Everly pinches my arm through my suit and turns a bright, genuine smile to the orange blob beside me. “So…Cassandra, what do you like to do for fun?”
“Call me Cozy.” Cassandra winks at Everly. “I was a really chubby baby, so everyone called me Cozy Cassie…pause for shock and awe.” She gestures to her body, which is apparently supposed to confirm her coziness? “Anyway, I decided to rock the Cozy instead of Cassie as I got older. It’s more fun, don’t you think?”
“Definitely,” Everly says with a giggle.
I huff out a forced laugh that Cassandra does not give notice to. She leans past me toward Everly, pressing me back in my seat before she brushes my chest. “You know what I like to do for fun?” She pauses and waggles her dark eyebrows playfully. “Nothing.”
Everly jerks back with a puzzled look on her face. “Nothing?”
Cassandra nods and smiles, flashing her round emerald eyes at my daughter. “A whole lot of nothing. My life philosophy is why do more when you can do less.”
I roll my eyes and sigh. I’m not surprised. Her résumé had next to nothing on it. This must be some cruel joke Rebecca is playing on me for being a pain in her ass client.
“Isn’t doing nothing kind of boring?” Everly asks, her brows pinched together with rapt fascination.
“Only if you have a boring mind,” Cassandra quips as she props her chin on her hand and narrows her gaze at my daughter. “Do you have a boring mind, Everly?”
Everly scrunches up her nose as if she’s trying to think seriously about this ridiculous question. “I don’t think so.”
“I don’t think you do either…I can usually spot a boring mind.” Cassandra’s eyes slide to mine, and her intent is as subtle as her entrance into my boardroom.
I clear my throat, knowing I need to take over this interview that’s venturing on completely ridiculous with a candidate who listed Subway as her last place of gainful employment four years ago. “I’m afraid our life philosophies don’t quite match up, Cassandra. My ex and I like Everly to stay busy and feed her mind. She’s on the swim team and does gymnastics. She has piano lessons and her chess club. We have her booked up for several camps this summer. Oh, and her book club—”
“I’m in a book club…What are you guys reading right now?” Cassandra interrupts.
“It’s called Mostly The Honest Truth…it’s kind of sad.” Everly looks disappointed.
I frown and open my mouth to respond to that but am cut off once again. “I love a good tearjerker!” Cassandra gushes, adding excitedly, “Especially the kind that makes your nose run. It’s like your body’s way of cleansing your soul.”
“Cleansing your soul?” I mock.
“I never thought about it like that!” Everly peals with a thoughtful smile, erasing the sadness in her voice she had a moment ago.
Cassandra returns Everly’s smile and shoots a small wink at me before refocusing on Everly. “It’s fun to think about things, isn’t it? That’s what doing nothing gives you the opportunity to do. Let your imagination run wild and daydream.”
“So that’s really your proposal with my daughter this summer? To do nothing?” I ask dryly, hoping she has a backup response that she’s going to pull out of her back pocket at any moment.
Cassandra nods proudly. “We’ll also do a lot of sitting. I’m an expert at sitting,” she deadpans.
“Okay…I think we’ve heard enough, Cassandra.” I move to stand, but she reaches out and touches my arm, halting me in my tracks.
“Cozy,” she corrects with a wink.
The teasing look in her eyes causes my skin to tighten. I do my best to shake it off as she refocuses on Everly to share with her the last book that made her cry. Her hand slides off my arm, and my eyes lock on the way her index finger trails off the fabric of my suit.
I’m left struggling to shake this silvery feeling her delicate touch has left on my arm, so I take a moment to inspect Cassandra a bit closer now that her focus is off me. Her facial features are round, a faint dimple appearing in her cheek as she talks animatedly to my daughter. Her alabaster skin is a stunning contrast to her nearly black hair cropped bluntly just above her shoulders. She has shockingly plump lips slathered in a pale pink gloss that thankfully doesn’t match the orange jumpsuit that looks like something a teenager would wear. Her ample curves indicate she’s very much not a child.