Worth The Wait. Lori Foster

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Worth The Wait - Lori Foster

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efficiency.

      At the table closest to him, his brother, Jason, and sister-in-law, Honor, sat with neighbors Sullivan and Lexie. Hogan laughed at something Lexie said, then shook his head.

      Violet could remember a time when she’d thought something might’ve been going on between Lexie and Hogan. After all, Lexie was an extremely pretty woman with her short, pale blond curls and her very up-front sexuality.

      Then Lexie had moved in with Sullivan, and Violet quit worrying about it. Talk about gorgeous—Sullivan, with his inky-dark hair and midnight eyes, killer instincts and ripped body, would keep any woman happy. He was very intense, mysterious and almost intimidating.

      He was fantasy material, but not once had Violet been tempted to seek an involvement.

      “So admit I was right,” Lexie said to Hogan while turning to Sullivan for backup. “He looks blissfully happy, doesn’t he?”

      Sunlight glinted off Sullivan’s black hair as he pretended to survey Hogan. “You know, honey, I think you’re right. Hogan looks peaceful.”

      “She’s absolutely right,” Honor chimed in, aligning herself with her best friend. “Seriously, Hogan, you do look somewhat blissful.”

      “Peaceful? Blissful?” Jason hugged his wife and said, “I don’t want to be left out, so can I admit that it does seem to suit you, Hogan?”

      “It’s a gift,” Lexie claimed. “A real talent. A man should never ignore the calling of a talent.”

      Hogan laughed again. “You’re all nuts. Yeah, I enjoy it, okay? But it’s hardly a calling.”

      “You’re wrong,” Lexie insisted. “You were meant to do this.”

      “This?” Hogan waved his long metal tongs at the grills. “Come off it, Lexie. I can’t see myself working in a restaurant for the rest of my life.”

      That smacked of an insult and Violet decided to announce herself. “Something wrong with working in a restaurant?” All eyes turned to her as she stepped out of the preparation area and into the side yard. “It’s not good enough for you?” Am I not good enough?

      Hogan took in her frown. “I never said that.”

      “Maybe it’s working for a woman that you find objectionable?”

      “I work for a woman at the accounting firm, too.”

      She hadn’t known that and it threw her, but only for a second. She squared her shoulders, ignored all the others and stared up into Hogan’s eyes. “I think it’s out of your hands. The demand now is too high. You’ve spoiled all the customers—”

      Their own little audience cheered at that, sounding very spoiled.

      “—and now no one is going to want to give up having your ribs whenever they want them.”

      The grill hissed and spit, flames licking upward. Turning away, Hogan rearranged the meat and adjusted the heat.

      When Violet glanced at the others, she saw they wore varying expressions of encouragement, amusement, agreement—and worry. The last was from Jason.

      Did he expect his brother to bully her? Ha. Not likely.

      In front of all those rapt faces, she demanded, “Well?”

      Occupied with the grill, Hogan asked, “Well what?”

      “Sign on. Agree to work here for a full forty-hour week.” She gave that quick thought then amended, “Maybe a little more than forty given how crazy the weekend gets.”

      He didn’t look at her when he said, “What makes you think you can afford me?”

      He wasn’t saying an outright no? Hope blossomed. Hope and something else. “Let’s discuss it.” Thanks to Hogan, she not only had a better grasp of her own finances, but she was making more per week. She could give him a bump in pay, no problem.

      Finally, he set aside those long sturdy tongs and faced her. “You want to negotiate right now? In front of them?” He nodded toward their friends.

      His mood seemed off. The idea of trying to discuss this, alone, made her tingle. Could he keep to business?

      Could she?

      They hadn’t had any alone time in far too long now. And damn it, she missed him. She saw him every day, but not like she had while being sick.

      Dumb as it seemed, she missed having him touch her.

      She missed him holding her while she slept.

      At her long internal debate, he gave her a mocking grin. “Having second thoughts?”

      “Tonight.” Risky. Once she had him alone, or he had her alone—but this was too important. “After we close up.”

      “Ohhh,” Lexie whispered, sotto voce, “to be a fly on the wall during that meeting.” Then she squeaked, thanks to Sullivan’s squeeze.

      “All right,” Hogan said. He turned back to his grill. “If you see Colt, have him come out on his break, okay? I haven’t seen him yet today.”

      Relief flooded through Violet until she almost felt light-headed. Hogan hadn’t flat out refused. “If I can pry him away from the girls, sure.” While Hogan might be great for her adult customers, Colt was equally great for the younger crowd. And that got her thinking. She needed to do something special for the school, something that would draw in even more young people during the less insane time between dinner and the cocktail hour.

      Conversation did not resume.

      Hogan busied himself filling a massive platter.

      Since he wasn’t being totally disagreeable, Violet decided to push her luck. “I was also thinking, maybe you need an apprentice, a trainee of sorts who could learn what you do and how you do it so that if you ever—”

      “No.”

      The abrupt refusal irked her. She put her hands on her hips. “What do you mean no? You won’t even think about it?”

      “Not right now, no.”

      “Then when? After you get sick or hurt and I’m left in the lurch?” Only half teasing, she said, “Don’t be selfish, Hogan. If you don’t want to share your sauce with anyone else, maybe you could just share it with me.”

      Jason choked and Sullivan snorted.

      “Hey,” Violet protested. “I’m capable.”

      Honor and Lexie, both grinning, rushed to agree.

      With their backup, she decided to take another turn at Hogan. “You can trust me, you know. I wouldn’t share your secrets. But if you teach me, then at least—”

      As if much put upon, Hogan sighed, straightened away from the grill and turned to her. They stared at each other, him impatient, her defiant.

      Before

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