by Stacy Finz
“I don’t need you to follow me home,” she said, and headed to the break room in the back. The staff lounge was isolated from the guest rooms so that employees could take breaks without fear of disturbing sleeping residents. Sam returned with a repentant-looking Andy and seemed to be stalling. But Nate would be damned if he let her walk to her car alone. Nugget was a safe country town—his brother-in-law, the police chief, kept it that way. But bad things could happen anywhere.
When Nate and Maddy had first bought the Lumber Baron, they’d had their own brush with crime. A meth head had set up shop in the then-decrepit Victorian and attacked Maddy when she’d been there alone. Then Rhys Shepard saved the day. He shot the bad guy, married Maddy, and the town had been relatively crime-free ever since.
Nate glowered at Andy and turned to Samantha, who was gathering up her purse and jacket. “You ready to go?”
Between clenched teeth, she said, “You go ahead. I’m fine on my own.” She clearly disliked him as much as he did her, which was fine as long as she did her job.
“Oh, for Christ’s sake, Samantha, we live next door to each other.” Not by Nate’s choice. He’d bought his house before Sam and her Mercedes convertible had slammed into Nugget. That had been right after Christmas, back when half the town thought the woman had escaped from a loony bin. But because Sierra Heights had the fanciest homes in town, Miss Richie Rich had to lease the place next to his. Right on the golf course.
“Whatever,” she huffed, and turned for the door, giving him a spectacular view of her heart-shaped ass, not that he wanted to look. He knew all about beautiful spoiled princesses. Been there, done that, and had the returned engagement ring to prove it.
He followed her to the gated community where they both lived, watched her taillights disappear behind her garage door, and waited until he saw her silhouette through the living room window before pulling into his own driveway.
He walked into his empty house. Other than the log bed he’d bought from Colin Burke, Nugget’s resident furniture builder, he hadn’t had time to purchase couches or even a kitchen table. Anyway, he usually ate all his meals at the Ponderosa, Nugget’s only sit-down restaurant, which seconded as a bowling alley. His best friends owned the joint and were the reason he and Maddy had chosen Nugget as the location for their hotel in the first place.
Hoping that if they built it, tourists would come, he and Maddy had bought the Lumber Baron eighteen months ago. At the time, the Victorian mansion was the most dilapidated building on the town’s square. They’d sunk a ton of money into renovating, fought the city for a lodging permit, and opened their doors on a wing and a prayer.
Ever since, business had fluctuated. Sometimes, like now, it was better than Nate could’ve imagined. But during the months of December, January, and February, when Nugget got socked in with snow, the place had been emptier than a bar after last call. Ordinarily, spring would’ve been the perfect time to go full bore on promoting the fledgling bed-and-breakfast with extra ad campaigns and more Internet visibility, but Maddy had to go and get herself knocked up. Nate tried to do his best, but he had nine other hotels to operate in San Francisco, four hours away.
That’s why he constantly traveled back and forth. But living out of a suitcase had started to wear on him, so he’d bought the Sierra Heights house, thinking it would be a good investment. Mostly, though, he liked having his own space, especially since lately he spent more time here than in the city. The house—a sprawling twostory log cabin with mammoth picture windows—also had plenty of space for Lilly, his daughter. He went to bed thinking how much he missed seeing her every day and experiencing parenthood the way a normal father would.
Just about the time he drifted off to sleep, the incessant beeping of his clock roused him awake. Nate shut off the alarm and lay there for a few minutes with his arm covering his eyes, then got up and took a shower. The huge tiled stall had multiple spray nozzles and a rain showerhead. The house had a lot of great features: tall ceilings, radiant floor heating, a state-of-the-art kitchen, and views that wouldn’t quit. But he hadn’t exactly made it a home. Between the birth of his daughter and running Breyer Hotels, there hadn’t been time.
In San Francisco he lived in one of his hotel’s penthouses. Small but fully furnished, the suite came with round-the-clock room service. Being the boss, he never had to wait long for anything. Despite the ease of living there, he found it impersonal, and all the pampering and sucking up made him feel soft.
No pampering here. He didn’t even have a coffeemaker. He knew Samantha had one; a stainless-steel job that looked like it would also rotate your tires. The one and only time he’d been inside her place, he’d seen the machine, along with enough paintings and sculptures to fill the de Young. If you asked him, she’d decorated the place a little over the top for a town like Nugget, where chainsaw bears and mudflap girls amounted to high art.
He put on a pair of boxer shorts, went to his bedroom window, and separated a few of the blind slats with his fingers to peek at her window. She had her drapes drawn so he couldn’t see anything. For all he knew, she’d already left for work.
One thing he’d say for Sam was that she was always on time. He presumed she’d read somewhere that being prompt was a big part of keeping a job. According to Maddy, other than volunteering, Sam had never actually worked a day in her adult life. Nate couldn’t imagine being that idle, not to mention that his parents wouldn’t have tolerated it. The Breyers might be relatively well-off, but they’d earned their fortune, not inherited it. And they’d worked damned hard and had raised their kids to do the same.
He finished getting dressed, made half-a-dozen phone calls to check on his San Francisco hotels, and jetted over to the Ponderosa. He’d barely been there long enough to get comfortable when Owen slid into his booth. The barber was the unofficial leader of the “Nugget Mafia,” a group of the town’s powerbrokers who also happened to be the biggest busybodies around.
“What’s up, Owen?” Nate had helped himself to a cup of coffee and was waiting for a waitress to take his order. There was no sign of Sophie or Mariah, the Ponderosa’s proprietors. But Nate seemed to remember something about them doing errands in Reno.
“How’s the redhead?” “Who? Samantha?”
“No. Howdy Doody. Who else would I be talking about?” Owen waved over a server. “Who does a guy have to sleep with around here to get some service?” He pointed to Nate. “This fellow wants to order.”
Nate got his usual: two fried eggs, hash browns, bacon, and toast.
When the waitress left, Nate said, “She’s doing fine, Owen.”
True to form, Owen actually expected Nate to share personnel information with him. Not a lot of professional decorum—or boundaries of any kind—in this town.
“Why do you ask?” Nate asked, curious. Sometimes Owen’s nosiness paid off. The man usually had the best intel in Nugget.
“Just curious. You gotta admit she’s a hottie.”
She was that. She was also a fickle, spoiled, trust-fund baby. Something Nate didn’t plan to lose sight of.
“Why do ya think she left that fiancé of hers?” Owen continued.
“How would I know?”
Nate’s food came and he prayed Owen would let him eat in peace. No such luck. Owen was a man born to loiter. “Don’t you have hair to cut?”
“It’s Darla’s day,” Owen said.
Darla was Owen’s daughter, who’d taken over the barbershop so the old man could retire. Nate, however, doubted that would ever happen. Owen liked being at the center of it all, and the barbershop was practically town hall. That’s why the old geezer held on to a few longtime customers, mostly members of the Nugget Mafia.
“You think he might’ve been one of those Bernie Madoff characters?”
“Who?” Nate asked, flagging over the waitress for more coffee.
“Sam’s ex.”
“I don’t know, Owen. I don’t know anything about the guy.” Just that Nate f
elt an affinity for the dupe.
“Well, why else would she have left him? Unless he beat her. You think he beat her?”
Nate blew out a breath. “You watch too much daytime television, Owen. But if you’re so curious, ask Darla. She probably knows.”
“Beautician-client privilege,” Owen said.
But Nate doubted that even Darla knew the truth. From what he’d heard, the runaway bride had kept the secret of her failed nuptials pretty close to her Versace vest.
All anyone knew about Samantha Dunsbury was that she’d shown up in Nugget with a head of hacked hair and 2,700 miles of roadstuck to her tires. According to her story, she’d gone scissor happy on her hair the morning of her wedding, got in her car, and kept driving until she landed here, the middle of nowhere. Then she holed up at the Lumber Baron until Darla fixed her hair and Maddy gave her a job.
None of her story sounded very credible to Nate. But then again, how could he know the mind of an airhead? He figured she’d eventually get bored living in a small town, working at a country inn, and would hightail it home to Wall Street Boy and her rich family.
Vaya con Dios.
Except for when she walked into the Ponderosa five minutes later in a stretchy nude dress that clung to her body like a second skin, he wasn’t thinking about God.
Chapter 2
“Thank goodness you’re here.” Sam rushed to Nate’s table. “Your cell’s not working.”
“Yes, it is.” Annoyed, he pulled it from his pocket, played with it for a second or two, then pulled a face. “I must’ve inadvertently shut it off. What’s the crisis?” he asked, intimating that if she had her hand in it, it must be a catastrophe.
Why the man had to be so boorish, Sam didn’t know. For some reason he’d taken an instant dislike to her.
“No crisis,” she said, and noticed the barber sitting on the other side of Nate’s banquette. “Hi, Owen.”
“How you doing there, missy?” He flashed his dentures and started to squeeze out of the booth. “I best be getting over to the bowling alley. Me and the fellows have a standing game.”
Once Owen was out of earshot, Sam said, “A businessman from San Francisco may want to book the entire inn for a family reunion in July, but two of the rooms have already been spoken for on the dates he wants.”
“Get him to take another date,” Nate said, and drained his coffee before calling the waitress over to pay his bill.
“That’s the problem. He only wants that one week and made a big deal that I should Google him. Can you imagine the audacity? I had half a mind to tell him to go elsewhere.”
“Who is he?”
“Some guy named Landon Lowery. Owns a company called Zergy. I never heard of it.”
Nate’s eyes grew wide. “It’s only the largest video gaming company in the world. Tell me you didn’t tell him to go elsewhere.”
“Of course I didn’t. I’ve been around high-handed rich and famous people my whole life. I know how to handle them.”
“Yet you didn’t know who Landon Lowery was.” Nate, obviously tired of waiting for the server to return with his credit card, stomped over to the cash register to complete his transaction, grabbed his sports coat off the rack, and shrugged it on.
“I’ll take care of it,” he told Sam, dismissing her like she had a feather duster for a brain. It reminded her of all those years of living with her dictatorial father. Well, she didn’t plan to put up with it anymore.
“What do you mean, you’ll take care of it?” She practically chased him across the square. But with those long legs of his, she didn’t stand a chance of catching up. “It’s my account.”
He stopped at the stairs of the Lumber Baron, turned and squinted his chocolaty-brown eyes at her. “It’s my hotel.”
“Mr. Lowery and I already have a rapport.”
“You all but said he was an asshole. What kind of rapport is that?”
“Enough of a rapport that he’s coming to check the place out next week and wants me to show him around.”
“Great.” He rolled his eyes. “You’ve been here all of four months. What do you know about the Sierra Nevada?”
“Nate, Maddy put me in charge of event planning,” she said, intending to hold her ground. This was her first job and she desperately wanted to show that she could do it. “Mr. Lowery wants his family reunion to have activities—organized tours, a meal program, shopping excursions. Basically, he wants a week-long party. I may not have hotel experience, but I know how to throw a party.” It was the only skillset she had, and Sam wanted to put it to use—as a vocation, not a hobby.
Nate turned his back on her, went inside the inn, and disappeared into his office, shutting the door behind him. Conversation over. The man was truly insufferable—a complete jackass. Why couldn’t he at least be ugly? A troll with a hunchback. But no, even that was too much to ask. Physically speaking, Nathaniel Breyer was a Roman god sent down from the heavens. A full head of thick, brown hair that made you want to run your fingers through it. An angular face, too sharp to be pretty but breathtaking just the same. And a lean, hard body that would make a weaker woman quiver.
The only thing lacking in Nate’s road to perfection was a personality.
Sam stood at his door, wondering whether she should burst in and demand that he let her do her job, or give him a little time to come to his senses. Settling on the latter, she went into Maddy’s office, which she had commandeered as her own, and returned three calls—brides inquiring about using the inn for their weddings. Her own had been an unmitigated disaster. Or at least it would’ve been if she’d bothered to show up. The marriage, however, would’ve been even worse. The four months she’d lived in Nugget, Royce had only called twice—once to scream at her for “making me look like a goddamned fool,” and the second time to demand his ring back. He’d insisted that one of his ancestors had brought it with her on the Mayflower, when Sam knew for a fact that he’d purchased it on West Forty-Seventh Street, Manhattan’s Diamond District.
Well, she was here now, away from Royce, and never before had each day seemed so filled with possibility. Like yesterday afternoon. It had been her day off, before Mrs. Abernathy had gotten sick, and she’d driven across state lines to Nevada’s Washoe Lake to see the wildflowers. She’d been told that April was still a little early, but even so, the land was awash in color—greens and purples and yellows. No stranger to travel—Sam had been all over the world, but mostly to plush resorts and big cities—she’d never seen anything like the desert, where a person could see forever. It was solitary, but not lonely; silent, but so alive. It seemed freer than any place on earth. Not just the land, but the people. They didn’t seem to care who you were or what you did or where you came from, only that you were a decent person.
People here even talked differently than they did on the East Coast. Not just the accent, a barely detectable twang, but they used odd expressions, like “airin’ the lungs” for cursing or someone with a “leaky mouth” gossiped too much. Just the other day she’d heard Owen describe Portia Cane, the lady who owned Nugget’s tour-guide company, as a “Montgomery Ward woman.” Sam had thought he’d meant that Portia shopped at the department store, but Owen corrected her. It means she’s U-G-L-Y.
She supposed Westerners were all around more colorful people. Here, the fact that she’d run out on her wedding made her a minor celebrity. Not a day went by when Donna Thurston, proprietor of the Bun Boy burger shack, didn’t shout across the square, “You go, girl.”
Back in Connecticut it had made her a laughing stock. But leaving that day had been the best thing she’d ever done, even if Daddy was threatening to cut her off. The truth was he could shut down her Dunsbury bank accounts and she’d still be wealthier than anyone had a right to be. Her mother, an Astor, had left her a fortune when she died, and Daddy couldn’t touch that money. Oddly enough, she did miss him, though. George Dunsbury IV might be domineering, demanding, and detached, but she loved him. And she knew that
he loved her too, even if he’d tried to “wrangle” (local rancher Clay Mc- Creedy’s word for forcing cattle to do things they didn’t want to do) her into a loveless marriage.
Unlike Royce, he called every day, pleading for her to come home. And when that didn’t work, he threw out harsh ultimatums. But she wasn’t going anywhere until she figured out her future, which included carving out a real profession for herself. Life as the hostess with the mostest had become terminally dull—and meaningless. Samantha would never find a cure for cancer or balance the economy or invent a talking smartphone, but at least she could make a difference in people’s lives, even if it was only to plan them the perfect weekend getaway.
A tapping at the door shook Samantha from her reverie. “Come in.”
Nate pushed open the door and stuck his head in. “I’m having Tracy Cohen from corporate take over with Landon Lowery. Send me his contact info and the dates he wants.”
“You’re kidding me.” Sam stood up and folded her arms over her chest. “Tracy has never even been here. When we talk on the phone she acts like Nugget’s in a foreign country.”
“Sam, this is too important to let you play at being an event planner. Lowery could mean big business for Breyer Hotels—not only this reunion, but corporate events. The man’s a legend in the tech world.”
Sam glared at him and Nate said, “Let me boil it down for you: It would be like having a Kennedy show up at one of your fund-raisers.”
“Kennedys regularly show up at my fund-raisers.” She pointed her chin at him in challenge. “That’s why I’m perfect for this job.”
He looked up at the ceiling, his patience clearly wearing thin. “Look, if this were an old blueblood looking to book a family reunion at the inn, I’d probably give you a crack at it. But this is Silicon Valley. It’s a different breed than New England old money. They’re like rock stars, and Tracy knows how to handle these people. Hell, she and Marissa Mayer went to Stanford together.”