the three years theyâd been apart, he hadnât had the common courtesy to get fat or wrinkled. Nope, he was gorgeousâwhich was just like a man.
Still, he needed her help. Oh, yeah, that part was very cool. While theyâd been married the message had been she wasnât good enough. Now he wanted her to save the dayâ¦or the restaurant, in this case. While she planned to say yes, eventually, she was going to enjoy every second of making him beg.
âThe Waterfront is in trouble,â he said, then paused as the waitress came by to take their order.
When the woman left, Penny leaned back in the tufted seat of the booth and smiled. âIâd heard it was more than in trouble. Iâd heard the place was done for. Hemorrhaging customers and money.â
She blinked, going for an innocent expression. No doubt Cal would see through her attempt and want to strangle her. But he couldnât. Because he needed her. Was, in fact, desperate for her help. How she loved that in a man. Especially in Cal.
âThings have been better,â he admitted, looking as if he hated every second of the conversation.
âThe Waterfront is the oldest restaurant in the infamous Buchanan dynasty,â she said cheerfully. âThe flagship. Or it used to be. Now you have a reputation for bad food and worse service.â She sipped her water. âAt least thatâs the word on the street.â