That was it for the open mic, and some stragglers—the people who didn’t have to go to work the next day, or had no place else to go that was particularly appealing at the moment—migrated into the poolroom to join the people already there. All those faces were cast into strange shadows by the lurid light of a dozen or so vintage beer signs. A chalkboard on the wall was apparently for sign-ups and keeping score. Right now it said Moses and Truck.
“Thought I’d take you up on that offer of a pool game, Truck.”
The murmured conversation stopped and the people in the room—about seven of them, two couples, the guys J. T. had come to think of as Truck’s henchmen—stared at him in awe.
A beat of silence later, Truck said, “Moses.”
Moses abandoned the game in progress and Truck racked the balls.
J. T. took the pool cue Moses proffered as if he was being handed a dueling pistol.
“You go ahead and break,” Truck said magnanimously. And somewhat sinisterly. He apparently had a lot of faith in his skill at pool.
It was pretty clear that those in the room saw Truck as some sort of authority.
But J. T. was John Tennessee McCord; charisma was in his DNA, and all eyes were on him, and everyone could nearly feel the molecules in the room re-aligning behind J. T.
Truck was going to need to fight for supremacy.
“You got a new show coming up I hear, Mr. McCord?” A blonde girl asked this shyly.
“Yep. Called The Rush. Set right here in Gold Country. It’s going to be fantastic. Best script I ever read. Thrilling and hot and funny. On AMC.”
Part of his job as an actor was to never, never stop selling.
And everything he’d just said was true, as far as he was concerned. The Rush was going to be a freaking triumph, or his name wasn’t John Tennessee McCord.
“Don’t about ten people watch that channel?” Truck asked.
This got a couple of snickers.
J. T. took his shot. The green 6 rocketed into the side pocket.
“Twelve. Thirteen if you count that guy in Omaha who lost his remote and is too lazy to get up to change the channel.”
Everyone laughed.
The answer would likely be more like 2 million at least, when you factored in DVR viewing and the like. A drop in the network bucket. It could, of course, explode into much bigger numbers, the way The Walking Dead had. It didn’t pay to wonder and it didn’t pay to project.
Anything could happen. In fact, J. T. often thought there should be a giant asterisk next to the Hollywood sign, and at its foot the words Anything Can Happen should be erected.
J. T. pointed to the corner pocket and shot the three ball in.
Truck was looking pretty tense now. He was holding his cue the way a Beefeater at Buckingham Palace holds his rifle.
“Mr. McCord . . .” A shy girl presented a napkin and what appeared to be a purple eyeshadow pencil. “I loved Blood Brothers. I’m sorry to interrupt, this is all I have to sign, but would you . . .”
Her boyfriend was wearing a strained smile, and he kept a loose grip on her, as if McCord were a magnet and she were an iron filing in danger of being sucked into him.
“You’ll love The Rush, too, darlin’.” She would never forget the “darlin’.”
He scrawled John Tennessee McCord. The pencil proved no challenge. He’d written his name with any number of implements, from lipstick to erotic lubricant, and across any number of things over the years, from Maserati dashboards to cleavage.
He handed it back to her. She clutched it happily, beaming up at her boyfriend.
J. T. turned and eyed the four ball, pointed casually to a side pocket, lined up the shot, and slapped the sucker in.
He saw Truck’s nostrils flare. Though the rest of his face remained admirably stony.
“You’ll be filming here, in Hellcat Canyon?” someone else ventured.
“Yep. Quite a bit of the series will be filmed in the mountains around here, along the river and such. Ya’ll will get tired of seeing me and the rest of the cast around town come next fall.”
More laughter, and someone fervently muttered, “Never!”
He chalked the cue again. Pointed at the left side pocket. Eyed it a moment, for the sake of drama. And then shot the sucker in.
“Hey, McCord,” Truck said suddenly. “You know the Misty Cat is haunted?”
“You don’t say,” J. T. said idly.
“You like ghosts, McCord?”
“Not sure anyone likes ghosts. Seems to me, you either have ’em or you don’t.”
Scattered laughter greeted this.
“It’s just,” Truck drawled, “I figured you might know a bit about dead things. Seeing as how your career is pretty much one.”
J. T. straightened and examined Truck thoughtfully.
“Not bad, Truck. A bit labored as insults go, but nonetheless fairly well constructed. I give it an eight. Always good to know someone is following my career.”
Nervous laughter greeted this.
He bent over the table again, picked out the red 3, lined up his shot, and slammed it into the pocket.
“Daaamn!” someone murmured.
“Who says nonetheless when they’re playing pool?” Truck addressed this to the crowd at large.
Only one person laughed. Nervously.
J. T. did, that’s who said nonetheless while he was playing pool. Especially when he knew it would piss Truck off. Which was his whole objective.
“Naughty Nellie, they call her,” Truck continued. “The ghost. She was a prostitute.”
“How’d Nellie die? She see you coming, Truck, throw herself out the window?”
The room erupted in laughter.
He lined up a shot; the seven was about a 60 degree angle to the left side pocket. A tricky one. He took a moment to commune with the shot.
He aimed. And he got it crisply in, to a rustle of oohs and aahs.
Truck was tenser than a drum skin now.
The air felt hot and close, and waves of something hostile and dangerous were coming off him.
J. T. lined up the blue ball and tapped her delicately in, just as Britt wove into the room, tray balanced on her arm, handing out smiles, beers, and change.
She pushed past Truck to get to Moses. And Truck didn’t even look at her, but somehow, magically, he managed to brush her ass with his hand.
J. T. saw her scoot out of the way and every muscle in his body went rigid.
“Nobody sees me coming, McCord,” Truck claimed.
“Aww, now that is a shame. Just you and your right hand these days, Truck?”
More raucous laughter greeted this.
“Right hand!” half the crowd crowed, like a Greek chorus.
Truck’s complexion went a full shade redder. He was now fully as radiant as the beer signs.
“Means if I want to take you out, McCord,” he said thoughtfully, “you’ll be on the ground before you even see me coming.”
Britt tried to maneuver by him again with a tray and Truck’s hand slipped down and swiped at her ass again.
She dodged and handed beers to the girl with the eyebrow pencil and her boyfriend.
“That so?” J. T. said softly. “You’re a ninja, eh, Truck?”
“Bam,” Truck said softly. “On the ground. Before you even see me.”
J. T. nodded thoughtfully, as if taking this in. “See, the problem is that I’ve seen you grab at our waitress’s ass three times tonight. And every single time I saw that move coming a mile away.” His Tennessee drawl had gone as slow and taut as a stalking predator. “I’m going to recommend that you stop doing that. Right now.”
Conversation dwindled uncertainly and then came to a decided, uneasy, fascinated halt.
There was a fraught silence.
“Aw, she don’t mind, right Britt?” Truck didn’t address that to Britt, who was getting ready to dart by him with an empty tray. Truck curled a hand around her arm to stop her.
J. T. saw raw terror flash into her eyes.
It was there and gone, so quickly he might have even imagined it. But it nearly stopped J. T.’s heart.
And this time she didn’t dodge or object or demur. She was frozen.
“Yeah. I’m going to need you to take your hand off her, Truck. Now.”
He knew that was all that was necessary to get that big dumb bomb to go off.
He touched Truck gently on the back.
It was like touching a bank of file cabinets.
Truck whirled on him and brought his pool cue whipping down toward him like a club.
In a series of smooth blink-and-you’ll-miss motions, J. T. blocked it with one hand, snatched it from Truck’s fist with the other, and then snapped it over his knee.
The ensuing silence was so instant and total it was like something had vacuumed sound out of the world. He would have sworn even the neon signs had stopped humming out of shock.
He hung on to the cue. The top half dangled from a single shred of wood, like a man hanging from the gallows.
The silence rang.
And then J. T. became aware of a tiny sound. Like a hungry mosquito had zipped into the silent room.
The sound swelled until it became a gleeful “oooOOOoooo . . .”
The universal sound of glee that accompanied the anticipation of a fight.
He shot a censoring black look at the culprit.
The sound stopped.
“That’s my lucky pool cue, you son of a bitch!” Truck, when he found his voice, sounded perhaps a bit more surprised than furious.
But it was fair to say he was a lot of both.
“Damn straight it’s your lucky cue. You’re lucky I didn’t skewer you like chicken satay with it.”
Truck was scarlet. “What the fuck is satay! Quit saying things like satay!”
“You’re lucky I didn’t puncture you like a toothpick in fondi de carciofi.”
He’d never before used hors d’oeuvres as weapons. But he was resourceful, and Truck had just handed him a weapon, and as he’d told Britt, he didn’t see the need to fight fair.
He decided to put Truck out of his misery.
“What I mean to say, Truck, is, you’re lucky . . .” J. T. leaned, perhaps inadvisably, forward and said, very, very slowly, with tenderly menacing patience “. . . I didn’t ram it up your ass, Truck.”
“It’s broken now. One of those pieces ought to fit on up there,” suggested some wit.
Truck whipped around on him. “You shut your hole!”
“You don’t want to fight me, Truck. You ever been in actual prison? It ain’t the cozy hometown drunk tank I bet you have here. And what I did to that cue? I can do to your neck. And just as fast.”
Ain’t? Where the hell had that come from?
When in Rome, he supposed. He didn’t like discovering his veneer of civility was tissue thin.
J. T. didn’t like knowing it was a veneer.
Britt had sidled up next to him and gently laid his beer tab down on the table in front of him. Deliberately.
He glanced at it. It read: Mention his mama.
“You think your mama would be proud, Truck?” he said seamlessly.
Bingo.
Truck froze.
Doubt rippled across his expression. He made a visible effort to collect his temper.
Satay was one thing. His mama was apparently a whole other level of combat.
J. T. sighed a great gusty sigh of exasperation. “The trouble with you, Truck, is you’re boring. I’m willing to bet everything that you circle around and around, doing the same damn things, in the same damn way, blaming the same damn people, throwing the same damn tantrums. Like a damned baby with a dirty diaper. Am I right? Ain’t you bored with yourself?”
J. T. seized the chalk used to keep score on the board and dashed out, in huge, sweeping letters:
SATAY
He slapped the chalk down on the pool table.
“The internet,” he said. “Not just for porn anymore.”
Truck was speechless.
“You follow me now or if you ever again touch Britt here when she doesn’t want to be touched, or say anything untoward to her or anything that so much as raises a blush, I will kick your ass in ways so surprising and painful you’ll have to Google your own name to remember who you are.”
He knew an exit line when he uttered it.
He threw the destroyed cue down, snatched his cue up, shot the eight ball in the corner pocket, and flung the cue down again.
And then he headed out the door.
“Untoward?” Truck’s voice was frayed with shock. “Who says shit like that?”
“Aren’t,” Britt heard J. T. say viciously to himself, once he stood outside. As though he were pressing a reset button.
She’d started after him and paused to give Sherrie an imploring look. Sherrie gave her the “go on, go after him” nudge with her chin.
The street was so peaceful compared to the inside of the Misty Cat, it was like entering another dimension. The hills were purpling now and it would be full dark in minutes, but it was never really dark on a clear night, thanks to all the stars.
He glanced over at her. “You okay?”
“I’m fine. A little shaken. Impressed. But fine.”
He was quiet a moment.
“Wasn’t all that long ago I didn’t know what satay was. That was playing even dirtier than I’m normally willing to do.”
“I’m sorry you had to do that.”
“It’s not me I’m concerned about. I have plenty of experience with the Trucks of the world. If I had to guess, he’s a big fish in a small pond that doesn’t have the guts to ever leave. Guys like Truck, when they see something different or new, they either want to own it, be it, or kill it. Metaphorically speaking. Or, if you’ll excuse the vernacular, fuck it. Anything to make him feel like he has some control over it.”
Only someone who was used to feeling like an outsider would know these things.
Her first impression of him had been right: John Tennessee McCord was probably fundamentally lonely.
“You nailed him pretty perfectly,” she told him softly. “Add to all that the fact that he hasn’t worked in over a year. Got laid off. His mama’s on disability.”
J. T. gave a short laugh that tapered into a sigh, and he swept his hair back with his hands. “Now I feel like even more of a jerk.”
“No, Truck had every bit of that coming. He wasn’t going to hurt me, though.”
“Oh, how the hell do you know that?” He sounded more wearily exasperated than anything else and she almost laughed.
“I just do. He’s an equal opportunity asshole. He mostly just blunders about and people put up with it because they know him. Everyone in town seems to have their own role. Seemed like he had something to prove tonight, though.”
He turned and even in the dark his eyes seemed brilliant.
Normally she would have enjoyed an uninterrupted opportunity to stare into his blue eyes.
At the moment they felt like lasers.
“But you didn’t like him touching you, Britt.”
She hesitated. “No.”
“Has he touched you before? Like that? Grabbed you?”
Suddenly she was wary.
This was a man who noticed things.
“Not quite like that. No.” Her voice was fainter now.
“And you’re certainly not scared of Truck, necessarily.”
She hesitated again. “No.”
Her voice sounded small over the pounding of her heart in her ears.
He was just a few questions away from cornering the truth about her, the one that no one in Hellcat Canyon knew.
“Because here’s the thing, Britt. You weren’t pissed off when he grabbed your wrist.” He pointed this out, gently but relentlessly. As if he somehow knew she didn’t want to hear it. “Or just annoyed. Or amused. You were terrified. I saw it in your eyes. You were scared to death.”
She was speechless. Her mind blanked.
He held her gaze with a sort of sympathetic remorselessness. He would have made a good actual cop, she thought, because she doubted he’d miss an eyelash twitch.
And she simply couldn’t deny it, because it was true.
She suspected she’d told him quite a bit with her silence.
And he seemed to take it as confirmation.
“I just couldn’t let that stand,” he said gently. “Is that all right?”
Her throat was so tight the words couldn’t emerge. Her mind couldn’t seem to line them up in any proper order anyway.
“I’m sorry you had to . . . but . . . thank you. Yes. That’s all right. ”
He exhaled, as if he’d been waiting for just those words.
“Good,” he said softly.
And suddenly they were quiet. J. T. sought out the moon, a sliver of light over the mountains.
The silence thrummed with intensity. She was grateful he didn’t ask any more questions. Though she had a hunch his thoughts were full of them.
“Just so you know, J. T., I can actually take care of myself.”
He turned very, very slowly toward her. He stared at her with unflattering incredulity. “Do you really believe that?”
She was shocked. “I’m—”
“Or is it just something you say, a formality, like offering to pick up a check when you know someone else is going to pay for it anyway?” he demanded.
She was speechless. “Maybe,” she admitted faintly, after a moment. “But you sure use a lot of food analogies when you want to make a point.”
He blinked.
And then the tension visibly went out of him. He smiled faintly. “Something new I’m trying.”
“I’m not saying you’re helpless, Britt. I don’t think that for a minute. It’s just that no one can completely take care of themselves. Not even me, and I have a freaking black belt in karate. It’s not a man versus woman thing. It’s a ‘let somebody care about you thing.’ And sometimes that takes more guts and sense than taking on the whole damn world by yourself.”
She was awfully tempted to argue just for the sake of arguing, but it would get her nowhere. He was every bit as stubborn as she was.
And the thing was, he was exactly right. With this little lecture he’d just chipped off another layer of her crusty old defenses. Trust and vulnerability had once led her into danger. Add that to her own native stubbornness, and you had a recipe for a wall.
“Got it,” she said finally, tersely. A concession on her part.
And the perverse man smiled slowly at her. He seemed to actually relish her stubbornness.
She sighed. “It’s funny,” she mused. “You’d be surprised, but plenty of women are into Truck. Kayla Benoit and Casey Carson once got into a fight right there outside the Truth and Beauty over him. It started when Kayla told Truck she could tie a knot in a cherry stem with her tongue, and I’m not quite sure what happened after that, but everyone was torn between selling tickets or getting the fire hose. Even the sheriff hesitated to wade on in there. They both had fresh manicures and those nails can do some damage.”
Bemusement bloomed into unadulterated wicked delight on J. T.’s face. “Who won?”
“Casey pulled out Kayla’s new hair extensions, which upset both of them, since Casey had just put them in and they looked great. That stopped it pretty quickly. They made up right there on the street. So I guess you can say it was a draw. Kayla offered Casey a twenty-percent discount on anything in her store, but she told her she had to come into the store to use it, and she hasn’t yet. And they haven’t really talked since. Which is kind of a shame, since they’ve been friends since grade school.”
He was smiling in earnest now. “Well, I’m a little sorry I missed that.”
“Casey’s pretty talented with hair.”
“All artists are temperamental.” Said the man who ought to know.
She smiled back at him.
His grin faded. “You get a little older, you get to know what or who is worth fighting over.”
The implication, if she wanted to read it that way, was that he considered her worth it. Worth the risk to his reputation, worth the risk to his person, worth lecturing her about unclenching.
And her heart lurched.
The low hum of want that thrummed between them was textured now with the things they weren’t saying, the questions he wasn’t asking, the admission she’d just made that wasn’t really an admission. The admission he’d just made.
“I’ll see you home if you want,” he said finally, easily. “My truck’s right’s over there.”
The silence between his question and her answer nearly rang like a note.
This is it, she thought. It was her chance. It wasn’t quite the way she’d expected, but she’d better take it.
“All right,” she said finally, softly. “Thank you.”
He released a breath he seemed to be holding and immediately aimed his keys at his truck and beeped the locks open, and he pulled open the door for her. She climbed about two stories, or so it felt like, and slid into cushioned comfort.
He shut the door behind her. “Seat belt,” he murmured.
She smiled and clicked into it as he started the truck up and pulled away from the curb.
J. T. was silent. He was still waiting for the last of the adrenaline to ebb. Running like a deep seam through the pure carnal triumph of finally spiriting away a woman with whom he badly wanted to have sex was the satisfying knowledge that he’d protected her.
It had been a reflex. And he’d known he would do it again, in a heartbeat, career be damned.
In this moment, next to him, Britt Langley was safe. This, for whatever reason, seemed to be the only thing that mattered in the moment.
“I like this,” she said, pointing at the stereo.
“It’s Wilco.” He turned it up a little.
It was loping and jangly and acoustic, lovely and wistful, not country but not not country. A song about resting your head on a bed of stars, one he’d heard dozens of times, one of his favorites. It seemed sort of prescient given how he’d ended up here in Hellcat Canyon.
“This is how I felt when I first saw night in Hellcat Canyon,” she said.
He could have guessed that. He and Britt Langley, he had a hunch, saw much of the world in much the same way.
There was a whole lot of strategy and very little delicacy in most Hollywood relationships. When people were so easily had, it was easy to forget the serrated thrill of uncertainty. The pleasures of wooing. Of actually earning someone’s regard.
He began to think that inner peace just meant knowing someone needed you. The essential you, whoever you might be when all the other nonsense was stripped away.
“Maybe you should get a dog,” he said, finally, to her. “Or do you have one?”
“I have a cat.”
“I hope by cat you mean ‘puma.’ ”
She smiled. “The dog a few houses down from me barks when a squirrel so much as sighs.”
He jerked his head toward her, feigning astonishment. “What do squirrels have to sigh about? You got world-weary squirrels here in Hellcat Canyon?”
She laughed. “I do have a blue jay who’s a bit of a dick.”
“Oh, blue jays don’t take any guff,” he said in all seriousness.
She laughed again. He loved the sound of her laugh.
He took the nearly U-shaped bend she silently pointed to and aimed the truck up the hill.
“I’m . . . riiiight . . . there. On the right. That yellow cottage with the red mailbox.”
He maneuvered the truck over and cut the engine and the party of deer arranged in front of her house like ornaments scrambled to their feet and trotted at a swift but hardly urgent pace up the path and out of her gate. They seemed less frightened of than guilty about being caught holding a lawn party.
Their hooves echoed on the hard earth as they all vanished.
“That’s one of my favorite sounds,” she said absently.
“What, deer hooves?” Somehow he just knew.
“Yep.”
“It’s a good one. Flapping’s good, too.”
“Flapping?”
“Wings, flags, sails, the ears of dogs and cats when they shake their heads.”
She turned to stare at him.
“All good sounds,” she said softly. As if it was the most perfect thing she’d ever heard.
He realized his hands were still gripping the wheel. Albeit loosely. He still hadn’t quite turned all the way to look at her head on.
He knew it was because the minute he met her eyes he would need to make a decision.
The atmosphere in the cab of the truck was a bit like the air just before a lightning storm.
His head turned, his hand left the wheel.
And it rose slowly, to slide along her cheek, and she tipped her head into it with a sigh. And then her eyes closed, and magically, as if they both knew this was the next step in the dance, they were leaning into each other, and his lips leisurely, softly, brushed across hers. It was the kind of caress, he knew from experience, that let all your other nerve endings know that mind-blowing pleasure was on its way.
It was very nearly a chaste kiss.
If, say, a burning match touched to a fuse could be considered chaste.
And the little carnal catch in her throat . . . well, he’d remember that sound forever.
He unleashed himself just a little. He let his mouth sink against the softness of hers.
He could all but taste desire in the back of his throat, electric and nearly desperate. It was as if every muscle in his body was pulled taut as a bowstring.
Her lips, her skin, her hair. So soft. Christ almighty.
His lungs moved shallowly. He could feel the answering tension in her. Her mouth parted softly against his; he pulled her lower lip gently, gently between his. Her breath was hot and shuddery and he wanted to slide his hand up under her skirt and between her thighs, watch as her eyes went hot and dazed and her head thrashed back as his fingers worked their magic.
And to get from here to there, all he had to do was take that kiss deeper.
In minutes have her in his lap, riding both of them to climax. This was hardly his first rodeo.
He knew exactly what to do to get what he wanted.
He ended the kiss.
It about killed him, though.
Their mouths hovered a hairsbreadth away from each other for a second.
He sat back slowly, as if he didn’t want to jar his body. He felt like a naked wire. Almost dangerous to touch.
He closed his eyes briefly and sucked in a long steadying breath. Released it at length.
His body, particularly his hard cock, thought he was nuts.
There was no sound in the cab of the truck apart from the two of them breathing, and that sound, in its intimacy, was purely erotic. And he remembered the Eternity Oak, and the sound of the falls near it.
“I’ll watch you get in your door.” His voice was a husk.
If she was surprised, she didn’t betray it.
She hesitated.
“Okay,” she said softly. “Thanks.”
She got out and the door shut with a thunk behind her.
She flapped a hand behind her in farewell, tossing a little smile over her shoulder.
He watched her go up the little flagstone walk to the raised wooden porch, surrounded by a railing that he doubted would survive a good lean by a person any heavier than she was.
And the porch itself had a definite curve. Like a slight smile.
Or her butt in that skirt.
When she leaped that top step like a pro he winced. One wrong move and she might just drop through that thing like it was a trapdoor. He remembered her “triage” on priorities, and the muscles of his stomach tensed again. He could so easily fix that porch.
Now she was in the warm, yellow pool of light on her porch.
It briefly turned all of her a shade of gold.
Funny, he felt a little like that inside. Gold and lit.
She tucked her hair behind her ear, away from her face, to jam her key in the lock. She turned around, paused, and flashed him a smile, and disappeared inside.
He watched a moment longer. Unwilling to move just yet.
He’d have to go back a long, long way to the last time he’d felt quite like this.
Back at least before he’d learned that he could be cavalier about sex and still live with himself.
Whatever had happened to Britt Langley made him want to protect her, and if that meant from him, too, so be it. If she wanted him—if she really wanted him—she would let him know. In the same way she’d dropped off that beer this evening.
They’d both be lying awake burning tonight, he was pretty sure.
It wasn’t really strategy on his part. But it might work out that way, anyway.
Then he swiped his hands down his face and turned up the music again, and started the truck.