Chapter 4

1762 Words
Chapter 4Jo had blown off the rest of the afternoon, what was left of it after a three-hour lunch, and gone to the Eastlake Gym. When Renée Linden did a full-on opening argument, Jo had found herself at some loss to offer a clean and cogent rebuttal. And she still didn’t know what her plan or intent was, making it all the more confusing. If there were a pending lawsuit on which the Market needed her assistance, why hadn’t she simply laid out the bones of the case. Not that Jo would have time to tackle it, but she’d be glad to give them a little advice and hook them up with someone sharp enough to take down whoever was messing with them. Jo shoved the pin in ten pounds heavier than normal and began working her triceps on the machine. This wasn’t her normal workout time. She and Cassidy typically came in with the other early corporates. Hard workouts to get fired up for a guilt-free day because your workout was already under your belt. Perrin never joined them. A true night owl, if she ever went to the gym it would be at midnight. The afternoon crowd was an odd mix. A lot of mothers getting in a quick half-hour while the kid was at ballet or wherever. There were also a fair number of guys who looked bruiser strong. Like construction workers off work at three who hadn’t gotten enough exercise hefting steel girders and giant laminate beams all day. Jo decided to just keep her head down and do her workout. And hope that she could somehow make sense of what happened at lunch. “We’re retiring,” Renée had explained over the entremets of strawberry sorbet with a dark chocolate flake. “Nathaniel and I are going cruising for a while, then we thought we’d winter over in New Zealand. This is our home, but we decided it was time to travel for some reason other than business.” Renée Linden retiring. That would send shockwaves rippling through the Seattle social firmament. Jo still couldn’t make sense of that, even by the time she’d worked through biceps and moved on to abs and obliques. And Nathaniel Linden leaving Boeing management. He was the President of the custom business-jet division, had practically created it. You want your own personal 737 outfitted for entertaining? He was the man. A six-bedroom 747, with an in-flight movie theater that could seat your family and friends each in their own lounge chair before a ten-foot screen with full-surround sound and a garage in the cargo bay to transport your Maserati? He’d make it happen. It was a small, but exceptionally lucrative division. That had been enough of a shock for Jo, and she’d wager that neither Pike Place Market nor Boeing were the least bit happy about their pending departures. Jo counted out ten more reps trying not to think, but that wasn’t helping. Her litigator instincts would bet safe money there was still more up the woman’s sleeve. She was notorious for never stopping once she’d set her sights on something. But Jo couldn’t quite identify what she’d been after. That’s when Jo’s brain had shut down, plain and simple. It was as fatal a mistake in court as it was at a power lunch, but she couldn’t get around it. Researching the woman for a year would not have brought her to that lunch prepared for what was fielded at her with Renée’s pleasant conversation and a one-two punch of kindness and gentility. Without actually saying it out loud, Renée had made it clear that they didn’t want Jo on the PDA board, which simplified that decision for her. It had been such a relief that she’d ordered the most decadent Soufflé au Grand Marnier she’d ever eaten. No. The board had its twelve members. But, Renée let slip ever so casually, that she hadn’t yet told the board that she’d be resigning as the Executive Director of the Pike Place Market. Because Jo was the first to know other than her husband, she must keep it to herself until she announced it next week. Jo let the kick bar for working her quads drop back into position with an ear-ringing clang. Half the people in the weight room turned to see if there’d been an accident. She tried to lift it again so that everything appeared to be normal, but couldn’t gather enough neurons sending the message to her legs to do so. Renée had simply wanted “to let Jo be the first to know. As a professional courtesy.” Jo had been so dazzled by the lunch and the conversation that she didn’t even see it coming until this moment sitting at the exercise machine, her foot hooked behind a bar that was impossible for her to lift. Renée wasn’t merely retiring, she had already chosen her replacement. And, without once stating it in as many words, she’d informed Jo that she was Renée’s first and only pick to replace her. She’d simply used the basket and the luncheon to plant the idea in Jo’s mind, and then allowed it to have time to build and age like the Royal Oporto Tawny Port they had with the final cheese and pear course. Jo blew out a breath as if at the end of a brutal workout and not just her third set of reps. The anointed chosen successor to the great Renée Linden and she’d never seen it coming. Never had a chance to react and refuse or, Jo now identified the heart of Renée’s finesse, say anything she might regret later such as laughing hysterically in the woman’s face. At least not until she’d had time to think about it. The woman would have made one heck of an attorney and Jo would hate to argue a case against her in court. She wouldn’t stand a chance. Angelo had tried exhausting himself on the step machine, but though his legs burned, his mind was still churning. He went for the elliptical next and set the program to maximum cardio with heavy resistance. The gym was high above Eastlake Avenue, high enough to look over the buildings across the street and allow its patrons to enjoy views of Lake Union and steep Queen Anne Hill if they tired of the television screens while they worked out. High enough that maybe he could get some perspective on what had just happened to his life. His mama had come to live with him. That was wonderful. Mostly. He had the room. With the success of the restaurant, he’d moved out of the tiny one bedroom and into a two bedroom with a good kitchen right in the heart of Pioneer Square. He’d thought he’d experiment there, but he never did, he always ended up just going to the restaurant at odd hours to test new dishes there. No matter. He could afford it now. And the last time he’d had a girl up to his apartment… He looked out the window at Lake Union. A cluster of sailboats were skittering across the surface of the lake that made the north boundary of downtown Seattle. He had to think back a ways to remember. Well, okay, so his mother wouldn’t be cramping his style there either. But in his kitchen? No one was as good as his mama in the kitchen. It didn’t matter if they actually were, they still weren’t. Paprika in the Biroldo sausage? Sacrilegio! Then he’d tried it after she left to go to the apartment and take a nap after the flight. It was exactly right, damn it. She’d be fussing with each of his dishes until he didn’t recognize them anymore. And worse, they’d probably be better. At least she’d never know what happened last night. Just last night? He cast his eyes skyward in prayer that she’d never hear how he’d had a total meltdown less than twenty-four hours before. Sweat poured off him as the elliptical sent him on another hill climb. Of course, he knew why he’d made such a mess. Too bad there wasn’t a thing he could do about it. It was too late. Jo Thompson would take that meal as a personal affront and never speak to him again. He certainly would in her position. He truly hadn’t intended to ruin her date with awful food. God, he hated working out in the afternoon. He should be worrying about dinner prep, instead he was worrying about his mama. When he worked out in the mornings after he’d done the shopping for the restaurant and before lunch prep began, he used to run into Cassidy and Jo on occasion. Casual waves, polite greetings. But the heat that had coursed through his body each time he saw Jo had become too uncomfortable and he’d shifted his workouts to between lunch and dinner service. Another hill? The machine had it in for him today. He grabbed his towel and wiped off his face and eyes. They stung with the salt from his sweat. Another mile the machine warned him. And one last high resistance climb. He was dying here. The only way this could possibly be worse… He focused on a machine two over from him. The woman climbing onto her elliptical was one he’d recognize in a white-out blizzard even if she were wearing a parka and hood. Though that sure wasn’t what she was wearing now. A dark maroon sports b*a left her shoulders and midriff gloriously bare. It left so little to the imagination that his blood pressure was threatening to pop. Matching running shorts that exposed one of the nicest lengths of leg he’d ever seen. And lemon yellow sneakers like the laugh line on a great joke. Jo Thompson looked incredible. And she wasn’t looking at him. Either hadn’t noticed him or, far more likely, was studiously ignoring his existence. A hundred percent snub. There were rules in workout gyms. Everyone was in their own space, doing their own thing. You never messed with that. And it was truly bad form to stare at a woman. His own headphones were spilling out The Boss because who else could help you with your Italian mother better than Springsteen. Born to Run? You betcha! Jo was probably listening to opera. She sure wasn’t looking his way. She must have seen him, had purposely left an empty machine between them, and then ignored him to rub in how angry she was about last night’s meal ruining her date. He slowed his pace. The machine began blinking the “Pedal Faster” sign at him. He slowed to a stop. She was staring up at the TV screens set above the wide glass window with the view of the lake. CNN or the James Stewart film. He couldn’t tell which she was watching. He wiped down the machine and headed for the showers. One glance back showed him a view he’d never forget, the beautiful and brilliant Jo Thompson running away from him at high speed.
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