Baby, Drive South. Stephanie Bond
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Reminded of her resolve to leave, Nikki lifted her chin. “No, thank you.”
Porter’s smile fell. He seemed to be at loose ends, obviously unaccustomed to being turned down, especially—she speculated—by someone who looked like her. It was probably more common for women to melt into a puddle of ooze at his feet. “Oh…okay.”
Suddenly Rachel Hutchins appeared in the doorway, with Nigel at her feet at the end of a pink leash. The woman was stunningly sexy in a short denim skirt and tight yellow T-shirt, her golden hair flowing around her shoulders. “I thought I heard your voice, Porter. What are you doing up here?” Her voice had a suspicious lilt. Even Nigel glanced back and forth between Porter and Nikki.
“Mr. Armstrong was checking the hot water in my bathroom,” Nikki said quickly.
“Oh, it’s perfect in my room,” Rachel gushed. “I took the longest, hottest shower. It was amazing.”
Porter seemed mesmerized. And since even Nikki was visualizing Rachel standing naked under a spray of steaming water, she could only imagine where his mind had gone.
“Rachel,” Nikki said brightly to interrupt the uncomfortable moment, “Mr. Armstrong is heading to the barbecue—maybe you could walk with him to make sure he doesn’t fall?”
Rachel beamed. “I’d be happy to.”
Porter took one swinging step forward, then looked back to Nikki, as if he suddenly remembered she was there. “Come with us, doc.”
“Maybe later,” she lied, shutting the door to move him along. He looked as if he might protest, but she succeeded in shepherding him into the hall and closed the door on the happy couple. Nikki stood with her ear to the door and listened until the thump, thump of his crutches meeting the floor faded. Rachel’s tinkling laughter reached back and curled under the door, mocking Nikki. I’m just like you…only prettier.
Nikki indulged a barb of envy, then sat down and penned a note to the Armstrong brothers saying she’d decided Sweetness wasn’t for her after all, and propped it on the table. When silence settled over the house, she gathered both pieces of luggage, opened the bedroom door and stuck out her head to make sure all was quiet. When she was convinced she was alone in the house, she carried her suitcases into the hall, closed the door and stole downstairs.
Moving stealthily, Nikki exited through the front door, crossed the shadowed porch and hurried in the direction of her extended van.
Darkness was settling quickly. A light high on a pole in front of the boardinghouse illuminated fluttering moths and guided her footsteps to the side of the road. Then she picked her way down the row of vehicles to her van. Insects chanted in rounds, the noises swelling, then falling away to build again. The unbearable heat of the summer day had given way to a breezy evening. She attributed the wide swing in the temperature to their altitude.
She swallowed hard at the thought of descending the mountain road with nothing more than her headlights and the glow of the three-quarter moon to guide her. Maybe she should wait until morning….
Across the road and beyond a tree line, voices, music and the radiance of a fire indicated the barbecue was getting underway. The good-time sounds pulled at her, but the suitcases in her hands propelled her forward. If she waited until morning, there would be confrontations, explanations, excuses…drama she didn’t want or need.
Especially when it came to a certain pair of cobalt-blue eyes.
After loading her suitcases in the back, Nikki climbed into the driver’s seat that was uncomfortably warm from the build-up of the day’s heat. She zoomed down the window to let the stale air escape.
In the side mirror, the amazing watercolor sunset was melting onto a distant mountain range. Nikki paused a few seconds to drink in the matchless scenery. If this town ever took root, it would blossom in the most glorious of surroundings.
Then, nursing a tiny pang of regret, she started the engine, turned the van around and pulled away.
8
From a rocking chair in the shadows of the porch, Porter observed Dr. Salinger pulling away in her long van. Damn it, Marcus and Kendall had been right about her hightailing it back north at the first chance. Sneaking out when everyone was preoccupied, without so much as a “nice to know you.”
Truth be known, his feelings were a little hurt.
Porter pulled at his chin and waited, counting off the seconds the way he and his brothers used to do when they were little, trying to figure out how far away storms were by measuring the time lapse between a flash of lightning and a rumble of thunder. One Mississippi…two Mississippi…three Mississippi…
The van’s brake lights came on before four Mississippi, then the engine sputtered and died.
Porter positioned his crutches and pushed to his feet. His leg was aching from crawling under the van to disconnect the fuel pump, but it was a quick way to safely disable the vehicle.
Marcus had charged him with keeping the little lady doc here. He hadn’t specified the methods had to be aboveboard.
The van slammed into Park, and the sound of the engine trying to crank floated on the evening breeze. By the time Porter reached the driver’s door, Dr. Salinger was banging on the steering wheel and cursing like a longshoreman.
“What’s up, doc?”
She startled and screamed, then turned her head to look at him through the open window. “You scared me to death!”
He grinned. “Sorry about that. Going some where?”
She opened her mouth, then seemed to cast about for a plausible explanation. “I…was just…exploring.”
He craned his neck to look over her shoulder into the backseat. “With your suitcases?”
She looked away, then back, and lifted her hands. “Okay, you got me. I was leaving.”
“I guess we didn’t make a very good first impression,” he conceded. He was struck by the perfection of her profile in the low lighting. The woman had exquisite bone structure. She was really quite pretty…not sexy by any stretch of the imagination, but pretty.
“I shouldn’t have come here in the first place,” she said quietly. “I…I don’t belong here.”
No surprise, he thought, Sweetness wasn’t good enough for her and her medical degree. “So you’re going back home?”
Her small hands tightened on the wheel. “If I can get out of here. I don’t know what’s wrong with the van.” She peered at the dashboard. “The gas tank is almost full and I bought a new battery a couple of weeks ago.”
“Let me take a look under the hood,” Porter offered magnanimously. “Do you have a flashlight?”
She rummaged in the glove compartment and came up with one. “Can I help?”
“Uh, no. Stay inside in case I need you to turn the key.”
He hobbled to the front of the vehicle, then made a big production