Just One Night. Nancy Warren
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“See the thing is—”
He stopped talking when they both heard the front door open and a female voice called, “Can I come in?”
Julia. “Sure. In the kitchen,” she called back.
“So the coast is clear.” And then Julia walked in, a swish of red cashmere coat and black pants, saw the man sitting there and said, “Oh.”
His lips twitched, which made her feel once more that strange sense of connection with him. “Julia, this is Robert Klassen.”
“I go by Rob,” he said as they shook hands.
“Hi, Rob,” she said, and flicked Hailey a glance. “Are you interested in buying Bellamy House?”
“I might be, if I didn’t already own it.”
In a few seconds Hailey had filled her friend in on the situation. Julia poured herself a coffee and sat down. “It’s great that you’re here to see Hailey at work. She’s fantastic. This place will sell in no time.” She turned to Hailey. “How did the MacDonalds like it? I think we were genius to stage the small bedroom as a nursery.”
“I think they’re interested,” Hailey said, keeping her tone carefully neutral.
“They’re not the right people for this house,” Robert Klassen, call-me-Rob, announced.
Hailey and Julia exchanged glances. The unspoken message being trouble ahead.
There was an awkward silence, then Julia broke it. “I dropped by to see if you want me to finish the staging on Tuesday night. I had to rush on the upstairs.”
“Don’t you have a date Tuesday night?” Hailey had been so excited about the blond guy that she had added a notation to her agenda just so she’d remember to phone and ask how the date had gone.
“No. He had to postpone. His business trip has been extended. He’s got to go to Nigeria next week. I’ll meet him the week after.”
“Oh, too bad.”
“Gives me time to lose a couple more pounds before we meet.” She turned to Rob. “We connected through LoveMatch.com.”
“What kind of work does he do?” Rob asked.
“He’s a civil engineer.”
Hailey said, “I’m not sure about Tuesday. Can I let you know?”
“Sure.” Julia took another quick sip of coffee, and then rose. “Sorry to run, but I’ve got to write up a staging proposal and head to an old friend’s baby shower. And I’m already running late. Nice to meet you, Rob.”
“You, too.”
“I’ll call you,” Hailey said.
When her friend had gone, she only had twenty minutes to convince this man to let her keep the listing. She opened her mouth to get back to business when he surprised her.
“So your friend hasn’t met that guy?”
“What guy?”
“The one she has the date with?”
“No. Not yet. Why?” He was messing with her careful arguments on why she should keep this listing. And besides, what business was it of his if two people he didn’t know had a date?
“Tell her he’s probably a scammer.”
“What?”
“Nigeria is the scam capital of the world. And something about ‘civil engineer’ sounds fishy to me.”
“How can you be so judgmental? She’s talked to him on the phone. I’m sure it’s fine.”
“Maybe. You spend long enough in the news business, you get an instinct.” Between telling prospective buyers ghost stories and trying to kill her friend’s happy buzz, she wasn’t too sure about his supposed instincts. Apparently he didn’t have much of an instinct for dodging bullets. “Just tell her, whatever she does, not to send the guy money.”
“All right. Fine.” She shifted and glanced at her watch. “Can we talk about us?”
He had the sexiest way of looking at her. She’d known the man all of about an hour and every time he looked at her thoughts she had no business thinking flitted through her mind.
“Us?”
As their gazes connected, she thought maybe Julia had a point. It had been way too long since she had sex if a shaggy drifter who was trying to mess with her career could make her overheated with a mere glance. She crossed her legs. “You know what I meant. The listing.”
He leaned back in his chair, savored another sip of coffee. Then he said, “Okay. Here’s what I propose. You can keep the listing. I’ll be living here so you have to work around me. I don’t want open houses. Appointment only. We’ll see how it goes.”
She was so relieved not to find herself fired before she’d started that she nodded. “Okay.” However, she wasn’t a complete fool or a pushover. “I have a condition of my own.” And she drilled him with her serious-business-woman look. “No more stories about your grandmother dying in that bed. As I’m sure Mrs. Neeson taught you, if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.”
4
AFTER THE HOT REALTOR LEFT, Rob drained the rest of the coffee into his mug and began to wander through the house.
She was right, of course. It didn’t make any sense for him to keep the place. It was too big, with maintenance issues always cropping up. It was a house meant for a family, and now that his grandmother was gone, he didn’t have one anymore.
Maybe he hadn’t been able to say goodbye formally at her funeral, but he could for damn sure make certain that the next people who lived in this house were a family his grandmother would have approved of.
He suddenly realized that was what had brought him back to Seattle.
He needed to hand on the house to the right people. Then maybe he could let his memories go and get back to his regular life.
If he owed anything to Agnes Neeson’s memory it was not to let weenies who were scared of their own shadows live in her place.
He didn’t have much of an idea what he was going to do with himself for the next several weeks, apart from get his strength back, so he called Dr. Greene’s office and wasn’t remotely surprised to get an appointment that very afternoon.
HAILEY BARELY MADE the weekly office meeting at Dalbello and Company, sliding in as the office manager was in the midst of his weekly speech. Normally she worked from home, not interested