Susan Mallery

Sizzling


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grabbed Penny by the arm. “Hey, slow down. Take a breath. You’re fine. Loving your work is allowed, even encouraged. You need to be back in the kitchen because being a chef is part of who you are. As for the baby, Allison is incredibly spoiled and totally loved. Just be grateful you love your job.”

      “You mean be rational,” Penny said with a slight smile. “Hard to do these days, when I’m living in a sea of hormones. But I’ll try. You’re right. I love Ally, but cooking will always be my passion.”

      “See, I think you have a much bigger problem with Cal than with the baby. He’s not going to appreciate knowing he comes second to a bunch of pots and pans.”

      Penny’s smile softened. “He knows I love him.”

      Dani had liked Penny the first time Penny had married Cal. The second time was even better.

      “So you’re back, you’re excited about being back,” Dani said. “This is a good thing.”

      Penny eyed her. “I think I can guess why. You want to leave.”

      Dani glanced around at the restaurant kitchen. Penny had given her a job when she’d desperately needed to do something with her life, but this wasn’t where she wanted to be in five years, or even five weeks.

      “Let’s just say the thrill of sticking it to Gloria has faded,” Dani admitted. “You were great to give me a chance here, but I have to move on.”

      “I understand,” Penny told her. “I don’t like it, but I understand. Do you have any idea what you’re going to do?”

      “Try to make up for all the time I wasted trying to please Gloria.”

      Penny touched her shoulder. “Maybe if you think about it as a growth experience…”

      “So far, that’s not working. As mean as Gloria is, I still can’t believe she let me work for her all those years, let me believe I had a chance of moving up in the company, when she was never going to let it happen.”

      Dani closed her eyes and drew in a deep breath. If she continued to let Gloria upset her, then she continued to let the old bat win.

      But it was hard to let it all go—and impossible to forget Gloria’s bombshell. That the reason Dani would never make it in the Buchanan empire was that she, Dani, wasn’t a real Buchanan.

      “Look at the bright side,” Penny said, affection obvious in her voice. “You have a great résumé and fabulous letters of recommendation from me and Edouard.”

      At the mention of the cook who had been left in charge of the kitchen while Penny had been out on maternity leave, Dani grinned. “Edouard said he wasn’t going to write me a letter of recommendation. He said I hadn’t been deferential enough while he was in charge. That I hadn’t supported his pain.”

      “Oh, really? Then perhaps I’ll tell Edouard I’m not feeling ready to come back. I can leave him in charge a little longer.”

      As Edouard had spent the last eight weeks whining about the extra work of covering for Penny, Dani knew it was the perfect threat.

      “I’ll let you tell him,” she said.

      “I can’t wait.”

      LORI WAS STARTLED to find a woman lurking on Gloria’s front porch. In this upscale part of Seattle, the houses were mansion size, the lawns perfect and no one lurked.

      “Can I help you?” Lori asked as she slipped her key in her pocket and crossed her arms over her chest. While the woman was perfectly well dressed and seemed normal, Lori had a bad feeling she couldn’t explain.

      The woman smiled at her. “Hi, I’m Cassandra. Cassie to my friends. I’m a reporter. I recently wrote an article on Reid Buchanan.”

      No need to define which article. In recent weeks there had only been one anyone would remember. “An article, huh? Is that what you’re calling it?”

      Cassie smirked. “Oh, so you’re one of his little fans.”

      Lori might have a stupid crush on Reid, but she wasn’t about to admit it. Besides, this wasn’t about her feelings, it was about using one’s position to try to destroy an almost innocent—well, innocent—person.

      “Do I look like one of his little fans?” she asked bluntly. “I’m actually just a person who wonders about today’s standards of journalism. There’s a difference between reporting and being mean. You got away with what you wrote because you’re a woman. If the situation had been reversed, the article wouldn’t exist.”

      Cassie shrugged. “Maybe, but I’m getting great play out of the story. It’s all true. He was lousy in bed, but as I said, that’s just my opinion. Others don’t seem to agree. Is he home?”

      “I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Lori said, staring at the woman and refusing to even glance at the door.

      “I can’t find him anywhere and I don’t think he left Seattle. There aren’t that many places he could go to hide.”

      “What about with one of his fans?”

      Cassie laughed. “Reid commit to one woman? I don’t think so.”

      Which was kind of how Lori saw him, but she was going to ignore that for now.

      “You’re trespassing on private property,” she said. “Please leave.”

      “Sure. No problem. Oh, by the way, do you spend much time on the Internet?”

      “What? Not really.”

      “Then you probably haven’t seen these.”

      Cassie passed her several photos. Lori glanced down automatically, then wished she hadn’t.

      There were about a half-dozen glossy images of Reid having sex. Each picture showed him with the same woman. The pictures were crude, explicit and grainy. But they made the point—he was a man who loved women.

      Doing her best not to react, Lori passed them back. She felt like she needed to wash her hands or something. “Thanks, but not before breakfast.”

      “These are online. Even a ten-year-old could download them. Are you sure you want to protect him? We should stand together against men like Reid Buchanan.”

      Despite the sick feeling in her stomach, Lori shook her head. “I’m not interested in standing with you on anything.”

      She waited until the woman left before she headed inside. The sick feeling didn’t go away. What horrible pictures. Did Reid know about them? Had he posed for them? She wanted to believe the pictures had been taken without his knowledge, but how could she be sure? She knew almost nothing about him. Wanting him to be one of the good guys meant absolutely nothing. Based on how he lived his life, he was most likely the guilty party.

      That should take care of her little crush. It wouldn’t, of course, but it should.

      “YOU NEED TO WALK,” Lori said, hanging on to her patience with both hands. “Just across the room and then we can be done.”

      “I’m done now,” Gloria snapped. “It’s enough that damn physical therapist pushes me. At least he knows what he’s doing.”

      “You either do your physical therapy and get better, or crawl back in bed and die.”

      “You keep threatening me with death,” Gloria snapped, “and I’m still standing.”

      Lori stared at the old woman hunched over a walker. “Barely. Don’t you want to get strong enough to kick my ass?”

      “What I want is to be rid of you. Get out. Get out now!”

      The last couple of words were nearly a scream. Lori ignored them and patted the bed. “Eight steps,” she said cheerfully. “Seven if you don’t shuffle.”

      “I