Digging Up Trouble
ordering."
    "Good," I said, thinking maybe I wouldn't have to fire him after all.
    "Jean-Claude?" Harry asked. "Is that you, man?"
    My head snapped to Harry, then to Ana, who shrugged.
    Jean-Claude's cheeks turned a fiery red. "Do I know you?"
    I caught a very subtle shake of Jean-Claude's head as he asked. Hmmm.
    Harry cleared his throat. "Guess not. You just look familiar."
    My mouth dropped open. "You knew his name!"
    "Lots of people with that name." Harry shrugged, fussed with his collar.
    "Uh-huh. Jean-Claude is at the top of every baby name list. I'll have to let Tam know."
    "Tam?" Harry asked.
    "I better go." Jean-Claude fairly sprinted out the door.
    Obviously Harry knew Jean-Claude and Jean-Claude didn't want anyone to know that. Why? Did it have something to do with the late night activities he was so hush-hush about?
    Had Harry been into the car stealing business too? Maybe
    a drug dealer? Maybe he'd been arrested on possession charges. Asking him might shed some light on JeanClaude's nighttime forays.
    "Hey, Harry, why were you arrested?" I asked.
    He looked at Ana, his eyes pained. "Do I have to tell her that?"
    Ana nodded. " 'Fraid so."
    "I, um. Shhrohghn," he said, rubbing his hand over his mouth.
    "What?"
    He pulled his hand away. "Solicitation, all right?"
    I blinked. "You're a prostitute?"
    "I prefer escort. And I'll have you know I was entrapped. That's why I got locked up."
    Harry was, er, an escort. And he knew Jean-Claude.
    Oh. My. God. Was Jean-Claude moonlighting as a gigolo?

    "I have to go talk to her, right?" I asked. "Try to explain."
    It was early Saturday morning and I should have been helping Kit with a "mini"—a mini makeover reserved for smaller yards or certain problem areas—but I knew the McPhains' yard was perfectly fine in his capable hands. Plus, he had Marty and Jean-Claude with him. Despite my determination to fire Jean-Claude, I'd taken pity on him since he had been at the Grabinsky site after all—helping Kit.
    I was such a sucker. How many chances was I going to give him?
    Kit had plenty of manpower to transform a small nondescript brick patio into something special. Plus, if he needed help he could always call Deanna or Coby, who were at the office.
    Instead of helping out, I'd driven over to see Tam.
    "I don't know," Tam said. "It might make things worse."
    "Worse than getting sued?" I asked.
    The tortuous beltlike contraption around her waist was still there. And it had a friend. I could see two squarish lumps underneath her hot pink silk pajama shirt. She'd explained to me that one monitored contractions, the other the baby's heart rate. As of right now, everything was normal. The medication she was taking had stopped the contractions. But she wasn't going anywhere anytime soon.
    Which meant I had to find a temp for her.
    But not Harry.
    I didn't dare tell her about Jean-Claude possibly being a gigolo. That might send her into irreversible labor.
    A notepad balanced on Tam's belly. She tapped a pencil on it. "You have a point."
    "For once," Brickhouse Krauss piped in.
    "Don't you have some oxygen to suck?" I asked in a too sweet voice.
    "Oh!" Tam said, clutching her stomach.
    "What? Is it the baby?" I glanced at the monitors, but everything looked okay. "Should I get the doctor?"
    "No, no," Tam assured me.
    Brickhouse had looked ready to leap out of the bed to be of assistance. Actually, she looked rather healthy to me. Pink cheeks, softly glowing skin. What was she still doing here?
    "The baby just kicked a rib is all."
    I glanced at her stomach in time to see a bump move from one side of her body to the other.
    Tam laughed.
    "What?" I asked.
    "You should see your face."
    "Does it always do that?" I asked, horrified. It was like something out of a horror movie.
    Tam nodded. "You get used to it."
    "Oh." I didn't believe her for a minute. You get used to swimming in lukewarm water. You get used to doing your hair the same way. You get used to infomercials. You do not get used

Similar Books

Down Outback Roads

Alissa Callen

Another Woman's House

Mignon G. Eberhart

Fault Line

Chris Ryan

Kissing Her Cowboy

Boroughs Publishing Group

Touch & Go

Mira Lyn Kelly