The Pint-Sized Secret. Sherryl Woods

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she’d never been on a dance floor before in her life. “I can’t.”

      “You don’t know how? You don’t want to? Or what?”

      “Dancing is not going to prove anything to Max Coleman,” she said, as if she pitied Jeb for being foolish enough to think otherwise.

      For the moment Jeb forgot all about his secret mission for the evening and concentrated on hers. She looked vulnerable and defeated, and he was too much of a gentlemen to let that continue.

      “Then you’re not doing it right,” he assured her, sweeping her into a dip that clearly left her dizzy. She was laughing by the time he brought her upright.

      “Okay,” she said, the sparkle returning to her eyes. “Let’s do it.”

      For the next three dances, they ruled the floor. The crowd parted to observe, cheering the intricate steps, applauding and begging for an encore when each song ended. Jeb caught Max’s expression as they whirled by him in one tempestuous sweep of the room. He looked as if he’d swallowed something particularly nasty.

      Brianna caught his expression, too, then gazed up at Jeb. “Thank you,” she whispered. “I think our job here is done.”

      Jeb nodded his agreement. “Let’s blow this place.”

      She giggled like a schoolgirl and in that instant, Jeb felt himself falling for her. She tantalized him. He didn’t know her. He didn’t understand her secrets. He had no idea what made her tick.

      Which meant he was going to have to keep seeing her, he concluded. Not that it was a hardship. She fit a little too neatly into his embrace. She smelled of some exotic scent that drove him a little bit crazy. He found himself wanting to kiss that graceful curve of her exposed neck.

      None of that was supposed to happen, of course. Getting turned on by the subject of an investigation tended to cloud objectivity. He might not be the professional P.I. his brother was, but he knew that his current state of arousal was big trouble.

      Still, he had no choice. Not if he was to save Delacourt Oil.

      And maybe not even if he was to save himself.

      After their triumph on the dance floor, the evening had gone downhill. Jeb couldn’t coax more than a one-word response from Brianna all the way home. At her house, she fled from his car. She barely uttered goodbye, much less an invitation to come inside. He had sat in the driveway for fully ten minutes trying to decide whether to follow her. At midnight, he’d finally concluded that he needed to give her the space she so obviously craved. He figured eight to ten hours ought to be enough.

      He was up at dawn on Saturday and on the phone to Dylan.

      “Some of us actually like to sleep in on the weekends,” his big brother protested when Jeb awakened him. “Especially when there’s a beautiful woman in bed beside us.”

      “Stop bragging,” Jeb retorted. “Besides, this is important.”

      “And my plans for the morning weren’t?”

      “You can get back to them in a minute.”

      Dylan sighed heavily. “Afraid not. I can hear the patter of little feet running toward the kitchen right now. Soon I’ll be blessed with the sound of cartoons at top volume. Then my bride will desert me.”

      “Okay, okay, you have my pity and my apology. Now will you listen for a minute?”

      “Why not? Looks like I don’t have anything better to do.”

      “I went out with Brianna last night.”

      Dylan whistled. “The lovely spy?”

      “We don’t know she’s a spy,” Jeb said defensively.

      “Hey, you’re the one who pinned the label on her, not me. What’s changed?”

      Jeb ran his fingers through his hair. “She’s…I don’t know. She’s not what I expected.”

      “Holy mackerel, you’ve gone and fallen for her, haven’t you?”

      “Don’t be ridiculous. It was one date. Nobody falls for a woman in one date. Besides, I’m investigating her. How stupid do you think I am?”

      His brother laughed. “Not stupid. Just male.”

      “You are not helping,” Jeb accused.

      “What do you want from me?”

      “Advice.”

      “About your love life?”

      “About the investigation, dammit!”

      “Let’s take it from the top then. Tell me again why you suspect Brianna of leaking Delacourt secrets.”

      “Timing, mostly. She arrived and suddenly deals started going sour.”

      “What does Dad say?”

      “That I should stay the heck away from her, that she’s totally trustworthy, etcetera.”

      “Maybe you should listen to him for once.”

      “I can’t ignore my instincts. There’s something going on, Dylan. I can feel it.”

      “Maybe there is, but maybe Brianna has absolutely nothing to do with it. Circumstantial evidence, especially the little bit you have, won’t cut it. You need some cold hard facts. There are other geologists. Any one of them could be behind the leaks.”

      “Out of the blue? They’ve been here for years.”

      “But maybe one of them has just been hit with huge medical expenses, or college tuition, or blackmail. The possibilities are endless. I think you’d better back off with Brianna. Start from scratch. Look at everyone who had the information that was leaked. Check into their finances. If you want to fax me a list of names, I’ll do some of the financial checks for you. Then you can go from there.”

      Jeb could see the logic of Dylan’s plan, but it grated just the same. If he did as his brother suggested, he’d have to stop seeing Brianna. Right now he had the excuse of the investigation. If he kept seeing her, he would have to admit it was personal, and then what? What if the feelings that had stirred in him last night deepened, and then it did turn out that she was guilty? He’d be caught smack in the middle of a disaster.

      “Jeb? Are you listening to me?”

      “Yeah, I heard you.”

      Dylan groaned. “But you don’t want to stay away from Brianna, do you? It’s already gotten personal. How far has it gone, little brother?”

      Jeb saw little point in lying. Dylan was already assuming the worst. “Not far. I kissed her. That’s it.”

      “You think she’s a corporate spy and you kissed her. Terrific. That’s really using your brain.”

      “I didn’t consult my brain. That’s

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