Two
 
 
 
 
 
He called for the bartender, who left the brunette and her sweater with a grunt of frustration, and ordered hot tea while Lanie peeled off her sodden coat and rubbed feeling back into her hands.
“Will DeMaio,” he said, offering his hand, which was huge and dry and very warm against hers.
“Lanie Burke.” Damn it, was her nose running?
“Short for Elaine?”
“Long for Lane.” She smiled up at him, trying to ignore the happy little thrill that rippled through her when he grinned back. “A family name. My sister’s Bell, which is just for ... well, Bell. My mother has a thing about genealogy.”
“Good thing no one on her side was named Hocken-schmidt, I guess.” He slid the mug of tea toward her. “Sugar? Milk?”
Who was this guy? She’d stopped shivering, but it didn’t make the urge to snuggle up to his broad, sweatered chest any less appealing. Her flirting instinct was coming to life despite her best intentions, and since the ceiling hadn’t caved in and she was fairly sure she didn’t have broccoli stuck in her front teeth, she figured it couldn’t hurt. Much.
“Something artificial and probably very, very bad for me, if it’s available,” she said, wrapping her hands around the steaming mug. Will handed her two packets of Sweet ’N Low, and she stirred them in before tilting her head up to his. “Do you live here?”
“All my life. DeMaio Carpentry and Construction, that’s me. What about you?”
“I don’t live here.” She sighed and wriggled her still-frozen toes inside the soaked mules. Delicious buttery black leather ruined for nothing. “I’m looking for a little house on Gallows Hill Road, which actually doesn’t sound very appealing now that I think about it. Any idea where that is? And if I can get there without a snowmobile?”
He grinned, and she watched in amazement, wondering how his mouth had learned to curve into such a sensuous, cat-with-a-canary shape. Nothing that sexy could be a genetic accident. “I live there, if you can believe it. On Gallows Hill, I mean. And you won’t need a Sno-Cat, but you might need a little help plowing through the storm if you’re planning to stay here long enough to drink that tea.”
She glanced past a group of old-timers arguing about the Yankees’ latest trades, and out the front window, where only a thick white blur was visible beyond the dusty glass. A “gotcha” spring snow shower was one thing, but a blizzard was another. She’d be lucky if she made it back to the city on Monday night.
“And you’d be offering to help?” she asked, turning back to catch that irresistible twinkle in his eyes again.
Before he could reply, a rough hand settled on his shoulder, and a voice from behind him barked, “Who the hell do you think you are, DeMaio?”
Well, there was the beauty of a local bar, Lanie thought. Everyone knew everyone else, and no one had any respect for an out-of-towner’s attempts at good old-fashioned flirting.
Will shrugged off the hand and turned halfway around, giving Lanie a view of a guy who might as well have had “crotchety” tattooed on his forehead. Right underneath “curmudgeon.”
“I think I’m exactly who I was this morning, Vic.” Will’s tone was even, if slightly amused. “Who do you think you are at the moment?”
“Save the smart remarks, asshole,” the other man growled, swiping what could only be called a paw under his nose. “I want to know where you got the balls to underbid me by fifteen thousand on the high school job. You printing money in the basement now?”
“Have they made that legal finally? Good to know.” Will shrugged and turned back to Lanie, who gave him a weak smile. It was nice to discover that he was an optimist. If he thought Vic was just going to walk away, he obviously subscribed to the “glass half full” philosophy.
“I want an answer, DeMaio,” Vic shouted, and Lanie winced. One lit match within six feet of his breath, and the bar would go up in flames.
“I don’t have one for you, Vic.” Will’s voice was suddenly as no-nonsense as a piece of rebar, and about as friendly. There was no sign of that twinkle, either. “Not unless you’re looking for something along the lines of honest bidding, fair pricing, and a crew that spends more time with their tools than down here drinking.”
Oh, dear. Fighting words, definitely. And, strangely, kind of a turn-on. Had her brain frozen on the trudge over from the car? She’d never gone for the alpha type, not that she’d actually met a lot of them in the city. Not genuine ones, anyway. Not the kind who made a girl tingle by showing off his sexy twinkle as he took over, ordering tea and putting her into a chair. Well, put that way it didn’t sound very alpha, but going Neanderthal on the local drunk qualified. Still, she bit her bottom lip, praying that a bar brawl wasn’t imminent. She really didn’t know Will, but he’d been so nice before the other man showed up. He’d unwrapped her wet scarf. And plus, she wasn’t even close to finished admiring his face yet.
She was trying not to picture the angled strength of his jaw purpled with a bruise when a younger guy walked up behind Vic, who had just reached the rolling boil stage. “Not the time for business, Vic. Come on. We’ll handle this Monday.”
The stranger’s dark eyes flicked over Lanie, and she fought the urge to shudder. Something about the way he’d said “business” sounded much too ominous for an everyday argument between rival contractors.
“Sounds like a plan,” Will said smoothly, and turned back to Lanie as Vic was steered away. “Sorry about that.”
“Not very neighborly of them.” She watched as they disappeared into the crowd at the back of the bar. “Do contractors up here come to blows every day?”
“With Vic, only the ones that end in Y.” Will flashed another grin and propped an elbow on the bar. “Speaking of neighborly, though, I think I know where you’re headed. Dave and Jess Seaver’s place, right? My house is just past theirs, and I look after their place when they can’t come up for a while. So we’ll be neighbors as long as you’re here.”
At least sipping her tea was one way to hide a ridiculous, pleased grin. He was honest to God coming on to her. Either her flirting muscles were in better shape than she’d thought after six months on vacation, or the dusky light of the bar was hiding her half-thawed red nose and what was sure to be Bride of Frankenstein hair by now. On a good day it was two parts Felicity to one part Carrie Bradshaw (from the first season of Sex and the City, of course), but get it wet and it looked like she’d borrowed Elsa Lanchester’s wig.
She was about to reply when she heard a voice from across the bar and watched Will’s jaw tighten in irritation.
“Hey there, Will DeMaio.” A redhead in a thick black coat and a metallic gold scarf rubbed her shoulder against his, her lower lip caught between two very white, very large front teeth. “Who’s your friend?”
“Jill, this is Lanie Burke.” He’d edged closer to the bar to escape her friendly nudging, and his eyes had darkened to a furious navy blue, despite the courtesy in his tone.
Jill stopped rubbing and nudging, her overplucked red eyebrows drawn into a frown. “I don’t think we’ve met. Lanie. That’s a weird name, huh?”
The last few words were delivered with a falsely bright smile. Marking her territory, definitely, Lanie thought. She wondered when Jill would figure out Will wasn’t interested.
“No weirder than Jill, I guess,” she replied, and wanted to bite her tongue. Cattiness wasn’t the most attractive trait to put on display in this situation, but she couldn’t help it. Will had been flirting with her, damn it, and if Jill was her bad luck personified, she wasn’t going to give in without a fight.
“She’s here for the weekend,” Will cut in, taking Lanie’s hand. The contact was so unexpected, Lanie nearly jumped. “And we’re busy catching up.”
“Well, don’t let me interrupt,” Jill said, swallowing hard. Her injured sniffle puffed out her chest, which Lanie was pretty sure had been fortified with a padded WonderBra.
“That was flouncing,” Lanie whispered as the other woman headed for the back of the bar, red hair swung violently over her shoulder. “There are some hurt feelings there, if you ask me.”
Not that he had. Not that it was any of her business. She hadn’t come up here to find a guy, and she didn’t really know Will DeMaio at all. His romantic troubles were his problem—although it surprised her to realize how glad she was that dyed red hair and Spandex didn’t seem to be his taste.
“Her feelings have been hurt since the seventh grade,” Will said, shaking his head. “I’ve been giving her the ‘not interested’ signs since then, without much luck. She’s the most single-minded woman I’ve ever met.”
Hmmm. Lanie sipped her tea and glanced down at his left hand, which was wrapped around an icy bottle of beer, checking for the pale white stripe that would prove a wedding ring was nestled in his bureau at home. But he was clean—his hand was uniformly tan, with just the kind of long, capable-looking fingers she liked on a man.
“It’s the truth,” he said. Twinkle. Sparkle. “There’s no secret tragic history there, believe me. That probably doesn’t sound very convincing, but ...”
“The way my life has been going lately, I’m actually inclined to believe you,” she said, and looked down to find her hand resting on his wrist. This was flirting, all right. Two-way, official flirting.
“What’s wrong with your life?” He slouched against the bar, and his body was suddenly much closer. His big, strong, beautifully built body. She could smell the crisp, spicy scent of him, and for one wild second she had to resist the urge to lick her lips.
But before she could answer, someone shouted at the other end of the bar, and a beer bottle shattered with an explosive crash.
“Oh, cry me a river, Nick! Do you think I give a shit about your shop or your new goddamn girlfriend? You can both starve to death for all I care!”
A skinny guy with a moustache that looked very much like a moldy caterpillar stood up, his cheeks flaming, his thin shoulders trembling inside an oversized leather jacket.
“No blood from a stone, Staci, you ever hear that? I don’t have your fuckin’ money!”
Staci, who was almost as tall as he was and much broader, squared off in front of him, jabbing a finger toward his chest. “So your kids’ll just have to make do again, huh? Even though you got the money to be here with her, drinking your fill?”
The “her” in question, a bleached blonde who had narrowed her eyes and folded her arms across her chest, defiantly picked up her mug and took a thirsty swig.
“That does it, you fuckin’—”
The end of Staci’s threat was cut off as a man shaped like a steamroller grabbed her from behind, one arm around her waist and the other hand clamped over her mouth. “Time to go, honey,” he said, shaking his head. “You wanna fight, you take it somewhere else.”
He carried her, kicking and grunting, out of the bar and into the snow, and Lanie watched as the other patrons shrugged and turned back to their drinks. The name Churchville was all wrong for this town.
“In case you were wondering,” she said to Will, setting down her empty mug of tea, “I’ve reconsidered moving up here permanently.”
His laugh was a deep rumble of relief. “Do you want to get out of here?”
“I think it’s probably advisable at this point.”
There was that grin again, complete with twinkle. Her insides did a slow, warm roll. “What were you planning to do for dinner?” he asked.
“There’s a big bag of peanut M&Ms in my car.”
He arched an eyebrow, and she shrugged. “Hey, it’s ... nutritious. Kind of. Half carbs, half protein.”
He grabbed his coat and put it on, handing her her scarf. “I think we can do better than that, if you let me stop in the kitchen. I’ll drive your car, and I can walk from there to my place.”
She let him help her into her coat, savoring a pleasurable little thrill at the feel of his hands on her arms, lingering on her shoulders as he wound the scarf around her neck. Wondering if he’d stay at her place instead of going home was premature. Ill-advised. Just plain asking for trouble. The half hour she’d spent with him so far had been more fun than every date she’d been on in the last six months. Wishing for more—the touching, kissing, pulse-pounding, blissful kind of more—would lead to nothing but disaster. It was just her luck, or lack of it, lately. No use denying it.
But as she let him take her hand and lead her through the crowd toward the back of the bar, she couldn’t help imagining what he would look like without the heavy sweater and the faded jeans. What his hands would feel like on her bare skin, instead of the still-damp fabric of her shirt. What his mouth would taste like on hers.
And when he rested his hand on the small of her back, letting his words shiver against her neck as he asked if she wanted her cheeseburger medium or well, she decided that maybe, just maybe, her karma was finally turning around.