The Hottie Hero Goes Viral
With the puppies clean and a cutie pie corgi adopted, the morning had proved productive. Thankfully, the rain had stopped. Both the Doc and Lucky were at the Animal hospital waiting on x-rays. When Carol carried Lucky out, Mimi could have sworn the dog was smiling at her. The pain meds had kicked in. Well, Lucky'd allowed her a brief pet on the way out, anyway.
Jen and Carl had things under control. With no need to reschedule the Boy Scouts dog walk now that the rain had stopped, she had time to sneak lunch with Tiny. Armed with a turkey sandwich and a bag of chips, Mimi headed to the kennels with excellent depressed dog treats in her pocket. Seeing Tiny at the gate, nose pressed between the bars with her ears perked, stopped Mimi in her tracks. As she got close, Tiny eased back a few steps.
"Do you hear the babies?" Mimi expected her to leap back when she opened the enclosure. Instead, faster than Mimi had ever seen her move, the chihuahua raced past her and headed toward the desk drawn by the sound of the puppies. Amused, Mimi followed. "Tiny, are you about to tell them what for?" She called to Jen, who was behind the desk with the pups and Nanny Fluff. "Open the gate for Tiny. Let's see what happens."
As if she owned the place, Tiny slipped through the gap. Jen said, "Well I'll be damned."
Pausing at the sight of Nanny Fluff with all the puppies, Tiny's tail gave an uncertain wag. Nanny Fluff responded in a friendly fashion, her feathery tail brushing across a puppy. Ignoring Jen, with her head held high, Tiny walked to a puppy and sniffed at him. Nanny Fluff made no complaints as the chihuahua greeted each puppy with a touch of her nose or a fond lick. As quietly as she could, Mimi stepped behind the desk, closed the gate, and dug into her paper bag for her sandwich. Nanny Fluff's ears perked, and she left the nest of puppies to investigate Mimi's lunch. Being a nanny was hard work. Mimi gave the good girl a bit of turkey. Shifting the puppies gently, Tiny placed herself in the center of the pile, smaller than all but the runt. Nosey brown foot nibbled her tail, and she responded with the benevolence of a queen.
Jen said, "Hmm, I didn't know she had a history that involved puppies. There wasn't any mention of it in her paperwork." Once Mimi settled into her office chair, Jen offered her half of a PBJ, and Mimi offered back half of her turkey sandwich. They shared lunches like school kids almost every day. Slipping the attentive Nanny Fluff a piece of turkey, Jen said, "Looks like we have two nannies now."
"These babies are being raised by a village."
Taking a big bite of the turkey sandwich, Jen nodded approval. "This is good."
"I made the mustard."
"Delish. Did I hear our hotty hero ask you out for coffee this morning? Or did I just hallucinate you saying no?"
"You know I don't date."
"I think five years of grieving your divorce should be enough. It's time to get back out there."
Mimi grimaced. "Once was enough for me. If I learned nothing else, I learned I am not made for relationships. All that movie hoopla is bunny poop."
"Is that why you don't talk about Wade?"
"What is there to talk about? He and I were friends who grew up together. We courted and married because our parents thought we would be happy together, but we weren't. I don't miss the marriage part at all, but sometimes I miss being his friend."
"Do you ever see him?"
"No, he moved to Nashville a few years ago. We haven't spoken since then. I avoid his folks when I see them at the Mega Mart."
Tiny didn't move at all as Nanny Fluff stepped back into place amongst the puppies. The sweet golden seemed to just include Tiny as a co-parent. With an enormous sigh, Tiny rested her chin on a puppy's back. "I wish we would have had a kid. That is my only regret. I wanted to be a mother.
"You are twenty-five. You could still have a kid."
"Nah. I'm not lucky like that. Wade and I tried for two years every month. Part of why we got divorced was because he wanted kids and I couldn't get pregnant."
Jen reached over, lifted Mimi's barbecue chip bag, ate one, and then turned the opening toward Mimi, who took a chip.
"I like my life, Jenny Penny. Marriage just isn't a fit for me."
"Well, free coffee and cake aren't exactly a marriage proposal."
"Who said it would be free? It's always seemed to me that guys get the better part of the relationship bargain."
Jen teased. "You could date a girl."
"And disappoint another gender? No thanks. No relationships for me, not on a boat, not with a goat. I do not like them, Jenny Jam. I do not like big guys like him."
Jen reached over and picked up the current romance novel Mimi had hidden under the desk shelf. "Big guys like this?"
"No comment." Mimi snatched the paperback out of her friend's hand and returned it to its spot under the ledge of the counter, causing Jen to laugh.
Tapping the computer monitor, Jen said, "I posted his picture and tagged his company on our social accounts." She fished Adam's card out from under the keyboard. "Want it back?" She waved it teasingly. "It has the number for the big guy you dislike on it."
Mimi took the business card out of her fingers. "I have to keep it. He will want an update on Lucky and the puppies. And it's not that I didn't like him. He seemed like a nice person." Tucking the card into her pocket, she added, "I just don't date."