Anything You Can Do (4 page)

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Authors: Sally Berneathy

BOOK: Anything You Can Do
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None of which explained why she was so reluctant to meet him and Gordon for dinner. She realized the tempo of her pencil tapping had increased measurably and forced herself to stop.

Very well, she decided, since there was no logical reason not to go to dinner with Gordon and Austin, she'd be there.

*~*~*

Austin leaned back in the dim, cool booth at Reilly's and smiled politely when Gordon told him Bailey would be joining them for dinner. But his feelings were ambivalent. True, the idea of seeing her again brought every nerve ending in his body to attention, but he'd wanted to relax for the evening. Bailey was definitely not a relaxing influence.

As he went into his second week at the Kansas City office, the problems and stress had mounted in direct proportion to his discovery of the situation.
Everyone was perfectly happy with the status quo. Growth, expansion, updating, only meant change and uncertainty to them. In particular, the partners who were senior to him were making it difficult. Though he was attempting to carry out the majority decision, they acted as if he had no authority.

Spending time alone with Gordon would be restorative. Having Bailey ar
ound would be almost as stressful as trying to iron out the problems at work. Still, the idea also held a certain amount of pleasurable excitation, a large amount, in fact. He adapted to the confusing situation by ordering a second Scotch on the rocks.

"I just hope she gets here soon," he told Gordon. "I'm starving. Didn't have time for lunch."

Gordon shook his head. "You seem to have a problem keeping your priorities straight," he drawled, sipping lazily on his beer. "I always have time for lunch. It's the work I sometimes don't have time for."

"You haven't changed a bit in twenty years." Austin grinned in spite of himself.

"Haven't seen any reason to change. I like me this way. Maybe I don't have any ambition, but hey, that's okay. I have lots of money in my trust fund. It seems a shame to let it all go to waste."

"But you're wasting yourself. You're a talented attorney. Hell, just the fact that you manage to keep your job with that old Scrooge shows you must be doing something right. If you put forth even a little effort, you'd make partner." He accepted his drink from the waitress, took a quick si
p, and set it on the table.

Propping one elbow on the back of the booth,
Gordon smiled lazily. "Let's say I work harder and make partner. Then I'd have to work even harder, and for what? I don't need the money. So I'd work more, play less, put more money in the bank for my heirs at law to fight over when I'm dead, which would be a lot sooner under those circumstances. Nah, I don't think I want to be partner this week."

"Gordon, you're hopeless."

Gordon shrugged unrepentantly and had another drink of beer.

Austin wrapped his fingers around his glass but stopped before raising it to his lips as the atmosphere in the room seemed to change, to become charged with energy. Ridiculous.

But somehow he wasn't surprised to see Bailey approaching. For an instant their gazes met, but before he could read her expression, she lowered her eyes and slid into the booth next to Gordon.

"Just get off work?" Gordon asked.

"No, I went home to feed Samantha—my dog," she explained with a quick, neutral glance in Austin's direction. "Then Paula called while I was there."

"Hasn't changed her mind
about coming to work here, has she?" Gordon inquired, a trace of concern in his voice.

"Oh, no," Bailey replied, and Austin was sure she'd missed the nuance. "In one more week she'll be an employee of Hoskins, Grier and Morris, God rest her soul."

"And a roommate of Bailey Russell, ditto," Gordon added.

"Hold your tongue or
I'll tell Stafford where you go to nap."

After they placed their orders, Austin cast about for something to say to Bailey. Everything that came to mind, he discarded. The standard small talk wouldn't do. She'd just look at him with that clear green gaze and make some satirical comment that cut right through the nonsense.

"I did stay a little late at the office," she said abruptly, fixing him with that gaze he'd been thinking about. "An important case like Miller v. National Service Insurance justifies some overtime. Wouldn't you agree, Austin?"

He stared at her uncomprehendingly for a moment. Why did she have an interest in that case? She wasn't the assigned attorney. And why had she said it was important? It appeared to be relatively insignificant. He'd decided, after going through the deposition with Mark Powell today, that Mark was competent enough to handle it. The boy could use a few lessons on power techniques, but power hadn't seemed necessary in that instance. After Bailey's remark, though, he'd have to keep an eye on that deal.

"Makes sense to me," he finally said, deliberately being as evasive as possible. Not the answer she'd wanted, he could tell. Her eyes narrowed and her lips compressed slightly.

"Of course, one never knows the full magnitude of any situation until all the facts are out in the open."

What on earth was she talking about? "Volcanoes frequently erupt with very little warning." There. That should give her something to think about.

"And how was your day, Gordon?" Gordon interrupted. "Oh, the usual. I won a case in Supreme Court, wrote a lease that Larry Haynes liked on the first draft, and Stafford Morris told me I'm a great lawyer. Just your average Monday."

"Aren't you getting enough attention?" Bailey asked, wrapping a long, slim arm around his neck.

With a shock, the idea hit Austin that Bailey and Gordon might be lovers. Impossible! Gordon had never mentioned it, and be
sides, how could anyone so easy going be attracted to someone so pushy? Though she actually looked soft as she kissed Gordon's cheek, those enormous eyes half-closed, her full lips pursed.

Gordon smiled smugly. "Are you taking notes?" he asked. "How to get a beautiful woman's attention."

"Gordon," Bailey said, laughing and pushing him away, "if you weren't my friend, I wouldn't even like you." "

They weren't lovers, Austin decided with an inexplicable rush of relief.

*~*~*

Friday afternoon Bailey was working frantically on a project that had to go out with the Federal Express pickup at six when Gordon strolled into her office and flopped into a chair.

"What's up?" she asked, never lifting her eyes from the papers strewn across her desk, tactfully letting him know she didn't have time to talk.

"TGIF, Bailey, my friend. What's on your agenda for the weekend?"

"Not much. Paula's moving in tomorrow."

"Don't tell me you're taking Saturday off."

Bailey looked up briefly to smile. "What an imagination you have." 

"So your friend's going to be stuck by herself in a strange city, unloading furniture and heavy boxes."

Bailey looked up again. Gordon had swung one leg over the arm of his chair and was helping himself to a mint from the jar on her desk.

"What is this, Gordon?" she asked. "Are you strapped for entertainment? Are all your girlfriends out of town for the weekend
? Are you hinting for an invitation? Okay. Paula's storing her furniture, but why don't you go over and help her unload boxes, and when I get there, we'll all have pizza and beer and watch TV. Now go away and let me work."

Gordon rose with a sigh, returning the candy jar to her desk. "I'm a busy man, but no one could resist such a gracious invitation. I'll baby-sit
Paula and Samantha until you make it home then keep you girls company for the rest of the evening."

Bailey smiled to herself as Gordon strolled away. His friendship meant a lot to her, and she was glad he and
Paula seemed to get along so well. She'd try a little harder to get along with his friend Austin. The guy wasn't all bad. He was, after all, a good runner with great legs.

And wouldn't he be surprised when she showed up at that deposition on Monday. That whole situation was still a mystery to her. After going over the entire file and Candy Miller's deposition, she could see no reason for Austin's intrusion into the case, or for that matter, her own. Except something was going on, and she owed it to her firm to find out what.

But that was Monday. She pushed aside the pleasurable anticipation. Right now she had to finish the blasted contract.

*~*~*

When Bailey arrived home early Saturday afternoon, she noticed several cardboard boxes in the spare room but no bodies. Even Samantha was gone. However, stuck to the refrigerator door she found a small, yellow note with the single word
Pool
scrawled in Gordon's inimitable handwriting.

As she started to lea
ve the room, she spotted a newspaper lying on the kitchen counter, folded over to the classifieds, with one ad circled in red.

I've kissed the requisite number of frogs,
she read
, so where is Prince Charming? PC is tall (even without the crown), intelligent, and easy on the eyes. His Cinderella is slim, five feet two when not wearing her glass slippers, dark hair and eyes. She'd love to go to the ball or even the local Burger King with the real PC or a reasonable facsimile thereof. No lawyers need apply.

Bailey wondered briefly what her chances were of finding and burning every copy of the paper before
Paula got herself in trouble.

Slipping on an old sw
imsuit and half a bottle of sunscreen to avoid the freckles that had been the bane of her younger years, she headed for the pool to find her friends and her dog and see how much trouble they were in already.

As she rounded the building and approached the pool, she saw Gordon and
Paula lying stretched out full length, almost visibly turning brown in the warm sun. Beside them, Samantha lay on her back in Austin Travers' lap, looking up at him with adoring brown eyes while he scratched her stomach.

For an instant she panicked. What was he doing
there? Gordon could at least have given her a little warning, a chance to get prepared. Squaring her shoulders and wishing she had on a business suit rather than a swimsuit, she opened the gate and strode determinedly toward them.

Austin could feel himself unwinding as he soaked up the warm sun, en
joyed the undemanding companionship of Paula and Gordon, and stroked Samantha's soft, fuzzy stomach. Anxious to get out of the tiny apartment where he'd been staying, he'd agreed to come along with Gordon and help Paula move some boxes upstairs to Bailey's condo.

He stopped scratching Samantha's stomach just to make her raise one little paw toward his hand, silently urging him to keep moving. But this time she stopped, paw half-raised, rolled to her feet, and dashed out of his lap.

He made a futile grab for her leash then looked up to see Bailey gliding toward him. The faded black swimsuit she wore emphasized her translucent skin and hugged her streamlined curves. Smiling broadly, she stooped to catch the little dog in midair.

The sight brought out the usual mixed feelings he'd come to associate with Bailey. On the one hand, he wanted to touch her porcelain skin, see if it really was as smooth as it looked. On the other hand, he felt the need to stand up before her and prepare for battle.

Choosing a third option, he employed the smile that showed his molars. "Bailey! How nice you look."

Gordon and
Paula opened their eyes and sat up. Bailey looked at everyone then turned her gaze back to him. "Why, thank you, Austin. How kind of you to say so."

"Bailey, have a beer," Gordon offered, opening an ice chest. "Anybody else ready for another?"

"I saw your ad," Bailey said to Paula, accepting the can and settling herself into their midst, folding her long legs under her sleek body.

"What do you think?"
Paula asked. "I wrote it kind of fast so I could get it in this edition."

"Oh, it was well written. You always were very articulate."

"Quite creative, I thought," Gordon added. "I told her she ought to try for a career as a writer, but—" he shrugged and rolled his eyes "—you know how dedicated she is to being a legal secretary."

Paula
pressed her cold beer against Gordon's back, eliciting a brief shriek. Everyone laughed, but a loud silence followed. Soft laps of water against the side of the pool and muted music from someone's radio sounded clearly through that silence.

Austin was trying to decide if perhaps he ought to leave since Bailey hadn't invited him, and it was, after a
ll, her place, when she turned to him. Her hundred watt smile set every nerve in his body to jangling in excitement and apprehension.

"You will stay for pizza this evening, won't you? Or do you have plans?"

How tactful. Straight out of a textbook on manners.

He could match that. "Thank you," he said. "I'd love to stay."

"Good deal," Gordon approved. "You can carry the pizza, and Samantha'll probably let you rub her tummy some more."

Paula
reached over to stroke the fuzzy head as Samantha looked up at the mention of her name. "She took an immediate liking to him," she informed Bailey. "Jumped into his arms the minute he walked through the gate."

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