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Down London Road (On Dublin Street #2)(13)

By:Samantha Young


Su took his number with a wide, infectious smile. 'Sounds promising, Jo. Cheers.'

'No problem.'

We bade each other goodnight and I hurried down the basement steps, smiling a bright hello to Brian, the security guy, and Phil, our doorman for the night.

'Evenin', Jo.' Brian winked at me as I passed.

'Evening. Did the missus forgive you for forgetting her birthday?' I asked, slowing down as I turned to wait on his answer. Poor Brian had arrived at work on Saturday night in the worst mood. He'd forgotten his wife's birthday, and rather than being angry, Jennifer, his wife of ten years, had been hurt. There had been tears. Brian, who looked like a grizzly bear but was more the cuddly kind, was distraught.



       
         
       
        

Not so much now, if his grin had anything to do with it. 'Aye. I had that movie set up like you said. Worked like a charm.'

I chuckled. 'I'm glad to hear it.' I'd suggested that Brian talk to Sadie, one of the students who worked at the bar and was in the film club at Edinburgh University. I thought she might be able to get permission to use one of the uni's projectors so Brian could take Jennifer to a private screening of her favourite movie  –  An Officer and a Gentleman  –  on the big screen.

'You still dating that lottery winner, Jo?' Phil asked, his eyes running the length of me. Not that there was anything to see  –  I was wrapped up in my warm winter coat.

I tilted my head to the side, my smile flirtatious now. Phil was just a few years older than me, single, cute, and perpetually asking me out to no avail. 'I am, Philip.'

He sighed heavily, his dark eyes glittering under the twinkle lights around the club door. 'You let me know when that ends. I've got a big shoulder here for you to cry on.'

Brian snorted. 'Maybe you'd have a chance with her if you didn't spew shite like that.'

Phil huffed and swore at him. As this was almost a ritual now, I laughed and left them to their bickering.

'There she is.' Joss grinned at me as I wandered into the empty club. She was leaning against the bar, and her expression changed when she saw my face. 'Something happen?'

'I had'  –  I glanced around to make sure we really were alone  –  'a difficult time with Mum tonight.' I took the steps down to the bar and ducked under it. After I brushed past her, I heard her footsteps following me into the small staff area.

'What happened?' Joss asked quietly as I shoved my bag in my locker.

I turned to her, shrugging off my coat to reveal the same uniform she wore  –  a white tank top with CLUB 39 scrawled across the right breast and black skinny jeans that made my long legs look even longer.

Joss stood before me in all her attitude. Her thick mane of blonde hair was pulled back into a messy ponytail and she gazed at me in concern with her exotic grey feline eyes, her full lips pursed. Joss wasn't a traditional beauty, but she was sexy. I could see why Braden had fallen for her. Her cool smartassery was so at odds with her unintentional but overt sexuality, any guy would be intrigued.

Yeah. We made a pair. And we got good tips.

'Mum fell out of bed, broke her last bottle of gin, and took her usual tantrum when I said I wouldn't get more for her. Once she calmed down I had to help her get ready so she could leave the flat to get some booze.' I snorted bitterly. 'Then I had to leave Cole there.' 

'He'll be fine.'

I shook my head. 'I'll worry about him all night. You mind if I keep my phone on me?'

Joss's brow puckered in consternation. 'Of course not. But you know what the solution to that is, right?'

'A fairy godmother?'

'Yes.' Her mouth tilted up on one side. 'Except instead of a fairy godmother, he's a suit-wearing fairy caveman.'

I didn't get it.

'Braden! He's offered you a job so many times, Jo. Part-time or full-time. Just take it. If you took a full-time position, you'd be working during the day so you wouldn't have to worry about working nights away from Cole.'

I tried to feel only gratitude as I strode past her and into the bar and tried very hard to ignore the irritation. 'Joss, no.'

She followed me and I didn't even have to look at her to know she'd be wearing the mulish expression she used to reserve for when people asked her questions she didn't want to answer. 'Why tell me these things unless you want a solution?'

'That's not a solution,' I replied quietly, tying the short white apron around my waist. 'That's a handout.' I shot her a smile to soften the blow of my words.

My friend clearly wasn't having any of that tonight. 'You know, it took me a long time to figure out that we can't do everything on our own.'

'I'm not on my own. I have Cole.'