His mother's cheeks went pink. "Fine. I should shop for dinner," she said with a sharp pivot toward Sterling. "We'll eat at six thirty. Don't be late." She marched away, the knife in her hand reflecting flashes of florescent light.
Paige let out a breath and moved some papers on her desk.
"And you don't want to work together," Sterling mocked.
"Pardon?"
"Tag teams in the WWF don't work this well. I barely got to headlock Mom at all before you body-slammed her."
"Rosie genuinely needs help."
"I spoke to her at the hospital when I came to see you and Grady there on Friday. She said she's going with Grady to Palm Springs."
Paige didn't apologize for the lie, only started to pull her chair around to sit, sending him a beleaguered look. "Will you get out of my office, please?"
"We're off to meet and greet. We can put this away as we go." He jiggled the box he still held.
"I'm really not up to it." Her tone was stiff and cool, but there was an underlying thread of emotion.
He thought about what she'd suffered upon arrival. His gut instinct was to go out there with Paige and confront whoever had made that comment, watch her suspend the asshat at the very least, but she obviously preferred to retreat. That bothered him. The heavy corners of her mouth and the drawn tension around her eyes bothered him.
She was hurt.
"Tomorrow maybe," he said.
"We'll see." She jiggled her mouse and made a face at the cord.
He left, disgruntled.
Fuming.
Out on the factory floor, he made a point of advising the foremen that Paige was a partner, there were laws against sexual harassment, and if anything like today's performance happened again, jobs would be lost.
~ * ~
Hanging up from leaving a voice mail for Britta, Paige went back to sterilizing her father's office, knocking the dust off the mouse pad, closing the unused day planner, then gathering the various sticky-notes off the frame of her father's computer monitor.
She should give someone these unidentified phone numbers, she thought. Sterling, maybe, if he was going to be covering sales?
One said ‘Zack's game- Thursday five p.m.' He hadn't played basketball since pulling his Achilles tendon last year. She threw it out along with the faded blue, ‘Your daughter called' with a July date on it.
Footsteps stopped outside the door and she glanced up.
Olinda again, and she was frowning even more deeply than earlier.
"I thought you were going home for lunch."
"I'm leaving now. And I just heard downstairs that you sent out an email asking everyone in the office to write out their job descriptions?"
"It's part of the audit. Did you-"
"Get the list of things you want from me? Yes, but I don't know when you'll get them. We don't have time for job descriptions, Paige."
Paige drew in a long, subtle breath of gathering patience. This was a new dynamic, she reminded herself. Everyone would need time to adjust.
But despite viewing Olinda as family, this was one time when she couldn't afford to be a pushover.
"I could use your help on this," she said, deliberately making it sound like Olinda would be doing her a favor, rather than simply doing her job.
"You're scaring people."
"How?" Paige set aside the notes she'd collected.
"They think if you find mistakes, you'll fire them."
"Tell them we prefer public canings over termination." No smile. "Come on, Olinda, you know I'm not here to fire anyone."
"None of us has accomplished a decent day's work since your father went into the hospital. We're all behind and we can't afford to drop everything for an audit."
Paige sat back. Being nice wasn't working. "Look, I'm used to encountering resistance. No one likes audits, but you understand why this is necessary, don't you?"
"No, I don't! You've worked under me, yet you're calling into question my procedures, my integrity...."
"This isn't personal, Olinda," Paige assured gently. "I'm not checking up on you. I don't expect to find anything big."
"You won't find anything at all. I run a tight ship." Olinda was flushed, eyes bright.
Paige knew she had to tread carefully, but her conscience forced her to be honest. "Some errors always come to light. It's to be expected. Everyone makes mistakes now and again."
She was making one now. Olinda's shoulders were going back.
"Look, incidental oversights don't matter," Paige ran on. "I'm more concerned with the big picture. If the way you're doing things is solid-and I'm sure it is-then I can be confident the financial statements are a true reflection of the company's worth. How can we sell Dad's share until we know the price is right?"
"And once you do sell, you'll pay me what he owes me?"
"Is that what's really bending you out of shape? The fact the audit delays the sale?"
"I could really use that money!"
Paige bit back a curse. "Then help move this audit along."
Olinda folded her arms and scowled. "Fine. I'll tell everyone to go ahead and write up their job descriptions after all."
"You-" Paige held her tongue. She had what she wanted. That was enough for the moment. "Thanks," she forced herself to say.
Olinda nodded and Paige expected her to leave, but she hovered.
"Something else?"
"I'm wondering about Rosie. You said she was trying to make a claim on the house?"
"Right. Um... I may have found a way out of that." Paige licked her lips. She had hoped not to have to admit this to Olinda but, "She's going to Palm Springs. With Dad. Remember he went there that other time to recover? Because it's right around the corner from that clinic where Anthony's aunt works? Anyway, Rosie has a cousin there and thinks she can get a job. It seemed a good way to get her out of the house-"
"He's taking her to Palm Springs." Olinda grew tall with resentment. "Taking his little trophy girlfriend who he can't even have sex with because it's liable to kill him. She's younger than you are, Paige. It's criminal. Did I ever get a vacation out of that man? How many times did I ask you if I could use the condo in Palm Springs? Why does he get to use it with her, and I never did even once?"
"Would you rather she stayed here at the house and acted like she owned it?"
"No," Olinda grumbled.
"There you go."
Paige's phone rang, prompting Olinda to leave in a huff.
Paige let out a breath and picked up the receiver, grateful for the interruption, but still annoyed as she said, "Paige Fogarty."
"Hey." Britta's voice had her sagging back into her chair.
"Hey yourself."
"I thought your message to call you at this number was a joke. What are you doing there?"
"Your Dad didn't tell you? I had him draw up the paperwork so I could take over from mine. I have a new job."
"The hilarity continues. Does this have anything to do with my news?"
"No." Not directly anyway. "But you want to get together after work to talk?"
"Sure. But, um, at The Mill?"
Paige frowned. They never met there. "For dinner? I guess."
"‘kay. See you then."
Chapter Nine
Paige thought she saw Britta's car, but couldn't find her inside. She sat at a table in Lumberjack's, the café of the Liebe Falls Hotel, for ten minutes before she was tipped off by a waitress that Britta was in the bar.
Pushing through the swing-back doors, she walked down the hall, past the washrooms, into the subtly-lit interior of The Mill, pleasantly surprised by the way the family who owned the business had refurbished since she'd last been in here to pick up her Dad. Chipped mirrors had been replaced with ones that had frost-tipped edges. The stained carpet had been torn up and the original hardwood restored. It didn't even smell the same, which was a small pity because the stale, cloying scent had been a nostalgia trigger for her.
Skimming the faces in the booths, she wound up nodding more greetings than she would have expected, seeing the receptionist from the factory, one of her brother's longtime friends and an acquaintance from high school who stopped her.
"I heard you and Sterling are taking over the factory?"
"No, he's only- I'm not-" Paige could hardly speak in the face of such fervent snooping. "We're not doing anything together. Oh, there's Britta. ‘scuse me." Paige made a beeline for her friend. "Good grief, that was horrible."
"What was?" Britta lifted her face, her smile uncertain. She was wearing a snug emerald-colored sweater that did amazing things to her skin tone and emphasized the green eyes she'd inherited from her father.
"I was just stopped by-never mind. Doesn't matter. I just wish you hadn't picked here. I thought you meant the diner." Paige tossed her purse and suit coat toward the inside of her bench seat.