“Repairs have to be made by the company mechanic,” Jack explained. He screwed the top on the vacuum bottle. “Thanks for the help.”
Simmons gulped and nodded, but Miss Shea braced her hands on her hips, oblivious to the grease she was depositing there. He could tell by the set of her mouth that she was angry.
“What is it?” Jack asked.
Her lips worked a full minute. “You know what.” She nodded toward Simmons, who was packing up his tools.
He hated when women assumed he could read their minds. “Humor me.”
She whispered, “Hendrick Simmons put in a lot of time on your plane, when he could have been working at the motor garage. He deserves some…compensation.”
“Why didn’t you say so?” Though it irritated him that she expected payment when they’d volunteered, he pulled out his wallet and settled with Simmons.
“Want a ride, Darcy?” asked the kid, pocketing the money.
She shook her head. “Brought my lunch.”
Simmons hesitated. Clearly, he didn’t want to leave Darcy alone with Jack, nor should he.
“I’m locking the barn.” Jack put on his cap. “I’m afraid you can’t stay, Miss Shea.”
Jack’s words spurred Simmons on his way, but Darcy took her time gathering her lunch basket. “I’m going to eat under the big oak. I brought roast beef sandwiches. There’s enough to share.”
“Share?” Jack wasn’t so sure that was wise.
“What’s wrong? You don’t eat beef? Or is it the company you find objectionable?”
“Not at all.” He searched for an excuse. “I wanted something hot.”
“I can set your sandwich in the sun.”
He had to double-check, but sure enough, Darcy Shea was teasing. It had been a long time since a woman had teased him, and it felt good. “That won’t be necessary.”
“Then you’ll join me?”
“After an invitation like that, how could I refuse?”
She unpacked the basket beneath the big oak: sandwiches wrapped in paper and a mason jar filled with a pale yellow liquid that had to be lemonade. His mouth watered. He hadn’t sipped a lemonade in years.
“What else do you have in that basket of yours?” He made sure he stood a good ten feet away.
“Dill pickles, boiled eggs and blackberry pie, but you’ll have a hard time eating them from there.” She plopped to the ground and pointed to the grassy expanse in front of her. “Plenty of room to sit.”
He dropped to the grass and bounded right back up. The ground was littered with thousands of acorns. “I don’t suppose you remembered a blanket and wine.”
“It’s lunch, not a picnic. Besides, Michigan happens to be dry, Mrs. Lawrence’s notwithstanding.”
“I know that,” he said, though he found the tone a bit too temperance for his liking. Jack didn’t drink alcohol for personal reasons, not due to some self-righteous cause. He brushed the acorns away so he could sit with reasonable comfort.
“How do you know Michigan’s dry? You’re from New York.”
A wet state doesn’t need blind pigs, Jack wanted to say, but that was a conversation Jack did not care to have, so he turned its direction. “I live and work on Long Island, but I grew up in Buffalo.”
She gave him a peculiar look. “Buffalo? You’re from Buffalo? How odd. Everyone seems to be from there these days.”
“Who is ‘everyone’?”
She shrugged. “No one important.”
After an awkward silence during which the ants made progress toward the lunch basket and Darcy fussed with her napkin, Jack ventured, “Did you make the pie?”
“What if I say I did?”
“It’s not a competition. I don’t care who baked the pie. I’m just making conversation.”
“Oh.” A lovely, dusky blush rose in her cheeks. It was nice to know Miss Darcy Shea could be embarrassed. “I thought, well…never mind.”
He stretched out on the grass, leaning on one elbow, and tipped his cap back so he could watch her every move. If she’d give up that defensive shield she put around herself, she’d be downright attractive.
She unscrewed the lid on the mason jar. “We’ll have to share, unless you still have coffee.”
“Tough luck. It ran out a half hour ago.”
“I suppose I have enough for two.” She set the jar between them and took a bite of her sandwich. She even looked attractive chewing.
He checked the sandwich. Beef and mustard. Homemade bread, with its rich, yeasty aroma. It had been ages since he’d eaten anything other than bakery bread.
“What happens when your mechanic arrives?” she asked while he was chewing. “Will he have the replacement parts? Does he know what to bring? What did you tell him when you talked on the telephone?”
Jack choked down the food. “Is this an interview?”
This time no blush, just an enigmatic twist of the mouth. “I’m just curious.”
Jack ripped his gaze away. “He’ll bring everything he can. But if he doesn’t have a replacement part, we’ll have to wire the factory.”
It looked as if she perked up, but maybe it was his imagination.
“Where is the factory?”