Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
on the shelf above his head. e damn thing was so heavy,
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Georgia Beers
I was continually amazed each time he pulled it down that
he didn’t knock himself senseless with it. Josh is a gadget
man, up on every new piece of electronics on the market
today, every camera, every computer, every video game, but
he refuses to use the thesaurus on his Word program. He
told me once he didn’t trust it, that he was sure there were
way more options for each word than the ones
programmed into the computer and that Microsoft was
exercising its worldwide control by making people use only
the handful they designated. I told him he was a freak,
which he didn’t argue.
T. Harrison Jones & Associates is a small advertising
firm. e staff amounts to just a dozen or so people, but we
work very well together and we’ve come up with some
pretty brilliant campaigns for some of the most successful
companies in upstate New York. Small and mighty, that’s
what Tyrell likes to call us. He’s the T. in T. Harrison Jones,
as well as the owner, CEO, president, all that good stuff.
He hired me a little over a year ago and I have done
everything possible to give him the best I have to offer. He
treats his staff with respect, something I hadn’t seen much
of in my past jobs, and I want to stay here as long as I can.
Josh was here before me, and Anita Christopher was hired
just after me as a senior account executive. e three of us
make a formidable team and we helped THJ garner a
reputation locally. An impressive one.
“How was the view at the bank?” Josh asked as he
squinted at his monitor.
“As stunning as always,” I said, tossing in a dreamy
sigh for good measure. Since our computers are placed in
the corners of our desks, we actually sit almost with our
backs to each other. We’d carried on many a conversation
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without ever looking at one another. “And she had to talk
an irritated customer off the ledge.”
“I bet she did it in six seconds flat.” Josh was also well-
aware of Elena Walker, since he did his banking at the
same branch I did.
“Easily.” I opened up the file on the design for the
microbrewery on which I’d been putting the finishing
touches. “I think he fell in love with her.”
“Well, he’ll have to stand in line behind us.”
“I tried to tell him that. Telepathically, of course.”
“Did he get the message?”
“I can’t be sure.”
“Did you drool all over yourself?”
“I think I did.”
“Pig.”
I hung my head. “It’s true. I’m such a guy.”
Josh laughed, a loud bark of a sound that shocks most
people the first time they hear it. “Well, we’re happy to
have you counted amongst us.”
Our witty banter was interrupted by the ringing of my
phone, which I snapped up mid-chuckle. “Avery King.”
“Hey, you. Sounds like you’re having fun over there.
Shouldn’t you be working and miserable like the rest of
us?”
I grimaced at the voice on the other end of the phone.
Lauren and I had been together for almost three years and
broken up for nearly two. Our split had initially been ugly
(what breakup isn’t?), but I thought we’d gotten to a place
where we were almost friends. Lauren seemed to think so
too, and called me every couple of weeks or so just to say
hi…and to check up on me, I was sure. I didn’t call her at
all.
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“Hey yourself,” I said, trying to twist the grimace into
something more pleasant. Josh mouthed “the ex?” at me.
When I nodded, he pantomimed hanging himself. I
whipped my head in the opposite direction and looked
away from him so I wouldn’t bust out laughing in Lauren’s
ear. “What’s up?”
“Not much,” she said, releasing a sing-song sigh, a
trademark of hers that told me she was bored and just
wanted to chat. “I had a free minute and thought I’d call to
say hello.”
Lauren’s one of those people with whom all you have
to do is get the conversation started and then you barely
have to participate outside of tossing in an occasional, “uh-
huh” or “I see.” I knew if I gave her a push, I could get
some work done while she talked, and she wouldn’t lay the
guilt on me about not having the time for her. “So tell me
what’s new,” I prompted.
Across the cubicle, Josh picked up his own handset
and rapped it against his skull.
For the next fifteen or twenty minutes, Lauren
rambled on about her job, her mother, the date she went
on last weekend (I think she was hoping for a tinge of
jealousy from me…which she didn’t get), while I made
some final adjustments to the color and outlines of the
logo design I needed to hand off to Anita later in the day.
She started her wrap-up with, “Well, I should let you get
back to work.”
I jumped all over that. “Oh, yeah. We’re working on a
big project today and I really need to get back to it.”
“We should get together for dinner some time, you
know?”
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“You’re right. We should,” I lied, panic nearly seizing
me. Dinner with my ex was not something high on my list
of things I’d love to do with my evening. “Let me check my
schedule at home and get back to you, okay?”
Josh snorted. I flipped him the bird.
“Okay,” Lauren said, and I couldn’t tell if she was on to
me or not. “It was nice talking to you, Avery.”
“Same here.”
I barely let go of the handset in its cradle when Josh
said, “You are
not
getting together with your ex, are you?
What is wrong with you people?”
“What do you mean, ‘you people?’” I teased, knowing
exactly what he meant.
“You lesbians and the whole staying friends with your
exes thing. What
is
that? Besides freakishly weird.”
“It is freakishly weird, isn’t it?” I shook my head. “I
have no idea. It just happens.”
“It’s crazy, is what it is,” he muttered. “You don’t see
straight men doing that.”
“at’s because the exes of straight men usually hate
them with every fiber of their being.”
Josh pursed his lips and exhaled through his nose as
he nodded. “Yeah, there is that.”
e rest of the day went by quickly, just the way I
liked it. On the way home, I stopped at e Grape
Stomper, my favorite little wine store, and bought myself a
bottle of cheap zinfandel. Not because it was cheap, but
because it was surprisingly good. I also bought a bottle of
something a little more expensive to take to dinner with
me.
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When I unlocked the door to my townhouse, I was
greeted by Stephen King, the love of my life. Well, not so
much greeted by as looked at. He was stretched across the
back of the couch and could barely be bothered to lift his
head and acknowledge my presence. I set my briefcase on
the floor by the coat tree, put the wine on the kitchen
counter, then crossed to the living room and pressed a kiss
to the wiry hair on his head. In response, he gave a huge
yawn, his long tongue curling out, then in on itself like one
of those New Year’s Eve noisemakers.
“Hey, buddy,” I said to him. “Have a good day?”
His thick black tail began to wag slowly as he came
alive from his afternoon nap. He seemed to pour himself
onto the floor, sliding down from the back of the couch to
the seat, then from the seat, like a sooty black puddle of
ooze. He stretched again, first his front legs, then his back
ones. I shook my head with affection for the performance.
Steve is not a dog to be rushed.
We’d met not quite a year before when I decided I
wanted a dog to keep me company. I’d thought about a
purebred and I’d even gone so far as to research some
different breeds, look up some breeders on the internet,
and talk to a friend of mine who’s a vet. My timing
couldn’t have been better, though, because the local branch
of the Humane Society in Rochester was in the middle of
its annual fundraiser. During that time, they snagged a
couple hours on a Saturday afternoon to have a telethon
that was broadcast on a local television station. I’d been
channel surfing and ended up watching the whole thing
(not to mention calling in to donate fifty bucks). e shots
of all those dogs dropped off or picked up and just waiting
to be adopted really pulled at my heartstrings and I
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decided then and there that that was the kind of dog I
wanted. I’m sure there are deeper reasons for why I chose
this route, but the bottom line is, I went there the next
Sunday and met Steve and the rest is history.
My vet friend and I had a rough idea of his
background. She thought he was definitely some kind of
terrier, either Cairn or Scottie, judging from his short,
stubby legs and coarse, wiry hair. His stubbornness and
inability to walk without his nose to the ground seemed to
back her up pretty well. I suspected he also had a little
Border Collie in him. His ears were pricked up, but then
the ends flopped over. He tended to follow me around the
house by walking right at my heel, herding me in a sense.
And his hair was all black except for the white band that
ran right around his chest and a touch at the very tip of his
tail. He was easily the oddest-looking dog I’d ever seen and
that was one of the reasons I was so drawn to him.
Another was his personality. He is like a little person
trapped in a furry suit, and there are times when he looks
at me and for a split second I get a flash of a person. I
swear he’s often thinking human thoughts. at’s why I
gave him a human name, which he grew used to in a
shockingly short period of time. Plus, I thought having a
dog named Stephen King was pretty funny. What can I
say? e guy is a brilliant writer, and I am easily amused.
Steve went outside to do his business and then I fed
him before packing him and the better bottle of wine into
my car so we could head to dinner.
Maddie Carlisle and Joan “J.T.” ompson were my
best friends in the whole wide world. I’d met them as a
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couple nearly ten years ago at the universal meeting place
for lesbians: a softball tournament. I’d been called by a
friend as a sub for somebody who flaked out at the last
minute and I spent the entire weekend playing some
decent third base. I didn’t suck, but I wasn’t an exceptional
player. Many of these women were, though, and I enjoyed
simply watching them almost as much as actually playing.
J.T. was particularly amazing. No matter what the
sport, she’s one of those women you pick for your team
even before you choose your own girlfriend. She is the best
first baseman I’ve ever seen in softball. She spikes a mean
volleyball that leaves a reverse imprint of the word
“Wilson” on the forearms of anybody brave or stupid
enough to attempt to receive it. She was the star of her
high school and college basketball teams. e woman has
God-given athletic talent.
Maddie is pretty damn athletic herself, but knows
enough not to get into any kind of competition with J.T.
She just does her thing and smiles proudly while other
people stand in awe of her girlfriend.
It’s hard to explain exactly why the three of us became
such close friends. ey’ve been together since the dawn of
time; they’re the only lesbians I know who were one
another’s first girlfriends and are still together. ey’ve seen
me through more than one disastrous breakup and they’ve
continued to love me even after I did some really,
really
boneheaded things. ey are my lifeline and my
conscience.
eir modest-looking house is in Penfield, about
twenty minutes from my townhouse development in
Brighton. Modest-looking from the outside, that is. e
inside looks like it could have served as the photo model
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for one of those
House Beautiful
or
Home and Garden
magazines. What J.T. has in athletic ability, Maddie more
than equals in her decorating skills.
I’d barely opened the car door and Maddie was
coming out the side door, arms thrown open.
“Stevie-boy! Come here and give Aunt Maddie a
kiss.”
I shook my head in wonder as Steve scrambled across
my lap and out the driver’s side door, right up into “Aunt
Maddie’s” embrace and set to work bathing her with his
gentle kisses. I never get that kind of greeting from him.
“What do you do, rub bacon all over your face before
we come over?” I asked her as I followed the love fest into
the house, my nose lifting just like Steve’s as I caught the
delicious scent of whatever Maddie was making us for
dinner.
J.T. stood in the kitchen sifting through a pile of mail