He couldn’t believe that he’d let Avery “make it clear” to Margot they weren’t dating. Wasn’t he supposed to be pretending that he and Avery were dating, in order to get his mom off his back? What had he been thinking?
He’d been thinking that he wanted Margot to know he wasn’t dating anyone, no matter how pointless it was.
Luke pulled into the parking lot at the winery and saw Pete’s truck there. Right. Today was the day that Pete was coming by to meet with Margot and Elliot.
Pete got out of the truck just as Luke walked by.
“Morning, Luke.” He handed him a paper bag. “Your mom gave me this to give to you if I saw you here, and by that she meant I’d better find a way to see you here and give you that, so I’m glad you made it easy.”
Luke laughed at that. He peeked into the bag to see two sticky buns, and his smile got wider.
“Thank her for me, please,” he said. “If I had known that moving back to Napa meant getting surprise pastry deliveries, I might have moved back years ago.” He and Pete walked toward the front door of the winery. “And thanks for making the time to come by here.”
Pete shrugged.
“It’s no problem. Glad to be able to give you some brownie points, not that you need them, I’m sure.” That was debatable.
Luke opened the door for both of them. Taylor was already inside the tasting room.
“Hey,” he said to her. “This is Pete Smythe—he has an appointment with Margot and Elliot this morning.”
“I’ll buzz Margot,” Taylor said, but before she could pick up the phone, Margot and Elliot both walked into the tasting room through the front door, laughing about something. Margot had on jeans, boots, and a big sweater, and Luke smiled at the sight of her. She was usually more dressed up than this. He liked those dresses she always wore, but he liked casual Margot, too. But then he’d really liked her in nothing at all.
Fuck. He had to stop thinking about that.
“Hi, Margot and Elliot—this is Pete Smythe, the landscaper I was telling you guys about. I used to work for him, a long time ago, but don’t hold that against him.”
Margot and Elliot—and Pete—all laughed, and there was a whole round of handshakes.
“Thanks for coming by, Pete,” Elliot said. “Why don’t we walk you around the property, and you can let us know if you’ll be able to execute my sister’s vision.”
Margot glanced quickly at her brother. She looked irritated, for just a second, before she turned to smile at Pete again.
“Elliot, if you’re busy, I can handle this,” she said.
Elliot shook his head.
“Oh no, wouldn’t miss it.”
There was weird tension there. Luke took a step away, but Elliot stopped him.
“Luke, care to join us? That is, if you can spare him in the tasting room, Margot and Taylor? It could be useful to have him as a translator here, since he’s done this kind of work before.”
Luke looked at Margot. She opened her mouth, he was sure to object, to tell him to stay back in the tasting room with Taylor, but then Taylor piped up behind him.
“It’s no problem—I don’t need him for the next thirty minutes or so.”
Margot smiled at Taylor, and then at him.
“Then let’s all go,” she said.
No matter what Avery had said to Margot this morning, Avery was definitely wrong about how Margot felt about him. She didn’t seem to care one way or another if he was around.
Margot led the way with Pete, while Luke walked along next to Elliot.
“So, you used to work for Pete?” Elliot asked. “You’ve stayed in touch?”
Luke laughed.
“I worked for him in high school, yeah. But also, right when I graduated from high school, he started dating my mom, and they’ve been together ever since.” He glanced over at Elliot. “So yeah, you could say we’ve stayed in touch.”
Elliot let out a short bark of a laugh.
“That’s definitely one reason for staying in touch. And that explains how you were able to get him to return a phone call so quickly.”
“Well, also because he likes you guys,” Luke said. “He told me you treat your workers well. He wouldn’t have come today if he didn’t know that about you, no matter how long he’d been with my mom.”
Elliot looked embarrassed.
“Well. We don’t do anything out of the ordinary. At least, anything that should be out of the ordinary. But I appreciate you saying that.” He cleared his throat. “And I hope everything for you so far at Noble has been good?”