Skintight

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by Susan Andersen




  Reviewers love New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author

  Susan Andersen!

  “A sexy, feel-good contemporary romance…Palpable escalating sexual tension between the pair, a dangerous criminal on the loose and a cast of well-developed secondary characters make this a winner.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Bending the Rules

  (an Amazon Top Ten Best Romance of 2009 pick)

  “This start of Andersen’s new series has fun and interesting characters, solid action and a hot and sexy romance.”

  —RT Book Reviews on Cutting Loose

  “Snappy and sexy… Upbeat and fun, with a touch of danger and passion, this is a great summer read.”

  —RT Book Reviews on Coming Undone

  “Deft characters, smart dialogue, laugh-out-loud moments and sizzling sexual tension (you might want to read Chapter 15 twice) make this hard to put down…. Lovers of romance, passion and laughs should go all in for this one.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Just for Kicks

  “Andersen again injects magic into a story that would be clichéd in another’s hands, delivering warm, vulnerable characters in a touching yet suspenseful read.”

  —Publishers Weekly, starred review, on Skintight

  “A classic plot line receives a fresh, fun treatment…well-developed secondary characters add depth to this zesty novel, placing it a level beyond most of its competition.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Hot & Bothered

  “Sassy, snappy and sizzling hot!”

  —New York Times bestselling author Janet Evanovich on Baby, I’m Yours

  “Sizzling, snappy, sexy fun.”

  —New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Crusie on Baby, Don’t Go

  Dear Reader,

  I’m so excited about the reissue of Skintight. This was the first of my Showgirls duo, featuring long-legged women who make their living dancing in a lavish Las Vegas revue.

  Sounds pretty glam, right? Go tell it to Treena McCall. She’s worked hard to get where she is, but the past year has left her scrambling to hang on to her spot in the chorus line. Her sole aim is to pass the upcoming annual audition and gain another year’s employment.

  Then professional poker player Jax Gallagher comes to town with his sexy eyes and private agenda—and their lives are suddenly turned upside down. He isn’t the man she thinks he is. She isn’t the woman he expected. He came to Vegas planning to rob Treena blind, only to have her steal his heart.

  Figuring out how two people can forge a future from a relationship founded on lies was a roller coaster of ups, downs and loop-de-loops for me. I hope you enjoy the ride.

  And be sure to check out Burning Up, coming August 31, just in time for Labor Day weekend. Video Queen Macy O’James is back in Sugarville, Washington, the small town that practically ran her out on a rail. The last thing she’s looking for is a man. But the first person she tangles with is fire chief Gabe Donovan.

  And sparks fly.

  Happy reading.

  Susan

  Susan Andersen

  Skintight

  This book is dedicated, with love, to

  Meg Ruley

  for being the best,

  the greatest,

  the most fun agent

  a girl could ever have

  My sister Rogue Authors

  Victoria Alexander, Patti Berg,

  Stephanie Laurens and Linda Needham

  for laughter, commiseration,

  friendship and shared meals

  and to

  Boo and Mojo

  for warm fur, great purrs and stupid pet tricks

  Also by

  Susan Andersen

  Bending the Rules

  Cutting Loose

  Coming Undone

  Just for Kicks

  Hot & Bothered

  And coming in September 2010

  Burning Up

  Skintight

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  EPILOGUE

  PROLOGUE

  JACKSON GALLAGHER MCCALL set his drink down on the tiny cocktail table in front of him as a group of showgirls, clearly ready to party, strolled into the Las Vegas casino bar where he sat. How about that? Ask and ye shall receive.

  This must be his lucky night; his target was right in the midst of things. He watched her wild tangle of pale red curls gently shift against her collarbone and spill over her shoulders to float out behind her. It had been a bitch trying to pick her out in la Stravaganza, the lavish revue he’d attended a short while ago in the hotel showroom. All the dancers on stage had killer bodies, seemed to be within an inch or two of each other in height, and wore heavy makeup and identical costumes. They either had matching wigs or the exact same lavish headdresses, give or take a plume or three.

  He didn’t doubt for a minute it was the same group, however, for while they’d replaced all that theatrical greasepaint with the regular kind of makeup women wore, a few of the dancers were still in the skimpy costumes he’d last seen on stage in the final act.

  Not her, though. He looked her over from head to foot, and decided it wouldn’t be a hardship to seduce his way into this one’s house. Not with that body, clad now in tall, barely-there sandals, peach-colored hip-hugging slacks, and a matching top, the entire back of which consisted of nothing more than a few skinny criss-cross straps. She had a bawdy laugh and a mouth that was now curved up on the left side in a slight, knowing, closed-lips smile. It was a look that said this woman had probably forgotten more tricks than most women ever learned.

  And the same I’m-gonna-give-you-the-hottest-night-of-your-life crook of the lips he’d seen in the professional head shot his old man had sent him to show off the woman he’d persuaded to marry him.

  The woman who would become Big Jim McCall’s widow practically before the ink was dry on the marriage certificate.

  CHAPTER ONE

  “HAPPY BIRTHDAY, girlfriend!” With glasses raised, a multitude of female voices echoed the toast. Someone added, “So, which one is this, anyhow—your thirty-second?”

  Treena McCall looked at the group of women ringing the tables they’d shoved together to accommodate everyone and felt the corner of her mouth turn up. “My thirtieth,” she corrected smoothly, although it was actually her thirty-fifth. That was a fact she’d just as soon forget, but the ache of muscle strain in her left calf due to a simple high kick in the final number made it tough to do.

  Her friends hooted. “Sure it is,” someone agreed with friendly sarcasm. A dancer named Juney nodded and said, “And this makes how many thirtieth birthdays you’ve celebrated?”

  “Oh. Well. If you’re going to be picky…” Her lip crooked up a little higher yet. “The truth is, I’ve decided to quit adding numbers and go straight to the alphabetical system…which I suppose makes me thirty-E. Tell you what, though, Juney. If you don’t go there on mine, I promise to stay away from the subject on your next birthday.”

  “Deal.”

  “In any case—” Julie-Ann Spencer le
aned forward from down the table to say “—I guess you won’t be dancing the Crazy Horse Show for La Femme anytime soon.”

  There was an instant silence, since everyone knew Julie-Ann’s remark—although offered in a friendly enough tone—wasn’t made in the true spirit of comradery.

  “Bitch,” Carly murmured in Treena’s ear, then raised her voice. “Is anyone at this table besides you still under twenty-five, Julie-Ann?” Rude catcalls greeted her question, and Carly gave the young woman a pointed glance. “Then I guess no one but your perky little self qualifies for the Crazy Horse.”

  “And that is sure as hell La Femme’s loss,” Eve said.

  “Idiots don’t know what they’re missing,” Michelle agreed.

  But if Julie-Ann’s intention had been to cast a pall over Treena’s mood, she’d accomplished her mission. For not only would she never dance in the Crazy Horse, she’d be damn lucky if she passed the mandatory annual audition two weeks from now in order to keep the job she already had. Those eleven months off with Big Jim had cost her. His rapidly escalating illness had allowed her time only to take infrequent dance classes, and that sort of hit-and-miss practice simply wasn’t sufficient for a Las Vegas showgirl to stay in shape. In little less than a year, she’d gone from being dance captain of the troupe to barely keeping her spot. Thirty-five might be the prime of most women’s lives, but for a dancer it was nearly over the hill. There was nothing to look forward to but the slippery slope on the other side.

  Age hadn’t been something she’d given much thought to until she’d come back to the show, for the end of her career had always seemed far, far in the future. But as much as she’d like to ignore the way her career seemed to be hurtling toward its final destination faster than a Japanese bullet train, she’d awakened this morning to the realization that she was officially thirty-five. She knew that once this train got into the station, she’d have no choice but to get off. Unfortunately she wasn’t even close to realizing her backup dream—that of someday opening up her own dance studio.

  No sense dredging up the fact right this minute, however. It only served to exacerbate the itchy feeling of recklessness that had been building in her all day.

  She heard a low, sharp exclamation from a male throat and an accompanying high-pitched feminine yip, but even as she turned to see the commotion going on behind her, her bare shoulder and back were suddenly drenched with a shower of melting ice. With a startled shriek, she jumped to her feet.

  “Omigod, Treena, I’m sorry,” said their waitress Clarissa, who was already bent down on one black fishnet-stockinged knee, righting the empty glasses on her tray.

  “No, the fault is mine,” said a smooth, deep voice. A tanned, long-fingered hand cupped the waitress’s elbow and assisted her to her feet. “My apologies. I should have made sure no one was coming before I got up out of my chair.”

  As soon as the cocktail waitress regained her footing, he turned to Treena. She had a quick impression of height, wide shoulders, and tousled, sun-streaked brown hair before the man whipped a handkerchief from the breast pocket of a black jacket she’d bet a week’s pay had been fashioned by some brand-name, high-priced designer. Reaching out, he used it to gently blot the moisture from her shoulder.

  “I’m sorry,” he said, taking obvious care not to touch her with anything but the linen square as he daubed under her hair. He fished a dripping cube from her curls with his free hand, and his dark eyebrows met over the strong thrust of a nose that had clearly been broken at some point in his life. “The only saving grace here is that she was carrying empties when I tripped her up. Turn around. Let me get your back.”

  He spoke with such impersonal coolness that she automatically about-faced, and found herself staring at her friends who were all watching with varying degrees of wide-eyed or raised-brow fascination as he efficiently mopped the moisture from her back. That was when her own compliance hit her.

  She wasn’t docile by nature, and if he’d made even a single attempt to touch her in an inappropriate manner, she’d have cut him off at the knees so fast he would’ve been four foot two before he knew what hit him. She was used to deflecting that sort of bullshit from Stage Door Johnnies who thought because a woman danced topless in the final show of the night she was fair game for their wandering hands. But this man’s flesh didn’t touch hers at all. She felt him only as a heat source through the rapidly dampening handkerchief sliding over her skin.

  “There.” His voice sounded like a low rumble in her ear, and his hand dropped to his side. He stepped back. “It’s not perfect, I’m afraid, but the best I can do under the circumstances.”

  Turning to face him, she found him standing closer than she’d anticipated. She stepped back only to bump into her chair, and it rocked up onto two legs. When she reached out to steady it, she knocked off her purse. “Oh, for—”

  They both stooped down at the same time, their fingers tangling as each reached for the small leather envelope. He relinquished it to her, but pinned her in place with his vivid blue eyes and murmured low enough so only she could hear, “The young woman who’s young enough to dance for the Crazy Whatzit you ladies were talking about? Trust me—she doesn’t look half as good at twenty-five as you do at thirty-E.” His mouth crooked.

  She should have been miffed at his eavesdropping but instead, a small whoop of delighted laughter exploded up from her belly. She looked at him, squatting in front of her with his faded jeans stretched white over his wide-spread knees, his silk T-shirt beneath that lightweight designer jacket nearly an exact color match for his sky-blue eyes, and felt something she hadn’t experienced for a long, long time—attraction. Pure, animal, man-woman attraction. Her lips curved into her unique one-sided smile and she rose to her feet. “Thank you. That’s possibly the nicest birthday present I’ve received today.”

  He rose, as well, and stood looking down at her. “Listen,” he said slowly. “I don’t supposed you’d consider—” With a shake of his head, he cut himself off and, combing a hand through his disheveled hair, he stepped back. “No, never mind. Of course you wouldn’t.”

  “What?”

  “Nothing. It’s too presumptuous.”

  Treena shrugged, but her heart skipped like crazy and only through sheer force of will did she stop herself from demanding to know what he’d been about to say.

  Then he dropped his hand to his side, raised his lean jaw, and said, “What the hell. Would you consider joining me for breakfast tomorrow morning? I understand they have an excellent dining room here.”

  The reckless itch that had been agitating for expression all day urged her to snap up his invitation. Go on, whispered a little devil sitting on her shoulder. Live a little. It was her thirty-freaking-fifth birthday. She might as well get something out of it.

  Exactly, the tiny red-horned demon agreed. You could stand a little fun in your life.

  She wasn’t a young girl who acted on her every impulse, however, and the truth was her husband had only been buried four months earlier. So even though she wanted to say yes, she wrestled the temptation into submission and opened her mouth with every intention of politely but firmly declining his offer.

  But Julie-Ann beat her to the punch. “You might want to make that for brunch, big guy—or possibly lunch. Our Treena’s getting up there in age, you know, so she requires a bit more beauty rest than she used to.” Tilting back her head in a way that displayed her smooth, youthful throat to its best advantage, she laughed as if she’d just let him in on a huge inside joke.

  Rebelliousness rose in Treena’s chest as she turned to stare at the twentysomething dancer. What on earth was her problem? Julie-Ann had taken over Treena’s position as dance captain. Couldn’t she be content with that? Instead Treena’s very existence seemed to aggravate the younger woman. Well, to hell with her. She turned back to the man. “What’s your name?”

  “Gallagher. Jax Gallagher.”

  His voice reverberated along her nerve endings. “Well, G
allagher, Jax Gallagher, I believe I would like to have breakfast with you.”

  His smile deepened, showcasing his straight white teeth and the creasing lines that fanned out from the corners of his incredibly blue eyes. “Yeah?”

  “Yeah. But Julie-Ann’s right—I’m not the young woman I was yesterday, and we old ladies do need our rest. So would you mind terribly if we made it for ten o’clock? Or if you have something else going and are pressed for time, perhaps nine-thirty.”

  “Ten o’clock would be great.” He offered his hand.

  She grasped it, amazed at how energized his long, slightly rough-tipped fingers made her feel. She had first, second and third thoughts about the wisdom of meeting him in the morning, but she merely said, “I’m Treena McCall, by the way.”

  “Pleased to meet you, Treena.” His fingers slowly released hers and slid away. “Would you like me to send a car to pick you up?”

  “That’s not necessary. I’ll meet you in the dining room.”

  “Very well. Until tomorrow, then.”

  “Yes,” she said, as he took a step back. “Until then.” She watched as he turned and strode from the open concept bar, stopping only long enough to say something to Clarissa and drop some bills on her tray. Then his long legs took him up the aisle that ran between the craps and the blackjack tables. For a moment the sounds to which she’d long ago become so accustomed she rarely even heard them anymore—the clatter of silver dollars hitting trays, the constant ringing of bells, and the competing, clashing tones and beeps of the various electronic slot machines—saturated her consciousness. When Jax disappeared into the depths of the casino, she turned back to her friends. For a second she merely stared blankly at them. Then she pantomimed a scream.

 

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