one hand, he had two women eager to cook breakfast for him.
On the other hand . . . he had two women eager to cook breakfast for him.
But what the hell was he supposed to do? It was hard enough figuring out how to convince one woman that leaving was her own idea. No way could he handle two at the same time.
Josh sighed. âPancakes would be great, Mom. Perfect fuel for that conversation weâre about to have about boundaries.â
But neither woman was paying attention to him anymore.
âSo what do you do, April?â Sue asked, going to Joshâs tiny pantry and pulling out the container of flour sheâd stocked for him, again without his asking.
âIâm a marketing analyst,â April bubbled. Josh rubbed his temples. Good God, had her voice been that chirpy and annoying last night? âTechnically, Iâm based here, but I travel a lot.â
Sue made a tsk ing noise as she pushed Josh out of the way so she could place all of her dry ingredients on his counter. âTravelingâs no good. Must be hard to maintain relationships.â
Josh turned around so April wouldnât see his grimace. âCoffee, ladies?â he asked.
âAlways,â his mother said. âYour father insists on buying that cheap stuff whenever he does the shopping.â
âIs that why youâre here unannounced?â Josh asked. âBecause my coffeeâs better?â
âThat, and I want a pancake. If I make them at home, your father will eat them, and if he eats them, heâll put syrup on them, and the diet Iâve put him on will be for nothing.â
âThe diet you were doing . . . together?â
âYou hold your tongue, son,â she said with a little wink.
His parents had both put on a bit of weight after turning sixty. Something Joshâs dad had accepted just fine, but his mom was always on a âlose a dress sizeâ mission.
At least until she got a pancake craving.
âOh darnâ came a quiet mutter from Joshâs kitchen table.
Joshâs one-night stand turned breakfast companion looked up from her cell phone with an apologetic look on her face.
âIâm so sorry, but I have to get going,â April said. âOne of my coworkers has a stomach bug and needs me to cover a conference call for her.â
âNo problem,â Josh said, just as his mother exclaimed, âOh no!â
âRain check?â April said, standing and coming over to touch his momâs arm.
Absolutely not.
He liked April. She was a nice woman. Cute. Smart. Likable.
But heâd made it perfectly clear last night that he was only looking for last night. Only last night.
His motherâs unexpected appearance had bought her a reprieve for this morning, but no way was he looking to turn this into a thing. That wasnât his styleâat least not anymore.
Josh was already braced to counteract whatever invitation to dinner his mother had at the ready, but to his surprise, Sue Tanner gave April a noncommittal pat on the back of the hand.
âIt was just lovely meeting you, dear. Good luck with your meeting.â
âThanks,â April said, gracious enough not to press any further. She turned toward Josh and opened her mouth to say something. Then, Âseemingly seeing there was nothing to say, simply glanced down at the oversized clothing heâd shoved at her. Probably debating leaving wearing something three times too big versus putting on last nightâs dress, which if he remembered correctly was flesh-toned, skintight, and probably not what sheâd hoped to meet a guyâs mother in.
âTheyâre yours if you want them,â Josh said, jerking his chin at the clothes.
Her head snapped up. âReally?â
Josh smiled. âReally. Keep them.â
The light in her eyes dimmed just a little bit asshe put the pieces together that keep them had a very different meaning from you can give