I'll Never Let You Go (Morgans of Nashville) (4 page)

BOOK: I'll Never Let You Go (Morgans of Nashville)
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“Family?” He kept wiping the very clean bar. Most would see a man making conversation, but cops didn’t just make conversation.
“Mother and father have passed.”
“Sorry to hear that. You got brothers and sisters?”
Smile. Sip the beer. Act normal. “Are you writing a book about me, KC?”
A laugh rumbled in his chest. “Hard to break the cop habits.”
“Right.” He continued to lean toward her, still waiting for an answer.
Leah nodded toward a couple of women at the end of the bar. “You’ve got some thirsty gals over there.”
KC glanced down the bar at a collection of women raising empty beer mugs. “No rest for the wicked.”
No truer words. “So they tell me.”
“Back to work.”
She tipped the beer bottle’s neck toward him. “Good to meet you, KC.”
He saluted. “You too, Dr. Leah.”
She faced the stage and watched as Georgia sang and swayed to the music. She had the crowd in the palm of her hand, and Leah envied her command of the room.
A tap on her shoulder had her jumping, and she turned to see a tall gal with dark brown hair. She had a full, smiling face and a sharp gaze. Dressed in black, a thick chain around her neck dipped between the hollow of her breasts.
Leah smiled, relaxing. They’d bumped into each other at the front door minutes earlier, but Deidre had made a beeline for the ladies’ room. “Deidre.”
“I see you’re all settled in. Cold night.”
“Nice in here.”
Leah had met Deidre Jones a couple of months ago at the gym. They’d become friends, and when Deidre had suggested Leah join a marathon training group, she’d agreed. This New Year was about making new choices. Living. Taking full breaths. And having a friend was nice. “What brings you here tonight?”
Deidre grinned. “Got a date tonight.”
“A date?”
She winked, like a normal, happy woman would. “Nice to play and not work.”
“Still running in the morning?”
“If the date doesn’t go too late, I’ll be there.”
“So is that a yes or a no?” Grinning, she mimicked Deidre’s pointed look when Leah waivered on a run date.
Deidre tipped the top of her bottle toward Leah in a touché kind of salute. “It’s a yes.”
“Good. Always more fun when you’re there.”
Leah searched around. “Where is this date?”
“In the head. He’ll be right back. Just wanted to say hi again.”
The familiar face loosened a few knots. “Thanks.” A man approached behind Deidre. Tall, blond. “Is that David Westbrook from our running group?”
“Yep.” She grinned. “But don’t tell anyone in the group. I don’t need a lot of shit about it. My soon-to-be ex-husband will just make more trouble.”
Deidre had spoken of her divorce to Leah a few times. She hadn’t used the word
stalking
, but Leah had recognized the pattern. She’d offered suggestions that Deidre had brushed aside. “Sure.”
David grinned as he wrapped an arm around Deidre. “Leah. See you in the morning?”
“I’ll be there.”
“Great.”
“See you.” Deidre hooked her arm in David’s and the two vanished into the crowd.
“Right.” She nudged her back close to the bar and watched as Georgia moved back and forth onstage. The woman had an easy confidence Leah admired.
A man jostled next to her at the bar. When she glanced in his direction, he grinned. “Hey. I’m Max.”
She moved back a step. “Hey.”
“You here by yourself, little lady?” He had to shout to be heard.
“No.”
He made an effort to look around her. “I don’t see anybody.”
She dug her fingernail into the silver label of her beer and ripped the paper. Dogs, cats, snakes, even birds she knew. In an animal, she read dangerous fear or childlike joy at a glance, but people, well, Philip had proven that she didn’t understand the warning signs. A fight-or-flight impulse tightened her chest. She barely recognized her voice when she heard it. “I’m waiting for Alex Morgan.”
Brown eyes narrowed and then widened slightly. “You’re dating that ass?”
The mention of Alex’s name had several other people shifting their attention to her. So Alex wasn’t popular. Interesting. Still, he’d been nice to her, and that fostered an odd kind of loyalty. She sipped her beer. “I only see one ass.”
The man’s gaze narrowed, but instead of moving toward her, he took a step back, held up a hand in surrender, and melted into the crowd.
As much as Leah would like to think she was a tough customer, small-boned, five foot two and 105 pounds soaking wet, her size didn’t scare away much. He hadn’t bolted because of her big, bad scary self.
The wall of energy behind her, vibrating and snapping close, had scared him off. Tightening her grip on her beer, she turned to find Alex Morgan standing behind her.
A Saturday night and he wore a dark suit, a white shirt, and a narrow red tie twisted in a Windsor knot. Ink-black hair cut short and brushed off his face stressed a long, narrow face marked with lines around the eyes and mouth. She guessed he’d earned those lines by frowning, not smiling.
“Was he giving you a problem?” Alex’s gaze darted past her toward Max before settling back on her.
The tension cranked up a notch. Max was an annoyance. Alex was dangerous. He’d heard the comment, noticed the stares but had not reacted. “He was trying to make conversation.”
A muscle in his jaw clenched, released. He shifted his attention away from Max, dismissing him as a non-threat. “I see KC got you a beer.” He had to shout over the music.
“He did. Thank you.” The music pulsed, making conversation difficult. She guessed she’d been in the bar ten minutes, which put the time at about ten. How long did a date last before it ended?
“Can I get you another beer?”
“No. Just got started on this one.” A glance toward the bar found KC twisting the top off a beer bottle and pushing it Alex’s way. He scooped up the beer but didn’t drink.
Alex turned toward the stage as Georgia finished her song. The crowd cheered, and he raised a beer bottle to her when she looked in his direction. She winked. The band settled into a softer, slower song.
“She’s good,” Leah said. Maybe talk would burst the anxiety bubble. “Has she always sung?”
“Since she could talk. But she’s only been singing in public for a couple of years.” He sipped his beer and faced her. “You look pale. Are you okay?”
Lying hadn’t always come as naturally as it did now. “I’m fine.”
His blue-steel gaze studied her. “You look like you want to bolt.”
Normally, a smile and a few fibs deflated questions and concerns. “I spend my days with barking dogs and hissing cats. Haven’t been out in a while.”
“There’s a restaurant across the street. Much quieter and less crowded. We’ll go there.”
It wasn’t a suggestion but a direction. She wasn’t sure what scared her more: the pulsing beat of this crowd or being alone with him. The frying pan or the fire?
New Year’s resolutions had prompted so many changes in the last couple of weeks.
Get out. Be a part of humanity.
It had been an easy enough promise to make on New Year’s, after she’d finished her second glass of champagne, as she’d watched the televised ball in Times Square drop. “Sure. Sounds good. Let me get my coat.” She set her beer on the bar and grabbed her coat. He took it from her and held it out. Not controlling but the move of a gentleman, she reminded herself.
A smile flicking the edges of her lips, she turned and lowered her arms into the coat. He raised the coat up to her neck, his fingertips barely brushing the back of her hair. The physical touch constricted her lungs.
Smiling, always smiling, she turned and faced Alex.
A dark brow arched. “You okay?”
“Great.”
She moved out toward the door, threading her body around the growing crowd. He trailed close behind, and she caught several angry gazes directed at Alex and her. Outside, the snap of cold air redirected her attention from worry. “Where to?”
“Right across the street.” He moved beside her and gently placed his hand in the small of her back, guiding her. Gently. Not all touch equaled pain. No worries.
The restaurant specialized in barbecue and was outfitted with clean but dinged-up booths. The floor had once been a black-and-white tile, but years of wear and tear had worn away the crisp lines, leaving it a shadowy blend of dark and light. Behind the counter, a hot grill butted against the wall where a tall man wearing a white apron over a white shirt ladled barbecue sauce on dozens of sizzling chicken wings and thighs. The sweet, spicy scents were welcoming.
They settled in a seat by the front window and she shrugged off her jacket, refusing to be nervous. This was a date. Nothing more. Dates were fun. And she wasn’t a crazy woman. She could go on a date with a guy. She could.
Alex ordered a couple more beers and reached for the laminated menus stuck between the napkin holder and the salt-and-pepper shakers. “Place might not look like much, but the barbecue is great.” He unfolded his menu. “Vets eat meat, don’t they?”
“I do. Love barbecue.” She wouldn’t eat much, but she could push the food around and make a show of it. Their beers arrived, and he asked if he could place their order. She agreed, but instantly second-guessed herself, wondering if giving him any kind of control was a smart thing.
She sipped her beer and realized she hadn’t eaten much that day. She’d worked late and her appetite was off due to nerves and fatigue. When the waiter set biscuits on the table, she took one and broke off a piece.
“Rick says you’re a popular vet with dogs.”
“I love what I do, so it’s easy.” She took a sip of beer. “He says you’re a great agent.”
Alex traced the label on his bottle. “He didn’t say that.”
“Maybe not in so many words. But my receptionist got him talking the last time he was in, and she said he had nice things to say about you.”
He studied the menu. “So you and your receptionist were talking about me?”
Color rushed to her cheeks. “I suppose we were. We take care of several of the police canines, and we generally talk about them and their families.”
He closed the menu and looked up. “Good to know. So you must have a dog?”
“No. No dogs for me. I work long hours. Maybe one day.” Since Philip, she’d feared loving anything too much in case it would be taken away.
“I picture you with a houseful of cats and dogs. The homespun type.”
“You’re making fun of me.”
“Not at all. Making an observation.”
Homespun
jabbed, conjuring rocking chairs, shawls, and, well, old. “You’re not the animal type.”
“I like Tracker. But I’m not a dog or a cat guy. I’m on the go too much.”
“Which begs the question, why did you ask me out?”
He sat back in the booth and tugged his coat jacket in place. “You’re different. Interesting.”
“In a homespun sort of way?”
“In a multilayered sort of way.”
She sensed he had lots of questions, but there would be no peeking behind the curtain where she hid her secrets. “I vaccinate dogs and cats all day. Most interesting thing I’ve done lately is joining a running group.”
“With Deidre Jones? She told me a vet had joined the group.”
“I didn’t realize you knew Deidre.”
“She works with my brother at the Nashville Police Department. We cross paths occasionally. How’s the running going?”
“I’m the slowest in the group. And that’s not false modesty. It’s the truth.”
“Tortoise and the hare. Stick with it.”
“Maybe.” She sipped her beer. “You don’t seem to have a lot of friends at Rudy’s.”
“No.”
“Why?”
“I investigate cops. Doesn’t win me many points with the rank and file.”
She traced the rim of her cup. Ah, that explained the man’s comment in the bar. “Does that bother you?”
“No.”
His attention shifted to her palm and the scar slashing across it. She closed her fingers, resisting the urge to explain. Whatever she told him would be a lie. She never told the truth about her past, which still shamed her. How could she explain that she was a smart woman who had stayed with an abusive and, ultimately, murderous man? The less said, the better.
“Seems they’d want to weed out the bad apples.”
Alex’s expression didn’t change, but somewhere inside him she thought she saw a door close and lock. “You would think.”
They both hid behind walls. Guarded secrets. Good.
You leave mine alone, and I won’t dig into yours
. “So, we’re two very simple people.”
The corner of his lip tipped into that grin. The ice melted for a moment, and that unfamiliar pull of desire flowered again. Some would have embraced it. Leah likened desire to a tiger’s dangerous beauty.
“I think we’re two people who’re fairly bad at dating and don’t like to talk about ourselves,” Alex said.
His directness charmed her. And that scared her. Being charmed led to liking, which led to desire, which equaled vulnerability. Her nerves stretched tighter and tighter. “Then why’re we here?”
A shrug. “I was curious about you. And Tracker likes you. He’s a good judge of character.”
Secrets, sadness, and shame banged on the wall so carefully built. She sipped her beer, which now tasted flat and lifeless. “Ah.”
“So what about you?”
“I’m fairly straightforward. Raised in Nashville. Both my parents have passed. Got my vet degree in Knoxville at the University of Tennessee. Enjoying the single life.”
He leaned forward, as if a bullshit meter had clanged in his head. “How did you get the scars on your hands?”
Cut to the chase. This guy didn’t waste time or mince words. No need to look down to see the deep slashes that crossed both palms. “Are you this nosy on most first dates?”

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