Chasing Treasure: Granite Lake Romance

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Chasing Treasure: Granite Lake Romance Page 27

by Jody A. Kessler


  “I don’t see your friend,” she accused as she opened the bottle and set it down in front of him, stuffing a wedge of lime into the top.

  “I’ll walk if he doesn’t show,” Dean said, placating her.

  “Twenty miles?” The dubious look was back.

  “Yes, ma’am,” he said, and took a drink.

  “What’s going on?” the new bartender asked.

  She was inquisitive, but only just, with nothing particularly friendly in the straight line of her mouth or the cool gaze behind her doe-shaped eyes.

  Dean chanced a steady look at her face. Even in his drunken stupor, he could observe and assess a target in seconds. It was a desirable trait to have in the field, and he had often been consulted by his Commanding Officers for his keen vision. He decided that she was definitely Native, but looked different from the girls he was used to seeing on the Blackfoot Reserve. Her face was slimmer and more angular, kind of like her body. Her eyes were deeply set, or maybe it was just the way that she looked back at him. There was a shield behind those dark eyes, and it felt awfully familiar. He didn’t want to see any more, and looked at the T.V. quickly before he noticed too much, or she did.

  “Kai, this is my cousin, Dean. I take care of him because he’s a good tipper, and he’s family. Plus he’s usually not too big of a pain in my ass,” Gena said.

  “Don’t listen to her,” he said without looking at them. “I am.”

  Unable to help himself, he glanced at Kai for the second it took to see her raised eyebrows and lack of enthusiasm.

  “Dean, this is my friend, Kai. She’s working here during the tourist season while she’s out of school for the summer. Don’t give her a hard time.” Gena said this last part in a playful way, but he knew she meant it.

  He swallowed. His mouth felt dry. Dean couldn’t remember ever having felt like he’d swallowed his tongue because of meeting a woman for the first time. “Hey,” he said, and gave a brusque nod.

  “Now give me your keys.” Gena held out her hand expectantly.

  “I thought you were leaving,” he grumbled.

  “I am. Right now. So hand them over. Kai can hold them for you until Badger gets here. I’ll find out later if you’ve lied to me about your fake ride.”

  Knowing she wouldn’t give up, he dug out the key to his truck and then watched Gena hand it over to her friend. Kai slipped it into her apron pocket, and he knew he’d just been swindled out of his key for a twelve pack of beer.

  “He’ll be here,” he said.

  Gena gave him an evil smile and turned to Kai. “Stop serving him whenever you like. Especially if he gets out of line.”

  “Oh, I will,” she said with a sobering glance at Dean.

  “You’re the one out of line, Gena. Without me, this dump would shut down. You’d be jobless, and we can’t have that.”

  Dean could hear the alcohol starting to warp his tongue. He hated that. Despised himself for being drunk in public, but it was the only way that he’d been able to handle the reality of his life.

  “I mean it. Don’t be afraid to cut him off,” Gena said to Kai as she walked out from behind the bar toward the door. “There’s a list of numbers next to his name on the phone pad. Anyone you call will come pick him up if his ride doesn’t show.”

  >><><<

  Kai watched Gena as she gave her an encouraging nod and then hustled out the door, excited for her date.

  She went to the sinks and began washing glasses before moving on to restock beer bottles. The couple of patrons sitting at the bar weren’t of the chatty sort, and her one waitress on duty tonight was taking care of the floor. With virtually nothing to do, Kai thought about spending her summer in this place, and almost walked right out. It wasn’t ideal, but it should be easy cash, and she needed all she could get. Working with Gena part time at the daycare was her better job, but the hours were minimal and so was the pay. She and Gena had become trusted friends quickly, so when Gena offered her the summer position at Growler’s, she took it. She decided that she could give up one summer working both days and nights to build her savings, especially since her aunt was willing to watch her son. She needed to have a few dollars saved up before the fall and winter semesters began. Bartending would have to hold her over.

  Now that she had been through her first week, Kai could see why Gena always looked so tired after a long night at the bar. The customers could drain the life out of you with one dreadful drunken story after another. That, and she’d already been asked out a half dozen times by belligerent and loathsome old men who made her want to gag.

  Now she found herself behind the bar trying not to stare at Gena’s cousin while wondering just how many beers the guy could drink before floating off his bar stool and drowning in his own watery piss. It’s really too bad that someone with such an amazing body and ruggedly handsome face could waste it by dating Senorita Corona.

  Half an hour before last call rolled around, his supposed friend had still not arrived, so she stood in front of Dean and asked, “Can I call someone for you?”

  “No thanks.”

  His eyes were unfocussed, and she thought again about the unfortunate commitment she’d made in agreeing to work at the bar through the tourist season.

  “We’re closing soon.”

  “How about another beer then?”

  “I don’t think so,” she said while tapping her fingers on the bar.

  “The injustices of the world never stop, do they?” he slurred. “Someone always thinks they know what’s best for you.”

  “You know what I call an injustice? Making your server responsible for taking care of you because you’re too drunk to do it yourself. That seems a bit unfair to me.”

  “You’re absolutely right.” He paused, attempting to focus on her face. “What’s your name again? Leah? No, that’s not it, is it? I have a terrible memory when I’ve been drinking.”

  “Really? I wonder why that would be.” Her sarcasm was probably lost on him in his drunken haze, but she didn’t care.

  “Kai. Right? I got it,” he said, sloppy pride tingeing his voice. “I can’t put my unfortunate state of being on you. I’ve got buffalo chips for brains. Excuse me,” he apologized, and then pushed himself off the sticky vinyl barstool.

  Surprised by the unexpected response, she watched him shuffle over to the restroom and disappear inside. Not knowing what he may or may not do next, she kept an eye on the door to make sure he didn’t just pass out on the floor. This was her first night to shut down the bar by herself, and it would be embarrassing to have to call Gena to come back in and help her. Her friend was giddy with excitement over having an actual date, and Kai wasn’t about to ruin it. When Dean didn’t reappear after ten minutes, she grudgingly knocked on the men’s room door.

  No answer. She sighed and then berated herself for telling her waitress that it was okay to leave an hour earlier. She dreaded having to handle a drunk man twice her size by herself, but she gritted her teeth and gingerly pushed the door open.

  Dean turned at the sound of the creaking door and embarrassment flushed her face as she saw that he was only slouched over the sink washing his hands, not passed out next to a vomit-filled toilet. She backed out of the restroom and let the door close in her face. Mortified that her suspicions had proved unwarranted, she was about to go hide behind the bar when something odd occurred to her, and she slammed the door back open.

  “Are you bleeding?” Kai strained to get a good look at his head.

  Dean’s hand rose to his forehead and she rushed forward. As she passed the trashcan, she noticed soiled paper towels that were bright red with blood.

  “What the hell did you do to yourself?”

  Dean tried to step around her and leave the bathroom, but she wouldn’t let him. Not until she got a look at the injury.

  “It’s nothing,” he said, and stumbled back into the sink.

  She gripped his arm, partly to steady him and partly so she could turn him around and
look at his head. She recoiled as she stared at the split on his skin and the rising lump just above his right eyebrow.

  He ducked his head away from her so she couldn’t see it and then pulled free of her loose grasp.

  “The damn door bites. Now back off. It’s nothing.” He walked out of the men’s room, leaving an astonished Kai standing inside with her mouth hanging open.

  Collecting herself, Kai followed him into the bar and then decided to call someone on Gena’s list. Looking around though, she realized that Dean had walked out into the late night and he was no longer her problem.

  Uneasy relief settled over her shoulders as she realized that she was at last completely alone and could now finish shutting down the bar. She wished Gena’s cousin would have just let her call someone, but she already knew not to argue or confront a drunk. If he could put himself in this situation, he could get himself out of it. With that in mind, she cleaned the bar top, the taps, shut down the jukebox, and closed her register.

  As Kai walked to her car, her brain told her that her son would be awake in five hours or less. Could she really handle working such late hours? The brutal reality that sleep had become a precious commodity felt like another drain on her spirit, but Kai knew it could be a lot worse. She could be broke, hungry, and homeless. She had firsthand experience with even worse fates than those. Sleepy was the lesser of the current evils, and if she had to remind herself a thousand times a day that she was working to make her and her son’s lives better, then she would keep it up like a mantra. She yawned as she turned the key to start the engine and dreamed about what it will be like after she graduated nursing school, started working at the medical clinic, and could get her own place.

  She drove across the lot toward the empty street, but as she passed the only other parked vehicle, she happened to see a pair of boots dangling over the edge of the open tailgate.

  “Why me?” she asked the sliver of moon hanging over the western horizon.

  Unable to ignore her natural tendency to nurture and take care of the needy, she stopped her car and climbed out. The thought of him lying there with a concussion forced her to drag her sorry, exhausted self over to his supine body.

  She approached with caution. “Yo. You alive in there?”

  “I wasn’t until you started screeching at me,” he said, and sat up.

  She crossed her arms over her chest. “I am not screechy.”

  “No. You sound more like a bawling, sultry cow.” He covered his forehead with his palm, winced, and then lay back down in the bed of his truck.

  “A cow?” she asked, insulted and disbelieving the craziness unfolding on her first night alone at the bar.

  “A key stealing cow,” he said.

  Right. She touched the pocket on her apron and felt the foreign object. She started to toss it over, but remembered Gena threatening him about not driving. And what happened to his buddy?

  She wanted to go home. Unlocking the bar to call strangers in the middle of the night to come pick up some drunk Indian wasn’t happening either. She could call Gena, who was probably back from her date, but it didn’t seem fair to do that to her friend on a much needed night off. Her mind imagined calling the cops and letting law enforcement teach this enormously inconvenient man a lesson, but she knew she would never ruin a man’s reputation and record for making unwanted comments while lying in the back of his own truck.

  “Can I have my key, Kai? Or do you just want to stare at me a little longer first?”

  “You’re a serious douche. And the answer is no. Now get up and get into my car before I change my mind.”

  He pulled himself up once again and she noticed that the strain of his movements had opened the cut on his face. In the shadowed light of the parking lot she watched a trickle of blood seep from the wound, drawing a thin black line down his forehead.

  “I’ll quit bothering you if you just open my truck. I’ll sleep it off in the parking lot.”

  It was a good alternative to her idea, but Kai had already made up her mind to take him home herself. Sleep could wait, and Gena wouldn’t have to know just how out of hand the night had gotten. Besides, if she could get a better look at his head, she could take him over to the emergency room if needed.

  “Get down from there and tell me where you live. Do it,” she ordered after he merely stared at her, unmoving.

  “I never could say no to a demanding woman,” Dean confessed and finally did as he was told.

  Kai felt her misfortune escalate after she learned how remote his house was. She took yet another single track trail in the middle of nowhere Montana. This one led over a rolling hill and down the other side into a shallow valley. She passed a small pond and found her headlights shining on a tiny log cabin next to a white tipi in the middle of a grassy meadow.

  Dean had passed out after his last instructions to turn right, so she shook his shoulder and said, “You’re home, jackass.”

  Luckily, the trickle of blood on his face had stopped almost immediately after getting him into the car, so Kai wasn’t going to concern herself with it any longer.

  “A sweet talker, too. That’s special. It matches your suspicious eyes.”

  “Just get out.”

  Before he closed the door, he threw some bills on the seat and mumbled, “Sorry to keep you out so late. This is for your gas.”

  She watched him walk inside his teeny, ancient-looking house where the timbers leaned to the left, the roof sagged to the right, and the trim needed a new coat of paint about twenty years earlier. Then she realized that she still had his key. Frustrated with herself, she opened her door and stepped into the brisk star-lit night. She jogged up to the door, hoping she wouldn’t have to see him again for even one more second. The way he called her a cow and then topped it off with more insults. It was unbearable, and she wouldn’t take any more of that. She laid his key on the stoop, happy to finally see the night’s monkey business come to a close.

  ~ End preview ~

  Available on Amazon

  More From Jody A. Kessler

  A Witch’s Fate

  Witches of Lane County

  Tori Morgan is a modern-day witch from Lane County—and she’s cursed. Falling in love is not in Tori’s astrological chart, her cards, or anywhere else in her plans for the future. Falling for a skeptic who debunks the paranormal for a living is even less likely.

  Leif Andersen doesn’t believe in magic or the paranormal. When he’s hired to investigate the mysterious death of former Hollywood actress and humanitarian, Delana Smootz, Leif is led straight to Tori Morgan’s door. There's no way he's going to fall for Tori or her woo-woo mysticism, no matter how magical she feels in his arms.

  Sparks fly and an undeniable attraction sizzles as Tori and Leif travel the globe in search of a suspect and the answers to Delana’s supernatural downfall.

  When We’re Entwined

  A coming of age novel

  Former circus performer and aerial gymnast, Tara knows it’s time to move on. Tired of the constant abuse and the emotional rollercoaster ride at home, she takes to the road to perform on stage with her boyfriend and his band, Paradox 21.

  Tara never imagined late night after-parties would lead to a devastating betrayal by her boyfriend and cause her summer tour to come to an abrupt end. Jobless, homeless, and broke in a city far from home, an eccentric homeless knight gives Tara fresh perspective and a serendipitous run-in with an old acquaintance—a punk named Corban—takes her on a spontaneous road trip that lands her a job with a traveling sideshow.

  As Tara searches for a freedom she has never known, she documents her journey by writing her most embarrassing, profound, excruciating, and soul-searching moments in letters to her sister. Despite heartache, love and loss, Tara finds immeasurable strength and wisdom during her travels in this unforgettable adventure of self-discovery.

  * * *

  “When We’re Entwined is a gripping, emotional modern day adventure with a glimpse of alternati
ve lifestyles in America as one vibrant, young aerial gymnast realizes cruelty and injustice can be outweighed by kindness, humor, and compassion with the help of a most unlikely and wildly colorful cast of characters.”

  More information can be found at JodyAKessler.com

  Available on Amazon

  Select titles can be found at major eBook distributors

  ~ Thank you for reading ~

  On the Back Cover

  After spending the winter apart, Treasure can’t stop thinking about her former paramedic partner, Bodie Everett. But, with her unfortunate history of dating, and an overwhelming fear of commitment, Treasure doesn’t know how she’ll react when Bodie returns from Wilderness School. Or, if the irresistible and sexy, Bodie, wants to continue where they left off back in December. With a ridiculous suspension from her job as a paramedic and a flooded apartment, Treasure heads to Granite Lake and back to her childhood home — a rundown apartment and a garage packed full of motorcycles.

  Now that Bodie has new Search and Rescue certifications under his belt, he’s ready to move forward with his life. He hopes that includes a relationship with Treasure. After an unforgettable night together, he can’t seem to shake her from his head or his heart. He’s ready to take their friendship to the next level, but his intruding family members have their own agenda. Opening a brewpub with his brothers, joining the Mountain Division of Search and Rescue, and the surprise return of his ex-fiancé complicate and distract Bodie from chasing and catching Treasure.

 

 

 


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