he worked. “Go for height, contrast. The sauce goes on the plate, not the food. You get more visual impact that way."
“Yes, Chef.” Roman admired the shrimp. “That plate looks like something else."
“Looks are good, taste is better.” Damon reached out for a shrimp and swabbed it through the colored dots. He took one bite, considered. Squeezed on some lemon and took another. And another. “It’s good,” he said to Roman. “Add some lemon juice to the chili sauce, brighten it up. Plate it the way I showed you, finish it with some micro cilantro."
“We don’t have any.”
“How about the green market?”
“Not that I know of. You’ll have to get it—”
“If you say shipped in, you’re fired.”
“Yes, Chef,” Roman said.
“All right, forget about the microgreens. I’ll figure something out."
He turned back to his tenderloin tournedos, sealing them in plastic storage trays, then pulled Roman’s cutting board toward him. The sous chef stared, knife in hand.
“Well, get to work,” Damon told him. “I’ll finish this. You’ve got another hour to refine the sauce and write it all down and come up with a name."
“A name?”
“Sure. It’s got to have a name if it’s going to be our appetizer special."
Roman grinned. “Yes, Chef.”
Cady always felt calmer in her greenhouse. It wasn’t big as hothouses went, maybe twice the size of her living room, but it was her territory. There was a serenity in the ranks of greenery and the warm, humid air. Out here, shut away from the rest of the inn, she could put her hands in the earth and forget all about difficult guests, pesky clients, unreliable suppliers and other annoyances. Like Damon Hurst.
She shook her head. She wasn’t going there. She was not going to think about that moment in the kitchen when he’d leaned in close, when she’d seen in his eyes that he was going to kiss her. She wasn’t going to wonder what it would have been like. She wasn’t going to wonder how it would have felt. Nope, not going there.
You don’t know, you might like it.
That was precisely the problem. She might, and that would spell disaster. A guy like Damon Hurst wasn’t interested in someone like her. She’d seen him on the magazine covers wrapped cozily together with this model, that actress, and one thing Cady could say for sure was that she was not his type. Maybe he was bored, maybe she was a challenge, maybe seduction was a knee-jerk reaction for him. Whatever it was, she’d been down this road before. She wasn’t about to be played.
The problem was, when he got to looking at her and talking to her, she forgot all about that. All she could do was watch his mouth and wonder.
“Don’t be an idiot,” she muttered and began transplanting petunia seedlings into the hanging basket that sat on the workbench before her. This was what she needed to be focusing on. She needed to be thinking about how she was going to design the perennial beds she’d spent the morning clearing out over at the Chasan place. She didn’t need to be thinking about Damon Hurst.
Feet crunched on the gravel walk outside and, as though she’d conjured him by thinking, Damon opened the door across the room from her.
And serenity flew out the window.
“I thought I might find you out here,” he said, stepping inside. “Hiding out?"
“Working,” she said. “Lot of that going around.”
Calm had disappeared. Sanctuary was no more. She was uneasy, more than a little tongue-tied and, dammit, had butterflies. It didn’t matter that she was on the other side of the room from him. Suddenly, the greenhouse seemed very small.
Damon strolled around, still in his checks and chef’s whites. He should have looked ludicrously out of place and awkward. Instead, he seemed right at home. She was the one who was tense.
He turned to her. “Nice place.”
Cady tried to see it through his eyes: the four long wooden tables covered with flats of pansies and snapdragons or trays of potted marigolds, the hanging baskets of geraniums and petunias, still waiting for their first blossoms. On the far side stood her workbench and the tables with pots of evening primrose, forsythia, bleeding heart. The air smelled rich and green and fertile.
“What’s all this stuff?” he asked, fingering the velvety green leaf of a petunia.
“The flats are annuals—pansies, marigolds, snapdragons. The plant you’re about to take a leaf off of is a petunia,” she added. “It’s cheaper to grow them than to buy them."
He nodded and began to wander again. Having him in her territory felt strangely intimate. The walls were opaque, the door closed, the only sound the occasional drip of water. For the first time, they were truly alone. There were no distractions, just the two of them amid the green.
“These go in the ground now?” he asked, watching her as she went back to transplanting the petunias.
“I’m starting to set some of them out in the yards I’m working on. I probably shouldn’t before Mother’s Day—you never know if you’re going to get a frost up here—but I’m taking my chances."
“Cady McBain, extreme gardener.”
“I like to live life on the edge.”
“Really?” He studied her. “That’s good to know.”
Her skin warmed. “That wasn’t an invitation.”
“Do I look like I need one?”
No, he looked like the kind of guy who just went after what he wanted, she thought uneasily. She just couldn’t figure out why it happened to be her.
“If you plant all this, you’ll have a lot of space afterward. You could probably find a corner for a commissioned job, couldn’t you?"
And there was the answer. Her eyes narrowed. “If this is about growing ramps for you, no. My hands still smell."
“Not ramps, microgreens.”
“If they grow in the forest, I’m not interested.”
“They don’t grow in the forest.”
“I’m still not interested.”
He tapped his knuckles on one of the wooden tables. “They don’t take much room,” he offered. “Just a little dirt and water and a week or two of growing time."
“Two weeks? You know what you’re going to get from two weeks of growth? Grass. Micrograss."
“Strongly flavored micrograss. They taste phenomenal, trust me. Makes all the difference in a dish."
“Then I suggest you tap into your underground chef network and find out where you can get some. In case you haven’t noticed, this greenhouse is full, and when I’ve planted the annuals I’ll be filling it up with perennials."
“The microgreens don’t take a lot of space. And I need them,” he said simply. “The restaurant needs them."
The thing she couldn’t say no to. “What, nobody in the entire country sells them?"
“The closest supplier I could find is a guy out in the Midwest.”
“And let me guess, you want local.”
“Bingo,” he said. “A lot of other chefs do, too. You know, this wouldn’t just help the Sextant,” he added thoughtfully as he wandered away from her along one of the rows. “It could work for you, too. You could probably supply microgreens to half the restaurants in Portland, in New Hampshire, shoot, maybe even Boston. You could turn a tidy little profit. Help you pay for