Playing Dirty

Playing Dirty by Susan Andersen

Book: Playing Dirty by Susan Andersen Read Free Book Online
Authors: Susan Andersen
Ads: Link
skills, I’m telling ya.”
    The next thing Cade knew, all of his team who’d shown up this morning were swarming the food table, making a huge dent in Ava’s arrangement. And she just laughed while they did, refilling coffee cups and urging them to try this, that or the other treat. Apparently she got off big-time on seeing to it that everyone was fed.
    He waded in to grab a few things for himself before the locusts formerly known as his crew reduced it to crumbs, a few apple cores and orange peels.
    But when he told them a few minutes later that it was time to get to work, the swarm reverted to the professionals he knew and cleared out to get back to their various tasks.
     
    A FTER EVERYONE LEFT , Ava happily puttered around the kitchen, clearing up the dishes and coffee cups, replenishing the fruit tray and bringing out a vegetable platterto place beside it, along with a bowl of dip she would refrain from telling Kyle had a yogurt base.
    She made a trip out to Mrs. Hoffert’s Audi and retrieved the plastic crate that cradled her big Crock-Pot, which she had transferred from her own car earlier. She had slow cooked a tortellini soup overnight, and she brought it into the kitchen, plugged it in and turned it on to warm. She put out spoons and a stack of bowls next to the pot. Then, pouring herself a cup of coffee, she sat down and went over this morning’s offerings, checking each item and making adjustments to the amounts she’d need to buy for tomorrow.
    She also made some notes on ideas she had for switching things up so the crew didn’t get bored the next few weeks.
    This was her element. She loved seeing a need and filling it. She liked feeding people, liked doing what it took to make their day-to-day lives easier. It was what she was good at.
    It was purely a bonus that performing those functions made it easier for her to ignore Cade.
    The back door banged open, making her jump. Cold, damp air gusted into the room, and a lean man in a black watch cap and parka blew in along with it. He probably only topped off around five-eight or so, and taken feature by feature should have been average-looking. But his spectacular aqua-blue eyes and the overall way all those features were put together added up to an attractive package.
    At a glance, Ava would say he knew it, too, for he grinned, said, “Hey ya, beautiful,” and nodded at the alarm box keypad. “What’s the code?”
    “Considering I don’t have a clue who you are, I’m not inclined to tell you that,” Ava responded calmly,keeping to herself that the alarm wasn’t armed at the moment, since one of the discussions Cade’s crew had had while eating her food was that between all the comings, goings and equipment deliveries throughout the day, it would be a major pain to have to constantly set and reset the alarm.
    Obviously figuring for himself that it was turned off, the man crossed the room to her. “Anthony Phillips,” he said by way of introduction. “But everyone calls me Tony. I was hired as security for Scorched Earth Productions.”
    Ava raised a brow at him. “I was under the impression that was John.”
    “Whoa. Suspicious much? He’s night security. I’m the day watchman.”
    She rose and went to the archway to stick her head out into the hall. Power cords and cables snaked the normally pristine hardwood floor, and for a second she merely blinked at them. Then she collected herself. “Beks!”
    “Yeah?”
    “Your day security guy is here.”
    “Thanks, Ava. I’ll be down in a sec to get him.”
    She turned back to catch Call-me-Tony eyeing her butt. “Have a seat. Or coffee’s over there if you’d like a cup.”
    “Thanks, doll, a cup of Joe would be nice.”
    “You and I will get along a great deal better if you don’t call me doll.”
    “Right. Got it, doll—uh, Miss.”
    “I’m Ava.”
    His big flashy smile returning, he stepped forward and stuck out his hand. “Nice to meet you, Ava.”
    Beks came in and crossed to

Similar Books

Hellraisers

Alexander Gordon Smith

Death Sentences

Kawamata Chiaki

The Last Continent

Terry Pratchett

Breathe

Sloan Parker

Marine Corpse

William G. Tapply

The Abyss of Human Illusion

Gilbert Sorrentino, Christopher Sorrentino