She gave him a grateful smile.
“But if you do it again, I’ll have to kick your ass. And that’s the end of our little pie discussion.” Theo continued scribbling on his clipboard, one ankle casually crossed over the other.
Lucy sighed. She supposed he couldn’t help it, but Theo Redmond throbbed with the good-looking guy vibe, that chromosomal-level confidence that made every female within a mile perk up, suck in her gut, and smile in an effort to catch his eye.
Except for herself, of course. It was understood that women like Lucy were automatically disqualified from playing those games with men like Theo. She’d once been stupid enough to believe she could be the exception to the rule, and look where it landed her. Never again.
She studied Theo, all that lean muscle and golden skin, and realized it was a blessing, really. There could never be any kind of sexual connection between them, and that left her free to be herself with him, the red-faced, sweaty mess she was.
Lucy was huffing now, starting to drip. She looked down at the digital readout on the treadmill console and frowned. “Hey!” she gasped. “I thought… we were… sticking to three-point-two miles an hour… maximum incline…of three!”
“Think again.” Theo didn’t raise his eyes from the clipboard.
“But-”
He looked up, his grin spreading ear to ear. “Don’t want you to get bored, Cunningham.”
She shot him a glare.
“Keep talking to me. This is just a warm-up, and if you can’t talk, then it’s too much.”
“I can talk.” The sun was just starting to peek over the water. It made her smile. This entire experience made her smile-she was awake to see the sun come up. She was moving, sweating, breathing, meeting a challenge. She felt alive.
She turned and saw Theo scrutinizing her. “Thank you, Theo,” she said, knowing she was beaming at him.
“For what? The pie thing? Don’t thank me-just don’t do it again.”
She laughed. “Not that, exactly.”
Theo shook his head almost imperceptibly. “Then what?”
“For being so cool about everything. For being good at what you do. I’m lucky to have you as my trainer.”
Slowly, Theo’s grin began to fade, and Lucy watched him struggle to keep it in place. He shrugged off the compliment. “It’s just my job.”
Right
. Lucy turned back to the windows and laughed out loud at herself for being flattered by his attention. Theo was looking at a huge payoff if he could get her to lose all the weight, and at this point it looked like she’d make it way before the year was through. That charm was professional courtesy. That smile was capitalism at work. She bet those cornflower blue eyes shone like that for all his paying clients. Of course it was his job.
She
was just a job. Nothing more.
Lucy told herself to remember that.
Chapter 3
February
Journal Entry Feb 6
Breakfast:
1/2 whole wheat bagel; 1 tbsp natural peanut butter; 1/2 grapefruit; decaf with splash of skim milk
Lunch: 2 cups
romaine and raw vegetables; 4 oz turkey breast; 1 oz light cheddar; 1 tbsp olive oil; red wine vinegar; 1/2 c brown rice
Dinner: 1
small baked sweet potato; 3 oz broiled chicken breast; 1 c steamed pea pods and mushrooms
Snack: 1 c
plain yogurt; one apple; cinnamon
Affirmation for Today:
I’m sure that somewhere in the world there is a boss
more psycho than mine. I just haven’t met him yet.
Stephan Sherrod burst into the conference room without warning. “Greetings, employees!” He settled into an armchair, his long legs stretched in front of him. “I take it we’re flexing our creative pecs and abs in here this morning?”
Stephan chortled at his own pun and waited for someone-anyone on his staff-to join in appreciation of his wit. Lucy didn’t volunteer, but her assistant, Veronica King, managed a vague giggle. “We’re reviewing the Palm Club account,” Lucy said, handing Stephan the month’s media summary,
“Marvelous. Don’t let me stop you.”
Now
that
was truly funny. Everyone in this conference room knew that Stephan Sherrod could single-handedly suck the lifeblood out of anything-and did so as a matter of course. Meetings. Client outings. Parties. And, since his partner, Sarah Thorns, died eight months ago, Stephan had been doing it to his own company. Sherrod amp; Thorns had been steadily losing loyal clients, and it was a battle to find new ones. The company lost its heart and soul when it lost Sarah.
Lucy looked around the conference room and noted that Stephan had managed to ruin her team meeting as well. Moments ago, they’d been reviewing everything from graphic design to Web site development for the Palm Club account and the room had been filled with creative energy, good humor, friendly competition, and teasing. Now, there was nothing but discomfort.
Barry Neikirk stared at the ceiling. Maria Banderas clicked away at her laptop in silence. Veronica nervously snapped her gum and doodled on her agenda.
Lucy had taken the position with Sherrod amp; Thorns last year because of Sarah Thorns. Sarah had been in her midfifties, outgoing and witty, devoted to her clients, and full of life. Her creativity and drive had made this little company a big presence in the Miami-Dade market. It didn’t take Lucy long to figure out that Sarah was the heart and soul of the operation and Stephan was the face man, the schmoozer. It had worked.
But Sarah died during elective surgery about eight months after Lucy moved to Miami. She looked around the conference table now and knew that everyone there-herself included-had stayed with Stephan because the job market was tight, not because they enjoyed working for him.
And in ten months, if she met her weight loss goal, she’d be walking out of this place with a hundred thousand in her pocket and a business plan for her own agency. The thought put a smile on her face.
“So Barry,” Lucy decided to salvage the meeting. “What do you think about capitalizing on the idea that the gym can work around anyone’s schedule?”
“It’s the only way to go, frankly,” he said. “The fact that the Palm Club has personal trainers available from five a.m. to ten p.m. seven days a week really sets them apart. They’re leaving their competition in the dust.” Barry referred to his laptop screen. “Goldstein’s Gym only offers personal training from six to six, five days a week.”
Maria agreed. “The Palm Club’s ability to work around a client’s schedule is really the only way to justify a price point much higher than anywhere else in town, including Goldstein’s.”
“Exactly,” Barry said. “You can’t exactly put a price tag on the South Beach celebrity mojo thing they’ve got going.”
As everyone nodded their agreement, Lucy glanced Stephan’s way. At some point in the last few moments, his expression had shifted from affable vacancy to pasty fear.
“Are you all right, Stephan?”
“Fine. Fine.” He cleared his throat and straightened in the leather chair.
“Well, I loved the slogan ‘Fitness at the Speed of Life,’” Veronica chimed in.
Maria pointed across the table. “That was your idea, wasn’t it, Lucy?”
Lucy still had one eye on her boss. “Yes, it was.”
“I think you hit a bull’s-eye with that,” Barry said.
Stephan stood up.
“Thanks.” She watched her boss shuffle toward the conference room door, his shoulders slumped. “I fiddled around with a few other things, including something a bit more blunt, but that’s the one I like, too.”
Maria smiled. “I’m all for blunt. What was it?”
Lucy studied Stephan’s back. “Oh, just something like, ‘Wanna bet the fat chick can do it?’”
Suddenly Stephan spun around, a glint in his eye. “My God, Lucy! You look like someone stuck a pin in you and you’ve begun to deflate!”
Veronica snapped her gum a little too loudly.
“I’d heard you’d lost a few pounds, but I hadn’t really noticed until now.”
If it weren’t for past experience, Lucy would have assumed she’d misheard Stephan. But as she was now well aware, her boss had no manners.
“Uh. That’s the whole point,” she replied.
Stephan laughed. “Well, we need to take you out to celebrate. Whad’ya say? Lunch for everyone tomorrow at Bugatti? My treat. Anything you want. They have the best pesto ravioli in town.”
And with that pronouncement, he was gone.
Lola DiPaolo looked like she was hitting the tanning bed a bit too hard these days. At this rate she’d have skin like a wrinkled paper bag in another few years, Theo decided. But then, Lola wasn’t known for her long-term approach to anything.
‘Theodore.“ She looked up from her bodybuilding magazine and smiled.
“Lola. How’s life?”
“Fun as always. How’s yours?”
“Busy.” Theo walked over to the wall of mailboxes in the staff lounge, where each trainer had a cubbyhole for mail and phone messages.
He sorted through a stack of messages and found the usual-clients who needed to reschedule, clients who wanted information on the military basic training course, clients who said they needed to stop their workouts because they were going to be out of the country or were moving.
He hated that. More than anything in the world, Theo hated seeing months of hard work fizzle away as people returned to bad habits, just because they felt familiar and took less effort. He hated it when people gave up on themselves.
He felt Lola behind him. This was bad news.
“Hey, Theo.” Her breath came hot down on his neck. He felt the front of her thighs nearly touch the back of his. “You know, I was wondering-”
“The answer will always be no. Back off, Lola.” He continued to sort through messages and ignored her, then noted that the hours in the tanning bed must have damaged Lola’s hearing, because her hands went to his hips and the rest of her pressed nice and snug against the back of his body, from calf to shoulder. He felt the outline of all her parts-the parts molded by endless hours of hard work as well as those that were God-given.
“I said
no
.” Theo grabbed her roaming hands and extricated himself from his coworker and near… What word could he use to describe what had almost happened with Lola? She hadn’t been a date. She hadn’t even been a friend. She’d been a perfect body, at a time when he hurt so much that he thought a few hours with a perfect body would dull the pain.,
Thank God he’d recovered his senses in time to zip up and go home. Unfortunately, Lola didn’t feel the same sense of relief-she’d taken his rebuff as a challenge.
“Well, Theo. As usual, it’s your loss.” A nasty hiss hung off the end of the last word as Lola returned to the recliner and her magazine.
Theo headed for the door.
“So how’s it going with the hopeless heifer?”
He stopped. His ears burned. His stomach twisted with anger. He turned to her. “What are you talking about, Lola?”
She shook out her straight blond hair. “You know. The fat marketing chick. Lucy Cunningham. You two seem to be getting very cozy.” She shot him a snide smile.
“She’s a terrific woman and she’s working hard.” Theo had every intention of leaving the room, but he couldn’t believe what Lola said next.
“If you’re sleeping with her, that’s against policy. Not to mention disgusting.”
Theo whipped around and stared at her. He was so livid, his mind went blank. “What did you just say to me?”
“You heard me.” She thumbed through the ads for protein bars and starch blockers.
It took a moment, but Theo’s head cleared. “You’re a real class act, Lola.”
She giggled and kept her attention on the magazine.
“Listen up. From now on, keep your nasty, comments-and your hands-to yourself. Not interested and never will be.”
Lola looked up at him, her eyes narrow and mean. “You sure were once.”
And it was the lowest fifteen minutes of his life.
“We’d look great together, Theo.”
“No, we would not. Let it go, Lola.” He slammed the door on his way out, only to run right into Tyson.
“What’s up, Theo? You look mad as a rattlesnake.”
Theo pushed past, shaking his head. “Nothing.”
Tyson caught up with him. “Hey! Whoa, Redmond. Is this about the Lucy Cunningham woman? I thought she was doing great.”
Theo stopped and looked at his friend. “She is.”
“And you?” Tyson yawned, rubbing his eyes. “How’re you doin‘?”
Theo grinned, amused by Tyson’s efforts to stay awake. “I’m keepin‘ it together.”
“Just remember, man, you’re a personal trainer, not a miracle worker.”
Theo laughed. “No, I’m a trainer
and
miracle worker. Don’t have any choice at this point. And you need to get more sleep.” He continued walking, spotting his nine o’clock appointment waiting for him on the leather couch, the cute, trim, red-headed Cecile.
“How’s the little bro?”
Theo smiled at Tyson. He was always so cool about Buddy and had been a great help with coaching these last few years. “He’s good. He wants you to come over Sunday to watch the game. We’re having some of the athletes over. You up for it?”
“Always.” A big grin burst across Tyson’s face. “Those boys know how to party.”
Coming from Tyson, that was a real compliment.
When Gia Altamonte called Lucy at work an hour before and invited her to lunch, Lucy had been shocked. She was way beyond shock now, staring at the supermodel sitting across the VIP table from her at Larios on the Beach, snarfing down a plate of rice and beans and roasted Cuban pork.
“I think I forgot to eat yesterday,” Gia said, her mouth so full it temporarily muted her unmistakable speech.
“Yeah. Happens to me all the time,” Lucy said.