Small-Town Redemption

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Small-Town Redemption Page 3

by Andrews, Beth


  She wanted to touch it, to feel its burn. A good girl taking a walk on the wild side. Rebelling against the endless repetition of her tidy life and daily routine, the expectations of others and her own boredom.

  “You’re here,” he said, “because you thought getting laid would make you feel better.”

  Her shoulders snapped back. But then, that seemed to be her natural stance—rigid. Uptight. Condescending. “You don’t know anything about me.”

  He knew the last time she was at his bar, she and Sadie had fought about James Montesano, a local carpenter. That their argument had disrupted Kane’s night and upset Sadie enough that she’d ducked out of work three hours before the end of her shift.

  “I know you want to piss off your sister. Find some other way than throwing yourself at a guy.”

  Charlotte’s hands balled into fists. “This has nothing to do with Sadie.”

  “Bullshit. You think sleeping with me will prove you’re over him? That you don’t care he chose Sadie over you? All you’re doing is embarrassing yourself.”

  Her eyes welled. Her lower lip trembled.

  Panic squeezed his spine. Had his palms sweating. He had no use for tears or the women who used them to get what they wanted. Women like his mother.

  “Swallow those back,” he growled. “Or I swear to God I’ll toss your skinny ass out the window.”

  “I wouldn’t cry over you,” she said with a deep sniff. “I wouldn’t waste one single tear. You’re not worth it.”

  She had that right. “Good to hear.”

  “You...you’re...”

  “Could you spit out whatever you’re choking on so I can get back to my bed?”

  “You’re an ass. A bastard. A—”

  Someone knocked on the door.

  Red, her mouth open, her eyes wide, leaped behind the chair, half crouching behind it. “Who’s that?” she whispered.

  “Sorry but my X-ray vision is on the fritz.” He stepped toward the door.

  “No,” she gasped, grabbing his hand. “For God’s sake, don’t answer it.”

  More knocking, rapid in succession and annoying as hell.

  “If I don’t,” he ground out, pulling free, “I can’t get rid of them.”

  For the second time that morning, he opened the door.

  And for the second time that morning, found an unwelcome visitor.

  “I’m sorry,” Sadie Nixon blurted, her blond hair a wild mass around her face, dark circles under her eyes. “Did I wake you?”

  “I run a bar that doesn’t shut down until 2:00 a.m. What do you think?”

  “I’m sorry,” she repeated, sounding as if she was about to burst into tears any second. Christ, but this was not his morning. “I didn’t know where else to go.”

  He raised his eyebrows at the suitcase she held. “I hear the Holiday Inn off the highway has affordable rates.”

  He started to shut the door, but she blocked it with her foot. “Please,” Sadie said, much nicer than Red ever spoke to him. “Just for a night or two.”

  Have her bunk with him for a few nights? No way. He didn’t get involved in personal problems, didn’t get personally involved with the people he worked with.

  Or, in this case, the people who worked for him.

  “You don’t want to come in here,” he said.

  “I do. I really do.”

  Maybe the only way to get rid of her—of both of them—was to let Sadie in.

  Scratching his stomach, he stepped aside. “Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

  “Thanks,” she said, brushing past him. “I promise not to—”

  “You have got to be kidding.”

  Sadie slowly turned, her eyes about popping out of her head when she saw her sister. “What are you doing here? Where did you get those clothes? I didn’t realize Nordstrom had a tart department.” She whirled on Kane. “And you. You should be ashamed of yourself. She’s just a child!”

  “I probably should be,” he agreed. Would be if he’d gone through with some of the more lewd thoughts he’d had concerning Red. “But I’m not.”

  He had more than his fair share of sins, but this wasn’t one of them.

  Red stalked over to her sister, towering over the curvy blonde. “How dare you? I’m a grown woman, damn it.”

  Sadie sniffed. “Then I suggest you act like one.”

  “I don’t need to stand here and listen to this.” With a toss of her hair, Red snatched up her purse. “You’re in my way,” she told Sadie, who blocked her exit.

  “You’re not going anywhere until you tell me what, exactly, you’re doing here.”

  “I’m not telling you anything. Now move. Or I swear, I will move you.”

  Sadie narrowed her eyes. “I’d like to see you try.”

  “And I’d like to see the backs of both of you as you leave me in peace so I can get some more sleep,” Kane said.

  “Blame her—” Red jabbed a finger at Sadie.

  He yawned. Rolled his shoulders back, then took them each by the upper arm and tugged them out into the hallway. He stepped inside his apartment and faced them. “Let’s not cast blame.”

  He shut and locked the door, the soft click echoing in the stunned silence.

  Stunned, blessed silence.

  He walked to his room. He might not have been as gentle as he could have been with Red, but he’d done the right thing. Which wasn’t something that came often or, to be honest, easily. Mostly because he couldn’t care less about what other people thought was right. But, yeah, for once he’d made the morally acceptable choice.

  Give him a freaking medal.

  He kicked off his jeans and padded naked to the bed. Lying down, he linked his hands behind his head and stared at the ceiling. He blew out a heavy breath. Shut his eyes, but could still feel the warmth of Red’s fingers on his skin. Could still smell her. She’d invaded his apartment and now her ghost was sticking around.

  Women. They never knew when to leave a man alone.

  He rolled off the bed, yanked the window open, then flopped onto his stomach. All the cool breeze did was blow around her phantom scent so he pulled the pillow over his head. He tossed and turned for what seemed like hours, the memory of Charlotte standing before him in nothing but jeans and a bra imprinting itself in his mind. When he finally, gratefully, fell asleep, he dreamed of her. Of her long legs, bright hair and wary eyes.

  And when he woke, hard and aching for her, he could have sworn he still tasted the whisper of her kiss on his lips.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Seven months later

  BEHIND THE BAR, Kane wiped his hands on the towel he kept in his back pocket. Julie Moffat, law student by day and kick-ass waitress by night, wove her way through the crowd at O’Riley’s, a tray of cosmos in her raised hand. She delivered the drinks to a table of coeds celebrating a twenty-first birthday, said something to the girls then nodded toward the corner where two dudes raised their beers in a toast. By the time the girls smiled their thanks to the guys, Julie was back at the bar.

  “I need four margaritas,” she told Sadie, “two regular, one of those no salt. One strawberry, the other pomegranate, both blended. And four shots of Cuervo.”

  Sadie, already pouring tequila into the blender, raised her eyebrows. “Sympathizing, celebrating or just loosening inhibitions?”

  “They’re celebrating,” Julie said with a nod toward the four middle-aged women at a booth by the dartboard. “The blonde in the mom jeans got some big promotion, finally getting out from under the ass-hat supervisor she’s had to deal with for the past five years.”

  “Good triumphs over evil.” Sadie raised the bottle in a toast before setting it on the counter. “I love when that happens.”

  Kane handed a custom
er two bottles of Corona, a lime quarter wedged in each one. “Give the ladies that round on the house,” he told Julie.

  “Will do.” And with that, she and her asymmetrical dark hair and neck tattoo were off again.

  Sadie poured herself a glass of ginger ale. “While I have your attention—”

  “You don’t have my attention.” He pointedly took in her cheetah-print dress, the snug material hugging her curves. “But PETA called. They’d like to talk to you about that outfit.”

  “Oh, ha-ha. Such wit. Ease your mind, my little animal advocate. No cheetahs were injured during the making of this dress.”

  “Maybe not, but you’ve blinded half the people in here with those tights.”

  She glanced down at the neon pink covering her legs. Grinned. “Just trying to bring a little bit of brightness to this dreary place. Unfortunately, I won’t be able to do so next weekend as I need it off. That’s the whole weekend—two days. Two. Don’t try to schedule me for Saturday night and then claim you thought I meant only Friday.”

  “You don’t seem to get how this works,” he said. “I’m the boss. I write the paychecks. I make the rules.”

  And holy shit, but he had sounded just like his father.

  “Yes, yes,” Sadie agreed pushing her fluffy blond hair from her shoulder. “You’re the big boss man. You have all the power in this relationship while I am just an employee, et cetera and so forth.”

  “Glad you finally see things my way.”

  “And as your employee, I’m giving you advance notice that I will be unable to work next weekend.”

  “No.”

  “You don’t seem to get how this works,” she said, throwing his words back at him with a sunny grin that made his left eye twitch. “I’m not asking for permission. I’m telling you I’m not working next weekend. James and I are going out of town.”

  Sadie and James had become an official couple not long after Kane kicked Sadie and Charlotte out of his apartment last fall. They lived together. Why did they have to go out of town?

  “You have to work.” He kept his tone calm. No sense losing his temper or his control. Though dealing with Sadie Nixon would be enough to make the most patient man lose his cool. “I already gave Mary Susan the weekend off so she could drive down to see her granddaughter in some school play.”

  Sadie patted his arm, all faux conciliatory, as if the headache he’d developed wasn’t entirely her fault. “You’ll figure something out.”

  “Do I have any other choice?”

  Frowning, she pursed her mouth as if she seriously considered his question. “You could always close the bar. Hey, you could take a little vacation yourself. You haven’t had a day off since I started working here.”

  He finished his water, tossed the empty bottle into the recycling bin. “You take enough days off for both of us.”

  “So fire me.”

  It was one of her favorite rejoinders, one she used mostly because she knew damn well he had no intention of doing it. He hated having anyone read him so clearly. If people knew you too well, they had the power to use that knowledge against you.

  “Don’t think I’m not considering it.”

  She laughed loudly, the sound somehow rising above the bar’s din. Several people—mostly men because, hey, pretty blonde in a tight, low-cut dress—glanced their way. “Oh, you slay me. You really do.”

  “What’s so funny?” Bryce Gow, a heavyset elderly man with red cheeks and a bulbous nose, asked as he hefted himself onto a stool.

  Sadie fixed his usual—rum and Coke—and set it on the bar, then leaned forward to tip her head conspiratorially toward Bryce. “Kane said he’s going to fire me,” she told the retired electrician.

  Bryce’s expression brightened, but that could’ve been due to the fact that Sadie’s pose gave him an excellent view of her cleavage. “Fired shmired.” He sipped his drink, then patted Sadie’s hand. “Quit this dump—”

  “Funny how this being a dump hasn’t stopped you from parking yourself on that stool every Saturday night for the past one hundred years,” Kane said.

  Bryce, eighty if he was a day, and a regular long before Kane had ever set foot inside O’Riley’s—hell, before Kane, or even his father, had been born—glared, then turned back to Sadie. “You can work for my grandson,” he told her. “He’s a good boy. Respectful of his elders and his paying customers.”

  Kane pulled yet another beer. “Last week you said he was lazy, ungrateful and running the company you’d built into the ground. You called him an idiot who’d touched one live wire too many and fried his brain.”

  Bryce lowered his eyebrows. “At least he’s smart enough to appreciate good employees.”

  “I am undervalued and underappreciated,” Sadie agreed with a sigh that was pure heartfelt drama. “I would quit in a heartbeat, but if I wasn’t around, poor Kane would miss me—”

  “Poor Kane?” he mumbled, seriously considering sticking her head under the beer tap and giving her a good dousing. “Jesus Christ.”

  She batted her eyelashes at him. “And I’d hate to see a grown man as pretty as him cry.”

  “You’re a pain in the ass.”

  “So I’ve been told,” she said cheerfully. She blew him a kiss. “You know you adore me.”

  The worst part? It was true.

  “I’m heading to the back of the bar,” he said. “Give you and that big head of yours more room.”

  He really should fire her, he thought, as he made his way to the other end of the bar. She was flighty and unreliable, showed up for most of her shifts late, and took too many breaks when she was working.

  She was also a great bartender, cheerful and chatty, always ready with a joke, a compliment or a sympathetic ear.

  As much as he hated to admit it, he liked her. Hell, if he believed men and women could be friends without sex getting in the way, he might just say she was the closest thing he’d had to a friend in years.

  If she ever suspected, she’d never let him hear the end of it.

  “Slow night,” Sadie commented, joining him.

  “Not too bad,” he said. “The birthday ladies alone are making us a lot of money.”

  “Only because every guy under the age of fifty keeps buying them drinks. Men. Always so hopeful they’ll get lucky.”

  “It’s what gets us through each day. Any of them getting pushy?”

  “If they do, Julie will let you know.”

  He expected that. Was glad his employees knew to come to him if there was a problem. He kept an eye out for everyone in his place. Took care of them.

  He’d been in Shady Grove less than a year and already he was turning into a damned Boy Scout.

  For another thirty minutes, Kane filled drink orders, yakking with those who wanted to chat, leaving the ones who didn’t alone with their thoughts and alcohol. The song on the jukebox ended and the familiar opening riff of Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit”—a Saturday night mainstay at O’Riley’s, along with Guns n’ Roses’ “Sweet Child o’ Mine” and Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ on a Prayer”—started.

  It was a good song. A classic. At one time it had been one of Kane’s favorites.

  Until he’d seen people dance to it.

  It wasn’t a tune made for smooth moves, but that didn’t stop a small portion of his customers. All that twitching and hopping and head-banging—most of the time simultaneously—could put off even the most die-hard Nirvana fan.

  Averting his gaze from the dance floor, he opened a bottle of water and took a long drink. Scanned his domain from his position behind the bar. The booths along the back wall were filled, as were a few of the tables, late diners finishing their meals or enjoying a nightcap before heading home. The in-between stage of the evening meant those who’d come in for good food a
t reasonable prices mixed and mingled with the drinking crowd.

  Shady Grove was a long way from Houston, but if there was one thing Kane had learned it was that people—whether at a honky-tonk stomping their cowboy boots to classic Hank Williams or in an exclusive club shaking their designer-clad asses to the latest techno hit—were the same everywhere. When Saturday night rolled around, they wanted a good time. To forget their problems, lose their inhibitions and seek out the mystical happy place where their pain magically disappeared, their checkbook wasn’t overdrawn and their boss/spouse/parent/kid wasn’t such a douche bag.

  Only to wake up Sunday morning hungover and right back where they’d started.

  Nothing sucked the life out of a good time like the real world. But, for a few hours he gave them a reprieve from their lives. That the reprieve came with copious amounts of alcohol caused him some guilt. Not so much he seriously considered turning O’Riley’s into a coffee shop or bookstore, but enough that he wanted it to be more than a bar where the locals got hammered every weekend.

  He’d come up with the idea of serving meals. Full dinners instead of bar fare—though they offered burgers, wings and a variety of vegetables coated in thick batter and deep-fried.

  Turning O’Riley’s into as much restaurant as bar had been a good idea, a smart one. An idea that had increased his business’s revenue over 30 percent since the fall. He wasn’t about the bottom line—that was his old man’s thing—but he couldn’t deny the sense of pride that came with being successful.

  O’Riley’s was in the black, and it was all because of him.

  Not that it had been a struggling business to begin with. When Kane had first stepped into O’Riley’s, it had a solid customer base, a good reputation and income enough for Gordon, the previous owner, and his one employee.

  Now Kane did enough business for him to be more than generous with his six employees and still have money left over.

  He should use it to buy some new chairs, maybe have the floors redone or renovate the kitchen. After all, this was his place. Every shot glass, every bottle of whiskey, every damn thing, from the beer taps to the utility bills to dealing with pain-in-the-ass customers who couldn’t hold their drinks or their tempers, was his problem. He knew these people, the men and women—young, old and in between—who came here night after night, weekend after weekend. He was a business owner, a member of the Shady Grove Chamber of Commerce for Christ’s sake.

 

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