Killing Casanova

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Killing Casanova Page 1

by Traci McDonald




  Killing Casanova

  Traci McDonald

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Text copyright © 2012 by Traci Hinton McDonald

  Previously published by F+W Media

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published by AmazonEncore, Seattle

  www.apub.com

  Amazon, the Amazon logo, and AmazonEncore are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.

  eISBN: 9781503966819

  This title was previously published by F+W Media; this version has been reproduced from F+W Media archive files.

  For Erik, who shows me every day what a man who truly loves you looks like.

  Acknowledgments

  My deepest thanks to my sister Kamarie for being the best cheerleader a girl ever had.

  To Alyssa Shrout, the best writer I know, and the best friend I could ask for. I’d be lost without you.

  To Virginia, for teaching me how to be not just a writer, but a good one.

  To my editor, Jennifer Lawler, and the Ladies in Red at Crimson Romance, thanks for all the great ideas and for all your patience with the blind lady. You guys are great.

  Special thanks to the Utah State Offices for The Blind and Visually Impaired, the Utah Chapter of The National Federation of The Blind, and Freedom Scientific for JAWS, their screen reading program.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  About the Author

  Sneak Peek: Games of the Heart

  Chapter One

  “Jake.” The honey-sweet voice drifted over the raucous sounds of the bar. Jake gulped down the last of his melted-ice-cube drink and turned back to check his reflection in the mirror behind the bar. The DJ was throwing back the rest of his drink too and preparing to start the next dance set. Jake ran his fingers through his hair, tousling the dark curls off his brow and watching the approach of a group of women behind him. Someone sultry had called his name, and he grinned crookedly, hoping it was one of these girls.

  Four pairs of sparkling eyes probed his reflection, and he winked teasingly, drawing their long, tawny legs in cut-off jeans toward him. They were like a pride of golden-tanned lionesses spreading out for their attack, and Jake smiled more broadly as they skirted the crowd to close in on him.

  Spinning on his stool, he cast his gaze back into the crowd as if looking for something or someone else, knowing that his lack of attention would just speed their descent on him. From the corner of his eye, Jake caught the flounce of blond curls and green eyes as a sultry form slid next to him at the bar. Possessively clutching his knee, she draped her slim, delicate hand onto his thigh and then moved his knees apart with her hips.

  “Jake?” Her whisper prickled against his ear. “You’re not going to dance with those little …”

  Natalie Harper’s voice paused ever so slightly, as she glanced pointedly at the women closing in around him. A wicked smile curled her lips as she looked back at Jake’s reddening face, waiting for his mind to fill in the unspoken insult, before she turned his stool until he faced her crimson lips.

  Natalie was beautiful, nearly six feet tall with eyes the color of the Irish hills. She put her other perfectly manicured hand on his other leg and pressed her curvaceous body against him, speaking in low, sultry tones.

  “You belong to me tonight, Jake.”

  Twisting the stool back until he once again faced the dance floor, he forced Natalie to stumble along with him. Jake leaned his forearms back against the brass bar behind him.

  “I’m drinking, Nat,” Jake hissed, pulling as far back from her as possible. “Not dancing.”

  Natalie stood straight now, causing the pendant of her long silver chain to disappear into her cleavage. The white tank top she wore clung to her slightly sweaty body and Jake bit back a scowl as he watched more than one pair of eyes follow the heart-shaped bobble as it vanished, along with a single drop of Natalie’s sweat, beneath her plunging neck line. She scowled openly and crossed her arms under her breasts, tapping one of her sandals impatiently.

  “That drink’s gone, Jake. I’ll disappear a lot faster than those ice cubes if you don’t dance with me.”

  She leaned across Jake’s steely gaze, revealing the nestling pendant, before plucking the ice cube from the top of his glass. Holding out her tongue to catch the dripping droplets and then sucking it into her mouth, Natalie straightened once more, smiling demurely. Hearing the sharp intake of more than one man’s breath, Jake fought the temptation to roll his eyes. He took the half-empty glass from the bar beside him and pulled an ice cube out as well, throwing it into his mouth and grinning at her.

  “You better get going then,” he teased, “I’ve only got two more to go.”

  Tonight had been Natalie-free — until now — thanks to his friend Lilly Pinion. Lil had been keeping a close watch on the blond bombshell by conveniently keeping herself in Jake’s arms whenever Natalie was prowling, but now Lilly was off somewhere stalking her own herd of small-town cowboys, and Jake was on his own. Three and a half weeks ago Natalie’s body and her lips had tormented Jake to distraction until he had spent some real time with her. Without the flashing lights of the bar and the too loud music, he had discovered the best part of kissing her, which was the only part with any appeal for him: it kept her from babbling relentlessly about … everything … nothing.

  With another cocky grin, Jake picked up his glass and shouldered his way into the pressing crowd, not worried about Natalie being well-cared for in his absence. Jake found the swinging doors to the parking lot and pushed out into the night air. The roiling heat of the desert would soon be upon them, and the eighty degree nights would not last until June.

  He had promised Heidi one last camping trip out to Navajo Canyon, and his mustang, Deseo, was chomping for one more run through the high meadows of the Sierra Nevadas. It would have to be soon, before the summer slaughter and the haying had to be done. Jake smiled wanly at the flirtatious glances of a few late-arriving teenage girls, but he did not move from his inclined position against the log wall of Mcgoo’s. He had come home to help with the summer work at the cattle ranch, but the restlessness inside his heart could not be quelled tonight, and he was certain the glass in his hand was not chain enough to keep him here much longer.

  Turning back to the pulsating music and lights of the interior, Jake saw the blur of Natalie’s long hair again, and he slipped through the doors, along one wall and into a chair at the back corner table.

  Deeper shadows hid his piercing blue eyes, and he leaned the chair back on its hind legs to sink further into oblivion. He had held, danced, and talked to at least three-quarters of the girls in the bar tonight hoping the usual distraction of their desperate attention would calm his heart. Gary Burke, his agent, had left him three text messages and four voicemails in the past three hours; his pho
ne vibrated in his pocket to remind him that he had ignored them. He didn’t want to think about that tonight, and he certainly didn’t want to focus on life decisions with so many lovely distractions pulsating around him, but here he sat alone in a dark corner avoiding both the decisions and the distractions in favor of … ?

  Jake watched Carter Langdon carry four longneck bottles of beer through the back door of the bar, apparently out onto the delivery dock of Mcgoo’s. He would have to keep watch on Carter tonight; that guy was dangerous with too much alcohol — and he had passed “too much” an hour ago.

  Steve Burwell appeared at the table in front of Jake and set down a chilled glass of lemonade on a paper coaster.

  “Put that chair back on the floor,” he growled, glaring at Jake.

  Jake set the chair back on all four legs and grinned broadly at the grumpy old bartender.

  “Sorry, Steve,” he said. Steve straightened and folded his beefy arms across his massive chest as he scrutinized Jake’s apologetic smile.

  “What are you doing back here, Jake?” the bartender asked with narrowed eyes. “Your fan club can’t find you back here in the dark.”

  Jake drank another ice cube from his empty glass and smiled more broadly now. “That’s the point, Steve-o,” he said with a chuckle, “I need a break from the fans.”

  Steve grimaced and glanced back toward the floor, stiffening slightly as the song ended and the dancers returned to line up at the bar.

  “Don’t make a fuss back here,” he warned, pointing a finger at Jake and stepping aside to allow an auburn-haired girl to sit at the table. Steve glanced nervously at her, and then turned his back on Jake.

  Jake smiled again, watching the bartender’s usually stony manner soften into putty as he spoke softly to the girl and then moved a lemonade into the palm of her outstretched hand. She smiled warmly and tenderly patted his arm, bringing on a flush of color Jake had not known was possible in the graying features of the long-time bartender. He choked back a laugh before Steve could hear him and then looked at the girl.

  She was pretty, but not spectacular, especially in comparison to the immaculate beauties surging throughout the room. Her long, wavy auburn hair was sun-streaked blond in places. Not highlighted in a sink somewhere, but truly streaked with flecks that were the result of long days in the sun. Her features were soft and pretty, but she wore no makeup and her eyes seemed too pale for her tanned features. They were blue, or maybe gray? It was hard to tell in the dim lights.

  As she sipped slowly on her drink, light from the dance floor turned her eyes a pale sky blue. Jake shuddered a little at those eyes. They rested on nothing and seemed to see everything all at once. He turned away from them before she could catch him watching. Sliding his chair back away from her table and further into the corner, Jake looked everywhere except at her. The quiet hum of her voice caught him by surprise.

  “You don’t have to hide,” she said with a soft laugh. “I don’t bite.”

  Jake blushed openly at her quiet reproach. He should have known she would have been watching him, and he would not have been able to make even the slightest movement away from her without her noticing. He was surprised he had stayed hidden in the back corner this long without one of his entourage finding him.

  “It wasn’t you,” he assured her with a cocky grin. “I’m not hiding, just looking for a quiet corner to take a break in.”

  “I’m Cassie,” she said, holding out a hand in his direction but not moving toward him.

  “Jake,” he answered, leaning forward and shaking her fingers briskly.

  He slumped back into his chair quickly, and she withdrew her offering with a slight wrinkle of her forehead.

  “It’s nice to meet you, Jake,” she said sharply, turning her back on him. “Enjoy your break.”

  Jake grimaced guiltily; he was being rude and he knew it, but he was not interested in more swooning females tonight, at least not until Natalie had suspended her hunt. It went against everything his mother had ever taught him about respect and honor to hide behind her and insult her casual friendliness at the same time, just because he was in a bad mood.

  Standing swiftly and moving his chair so he was hidden from view of the dance floor but close enough so she could hear him, Jake sat back down and spoke softly over her shoulder, “I didn’t mean to be rude,” he said, letting his voice drip with sincerity. “I am hiding, but not from you.”

  She gave a quick shake of her long hair, and Jake thought he heard a small laugh from behind her glass of lemonade. Sipping the drink slowly and then carefully setting down the glass, she turned ever so slightly in her chair. She focused her eyes on a dark-haired young man sitting in a chair just beyond the circle of dance floor lights and spoke as if she was speaking to that distant figure.

  “This is a good place to hide,” she said bemusedly. “That’s why Steve put me back at this table. He says in a place like this you stay in the shadows, because the lights bring the snakes out at night.”

  A crooked smile teased her lips now, and Jake chuckled darkly. “Steve didn’t know I was curled up back here tonight, or he probably would have found you another table.”

  “So what snake are you hiding from?” she asked, keeping her face turned slightly away from him. Jake lifted an eyebrow. If anyone were to glance over to their corner, it would look like she was talking to someone at another table, and he would remain cloaked in the shadows.

  “She’s not a snake,” Jake said dryly. “She’s more like Medusa.”

  “Medusa? Is she trying to seduce you or just turn you to stone?”

  Jake scowled, looking around the room for Natalie. “Not sure. I guess it depends on if she’s trying to hook up again, or punish me for not wanting to.”

  He looked back at the girl’s face, expecting a smile and more of her easy banter. Instead her face was serious and now she turned her pale blue eyes boring directly into his.

  “Well,” she said tartly, “I guess that makes you the snake then.” A flash of white-hot fury danced in the depths of her eyes and she turned her back on him once more.

  Jake sat stunned, shocked. Had he said something besides the words he had heard come out of his mouth? Had he accidently told her he’d been making out with Natalie because she was hot, and it was easy? Somehow he felt as if he had confessed the last month and a half of empty, casual relationships, and now she had hung the string of broken girls around his neck like an albatross. Jake opened his mouth to give her a defensive retort but found it already hanging open. What did he need to defend to her? Who was this girl?

  “I’m sorry,” Jake drawled, sarcasm heavy on his lips. “Mother Teresa? Is that what you said your name was?” Not even a flounce of her hair met his retort, and Jake frowned dejectedly. “Look, Cassie?” he said standing and shoving his chair back from the table. “This is a bar. This is why people come to bars. If you’re too morally superior to the rest of us, then I guess this is the last time either of us will have to put up with each other.”

  Jake picked up his glass and drained the last of his melting ice before slamming it on the table again. His dark, stormy gaze caught the flash of Natalie’s green eyes from across the room and he groaned under his breath as she started to move around the room toward him.

  “I don’t think you’re in hiding anymore. It sounds like your tantrum has brought you out of the vipers’ den.”

  Jake cursed quietly, then slipped back into the shadows along the wall and out the doors once more.

  Chapter Two

  “Jake or Dylan?” Cassie Taylor muttered, shaking her head emphatically as he slipped out of the club behind her. He was right, this was a bar, a bar in a small, lonely part of the Mojave Desert. None of these people were here for stimulating conversation.

  He didn’t know her, and still he had tried to do his best Prince Charming impression. She laughed at her own foolishness. Guys who were doing their best impression of anything had real demons to disguise and she was the l
ast girl in the room any fairy tale writer would have chosen to cast in the role of princess. With a heavy sigh of disappointed reality, Cassie turned back to her lemonade and let the music drift to her ears.

  “Cassie!” Jana Pembrooke said with a huff as she sank into the chair Jake had vacated. “What did you say to Casanova that made him so mad?”

  “What makes you think I said anything at all?” Cassie asked innocently.

  “Because he left, and he’s the reason I dragged you out here tonight. He just started ignoring Natalie Harper, which means I, mere mortal that I am, actually have a shot with him. Now he won’t be back, and I never even got a chance to introduce myself to him.”

  Cassie turned to face Jana now, feeling chagrined for ruining her friend’s night. “Are you sure we’re talking about the same guy? That guy’s name was Jake, and he doesn’t really seem like someone who has much going for him. A little grumpy, a little testy, and a whole lot arrogant. I’m sure there is a lot of decent guys here, Jana. What’s so great about him?”

  “Jake Caswell is the hottest thing in all of Lindley.” Jana sighed. “Not that it says much, but he’s hot enough to be an actor and a model in LA. He’s only here between jobs, helping his dad with the cattle until he has another project out there.”

  Jana’s voice was straining in pitch, and Cassie heard the edge of frustration plucking at the girl’s patience. “He’s gorgeous. That’s why the girls around here call him Casanova. He smiles and asks you to dance and there’s no resisting him.”

  Cassie rolled her eyes and grinned at Jana. “I managed it,” she teased smartly. “Besides, I’m sure he’ll be back next weekend. He’s got to keep up that reputation with the girls.”

  “The next two weekends, we’re taking groups to the campground and the river. It will be at least three weeks before I get back here, and I don’t think Jake needs to come here to keep his social life full. Tonight could have been my last chance before he goes back to LA.”

 

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