Taken by Tuesday

Chapter Eight



Meg nudged Karen’s elbow and brought her attention to the kissing taking place on the dance floor. “Check it out.”

Karen glanced over her shoulder and let out a soft whistle. “I knew that was coming.”

“Judy’s really crazed over him.”

Neither of them stopped staring while the kiss ended and Rick said something in Judy’s ear.

“Crazy good or crazy bad?”

“A little of both.”

Rick left Judy staring after him, and when she swiveled toward the two of them, both Karen and Meg turned their attention to the wineglasses in their hands. They couldn’t have been more obvious.

“Is he a good guy? I mean, he seems like he is.”

Karen brought her drink to her lips and talked over the rim. “I’ve never seen anything that raises any alarms. He’s been Neil’s right hand for over two years.”

“Does he date a lot?”

“I’ve never seen him with anyone. I’m sure he’s been out, but not with anyone he’s brought around us.”

Zach slid up alongside his wife, placed a hand on her shoulder. “Was that Rick kissing my baby sister on the dance floor?”
     



Karen leaned into her husband with a giggle. “There is not one other man in this place that can be mistaken for Rick except Neil, and we both know how happy Neil and Gwen are.”

Zach’s eyes narrowed toward the door Rick had used to escape the room. “Hmm.”

Meg glanced over and saw Mike talking with Judy. Both Mike and Zach had the same expression on their faces.

Zach started for the door and Karen caught his arm. “What are you doing?”

“Nothing,” he said a little quickly.

“Don’t do anything stupid. Judy’s a grown woman.”

Zach kissed the side of Karen’s head before walking away.

Meg watched with appreciation. “As an only child, I’ve never had a brother or sister worry about the guys I’ve dated.”

“Me either,” Karen said. “It’s nice to see.”

Mike met Zach at the door and they both walked side by side to confront Rick.

“Should we warn him?”

Karen shook her head. “No, but I sure do want to watch.”

Meg liked her spirit. “You watch. I’ll catch up with Judy.”



Rick circled to where two guests were getting a little heated about whose name was last on the list before the auction table closed. Security stood to the side and watched while one of the auctioneers attempted to resolve the situation as quietly as possible. Unfortunately, the men weren’t having anything to do with the woman’s negotiations.

“I have to go with the last name on the list, Mr. Phifer. Perhaps we can contact the organization that donated this item and have another one offered.”

Mr. Phifer wasn’t happy with the possibility of not leaving with the auction item. He glared at the taller man standing on the other side of the volunteer. “And if they don’t?”

“We can only try.”

“If you really want something here, you need to stand over it,” the taller man snarled over the voices around him.

Rick had no idea what the men were fighting over, but it couldn’t be so important that two grown men should have it out at a charity event to obtain it.

Mr. Phifer pushed in, almost sandwiching the volunteer.

Rick made his presence known with one step. Between them, Rick circled around with a smile. “Gentlemen? Have you forgotten why you’re here?”

Accusing fingers were pointing; both men started voicing their argument. It soon became apparent that they’d both been drinking and neither was listening.

Rick turned and reached for the clipboard in the volunteer’s hand. He offered a more genuine smile to the fiftysomething lady and glanced at the last name and the amount on the bottom of the sheet. “You’re Mr. Connors?” he asked the tall man.

“I am.”

“Your last bid was for two thousand five hundred.”

“That’s right.”

“And you’re Mr. Phifer?”

Phifer wiggled his pudgy finger over the entry prior to Connors. “That’s my bid, which was done right as the time limit for this table was up.”

Rick glanced up to see Zach and Michael walking toward him. They stopped short to watch.

“Well, since there seems to be some discussion about timing, let’s do the diplomatic thing and make this a live auction. The bid’s at twenty-five hundred, Phifer, will you offer more?”

Phifer narrowed his eyes. “Twenty-six.”

Rick swiveled his head to Connors.

“Three thousand.”

Rick turned to Phifer.

“This is crap. My bid was the last one and on time.”

Connors crossed his arms over his chest with a shit-eating grin on his face. The lookie-loo crowd around them had grown silent.

Rick had no idea who these men were, or how connected they might be to Karen and Zach, but he was getting a serious headache.

“If it’s too steep for you, back off,” Connors said.

Phifer attempted to push around Rick.

Rick pushed the clipboard into Phifer’s chest, the smile on his face dropped. “I wouldn’t even try.”

Michael took that moment and lifted his voice above the mumbling. “Six thousand.”

The crowd gasped and all eyes swiveled to the celebrity.

Then, as if it was a game, Zach added, “Seven thousand.”

“Eight.”

When it reached ten grand, Zach patted Michael on the back. “All yours, brother.”

Connors and Phifer glared at each other but then seemed to notice the scene they’d both made. When the two men moved in opposite directions, neither of them winning, the crowd dispersed.

“Man, Zach, you need to screen your guests better.”

Zach shrugged.

The volunteer thanked Rick and moved to the next table.

Rick turned to find the focus of both men on him, their expressions unreadable. Then he remembered the small public display of affection with Judy.

“What can I do for you, boys?” The coming conversation was inevitable. One better off done and under the table.

“Just a chat,” Michael said as he led them away from the mass of bodies in the auction tent.

Zach started first. “So, Judy?”

Just the mention of her name brought a smile to Rick’s face.

When he didn’t say anything, Michael added, “Our baby sister.”

“A sister, yes, a baby, no.” Nothing about Judy was infantile.

Both men glared at that.

“Should we be worried about you?” Zach asked.

Rick would have been offended if he didn’t know that these men were only trying to protect their sibling. “I don’t think it’s me you need to worry about.” He turned to Michael. “Do you want to enlighten Zach about the conversation you had with Judy as you were leaving to come here?”

Michael narrowed his eyes, then realized what Rick was talking about. “Alliance.”

“Right. I don’t think any of us want to see Judy signing up . . . am I right?”

Zach glanced beyond the two of them toward the house. “She wouldn’t.”

“I don’t know, Zach,” Michael said. “She was talking about it.”

Zach clutched his fists. “No. Just no.”

Rick let out a sigh.

“Judy’s sensitive, Rick. Messing with her just to keep her from Alliance will backfire,” Michael told him.

He shook his head. “Who said that’s what I was doing?” Exploring the possibilities wasn’t messing with someone, was it? He questioned his own intentions for about ten seconds. The chase was exciting, the sizzle worth the run. Besides, he’d waited nearly a year to pursue his little pixie.

“Don’t hurt her,” Zach warned.

“It’s hard to hurt her when she won’t agree to go out on a date.”

Michael laughed. “You’re kissing her and not dating her?”

Zach shook his head, tossed his hands in the air. “I don’t want the details.”

The three of them started back toward the house when Michael asked, “So what did I win at the auction?”

Rick, realizing he still held the clipboard, looked at the auction description and burst out laughing. “Looks like you and four of your youngest friends are going on a studio tour at Nickelodeon.”



Judy purposely wore what she called her power suit. It wasn’t a suit, but a black pencil skirt complete with black boots and a red blazer. If anyone at Benson & Miller was going to notice her, she needed to start forcing some eyes her way. She showed up thirty minutes early Monday morning and finished the mail detail before the receptionist answered the first call.

As expected, Mr. Archer had a pile of papers, mainly crap from his desk that needed to be sorted and filed or given back to him in some kind of order before noon. She could have finished the job in two hours, but took her time looking over the designs, the contracts for future projects.
     



Two of the projects were remodels of office buildings, nothing too grand, and nothing that required anything other than a facelift on the interior. The third project was nothing more than a bid with a few sketches on a blank piece of paper. A performing arts center was going up in Santa Barbara, and Benson & Miller were apparently in the running for the contract. The size of the proposed site would house the square footage needed for an eight-thousand-seat hall. The conservative bid wouldn’t lend itself to much in the way of details. She pored over the estimates, the details of what the committee in Santa Barbara wanted, and started to sketch. The mission-style buildings in the area helped the overall design in her head take shape. The morning flew by, and when she glanced at the clock it was eleven thirty. She made a dash to the copy room, made her own portfolio of the project to take home, and then gathered up all the files to return to Mr. Archer’s office.

With her hands full, the phone on her desk rang. It never rang. “Judy Gardner,” she answered.

“Uhm, Judy?”

It was the receptionist, Nancy, and she sounded winded.

“I’m running to Archer’s office, Nancy, what’s up?”

“Y-you have a visitor. Uhm . . . can you . . .”

Judy rolled her eyes. There was only one person who generated that kind of frazzled female.

Get noticed, he’d said. It’s easy, he’d said.

“Tell him to come on back.”

“But it’s—”

“Yeah, I know.”

She met Mike in the main hall just feet from Mr. Archer’s office.

Eager faces poked out from cubicles, and more than one executive stepped from an office as word of Michael Wolfe’s presence made it through the office like a California wildfire during a Santa Ana wind event.

“Hey, sis.” His Hollywood smile had her shaking her head even harder. “Am I too early for lunch?”

Judy shifted her load to her other hand. “I didn’t know we had a date.”

“Didn’t I mention it? Oh, let me help with that.” Mike took the papers from her. “Where do you want these?”

She offered a coy smile, glanced at the manager of landscape design, who poked her head from her office, and then lowered her voice so only Mike could hear her. “I should be mad at you.”

“I wouldn’t be doing my job as your big brother if I didn’t bug you in some way. Now where do you want these?”

Twisting on her foot, she moved around the corner into Mr. Archer’s office. “You can set those here,” she said, pointing to the top of the cabinet.

Mr. Archer sat behind his desk, his jaw halfway to the garage floor of the building. “Sorry to bring a stranger into your office, Mr. Archer, but my brother is early for our lunch date and our mom never let us girls carry anything if one of our brothers were around.”

“Uhm, it’s . . . ah, OK.”

Maybe her brother wasn’t the only one in the family with the talent for acting. “Oh, I’m sorry, you haven’t met yet, have you? Where are my manners? Mr. Archer, this is my brother, Michael.”

Mike raised an eyebrow, knowing damn well she never called him Michael. Only Hollywood called him that. Mike stepped forward and offered his hand. “A pleasure. Judy’s told me a lot about you.”

“Has she?”

Nothing good.

“She has. Truth is I’m not in town very often and wanted to sneak up on her a little early today to see where she works. Hope that’s OK.”

“It’s fine.”

“Good, good. Nice place you have here.”

Judy nudged his arm. “I need to file these before we can leave. If you want to wait—”

“You can do that when you get back.” Mr. Archer’s eager eyes kept swinging back and forth between her and Mike.

“It won’t take a minute.” Mr. Archer always reprimanded her on anything that wasn’t done exactly when he wanted it.

“You came in early, seems only right that you have a few extra minutes for lunch.”

Wow, he actually noticed.

“All right then. Let me grab my purse,” she told Mike.

He followed her out. “Nice to meet you, Mr. Archer.”

“Call me Steve.”

Good God . . . who knew the man would be so thrown back by a movie star? Call me Steve. Please.

Judy snagged her purse from her desk drawer and placed the strap on her shoulder. “There’s a café on the corner.”

“Lead the way.”

She slid the chair under her desk with a grin.

“Oh, for you.” Mike pulled a magazine out of his back pocket and tossed it on her desk. “Looks like we made the front page.”

Sure enough, a shot of the two of them dancing at the fundraiser graced the cover of the gossip magazine. The glimmer of her gold dress almost matched the smile on Mike’s face. “I’ll read it on my coffee break. C’mon, if we make it to the café even five minutes before noon we can grab a table in the back. Maybe then we can eat in peace.”

Mike looped his arm over her shoulders and walked with her out of the office.

Every eye in the place followed them out.

Only when they were in the elevator did Judy start laughing. Mike joined her but then kept a straight face when the elevator stopped and let on other passengers.

One man stared while the woman who stepped in nearly fell over. Mike caught her elbow to keep from having the woman fall into him. “Oh, my . . . are you? You are!”

Mike just smiled, completely comfortable in the chaos his mere presence created. “You OK?” he asked the woman as she steadied herself before the elevator started its descent.

“I am. Wow, that’s embarrassing. Sorry.”

“It’s OK.” He winked at the poor flustered woman and turned his attention to Judy. “So, Judy, my manager Tony is coming by tomorrow to pick up my car. Wants to impress his date so I told him he could borrow it.”

“The Ferrari?”

“Yeah. Didn’t want you to worry that someone had stolen it.”

The elevator met the lobby floor and they all left the small space. Mike’s arm fell on her shoulders again and he bumped her butt with his.

“You really are making sure everyone sees you, aren’t you?”

“No. I’m making sure everyone sees you with me. It will be up to you to ride this.”

Mike slid his sunglasses over his eyes the minute they met the outdoors. The café was only a block away and they managed to snag a table in the back.

“I should have known you’d show up today,” Judy said once they managed to get the waiter to stop staring and start writing down their order.

Mike leaned back, stretched his long legs out. “I’m flying out tonight and wanted to make sure we had some time alone.”

A woman from an adjacent table kept turning around to stare.

“When will you be back?”

“Production isn’t wrapping up for a month and a half, but I’m flying in for a few days the first week in September.”

The waiter brought them their drinks, smiled, and walked away.

“You weren’t kidding when you said you’re never home.”

“I wasn’t. I’m happy you and Meg are keeping my place occupied.”

Judy giggled. “It’s a hardship. Such a hassle after a two-bedroom apartment with one toilet and a shower without a tub.”

“I don’t want you in a hurry to move out.”

“It’s hard to be in a hurry when I’m not making my own living yet.” She’d gotten over the fact that her brother was supporting her and it was Meg’s income putting food on the table. She’d stretched her living expense money during her last semester in college to help carry her for the first few months in LA. But that was quickly dwindling.
     



“I talked to Mom and Dad.”

“Oh? Is everything all right?”

“Fine. They told me they don’t know how you’re paying for gas.”

“I saved.”

Mike looked over the rim of his sunglasses, which he kept on even though they were inside. “Judy.”

“I’m OK, Mike.”

“You might be . . . right now.”

“Really, I’m fine.” She hadn’t yet felt the poverty that would descend upon her before the holidays. Hard to feel poor when she lived in Beverly Hills and danced with the rich and famous.

He reached into his sports jacket and pulled out an envelope, slid it across the table to her.

She didn’t have to look inside to know its contents.

“Mike, no.” She moved it back.

“Judy, yes. I assured Mom and Dad you were fine. And after our little conversation the other day about Alliance, I know you might be feeling the pressure.”

“It’s normal pressure, Mike. Every college graduate needs to find their feet and get a job.”

“Which you’ll do. You’re working for free to gain experience. It’s like you’re not out of school yet. Consider this a student loan.”

She knew arguing wasn’t going to get her anywhere. And why fight it anyway? She didn’t have to spend the money. Giving it to her would give her brother and her parents some peace of mind. “Loaning money to family is a bad investment.”

“A graduation gift.”

“You gave me a party.”

“I gave my gardener’s daughter a party when she turned fifteen. I can give my sister more.” He slid the envelope back her way. “Take it, Judy. Use it.”

Pushing her pride aside, she took the thick envelope and tucked it in her purse. She leaned over and kissed her brother on the cheek. “Love you.”

“Love you, too.”

The waiter showed up with their food, and the conversation around money ended.

Forty-five minutes later Mike was walking her back to her office building. “Should I go back in with you?”

“Love ya, big brother, but the girls in the office are going to be hard to peel off as it is. Another Michael Wolfe dose might be too much for the water cooler to bear.” She gave him a big hug. “Safe flight.”

“I’ll text when I land so you won’t worry.”

She liked that. Liked the fact that she knew what was going on in her brother’s life. For too many years, he’d been absent. His temporary marriage to Karen seemed to have reminded him about his family, and Mike was working overtime to make up for some of the lost time. “Thanks again.”

“Anytime.”

People were still staring as Mike walked into the parking garage.

Judy made it back into the office before the majority of the staff returned from lunch. She took a moment to glance at the amount of money Mike thought was a graduation gift.

She stopped counting at ten thousand dollars, closed the envelope, and rested her head on her desk. I don’t have to spend it.

It was nice, however, to know emergency money was close at hand. She opened the drawer to her desk and started to place her purse inside. A copy of the magazine Mike had given her was there. Someone must have seen the magazine and placed it in her desk . . . but when? It wasn’t there when she left for lunch.

Not entirely comfortable with someone going into her space, Judy tucked the envelope with all the cash inside her boot, closed her purse in her desk, and made her way to the ladies’ room.