“What?” the younger girl asked, trying to look innocent as she twisted her head to her mother and sister. “He’ll have fun.” She looked back at him and grinned. “We Winters girls, we’re loads of fun.”
“I’m sure Mr. Callahan has better things to do than go to the mall,” Violet stated and walked to the Mustang, hitching her purse on her shoulder.
“Do you have better things to do, Mr. Callahan?” the girl asked.
Cal just stared at her.
“Malls are a blast,” she told him.
He didn’t reply mainly because he didn’t agree, not even a little bit.
“And we’re goin’ to The Cheesecake Factory for dinner and it’s great there.”
“Keira, seriously, leave Mr. Callahan alone,” Violet ordered. “Get in the car.”
She was standing in her opened door, the keys in her hand, her eyes on her daughter. The other girl was standing in the other door without the keys but her stance and her gaze were an exact replica of her mother’s.
“And we’re going to see the new Nicole Bolton movie. It’s supposed to be awesome,” the younger girl went on, completely ignoring her mother.
“Keira!” Violet called sharply and her voice jolted Cal to action.
He moved and when he moved, he moved toward Violet. He didn’t know why but he did and as he did, he watched her body get tight and watching it made his jaw get tight.
He made it to her, she tipped her head back to look at him, her gorgeous face filled with panic which he took advantage of when he tugged her keys out of her fingers.
“I’m drivin’.”
“Yippee!” the younger girl screeched.
“What?” Violet whispered.
“Move outta the door, buddy.” She blinked, the panic gone, confusion in her expression and she stayed put so he told her. “Can’t drive, you on my lap.”
Her body jerked and the confusion cleared, her face shifting straight to angry. He’d seen that look on her face before when she’d thrown his business card and the fifty at him. She wouldn’t like to know it but her display of attitude was hot, then and now.
“Why is Mr. Callahan driving?” the older girl asked and Cal looked to his right to see she’d moved out of the way and the younger one was pushing into the backseat.
“Mr. Callahan is –” Violet started to speak to her daughter but Cal cut her off.
“Cal,” he turned to the girl and repeated, “Cal.”
“My girls don’t call their elders by their Christian names,” Violet told him, her voice ice and when Cal turned back to her, her face was ice too.
“We could call him Uncle Cal,” the younger girl suggested, her head and shoulders shoved over the driver seat so she could look at them.
Christ. Uncle Cal was worse than Mr. Callahan.
“Can we go? If we don’t, we’ll miss the movie or we’ll have to cut the shopping short,” the older girl asked, resignation in her tone and impatience then she shoved into the backseat and pulled the passenger seat back into place.
“Yeah, or we’ll miss the chance to have cheesecake at The Cheesecake Factory,” the younger one said, her eyes were on him as she finished, “obviously, that’s the best part.”
Cal looked at Violet.
“Get in, buddy.”
“But –”
He leaned into her, she reared back into the door but he ignored that even though he felt that in his chest too and repeated, “Violet, get in.”
She glared at him then slid by him, careful not to touch him as she did so. Then he watched her stomp around the hood of the Mustang and get in, slamming her door.
Cal folded himself into her car and had to adjust the seat, the wheel was practically in his crotch. Violet was tall, like her girls and unlike any woman he’d ever had but she wasn’t nearly as tall as him.
He closed the door and settled in. The new Mustangs were sweet, not as sweet as his ’68 GT but still sweet. Violet, he found, had as good taste in cars as she had in clothes, shoes, underwear and nightgowns.
He slid the key in the ignition and fired up the car, it roared to life, he threw it in reverse and pulled out of her drive.
“Hey, Cal, do you know any of the Buckley Boys?” the younger girl, Keira, asked from behind him.
“Just because he does what he does, Keira, doesn’t mean he knows everyone who’s famous,” the older girl, Kate, informed her sister.
“I know ‘em,” Cal said and heard both girls pull in their breath.
He did know them. They were all little shits, a boy band of five brothers, thought the sun shone out of their asses. They’d paid huge and he’d taken a special job, leading a detail of bodyguards again, covering them for an event. They were individually and collectively such a fuckin’ pain he turned down the next job their manager offered him.
“Really?” Keira breathed.
“Yep,” Cal replied.
“What’re they like?” Keira asked.
“You don’t wanna know,” Cal answered.
“No, really, I do. I do wanna know,” she told him and she sounded like she did really want to know.