EVERYTHING’S JAKE
Inspirational Romance
CHAPTER ONE
Mariah Jacoby paced the tiny office, taking the confined distance from wall to wall in four agitated strides as she waited for her boss to join her. She was fairly certain what the outcome of this meeting would be. Sheโd be looking for another job. She shook her head from side to side now in frustration. If only she could convince her boss that she could probably sell more from this boutique in the long run if she were honest with her customers!
Well, that wasnโt going to happen. Convincing Patricia there was something to be gained by telling a woman she looked fat in one of her dresses was about as likely as going over Niagara Falls in a barrel without getting hurt โฆ seriously hurt! Hadnโt somebody tried that once? She thought sheโd remembered reading something about it, but โฆ right now her mind was too muddled with the mess sheโd made of her third job in two years. Of course, itโs not like this latest one was something in her field. With a bachelorโs degree in English and a masterโs in journalism, selling in a boutique was a little wide of the mark on both counts.
But her one year working at the Excel Learning Center had been enough to convince her that trying to teach students how to learn better was definitely not her forte. Her second job, the one withย The Beacon,ย had been more in her line, but evidently news reporting was not what she really felt called to do either. Well, Mariah did feel a genuine interest in writing for a newspaper. It was actually her editor who had felt that she wasnโt right for the part. โYouโve got to quit editorializing, Mariah!โ he said, through his gritted teeth. How many times had he said that? She couldnโt be sure, but it seemed to average about once a week, until finally, he had given her the bad news: Sheโd have to go. And heโd warned her one last time that if she thought sheโd ever really want to get serious about a career in journalism, sheโd better start working harder on her ability to remain objective when she covered the news.
She sighed now and finally dropped into one of the two chairs that sat in front of the desk, just settling into the seat when her boss opened the door and came in with a purposeful stride. Patricia wasnโt a time-waster; that was for sure. She marched around her desk and leaned over it toward Mariah. โI guess you know what this means?โ Mariah opened her mouth to protest โฆ or defend herself โฆ or something โฆ but nothing came out. She dipped her head and then nodded.
โI know,โ she said on a resigned sigh. โI really do try to do what you want though, Patricia.โ
Her boss shook her head as she sat down behind the desk. โNot hard enough, Mariah. Iโve told you repeatedly that we do not tell any of our customers that they donโt look terrific in whatever they choose.โ
Mariahโs head came up, and she looked directly at her boss. โBut thatโs lying! I canโt believe thatโs the best way to do business!โ
โThe point is that this isย myย business, Mariah. And the only one who needs to be satisfied with the way we do business here is me. Besides, I donโt really consider it lying. When our customers have chosen something that they like on themselves, it makes them feel good about themselves, and that does make them look good. Happy people always look better than those who are unhappy. And more importantly, happy customers keep coming back!โ
โBut Mrs. Jamison wasnโt unhappy when I told her that I thought sheโd look better in something else.โ
โNo? Well, just what would you call that frown on her face, that furrowed brow, and her flustered attitude?โ
โShe was just trying to think about what Iโd said while I was showing her the other possibilities.โ
โAll possibilities that she did not like herself! Thatโs just my point. Sheโs been a customer here for five years, and she had already disqualified the style of dress you kept trying to push off on her!โ She leaned back with a sigh. โIโm sorry, Mariah, but I did warn you that you may not be cut out for this kind of work. I know youโve tried, but youโre not going to be able to treat my customers differently. This is the fourth time Iโve had to deal with the situation and try to soothe the people youโve upset. Iโll give you the rest of this week doing jobs that wonโt require you to work with customers, and Iโll give you the two weekโs severance pay that your contract specifies, but Iโll definitely have to replace you with someone whoโs comfortable with my rules here.โ
It didnโt take long for the end of the week to arrive, and Mariah found that she wasnโt all that emotional about having to say goodbye to Patricia and the two other women who worked at the boutique. Sheย wasย very emotional, however, about not having a job. She had managed to save a little money while sheโd worked on her masters because sheโd decided to attend the university at home and stay at the house with her parents. They had been eager to have her there again, even for that period of time, and they just refused to let her pay for much of anything at all. Sheโd tried to make up for it by treating them to special dinners out and a weekend away a couple of times, but she had put most of her money from the job on campus into a savings account. Good thing! Sheโd already gone through half of it, and it looked like the second half would soon be in hot pursuit of the first.
She made her way back to the one-bedroom apartment in a very unfashionable, but comfortable part of town, dropped her purse and jacket on the table just inside the door, kicked off her shoes, and headed for the tiny kitchen to make tea. Her granny had always sworn by tea as the fix-it potion for any problem. Of course, Granny had always held faithful to all the little details that constituted a traditional English tea โ the boiled water, the warmed teapot, the unrushed brewing time. Mariah filled the teapot and stuck it in the microwave. What Granny didn’t know wouldn’t cause her any unhappiness.
While she waited for the water to boil, she picked up the mail that lay on her kitchen counter. She hadnโt had time to go through it carefully for the last two days, and now she was surprised to see a card from a friend of hers in another state. Abigail Harland, who had gone through the first four years of college with Mariah, was now a happily married wife and the mother of two rambunctious little boys. She took to that lifestyle like a duck to water, Mariah thought, smiling now as she remembered the last time sheโd visited Abby and Seth.
She scanned the lines eagerly, moving over to the microwave as it dinged to let her know the water was ready. A few minutes later, as she sipped the fragrant tea and began to relax, she came to the end of the note, which included another invitation to visit as soon as possible. โCome for a whole weekend if you can,โ Abby had written. โBetter yet, I wish youโd look for a job here so we could be close like we used to be.โ
Mariah laid the note on the counter, deep in thought. Well, why not? Why not at least try? She certainly had nothing holding her here. Of course she was only an hour from her parents living here, but Abbyโs home wasnโt more than three hours from them. She shrugged her shoulders. She was going to have to start somewhere, and she might as well try to find something close to her best friends. Sheโd made a couple of local friends since moving here to work, and of course, she was comfortable with most all of the people sheโd met at church. But there wasnโt anyone she felt she could bare her soul to the way she could Abby and Seth. Maybe this was a good time to move on.
She got up and added more tea to her cup, then moved into the living room and snuggled into the corner of the sofa. She had an uneasy feeling in the pit of her stomach โฆ almost a fear. Only sheย refusedย to let herself be afraid. It was just that โฆ well โฆ she had never figured herself for a failure. She had always done well in school. And sheโd taken a variety of electives just to expand her mind and her horizons. Hadnโt she even taken those two auto-shop courses?
She grinned now as she remembered how surprised a couple of the guys in the class had been when theyโd discovered how much she already knew. That was thanks to her big brother Mitch, of course. From the time sheโd been a preteen, she had helped him work on his cars. And heโd had several over the years that he virtually rebuilt. Of course, it was just a hobby with him. Heโd opted for a career in marketing, but heโd really had a gift for working on cars! And heโd told her she was a natural too, but of course, no other girls she knew were interested in becoming auto mechanics, so she dismissed that idea as less than good if she were going to have to compete with them for the guys out there that were worth having.
She snorted now as she thought about the fact that even though she was never in overalls or smudged with grease and oil these days, the guys werenโt exactly beating a path to her door. She thought about what she had to offer a man. Well โฆ there was her open, friendly nature โฆ her quick mind โฆ her Christian lifestyle โฆ. She sighed. Those things didnโt sound like attention grabbers to her.
She took mental stock of her physical assets: She had a clear complexion. Her hair was a rich brown, and the pixie cut she currently wore framed her face perfectly and drew attention to her eyes. And they were probably her most positive feature, weren’t they? She had always considered them plain old brown until one of the men sheโd dated in college had told her they were the warm color of a glass of sherry.ย Her relationship with that man had taken a definite upswing from that moment, although theyโd never gotten serious, and heโd graduated the following year. Still, he remained one of her favorite dating memories just because heโd given her a whole new confidence about her looks.
She sat her empty cup on the table beside the sofa and stretched out, thinking. What kind of job should she look for? She laughed lightly. Sheโd lain on the sofa in her home as a child and daydreamed just this way, asking herself, what she wanted to be when she grew up? But this wasnโt like those times. This was no daydream; this was reality. Sheย wasย grown-up. She was 25, and it was time she made a career for herself.
The following Friday evening, she arrived at Seth and Abbyโs door with a large suitcase, having told them of her plans to look for a job close to them. They had insisted she stay with them while she searched, but she had been adamant about not staying more than a week. If she hadnโt found something by then, she would either move into a motel or start looking in a different town.
But by the end of the week, she was no closer to having employment. She had checked with the area schools about possible openings for the next school year, which was right around the corner. She knew she wasnโt licensed to teach in the state, but she also knew there were ways to deal with that as long as she was working toward meeting the requirements within a certain time period. But there wasnโt anything in her field. Then sheโd checked with a couple of local newspapers, but still nothing permanent. They had told her theyโd consider some free-lance articles from her if she wanted to turn something in, and she had, in fact written one article and had it published. But she knew that she had managed that feat mainly because it was the kind of thing she didnโt have to be objective about.
Then sheโd checked with a couple of department stores, but their waiting lists were long, and besides โฆ she could tell by the manner of the women whoโd talked to her that she would be right back in the same boat as she had been with Patricia. So sheโd signed up with an employment agency, and had even gone to one interview that theyโd set up, but to no avail. Theyโd been pleased with her credentials, but they were equally pleased with those of some of the other applicants, and two of those people had lived in the town all their lives. The company just considered them a better risk, all other things considered.
On the Friday evening a week after sheโd arrived, Abby tried to convince her that she should stay at least another week. โYou know we love having you here, Ry,โ she said. โAnd youโve been so much help with the boys. They really love you.โ
Seth had reached over and patted Mariahโs hand. โWe both want you to stay, Ry. Give it at least one more week.โ He glanced over at his wife, a light in his eyes that made no secret of the fact that he was in love with her. โBesides,โ he said, a teasing note in his voice, โmy sweety would never forgive me if I didnโt do everything in my power to make sure you move here permanently.โ
Mariah had laughed with them, but she felt sad too. Something was wrong with her. Why couldnโt she find a job? And a job that she liked? What did she really enjoy doing, anyway? She thought long and hard on that subject after she retired for the night. Lying there in bed, she tried to remember every time sheโd ever felt happy at work, and she realized with a good deal of surprise that she had actually felt pretty good about all of her jobs. The problem was that her happiness had really been coming from her interaction with people, which she always enjoyed, and not from the work itself. In fact, the last time she remembered feeling reallyย happyย about theย workย she was doing was when she had been in the auto mechanics class, helping her project partner put an engine back together.
The following morning at breakfast, Abbyโs four-year old climbed up on Mariahโs lap and put his arms around her neck. โYou stay wif us,โ he said. Then he reached up to pat her cheek. โ Me donโt want you to leave. You stay wif us, Ry.โ She squeezed him tightly and kissed his cheek.
Abby sat down at the table with a cup of coffee. โSee,โ she said, grinning. โYou canโt break his little heart by leaving yet.โ
โOh, all right. Youโre all ganging up on me. I’ll take one more week, but โฆ Abby โฆ you know if I donโt find something by then, I need to try to get something in a larger city. Thereโs bound to be some kind of newspaper and teaching jobs both in a large enough city.โ
โWell, just try one more week here then. I canโt bear to think youโve come so close to living in the same town as us again and then not have it work out.โ
Mariah chuckled and reached over and gripped her friends hand briefly. โMe too, Ab. Iโll really try this week, and Iโll spend more time praying about it too. Maybe Iโve been trying too hard on my own and not looking to the Lord for the guidance as I should have been.โ
So after breakfast was cleaned up, Mariah went out to their back yard to sit on the patio in the shade and read her Bible and pray. Sheโd been a Christian most of her adult life, and she thought she had lived according to Godโs will, but sometimes she had to admit that she didnโt spend nearly as much time listening to what the Lord might have to say to her as she did talking to Him. So for the next week, that was her primary goal, and her job search would have to be secondary.
CHAPTER TWO
The next Monday she was on her way to apply for a position she had heard about at church the previous day and began having trouble with her car. It kept dying at every stop sign, and then began jerking and trying to die in the middle of traffic. She remembered passing an auto repair center several times on that end of town, so she made her way there now, gritting her teeth and praying that she could make it there without getting stranded in the middle of the road somewhere.
As she pulled in, she realized that there were several cars ahead of her, but she hoped that since she had a sort of emergency situation, that might weigh heavily with the manager. If sheโd had tools and parts, of course, she could have fixed it herself, but that was like wishing for the moon, since she didnโt even have a screwdriver with her this trip. And boy was that stupid, she told herself. At least she could have come better prepared to cope with car problems. But she had been pretty depressed by the time sheโd set out for Abbyโs, so that probably accounted for her lack of thought on the subject.
She got out and walked toward the open work bays. Even though the day was warm, she could feel the change in temperature as she entered the cool interior and adjusted her eyes to the darker atmosphere. She sniffed the air, recognizing the smells of a normal auto shop โฆ smells she was comfortable with โฆ and she smiled slightly. She could hear the sounds of someone working and finally managed to see a man half submerged beneath the hood of a luxury car leaning over the engine, totally absorbed. She needed to go into the office area. Turning half circle, she saw the office door and headed inside.
Even cooler air from the office air conditioner hit her as she stepped through the door. There was one man inside, leaning slightly on a high counter, writing something out by hand. He looked back at his computer screen, which was sitting on a desk behind the counter, then turned back and wrote some more. He looked a little taller than her, and slightly heavy set. It was obvious that he weighed in a little over normal. Probably most of it was muscle, but she doubted that all of it was. He had dark brown hair, liberally striped with gray. His face had a few lines that she could see around his mouth and eyes, but it was rather nice looking โฆ at least what she could see of it with his head down a little. He looked back at his computer again, and spoke something in an exasperated voice, scratched his head, and turned back to the counter.
But before Mariah could get his attention, the front door to the office opened, and a man came in with a set of keys in his hand. โHereโs my keys, Neil. Iโll be back around closing time to pick it up.โ
The man behind the counter slapped his palm against his forehead. โOh, for crying out loud, Paul. I forgot all about you coming in today, or Iโd have called you.โ
โSomethinโ wrong?โ
โBoy is that an understatement! Kurtโs off sick with the flu, and Bobby fell off a ladder at home yesterday and broke his arm โฆ pretty bad break too.โ
โWow, thatโs tough. Is he going to be all right?โ
โWell, they seem to think so, but theyโre saying at least six to eight weeks until he can come back to work.โ
The customer let out a slow whistle. โSo I guess that meanโs youโre too short-handed to service mine today, huh?โ
Neil nodded from behind the counter and Paul continued. โNo problem. Itโs not really giving me any trouble. It was just past time, and I thought this week would work schedule-wise. Iโll give you a call next week and see if youโve managed to get a temporary replacement.โ
Neil shook his head in obvious exasperation. โI appreciate it, Paul. I canโt tell you how sorry I am โฆ for Kurt and Bobby โฆ for all my customers โฆ for Bill out there whoโs all by himself except for me โฆ and not least of all for me personally.โ He finished that statement with a sheepish grin that made him look like a self-conscious teenager instead of a man old enough to have gray hair. Mariah felt a pang of sympathy for him.
โWell, I’ll get on my way and let you take care of your other customer,โ Paul said, looking toward Mariah and nodding briefly. For the first time, the man behind the desk โฆ she assumed he was Neil โฆ looked over to the side where she still stood close to the door. His eyes widened in surprise.
โOh โฆ sorry miss. I didnโt realize you were here.โ He glanced back at Paul. โThanks again, Paul. Iโll get to you as soon as possible; I promise.โ His customer lifted his hand in a brief salute and headed out the door. Neil turned back to Mariah. โCan I help you?โ
Mariah had been entertaining the wildest idea ever since she had heard the conversation between the two men. Rather than ask this man who was obviously the garage manager to help her, why not offer to help him? Her eyes twinkled as she stepped closer to the counter, and he looked at her more intently, a slight question in his eyes. Mariah had butterflies in her stomach, but she just knew in her heart that somehow this was right. She spoke with all the confidence and authority she could, so as to drown out her own doubts.
โWell, actually, I think itโs more a question of whether I can helpย you,โ she said, smiling directly into his eyes. He got an even more harassed look in his eyes, brushed his hand through his already disheveled hair and answered her. โLook, maโm, if youโre selling something, this isnโt the time to talk to me. Iโm not going to try to make any decisions about buying anything at all this week!โ
โOh, but Iโm —โ
He held up his hand as he interrupted her. โAbsolutely nothing at all!โ
โBut Iโm notย sellingย anything. Except โฆ maybe โฆ myself.โ
His eyes grew even wider and his face flushed just a little as he looked her up and down, trying to consider what a basically decent woman was doing standing in his office offering to sell him sexual favors. He hadnโt figured out how to answer her without insulting her when it dawned on Mariah that what she had said could have been seriously misinterpreted. Then it was her turn to flush, but she did so with no half-way measures. She turned red and felt as hot as if sheโd been standing in front of a 500 degree oven.
โOh, I โฆ I didnโt mean โฆ I mean โฆ I donโt mean what you think I mean!โ She put her hands to her cheeks and felt the heat. She closed her eyes in misery at her foolish words.
โAnd โฆ uh โฆ just what is it that you think I think you mean?โ
โWell โฆ itโs obvious โฆ at least from the look on your face โฆ that you think I mean Iโm hear to offer you โฆ uh โฆ well โฆ.โ It just kept getting worse with every word, so she stuttered to a stop.
By this time, Neil was starting to feel relieved to know that evidently heโd been mistaken about her words and breathed a sigh of relief. Now he was able to take a little pity on her and he chuckled. โWould you like to start again?โ
โPlease,โ she said, finally beginning to return to normal color.
โBut, miss, I have an unbelievably busy day, so could you make it kind of quick?โ
โWell, thatโs just it,โ she said, coming all the way up to the counter now and standing just across from him โฆ only the width of the counter separating them. โYou see, I did come to have my car checked out, but when I heard you tell the other man that you were so short-handed, I knew that wasnโt a possibility. But โฆ well, Iโm a mechanic myself, and I can fix my own car if I have the tools and a way to order parts.โ His jaw dropped open, but she hurried on. โBut even more important for you โฆ I can help you with your work here,โ she finished, beaming her happiest smile at him.
Once again Neilโs eyes widened, but somehow he did manage to close his mouth. Was there no end of the surprises to come from this perky girl? At the same time he was considering this question, another part of his mind was taking in the fact that, although he wouldnโt have called her beautiful, she had a certain something that drew a manโs attention. She had the kind of face that made you feel good looking at her, especially her eyes. They were inviting somehow. Good grief, he needed to get his mind back on his work!
His eyes connected with hers again. โYour โฆ uh โฆ a mechanic, you say?โ He didnโt have to say he didnโt believe her. It was too obvious.
โYes,โ she answered eagerly. โWell, not a professional one, you understand.โ Neil didnโt think he was understanding much of anything that had happened since heโd looked up and spotted her, but he didnโt have a chance to say so before she added. โBut Iโve taken a number of auto mechanics courses in college, and I used to help my brother all the time. Iโve done most of the things that your customers would need done.โ
He ran his hand through his hair again. He couldnโt seem to get hold of a sensible response. She still stood there beaming at him. Finally he tried to say something. โLook โฆ miss โฆ I canโt hire just anyone off the street —โ
โOh, I understand,โ she interrupted. โYou may even feel you have to have someone with a degree. But couldnโt you take me on as an apprentice for right now, and at least youโd have two more hands to get your customerโs cars serviced and repaired.โ
Her eyes sparkled at him, holding him entranced for a few seconds. Just enough time to make him waver in his reply again, and Mariah took advantage of his hesitation. โTell you what. I have some time right now, so how about if I go to work on my own car, and you can watch me and see if Iโm not telling you the truth about how good I am.โ
By this time, she was leaning over the counter, close enough for him to see the tiniest sprinkling of freckles across the bridge of her nose, almost completely hidden by her modest make-up. He looked into her warm, sherry-colored eyes and was momentarily lost. โWell โฆ uh โฆ I โฆ I donโt know โฆโ
Her eyes grew more intense, and she pulled back from the counter and stamped her foot. โWell, what have you got toย lose?โ
He didnโt like being put on a spot like this and made to feel stupid. His voice was a little harsh as he replied out of his frustration: โMy business?โ
Mariah opened her mouth to answer him, but then closed it again. She had to admit that some strange girl coming into an auto repair shop asking to use the manโs tools and dig through his parts to fix her own car and then expecting to be hired on the spot did seem pretty unorthodox. And she had to admit to herself that most of the mechanics sheโd known who owned their own shop had struggled like crazy and invested every last thing they had in it to try to make a go of it. Asking one of them to let some stranger go to work there out of the clear blue would put any of them in a tough spot.
Finally, she nodded her head with a resigned look on her face. โOf course,โ she said, her voice considerably subdued now. โI understand. Itโs asking a lot of you to take a chance like that with a business youโve no doubt invested every single resource in. Iโm sorry,โ she added with a sigh. โI guess since you donโt have time to take on any more work, Iโll look for someone else to fix my car too.โ She turned toward the door, and Neilโs heart turned over. He scratched his head again. He was probably going to regret this, but he just couldnโt stand to see her so disappointed. She had seemed so excited at the prospect of working here for a while. He supposed he ought to at least give her a chance. She seemed so sure of herself. But โฆ a woman mechanic was something he didnโt have any experience with at all.
โWait!โ he heard himself saying before he had sorted through all those thoughts. She turned back to look at him, and he continued. โUh โฆ Iโll tell you what. Pull your car into the last bay down there, and Iโll show you where everything is and get you started.โ
โReally?โ Her eyes were brilliant again, and the smile on her face was worth the butterflies in his stomach as he asked himself silently whether his insurance would cover this if something went wrong. He took a deep breath.
โYeah โฆ really.โ He said.
She stepped back to the counter and held her hand out toward him across the top. โYou wonโt be sorry. I promise you,โ she said, as he took her hand in his. It was warm and strong, but just soft enough that it sent a little tingle along his arm. He had to remind himself to let go, but finally he turned to walk around the counter and lead her back into the work bays.
โBy the way, I’m Mariah โฆ Mariah Jacoby.โ
Mariah pulled her car into the last bay, got out and raised the hood. Then she looked around to size up what she had to work with. She spotted a blue coverall hanging on a hook along the side wall and went over to get it. โDo you mind?โ she asked Neil. โ I was dressed to go to an interview,โ she added, looking down at her light colored skirt and short-sleeved knit top.
โSure. Go ahead,โ he answered, and she slipped into the uniform, rolling large cuffs on the sleeves and legs. She thought about her hair, but one look at the only greasy cap hanging there convinced her she was better off taking her chances without it. That done, she began looking around at the array of tools and collecting what she thought sheโd need. She had a pretty good idea what was at the root of the problem, knowing there were only a couple of possibilities likely to cause just that set of symptoms, and she also knew the job could take quite a while.
She told Neil what had been happening with the car as she began to check some things out, and then she began to tell him exactly what she was looking for, figuring that should give him a good idea of whether she knew her stuff or not. Neil nodded and grunted his agreement, silently coming to the conclusion that maybe she really did know something about engines. She worked without talking for the majority of the time, and Neil excused himself after a while, saying he had to get back to his accounting for a few minutes.
As he passed the young man who was still leaning under the hood of the other car, he stopped momentarily. โHowโs it going with this one, Bill?โ
The blond-haired younger man raised up and wiped his hands on a cloth. โI think Iโve got this one licked. Iโm about ready to give it a test drive.โ
โGreat,โ Neil answered about the time Bill glanced over and saw Mariah. He raised a questioning brow at his boss.
Neil cleared his throat and motioned with his head for Bill to follow him into the office. Bill did so with a big grin on his face. Heโd never seen his boss flustered any time in the last three years, but something was up with this woman. He couldnโt resist teasing Neil a little. โYou hire a new mechanic?โ he asked, grinning from ear to ear.
โMaybe,โ Neil answered and looked Bill in the eye. The grin dried up immediately, and Billโs mouth just sort of hung open. โHuh?โ
โWell, itโs like this,โ began Neil, and then proceeded to tell him how all of the last half hour had transpired.
Bill just shook his head and chuckled. โWell โฆโ he said, looking back out through the window in the door, watching Mariah for a moment. โWell, she sureย actsย like she knows what sheโs doing, doesnโt she?โ
Neil sighed. โWeโll see,โ he answered and then looked back at his computer. โIโve got to get this finished and then go out there and watch her at work some more before I know for sure. Go ahead and take yours out for the test, and get back as soon as you can.โ
โSure thing,โ Bill said and hurried back into the work area. When he brought the Continental back, he parked it outside, satisfied that it was fully repaired, and then he drove a gray and white truck into the bay heโd left empty. As he got out, he heard Mariah talking to Neil about how the repair to her own car was coming. Bill couldnโt resist walking over to where the other two were working, Neil mostly handing Mariah tools and making a suggestion here and there.
โSo, howโs it goinโ?โ Bill asked.
โGreat,โ Mariah answered before Neil could decide what to say. โI should have this baby running right in another half hour or so.โ
โSo what was it, anyway?โ Bill asked her, walking around to the other side of the car to be closer to her.
She told him and then began to talk about how the repair was going in a little more detail, Bill agreeing with her on all points that she made. Neil was beginning to feel like a fifth wheel, and he just slipped away and walked over to the truck. He remembered what the owner had told him about the problem with this particular truck, so there was no need to go back into the office to get the work order. He just started to gather his tools and get to work. He knew he should direct Bill to get to another vehicle in the third bay, but, surprisingly, the quiet conversation between Bill and Mariah in the bay beside him was soothing to him as he worked, and for the first time in the last 24 hours, he was actually beginning to relax.
By the time Neil had the truck running smoothly, Mariah was ready to take her car for a test spin. As she pulled it out of the bay, Bill walked over to Neil, who was just putting down the truck hood. โBoy, I think that little lady really does know her business, Boss? You gonna let her stay on and help us?โ
Neil was wiping his hands on a rag. โMaybe,โ he said, looking a little preoccupied.
Bill nodded. โHard decision, huh?โ
Neil grinned a little. โToughest one Iโve made since deciding to go into business.โ Bill nodded his understanding and Neil spoke again. โTake this one out for a test, will ya?โ
โSure thing,โ he said, hopping into the cab and backing the truck out of the building.
Mariah was back in a few minutes, beaming. โItโs right as rain,โ she announced. โDo you want to test it out yourself just to be sure I really did fix it?โ she asked, looking at him so earnestly that his heart turned over again. For some reason this little gal really wanted to work at this garage. He made his final decision in a second.
โNope,โ he said, grinning back. โYouโre hired.โ
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