The Eleventh Hour. Wendy Etherington

The Eleventh Hour - Wendy Etherington


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bet.”

      “What can I get you?” the bartender asked.

      “Nothing,” Laine said before Mark could respond. Shaking her head, she waved. “Bye, Mark.”

      As Mark the Cheating Scumbag got up from his stool and strolled away, Laine glanced around Suds. With its ancient-looking tables, scuffed floor, ever-flowing tap and simple bar food, it reminded her of Temptation.

      It was still hard to believe she was too far away to rush back to Kendall and see what problems had popped up at the bar.

      She did, however, have to worry what bills might need paying. And she couldn’t push aside the compulsion to call her sister and remind her to call the auction house about selling the furniture.

      She’d left a clearly outlined plan of action taped to the bar before she’d left on Thursday, and she’d bet her best zoom lens that Cat hadn’t so much as glanced at it.

      Digging her cell phone from her purse, she called the bar. Though it was nearly nine on a Sunday night, she knew her sister wouldn’t be home with a cup of tea and a book.

      “Cat?” she yelled into the phone over the blaring music.

      “Lainey?”

      Laine ground her teeth. “Have you called the auction house yet? We need to get some cash for the furniture to pay off the liquor supplier.”

      “Hi, sister dear, how are you?” Cat answered back in a sarcastic tone. “How was your day? I’m sure it’s so difficult dealing with everything all on your own since I left you there without a thought at all for anybody but myself.”

      Laine eyed the bar in front of her and tried to resist the urge to pound her head against it. They’d had this argument already. Her income was all they had at the end of the month. She had to make sure the money kept coming in. “Please don’t start, Cat,” she said calmly. “You’ll be fine. Just follow my list.”

      “What list?”

      “The one I taped to the bar that explained step by step what you needed to do this week.”

      “Oh, I wondered what that was. Some guy spilled whiskey all over it Friday night. I threw it away.”

      Laine rubbed her temples. Why had she called? Why did she continue to submit herself to the torture of communicating with her sister? “I’ll e-mail you another copy. And call the auction house first thing tomorrow.”

      “I’m busy.”

      “Please, Cat. We have to get moving on these things.”

      “Yeah, sure we do.”

      Was that a catch in her sister’s voice? Okay, maybe she was irresponsible and forgetful, but she was family. Her baby sister. This closing was hard on her. Maybe—

      “Look, Laine, I’ve got to go,” she said and disconnected.

      Their once-boisterous Irish father was no doubt rolling over in his grave at the tension between his two girls. Laine had always taken care of her sister, tried to get her to do the right thing, the responsible thing. But Cat never saw things the same way and inevitably dug in her heels whenever Laine tried to convince her otherwise.

      Feeling both relief at having done her duty and overwhelming guilt at abandoning Cat to tasks she would never manage on her own, she closed her cell phone, then dropped it back in her purse.

      She would just have to straighten it all out when she got back.

      Rolling her shoulders, she thought about her shooting plan for the next day. Some aerials of the damage, some—

      Without fanfare or a drumroll, Steve Kimball walked into the bar, his buddy Josh Burke flanking him.

      Steve looked every bit as good as he had that summer. Wavy black hair, broad shoulders, confident, seductive smile. Caught up in her stunned, drooling stare, she even thought—from fifteen feet away—she could see the mischievous glint in his bright blue eyes.

      Her body loosened. Sparked. Stood at attention.

      Though confused at being awakened so suddenly, she was pretty sure her libido saluted.

      What had she done? Why had she thought she could be within twenty miles of this man and not want him again?

      Like the chicken she was trying to prove she wasn’t, she hid behind a menu. She wasn’t ready to face him.

      By now she supposed he knew she was in town, since she’d spotted Josh the first night she’d arrived, when she’d met her friend Denise for drinks.

      As she peeked past the menu, she saw him looking around the bar, as if searching for someone. Her? Not likely. He’d been angry and resentful when she’d asked him to choose between her and his job. In retrospect, she could hardly blame him.

      An adventurer like him wouldn’t have stayed satisfied with her for long. Not when he had his pick of any woman he wanted. And she couldn’t imagine spending her life watching him jump out of airplanes, wondering when the day would come that he never made it home.

      Deep down she’d known they’d never last. Asking him to choose, when she already knew the answer, was an easy way to bring everything to a neat end.

      He and Josh obviously spotted their buddies in a back booth, already crowded with giggling women. She recalled many times when Steve, Josh and Tommy were surrounded by women. Josh, with his shaggy, curly dark hair and direct stare. Tommy with his clean-cut, blond California good looks. And Steve, rounding out the gorgeous and charming threesome.

      She could hardly blame the women for their good taste. Still, Laine had been embarrassingly insecure and jealous.

      In the years since, she’d grown up a lot, found some confidence and backbone. She wasn’t emotionally invested in Steve anymore. He and his dangerous job simply reminded her of an uncertain time in her life, and of her insecurity about his feelings for her. And while he might still affect her body, his job didn’t matter, except in relation to her photo assignment. She wasn’t falling for him again.

      Especially since he wasn’t likely to give her a second glance.

      Save Aunt Jen from a wildfire and her pride. Wow her editor with action, nongirlie photos. Resist Steve Kimball.

      A workable plan. A reasonable plan.

      Right?

      2

      SETTLED INTO A BOOTH and surrounded by Josh and Cole and the lovely ladies they’d invited, Steve glanced around the bar. He saw several colleagues, a few people he vaguely recalled from either his residency seven years ago or the recent work on the fires, plus a stranger or two.

      Certainly no Laine Sheehan.

      He wished he wasn’t so disappointed. They hadn’t parted on the best of terms. It’s not as though she’d be holding up a welcome banner.

      “So, did you put out the fire yet?” a buxom brunette sitting between Josh and Cole asked.

      “No, silly,” her equally buxom blond companion said with a nudge. “Don’t you ever watch the news?”

      “Not if I can help it…”

      Steve let their voices fade into the background. Though he hesitated to admit it to himself, and certainly wouldn’t tell his friends, he was bored.

      And he couldn’t explain why. Back home in Georgia he liked nothing better than to hang out with his buddies from the firehouse. If a woman or two wandered across his path, all the better.

      Why was he restless? Why could he only manage a smile at Cole’s raunchy joke?

      Simple. He couldn’t get Laine out of his mind.

      “You all right?” Cole asked.

      “Fine.”


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