Two days later, I was with my brothers at the Maxwell Wineries headquarters in one of the office buildings on LaSalle Street.
My passion for wines began at a young age. We grew up on a vineyard on the west side of the state. It was small, and my dad only produced wine for personal consumption, but Iâd had the bug since I was a kid. I always knew I wanted to get into the wine business, even though I grew up on the floors of Maxwell Bookstores, the chain of bookstores my grandparents founded. My grandma, uncle, and parents ran it after Grandpa passed away. Ten years ago, they sold it in one of the highest transactions in that industry. My parents set up trust funds for each of us. I hadnât touched mineâI put it directly in Paisleyâs name.
Maxwell Wineries was taking off. In fact, I moved the company into this building only two years later.
It started when I rented far more space than I needed for my employees, and then gradually, each of my brothers moved their business here. Declan, Travis, and Luke also had their office in the building. Tyler often stopped by, especially during the off-season. Sam joined us whenever he was in the country.
After work, we sometimes went to the top floor where there was a bar with a view of the Chicago skyline. That was currently where we were. It was one of the perks of working in the same building.
âMan, maybe we should help you pick,â Declan said. Theyâd asked about my interviews and what I decided. I couldnât tell them the truth.
I groaned, tipping back a beer. I had interviewed four candidates over the past two days, and so far, I only wanted Lexi Langley. She was the one who bonded with my daughter and who seemed to actually like children. The others had held several different jobs besides childcare. One had been laid off from her computer science research job. The other worked as a bank teller until recently, and the last one was an aspiring fashion designer. But Lexi was different. And I liked her far too much, which was a fucking problem. If she was going to be my daughterâs nanny, as temporary as it was, I couldnât lust after her.
She was so damn beautiful that remembering her in that yellow dress was driving me crazy. It had looked sexy as fuck on her.
âDude, heâs lost in thought,â Tyler said. âThat never happens to him. Someone must have revved his engine.â
âTrue,â Luke pitched in with more smartass comments. âYou have an iron determination and focus, isnât that what you say is the key to your success? So who is she?â
âWhy are you mobbing the guy? Heâs having a hard time picking the next sitter, knowing heâll probably fire her before the summer ends,â Travis said.
âOr the month,â Luke added.
Our inability to keep our opinions to ourselves was chronic.
âI donât fire people because Iâm an asshole. Those I fire do things on the clock they arenât supposed to. Most leave because they get tired of the job. Itâs tough on Paisley because she gets attached, and now the only candidate I like is Lexi, an elementary school teacher who told me upfront that she can only work until the end of the summer.â
âBut sheâs your best candidate, right?â Luke asked. I nodded.
âWait a second,â Travis added. âHeâs too silent. My money is on the fact that he likes Miss Lexi a little too much. Donât you?â
Busted.
Tyler burst out laughing. âDude, donât do that. Donât go there. Hooking up with your daughterâs nanny is a bad idea.â
âSheâs not my daughterâs nanny yet, and I havenât hooked up with her,â I said.
Luke patted my shoulder. âYet, right?â
Declan raised a hand, motioning to the bartender. âGive us a round of tequila shots. Beer isnât going to cut it tonight.â He looked at me with what I called his lawyer face, and I knew he was going to warn me off. âTate, donât go there. The last thing you need is a harassment lawsuit. Andââ
âDeclan, save your breath. Give me some credit, will you? Iâve never even looked at one of my daughterâs nannies, and Iâm not going to start now.â
That wasnât exactly true. Iâd looked a lot at Lexi, and Iâd fantasized a whole lot more.
âOkay. Why donât we talk about something else?â Tyler said. âAnyone spoken to Reese recently?â
Reese was our cousin from Dadâs side. She and her sister, Kimberly, had practically grown up in our home, and we were all very close. Reese was going through a rough time since discovering her scumbag ex-fiancé was cheating on her. To make matters worse, they were going to go into business together.
âI speak to her daily,â Declan said, âbut sheâs not telling me much. Mostly, sheâs worrying about Granâs building.â
When selling the chain of bookstores, Gran insisted on keeping the building where theyâd opened the first one. It was symbolic because it reminded her of Grandpa. It meant a lot to her. Reese and the scumbag were going to turn it into a spa. Now everything was a mess. Declan was helping with the legal ramifications.
I turned to Luke. He was closest to Reese and Kimberly. âSheâs coping. But it doesnât help that the scumbag isnât making it easy on her. He still wants to open the spa.â
âHeâs going to be trouble,â Declan said.
I gritted my teeth. âThen heâs not just an asshole but also an idiot. He doesnât know who heâs messing with.â
He was going to be very sorry for hurting Reese. I was very protective of herâall my brothers were. Business was business, but family was the most important thing for us. I wouldnât allow my family to get hurt.
***
I spent time with my brothers until later in the evening. Paisley was at Granâs house tonight. Once at home, instead of heading upstairs, I went down into my home office.
I could ask my Gran to look after Paisley for a while longer while I told the agency to send me more applicants, but I didnât want to do that. It wasnât fair to them. Besides, Iâd searched for nannies often enough to know I wouldnât come across someone like Lexi Langley again too soon. The way sheâd instantly bonded with my daughter shifted something inside me, something I didnât want to analyze. Sheâd been real; it wasnât just a job to her. And the way sheâd clicked with Paisley proved there was such a thing as chemistry.
Paisley had asked to meet with the other women I was interviewing too, and I gave in. After all, they would be spending time together. It was fair for Paisley to weigh in. As it happened, she liked Lexi best too.
I sat in my leather armchair and picked up the phone. There was no point postponing this. I was going to employ Lexi Langley, and I was going to keep my distance. I wouldnât ruin this for my daughter.
I dialed her number before I could change my mind yet again.
She answered after a few rings.
âHi, itâs Mr. Maxwell, right?â she asked loudly, but I could still barely hear her over the music in her background.
âYes. Is this a good time to talk?â
âSure. Let me move a bit farther away from the music.â
âWhere are you?â I asked.
âIâm at the lake. Thereâs music, and I came down to enjoy it.â A few seconds later, the music was fainter. âOkay. Iâm listening.â
âI promised Iâd be in touch. I finished the interviews, and Iâm happy to say that Paisley and I would like you to start as soon as possible.â
âOh, wow. Really? Thatâs amazing. I thought the time issue was a deal breaker.â Her voice was a bit edgy, making me think she suspected there was another reason. Sheâd caught me looking at her a couple times. I had to be more careful.
No, damn it, Maxwell. What you have to do is not check her out at all.
âYouâre very qualified, and you and my daughter had chemistry. Itâs not ideal that you canât continue the job after school starts, but weâll deal with it.â
âIâve been thinking about it too,â she said. âYou can keep looking, and if you find someone before the summer ends, Iâll look for another job.â
I frowned and almost asked why she needed a summer job at all. Sheâd briefly let it slip that she needed the extra money, and now I wanted to know why. Iâd find an opportunity to ask once she started.
âIâm going to pause the search for now, and Iâll resume it at the end of summer, so donât worry about that. Your job is secure. I think weâre going to get along great,â I told her. âI mean, youâre not going to see much of me, of course, but Iâm sure you and Paisley will get along well.â
âOkay, then. Iâll start Monday morning? Still nine oâclock?
âYes. Good memory,â I told her.
âGreat. Did Paisley tell you what she wants to do? Iâm not sure what to wear. Maybe Iâll wear jeans and a T-shirt. And I can bring a change of clothes.â I could tell she was mostly talking to herself now. âSomething thatâs not too revealing.â
âAnd why is that?â
âOh, shoot. I didnât mean to say that out loud,â she blurted, making me laugh.
âBut now youâve made me curious. Tell me, Ms. Langley.â
She cleared her throat. âI meant something professional and not too revealing.â
âMs. Langley, your yellow dress wasnât at all revealing. I imagine youâd look stunning in anything you wore.â
She was the one who burst out laughing that time. Damn, I liked the sound a bit too much.
âI apologize. That was out of line,â I said, determined to keep this professional.
âI didnât think you noticed my outfit.â
It was on the tip of my tongue to say I spent half that interview memorizing every detail of her gorgeous bodyâbut I didnât.
âAnd Iâm sorry. I was out of line blurting my thoughts,â she whispered. âIâll⦠see you on Monday?â
âYes. Donât let me keep you from your evening. Have fun, Ms. Langley.â
âYou too.â
I leaned back in my seat, shaking my head. Iâd told myself I couldnât even look at her, but now with one phone call I was already imagining what fun we could have together.
This summer was off to a dangerous start.