to the computer to look for a new job.”
“He’s giving up on the seafood business?” Kyle asked.
“Apparently. If he can find something better, which at this point could be almost anything.” I paused. “Your father can’t go with you?” I suggested tentatively.
“My father is having dinner with someone else tonight.” He dropped the name of a very famous Food Network chef. I was duly impressed.
“You weren’t invited?”
“No, I wasn’t.” Kyle couldn’t hide his bitterness. “Anyway, I think I’ll go out and try this place by myself. If it’s worth it, then maybe you’ll come back with me another night?”
“Definitely.”
“Now, you sure I can’t lure you away from work? A little gumbo? Creole? Etouffee?”
I had no appetite for anything but soothing ice cream right now. “Sorry. But another night, I promise. I’ll talk to you soon.”
I hung up and clicked back to Josh’s profile page. One of my favorite things about Facebook is being able to see what friends are doing. When Facebook offers me the fill- in-the-blank opportunity to tell people what I’m up to myself-
Josh’s status had been updated twenty minutes earlier:
My cell rang again. I figured that Kyle was calling back to reel off more Cajun cooking terms and repeat his invitation to go out. I was wrong.
“You picked up this time,” Josh said.
“It was an accident.” I clicked off his profile and hit the Status Updates button, the one that let me know what all of my online friends were doing at that Facebook moment.
“What are you doing right now?” he asked.
“Looking through Facebook. Isn’t that exciting? My life is terribly scintillating. No wonder you moved to Hawaii.”
“Don’t say that.”
Both of us were silent, but I stared at the computer screen as Josh’s status update changed:
My hands started to shake. I walked slowly from the bedroom into the living room and looked down at the floor for a moment before lifting my head to the window on the back door. Josh waved his BlackBerry at me. I dropped my phone.
Josh and I locked eyes, and I rushed forward and opened the door. It didn’t matter to me at all that I had on crummy clothes or that my hair was in a ratty ponytail or that I was wearing his old shirt-in a desperate attempt to feel close to him. He stepped inside, putting his body inches from mine, and shut the door behind him.
Josh slid an arm around my waist and pulled me against him. “I love you,” he breathed. Everything became blurry as he slowly kissed me.
I pulled back slightly. “I don’t love you,” I said, and then took his face in my hands and kissed him hard.
“But I still love you,” he whispered, walking me backward toward the bedroom.
“But I still don’t love you,” I whispered back, smiling and fumbling to pull off his shirt. “I don’t love you at all.”
NINETEEN
A good hour later, I rolled onto my side while Josh held me in his arms and kissed my shoulder. It felt as if no time had passed since the last time we’d made love, but I was keenly aware that everything was different now.
“Josh?”
“Yeah, babe,” he said as he ran soft kisses across my skin.
“What about Georgie?” I shut my eyes, waiting for his answer.
“What do you mean?”
I sighed and scooted away. “I know you’re together, Josh. You and Georgie.”
Josh rolled me onto my back and laughed. “Have you totally lost your mind since I’ve been gone?”
My expression became serious. “Actually, yes.”
He hung his head. “I’m sorry. But what would give you the idea that I’m with Snacker’s girlfriend? I talked to Owen before I called you, and he told me that you had this crazy notion that I’d hooked up with that girl. There is no truth to that idea whatsoever.” Josh slid his body on top of mine and brushed the hair from my face. “None at all.”
“But I saw you two together. Last Friday.” I didn’t particularly want to reveal that I’d been hiding behind a potted plant, spying on him. “I just happened to be coming out of the ladies’ room when you told her how hot she was. Not that she isn’t, but…”
“You nut!” Josh said with a smile. “Didn’t you notice that a lot of the food that night was lukewarm when it got to the table?”
“Yeah.”
“I was taking Georgie and all the other servers to task for ruining the food. They were all so incompetent. They kept letting the plates sit too long before taking them to the tables.”
“Oh.” I gazed into his blue eyes and gently ran my hand down his back. “So you’re not interested in Georgie?”
“God no. There is only one woman I’m interested in, Chloe.”
“Oh,” I said again.
“But you’re right about one thing. Georgie is not above cheating on Snacker.”
“I know. Digger, right?”
“Yeah. How’d you know that?”
“That was another conversation that I happened to overhear.”
“My, you heard a lot that night, didn’t you?” Josh teased. “I can tell you that Digger wasn’t the only guy she was cheating on Snacker with. I never thought Snacker would be the faithful one in a relationship, but he seems really into her. I feel bad for him, although he’s probably earned it after all the messing around he’s done in his life.”
“You don’t think… you don’t think that Snacker could have…” I started.
“No. Snacker did not kill Digger.” Josh shook his head.
“Did Snacker know that his girlfriend was having an affair with Digger, his close friend? No one-not even Snacker, who has his own knack for philandering-would like that.”
“I can’t believe that he would ever do something so gruesome. He loved Digger, just like I did.”
“He did benefit from Digger’s death, though. He got the executive chef job at the Penthouse.”
“I hate to admit it, but Snacker’s not the most honest, upright person I know, and yes, he did need the money.