Trouble (Dogwood Lane #3)(48)



“I love it,” I reply. “I had a similar vision, so this really works. I sat down with Harper last night and jotted some things down. We’re on the same page, I think.”

“What are you thinking?” she asks.

“Well, in general terms, I’m thinking about finding out what this town means to the locals and really bringing that to life. Making it grand—an in-your-face snapshot of the town through the years.”

Meredith claps her hands and almost squeals. “Yes. That’s brilliant. Run with it. Have fun with it. Tell me if you need my help or advice, but I want you to just have at it, Avery.”

My insides squish as her trust in my abilities is heaped on me. I think I might burst. “Wow. Thank you. I’m excited.”

“If you want to get the supplies you need and just bill me for it, that’s fine,” she says. “Or you can make a list, and I’ll be sure to get them.”

Jake cuts in. “Let’s rephrase that with a bit of practicality. She’ll get the list to me, and I’ll get it here as soon as possible.”

“That’s what I said,” Meredith says.

“No, it’s not,” Jake, Trevor, and I all say at the same time. It gets a round of laughs from all four of us.

As discreetly as possible, I glance toward Penn. He’s using a pencil like the one he gave me last night to make marks on a board. It makes me happy, and I’m not sure why. It’s a pencil, for heaven’s sake.

He’s so focused on what he’s doing that he doesn’t see me checking him out. I take the opportunity to study him. He’s so careful as he marks the wood, so controlled as he stops and points at something on the plans. Matt listens to what he says and nods.

“Jake,” Meredith says, drawing my attention away from Penn, “I need you to get the window company down here soon. I have big ideas for the shutters.”

“I know it’s a foreign thought,” Jake says, “but everything can’t be on Meredith Time.”

“That doesn’t work for me,” she says.

“Of course not.” Jake gives me a grin and a little wave. “Trevor and I have to be going. I’ll see you at the house later, Meredith. It was nice meeting you, Avery.”

“You too,” I call after them.

“And head by the flower shop and say hi to Haley. She’d love that,” Trevor says over his shoulder.

Once they’re gone and Penn and Matt are back to cutting lumber, Meredith and I walk toward the wall that will hold the mural.

“I’m glad you got to meet them,” Meredith says. “They’re so smart, both of them. Trevor lives here now with Haley. Jake isn’t around as much, but you’ll see him from time to time, and you can always reach out if you need anything.” She stops walking and faces me. “I know Jake was a little flirty. I haven’t mentioned that you and Penn are an item.”

“What?” I blurt out as another boom rips through the room.

We look over to Penn, whose eyebrows are shooting skyward, and to Matt, who can’t contain a chuckle.

“Penn and I aren’t a thing,” I say, keeping a side-eye on him. “I have no idea why you thought that.”

“Really?” She looks at me and then to him. “That’s surprising. There’s a lot of chemistry between the two of you.”

Penn’s features smooth out as he goes back to measuring his board. “I can’t help it. Women are always drawn to me.”

“Given your attention-seeking ways, they don’t have much of a choice, do they?” I poke.

He ignores me.

“Well, now that that’s all out and awkward,” Meredith says, “I need to go. I have brunch with the head of permitting for the city to try to get an animal license for this address. I had no idea this would be such an issue.”

Matt clears his throat as he approaches us. “I was actually thinking about that. Maybe if you can block off those meeting rooms in the back and almost make them their own structure, it would help. There would be a clear separation between animal and child, at least unless you intentionally mix them.”

Her eyes light up. “That is a great idea. From a construction standpoint, do you know how to do that? Is it hard?”

“Nah. It’s just framing,” he says. “Nothing more than we’re doing out here.”

“Perfect. Actually,” she says, biting her bottom lip, “could you go with me, Matt?”

“Where?”

“To City Hall. I might need you to talk construction.” Meredith makes a face. “I’d feel better if someone knowledgeable was at my side, fighting along with me.”

“I bet Matt would love to spend the morning with you,” Penn teases. “This physical stuff is hard since he’s so freshly recuperated.”

I’ve known Matt for only a few days, but I think if he could kick Penn in the face, he would.

“Great. Let’s get over there now so we can chat a little in the car,” Meredith says. “I like to walk into a meeting knowing exactly what we’re going to say.”

“Sure thing,” Matt says, giving Penn a look like he’s going to kill him later. He drops his belt on a piece of wood and follows Meredith out the door.

The room settles, the sounds of their voices drifting away, and it’s just Penn and me. We watch each other, neither of us wanting to be the first one to break the silence. Finally, Penn shrugs and goes back to work.

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