Dad hadn’t had a clue how to help her.
“Those girls in the band were probably supported by their parents.” Noah threw his sandwich wrapper into the recycle bin. “Imagine where you’d be today if your dad had supported your interest in flowers instead of pushing you into geology.”
“He only wanted what was best for me.”
“I know, but only you could decide that. Not him.”
They’d been through this argument before, so Audrey said no more. Nothing either of them said would change the fact that she’d worked in an industry she shouldn’t have for too long.
She was where she needed to be now, though, and just in the nick of time to take care of Dad.
Noah seemed to understand and changed the subject. “How did the standoff go at the greenhouse this morning?”
“Fine,” she answered. “Gray didn’t even know his father had sold the land to me.”
“Figures. Dude just wants to make money so badly.” He pointed his wooden spoon at her. “You watch out for that guy. He’s a corporate snake in the grass. I don’t doubt he can get down and dirty when he needs to.”
“Relax, Noah. The sale was legal.”
“I don’t trust him.”
“Don’t worry. I’ll be fine.”
Audrey smiled, but Noah didn’t return it, and that chilled her.
“Listen, Noah, I dealt with plenty of Gray’s corporate doppelgängers in my previous job. I can be as tough as I need to be.”
“Yeah, but—”
“No ‘buts’ about it. Seriously. I can take care of myself.”
“I know you can.” Noah’s sentiment sounded hollow. He should be the last person on earth to condescend to her, but she knew their history made it hard for him to think of her as independent.
In high school, when she’d been only fourteen, and too smart and a year ahead of her peers, and already trying to express her individuality with weird clothes, he’d caught a bunch of kids bullying her. Older Noah had given them hell. Even as a young teenager, Noah’s personality had already been set in stone, as though he’d come out of his mother’s womb fully formed. No one Audrey knew had better ethics or morals or stronger convictions, and he wasn’t afraid to act on them.
When he’d rescued her from the kids making fun of her spiky hair, her big boots and her baggy clothes, when he’d taken her under his brotherly wing, she’d been grateful, but it had been an uphill battle ever since to get him to see her as a grown-up. Maybe that was why they’d stayed friends and nothing more.
Too bad Noah’s version of support didn’t match what she needed these days. She buried her disappointment and ate her lunch.
When she left, though, Noah called to her, “Audrey.”
She turned from the doorway.
“You know I want only what’s best for you, right?” He smiled, his lips full in the middle of his red beard, but creases furrowed his forehead.
Oh, Noah. He didn’t even begin to get the similarities between her father and him. Hadn’t they already established that Dad had always wanted what he thought was best for her, too?
“I understand,” she said to ease his worried frown and left the shop.
* * *
GRAY TOSSED HIS pen on to the desk and took a deep, calming breath. Either that, or he would throttle the closest person. Considering that it was Dad’s blameless accountant, that wouldn’t be fair.
“I tried to talk Harrison out of this innumerable times,” Arnie said. “He wouldn’t budge. He wanted to give his people all of these benefits.”
“The company can’t afford them, though. I understand Dad’s urge, his largesse, given how long most of his employees have worked for him, but did he have to give them everything? Massages, for God’s sake. Orthodontics. Orthotics. Couldn’t he have chosen a cheaper benefit package? Just eye glasses and dental? Did he have to opt for the whole kit and caboodle?”
“I used those arguments myself, but he was...” Arnie’s glance slid away.
“Go ahead. Say it. Dad was stubborn.”
“Yeah, he was. About this, at any rate.”
“We have to cancel the contract with the insurance company.”
If the situation hadn’t been dire, Arnie’s look of horror would have been funny.
“What?” Gray asked. “We have to.”
“It’s one thing to fight with a union or a group of employees about implementing this kind of thing, but once it’s done, it just shouldn’t be taken away.”
Gray took another of his calming breaths. “It’s either that or layoffs, right?”
Arnie’s mouth became a thin slash in his aging face. “Yes.”
“Layoffs are the last resort, so we get rid of the benefits.” Gray glanced at his watch. Six o’clock. His head ached. He and Arnie had been hammering away at the budget, making cuts wherever they could, but the benefits package Dad had bought his employees a few years ago was the biggie.
“Come on,” he said. “Hilary should have everyone gathered by now.”
He stood and slid the walls of his office open. Many of the employees were already there. Turner Lumber employed over fifty people.
Some looked relaxed and others tense. Some expected him to be his dad. Others knew he wasn’t.
“The cashiers are just cashing out their tills downstairs, and then they’ll be up.” Hilary led him to a table she’d set up along the far wall, then took a militant stance. “I put on a pot of coffee and ordered in goodies from the bakery to tide everyone over until dinnertime.”
The defiance in her voice bugged him. Honest to God, she didn’t get that he wasn’t mean or stingy or hard-hearted, but a realist. Certain things had to change to save the company, but they could still afford doughnuts.
He was tired of tension in the company and with Hilary. He’d had to call her to task more than once for her spending of company money without his permission.
Worse, she’d actually called Dad a couple of times to make sure that what Gray was doing was okay with him. The woman needed to screw her head on right. She was either for or against him.
In the meantime, she ran the everyday details that Gray didn’t want to touch with a ten-foot pole. He needed more responsibility in his life like he needed a lobotomy.
What would the company do without Hilary?
“Thanks,” he said, to appease her. “It was good of you to think of it.”
Hilary smiled, but reluctantly.