Matinees With Miriam. Vicki Essex

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Matinees With Miriam - Vicki Essex Mills & Boon Superromance

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sure she could deal with his big, stupid smile, as if he was friends with everyone in Everville...

      If the movies had taught her anything, it was to never trust handsome charmers.

      She screwed up her face. “He’s not handsome, he’s just...new and different.”

      The theater’s old ventilation shafts shuddered softly, as if with laughter, and she glared up at them. Tightening the bolts on the shaft brackets moved up the to-do list. Shane Patel was nothing more than a novelty, and an unwelcome one at that. He was like Harold Hill in The Music Man, a huckster after every red cent he could get, or in Mr. Patel’s case, her building. He would get what he wanted and be out of there as soon as the deal was done.

      Well, that deal was never going to be done. She’d make sure of it.

      Her perimeter alarm chimed. She checked her phone, wary about who was on her property at this time of night. She grabbed her paintball gun as the shadow moved across the security camera’s view, but then paused. She recognized that broad-shouldered silhouette and wide-stepped saunter. The figure banged on the front door.

      With a disgusted grunt, she put the gun down, hastened toward the entrance and opened it. “What do you want?”

      Shane’s eyes twinkled. Was he laughing at her? “Sorry for coming by so late. I wanted to talk to you before I left town.”

      She blinked. “You’re...leaving Everville?” She didn’t know why her stomach dipped, or why disappointment pricked her so keenly.

      “Just for the weekend. I’m heading back to New York for a family gathering, but I should return Monday. Tuesday at the latest.”

      “Oh.” It came out stupidly. She wished she had some witty, cutting remark.

      “I spoke with the mayor the other day. I understand you’ve filed a formal complaint against the development of the condo.”

      She straightened, unsure why she felt a surge of guilt. “I have. And I won’t be the only one.”

      “I didn’t think you would be. I’ve encountered plenty of resistance to other Sagmar projects, but we’ve always managed to address community concerns.” He held out a thick file. “I wanted to give you this. It’s a portfolio containing the specifics of the Sagmar condo we’re proposing for the site—almost identical to the one I filed with city planning.”

      She glanced between him and the file warily. “I don’t need that. I already got all your emails. This won’t change anything.”

      “Maybe not, but you might find the information helpful for your deputation.”

      “Deputation?”

      “At the next town meeting. You submitted a formal complaint, so you’ll get to give a five-minute presentation to the council about why you don’t want a condo here.”

      She stared at him, feeling as though a trap were closing around her. She didn’t need to speak publicly about why she didn’t want the condo there. The Crown was her home. Not that anyone openly acknowledged it. Then again, Shane Patel probably didn’t know she lived there.

      “But...why would you give me this?” She nodded at the folder. In her experience, opponents didn’t try to help each other.

      Shane gave a light chuckle. The sound brushed against her senses with a featherlight caress, and her skin prickled. She liked that sound too much. “I don’t want to hide anything from you. I’m giving you this information so you can do your research properly. No one at Sagmar will hold any nonprivate information back from you, either. The company firmly believes in working with the community so that we can make sure we have the best fit, the best use of space, the best mix of business and residence. We don’t just drop concrete boxes into towns so people can spend years complaining about how they look or how terrible they are. We build homes.” He held the file out to her. “I want to work with you, Miriam.”

      Awareness shimmied through her. He sounded sincere, but she didn’t always trust the way things sounded. She couldn’t let him past her defenses. Not for a second.

      “I’m sorry—” his nose lifted as he looked past her “—but is something burning?”

       CHAPTER FIVE

      AT FIRST MIRA thought he was pulling some kind of ruse. Then she smelled it, too.

      “My soup!” She bolted inside, tripping across the worn carpets through the semi-darkness to the rear office. Thick steam and gray fumes billowed from the tiny pot on the hot plate and filled the room in two distinct layers like a miasma parfait. She reached for the pot, but snatched her hand back from the handle. The soup had boiled dry and the pot itself was red-hot. Bits of what had once been chicken and vegetables popped and flared briefly into tiny flames before becoming greasy black smoke.

      “Here.” Suddenly, Shane was there with his suit jacket wrapped around his hand. He picked up the pot and looked around. “Sink?”

      “Bathroom.” She pointed down the hall.

      He hurried out of the office, smoke blowing into his face. She yelled, “To the right!” when he hesitated, and he paused at the door to the ladies’ room. She pulled the door open for him, turned on the faucet and shouted at him to put the pot into the sink.

      A cloud of steam wafted up as the cold water hit the red-hot metal. Shane hissed and spun away from the superheated vapor.

      “Are you okay?” She looked between him and the mess in the sink.

      “Burned my hand on the steam,” he said, shaking his fingers. “My jacket isn’t as good as an oven mitt.”

      Crap. Visions of lawsuits danced in her head as she ran for the first aid kit in the smoke-filled office. The Crown’s building insurance had ceased coverage after Grandpa died and the theater closed. She’d have no way to pay for a lawyer or anything if Shane Patel—

      Mira froze, the blood turning to ice in her veins. For a moment, the hazy shape in the doorway looked just like Grandpa, rangy and powerful. He flapped his jacket as if it was a bullfighter’s cape, trying to clear the smoke, and the ghostly image disappeared.

      “The hot plate’s still plugged in.” Shane Patel’s voice cut through her momentary lapse. She dazedly went to unplug the machine. It was a lucky thing nothing else in her makeshift kitchen had caught on fire. “Leave the door open, let that air clear,” he said, using his jacket to waft the steam out.

      “I should look at your hand,” she said, agitated. “Run it under some cold water.”

      “It’s fine. It’s minor. Do you have ventilation fans? AC? Anything like that?”

      She bit her lip. “Grandpa had a bunch of fans to keep the lobby cool during the summer.”

      “Then let’s open the doors and get the air moving.”

      It took a few minutes to unlock and unbolt all of the front and rear doors—the first time they’d all been opened since Grandpa had died. Shane helped her lug out the heavy commercial turbo fans. Eventually, they got

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