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Silken Threats

Page 5

by Addison Fox


  And then he’d gone and proven it.

  When she said nothing, Tucker pressed his point. “You look confused at my statement.”

  “I’m not confused. Surprised, maybe, is a better word.”

  “I’m full of them.” A cocky grin quirked his lips along with something else she couldn’t quite name.

  Courtesy?

  Humor?

  Or maybe it was just another facet of that air of chivalry that seemed to hover around him like a cloak.

  Either way, she couldn’t hide the fact that she found it appealing. Found him appealing.

  “So tell me about your business.” Tucker split his attention between his juicy burger and her, and again Cassidy couldn’t quite fight the sense that he was unique. “Violet made a few comments about the business while we were cleaning up this morning but I didn’t get a full sense of your place.”

  “We started Elegance and Lace several years ago, snagging jobs where we could. Violet’s always been an event planner and was working for a woman who can only be kindly referred to as a bitch.”

  “Ow.”

  “Exactly.” Cassidy nodded, remembering more than one round of after-work martinis that involved as many tears as anger-fueled words. “And Lilah did some time in a restaurant before going to work for a bakery and then doing her own stuff on the side where she could.”

  “And you?”

  “I’ve always designed but never thought I could make a career of it.”

  “Why not?” Half his burger had vanished and she hadn’t even started on her own. Her uneaten dinner gave her a chance to hesitate for a moment as she figured out how best to answer his probing question.

  Even as she worked through what she wanted to say, long-ago fights sprang up as fresh memories.

  You’re meant to wear a wedding dress, not design them for spoiled socialites.

  If you want a career so damn bad, the least you could do is invest in something worth your time. Law or banking instead of fripperies and lace.

  My sister, down on her knees before Dallas’s brides, hemming their skirts.

  “Cassidy?” The dim lighting inside the pub had turned Tucker’s eyes such a dark brown they were almost black. The color was rich and inviting, as were the small crinkles that bracketed his mouth in a smile. “You in there?”

  “Yes. Sorry.” She fiddled with a fry before taking a deep breath. “Designing dresses was seen as a frivolous thing to do. In my family’s estimation.”

  “Frivolous?”

  “In the extreme. While waiting to marry well a woman should make herself useful by doing some staid, corporate thing like working at a bank. Then you’ll be sure to make enough money to squander it properly on a variety of items no one really needs.”

  The words were out before she could pull them back. And where the hell had they come from?

  She did okay for herself and had the benefit of pursuing something she loved at the same time. And she’d stopped worrying long ago about other people’s choices, even if they were her family.

  So she had no small measure of surprise when Tucker bypassed the money comment completely.

  “You would look cute in a button-down blouse and pencil skirt.” His gaze roamed over her face, and she felt the heat rising at the careful perusal. “But it doesn’t suit you.”

  Surprise at his quick assessment banished the storm clouds that thoughts of her family always brought. “Most don’t agree.”

  “Then they don’t see what I do.”

  The urge to ask him what he meant rose up on the swiftest of feet, but before she could ask what he saw, he pressed on.

  “So how’d you break free?”

  “I designed on the side and got lucky.”

  “Nothing wrong with a little luck. Especially when you’ve done all the prep work in advance.”

  Flashes of silk and seed pearls drifted through her thoughts as she popped another fry in her mouth. Cassidy still wasn’t sure Violet hadn’t had a hand in things, despite her friend’s denials to this day, but Tucker was right about one thing.

  She had been prepared.

  “A girl I went to school with had to stop by my apartment to pick something up. My father had made a donation to a Junior League function and I had an envelope for her.”

  “What exactly is Junior League? And do you graduate to senior varsity or something?”

  “I keep forgetting you’re not from the South.”

  “No, ma’am.” His grin was broad and she saw the mischief that had replaced concern in his gaze. “Which is why I walk around in a perpetual state of confusion every time I attempt polite conversation with a client.”

  “Junior League is a charity organization, not a sporting event.”

  “And here I pictured sweet, refined young women mud wrestling.”

  She laughed at that, images of the women she’d grown up with rolling around in mud and ruining their perfectly manicured hair and nails.

  “We only sling mud of the verbal kind, and even then, it’s rare. Most of the women I know are dedicated to the cause.”

  “Be that as it may, I still don’t understand how that ties to a wedding dress.”

  “It was a silly coincidence, nothing more. But Suzy had come for a check my father had made out for a table at an upcoming function and I said I’d get it to her. I had a dress I was making laid out on the dining-room table. I hadn’t even expected her to come in, but we’d started talking and she was excited about having gotten engaged the weekend before.”

  “Decibel levels too high to keep the conversation in the hallway?”

  His smile was broad, and she couldn’t quite fault him for the tease. In fact, she realized, back to her earlier thought, most men wouldn’t have even given the story another moment of their time, yet he seemed genuinely interested.

  “Pretty much. So she comes in and sees the dress I was making and that was it. She demanded I design her wedding dress for her on the spot.”

  “Off to the races, then.”

  “Off to the races. It didn’t hurt that her spring wedding was one of the most covered in Dallas. Nor did it hurt that Violet was her wedding planner. It gave me a bit of street cred to get some interest in dresses from other brides, and gave us the experience to pitch for a small-business loan.”

  “Funny that your father making a donation took you on a path away from a ‘proper’ life, especially if he didn’t support what you were doing.”

  Tucker’s words were casual, his gaze focused on his last few fries, before he glanced back up at her. But way down deep in those dark depths, she saw just how serious he was.

  They’d spent all day in each other’s company—a day full of any number of intense experiences, from danger to attraction—yet this moment seemed the most significant somehow. Because in that moment she knew, without a doubt, that Tucker Buchanan wasn’t casual. Or simple. Nor did he miss much.

  And he fully understood the irony of seeing her success come out of the simple action of an unsupportive parent.

  “He’s gotten over it.”

  “Parents usually do. The bigger question is, have you?”

  * * *

  Josephine Beauregard came awake to dim lighting and the dull scent of antiseptic. She became aware of a steady beeping somewhere behind her head and tried to figure out where she was. Recognition hovered just out of her reach—like she should know where she was but was too happy floating in a sea of blissful ignorance.

  Should she open her eyes? Wait...they were already open.

  With a series of rapid blinks she tried to pull the room into focus but her pupils hadn’t adjusted fully to the darkened room.

  She wanted to panic. Should she panic? But the blanket around her was warm and she felt an odd sense of saf
ety surrounding her.

  Blanket?

  The question hit her, tunneling through her disorientation and the fierce edges of a headache she was slowly coming to realize she had.

  Why did she have a blanket? It was Dallas in summertime and she hadn’t had a blanket wrapped around her since the freak ice storm they’d battled the previous March.

  So why was she wrapped up?

  Underneath the antiseptic she became aware of something else. A scent she remembered from so long ago. Strong. Masculine. And mind-numbingly alluring.

  Turning her head, she took in a dim shape in the corner of her room. “Max?”

  Now that she was aware of it, pain throbbed in her skull with all the finesse of a jackhammer. Despite the searing pain, she couldn’t hide the rush of awareness and excitement at the figure she sensed in the dark. “Is that you?”

  “Been wondering when you’d wake up.”

  “Why are you here?” Why was he here? He never came, and she’d stopped expecting him to long ago.

  “That’s the question I’ve been waiting to ask you.” He moved slowly—wasn’t that the way of it now?—before coming to stand beside her.

  Despite the age that tinged his features, she saw the young man she’d loved so well underneath. The firm jaw that had added folds of age still begged for her touch and those bright blue eyes saw as much now as they had fifty years ago.

  “What happened to you, Jo?”

  “I don’t know.” Confusion warred with the sweet memories of Max and again, the pain rose up in her head with sharp claws. Through the haze of hurt, a dim memory registered. “My house... Someone broke into my house.”

  She pulled at the blanket, the warm cocoon turning suffocating. “In my house. There was someone in my house. Someone hurt me.”

  He moved closer, his large hand on her shoulder to steady her. “Shh. Don’t move like that. Take it easy.”

  A wave of panic stuck in her throat, choking her, as hot tears pricked the backs of her eyes.

  Were they tears for the sudden realization she’d survived an attack, or were they for the fact that he was finally touching her? On a hard exhale, she admitted to herself she had no idea.

  But it was probably both.

  “Who would do that?”

  “We don’t know who.”

  “We?” The word struck her as strange since she’d been the one hurt.

  “My grandson and his friend are helping out your girls. Seems like trouble’s found its way to their door.”

  Max leaned closer, his gaze firm as those blue eyes lit with understanding. She’d seen those same eyes on his grandson—his namesake—and it never failed to choke her up.

  Never failed to remind her of things best left buried.

  “What aren’t you saying, Max?”

  “We don’t know who attacked you, Jo. But I think you and I both know why.”

  * * *

  Cassidy closed her front door behind Tucker, touched he’d walked her to her door. She’d purchased her small bungalow in East Dallas two years before, her home quickly becoming her haven, and it was odd to see his large frame in her doorway.

  Odd, yet lovely, she thought now as she watched his long-limbed strides through the glass pane that edged her front door frame.

  Maintaining his streak, he’d been the chivalrous gentleman, escorting her home and doing a quick check of her house to ensure the problems they’d battled all day hadn’t found their way to her door.

  She’d known the moment they walked in no one had been inside the house, but that knowledge hadn’t negated how nice it felt to be looked after. Nor had it kept her from allowing him to roam through her kitchen and living room, bedroom and studio, confirming all was well.

  If he’d noticed the thick duvet and red silk accent pillows that covered her bed she didn’t know. But a girl could hope the sight had been what put the slight hitch in his stride as he walked from her home.

  Yep. Tucker Buchanan had gentleman written all over him.

  And why was that so damn appealing?

  He pulled away from the curb, and she turned to focus on her home. The warm, almond-colored walls set off by bright, vivid prints of various sketches filled her with pride. This was her home. She’d earned it through hard work and the determination to make something of herself.

  To make something of her life.

  And with a soft sigh, she acknowledged she’d better get her mind off her attractive escort and back to work. She might have started the day early, but the unexpected twists ensured she still had a fair amount to get done.

  With a cup of hot tea in hand ten minutes later, she made her way into her studio and assessed the dressmaker’s dummy that stood half-clothed with her latest design.

  Although the bride wasn’t getting married for a year, the young woman was in the mood to experiment, and Cassidy had promised a preview of some mocked-up designs by the end of the following week.

  The opportunity was a new one and she enjoyed the challenge of designing something with the wearer in mind. Even so, she was still struggling with the sweep of silk she’d planned at the waist.

  Gaze speculative, Cassidy kept her distance from the dummy, considering the angles as she stood across the room. The cut of the neckline negated an empire waistline but the gathers she’d planned didn’t quite fit, either.

  The dress looked like every other dress and the carefree artist she was designing it for was anything but traditional.

  Unlike Tucker Buchanan.

  She settled her now-empty mug on the edge of her desk and considered her neighbor. The man had traditional and old-fashioned stamped across every inch of him. He was smart, strong and capable, with that damnable streak of chivalry she’d have never known she even liked until he found her standing in the middle of Dragon Street.

  “He even has a dog,” she muttered to herself as she padded back to the kitchen to make a second mug of tea. “A freaking dog. With a smooshed-in face and a big loyal gaze.”

  Other than Vi and Lilah, commitment and lasting bonds were not her strong suit. And a man with a dog had commitment painted across every inch of him.

  There was no way she was getting herself mixed up with a modern-day version of the Lancelot she’d teased him about. Nor was she a tease, so their hot kiss would have to be the end of things.

  When she saw him next—and based on what they’d discovered she knew more time with each other was inevitable—she’d keep her distance.

  She’d be polite.

  Friendly.

  Warm, without being a tease.

  It was only right. They were neighbors, after all, running up-and-coming businesses.

  The whistling teakettle added a smooth punctuation to her thoughts, confirming the finality of her decision. She had no real interest in Tucker Buchanan. They’d shared nothing more than a luscious lip lock between two healthy adults, capping off a tense and action-filled day.

  It was understandable. And really, it could happen to anyone.

  She’d nearly convinced herself as she carried her steaming mug back toward her office, once again determined to figure out the lines of the gown.

  But when images of Bailey—curled at her feet while she sat with a sketch pad working on dress designs—floated through her mind, Cassidy had to admit the truth.

  Who, exactly, was she trying to convince?

  Chapter 5

  Tucker dropped Bailey’s leash on top of his drier as the mutt beelined for his water bowl. Loud slurping sounds echoed behind him as he headed for a bottle of water in the fridge.

  Damn, but it was hot. Sweat covered him and he could have sworn he was giving off steam.

  And it was only six freaking o’clock in the morning.

  Just when he t
hought he was getting used to Texas, more heat leaped up to slap him in the face. It was a stark reminder of why Max had enticed him to take the job in the cool, arid month of January.

  “Calculating bastard.”

  Even as the epithet left his lips, Tucker knew full well Max wasn’t to blame for this morning. He’d earned his own personal heat wave all by himself, pushing the two of them through their paces. Bailey had delighted in the jog, his year-old boundless energy undeterred by the increasing heat. Although Tucker enjoyed his morning runs, he’d adjusted his schedule since getting the dog, ensuring they left early enough to miss the heat of the day.

  Clearly he underestimated the power of August in Texas.

  The lolling tongue and thick pants from where the dog now flopped on his belly against the cool kitchen tiles only reinforced the thought.

  “Good run, boyo. Even if I am still thinking about the woman and all that gorgeous red hair.”

  That tongue continued to loll but Tucker could have sworn he saw a subtle head nod as well as clear understanding in that solemn brown gaze.

  “And now you’re convinced the dog understands you,” he muttered to himself before gulping down a glass of orange juice, willing the natural sweetness to bring some equilibrium back to his thoughts.

  He obviously had none if he was talking to himself all while assuming his dog understood his words. With brisk motions he snagged another glass of OJ from the fridge, along with the milk and a large box of cornflakes from the counter.

  Sustenance and a shower would set him to rights. Then it was back to his drafting board to get a bit more done before heading into the office. Although Cassidy had filled more of his thoughts than anything else, the depths of his subconscious did manage to work through a bearing-wall problem he hadn’t quite figured out on his latest project. He’d focus on the designs and get the luscious redhead out of his mind.

  It was a good plan, and Tucker was convinced he’d have managed it until he caught sight of Bailey once more as he headed off for his shower.

 

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