1 The Mutt and the Matchmaker
Page 5
“And which are you, Jane? Did you choose Calamity? Was it through some complicated algorithm or did you go with your gut?”
“She’s not mine. I’m just her foster mom. I take the dogs who are hard to place in a home and try to make them more adoptable.”
“Ah, I see. You go for the hard-luck cases, healing broken hearts.” Ruby turned around and headed back in the direction we’d come from. “And have you made progress with Calamity?”
“I'm getting there,” Jane murmured, thinking of Tom.
Chapter 9
Tom frowned at his cellphone before raising it to his ear. “You do know that I have other things to do, don’t you, Danny?”
His younger brother’s voice was tight with tension. “I know.”
Tom imagined the pained expression on his little brother’s face.
“I wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t important, Tommy,” he said quietly.
Tom felt a twinge of guilt. The youngest of four boys, Danny had always struggled to keep up with the others and rarely asked for a helping hand, even when he could use one. It wasn’t his fault that whatever was going on threatened to derail Tom’s love life plans.
Tom shook his head. Before he’d met Jane Bly, he’d convinced himself love was out of the cards for him forever, but now… “What do you need?”
“Surveillance.”
“When?”
“Tonight. As soon as you can get there. I’ll pay you.”
“Are we talking the brotherly rate or will I get official payment?”
Danny worked as an investigator for a major insurance company.
“That’ll depend on how my case turns out,” Danny admitted.
“So this is an off-the-clock job?”
“For now.”
Tom shook his head. His workaholic brother had a penchant for long hours and little pay. “Tell me again why you won’t come work for me?”
“Because you spilled my invisible ink,” Danny replied automatically, bringing up a childhood grievance. “So will you do it, jerkoff?”
“Yeah,” Tom replied regretfully, knowing he’d have to cancel his dinner with Jane. Still, it wouldn’t be a total waste if he could solve the burglaries case. If the other pet sitter had told him about her suspicions regarding Jane, he had no doubt she’d spread the word to others. “But I need a favor in return.”
“Name it,” his brother agreed quickly.
“I need someone to run a license plate for me.”
“Done.”
After rattling off the plate of neighborhood handyman, Graham, and getting the specifics of where and whom Danny needed staked out, Tom had the unpleasant task of cancelling his date.
Jane heard the phone ringing while she was in the shower, but since she trying to rid herself of the odor of cat urine, she didn’t answer. Finally convinced she’d eliminated the evidence of her run-in with the Lanler’s crotchety cat, she climbed out of the steaming shower, pulled on her robe, and listened to the message.
“Hi, Jane, it’s Tom.”
She smiled at the sound of his voice.
“I’m sorry, but I’m going to need to reschedule our date.”
Her smile fell. A heavy weight pressed on her chest. He’d decided dating her wasn’t worth it.
“My brother’s in a jam and I promised I’d helped him.”
The pressure around her chest eased and she sucked in a sigh of relief. It wasn’t a rejection of her after all. How could she fault a guy for wanting to help his family?
“I’ll call you soon.”
“Okay,” she murmured as though he could hear her.
“Bye.”
The message ended.
She stared at her reflection in the fogged-up mirror. “Don’t get your hopes up about this guy.”
But the warning she was issuing to herself came too late.
She definitely had a spring in her step the next day as she walked Spot, a Dalmatian with a proclivity for finding every fire hydrant on their journey. She even waved at Dianne when they passed each other on opposite sides of the street. The other woman didn’t acknowledge her.
Then she spotted the postal carrier, Javier, on his rounds. He was delivering a package to the young family who lived in the house that had the biggest swingset in the neighborhood. While Spot sniffed a particularly interesting section of grass, Jane watched the mailman, wondering if he was a suspect in the burglaries. After all, he knew everyone’s schedules and no one would think twice about him toting around a bulging bag on his back. He could break in, load his mail sack with plundered goodies, and waltz right out under everyone’s nose.
As though he sensed her watching him, Javier scanned the area after dropping off the package. Spotting Jane, he broke into a big smile and waved enthusiastically. “Think it’s going to rain?”
Jane waved back, glanced at the overcast sky, and replied, “Hope not.”
“Me too. My daughter’s got a soccer game this afternoon. See you around.” He moved on along his delivery route.
Jane felt a twinge of guilt for adding him to her suspect list. Javier was a hardworking guy who loved his family.
She really wasn’t cut out to be a burglar detector despite what Ruby had thought.
After taking Spot home, Jane headed toward the Schroders’. She might not be the person who was going to catch the person who’d stolen their silver, but she might be the one to help them find a new dog.
The animal shelter was running a huge adoption fair in less than two weeks and Jane wanted to drop off a flyer so they knew about it. She slipped the neon green paper into their mailbox before heading over to pick up Mr. Sterling.
She’d almost reached his house when her cell phone rang. She didn’t recognize the number. “Hello?”
“Hi Jane, it’s me Tarzan.” Tom’s deep voice rumbled through the phone.
Jane chuckled. “Hi.”
“I’m sorry about last night.”
“It’s okay. Did everything work out with your brother?”
“It did. Listen, I was wondering if you’re free to have dinner tonight instead?”
Jane didn’t answer; she was too distracted by the sight of Sheila Croton coming out of a house that wasn’t hers.
“Look,” Tom said apologetically, taking her silence for hesitation. “I know it was lousy of me to cancel on you last minute like that.”
Jane watched Croton get into her car. Now there was a decent suspect.
Sheila was the local plant whisperer. Whenever anyone wanted their houseplants or gardens taken care of while they were away, Sheila was the person to do it. She probably had a key to half the houses in the neighborhood.
“Jane?” Tom sounded worried.
Jane watched Sheila drive away.
Realizing he thought she was giving him the brush off, she said hurriedly and with a tad too much enthusiasm, “I’d love to have dinner tonight, Tom.”
“I’ll pick you up at seven-thirty?” His relief was evident.
“Sounds great.”
“See you then. Bye.” He disconnected the call.
She put her phone away and actually skipped the rest of the way to pick up Mr. Sterling.
Chapter 10
Tom took a deep breath and exhaled slowly, preparing to ring Jane Bly’s doorbell. He felt as nervous as he had when he’d invited Christine Hoover to the junior prom.
Before he could push the button, there was a flurry of activity on the other side of the door, a couple of excited barks, the scritch-scratching of paws running across a floor, and a dull thud as the running dog was unable to stop and crashed into the door.
Even though he knew Calamity had already announced his arrival, he rang the bell.
“Just a sec,” Jane called from deep inside her apartment.
Tom glanced at his watch and realized he was twelve minutes early, so he leaned against the railing, settling in for a wait.
He was surprised when the door flew open and Jane stepped out, ready to go in
a simple dark green dress and black heels that hinted at beguiling curves and showed off a length of shapely leg he hadn’t seen before.
For once, her hair wasn’t tied back in a ponytail; it hung loose, framing her face with delicate waves.
His fingers itched to touch it, to see if it really felt as silky as it looked.
“Hi,” she said. Her eyes roamed over him appreciatively. “You clean up nice.”
“So do you.”
She smiled and his heart stuttered.
“You look beautiful,” he murmured, bending down to brush a kiss against his cheek. Her perfume, something sweet and floral, tickled his nose. He straightened and offered her his arm. “Shall we?”
And they were off. They made easy conversation in his car on the way to the restaurant, veering from whether or not it would rain, to a funny story about Jane’s adventure trying to wrangle a pet ferret, to a discussion about the pros and cons of personalized license plates. By the time they reached their destination, Tom was thoroughly relaxed and entertained.
He’d thought Jane was having a good time too, but when she got out of the car in the parking lot, she got strangely quiet.
“You okay?” he asked when she stopped and stared across the street. “If you don’t like the food here, we can go someplace else.”
She shook her head. Even though it was dark, he spotted tears in her eyes.
Stepping in front of her, he used two fingers to tilt her chin up so that he could get a better look at her.
Her expression of misery socked him in the gut.
“What’s wrong?”
She raised a hand and pointed a shaky finger toward the shop across the street. “That was my dream.”
“Donuts? You want donuts instead of dinner? I can do that. Donuts are great,” he said hurriedly, eager to make her happy.
She laughed, which caused two fat tears to run down her cheeks. Releasing her chin, he brushed them away.
“Sorry,” she hung her head, embarrassed. “Not exactly perfect date material, am I?”
Without thinking he pulled her to him in a tight hug to comfort her. She held herself away at first, but then seemed to melt against him, wrapping her hands around his waist and resting her head against his chest.
“Now tell me about this donut fixation,” he suggested, trying to ignore how perfectly she molded to his body, how good she smelled, how soft she felt.
“It’s not the donuts,” she sniffled. “It’s the shop. I was supposed to buy that storefront, but then Gerald, my ex-boyfriend, stole all my savings. Thirty-four thousand, five hundred and sixty-seven dollars.”
Tom tensed, overwhelmed with the urge to beat the crap out of the unnamed man who’d hurt her. “How?”
“He was my accountant,” she revealed bitterly. “And I was so happy to land someone solid that I never had a clue what a jerk he was until it was too late.”
The self-recrimination in her voice made him want to tell her that everyone made mistakes and that everyone gets suckered some time, but the words got caught in his throat.
“I was going to open my business there,” she continued. “You can’t see it from here, but there’s a giant fenced-in lot behind that place.”
“What were you going to do?”
“Doggie daycare.” She laughed self-consciously. “I know to most people that doesn’t sound like much of an entrepreneurial dream, but to me, it meant the world.”
“You love dogs that much?”
“I enjoy the company of dogs that much. My parents…” She took a deep breath as though to fortify herself for whatever she was about to reveal. “My parents loved each other passionately and they chased their dreams with abandon. They were professional dancers, bouncing from gig to gig.”
Tom stroked her hair, waiting for the giant “but” he sensed was coming.
“But it meant I was lonely a lot of the time, but you can’t be too lonely in the company of a dog. So yeah, I guess I love dogs.”
Tom didn’t know what to say. He’d grown up in a home with parents who had doted on him and three brothers who’d ensured he never had a moment alone. When Meghan had broken his heart, he’d retreated from the world, saying he needed his privacy. It wasn’t until this moment that he’d realized how lonely his self-imposed exile had left him.
“Do you want to see them?”
“Your parents? I thought you said they died.”
She fiddled with the antique locket she wore. The one he’d wondered if she’d stolen.
“Here they are.” She snapped it open.
He peered at the two tiny photographs, trying not to focus on the swell of her chest, even though the necklace lay between the lace-cupped mounds.
“Very nice,” he murmured.
She closed the locket with a click and let the pendant drop into the shadowy valley between her breasts. He fought the urge to dive in after it. Instead, he forced himself to raise his gaze back to her face.
Even in the dark, aided by the glow of the streetlights, he could see that once again her cheeks were flushed. It intrigued him and he stroked her face tenderly with his fingertips, delighting in the heat emanating from her skin.
“Did I embarrass you?” he whispered.
She shook her head.
He let his hand slip from her cheek to brush against her lips, delighting in the way her whole body shuddered at the touch.
Her tongue snaked out and licked his finger and it was his turn to be rocked by sensation.
Then, as though she realized she was playing with fire, she pulled back, stepping out of his embrace. She cleared her throat and smoothed her dress over her hips.
“I’m not giving up on my dream,” Jane declared, resolutely returning to their earlier topic of conversation as though they hadn’t just come this close to having mind-blowing sex on the hood of his car. “I saved up the money for it once and I’ll do it again, by hook or by crook.”
A niggle of doubt whispered to Tom through the sensual haze that thrummed through him as he remembered that Jane was his main suspect.
“Pet sitting can be a lucrative business. But enough about me, tell me why you decided to open a gym.”
The volume of the whisper in his head increased. He would have liked to have ignored it, but he’d been fooled once by a beautiful woman, it wouldn’t happen again.
Chapter 11
Jane had mixed feelings the next morning as she headed to a meeting with Ruby, who’d called and said she had a pet-sitting job for her.
Her date with Tom the night before had been strange. At the beginning, when they’d been driving around in his little sports car, she’d felt like they were really connected, but as soon as she’d asked him about his business, he seemed to take a step back.
She’d tried to convince herself it was because he was uncomfortable talking about himself, but she hadn’t been able to shake the feeling he was hiding something. She knew about boyfriends with secrets. She knew first-hand the damage they could do, and so she too had retreated.
Their dinner had been polite, but reserved, each caught up in their own thoughts. He’d taken her straight home afterward and she’d known it was their last date. Still, he’d insisted on walking her to her front door.
She’d thanked him for a nice evening and unlocked her door, not counting on Calamity, who usually hid in the kitchen when she came home, to bound out, tripping her.
Jane would have fallen if Tom hadn’t grabbed her from behind. Hauling off her feet with an arm snaked around her waist, he pressed her against his chest for a beat too long before lowering her to the ground.
She turned to thank him for saving her, but never got the words out because he’d cradled her face between his hands and kissed her. Thoroughly.
And she’d kissed him back. With abandon.
And then he’d released her and stumbled back to his car as though putting as much distance between them as possible was a matter of life and death.
She’d leaned weakly
against the doorjamb, watching him go, wondering if she’d ever see him again.
Reaching the address Ruby had given her, Jane gave herself a mental shake. She needed to focus on the job at hand.
She rang the bell and waited.
A moment later, Ruby, looking a bit flustered, opened the door. “Good morning.”
“Good morning.”
Jane expected to be invited in, but Ruby had other plans. Pushing past Jane, she pulled the door shut behind her and hurried away from the house.
After a stunned moment, Jane chased after her.
“I promised Mrs. Ciafonne I’d take care of her dog while she’s in the hospital, but I just don’t have the time.” She marched up the front walk of her next-door-neighbor’s yard, pulled out a key, and unlocked the front door.
“And I can’t keep imposing on my nephew to do it,” she said, raising her voice. “He’s got much more important things on his mind.”
Hearing her voice, a little white ball of fluff charged toward them.
Instinctively, Jane knelt to greet the dog.
The Maltese, festooned with pink bows, leapt into her arms and began to lick her face.
“It would appear that Marshmallow likes you,” Ruby declared.
“Marshmallow?” Jane twisted her head back so that she could speak without ending up with the dog’s tongue in her mouth. “Your nephew is Tom?”
“Unless I decide to disown him.” She eyed Jane curiously. “You know him?”
Putting the dog down, Jane got to her feet. “We’ve met. Because of Marshmallow in fact.”
“Now that’s interesting. Very interesting,” Ruby murmured.
Jane wondered what had brought the sudden smile to the older woman’s lips.
“So you’ll take the job?”
“You haven’t told me what you want me to do.”
“Walk her, play with her, feed her.”
“How many times per day?’
Ruby cocked her head to the side, thinking. “How often do you do most dogs in the neighborhood?”
“Two or three times a day.”
“Let’s make it three,” Ruby declared with a smile.