supposed to help with food prep and get double pay today, but it looks like that’s not happening.”
Ronan comes busting out into the back alley again and the door nearly hits Lars in the face, but his reaction time is at least decent, because he manages to get out of the way before the steel connects with his nose.
“What the fuck am I going to do?” Ronan grabs his hair and kicks the giant metal trash bin.
I’ve never seen Ronan anything but calm. “Are you okay?” I ask, even though it’s very obvious that he’s definitely not okay.
“No!” He throws his hands in the air. “I’m not fucking okay!”
“Is there anything I can do to help?”
“Unless you can magically thaw twenty-five damn Cornish game hens in the next three hours, then no.”
A sinking feeling hits me. I let Paul sign for the order yesterday and then I got busy with customers. It was nonstop all day. “Oh my God. Is this my fault? Did they go in the freezer instead of the fridge?”
Ronan’s brow furrows. “What? No. The freaking company I ordered from messed it up. I ordered fresh Cornish game hens and they brought me frozen ones and a bunch of cans of damn pie filling instead of pie.”
“Oh no! I hope they’re giving you your money back.” I can’t even imagine what it would do to my bank account if something like that happened to me.
“Yeah, but that’s not going to help me tonight. Now all I have to serve for Thanksgiving is potatoes, stuffing, and freaking vegetables.”
He paces the alley, hands still in his hair. I try not to ogle his tattoos, or the way his jogging pants do a great job of hugging his butt, but it’s a challenge.
“What if we put them in a cold water bath?” I suggest.
“They’re rock solid. It’ll take at least six hours and then we’d still have to prep and cook them. I spent eleven damn hours in a car yesterday so I could be open on Thanksgiving and this is what I get. I should’ve checked last night.” He scrubs his face with both hands. “Lars, you might as well go home. Enjoy the day off.”
“We could do wings or something,” he offers.
“It’s Thanksgiving. People don’t want wings. They want a proper dinner, and we don’t have one. We don’t even have a dessert to serve. There just really isn’t a point.”
“Sorry, Ronan. I know you had big plans for today.”
He waves him off. “It’s fine. It’s not your fault.”
“I guess I’ll see you tomorrow?” Lars takes a step toward the door.
“Yeah. Thanks for coming in early. I know you’d rather be sleeping.”
Lars leaves and Ronan slips his hands in his pockets and drops his head with a sigh.
I feel awful for him. Thanksgiving can be a good opportunity to make money, if you have the food to serve. “Do you need any help with anything?”
He rubs the back of his neck. “Nah. Guess I’m gonna sit on the couch and watch football today.”
“Why don’t you come over and I’ll make you a boozy coffee.” I incline my head toward B&B. It’s really the least I can do.
He blows out a breath. “Yeah, sure. Why not? It’s not like I have anything better to do.”
I’d be offended, but I don’t think it’s a personal attack, more that he’s upset about the sudden and unexpected crappy turn his day took.
I make us both special lattes, his spiked with booze, mine not since I have some baking to do. “I need to frost some cupcakes. If you’re interested in hanging around, you can be my taste tester.”
“Uh sure, yeah. I could do that.”
I lead him to the kitchen and set him up with a stool. I pull the naked cupcakes from the fridge so they have time to warm up, don a hairnet—hygiene before vanity—wash my hands and slip out of my heels and into a pair of flats before I get the rest of the ingredients out.
“Do you need any help?”
“Nope. You’re good to just hang out and drink coffee. I’m sorry about the delivery. We had a busy day yesterday and I let Paul accept it. I didn’t even check what it was.”
“It wouldn’t have mattered. I didn’t tell you what was supposed to be delivered and I should’ve checked everything last night, but that drive was hell. There was an accident on the way back and it took seven hours instead of four, which is already long enough,