Read Waiting for a Girl Like You Online
Authors: Christa Maurice
They could make beautiful music together…
Hoping to dodge a scandal that could destroy her personal life and her career, Alex fled grad school for a summer job in tiny Potterville, West Virginia. She didn’t expect the town cupids to orchestrate a “chance” meeting with Marc—a sexy, brooding rock star who appreciates her love of poetry. But Alex doubts he’ll want anything more if he discovers the indiscretion she can’t forgive herself for…
Marc came to Potterville to get some space from his band and clear his head. But before he knows it, he’s intrigued with the waitress at the local diner. Alex is not only smart and beautiful, she’s inspiring his songwriting and taking it to the next level. Soon he’s falling for her—and then she runs away. For the first time, Marc is chasing after a woman—and giving both himself and Alex a chance to heal past hurts and take a chance on the future…
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Drawn to the Rhythm Series
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Waiting For A Girl Like You
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Drawn to the Rhythm Series
Christa Maurice
LYRICAL PRESS
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Copyright © 2015 by Christa Maurice
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First Electronic Edition: July 2015
eISBN-13: 978-1-61650-535-6
eISBN-10: 1-61650-535-4
First Print Edition: July 2015
ISBN-13: 978-1-61650-969-9
ISBN-10: 1-61650-969-4
Printed in the United States of America
To all the university employees who were willing to indulge in “what if” conversations.
“Alex, I’m switching you and Tina.” Ida touched her shellacked hair.
“Okay, tomorrow I’ll start outside.” Alex headed away from the register. Half an hour and she was off for the day. About damn time. The gravy that the adorable, little darling dumped on her apron at the beginning of lunch was starting to crack as it dried, and the weight of today’s tips would have her walking with a tilt.
“No, I mean now.”
Big-haired, thick-waisted, hometown charm Ida was not kidding. Alex turned back. “Excuse me?”
“I need you to cover outside now.”
Alex pursed her lips before she refused. Saying no last time had worked out so well that she might need to delete it from her vocabulary. “Why?”
“Because I want you to wait on Marc.” Ida tapped one of her neon pink nails on the window. Alex could only assume she was pointing at the Marc under discussion, but didn’t care enough to look. She should never have said the day could only get better. Tempting fate, it was. Instead, she scanned her tables—her former tables. Three of them were about to get up, and Tina would decide they had to split all the tips, meaning Tina was going to clean up while Alex got the short end of the stick.
And none of this was worth arguing about.
“Fine. Did you tell Tina?”
“I will after I pick up them tables getting ready to go.” Proving Ida wasn’t a complete ogre. She’d make sure Alex got her tips, at least. That still didn’t answer what Alex had done wrong to be sentenced to work on the patio.
Alex went outside. Tina was nowhere to be seen, which was why her tips sucked. Alex cruised the tables. Of the ten tables that composed Tina’s section, eight needed something. Table nine was happy, but running low on drinks and roughly ten minutes from finishing. At table ten, the guy was on the phone.
“Well, Dez, I guess you should have hooked up with a lawyer instead of a personal trainer.” He scowled, looking dark and dangerous. Thin, long legs, and shaggy dark hair. The kind of guy who would have made her heart go pitter-pat when she was sweet little sixteen, but she wasn’t a sweet little anything anymore. Roger took care of the last of that. The bastard.
“No. Not another dime.” The man at the table said into the phone. “The sucker bank is closed.”
Sucker bank. Good one. Alex gestured at the bare table, nothing but the daisy in the little vase in the center and a half empty sugar caddy.
The guy shook his head. “How many times do I have to say no before you believe me?”
Alex mouthed that she’d be back. He at least needed a place setting and water.
Drew met up with her at the drink station. “Sorry, I’ve been trying to keep up, but I can’t do two sections, and Tina is on another break.” The alfresco seating at Ida’s Diner used to be a mechanic’s garage so the seating was in the bays and on the cement apron out front and the drink station was in the former office. Very kitschy and cute like the rest of the town. Drew had the nine tables in the old service bay. “What did you do to get exiled out here?”
“No idea. Ida just told me I had to switch. I’m off in a half hour, anyway. Can you prep me five glasses of water?”
“Sure thing.”
Alex made a round with utensils, napkins, and straws. Table Ten was still on the phone, but not smoking, just playing with the cigarette. He didn’t look like he was about to commit a felony anymore either, just a misdemeanor.
“What I’m asking you is how she got this number.” He twiddled the cigarette between his fingers like a tiny baton. “That’s not an answer.”
Alex arranged utensils on the placemat. A new conversation.
“Jody, listen to me very carefully. Client information is privileged. You don’t give it out to anybody. If they don’t have it already, they don’t need it. I am the client. We don’t want to have to let you go, but this is a serious infraction.” He mashed the cigarette on the table.
Alex shuddered. Table Ten was going to fire this Jody person over the phone. What an asshole.
“No, Candy will not be able to save your ass this time. Candy understands how important it is for the public to not have my private number even when that particular member of the public used to be married to me. Plus, Candy is in China picking out a child.”
Drew probably had that water ready. She needed to get it delivered. How bad an infraction was it to give out a phone number to somebody he already knew? Maybe it was worse when you had friends who went to China to pick out children.
“Jody, she’s my ex-wife for a reason, and she already soaked me for six million dollars.”
Six million dollars? Alex reappraised Table Ten. Jeans, but good jeans. T-shirt featuring a guitar and a snake—must be a concert shirt. Wristwatch. Wait. Tag Hauer wristwatch.
“Jody, Jody, please stop crying.” Table Ten caught Alex’s eye and frowned.
Shit. Busted. Alex opened her hands in a menu gesture to cover for why she was hanging around the table. This was a restaurant and he didn’t have a menu in his hands. Two and two made a perfect excuse.
Table Ten shook his head and mouthed, “Paul.”
Ida had shifted her out here to wait on this guy, the cook knew his standing order, he had an ex-wife who had “soaked” him for six million dollars, a Tag Hauer watch, and some sort of administrative assistant. The hair was too long for the average businessman, and the jeans were too trendy and expensive for a politico or a tourist. Therefore, Marc at table ten was somebody very exclusive sitting at a diner in Potterville, West Virginia.
Nothing in this town fit. When her cousin Angela said she could make a mint in tips waiting tables over the summer in this little tourist town that didn’t seem to have any special draw outside of the landscape, Alex hadn’t believed her, yet a mint she was making.
The waters Drew prepped for her had been sitting long enough to sweat. She dropped them off, careful not to linger at table ten. She was there long enough to pick up that he was now talking to Tessa about Jody giving his number to Dez, the ex-wife, who soaked him for the six million dollars. Not that money was the main goal of her life, but one had to pause when numbers like that started flying around.
“Hey, Paul.” She pushed through the kitchen door. “There’s a guy at—”
“I know. Marc.” Paul gave a little shiver of excitement as he pushed a plate across the service table. “Take him this plate.”
Alex pointed at it. “This plate.”
“Yes, this plate.”
“This very plate.”
Paul shook his finger at her. “Don’t get sassy with me.”
Alex grinned. Paul was yet another thing that didn’t fit. A world-class chef cooking at a diner in the West Virginian mountains. Maybe Marc with the Tag Hauer came for Paul. In a past life, Paul had been a chef in New York and had followed Cassandra Geoffrey here when she moved back after her divorce, but Cassie was now remarried and living in California either all the time or most of the time. Angela hadn’t been too clear.
The plate looked like five-star quality. Mushroom sauce trailed artfully over a thick, juicy steak. The baked potato should have been on the cover of a magazine. The crisp, golden skin split to allow a perfect square of rich yellow butter to melt into the fluffy mash with a sprinkling of fresh chives over top. The herbs had been clipped just this morning from the garden Paul maintained in his backyard. The salad balanced in such a perfect tower that Alex wasn’t sure she’d get it to the table without having it topple over. A crystal wine glass filled with jewel-toned red wine completed the meal. More incongruities. Ida’s didn’t serve wine, and they didn’t serve anything in crystal. Everybody else in the place was drinking out of old Mason jars.
Maybe Paul would cook up this meal for her one day if she asked nice.
At table ten, the cigarette was gone and Marc was on yet a different phone conversation. At least she assumed it was a different conversation since he referred to the person on the other end as man three times while Alex set out his meal. He was smiling now and beamed at her when she finished. A standard thank-you beam of someone too busy to speak to the help, but something about it shot down her spine with electric heat and triggered an insipid smile in return.
Oh, God.
All her tables were good for the moment, so Alex ducked into the ladies room in the garage. Ten minutes left before she could hang up her gravy-stained, crackling apron for the day. She washed her hands and her face before stopping to examine herself. Dilated eyes, flushed cheeks—maybe she was coming down with something. After work she could head back to Angela and Finn’s and let her cousin fuss over her.