Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
Starting From
Scratch
Georgia Beers
STARTING FROM SCRATCH
© 2010 BY GEORGIA BEERS
ISBN (10) 0-979-92546-0
ISBN (13) 978-0-979-92546-7
THIS TRADE PAPERBACK ORIGINAL IS PUBLISHED BY BRISK PRESS, NEW
YORK, NY 10023
EDITED BY KATHERINE V. FORREST
COVER DESIGN AND LAYOUT BY TAMI BOX (
www.tamarabox.com)
FIRST PRINTING: JANUARY 2010
THIS IS A WORK OF FICTION. NAMES, CHARACTERS, PLACES, AND
INCIDENTS ARE THE PRODUCT OF THE AUTHOR’S IMAGINATION OR ARE
USED FICTITIOUSLY. ANY RESEMBLANCE TO ACTUAL PERSONS, LIVING OR
DEAD, BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS, EVENTS, OR LOCALES IS ENTIRELY
COINCIDENTAL.
THIS BOOK, OR PARTS THEREOF, MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM
WITHOUT PERMISSION FROM THE AUTHORS OR THE PUBLISHER.
___________________________________________________
Books By Georgia Beers
Novels
Starting From Scratch
Finding Home
Mine
Fresh Tracks
Too Close to Touch
y Neighbor’s Wife
Turning the Page
Anthologies
Outsiders
Stolen Moments
e Milk of Human Kindness
Georgia Beers
website:
www.georgiabeers.com
Acknowledgments
is book has been a long time coming, and I have
many, many people to thank for helping me get it into your
hands, so bear with me…
First and foremost, my undying thanks and affection
to the lesbian reading community, to each and every one of
you who checked in on me, visited my site and my
Facebook page, sent me an e-mail, kept asking when the
next book was coming, plugged my appearances, spread the
word, and generally stayed in touch with me. Your letters,
encouragement, and enthusiasm kept me going when I was
wavering badly. I offer my sincerest and most heartfelt
gratitude, and I know it isn’t nearly enough. I hope this
book rewards your patience. ank you from the bottom of
my heart.
ank you to my wife, Bonnie, the one who loves me
unconditionally, despite my flaws (and there are many, I
know). What a long, strange trip the last three years have
been. Who’d have thought we’d end up right back where
we started and be ecstatic about it? ank you for helping
me keep my chin up, and for not letting me languish,
rocking in a corner and wailing about the injustices of the
world. You pulled me up, sat me at my desk, and got me
back to work with all the love, support, and understanding
a person could ask for. Peter was right: we
are
powerful
together. Heart. Always.
To my fellow authors and friends in the lesbian
publishing world: Ruth, Katherine, Jamie, KG, Joanne,
Karin, Rachel, Lori, Cheryl, Ann, Smitty, Jane, Catherine,
Toni, Tarsha, Andi, Sheri, Susan, Lynn, Cathy, Kat, Cate,
Linda, Gill, Cheri…the list goes on and on. You are the
people who grabbed my arms and pulled me from the
quicksand on those days when I thought maybe it was
better to just stop struggling and let myself sink. I owe
each of you a debt of gratitude for never allowing me to
give up, for helping me to stay strong, and for making me
understand that the best solution was to simply keep
writing. And to that tiny handful who would have liked to
see me fall apart and disappear completely, to those few
who would prefer to splinter this amazing community in
the name of power and greed rather than help it stay
cohesive and strong by working with others to make it so:
shame on you.
My eternal love, admiration, and gratitude to my
editor and friend, Katherine V. Forrest, an icon to me in
every sense of the word. When I asked her for guidance,
and admitted that I was slightly embarrassed to do so, she
said to me, “Hey, this is a sisterhood. We’re here to help
each other.” After months of wondering if I was stupidly
naïve in expecting my fellow lesbians to just be…
better
,
Katherine echoed my internal thoughts and renewed my
faith in my community. is
is
a sisterhood and we
are
here
to help each other, and I know that one day, I’ll be ready,
willing and able to pay it forward to a younger writer who
asks for
my
help. e lesbian literary community couldn’t
ask for a kinder, wiser, more genuine role model than
Katherine V. Forrest. ank you, Katherine, for being you.
To Tami Box, my WebDiva/cover designer
extraordinaire, I bow to your creative brilliance. You make
me look good, but more importantly, you make me look
professional. My website rocks and you surpassed my
wildest expectations by a long way for the cover of this
book (with which I am crazy in love!). You are a true artist.
To JD Glass…what can I say? Life is so strange and
the separate paths we started out on that ultimately met
and united have been—for each of us—long, difficult,
often lonely, and hard to navigate. But I have to believe we
ended up on the same road for a reason and your
friendship has grown to mean so much to me. Words are
not enough to thank you for your love, support, willingness
to listen, and clarity of advice.
To Susan X Meagher, I cannot begin to express my
thanks for putting your time, money, and faith into my
work. You gave me an opportunity with Brisk Press that
any other writer would
beg
for, and I will do whatever I can
to make all the effort worth your while. Mucho, mucho
gratitude to both you and Carrie for your hard work and
easy attitude.
To my Awesome Proofing Trio, Stacy Harp, Steff
Obkirchner, and Jackie Ciresi, this one took a long damn
time, but that doesn’t mean your efforts were any less
important. ank you guys so much for spending your days
off reading my stuff. Your dedication and honesty keep me
grounded and your friendship means everything to me.
And Steff: the trailer for this book rocks harder than I
can begin to put into words. You amaze me over and over
with your creativity, your generosity, and your love. I’m
lucky to have you. ank you.
To Dr. Holly Raschiatore Garber, my friend of (gulp!)
thirty-six years, for helping me look like I know what I’m
talking about when it comes to medical details.
To my friend, Denise Ash, for the crash course in
bank management.
To my sister, Lauri Whitney, and my friend, Tanja
Atkins, for letting me pick both your brains (sometimes
endlessly) about what it’s like to be pregnant and then be a
mom. You were both very patient with me, and I so
appreciated your help and direction.
Finally, to Jaclyn, Frankie, Allyson, Anthony, Alexis,
Joseph, Isak, and Emerson, for showing me that whether
I’m being a godmother, an aunt, or a babysitter, this non-
mother actually
does
have a little bit of maternal instinct
(who knew?). I love you all.
Dedication
To my maternal grandmother, Madeline DeRosa Pacilio, the
strongest woman I know.
In memory of my beloved aunt, Joyce Meredith Beers, a woman
before her time. I miss her every single day.
CHAPTER ONE
“I want to speak to your manager. Now.”
Uh-oh.
I glanced toward the counter at the panic-
stricken expression on the face of the young bank teller.
ose were never happy words. e poor kid couldn’t have
been more than twenty-one and his forehead was already
shining with sweat.
“Certainly, sir,” he said, and his voice cracked like
Shaggy’s in the Scooby-Doo cartoons. “I’ll be right back.”
e man who’d uttered the fateful phrase was older—
maybe sixty-five—and judging by the way he tossed his
checkbook to the counter and sighed loudly, he was not
pleased by having to resort to going over the kid’s head. Or
he was just a jerk. I wasn’t sure which, so I took an
exorbitant amount of time filling out my deposit slip at the
little rectangular desk in the middle of the lobby in order
to find out. My stalling tactics paid off, because a minute
later,
she
walked by. Elena Walker, branch manager,
stunningly attractive specimen of the human female, and
woman of my dreams…or at least my fantasies. I only
knew her name from the nameplate mounted next to the
door of her office, which I passed during each visit.
I was always surprised that she didn’t move in slow
motion with a mysterious breeze blowing her hair in some
sexy-chic fashion, she was that beautiful. Tall—a good
Georgia Beers
three or four inches taller than me—with dark, silky hair
cut just above her shoulders and styled in that sort of hip,
flippy look that I believe only professional hairdressers
know how to create. Olive-toned skin that looked tan all
year round and caused me to speculate on her ethnicity
(Latina? Italian? Greek?). Today’s business suit was navy.
Simple. Elegant. Sexy. e raspberry blouse beneath the
jacket gave the outfit a fun splash of color, making up for
any stuffiness the simple style of the skirt might conjure.
Of course, stuffiness was the last thing that came to mind
when you got a look at her legs. Long, shapely, strong. I
wondered absently if I was drooling on myself, though I
didn’t care enough to stop staring.
Rather than go around the counter, she walked right
up next to Mr. Irate Customer, introduced herself, and
shook his hand with a smile. All I had to do was see a
teeny, tiny glimpse of his face to know he was immediately
smitten with her.
“Hey, get in line, buddy,” I muttered softly and with a
grin.
Elena kept her voice low, probably figuring the entire
bank didn’t need to know Mr. Irate Customer’s business.
Or that he was angry. I didn’t hear what was said, just the
murmuring of voices, but the conversation didn’t last long.
Within two minutes flat, she had him smiling and
thanking her. Sweating Bank Teller Guy looked relieved at
his stay of execution.
I jerked my eyes back down to my own stuff as I
realized she was headed back to her office and would be
passing me. I didn’t want her to think I’d been staring.
“Morning, Ms. King,” she said with a smile as she
passed me. I looked up in surprise and caught the wink she
2
Starting From Scratch
threw at me. e color of her eyes made me think of
melted chocolate. “Have a great day.”
“You, too,” I replied lamely, wanting to slap myself in
the head for missing an opportunity to open some kind of
dialogue with her.
She knows my name. How cool is that?
I finished my business and floated on a cloud back to
work, wishing I had more reasons to be out and about in
the bright and sunny spring weather, and at the same time,
wishing I had more banking to do. But it was a very small
branch and I figured it would be noticed (and possibly
thought of as creepy) if I ended up in there four or five
times a week. Plus, I preferred to be somewhat stealthy in
my ogling. Elena Walker didn’t need to know I was
seriously crushing on her and had been since I’d opened
my accounts there six months earlier. I did have a
tiny
bit
of pride.
Back in my office, I was very happy to see that the
muffins I brought in earlier were almost gone. It’s not
really an office, more of a really large cubicle that I share
with Josh Bacon, one of my best buds and the creative
writer to my graphic design at T. Harrison Jones &
Associates.
“Hey, Avery,” Josh greeted me, not looking up from
his keyboard as he chewed. “Your muffins suck, by the
way.”
Feigning prim-and-proper shock, I asked, “And just
what would you know about my muffins, mister?”
“You’d be surprised.”
I snorted. “What’s that, your third one?”
“Fourth.” He stuffed the last bite into his mouth and
reached for a huge volume of
Roget’s International esaurus