Where There's Smoke

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Where There's Smoke Page 26

by Karen Kelley


  So she escaped.

  As she sat on one of the barstools, a young bartender made his way over to her.

  “What can I get you?” He smiled, showing pearly white teeth.

  Oh gosh, she hadn’t thought about what she would order. LeAnn was just proud she’d escaped the hotel room. She normally didn’t drink.

  “I can make anything,” he told her. “I took a course. We don’t just serve beer and whiskey here.” He blushed. “My name is Tony, by the way. I mean, since we’re carrying on a conversation, sort of.” He frowned. “Except I guess it’s just me talking, isn’t it?”

  She smiled, liking the young man. Although she suspected there wasn’t much difference in their ages, somehow she felt a lot older.

  “Surprise me,” she said. “And I’m LeAnn.”

  He narrowed his eyes. “Okay, LeAnn. Do you like tropical drinks? Pineapple juice, coconut?”

  She nodded.

  He grinned. “I could tell. Okay, one frozen piña colada coming up.”

  She wondered if he meant she was fruity, then shook her head. Nope, no one could really tell much about her. She wore jeans, as did just about everyone in Nashville. A chill was in the air, so she didn’t look out of place in a coat with the collar turned up á la Elvis, and she wore a floppy hat pulled down low.

  Nope, she was just your average working girl who came in for a little company and a drink after work. Nothing unusual about that.

  “Here you go.” He put a coaster down and set a pretty glass on top of it. “I didn’t have one of those little umbrellas.”

  “It looks good.”

  He waited.

  Okay, LeAnn supposed she would have to taste it even though she just wanted something sitting in front of her. She dutifully took a drink. A blend of tropical fruits hit her taste buds.

  “It’s wonderful,” she told him and was telling the truth. His grin grew wider.

  “Yeah, I’m pretty good at judging people. Oh look, the band is setting up.”

  She turned toward the stage.

  “It’s a shame, though.”

  “What’s a shame?”

  “The singer got laryngitis. Called in sick, and on opening night, too.”

  She quickly became very interested in stirring what looked like snow around in her glass with the straw.

  “They say your first night will make or break you in this town. The owners seem really nice, too. One of them sold his bar in Texas and sank all his money into this place. Sometimes it’s hard to have dreams that never happen.”

  Guilt rushed through her. She quickly cleared her mind. It wasn’t her problem. “But there seem to be a lot of people here.”

  He shook his head. “Won’t last long, though. As soon as they figure out there’s no singer, they’ll leave for the next place quick enough. Hell, the owners are out lookin’ for someone who can take her place.”

  “Maybe they’ll find another singer.”

  “They haven’t so far.” He held up a cell phone. “Said they would call if they had any luck.”

  LeAnn knew all about dreams, and dreams not coming true. And maybe the bar owner from Texas made her think about Duncan. Yeah, right, as if she did anything else since the day she and her manager had left for Nashville.

  Oh, what the hell. “I’ll sing,” she blurted before she could change her mind.

  Tony studied her. “Can you really sing?”

  Laughter bubbled out of her. “That’s what they tell me.” She pulled off her hat and shook out her blond curls.

  Tony’s eyes grew round. “You’re… you’re…” His face turned red and he began to choke.

  Oh gosh, she didn’t mean to kill the poor guy. She pushed her drink toward him. He automatically took it and gulped down a big swallow.

  He grabbed his neck.

  “What?” Ohmigosh, was he allergic to her drink?

  “Cold throat,” he gasped, eyes watering. “You’d really sing? I mean here? Tonight? Right now?” he finally managed to get out.

  She nodded.

  He took a deep breath. “Can I introduce you?”

  She nodded again and he grinned as if he’d won the lottery. He practically ran to the stage. She took off her coat and laid it across the stool, then followed. Oh Lord, what had she gotten herself into?

  “It’s my pleasure,” Tony said as he grabbed the microphone, “to introduce one of my favorite new singers, and she’s going to sing for us here tonight. Miss LeAnn Wells.”

  The crowd jumped to their feet, applauding.

  LeAnn smiled as she took the microphone. “Thanks, Tony.”

  Tony blushed and stumbled off the stage.

  She turned to the band that was on the stage. “Do you know ‘My Hero’?”

  The guitar player grinned. “Do we?” He began to strum his guitar.

  “My brother was my hero. I wrote this song for him.” She began to hum softly.

  LeAnn lost herself in the song that became her first number one hit and, when she ended on the last note, she looked around the crowd and smiled tenderly. What would her brother think if he could see her now? She had a feeling he would be proud of her. Except nothing happened. The people stared at her. Everyone was so quiet that for a moment, LeAnn wondered if maybe she should’ve stayed in her room channel surfing. Just her and the remote.

  But then the crowd erupted and they began to clap. She breathed a sigh of relief then glanced up and smiled. Well, what do you know, they liked us, Brother.

  “Sing ‘Lost Love,’” someone yelled.

  “Lost Love” was her newest number one hit. She looked at the band and they nodded, grinning from ear to ear. As they began to play softly in the background, LeAnn began to talk again.

  “Sometimes we meet someone just in passing, but they leave a mark on our lives forever. I’ve been lucky to have known a few people like that in my life. My brother, of course. Then there was Destiny. Destiny was, well, I like to think she changed my destiny.” She smiled before continuing. “But there was one person who swept in like a warm breeze that blows across the land, and when it’s gone, we look around and wonder if we only imagined it, and wonder if we’ll ever find it again.”

  LeAnn began to hum. She closed her eyes, and started to sing as though she sang to her lost love, and in fact she did.

  Like the sound of the midnight train

  As it fades into the night.

  Her voice was soft at first, then grew stronger.

  Like an eagle floating on the wind

  Slowly drifting out of sight.

  A love of long ago

  Leaves a picture in my mind

  One that will never fade

  With the passing of the time

  Visions filled her mind. That first look they’d shared. The instant when she felt the spark flowing between them. His startled expression as though he felt it, too.

  Duncan encouraging her up on the stage, introducing her like she was already a star. Destiny thought she trembled because she was so scared, and she was, but Duncan had caused her to tremble too. One look and she felt such an intense connection.

  She went back to that bar on skid row, only to find Duncan had sold it. A preacher on a street corner said the owner left, but he didn’t know where. Then he told her how he saw demons. That he was saved from the bottle.

  LeAnn was happy for the man, but she left quickly. The guy was really strange.

  And Duncan became her lost love.

  She finished the song, the last mournful note ending. Sadness welled inside her. It would seem she had lost everyone she ever loved or could have loved. She opened her eyes and smiled at the crowd.

  Her gaze skidded to a stop on one man. She held up her hand and the band stopped playing.

  “I said you would be a star one day,” Duncan told her.

  The audience grew quiet, waiting to see what would happen. When Duncan continued toward the stage, they parted like the Red Sea.

  The crowded bar seemed to disa
ppear until LeAnn felt as though it was only the two of them. “Everything happened so fast.”

  “I know.”

  “I went back. You were gone. The bar was sold.”

  “I came here looking for you,” he told her as he climbed the steps to the stage. “You’re famous now. I wasn’t sure I’d fit into your new life, but I had to find out.”

  She shook her head. “I wrote that song for you.”

  “Am I your lost love?” He stopped in front of her.

  She shook her head as her heart swelled until she thought it would burst.

  His shoulders slumped.

  “You’re not my lost love. You’re my found love.” She threw her arms around his neck. As his lips met hers, the crowd of people began to clap and cheer.

  ***

  “Is that better?” Chance asked as he waved his arm and the screen disappeared.

  Destiny nodded, wiping the tears from her eyes. “I love happy endings.” She sniffed as she went into Chance’s arms and wrapped her arms around his neck.

  God, he loved this woman. She was the very air he breathed, and he didn’t know what he would’ve done if he’d lost her.

  “Don’t ever leave me,” he told her. “If you did, I would die.”

  She rested her head against his chest. “As I would die if you ever left me.”

  “For all eternity,” he said.

  “For all eternity,” she repeated.

  Their vows slipped through the apartment and out to the balcony. The light breeze caught their words and whisked them upward, as far as the heavens above.

  Read on for a sneak peek of

  Where There’s a Will

  by Karen Kelley

  Coming September 2012

  From Sourcebooks Casablanca

  “Please Lord, you have to send me a miracle. A man, in case you want specifics.”

  Haley Tillman really needed to get laid before she incinerated. If a man looked cross-eyed at her, the only thing left would be a pile of smoking ashes.

  Just one little bitty miracle. Was that too much to ask?

  She was thoughtful for a moment, then decided she’d better revise her prayer. Once, she’d prayed for a stuffed bunny rabbit. The next day her dad took her to the taxidermist to pick up Fifi, the family dog that died two weeks before, or as Haley preferred to call the beast when no one was around, The Tasmanian Terror. The mongrel was more her mother’s pet. Her father had the miniscule creature from The Twilight Zone stuffed.

  There was also a sale on stuffed rabbits. She hated the glass-eyed, zombie rabbit and hid the nasty looking nightmare in the back of her closet. There was no escape from Fifi, though. Her mother placed the silent menace in the living room where everyone could see the dog.

  So, a prayer revision might be in order. “Not just any man. I want a really hot, drool-worthy, sexy man.” That still wasn’t good enough. “No, he has to be more than a normal man. He has to stand above mere mortals. No more dweebs, losers or rejects.” She figured it wouldn’t hurt to ask for the best.

  And no more crying jags like the one last night just because she got stood up. She threw the cover back, and grabbed her black-rimmed glasses off the nightstand before heading toward the bathroom.

  A miracle would be nice. She snorted. As if a miracle was ever going to happen. She was pretty sure hot and sexy would never make it to her front door. Her almost date wasn’t drool worthy. She supposed Ben wasn’t bad looking, in a GQ, polished sort of way.

  Haley sighed. Being stood up was nothing new. Anyone with any sense would be used to it by now, but not her. Okay, so maybe she sort of expected it because she’d cornered him. She did not wear desperation well.

  “Ben could’ve said no,” she mumbled as she walked inside the bathroom and flipped on the light. Her co-worker from the bank owed her. Haley worked all week crunching numbers for him.

  She casually glanced toward the mirror and saw an apparition.

  Her pulse took off and her heart pounded inside her chest. She stumbled back, her knees hitting the back of the bathtub. Before she toppled inside, she slapped a hand on the toilet seat and regained her balance.

  As her pulse slowed to a more normal rate, her gaze scanned the tiny room. She was the only one there. She came to her feet, nerves stretched taut.

  Please don’t be the ghost of Nanny.

  Haley loved Nanny, but her grandmother was gone, and though she had lots of fond memories, Haley wanted her to stay gone. Haley’s eyes stopped at the mirror. Her reflection stared back. Fantastic, she’d scared herself. It had to be an all-time low.

  She closed her eyes and took a deep breath, then opened them again. Mornings were not good. She should drape black silk over her mirrors until she at least had her first pot of coffee. Not that she was monstrously hideous, but she was no beauty queen, either.

  She had her father’s looks. Her father was tall. She was five feet, seven inches. She also had her father’s dull, dishwater blond hair. Her hair turned bright orange when she attempted to color it in the eighth grade. She decided dull blond was better. Her boobs were too big, but they matched her hips.

  All the magazines she read said you had to like at least one thing about yourself. Her legs were nice and long. When she wasn’t tripping over her feet, she was fairly satisfied with them. Except her life was never going to change. And miracles? She stopped believing in miracles long ago.

  She brushed her teeth, then dragged a comb through her tangled hair so it didn’t look quite so much like a rat’s nest.

  There was a half gallon of ice cream in the kitchen freezer. It wouldn’t be too difficult to eat herself into sugar oblivion. She could bring new meaning to the phrase, death by chocolate. What would her sister say? Rachael never, absolutely never, let sugar cross her lips, and she always said Haley was killing herself.

  The buzz from her doorbell blasted through the tiny, two bedroom house that she inherited from Nanny, effectively drawing her away from her dreary thoughts. Bummer. She’d already begun planning her funeral. She sighed. It was way too early for doorbells.

  She grabbed her faded, pink terry-cloth robe off the hook on the door and pulled it on over her green froggy flannel pajamas. Once she stood at the front door, she peered through the peephole her father installed for safety, as if anyone would ever break into her house. What would they steal? Her hand-me-down furniture?

  She blinked. No one there. Were they hiding?

  Hmm, serial killer lurking outside her door? Would that count as a date? Nope, they didn’t have murders in Hattersville. Nothing, absolutely nothing, ever happened in the small town. She shook her head and opened the door a crack, making sure the chain was secure.

  “Hello?”

  A man stepped into her line of vision. Haley’s mouth dropped open. Good Lord! This had to be the guy who invented tall, dark, and sexy! Her thighs quivered.

  At least six feet one inch of pure testosterone stood on her porch. He had the dark good looks of a male stripper, only with clothes on. The stranger removed his black Stetson, slowly dragging his fingers through thick, coal-black hair. His deep blue eyes held her gaze before sliding down her body as if he could see more than the sliver revealed from the slightly open door.

  Warm tingles spread over her like a Texas wildfire in the middle of summer. She could barely draw in a breath as her gaze moved past broad shoulders and a black, western shirt that hugged his scrumptious muscles. Then her eyes slipped right down to the low-slung jeans riding his hips, past muscled thighs, all the way to his scuffed black boots.

  Oh, Lord, her every fantasy stood on her front porch!

  She forced herself to meet his gaze.

  I want him! She felt like a kid in a candy store with lots of money to spend. Mommy, Mommy can I have the hot sexy cowboy! Pleeeeeeeeease!

  If only it was that easy. No way would she ever have the opportunity to have sex with someone who looked like that cowboy. What was he doing at her door, anyway? Lost?

 
; “Haley, right?” he asked with a slow drawl that made her body tremble with need.

  How did he know her name? She grasped the door a little harder. He smiled as though he knew exactly what she was thinking. Her world began to tilt. She remembered that breathing might not be a bad thing so she drew in a deep breath. “What?” the word warbled out. She cleared her throat and tried again. “Do you need directions or something?”

  “You’re Haley.”

  She nodded.

  He smiled wider, showing perfectly straight, white teeth. “Mind if I come in?”

  Her fantasy of this cowboy’s naked body pressed against her naked body shattered like rocks hitting a mirror. Oh, this guy was good, real good, but she wasn’t born yesterday. He’d obviously seen her name on the mailbox out front. She raised her chin. “I don’t need a vacuum. I have all the pots and pans I will ever use—including waterless cookware. There’s a complete set of encyclopedias on my e-reader and I have a double-barreled shotgun for protection. Now, do you want to tell me why you’re ringing my doorbell at this time of morning?”

  “You prayed for a miracle. I’m the answer to your prayer.” He rested his hand on her grandmother’s old chair. Her rocker had always sat in that same spot on the porch for as long as she could remember. The cowboy lightly set the chair in motion. Back and forth, back and forth, his thumb lightly caressing the weathered wood.

  Wow, her prayer was really answered? The man upstairs gave her more than she asked for. She reached up to smooth her hair about the same time reality set in. Had she lost her mind?

  “Go away!” She slammed the door shut. Her pulse raced so fast Haley thought her heart would jump out of her chest. Who was he? Definitely the wrong house. Shoot, the wrong town. No one looked liked him and lived in Hattersville. Definitely a salesman. As if she needed another vacuum cleaner. Three were quite enough. Another magazine subscription might have been nice. One could never have enough magazines.

  Her pulse slowed to a more normal rate. But wouldn’t it have been nice if he was sent in answer to a prayer? How had he known she’d prayed for a miracle? Not that it mattered since she slammed the door in his face.

 

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