In The Bodyguard's Arms. Lisa Childs
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“Looks like you’ve got them all fired up and excited,” Finn commented to the young woman as he checked her glass to see if she needed a refill yet.
“How about you? Do I have you all fired up and excited?” she asked, going with his wording. Connie shifted the stool to face him. The man was still her first choice to head up the work crew. The other men might be good—or even more capable—but so far this so-called bartender’s handiwork had been the only one she’d seen firsthand.
But the moment she phrased the question, she saw her mistake.
Finn had every intention of giving her a flippant answer, but there was something in her eyes, something that had him skidding to a grinding halt and reassessing not just his answer, but a hell of a lot of other things, as well. Things that had nothing to do with tools and construction.
The woman on the stool before him probably had no idea that she had the kind of eyes that seemed to peer into a man’s soul while making him reevaluate everything that had happened in his life up to this singular moment in time.
A beat went by before he realized that she was still waiting for him to respond.
“Yes,” he answered quietly, his eyes on hers. He found he couldn’t look away even if he wanted to—which he didn’t. “You do,” he added in the same quiet tone.
Despite the surrounding din, his voice managed to undulate along her skin and lodge itself directly beneath it.
It took Connie more than a full second to come to, then another full second to find her voice and another one after that to realize that her mouth and throat had gone bone-dry. If she said more than a couple of words, they could come out in a comical croak, thereby negating whatever serious, or semiserious thing she was about to say.
Taking the drink that was on the bar before her, she emptied the glass in an effort to restore her voice to its initial working order. Tears suddenly gathered in her eyes as flames coasted through her veins. She’d forgotten her glass contained whiskey, not something less potent.
“Good,” she managed to say without the word sticking to the roof of her mouth. Taking a breath, she willed herself to be steady and then completed her sentence. Nothing could interfere with work. She wouldn’t allow it to. “Because I have just the position for you.”
Most likely not the same position I have in mind for you.
The thought, materializing out of nowhere, took Finn completely by surprise. He was extremely grateful that the words hadn’t come out of his mouth. It wasn’t his intention to embarrass either himself or the young woman.
But he found that he was having trouble banishing the thought out of his head. The image seemed to be all but burned into his brain. An image that was suddenly making him feel exceedingly warm.
Finn focused on the hotel she had been talking about. This represented the first move toward progress that had been made in Forever in quite some time.
“What kind of a position?” he asked her out loud, rubbing perhaps a bit too hard at a spot on the bar’s counter.
“Is there someplace we can talk?” she asked him.
Finn thought of the room that was just above the saloon. Initially, their uncle Patrick had lived there when he’d owned and operated Murphy’s. On his passing, it had been just an extra room that all three of them had sporadically availed themselves of if the occasion warranted it. Currently, however, Brett’s fiancée was staying there, but only when she wasn’t working—or staying with Brett at the ranch. The clinic was still open, which meant that the room would be empty.
But Finn didn’t feel comfortable just commandeering it—besides, Brett would undoubtedly have his head if he found out.
The next moment, Finn felt he had come up with a viable alternative. “Have you had dinner yet?” he asked the woman.
“No.” She had been so worked up about this project, so eager to get it going, that she had completely forgotten about eating.
“Then I know just the place we can talk. Brett,” Finn called, turning toward his brother. “I’m taking my break now.”
Motivated by his interest in anything that had an effect on the town, Brett had discreetly listened in on the conversation between Finn and this woman. He appeared mildly amused at his brother’s choice of words. “You planning on being back in fifteen minutes?”
“A couple of breaks, then—plus my dinner break,” Finn added for good measure.
“You already took that, don’t you remember?” Brett deadpanned.
“Then my breakfast break,” Finn shot back, exasperated.
Brett inclined his head. “That should work,” he told Finn. “Just don’t forget to come back,” he called after his brother as Finn made his way around the bar.
Escorting the woman through the throng of patrons, most of whom were now keenly interested in what this newcomer to their town had to offer, Finn waved a hand over his head. This signified to Brett that he had heard him and was going to comply—eventually.
“Where are we going?” Connie asked once they made it through the front door.
“To dinner,” Finn repeated.
“And that would be—?”
Finn grinned. “At Miss Joan’s,” he answered.
“Miss Joan’s?” she repeated. The name meant nothing to her.
“The diner,” Finn prompted. “It’s the only restaurant in town.”
For now, Connie corrected silently. Plans for the hotel included a restaurant on the premises.
But for the time being, she thought it best to keep that to herself.
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