“We did. He’s keen, but green. We need someone to train him.”
“I’m no help with computers, son.”
“No, the practical stuff. He can read a label and find parts on a shelf, but he doesn’t know what they’re for. We need someone who can tell a customer, ‘Yeah, that will work,’ or ‘No, you need a three-eighths.’ It doesn’t have to be full-time. Any hours you could spare would be a big help.”
Gramps took off his glasses to give them a polish with the cloth he kept beside him. “What are you paying?”
“What do you want?
“Cash.”
“That could be arranged,” Logan said dryly.
“What do you think?” Gramps slipped his glasses back on and looked over them to where Sophie was folding laundry on the kitchen table.
She thought it sounded like a healthy way to get him out of the house. Sometimes it seemed like he didn’t leave his chair all day.
“You know locals will start treating the shop like a drop-in center,” she warned Logan. “The old-timers will come in to jaw-wag with him, but won’t buy anything.”
“More chance for him to be there when he’s needed.” Logan shrugged that off.
“Why don’t you try it and see if you like it?” she suggested to Gramps.
“I’ll have to leave in time to be here for Biyen, when he gets home from school.”
“He can meet you at the shop and catch a lift in your rig. Hell, put him to work,” Logan said. “How old were any of us when you set us to sorting nuts from bolts?”
“You little shits were trouble. You needed something to do.”
“That’s a true fact,” Logan agreed. “Is there any chance you could come in for an hour tomorrow, though? I have to do Reid’s rounds at the lodge while he takes Emma’s family around the island.”
“An hour’s not worth leaving the house for,” Gramps scoffed. “I’ll be there when I get there and leave when I’m ready.”
“Perfect.” They shook on it.
Chapter Five
Logan was not a nostalgic person, especially for his childhood, but there was something quaint and familiar in the morning scramble in the Hughes-Marshall household. Socks had to be located and a sack lunch prepared. There was yelling up and down the stair well and the smell of burnt toast and Art sitting in his chair, watching the morning news with the volume a little too high.
“Did you take your morning pill?” Sophie asked as she brought Art a cup of coffee.
“I did,” he assured her.
Logan noticed she checked the dispenser on the shelf over the coffeemaker anyway.
“Leave the dishes, Logan,” Art urged him. “I’ll do them before I come to the store. You all get going or the boy’ll be late for school.”
Logan turned off the water, suspecting Art was looking forward to peace and quiet.
The house was only a little farther from the marina than the one Logan had grown up in. He walked with Sophie and Biyen down the long driveway to the lane that led past the bottom of his own driveway and across the grounds of the resort—what they all called the village—past the pub and around to the boatyard and the side entrance to the marina building.
Logan imagined the walk felt longer in the rain, but this morning the sky was bright with the promise of a fine summer day. The air smelled like salt and school almost out and long days in the marina about to start. That, too, had an odd sort of appeal.
Biyen chattered the whole way, telling him dinosaur facts and a story about his friend’s little sister who put a crayon up her nose.
“Color me surprised,” Logan said.
It went over Biyen’s head, but Sophie sent him a look of mild admonishment for the pun.