getting into. My
guess, you’re gone inside a week.”
He had no idea how tenacious she could be. There was no way she was leaving until
she’d accomplished her goals. She pulled out the checkbook and wrote his check.
He snatched it from her hand, turned on his heel, and left.
“Nice doing business with you,” she called after him. She dragged herself to the front
door and locked up. Tomorrow would be a fresh start. Both of the men she had coming
in were experienced bar managers. It had to be an improvement over Mitch.
She looked back over the darkened room and wondered what she was doing. She’d made
employment decisions for other jobs, but this felt different. Doing it on her own
made the difference. She really had no backup here, and preventing Mitch from calling
her brother was the deciding moment. She was going to do this.
Early the next morning, her phone rang. Groggy, her blurry eyes attempted to focus
on the screen. Dad. She’d known this call would come; she’d hoped it would’ve taken
longer, though. She had to make a quick decision about what to tell him. She knew
she wouldn’t be able to disappear without being noticed.
“Hi, Dad.”
“Hey, sweetheart. Where are you? I haven’t seen you for days, and I don’t remember
sending you to a job.”
“I’m in Chicago. I’m visiting with Janie. You remember her, don’t you? I was feeling
burned out from all the work travel, so I decided to take a break.” It was only a
partial lie. She was burned out; she really did want a break. Unfortunately, Dad never
truly heard her desire to take over the company and stay at home. He was always more
focused on her social life.
“Oh. Why didn’t you say something?”
“It was spur-of-the-moment.” She sat up and scrubbed her hand over her face and waited
to be busted for that. Spontaneous wasn’t her style. Dad didn’t seem to notice her
lapse.
“When do you plan to come home?”
“I’m not sure.” She knew what was coming next, and her stomach turned.
“I have a new property I’m considering. If I get it, it’ll be ready for takeover within
two months.”
Two months? Too bad this wasn’t really a vacation. She didn’t want to head to another
job, in another city. “Can’t Keith do this one?”
She heard fumbling on the other end. She’d caught him off guard since she’d never
turned down a job before, but she had a feeling about this bar. This project would
surprise her father. She would prove that she had the ambition and initiative to take
over his spot. She could be him.
“Well, if that’s what you want. But you know I try not to send him out of town for
too long. The kids miss him. It’s hard on a family.”
She flopped back on her pillow. And there it was, the accusation beneath it all. Didn’t
she know how hard it was on a family to have a dad who traveled? She’d lived it. It
was hard on her nieces when Keith was gone, which was why Dad leaned toward giving
the company to Keith. But she shouldn’t be knocked out of the running because she
didn’t have a family.
“We’ll see how it goes. If you get the property, send me a timeline.” She hesitated
and then pushed forward. What was a little more truth stretching? “I’m actually looking
into some options here myself.”
“You are?” More shock.
“Yeah. I’m pretty tired, Dad. I was out late and I’m an hour earlier than you.”
“Sure, honey, go back to sleep.”
“Give Mom my love. I’ll call you soon.” She turned over with the intention of getting
more sleep, but her mind wouldn’t cooperate. She hated lying to her dad. That wasn’t
the kind of relationship they had. She picked up the phone again and brushed her fingers
over the buttons, but didn’t engage a call.
No, she’d started this and she’d see it through. If she hadn’t made significant progress
within a couple of weeks, she’d tell Dad the truth. All she had to do