Rock Chick 01 (25 page)

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Authors: Kristen Ashley

Tags: #Romance, #Mystery, #action, #Contemporary, #contemporary romance, #rock and roll, #kristen ashley, #rock chick

BOOK: Rock Chick 01
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“Oh, by the way,” Kitty Sue said, getting up
from the butterfly chair, “we’ve decided to go out for pizza before
Tod’s show, all of us. Won’t that be fun?”

Everyone was staring at me and I was at a
momentary loss. Okay, it wasn’t as if I’d lived an uneventful life.
My life was pretty active and kind of exciting but all of it had
been controlled. This was out of hand.

Ally, as she had many a time, saved my
bacon.

“Marianne, it’s none of your business so quit
asking and go get yourself laid, for God’s sake. Hank, get the hose
and turn it on those monsters before they tear up the yard. Tex, go
upstairs and lay down for awhile. Mom, help me make everyone a
sandwich.” Then she shoved forward, taking our shopping bags,
opened my house with her key and went in.

“I love your sister,” I said to Hank.

He threw his arm around my shoulders, pulled
me into his body and gave me a sideways hug.

Tod and Stevie had gone back to yard work and
I felt the guilt pull. Their side of the lawn was lush, green and
manicured, the edges that butted our brick walkways were cut
precisely. Colorful flowers grew healthy along the front, black
wrought iron fence, down the wooden fence at the side and in the
beds in front of their porch. They had a basket on the porch
overhang that happily dripped fuchsias and terracotta pots on each
step of the stoop trailing ivy and bursting with flowers.

My side of the lawn was also mowed and had
clean and cut borders but only because Stevie did it. I’d planted
flowers in my flower beds but they were being choked by weeds, had
not been watered in days, looked dry and close to death. The
fuchsia basket that Tod bought me to balance the look of the duplex
was bedraggled and only in slightly better shape than the flower
beds because it didn’t have weeds attacking it.

Their side looked like Martha Stewart. My
side looked like Sanford and Son.

I needed to help with the yard work. It was
my neighborly duty.

I went into the house and up to my bedroom. I
was running out of clothes at Lee’s place so I dumped the contents
of my ever-ready, rarely-used workout bag and shoved items in just
in case my stay there lasted longer. I took off my clothes,
slathered myself with factor 8, put on a pair of cutoff jeans
shorts and a kelly green camisole with a shelf bra. I gathered my
hair in a messy knot on top of my head, grabbed my phone and called
Lee.

“Yeah?” he answered.

“How’s it going?”

“Not good.”

He didn’t sound happy.

Yikes.

“If you get finished in time, we’re going out
for pizza before Tod’s show tonight.”

“Who’s ‘we’?”

“Your Mom says ‘all of us’ so I’m guessing
that means Marianne Meyer, Andrea Moran and her kids, probably Ally
and Hank, likely Dad and Malcolm and select players from the
Colorado Rockies,” I paused, “oh, and Tex.”

“Marianne Meyer and Andrea Moran?”

“They’re on a Lee and Indy Sex Watch.”

“Come again?”

“They want to know when we’ve
done
it
.”

Silence.

I went on. “If we don’t do it soon, they
might force us to at gunpoint.”

“Christ.”

“I know. No pressure though. I told them
we’re taking it slow.”

“You have to report in?”

“I kind of feel obliged.”

“How’s that?”

I didn’t want to tell him I’d recruited them
both for Lee Maneuvers in the past, so I said, “Never mind.”

“If something doesn’t happen soon, it’s gonna
be bad. I can’t keep focused, all I can think of is what’s on your
Victoria’s Secret credit statement.”

“You need to keep focused,” I told him, “bad
guys are after me.”

“Tell me about it.”

He hung up and I went into the other bedroom.
Tex was lying on the couch, a sandwich on a plate and an open bag
of chips both balanced on his sling, my remote in his hand, the TV
on and a ball game was blaring.

“You okay?” I asked.

“Peachy,” he flipped through channels, acting
for all the world as if he was a regular houseguest.

I got a sandwich from Ally and Kitty Sue, ate
it standing up and then went outside. Hank was alternately hosing
down Andrea’s monsters and watering my fuchsia and lawn. I hunkered
down to weed my front flower bed, got into it about three feet and
decided to take a break.

I laid down on my back in the grass and fell
into an impromptu Disco Nap. What could I say? Yard work did that
to me.

Something soft trailed down my temple and
across my cheek. I opened my eyes and saw Lee crouched beside me,
blocking the sun.

“I don’t like yard work,” I told him.

“My condo doesn’t have a yard,” he
replied.

Hmm.

I sat up. He grabbed my hand and helped me to
my feet. Someone (probably Kitty Sue and Marianne) had weeded the
side and front beds, the one I was working on was still only half
done. The yard was quiet. I took in a happy breath at the sweet
bliss of aloneness.

“Don’t get too excited, we have an audience
watching us from three different windows,” Lee told me.

Lee was close, looking down into my face,
forcing me to tilt my head to look up at him. He always looked
handsome but now I could see the tiredness around his eyes and
mouth. It occurred to me he’d been at this for days, non-stop. I’d
been lucky enough to squeeze in a couple of Disco Naps.

“How did hunting go today?” I asked.

“I’m used to better results.”

“That doesn’t sound good.”

“It isn’t.”

“What are you thinking?”

“I don’t think he’s gone to ground, one of my
contacts would know something. That means he’s either skipped town,
which is unlikely, or he’s dead.”

I sucked in breath.

“Is dead an option?”

“He has some enemies, starting with Coxy,”
Lee answered.

“You wanna explain that to me?”

“Not now, it’s nearly pizza time and I need
to go home and shower.”

“Do you want to shower here?” I tried to
ignore the thrill the thought of a naked Lee in my shower gave me
and pretend it didn’t affect me.

“I want to shower with you, are you comin’
with me?”

Okay, I couldn’t pretend he didn’t affect me,
he seriously affected me.

I looked back at the house and saw faces
swiftly disappear from the windows. “I don’t think I should, I have
company.”

He grabbed me and kissed me, hard and quick
and also disappointingly fast.

“Wear sexy panties tonight,” he said against
my mouth.

“I don’t have any other options except
commando.”

Lee’s arm tightened spasmodically.

“Christ.”

* * * * *

Lee met us at the Beau Jo’s.

Beau Jo’s offered huge, thick-crusted
“mountain pies” that were the best pizza I’d ever had outside the
times Dad and I visited Aunt Sunny in Chicago. Mountain pie crust
was so thick, you saved the edges, smothered them with honey and
ate them for dessert.

Our table seemed a mile long and it was
mayhem. As if Andrea’s children weren’t enough to make us loud and
obnoxious to all other customers, Duke and Dolores joined us as did
Dad and Malcolm. Duke, Tex, Dad and Malcolm seemed to be in a
contest to out-booming-macho-male talk each other.

Lee slid into the seat beside me, his hair
still wet from the shower and curling around his neck and ears. He
was wearing a pair of beat up, faded, army-green cargo pants and a
light-blue, loose-fitting collared shirt, untucked, the
right-amount of buttons left undone and the sleeves rolled
partially up his forearms.

He looked hot.

For no apparent reason, before Lee fully
settled into his seat, Andrea’s baby let out a high-pitched scream.
I liked kids, of course, other people’s kids. In small doses. Very
small doses.

Once Andrea had cooed it to semi-quietness, I
turned to Lee.

“Do you want children?”

His eyes slid to me as he grabbed a menu.

He answered cautiously, “Yeah.”

“How many?”

He turned to me and his arm went around the
back of my chair.

“Three.”

I thought about three children. They weren’t
pleasant thoughts.

“And you?” Lee asked, gently tugging my
hair.

“Hmm?”

“Kids?”

“I can’t even take care of my yard,” I
reminded him.

He smiled The Smile and I immediately decided
I’d like three kids a whole lot.

“How are things?” Dad asked Lee.

Lee glanced at Dad, took his arm from my
chair then studied the menu.

“Depends. Some are great, some not so
good.”

Dad nodded, apparently happy with that answer
or at least understanding it. I sat there thinking a lot more was
said than what was actually said. Men had a mysterious way of
communicating.

We ate, we chased after children who wanted
to visit other diners’ tables, we talked, we laughed and after
awhile, I began to relax. Life had been so weird lately, I didn’t
even realize how tense it was making me. I didn’t realize how much
I needed a night like tonight.

I poured honey on my crust and watched Tex
who seemed not like a man who had barricaded himself on his block
for two decades but like someone relaxed and who fit in with my
family and friends.

Then again, you bought yourself some serious
loyalty by saving a daughter/sister/girlfriend from being held
hostage and getting shot for your troubles.

I ate my honeyed crust and my eyes moved to
Lee who was listening to Dolores. His thigh was pressed against
mine under the table and twice he had handed me the honey without
me having to ask for it. The Savages and the Nightingales had been
to Beau Jo’s dozens of times either in Denver for whatever occasion
or Idaho Springs after a day of skiing.

Lee knew when I wanted the honey.

Yikes.

How did this happen?

There was no denying we were actually
together
, not test driving it. We’d blown right passed the
“getting to know you” phase of the relationship because we didn’t
need it. We were smack dab into the comfortable part of a
relationship, the part that held shared intimacy because of
history.

Even so, we still had the thrill of the
newness about our situation, discovering hidden things about each
other like him having a housekeeper, keeping good java in the
kitchen, being incredibly moody, kissing really, really well and
having a naked body that was a gift from the gods.

At these thoughts, inexplicably, panic
overwhelmed me.

Sensing it because he was a freak of nature,
Lee’s head immediately turned to me.

“What’s the matter?” he asked.

Self-preservation kicked in over the panic
and I lied.

“Nothing.”

He turned fully to me and his arm went around
the back of my chair again, his other forearm resting on the table,
fencing me in.

“What’s the matter?” he repeated.

“Nothing!”

He watched me for a couple of beats and then
he said calmly, “We’re gonna have to work at kickin’ your lying
habit.”

“I’m not lying,” I lied.

He leaned in. “What we have here is good and
if you’d get over your thoughts that it isn’t gonna last, you’d
realize how much better it’s gonna get if you’d just relax.”

See! He totally knows me. It was beginning to
be scary.

Since lying wasn’t going to work, I changed
strategies and went for annoyance.

“Get out of my brain, it’s pissing me off,” I
warned him.

Then I learned (or more to the point
realized) something new about Lee. Something he’d been showing me
for days.

Lee didn’t play games and he didn’t like me
doing it either. Perhaps surviving life-threatening situations and
living a life filled with danger made you more honest and less apt
to waste precious time.

“What kind of underwear are you wearing?” he
asked.

“What? Why?”

“Because if you describe it to me, I might
decide you’re worth the trouble.”

It was best to cut my losses so I crossed my
arms on my chest and glared at him.

He turned away, completely unperturbed.

I caught sight of Dad who was sitting down
the table from us. There was no way he could have heard what we
were saying because Lee had his back to him and spoke low. Still,
Dad was shaking his head.

“What?” I snapped at my father.

“Jesus, it’s uncanny. You’re just like your
mother.”

* * * * *

Everyone disbursed to get ready for Burgundy
Rose’s show, Ally taking responsibility for Tex, Lee taking me home
in his Crossfire.

I’d showered before Beau Jo’s but hadn’t
prettied myself up because most of my makeup was at Lee’s. We
walked up to the bedroom so I could change and Lee saw the bag.

“What’s this?”

I didn’t want to admit what it was and what
it meant that I packed it. Since Lee saw through most of my lies,
or was cocky enough to zip it open and see for himself, I came
clean.

“I was running out of stuff at your place so
I packed more provisions.”

His eyes crinkled their approval, his arm
snaked out and pulled me to him. His mouth went to the skin below
my ear.

“You done pretending to be mad at me to hide
bein’ scared?” he murmured.

My whole body stiffened.

“Don’t be a jerk.”

His head lifted and he looked me in the
eye.

“You’re right. That was an asshole
remark.”

Holy shit.

What did you say to that?

“I’m tired, it’s been a long day,” he
continued, his hand coming up to pinch his nose between his
eyes.

“That’s all right,” I said. “And no, I’m not
mad at you or pretending to be mad. But I need to put makeup on and
all my good stuff is at your condo so I have to visit Chez
Burgundy.”

I had put my Lynyrd Skynyrd outfit back on
for Beau Jo’s. I changed my top to a thin, black, silky,
partially-beaded, spaghetti-strapped affair that was in the Sushi
Den section of my closet. This necessitated no bra and since Lee
seemed quite happy laying back on my bed with his arms crossed
behind his head, watching me change (and I would have felt like a
naïve fool locking myself in the bathroom), I had to pull a
Jennifer-Beals-
Flashdance
move and take the bra off after I
put the top on. I kept the jeans, but exchanged the belt for the
one with rhinestones and the boots for high-heeled sandals with jet
beads sewn across the front strap. I added about two dozen shiny
black bangles on my wrist and some dangly earrings.

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