Naomi
I accepted the leather and denim apron Sherry โFiโ Fiasco handed me and tied it around my waist.
โShirt looks good,โ Sherry said, giving my Honky Tonk v-neck an
approving nod.
โThanks,โ I said and tugged nervously at the hem. The shirt was tight and showed more cleavage than I was used to accentuating. But, per my research at the library, ladies with their โgirlsโ showing tended to make higher tips.
Honky Tonk felt like a country bar that had a brief but satisfying affair with a glitzy speakeasy. I liked the โfancy cowboyโ vibe.
โThis hereโs Maxine, and sheโll be training you on the POS,โ Fi said, plucking the lollipop out of her mouth. โItโs also how you clock in and out and order your own meals. Hereโs your pin number.โ She handed over a sticky note with 6969 scrawled across it in Sharpie.
Nice.
โHi,โ I said to Maxine. She had dark skin dusted with glitter over her enviable cheekbones and modest cleavage. Her hair was cut short and left to curl tightly in tiny magenta coils.
โCall me Max,โ she insisted. โYou ever sling drinks before?โ I shook my head. โI worked in HR until two days ago.โ
I gave her points for not rolling her eyes at me. I wouldnโt want to train me either.
โBut I learn fast,โ I assured her.
โWell, youโre gonna have to since weโre short-handed tonight. So unless you suck, Iโll be pushing you out of the nest early.โ
โIโll do my best not to suck,โ I promised.
โYou do that. Weโll start with the drinks for my eight-top.โ
โWeโve got two drafts of Bud,โ Maxine began, fingers flying over the screen. Her glittery nails hypnotized me with their speed.
I was nervous but highly motivated. My bank had told me it would take up to a week for me to receive my replacement debit and credit cards. And Waylay had already polished off the entire box of Pop-Tarts. If I wanted to keep my niece in groceries, I was going to have to be the best damn server this town had ever seen.
โThen you hit send, and the printer at the bar spits out the order. Same for food, only it goes straight to the kitchen,โ Max explained.
โGot it.โ
โGreat. Hereโs the next one. Your turn.โ
I only fumbled twice and earned a โgood enoughโ nod from my trainer. โLetโs get those tips flowing. I hope your feet are prepared,โ Maxine
said with a quick grin.
I blew out a breath and followed her into the crowd.
MY FEET HURT.ย I was hours behind on my water intake. And I was really tired of explaining that I wasnโt Tina. Especially since that seemed to have earned me the nickname Not Tina.
Silver the bartender said something that I missed as I wearily unloaded glasses at the service bar.
โWhat?โ I yelled over the music.
โHanginโ in there?โ she repeated louder this time.
โI think so.โ Max had given me two tables of โunderstanding regularsโ to handle on my own, and so far no one besides me was wearing beer or complaining about how long it took to get their brisket nachos, so I felt like I was doing an adequate job.
I felt like Iโd walked ten miles just going between the bar and the tables.
Most of the patrons seemed like regulars. They knew each otherโs names and drink orders and razzed each other over sports rivalries.
The kitchen staff was nice enough. And while Silver wasnโt exactly friendly, she was a pro pulling pints with both hands while taking a to-go order over the phone.
I admired her efficiency.
Iโd just dropped off a fresh round of drinks when I realized Iโd spent the last few hours not thinking aboutโฆwell, anything. I hadnโt had time to worry about Waylay at Lizaโs or about the four emails from Warner I hadnโt opened. And the small roll of cash in my apron made me forget all about my thieving sister and my overdrawn accounts.
I also hadnโt given my hot, grumpy, urinating neighbor a passing thought.
Thatโs when I lost my focus and walked smack into a solid wall of chest under a black t-shirt.
โPardon me,โ I said, slapping a hand to the muscley obstacle to stay upright.
โWhat the fuck are you doing?โ
Not. Again.
โAre you kidding me?โ I squeaked, looking up to find Knox scowling at
me.
โWhat are you doing here, Naomi?โ
โIโm checking Santaโs Naughty List. What does it look like Iโm doing?
Iโm working. Now get out of my way, or Iโll hit you with my tray and Iโve had aย lotย of espresso today. I could get you on the floor in three or four whacks.โ
He didnโt respond verbally. Probably because he was too busy taking me by the arm and dragging me out into the hallway. He stormed past the restrooms and the kitchen door and opened the next door with a well-placed boot.
โEveninโ, Knox,โ Fi said, without looking up from her monitors. โWhat the fuck is this?โ he snapped.
Sherry spared him a glance. โThis?โ she repeated blandly. He pulled me farther into the room. โThis,โ he said again.
โThis is Naomi. A human person who is halfway into her first shift,โ Sherry said, going back to her monitors.
โDonโt want her working here, Fi.โ
Iโd had enough of the pissed off at the world in general and me in particular routine. I yanked my arm free and whacked him in the chest with
my tray.
Sherry looked up again, her mouth falling open.
โI donโt care if you donโt want me working here, Viking. Fi hired me. Iโm here. Now, unless you have a reason for detaining me at a job I desperately need, you blond Oscar the Grouch, I suggest you take up your hiring concerns with this establishmentโs management.โ
โIย amย this establishmentโs management,โ he snarled.
Great.ย Of courseย he was management. Iโd hit my new boss with a tray. โI wouldnโt have taken this job if Iโd known you managed this place,โ I
bit out.
โNow you know. Get out.โ
โKnox,โ Sherry sighed wearily. โWe needed a replacement for the server you scared off with all your scowling and Oscar the Grouching.โ
He pointed a threatening finger in her direction. โIโm not letting you make that a thing. Call Whatโs Her Name and get her to unquit.โ
Sherry leaned back and crossed her arms. โIf you can tell me her name, Iโll call her up right now.โ
Knox muttered a curse.
โThatโs what I thought,โ she said smugly. โNow, who makes the hiring decisions around here?โ
โI donโt give a shit if itโs the damn Pope,โ he growled. โSheโs not working here.ย Iย donโt want her around.โ
Deciding I had nothing to lose, I hit him again with the tray. โListen, Viking. I donโt know what your problem is with me. Whatever narcissistic delusional roller coaster youโre on, Iโmย notย here to ruin your life. Iโm trying to earn back some of the money my sister stole from me, and until the bank unfreezes my account, Iโm not letting you or anyone else stand in the way of Waylayโs Pop-Tarts.โ
โUnless you want to take her tables for her, boss, Iโm siding with Naomi,โ Sherry said.
Knoxโs eyes glowed with icy fire. โFuck. Fine. One shift. You make one mistake. Get one complaint and your ass is gone.โ
โYour magnanimity wonโt be forgotten. Iโve got tables waiting.โ โOne mistake,โ he called after me.
I flipped him off over my shoulder and stormed into the hall.
โGet rid of her, Fi. Iโm not working with some uppity, needy pain in the ass.โ His words carried to me outside the door. My cheeks flamed.
An uppity, needy pain in the ass.ย So thatโs what the gorgeous, bad- tempered Knox Morgan saw when he looked at me.
I KEPT IT TOGETHER,ย pushing all thoughts of my stupid boss out of my mind and putting my full attention into getting the right drinks to the right people, busing tables for turnover, and being helpful wherever I could.
I squeezed in the shortest dinner break in the history of dinner breaks, sneaking a pit stop at the bathroom and a few bites of a spectacularly good grilled chicken salad from Milford in the kitchen. Then made a beeline for the bar, where Silver was pouring a stream of liquor into a cocktail shaker with one hand and opening a beer bottle with the other.
Her hair was buzzed short, leaving nothing to distract from the dramatic smoky eye makeup and tiny eyebrow ring. The sleeves of her black blazer were rolled up, and she wore a striped tie loose over a Honky Tonk tank. She was androgynously attractive in a way that made me feel like an eighth- grader with a crush on the cool girl.
โSilver, do you mind if I use the phone to check in with my babysitter?โ I asked over the thump of the music.
She jerked her head toward the phone between the two tap systems, and I took that as approval.
I checked my watch and dialed the cottageโs number. Liza answered on the third ring.
โWe ordered pizza stead of eatinโ that mound of veggies you left us,โ she said over the blare of the TV on her end.
โAre those gunshots?โ I asked, plugging my ear with a finger so I could hear her over the musical stylings of country singer Mickey Guyton on my end.
โCan you believe sheโs never seenย The Usual Suspects?โ Liza scoffed. โLiza!โ
โRelax. Weโre just shooting real guns in the house, not watching R-rated movies.โ
โLiza!โ
โYouโre rightโyour aunt really is wound tighter than a necktie on Friday,โ Liza said, presumably to my big-mouthed niece. โEverythingโs
fine. Way helped me in the garden. We ate pizza and now weโre watching a PG-13, edited-for-TV action movie. Sylvester Stallone just called someone a poop head.โ
I sighed. โThank you so much for this. I really appreciate it.โ
โKinda nice to have company for once. Whenโs your next shift?โ
I bit my lip. โIโm not sure. This might be a one-and-done. My new boss doesnโt seem to like me.โ
She laughed softly. โGive him time.โ
I realized my babysitting fairy godmother had predicted this and wondered what she knew that I didnโt.
โThis ainโt social hour. Get your ass off the phone, Daisy.โ
I gritted my teeth at Knoxโs interruption. โYour grandson says hi.โ
Liza chuckled. โTell him to kiss my ass and to pick up a rotisserie chicken for me tomorrow. Iโll see ya when ya get home,โ she said.
โThanks again. I owe you. Bye.โ
I turned and found Knox looming over me like a s*xy turkey vulture. โYour grandmother says kiss her ass and bring her a rotisserie chicken.โ
โWhy are you on the phone withย myย grandma onย yourย first and last bar shift?โ
โBecause sheโs watching my eleven-year-old niece so I can earn money for groceries and back-to-school clothes, you uncharitable oaf!โ
โFigures,โ he muttered.
โLay off, Knox,โ Silver said as she shook two cocktail shakers at once. โYou know being a dick costs you in turnover.โ
โIย wantย this one to turn over,โ he insisted. โWhy donโt you hide in the kitchen and text like everyone else?โ
โBecause I donโt have a cell phone,โ I reminded him. โWho in the fuck doesnโt have a cell phone?โ
โSomeone who lost hers in a tragic rest stop accident,โ I shot back. โIโd love to continue this stimulating conversation, but I need to help Max turn over some tables.โ
โYou tell him, Not Tina,โ Hinkel McCord crowed from his barstool.
Knox looked like he was going to pick him up and hurl him through the door. I took a cleansing breath and did what I did bestโstuffed all of my feelings into a little box with a tight lid. โIs there something you need before I go back to work?โ
His eyes narrowed at my polite tone. We stared each other down until we were interrupted.
โThere she is,โ a familiar voice boomed over the din.
โJustice!โ My cafe-owning future husband had his arm around a beautiful woman.
โI brought the wife so she could meet my fiancรฉe,โ Justice joked.
โWaitโll Muriel hears about this,โ Hinkel cackled, whipping out his phone.
โIโm Tallulah,โ she said, leaning over the bar to offer her hand. โHubs told me all about your first day in town.โ
She was tall with a cascade of long braids down her back. She was wearing a St. John Garage t-shirt, jeans, and cowboy boots. โSorry I missed your first time in the cafe. Heard it was quite a show.โ
โThis one hasnโt been half bad either,โ Hinkel interjected.
โItโs nice to meet you, Tallulah,โ I said. โIโm sorry for proposing to your husband, but the man makes coffee that angels sing about.โ
โDonโt I know it,โ she agreed.
โWhereโs your section? Weโre here to patronize you,โ Justice said. Knox rolled his eyes.
โDonโt mind him,โ Silver said, elbowing the boss out of the way. โHeโs just pissy because Nay hasnโt screwed up yet.โ
I wanted to kiss her for giving me a nickname other than Not Tina.
โHe gave me one shift and no mistakes,โ I explained, not caring that he was standing behind me.
โKnox Morgan,โ Tallulah chided. โThatโs not how we welcome new Knockemouts. Whereโs your sense of community?โ
โGo away, Tally,โ Knox grumbled, but there was no heat to it.
โNaomi, Iโll have your darkest, strongest beer,โ Tallulah said. โAnd the hubs here will have a piรฑa colada with whipped cream.โ
Justice rubbed his palms together in anticipation. โAnd weโll split an order of the pulled pork flatbread. Extra jalapeรฑos.โ
โNo sour cream,โ Tallulah interjected.
โYou got it,โ I said with a wink. โHave a seat, and Iโll bring your drinks right out.โ
โYou gonna write that down?โ Knox asked as the couple wove their way through the crowd.
I flipped my hair over my shoulder. โNope.โ
He looked at his watch and smirked. โYou wonโt even make it to the end of the shift at this rate.โ
โIโll be happy to prove you wrong.โ
โIn that case, you just got yourself another table.โ
He pointed to a rowdy table in the corner where an older man with a potbelly and a cowboy hat appeared to be holding court.
โDonโt do that to her on her first night, Knoxy,โ Max chided him.
โIf sheโs so confident she can handle it, no use letting her wade around in the kiddie pool. Gotta throw her in the deep end.โ
โThereโs a difference between sink or swim when you introduce sharks,โ Silver argued.