Love Revolution

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Love Revolution Page 13

by Mankin, Michelle


  “I came all this way just to talk to you.” Chris paused unable to resist. “Sara Jo. You kinda left without saying goodbye.”

  “Sara,” Maude chided. “That’s not how I raised you.”

  “Grams,” Sara said through gritted teeth. “Can you give Chris and me a minute alone?”

  “Be nice to this one, Sara.” She patted Chris’ cheek. “I like him. And I’m the oldest one here and that makes me the wisest. So you’d be good to follow my advice.”

  “I like you, too, Maude,” Chris said, leaning down to kiss her soft cheek.

  Maude chuckled softly as she shuffled back inside.

  Chris flashed his sexy as sin smile at her as the door shut behind her Gram. The snarky words she’d intended to say became lodged in her throat. Outfitted like a true Texan in tight faded Wrangler jeans, a chambray button-down shirt, and practical work boots, he was more Blake Shelton than Big Tex today.

  “What are you doing here, Chris?” Sara realized Sam must have told him where to find her. She’d have to have a word with that little traitor. Still, she couldn’t believe his determination. The only way he could have gotten down here so quickly was to take the red eye flight. She shook her head, something she found herself doing a lot about him. The man was a mystery.

  “I wasn’t about to let it end that way between us. Honestly, Sara.” He took a step toward her. “You shut down on me whenever I get close. I think I deserve at least an explanation.”

  She turned away from his perceptive stare and those brown eyes that could see right through all of her defenses. Tucking her riding gloves into her belt, she said quietly, “I don’t have a good one.”

  “Then stop running away from me,” he said in a low voice, reaching for one of her hands and pulling her toward him. “What are you afraid of?”

  “I’m not afraid,” she said quickly but was unable to maintain eye contact. “Walk with me, Chris. I need to put Rena up.” Chris fell into step beside her as she led the horse down the short trail to the barn.

  Once she had the mare inside the stall, Sara took off the saddle and wiped down the horse with a towel. Her eyebrows stayed knitted together as she worked. Chris leaned against the cold steel rails, watching and waiting patiently for her to speak, breathing in the competing scents of hay, oats, and animal. She was running a brush over the horse’s golden coat when she finally glanced up at him. The sadness in her eyes made him want to hold her.

  “Chris, I appreciate the gesture, but I’m afraid you’ve wasted a trip. I’m sorry for how I left things with you, but I do remember specifically telling you that I can’t give you what you want.” She sighed. “There’s a lot you don’t know about me.” She tapped her forehead. “I don’t think I’ll ever be right in the head. I don’t sleep for shit. You saw for yourself the kind of nightmares I have.”

  “Sara…”

  “I’m all kinds of effed up.”

  “Aren’t we all?”

  “Not like me.”

  “Oh, yeah? Well, maybe your stuff is a little more extreme than most.”

  “You deserve better than me, Chris.” She closed the latch to Rena’s stall and started to walk past him.

  “I don’t want better,” he said, grabbing her arm. “I want you.” Her hair flew in an arc as he swung her back around to face him. Eyes narrowing, he placed his hands on her shoulders. “Sara, stop the martyr act. It’s not working. Sam told me about your parents.” He felt her shoulders tense, and she looked away. “I don’t care about any of that. It doesn’t matter.”

  Her eyes flashed back to his. “What do you mean, it doesn’t matter?”

  “I mean, it doesn’t change how I feel about you. You are not your parents, Sara Daniels. You’re a warm, passionate, smart, sexy woman. And I want you to stop pushing me away. Bitterness and regret are lonely bedfellows. I know. I’ve tried that route myself. Stop merely surviving and live. Let someone in. Let me in.”

  Staring intently into her eyes, he placed both thumbs on her brow and gently smoothed out the worried crease between. He threaded his hands through her hair until he held the back of her head gently in his palms. He moved in closer, tilting her head back. She didn’t try to stop him. He lowered his head and touched his lips to hers. He lightly stroked her face letting their lips fuse together. Sara sighed. Chris took that as acquiescence and slipped his tongue inside her dark delectable mouth. He moaned when he felt her tongue touch his and he tasted her. Her flavor was as unique as she was, reminding him of a wild winter storm that he wanted to weather with her.

  “I’m so sorry, Beth,” Sam’s voice quavered.

  “You have nothing to apologize for,” Beth told her, taking a seat on the suite’s couch beside her. Dwight remained standing, his arms folded, his expression troubled.

  “But I left the press conference and…”

  “Of course you did. I just can’t believe JR.” Beth fumed.

  “You both need to stop looking at me like you think I’m going to break,” she said, trying to infuse her features with a steadiness she didn’t really feel. “Really, I’m ready to go back to work now. I’m feeling much better.” She started to get up, but Beth put a hand on her shoulder.

  “No,” Beth admonished. “I want you to stay up here for a while. There’s really no reason to go back, anyway. The press conference is over.” Her phone pinged with an incoming message. She glanced down for a moment, her lips moving as she read the message. She returned her gaze to Sam. “It’s Mary. Things are still real tense downstairs.”

  Sam cringed.

  “Relax. No one who knows you believes a word of what JR said.” Beth gave her a reassuring pat on her hand. “And Mary really cares about you.” She looked at Dwight. “All of you. I know for a fact she would crawl over broken glass to come to your aid, if any of you were in trouble.”

  “I’d better get back down there,” Dwight said with resignation. “Marcus was in the process of ripping JR a new one. I don’t want to leave Avery running interference between those two for too long by herself.”

  “Wait, Dwight.” Beth held up her hand. “Did JR give you any indication why he would say such a horrible thing about Sam?”

  Tears filled Sam’s eyes again as she remembered the cruel words that had ripped her heart from her chest.

  Beth took her hand and squeezed it.

  Dwight nodded and gave Sam an apologetic look before he spoke. “He said you slept with Danny last night.”

  “What?” Sam exclaimed, scooting forward on the couch. “Danny and me? You’ve got to be kidding.” Her face burned. “That guy gives me the creeps.”

  Dwight gave her a tight smile. “I believe you, Sam, but JR seems pretty convinced.” He shrugged. “Do you have any idea how he might have gotten that impression?”

  “Wait a minute,” Sam gasped.

  “What?” Beth asked. “If you know anything that’ll help clear up this mess, you need to tell me now.”

  “I just remembered something. Danny asked me to switch rooms at the B&B. I didn’t think much about it at the time but now…” Her eyes narrowed. “I bet he had something to do with this.”

  “Tell me everything you can remember from that night.”

  Sam leaned forward and recounted every detail including the fact that she had never retrieved her clothes from the other room.

  “Hmmm, I wonder,” Beth said when she finished. She tapped her chin for a moment. “We’ll get to the bottom of this, Sam. Don’t worry.” She stood and leaned over to kiss the top of Sam’s head. “Dwight, let’s go. I want to get downstairs and have a little chat with Danny.”

  “Sure.” Dwight fell into step beside her.

  As they were heading out the door, Sam called, “Hey, wait for me. I want to talk to John.”

  “No, Sam. I’m sorry,” Beth told her firmly. “You’re gonna have to stay here and let me take care of this. There’s still a ton of press downstairs sniffing around. Having you show up would be like throwing gasoline on an op
en flame.” Her tone softened. “Just give me a little time to sort things out.”

  Sam reluctantly nodded, closing her eyes when the door shut behind them. Her head pounded. She went to the kitchen and took a couple of ibuprofen and put together an icepack for her throbbing head. On the way back to the couch to lie down, she heard a knock at the door. Thinking Beth must have returned she opened it without bothering to look through the peephole, a mistake she would quickly come to regret.

  She only got a brief glimpse of a tall well- built man in a Sutton Place uniform before he powered his way in, throwing his full body weight against the door. The force sent her stumbling backward. Gasping, she looked up into the lined but familiar face. “Papa,” she rasped, recoiling from him. “What are you doing here?”

  “Hello, daughter.” He kicked the door closed with his booted foot and advanced toward her. “Haven’t you heard? I’m a free man now. Aren’t you gonna offer your congratulations? I thought after all this time, you’d be glad to see me.”

  Heart pounding fast, Sam frantically scanned the living room for her cell. If he knew how terrified she was, his expression didn’t betray it.

  “Where’s your sister?” he asked casually as if they were old buddies.

  Where was her cell? She needed to get help. There …on the desk…next to the lamp. In a panic, she lunged for it, but he stopped her, wrenching her arm back so violently that she screamed. The pain was so intense that she saw stars and almost blacked out.

  “Uh- uh, no can do Kiddo. We don’t need anyone else involved. This is just between the three of us.” He drew a revolver out of the waistband of his pants.

  Oh, God.

  He pointed it at her head and frowned. “I asked you a question, Samantha. Answer me. You and I both know I will use this thing.”

  Sam closed her eyes and said a quick prayer. When she opened them, he was looming over her with a deadly expression on his face. She started to shake. “Sara’s not here,” she told him, her voice strained.

  “I swear, Daughter. If you’re lying to me,” he threatened, pressing the cold barrel of the pistol to her temple.

  “She’s not. I promise you.” The words tumbled out of her mouth before she could stop them. “She’s back in Texas.”

  He let out a vulgar obscenity, his breath hot against her cheek. “Then I’ll just have to give her a reason to come to me.”

  Those were the final words Sam heard before the world dissolved in exploding pain.

  You selfish prick!” Marcus shouted. “I can’t believe you. You are a total embarrassment.”

  “Marcus,” Avery said, putting her hand on his arm. “Calm down. It’ll be ok.”

  “Sorry, Ace.” Marcus looked down at Avery’s hand and back into her beautiful emerald eyes. He took a deep breath and pulled fistfuls of hair through his hands before he glanced at JR. His eyes narrowed. “You’ve pulled some ridiculous shit before, but this beats it all. We’ll be lucky if Sam doesn’t sue your ass and the band for slander.”

  Danny had heard enough. He slinked away from the door where he’d been eavesdropping, a satisfied smile creeping across his face. Determinedly making his way through the convoluted corridors on the conference level of the hotel, he squeezed into the packed elevator. “Lobby, please,” he told the man standing closest to the control panel. After exiting, a quick stroll across the opulent marble foyer brought him to a deserted lounge. A half wall partition separated it from the rest of the lobby. This was a good place. He ducked inside while hitting redial on his cell.

  “Hey, Honey. I just gotta thank you for helping me out with the shower thing the other day…Yeah, it worked like a charm. Better than I could have imagined. JR was so convinced that Sam and I did the nasty that he called her out on it at the press conference. The bastard’s totally being raked across the coals now. JR’s finally getting his arrogant ass taken down a notch or two. It’s beyond priceless.”

  A flash of long blond hair out in the lobby caught his attention. The supermodel. Hell, yeah. “I gotta go,” he said abruptly. “Something just came up.”

  Fred popped up from behind the bar like a jack in the box, the phonebook he’d been searching for completely forgotten. Watching Danny’s retreating form, his expression was grim. Holy smokes. What a soap opera. He needed to find a representative of Brutal Strength in a hurry. Straightening his tie, he took the elevator back upstairs. As the doors opened, he spotted Beth walking down the hall. “Ms. Tate,” he called out.

  Beth turned around. “Yes,” she said curtly.

  “Fred Baron,” he said, sticking out his hand. “President of the Official, Official Brutal Strength Fan Club.”

  “Yes, yes.” Beth nodded. “I know who you are. But I can’t talk right now. I’ve got a bit of a situation on my hands…”

  “I know.” Fred cut her off. “It’s about that. I think I have some news you might want to hear.” He dutifully relayed the details of the conversation he’d just overheard.

  “Fred, thank you so much,” Beth said, grabbing his arm, impulsively pulling him in for a hug. “You’ve just confirmed what we suspected. You are a true fan and a real gentleman. BS owes you big time.”

  “Don’t mention it,” Fred said with a shrug. “I love those guys. I’m just glad I could help. I would do anything for them.”

  “I’m gonna take you up on that. Follow me.” She led him at a jog to the smaller room where the band had gathered after the press conference had broken up. As they burst in, all eyes turned toward them.

  “I just came down from Sam’s room.” Beth’s tone was terse. “JR how could you? The girl is devastated… utterly devastated by the way you treated her. I can’t believe you would say something like that to any woman, especially her, let alone at a press conference for the whole world to hear.”

  JR opened his mouth to speak, but then closed it as Beth held up her hand. “You really screwed up. And there’s something you need to hear before this goes any further.” She glanced over her shoulder, and nodded for Fred to come forward. “It’s going to take a lot of groveling for you to walk this one back.”

  As Fred filled everyone in on what he’d heard, JR groaned. He immediately dropped into a chair with his head in his hands. Avery went and knelt beside him, glancing up at Marcus with a helpless expression.

  “Can I talk to you for a minute,” Mary asked Beth in a low voice. “In private?”

  “Sure.” Beth nodded, and they exited the meeting room together. Outside the door, Mary turned to Beth with a look of concern. “I realize this is a colossal cluster, but I know you can fix it.”

  “Sure, Mary. I’ll just wave my magic wand. It’ll be a piece of cake.”

  Mary raised a manicured brow at the atypical sarcasm from her second in command.

  “Sorry.” Beth sighed. “As you know, it’s been a day.” She pulled down on the hem of her suit jacket and straightened her shoulders. “I’ll take care of it. Business as usual at Black Cat, right?”

  “Not quite,” Mary said, putting her hand on her friend’s arm. “But I have a tremendous amount of faith in you. Well placed, I may add.” She glanced down at her watch. “I need to talk to Sam. I’ll leave you down here to work out the details with the band.”

  “Stop distracting me, woman!” Chris laughed as Sara made a face and stuck her chest out at him and wiggled her boobs. He glanced back at the road just in time to keep from crashing into the median. “I shouldn’t have told you how good you look in those tight western shirts,” he muttered.

  She giggled like a school girl. It was such a novel sound he could hardly believe he’d just heard it. His lips curved up into a smile.

  She arched a brow.

  “Sara Daniels, you’ve already got your hooks into me and good. Stop being so damn cute. I’m trying to drive here.”

  She apparently thought that sounded like a challenge that was too tempting to resist. She leaned over the console, placed her lips on his neck, and left a long lingering tongue tra
cing kiss below his ear.

  “Ughh, woman.” He gave her a heated look before jerking the steering wheel to bring the car back into the correct lane.

  She smiled.

  “You’ll be the death of me… of both of us if you keep doing stuff like that. You told me you’re already gonna be late for your sound check. Let me drive. You can do your concert thing, which I’m looking forward to seeing by the way. Then it’s just you and me babe, and we’ll see who’s best at distracting whom.”

  “Ok. I’ll behave.” She winked. “For now.” She settled back in her seat, grinned, and sat on her hands.

  When they arrived at Billy Bob’s, Chris was a little underwhelmed at first. The building was rather generic with adobe beige walls and a low roof. Knowing its larger than life reputation as a make or break venue for everyone from Willie Nelson to Jason Aldean, he’d expected it to be more impressive.

  Several interconnecting parking lots surrounded the place. He parked the rental car in the lot closest to the building. Entering through the nondescript side door, the first thing he noticed was the smell of cow manure and hay. His lip twitched as he followed Sara past an indoor arena. Only in Texas would they have competitive bull riding in a bar.

  It took a couple of minutes for his eyes to fully adjust to the dim lighting inside the world famous honky tonk. He was surprised by how much room there was inside. Parquet wood floors stretched out at least a hundred yards in each direction. Long wooden bars lined the outer walls and smaller rectangular ones held positions of prominence toward the center. He counted at least ten. There were a couple of dance areas and two stages, a smaller one up front and a larger raised stage in the very back surrounded by banquet style tables and folding chairs. All in all the seating area probably held a thousand. Neon signs glowed colorfully, advertising everything from the Dallas Cowboys to Shiner Bock, the local beer. Framed hand imprints of famous past performers, western style lanterns, and wagon wheel chandeliers provided additional decorative touches, but the centerpiece of the building had to be a rhinestone encrusted saddle chandelier that spun and reflected light in place of a traditional disco ball.

 

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