Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
department, but I knew in my heart that she adored me,
and if the best way she could show me so was to bake me
an angel food cake with marshmallow icing, that was good
enough for me. I loved her right back. And as will happen
with things that are handed down within a family, baked
goods became a tool for me to show my love as well, at
least in some cases. In other cases, I just like to bake. It is
my cure-all. I bake when I am stressed out. I bake when I
am sad. I bake when I am ecstatically happy. I bake when
I’m nervous. I don’t know why. Something about the focus,
the way I can concentrate on measuring and sifting and
stirring just helps to relax and calm my frayed nerves. Very
few problems in life can’t be made at least a teensy bit
better by a mouthful of cookie dough.
I finished up the last batch and left them to cool on a
wire rack while I did up the dishes. It was late, but
Grandma always hated to wake up to a sink full of dirty
dishes, so I always clean up my mess even if I’ve been
baking at three in the morning which is not unheard of.
After wrapping up a package for Maddie, I took a cookie
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for myself, along with the essential glass of milk, and Steve
and I headed to bed.
38
CHAPTER FOUR
My townhouse development was a bit classier than
most, in my opinion. Instead of being a bunch of giant
buildings with doors all in a row, each building only
housed two units. So, it was almost like living in a sort of
duplex, rather than a structure with four or six or even
eight units. And each building was slightly different,
whether it was the pitch of the roof or the path of the
front walk, or the color of the siding, so we didn’t look like
we lived in a bunch of cookie-cutter homes. ere were
three pods set up in semi-circles and inside each semi-
circle was a happy little courtyard with benches and a
swing set, so our back yards all looked over one another,
but we were far enough apart to feel like we had at least a
little bit of privacy.
As I opened my car door, I waved across the street to
Mr. Watson. He was a nice man, old enough to be my
father and widowed for about two years. He always snow-
blew my driveway right after he did his in the winter. I, in
return, kept him supplied with rum balls throughout the
holiday season. It was an agreement that worked well for
both of us.
“Morning, Avery,” he greeted as he crossed toward me.
He pointed down the street a ways with his square chin
and asked, “You see the Sold sign?”
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I nodded. “I noticed on my way home last night. How
long has it been there?”
“’Bout a week.”
I made a face that said I obviously hadn’t been paying
enough attention. “I wonder who bought it. Any clues?”
Getting into our development was tough and we liked to
keep it a closely guarded secret.
“Not yet, but according to Mrs. Greeley, it’s been sold
for a while and the sign should have been up weeks ago.
e closing’s next week some time.”
“Wow.” I tossed my briefcase into the car, wondering,
not for the first time, how Mrs. Greeley always managed to
get a hold of such detailed knowledge. Some would call
her a busybody. I thought she was a wealth of information.
If it wasn’t for her, I’d never know anything going on
around my home. “en I guess we’ll know soon enough,
huh?”
“Looks that way.”
1
Fridays are always a lot of fun at the office, with the
dress code moved to casual and the atmosphere a bit
lighter than at the beginning of the week, but that
particular Friday was more festive than usual. e
campaign we’d been working on—for a new local
microbrewery—had been received with great fervor and
excitement. Josh sent the praise my way for my colorful yet
simple design. I tossed it back into his lap because of his
catchy wording, and we both heaped the majority of the
success onto Anita, who did the actual pitching, which we
all knew she did with stylish presentation and expert
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coaxing. Tyrell was absolutely psyched, as we’d beat out
several larger competitors. e microbrewery was owned by
a much larger company, so the money they had to spend on
additional ad campaigns was quite a bit more than what a
small company would be able to fork over. is could turn
out to be a really big client for THJ and we all knew it.
Tyrell told us in no uncertain terms that we were all going
out for Happy Hour after work, and drinks were on him.
Even though Tyrell said he was buying, I didn’t like
going out to a bar without any cash at all; it made me feel
dependent upon others. is happened to me—finding
myself with no cash—more and more often since the
invention of the debit card. I wondered if other people had
the same problem. I could rarely buy myself a pack of gum
without using plastic because I just never thought to carry
cash any more.
Of course, in order to get cash, I’d have to visit the
bank. Elena Walker’s bank. You could call me a lot of
things, but “dummy” isn’t one of them.
Rather than use the ATM, which would keep me
from having to actually go
inside
the bank, and thereby
preclude me from catching a glimpse of my fantasy
woman, I entered the lobby and proceeded to fill out a
withdrawal slip at one of the little desks. I could see right
into Elena’s office, see her sitting at her desk, talking to
somebody on the little earpiece she wore so she didn’t have
to hold the handset of the telephone, and typing on her
computer keyboard. e day’s suit was black with very
subtle white pinstripes and big silver buttons on the jacket.
I couldn’t see if it was a pantsuit or a traditional jacket and
skirt, but the creamy blouse was unbuttoned enough to
show off a tan expanse of collarbone and the tiniest tease
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of cleavage. I bit my lip when the conversation she was
having sent her into amused laughter, and forced my eyes
back down to my pen. Did anybody have a right to be that
damn good-looking? at sexy? Wasn’t it dangerous?
Shouldn’t there be a law of some kind?
When I glanced up again, she was looking right at me,
those deep melted-chocolate eyes sparkling even as she
continued to talk to whoever was on the other end of the
phone line. She tossed a little wave in my direction. And
then she winked.
She winked at me.
My knees almost dropped me on the floor right then
and there like a pile of dirty laundry.
I left the bank whistling a joyful little tune that I
made up on the spot.
By five-thirty that evening, we were having a blast.
Tyrell was a different kind of boss, more like a big brother
or cousin, always looking out for those he cared about. He
was one of the nicest men I’d ever met and as I watched
him joking with Josh over a beer, I remembered the first
time I’d come out for drinks with the team, only a couple
weeks after I’d started working there. He’d introduced
himself to me as Tyrell Jones, so I asked if he named his
company T. Harrison Jones because it sounded more
professional, more sophisticated. He said, matter-of-factly,
that he named it what he did because it sounded less black.
I wasn’t really sure how to respond, but I felt
uncontrollable sadness over the fact that it was the 21st
century and we still had to deal with ridiculous crap like
racism and homophobia and misogyny. Tyrell was not only
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one of the sweetest guys I knew, he was also one of the
smartest and one of the most talented businessmen in the
city. But he had to be careful not to make his company
name sound too African-American because he might lose
clients. Sometimes the world just made me want to weep.
Josh bellied up to the bar next to me, his dark hair
looking like he’d just rolled out of bed. I reached up to fix
it, trying to brush it with my fingers like he was five years
old.
“What is going on with your bangs?” I teased as he
tried to swat my hand away. “Does your wife really let you
out of the house like this?”
“She leaves before I do in the morning.”
“at explains it. I’m calling her and telling her that
her husband needs a haircut.”
He laughed. “You will do no such thing.” He caught
the bartender’s eye and made a gesture with his finger that
encompassed both our empty glasses before asking me how
tee-ball was going.
“So far, so good,” I said to him, and meant it. “I’ve only
had a couple practices, but I haven’t murdered any of the
kids yet, so I’d say it’s a success so far.” I held up my glass
and he touched his to it.
Josh swallowed a mouthful of beer and then chuckled.
“I remember going to watch my niece Jasmine play in her
first soccer game. She was, like, five or six, I think. And the
ball is coming her way, all the players are running in her
direction, and what is she doing? Picking a dandelion she
found on the field. ey all went running right by her. I’m
not even sure she noticed.”
I thought of little Katie’s fascination with yanking
handfuls of grass out by the roots and shook my head. “I’m
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just hoping I have the patience for this. We’ll have our first
game before Maddie’s ready to come back.”
“You’ll be fine. Got any ringers?”
My mind flashed to Gabriel, who proceeded to whack
the crap out of the ball any time I put him near the tee. I
told Josh about him. “He’s a little condescending to the
other kids, but he’s got some real athletic potential. ere’s
Brittany, who I suspect is only playing because her mom
wants her to. She’s not bad, though. She tries hard. And
Max. He’s adorable and he wants so badly for his mom to
pay half the attention Brittany’s mom does, but she’s
always absorbed in her Blackberry or her cell phone or
whatever and can hardly be bothered to look up.”
Josh just grinned at me.
“What?” I asked him, wanting in on the secret.
“I just find it interesting that I asked you about the
kids and you told me all about the parents.”
I groaned. “See? I’m just not good with kids.”
“What are you talking about? Paying attention to the
parents means you’re more in tune than most people.”
I shrugged off the remark and tossed him a change of
subject. “So. How goes the baby-making?”
“Well,” he said, and then arranged his expression into
something resembling “thinking really hard.” He took a
gulp of his beer before continuing. “You’d think it would be
awesome for a guy to have his dick at a woman’s beck and
call, wouldn’t you?”
Beer went up my nose as I snorted over his choice of
words. He’d always treated me as one of the guys, so using
the word “dick” in conversation with me didn’t faze him in
the least. Once in a while, it caught me off-guard, though.
I wiped my dripping chin as I laughed and then mimicked
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dialing a phone and putting an invisible handset to my ear.
“Hey, Joshua,” I said in my best come-hither voice. “I need
you. Now, big fella. Come and have your way with me.”
He pointed at me and nodded with enthusiasm.
“Like that?” I asked.
“Exactly.”
“Yes, I would think most guys would love that.”
“Yeah, well you would be wrong.”
“I would?” I had to admit, I was surprised.
“It’s a lot of pressure,” he whined.
I rolled my lips in and bit them to keep from busting
out laughing at his little-boy tone. “What, you can’t just…”
I cleared my throat. “Stand up on cue?”
“No!” He must have realized my mirth because he
narrowed his eyes at me. “Most guys can’t.”
“Porn stars can.”
“at’s because they have—what do they call them?—
fluffers to help them along.”
“Maybe you need one of those.”
He arched an eyebrow at me. “You offering?”
“Hell, no.” I scoffed. “I don’t want to be anywhere near
that thing. No offense.”
“Gee, thanks.”
I noticed that he wasn’t quite his happy-go-lucky self
all of a sudden. We’d always taken each other’s ribbing
well, knowing that’s all it was: ribbing. e flinch of pain
that zipped across his features bothered me.
“What’s going on, Joshie?” I asked, quietly and with
more seriousness. “Are you having trouble?”
He studied what was left in his glass and pursed his
lips. When he spoke, his voice was as quiet as mine and it
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struck me how we’d gone from playfully poking to softly
serious in the space of about five seconds.
“It’s just…like I said. It’s a lot of pressure.” He finished
off his beer and gestured for a refill. “I think Nina’s getting
frustrated and maybe a little depressed that it hasn’t