Part 5 (2/2)
”Well, regardless-keep away from him. I don't want my sister anywhere near another violent a.s.shole.”
Lauren clutched the hot mug so tightly her fingertips burned. She placed the cup back on the coffee table before she spilled the contents. ”He's not Jonathan Knight, and you don't make decisions for me.”
”Like the decisions you made up until you divorced that New York p.r.i.c.k were good ones?”
”Todd Taylor, get your feet off my coffee table and shut your d.a.m.n mouth.” Lauren jabbed a finger at him. ”You don't get to say who I can and can't talk to, and I will be talking to Nate. I have to rationally and strategically change his mind about his plans for Mac's place.”
She looked away from her brother, huffing out a strangled groan at Kathy's amused scrutiny. ”And this is funny, because?”
Kathy's grin spread even wider. ”Rationally and strategically?”
”Yes. I'm sure he's a sensible man who'll consider other options.” Lauren smoothed down her shorts. Surely, from across the room, her sister-in-law couldn't see how her palms grew damp just thinking about Nate. ”One fist fight doesn't make him violent, especially if you're using the same yardstick you measure yourself with.”
Todd snorted. ”Yeah, whatever. But you're still making too big of a deal out of this whole thing. So what if a few rich suits or some B-grade actress from a telly soap wants to spend a weekend up here?”
”It's not the suits or actresses who worry me-and you know it.”
”When are you gonna stop hiding and live again, Laur? Are you still afraid of Knight; is that it? Because you act like it.”
”Todd,” Kathy said in gentle warning.
”I'm not afraid of Jonathan. I just don't want my face-and Drew's face-plastered all over some trashy gossip magazine. I don't want them speculating how s.e.xy Lexy ended up with a screwed-up face and a screwed-up life.”
Todd leaned forward, pumped up and ready for a sibling fight-to-the-death. ”Screwed-up life? I thought you were happy.”
Now look at what she'd started. She loved her life here with her brother and sister-in-law and their extended family. But some days-some days she yearned for more. A more where she could run into Bounty Bay's supermarket without feeling as if she were on a covert mission. A more where chatting to other mums at Drew's preschool wouldn't bring on a bout of paranoia, wondering if they'd seen past her dyed hair and lack of makeup. A more where strong arms and hot kisses soothed her to sleep at night, and she had something other than insomnia to keep her company.
”You know what I mean. I am happy here, and that's why I don't want some two-bit reporter like Nate Fraser-”
”Photojournalist,” her ever-helpful sibling pointed out.
”Changing everything,” Lauren finished.
”And how will making him your best buddy help?”
”What would you suggest I do otherwise to change his mind, brother dearest?” Lauren c.o.c.ked her eyebrow. ”Blow up Mac's place? A spot of arson, perhaps?”
Todd threw up his hands, flopping back against the couch. Java whined sympathetically and stretched up to lick the side of Todd's cheek.
Lauren folded her arms and rolled her eyes. ”Look, Todd. I'm not planning to make him my buddy, but remember Dad always said you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.”
Kathy's warm chuckle rolled around the room. ”Absolutely. And the way you two have been eyeballing each other? Nate's hot enough to melt you into a puddle of honey.”
”That's ridiculous.” So not ridiculous, since it appeared her emotional thermostat had gone haywire where Nate was concerned.
”He touches her and I'll kill him.” Todd stood and stalked outside.
Lauren met Kathy's eyes. ”It's not like that. It's purely professional.”
Kathy came over, pressed her cheek to Lauren's and whispered, ”Then why are you blus.h.i.+ng, little teina?”
By the middle of the week Lauren could walk without crutches-fortunately for her, as a client's '63 Impala needed its radiator reinstalled.
With Drew in preschool and her ear buds blaring Lady Antebellum at a teeth-rattling volume, Lauren tightened mounting bolts in the Impala's engine bay. She couldn't carry a tune if her life was in jeopardy, but that didn't stop her shaking her tail feather as she attempted to harmonize with Charles Kelley's s.e.x-on-a-stick voice.
The tap on her shoulder catapulted her heart past her vocal chords, and she narrowly missed clunking her head on the hood as she whirled around. Nate stood in sawdust-speckled blue jeans with one hand still raised, green eyes twinkling.
”Sorry.” The flash of white teeth behind his firm lips translated the word as Lady A. continued to blare.
Tugging out the ear buds, she sucked in a deep breath and tried to slow her heartbeat by shoving a fist against her chest.
”Sorry,” he repeated. ”I did knock, but you were, ah, kind of engrossed under there.”
His gaze flicked to her coveralls. Her uns.e.xy, grease-smeared coveralls that sometimes rode up her rear end when she bent over.
Heat speared through her, and she half turned aside, switching off the music and stuffing the ear buds into her pocket. ”Not your fault; I was in the zone, and I didn't hear you arrive.”
Nate moved to stand next to her, ducking a little to peer under the Impala's hood. Chrome gleamed, the V-8 engine so clean she'd bet a month's wages Nate couldn't find a speck of dirt on it-or anywhere else in her workshop.
”Nice car. Are you almost done?”
She swiped a finger across her lips, hoping she didn't have the remains of this morning's muesli bar snack smeared around her mouth. ”Todd's mostly finished the bodywork and I'm just working on the last of the mechanical stuff.”
Hands well away from her handiwork, Nate stepped back, glancing toward the organized benches loaded with her dad's tools, then looking across to the small, sectioned-off area with a fold-out futon couch where Drew often played with his toy cars while she worked.
”You've got quite a set up here. Your dad must be proud of the work you're both doing. Does he live nearby too?”
”No.” And because she didn't want to field any more awkward questions, she added, ”He died when I was a teenager.”
”I'm sorry. Todd mentioned the Caddy was yours and your dad's...” His voice trailed off.
”It's okay,” she said, even though it wasn't. How different might her life be if David Taylor, her biggest supporter and cheerleader when it came to her following her own path, hadn't collapsed in his workshop?
Nate's gaze skimmed over her, warm and sympathetic. Most people broke eye contact when faced with another's grief, but not him. He studied each line of her face as though through his camera lens. Very unsettling.
She ducked back under the hood and picked up her dropped socket wrench. ”How's Todd working out?”
Nate cleared his throat and leaned against the side of her station wagon. ”He's doing great. We've made a plan of attack, and tomorrow morning we're ripping off the roof.”
”Progress.”
”Yeah, which is why I stopped by-Todd said you have a chainsaw I could hire instead of mucking around with getting one from town.”
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