cafeteria. A peace offering, perhaps? Or maybe he just didn’t want her passing out from hunger.
Finally a nurse called them back. Miss Greer had been returned to her treatment room, looking none too happy. A doctor was waiting for them-a different one.
“Your grandmother’s hip is broken,” he said matter-of-factly. “The joint was in bad shape to begin with. If she wants to walk again, we’ll have to replace the hip.”
“She’s not our-” Sara started to say, but Reece nudged her with his elbow. She cleared her throat. “Then of course she should have the surgery. Right, Grandma?”
“I told the doctor just to give me some crutches and let me go home,” Miss Greer grumbled, “but he doesn’t listen.”
“How long will she be in the hospital?” Reece asked.
“Given her age, at least a few days. But once she’s home, she’ll need a lot of help. We’ll assign a home-health aide and a physical therapist, but she still can’t stay alone-not for at least a month.”
“She has me,” Sara said. “I live with her.”
“I can help, too,” Reece said.
“Good. Then you want to proceed with the surgery?”
“Excuse me, Doctor,” Miss Greer said, “it’s my hip that’s broken, not my brain. Stop talking like I can’t hear you.”
Sara bit her lip. It was refreshing to hear her landlady giving someone besides her an earful, for a change. “Grandma, you want the surgery, right?”
“No, but if there’s no other way to get better, I guess I’ll have to do it.” She looked at her own watch. “Oh, Holy Ghost, the guests will be arriving any minute and no one is there to greet them.”
“They’ll let themselves in,” Sara said reassuringly.
An orderly came to transfer Miss Greer to a room, leaving Sara and Reece standing alone in the hallway. She looked at him, eyes full of worry. “Why don’t you go back to the Sunsetter? I want to stay for a while longer and make sure she’s taken care of.”
“How will you get home?”
She shrugged. “Oh, I’ll find a way, I always do.”
Reece could just imagine. Would she hitchhike? Take a bus? “What if I come back in a while to get you?”
“That’s a lot of driving.”
“It’s only forty minutes. I don’t mind.” He really didn’t mind. The woman was exciting to be around, even if she did keep him in a constant state of semi-arousal. Anyway, what else did he have to do?
He had already set up the bookkeeping for Remington Charters, the business he and his cousins had inherited from their uncle. He could have gone home a week ago, and really he should have. But he’d been dragging his feet, pretending there was more work to do, and not quite sure why. For the first time in his life he wasn’t eager to return to his office and the numbers he loved.
Numbers were reliable. He understood them. He could rely on them to behave. Beautiful, wild, chestnut-haired women, on the other hand, were a complete mystery to him.
But he now realized Sara was at least part of the reason he hadn’t rushed home to his job, although she clearly was a most unsuitable woman for him.
Relationships were all about compatibility. Having the same interests, the same values. The fact that she got his juices flowing simply wasn’t enough.
“Well, if you really don’t mind driving all that way,” Sara said, “I’d appreciate it. Miss Greer will rest easier knowing someone is looking after the guests.”
“What rooms should I put them in?” Reece asked.
“The Silversteins always like the Orchid Room…no, wait, maybe that’s the Canfields who like to stay there. They’re coming next week…or the week after. But for sure, put the Taylors in the Tea Rose…or maybe it’s the Lilac Room.” She waved a dismissive hand. “It’s in the calendar at the front desk.”
Miss Greer wasn’t kidding about Sara being bad with the details. She was intelligent and well-read. He’d often seen her tucked into the window seat in the side parlor, reading something really dense like Proust or Hemingway.
Yet she was a disaster when it came to numbers and details. Why was that?
“I should go,” Reece said. “I’ll come back around eight o’clock. We can grab a bite afterward, if you want to.” He held his breath. Had he actually just invited Sara Kaufman to have dinner with him?
She surprised him with a warm smile. “I’d like that. Ooh, I heard about this great restaurant not too far from here. I’ve been dying to try it.”
“Okay, sounds good.” And it saved him the agony of coming up with some place to take her that she would enjoy.
SARA WAS WAITING in front of the hospital when Reece pulled up precisely at eight o’clock. She waved and trotted toward the car, jumping into the passenger seat. The car suddenly seemed a more cheerful place, filled with her colors and the scents of vanilla and cinnamon that swirled around her wherever she went.
She looked a little tired, but as usual she was smiling. “Right on time.”
“I hate being late.” Besides, he was hungry. He usually ate dinner early, went to bed early, woke up early. He liked getting to the office before anyone else, when he could really concentrate in the quiet. Just him and the numbers.
“Did you get the guests checked in?” Sara asked.
He nodded. “When I got back I found the Silversteins roaming about the living room a little puzzled by the fact no one was there to greet them. But when I explained about Miss Greer’s accident, they were completely understanding. The other two couples arrived right after. I got them all settled into their rooms.”
Then, because he’d promised Miss Greer, he’d listened to messages, returned phone calls and taken three reservations. Business was certainly heating up as summer approached.
“How is Miss Greer?” he asked as he pulled away from the curb without any clue where they were going.
“Resting comfortably. She’s scheduled for surgery first thing in the morning. Meanwhile, they gave her some pain meds that worked pretty well, though they made her a little bit loopy.”
“Loopy?” That was hard to imagine.
“She thought she was a little girl, and she spoke in German. Did you know she came over from Germany right after the war?”
“I truthfully don’t know anything about Miss Greer. She’s not exactly chatty.”
“Sometimes when she’s baking, she’ll let things slip.”
“Speaking of baking…” Reece said, “I assume you’ll want to be at the hospital for Miss Greer’s surgery tomorrow.”
“Yes, of course,” Sara said passionately. “Someone has to be here for her. But what does that have to do with baking?”
“What about breakfast?”
“I can grab something here.” Then she gasped. “Oh, my gosh, who’s going to feed the guests?”
Exactly what Reece was wondering.
Sara looked at him, her eyes beseeching. “I don’t suppose you’d-”
“Oh, no. I don’t even know how the coffeemaker works. Where are we going, by the way?”
She looked around, orienting herself. “Turn right at the light. Reece, you
Reece was surprised at how disappointed he felt. He
Her smile lit up the whole car. “Great.”
Yeah, great. He wondered if he should refund the Silversteins and the others some of their money. Part of the appeal of a B and B was a fancy, fabulous breakfast. But with Reece in charge, he was afraid it would be distinctly non-fabulous. He would shoot for edible.
“Just so you know, cooking was the one Boy Scout badge I never got. And I made it to Eagle Scout.”