The Boy I Grew Up With Page 27
I didn’t care. It was out of my walkway to work. “Brandon, you need to help me with this.”
He stared at me. I stared back, and then he rolled his eyes. “Fine. God. Good thing I love you.” He grabbed my shoulder and pulled me in for a quick hug.
“Good thing I make us a lot of money with this place.” I patted his chest, moving away.
“There’s that too.” He stopped to study the sign. “I think you should put one more nail in it. It might fall.”
I counted the nails. “You think?”
“Yes,” he deadpanned. “Twelve nails is not enough to keep this eleven-by-fourteen sign in place.”
I patted his chest again, but it was a hard thwack this time. “Don’t be an ass.”
“Only you, dear sister. You’re the only one who can have that title.”
I started inside, but flipped him off over my shoulder. I followed that with a laugh and heard him join in as he trailed behind me.
It’d been a month since that night, and a month since Channing and I were officially back together. Most didn’t pay attention anymore. This was our routine, but this time felt different. Everything felt different for some reason, and the last month had been good. Really good. Maybe it’s because I’d changed my attitude toward the crew, or maybe it was because Channing and I had started talking about Naly. Whatever it was, it was working.
“Is Channing coming over tonight?” my brother asked.
“No.” I shook my head as he slipped behind the bar. I stood back, scanning the inside of Manny’s. “I’m heading over to his place later.” I was about to say more, but Ava came to a screeching halt in front of me.
She was out of breath and swatting at loose hairs that had fallen over her forehead. “Suki’s going ham on Roy—the Uber guy,” she announced.
“Why?”
She held her hands up. “I have no clue. He got his food, asked for salt, and she went nuts.”
I could only groan as I headed to the front section. I heard yelling the closer I got, but it was just one voice. Suki’s. Her arms were in the air. She was shaking a fist at Roy, then the plate, then back to Roy, and I had to admit, I wasn’t sure if she was speaking a different language.
Roy had leaned back, his eyes wide, his face slightly pale.
I liked to give him a discount since he was so quick to pick up our patrons.
Now, as he held his baseball cap in front of him like a shield, I wondered if Suki hadn’t permanently killed that situation.
Another server was trying to soothe her. It wasn’t working.
Suki shook her off and only upped her volume. “Suki’s fish doesn’t need salt. Salt!” She pretended to spit on the floor. “That’s what Suki thinks about salt, ketchup, butter.” She sliced her hand through the air. “None of that is needed for Suki’s food.”
“Suki!” I stepped through the crowd.
Half the dining room was captivated. The other half were still eating.
I sighed. “Okay. That’s enough.” I pointed toward the back. “Suki, my office.”
She scrunched up her face, another burst coming, and I shook my head.
“Office. Now.”
She stormed off. Ava and the other server scattered. As they did, I took Roy’s plate and handed it to Lily, another server passing by. “Give Roy anything he wants,” I said to her, before turning back to him. “On the house. All weekend. Okay?”
Hearing me, three regulars shot their arms in the air. “We’d like more salt too! Suki!”
“Har, har, guys.”
They laughed, lowered their arms, and went back to eating.
Roy was jittery, looking from them to me. He kept that baseball cap in front of him, tightening his hold. “That’s not necessary, Miss Jax.”
Oh, fuck. Miss Jax. I didn’t need to hear that.
“I mean it. No ifs, ands, or buts. On the house. I know you help us out too. Got it?”
His eyes jumped to where Suki had gone, then he swallowed and gave a quick nod. “Yes, ma’am, Miss Jax. I’ll just have a burger.”
Lily nodded. “Got it.” She turned to me. “I’ll take care of him.”
“Right.”
Ava and the other server had already cleaned up the salt, along with whatever else my manager-who-kept-forgetting-she-was-a-manager-and-not-a-chef had thrown, so Suki was the only one left to manage. I started for my office. I wanted to say this was an oddity, but it wasn’t. Suki was sitting in Brandon’s chair, her arms and ankles crossed. Her face was set in defiance.
“You’re cooking again?” I asked as I closed the office door.
She watched me as I sat in my chair. “Marie didn’t come, so Suki took over. Cruz came in early to cover the rest.”
My fingers twitched for a cigarette as I sat down. I rubbed them against each other. Maybe I could rub that urge out of me? Or candy. I had candy.
I started digging through my drawers. Where’d that bag go?
“I know you called Marie and told her not to come in.”
First drawer was a mess. I winced, but no candy.
Second drawer.
“What?”
Aha! Third drawer. There was taffy in there. Thank the candy fairies.
I plopped it on the desk and dug in. “She texted me last night, asked if I was sure we didn’t need her. I let it go because I knew you’d be covering.” Popping a yellow one into my mouth, I gestured toward the hall. “I know you love making food, but you can’t do that. You know that.”
Suki had been shirking her manager responsibilities a lot lately. I’d let it go for too long.
“Katrina’s still on the payroll?” A pink taffy was on deck.
“Yeah.” Her eyes narrowed. “Why?”
I tossed the pink one in my mouth and stared at her. Hard. “Because you’re suspended.”
“Suki opens this whole weekend.”
“Not anymore, Suki doesn’t.”
Yes. Third person. I’d joined her narrative. Oh fuck. What the hell. I started unwrapping a green taffy.
“Are you kidding Suki?”
Yes. That was her speaking. Not me. But I answered the same way. “Heather doesn’t kid. Not when Heather needs a damn cigarette.” My nostrils flared.
Suki blinked, and her head inched backward. She was starting to get it.
Heather wasn’t playing around.
Fuck. Damn. Shit! I was doing the third-person speaking in my head now too.
I cleared my head, grabbing that green taffy and clutching it as if it was life itself. “You haven’t been doing inventory. You haven’t been doing the ordering. What you have been doing is putting everything off on Cruz lately, which is why I’ve been cutting him loose most nights and closing for him.”
I was feeling a little more settled. Suki had shut her mouth.
“We have to face facts here.” I gentled my tone. “Food is your first love, but that’s not your job anymore. Roy is like a daddy longlegs. He’s around. You might get mad at him, but he helps us. He kills other spiders and insects for us.”
“He does?”
“What?” Crap. My metaphor. “No, he doesn’t. The daddy longlegs does. They’re good spiders, but that’s what I’m saying about Roy. He’s here a lot, and he might ask for salt, but it’s not an insult to you. We want him here. He helps us. He keeps people safe when they might drive home drunk. We want him here.”