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From
the shadows at the back of the barroom, Nick Garrett
watched the slender, elegant woman cross the worn
carpeting to the bar. He’d seen plenty of women like
her. One too many. But he’d never seen one here in the
Blue Bucket Saloon. He knew money when he saw it. That
cream silk blouse and tan skirt had never graced the
pages of a Sears catalog, and he’d bet his best pair of
boots that those were diamonds flashing at her ears.
He recognized the type, all right. He’d had more than
his fill of that kind of trouble. Not that he actually
had anything against money. After all, without it, he
would never have hung on to the Blue Bucket, every last
weather-beaten, broken down timber of it. No. It was the
people who had too much of it that he despised. The
people who used it and abused it and sold their souls
for it. He forced his mind off his memories and
concentrated on the woman instead.
She was attractive, if you went for that fine-boned,
delicate look. Personally he preferred them a little
more robust, and hungry. Wry amusement flicked across
his rugged features, softening the hard planes of his
face, as he imagined her cool elegance lying warm and
eager in his bed.
No way, José. Stick to your own kind -- you knew where
you were with them. One night of hot passion and on your
way. No commitments, no regrets, and no one gets hurt.
And, if a part of him deep inside suggested that he
could be missing out on something important, he ignored
it. To listen to it could mean exposing himself to
risks, and Nick Garrett no longer took any risks.
His hard, navy-blue eyes narrowed as he saw her say
something to Dan, her voice inaudible against the
throbbing beat from the radio. Dan, his barman and
longtime friend, sent him a glance.
She was arguing. She had her back to Nick now, but he
saw the toss of her head, the impatient gesture of her
hand. Again Dan caught his eyes, his brows raised in
question.
Nick hesitated, then eased his long, muscular body away
from the wall and prowled across the floor.
Lee stared at the pudgy-faced, balding barman in
frustration. The last thing she wanted to do was sit in
this stuffy, smoke-filled room, breathing in fumes of
stale beer and body odor. She could feel the calculating
stares directed at her back, and sensed the knowing
nudges of the coarse-looking men crowding the bar.
More than anything, she wanted to turn around and walk
out of this sordid little shack and breathe the hot
summer air outside until she purged her lungs. But she
couldn’t do that. Simon needed her, and she wouldn’t let
him down. She struggled to regain the courage that had
allowed her to walk into the bar in the first place.
“All right!” she said, raising her voice against the
thump of country music. “If he’s not here and you don’t
know where he is or when he’s expected, then I’ll sit
her and wait for him. Or are you going to object to
that, too?” She glanced up irritably at the speakers
hanging on the yellowed walls. Her head throbbed with
every foot-stomping beat. She snapped her eyes back as
the barman spoke again.
“Suit yourself, lady. There’s no law says you can’t sit
there all night if that’s what you want. Till two a.m.,
that is. Then we close.” And you’re out, his expression
implied.
Lee’s chin lifted defiantly. “Then I’ll come back
tomorrow. And the next day. Sooner or later your Mr.
Nick Garrett will have to show himself.”
“And then what?”
The deep drawl had come from behind her and Lee swung
around, her pulse quickening as she met the probing eyes
of the man who towered over her. He wasn’t quite what
she’d expected, though she wasn’t sure what she had
expected. Someone older and, she realized with a quiver
of awareness, someone not quite so attractive.
This man had to be somewhere in his mid-thirties and was
wide-shouldered and lean-hipped, with a face that would
definitely turn heads. His shirt and his close-fitting
jeans were clean, and she could forgive the shadowed
jaw.
“You’re Nick Garrett?” She almost wished he weren’t.
“I am.”
“You’re a difficult man to find.” He made no comment,
and Lee fidgeted with the strap of her purse. “I’m
Leanne Coulton,” she announced, and, when that elicited
no response, added, “My brother is Simon King.”
She’d surprised him, she saw. The expression was
fleeting but unmistakable. “I’d like to talk to you,”
she said, “someplace where I don’t have to shout to be
heard.”
At first she thought he was going to refuse, then he
twisted on his heel, beckoning her to follow. He led her
into a small office and shut the door, muffling the
noise from the bar.
A scarred desk littered with papers stood before a
narrow window. Lee saw Nick’s brief gesture and sat down
on the aging chair, resisting the impulse to brush off
the dust. The faded curtains diluted the sunlight,
shading the room, and she felt a sharp longing to be
back in the plush security of the Royal King. Damn
Simon. What had he gotten her into?
She watched Nick move away, and she took the opportunity
to run her eyes over his body. He was in peak condition,
judging by the lack of surplus flesh. His long legs
confined by the faded jeans displayed muscles that were
well developed. Aware that she’d been staring, Lee
looked up hastily as his legs disappeared behind the
desk.
Nick ran a hand through his thick hair and looked at the
woman seated opposite him. It was hard to believe this
elegant creature was Simon’s sister. Brown eyes, olive
skin -- a direct contrast to Simon’s blond, blue-eyed
looks, though it had been hard to tell what Simon looked
like beneath that beard of his.
Coulton, her name was. That meant she had to be married.
What the hell was her husband doing letting her wander
into places like this on her own?
He allowed his gaze to slide over her well-shaped body.
She was taller than most women he knew, and pleasantly
curved in all the right places.
When he met her eyes again, he knew she wasn’t entirely
unaffected by him, and unexpectedly, desire curled its
fingers low in his belly.
“Does your husband know where you are?” he asked
abruptly. The words were out of his mouth before he’d
realized he intended to say them.
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