The Bachelor's Stand-In Wife
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“Okay.” Maybe not as hard as it seemed, she hoped. She would need an atlas, though, since she didn’t know where a lot of the European cities were in relation to each other. The Internet would help. “Do you want me to work on this now?”
He looked at his watch. “It’s almost lunchtime. Why don’t you take an hour off and spend it with your daughter. My guess is she’s anxious for a swim.”
She didn’t like that he had to take Hannah into consideration, but she was glad he did. “Can I make a sandwich for you?” she asked.
He stretched. “I’m going for a drive. I’ll eat while I’m out. I may take a couple hours.”
“Okay.”
“Good work today, Valerie. You’re a quick learner.”
“You’re a patient teacher.”
“Am I?” he asked.
She nodded. Why did that surprise him?
“I’ve never been known for patience.” He jangled his keys in his pocket for a moment, then pulled them out. “I’ll see you later.”
“Okay.”
He disappeared around the corner then came back into the doorway a moment later. “We never discussed your hours.”
“In what way?”
“Obviously you’re supposed to have days off. Need to have days off. Everyone does. And this job may be sixty hours one week and twenty hours the next.”
“Let’s not worry about it at this point. I’ll keep track for now and see how it averages. At some point I’ll probably want a weekend to go visit my mom in Palm Springs.”
“Works for me.” He left again. This time he stayed gone.
Days off? She smiled as she stood, laying her notepad on the streamlined black and teak desk, aligning the items on his desktop. Her salary was generous already, plus it included room and board. She could work eighty hours a week and it would still be a good deal for her.
Valerie put the computer to sleep, slid David’s chair under the desk, then moved hers back into position against a wall. She closed the blinds a little, blocking the sun. After a final glance around the room, she turned off the light and headed for the cottage, but before she reached it, a truck pulled in, a trailer full of gardening tools hitched behind it.
She changed direction and headed for the truck.
A man climbed out of the vehicle, thirtyish, not overly tall, brawny. His dark hair was pulled back into a ponytail and tied with a leather thong. His T-shirt hugged his torso, his jeans were torn in interesting places, his boots well worn. He looked like the kind of bad boy that teenage girls go for before they learn that good men make better partners.
Bad boys—the kind of man Valerie had gone for. Gotten pregnant by. Although he’d been less rough around the edges than this guy.
“You Valerie?” Bad Boy asked, his fingers splayed low on his hips, a knee cocked, challenge in the stance.
She kept her voice pleasant. “Yes.”
He angled his head toward the big house. “David says I take my orders from you now.”
“What’s your name?”
“Joseph McCoy.”
She offered her hand. “I’m looking forward to working with you.”
His belligerent pose eased a little, but he wore sunglasses, hiding much of his expression. He shook her hand.
“I’ll get my notes,” she said. “Be right back.” She didn’t wait for him to respond but headed for the cottage.
“You want to swim?” she asked her daughter as Belle slunk off the couch.
“Yes!”
“Go change. I’ll be outside talking to the gardener.” She grabbed a notepad from the kitchen counter and left.
Joseph was leaning against his truck, arms crossed. He didn’t acknowledge her, even though he couldn’t have missed hearing her footsteps. She tapped his arm with her notepad.
“Yeah, boss?” he asked.
Not a promising start. “This is my vision,” she said, holding out the notepad for him to take, ignoring his hostility.
He gave her design a cursory look but didn’t take the pad from her. “No flowers.”
“Why not? Won’t they survive the weather here?”
“Most things survive with proper tending. But in this case David specifically said no flowers.”
“He didn’t tell me that.”
“He told me.”
“I think the garden needs more color variation.”
“You can do that with plants. There’s lots to choose from. All shades of green. Yellow. Red.”
“Why haven’t you used them?” She mimicked his hostile pose now, tired of his attitude.
“He never said to.”
“You’re the expert.”
“Look, lady, David and I have been friends since second grade. He would’ve said something if he didn’t like what I was doing.”
“Mom! Can I get in the pool?”
“Just a second.” As Valerie turned back, Belle came running, but straight to Joseph.
“Hey, girl. You’re home.” He crouched and gave the dog a good rub. Belle pushed herself against him, knocking him down, making him laugh.
“We need to continue our conversation by the pool so that I can watch my daughter,” she said, heading that way, expecting him to follow.
“Yes, ma’am.”
She stopped, turned around and looked down at him, speaking quietly so that Hannah couldn’t hear her. “Look, I don’t know what bee got in your bonnet but don’t take it out on me. I’m your partner in this project, not your enemy. I think the place could look spectacular. It’s a good basic design. It just needs…refinement.”
He seemed to be glaring at her, but how could she tell with his sunglasses in place? Belle looked back and forth between them. He said nothing.
She threw up her hands. “Fine. I’ll be your boss, then. Follow me. I’ll give you your orders.” She climbed the path, gestured to Hannah, who was dancing pirouettes around the pool, that she could dive in, then sat on a lounge chair and waited for Joseph to join her.
He took the chair next to hers. “Bee in my bonnet?” he repeated.
She couldn’t gauge if he was making fun of her. “It’s just an expression.”