Stevie Lee

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Authors: Tara Janzen

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Stevie Lee

Tara Janzen

 

To Mary and Wayne with love.

Thanks for sharing your little piece

of paradise.

First published by Bantam/Loveswept

Copyright 1989 by Glenna McReynolds

EBook Copyright Tara Janzen, 2012

EBook Published by Tara Janzen, 2012

Cover Design by
Hot Damn Designs
, 2011

EBook Design by
A Thirsty Mind
, 2012

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Dear Reader,

Welcome to the Tara Janzen line of Classic Romances!
New York Times
Bestselling author, Tara Janzen, is the creator of the lightning-fast paced and super sexy CRAZY HOT and CRAZY COOL Steele Street series of romantic suspense novels. But before she fell in love with the hot cars, bad boys, big guns, and wild women of Steele Street, she wrote steamy romances for the Loveswept line under the name Glenna McReynolds. All thirteen of these much-loved classic romances are now available as eBooks.

Writing as both Glenna McReynolds and Tara Janzen, this national bestselling author has won numerous awards for her work, including a RITA from Romance Writers of America, and nine 4 ½ TOP PICKS from
Romantic Times
magazine. Two of her books are on the
Romantic Times
ALL-TIME FAVORITES list – RIVER OF EDEN, and SHAMELESS.  LOOSE AND EASY, a Steele Street novel, is one of Amazon’s TOP TEN ROMANCES for 2008.

She is also the author of an epic medieval fantasy trilogy, THE CHALICE AND THE BLADE, DREAM STONE, and PRINCE OF TIME.

Titles

Classic Romances

Scout’s Honor

Thieves In The Night

Stevie Lee

Dateline: Kydd and Rios

Blue Dalton

Outlaw Carson

Moonlight and Shadows

A Piece of Heaven

Shameless

The Courting Cowboy

Avenging Angel

The Dragon and the Dove

Dragon’s Eden

Medieval Fantasy Trilogy

“A stunning epic of romantic fantasy.”
Affaire de Coeur
, five-star review

The Chalice and the Blade

Dream Stone

Prince of Time

River of Eden
– “One of THE most breathtaking and phenomenal adventure tales to come along in years! Glenna McReynolds has created an instant adventure classic.” Romantic Times – 2002 BEST ROMANTIC SUSPENSE AWARD WINNER

Steele Street Series
– “Hang on to your seat for the ride of your life . . . thrilling . . . sexy. Tara Janzen has outdone herself.” Fresh Fiction

“Bad boys are hot, and they don’t come any hotter than the Steele Street gang.”
Romantic Times

Crazy Hot

Crazy Cool

Crazy Wild

Crazy Kisses

Crazy Love

Crazy Sweet

On the Loose

Cutting Loose

Loose and Easy

Breaking Loose

Loose Ends

SEAL of My Dreams
Anthology

All proceeds from the sale of SEAL Of My Dreams are pledged to Veterans Research Corporation, a non-profit foundation supporting veterans medical research.

Panama Jack
, by Tara Janzen

For more information about Tara Janzen, her writing and her books please visit her on her website
www.tarajanzen.com
; on Facebook
http://on.fb.me/mSstpd
; and Twitter @tara_janzen
http://twitter.com/#!/tara_janzen
.

One

Halsey Morgan was alive—bad news sure traveled fast.

Stevie Lee Brown held the telephone receiver at arm’s length and gave it a long, hard look, barely fighting the temptation to rip the darn thing off the wall. Ten lousy calls in the last four hours had all reported the same lousy news—Halsey Morgan was alive. From the Grand Lake postmaster to the station attendant at the Gas Em Up, everybody wanted to extend their sympathies.

“Halsey Morgan,” she muttered, finally hanging up the phone in disgust. With the unconscious ease of habit, she slumped against the beer cooler and absently wiped her hands on the bar towel wrapped around her waist. Dampness stained the front of her worn jeans. Loose strands of honey-brown hair clung to her cheeks and trailed down the front of her red shirt, adding to her mussed and tired appearance.

Sure as the sun rising in the morning, she was doomed to spend the rest of her days in this backwater wilderness tucked up against the Rocky Mountains. The Trail’s End Bar actually would be the end of her trail. The same old faces, the same old gossip year after year, she thought, and all thanks to a miraculously resurrected Halsey Morgan. Obviously the rumors about his death in the South Pacific had been just that—rumors. If half of the rest of what she’d heard about his exploits was true, he should have been dead a long time ago. But he wasn’t, and now her plans were ruined.

“Hey! Stevie! What’s a guy gotta do to get a drink around here?” A booming male voice carried the question into the semidarkened hall.

A weary sigh escaped her lips. Too tired to kick the man out, she crossed her arms and leaned harder into the beer cooler to wait him out. How she’d ever allowed Kong Kingman to overdrink was beyond her. Sure, she’d had a lot on her mind, but only a fool would let the behemoth of Grand County get snockered in her bar, and the one thing Stevie prided herself on was being nobody’s fool.

“Hey! I know you’re back there!” Kong hollered again. Of course she was there, she thought irritably, tucking her hands further under her arms. She was always back there, cleaning up, serving up, and dishing out.

Damn that Halsey Morgan anyway.

* * *

Halsey had gotten himself another bargain, that was for sure. Why he didn’t invest in a real car instead of always picking up somebody else’s lemon was beyond him; or rather, it was beyond his financial situation. Everything was beyond his financial situation. Delilah had sucked him dry.

He dropped the last of his groceries into the bed of the pickup truck and wrestled a tarp over them to keep out the high country blizzard. Heavy gusts of wind whipped his hair and chilled his face. His half-frozen fingers struggled with a length of climbing rope.

It was springtime in the Rockies, when Mother Nature let loose with her whole bag of tricks from blizzards to thunderstorms, rolling them all up into one and throwing them across the night sky. Bolts of lightning danced behind the low-hanging clouds. Thunder rumbled across the Kawuneeche Valley and echoed off the Never Summer Range. The beauty and power of the display got his blood going; Mom Nature was good at that. She’d stolen his heart at a very young age, and she’d never let go.

He slip-knotted the rope, then jumped in the cab and slammed the door a couple of times until it caught. Each attempt deposited a fresh layer of snow on the seat, and tightened his mouth another degree toward grim. He didn’t need this kind of trouble, not after what he’d been through. People had been looking at him funny all day, setting his nerves on edge. Halsey wasn’t a common name, but the wide-eyed, slack-jawed response of the Grand Lake postmaster had made him wonder if it was stranger than he thought. He hoped not. He needed to figure out a way to make a living in this town, which meant getting a job—which wasn’t likely if everyone he ran into looked at him funny.

With equal amounts of cussing and praying, he turned the key and waited through the truck’s prerequisite coughing and hacking. When the engine finally caught, a flicker of a smile crossed his mouth. “Just get me home.” He gave the dash a solid pat.

Home. The word had a foreign sound in his mind. He’d spent too many years in faraway places, he thought as he wiggled and shook the gearshift into first—and too many months stuck on that island where even the greatest boat builder in the world couldn’t have put back together what the South Pacific had taken apart.

Hal didn’t know what the rest of the world had called the maelstrom of wind and water that had swallowed his sailboat and spat it out on a strange and desolate shore, but he called the storm ‘Delilah,’ the lady who had laid him low. If a cruising yachtsman hadn’t spotted the wreckage, he’d still be rotting away under the coconut palms, living on sushi, and trying to rig together everything that could float. The episode had put a slight crimp in his adventuresome spirit and a major fracture in his bankroll. He told himself he was damn lucky to be back in the good old U.S. of A., told himself he was glad to be home—but he wished like hell he still had
Freedom
under his feet with the wind in her sails.

Instead what he had under his feet was a worn-out clutch and a gas pedal that went through the floorboard. He’d never seen the likes of it. A rainstorm in Utah had soaked him to the knees, and now his legs were encased in a thin layer of icy cotton.

Yessiree
, he thought with a wry grin,
darn glad to be back in the good old U.S. of A.
Maybe he should have a drink to celebrate his return before heading back to the cabin.

As if seconding his thoughts, the engine groaned and choked. Hal slammed down on the clutch and gave the truck more gas. The damn thing loved gas. Hal doubted if they’d missed a station between the West Coast and the Continental Divide. The engine warmed up in spits and jerks, and then, out of the blue, it died. Not a hesitant death, not in the least. Nope. Hal had enough experience to know when an engine left for the great beyond, and his just had.

Wonderful
. He slumped over the steering wheel, muttering every dockside obscenity he knew. The list took a couple of minutes to complete and did little to ease his anger. Now, besides needing a drink, he needed a ride home.

Fat chance, he thought. The grocery clerk had locked the door behind him and was probably long gone. He glanced out the windows for another sign of life in the deserted mountain town and found only one.

TRAIL’S END . . . TRAIL’S END, a flash of blue neon glowed at the end of the block, backlighting the flurries of wind-driven snow. He sighed. This wasn’t at all how he’d imagined his end of the trail. An ice crevasse on Mount Everest maybe, or getting “Maytagged” in a stretch of white water, but not freezing to death in the middle of Grand Lake, Colorado.

A wry smile curved a corner of his mouth again and stuck.
Trail’s End
. If he wasn’t so tired and hungry, the situation would be funny. But there wasn’t anything funny about freezing to death, so he hauled himself out of the cab and began the cold walk to the Trail’s End Bar.

* * *

“He looks a little rough around the edges, Stevie. I wouldn’t want to tangle with him.”

Stevie heard her older sister’s summation of Halsey Morgan through the buzz and crackle of the phone line and let out another heavy sigh before answering. “I don’t plan on tangling with him, Nola. If he’s got the money to get his property out of hock, fine. If not, I’ll pay the taxes on it again this year and it will be mine. All legal. All tidy.”
All shot to hell in a hand basket,
she added silently, doubting if Mr. Morgan had any intention of losing his cabin and acreage to back taxes. What a sweet deal it had been.

“Well, he didn’t look as though he had much money.” Nola’s voice lifted hopefully.

“His kind never do.” But his kind managed to wander the world freely, which was more than Stevie could manage. No one could tell her he didn’t have something stashed away.

“Dried beans, generic coffee, a loaf of bread, a dozen eggs, ten pounds of potatoes, peanut butter, no jelly . . .”

Stretching the phone cord behind her, Stevie walked over to the window and pressed her nose against the glass. “Nola?” she asked, interrupting the rundown of Morgan’s grocery list. “Why are you telling me this?” A snowplow turned onto the main street and lowered its blade. Great, she thought, she shouldn’t have too much trouble getting home. Her Mustang had chains, but she wasn’t up to putting them on tonight.

“And three of those little boxes of macaroni and cheese,” Nola added, finishing the list. “Isn’t it obvious? The man is broke. Your position is secure.”

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