Chapter One
Thomas Jones parked in the last spot within spitting distance of the Ruby Tuesday’s, leaned back in the driver’s seat of his rental truck, and closed his eyes. It didn’t help his headache. His secretary was always chirping something about finding his happy place when the irritation started to build up around his eyes in tight, pinching lines and his jaw felt like a lump of iron. So what would make him happy right now? White sand, blue ocean, hot sun, cool shot of Jameson.
Perfect.
Except he wasn’t really there, and he wasn’t really happy. Not even close to happy. Miserable was more his neighborhood right now, right between Bitter Avenue and this dry, dusty Vegas parking lot outside a restaurant where, in five minutes, he’d have the most important meeting of his life.
He hated Vegas. He hated coming back to Vegas for the sixth time in as many months. He’d volunteered for the company business trips when his sister lived in this godforsaken city. But now Erica was married to his best friend and living in base housing out in California, while Thomas was still stuck traveling to a town full of cheap booze, loose women, and the stench of disappointment.
His entire career rested on this meeting, Brianna Faulk, and a contract with the Golden Hand Casino. If he didn’t convince Ms. Faulk to trust his company with her casino’s marketing budget and brand image, he could kiss his elegant corner office and corporate expense account good-bye.
He needed to set up shop in Vegas and win Brianna Faulk or his career would reverse from rising star to burnout in a matter of seconds. He’d never met the woman, but so far she’d proven a little too elusive. A little too unwilling to commit, when she was the foothold his company needed to branch into the Vegas market. That was where Thomas came in.
He stepped out of the truck, straightened his suit, and headed down the crowded sidewalk toward the restaurant. A blond woman fell into step beside him, mumbling under her breath and swiping at her phone screen as if she had some personal grudge against it. Something about the way she walked and mumbled at the same time caught his attention—as did the fact that if she wasn’t careful, she’d walk right into the newspaper box in front of her.
He opened his mouth to tell her to watch out, but then shook his head. It wasn’t his business if she didn’t know how to walk properly. Surely she would look up and see the box before she fell into the street and got run over…right? Yet as they walked, she didn’t look up even once. Finally, when they were within a foot of the box, he cursed inwardly and reached for her arm to stop her from crashing. Unfortunately for him, she swerved right when he reached left for her, and they both stumbled backward.
He caught her in his arms, her ample br**sts squashed against his chest. She clung to his arms, looking up at him in surprise with pink-tinged cheeks. Her red, lush mouth rounded out in a perfect o, and she looked up at him with a mixture of embarrassment and frustration. When their eyes met, they both froze, their breath held. She was even more stunning up close and personal.
The dark, severe suit she wore said razor-edged businesswoman, but there was a softness and sensuality to her the suit couldn’t hide. She was a 1950s pin-up girl, from the bedroom eyes to the supple, luxuriant swell of her hips. He wondered how often she’d fluttered those long lashes to get her way or flashed a hint of ample cle**age to keep a man off-guard.
He couldn’t help but be thankful he would never see her again. She had danger stamped across her forehead.
She wriggled in his arms, her cheeks turning even redder, and her iPhone crashed to the sidewalk. The crack of plastic hitting sidewalk broke the spell that seemed to have them both immobilized. He let go of her, and she cursed under her breath. Bending to grab her phone, she looked up at him from the ground, her brow furrowed. “You should really watch where you’re going. You could have knocked me over.”
He raised a brow, rocking back on his heels. The woman had sass. She ran him down, then yelled at him for it? “I was watching where I walked, but you weren’t. I was trying to catch you.”
“What?” She stood up and looked at him as if he were the one with his head in the clouds. “I wasn’t going to fall. I knew where I was the whole time.”
“Obviously,” he said, a smile tugging at his lips. Her frustration with him amused him for some reason. “All right. Lesson learned. Next time I see a woman about to fall and bounce into a busy road, I’ll let her go.”
She flushed. “No. Of course not. It was nice of you to try to catch me.” She darted a quick look up at him, then ducked her head. “Uh, thanks.”
He grinned. She seemed like she didn’t really want to say it but thought she should anyway. “Don’t mention it.”
She gestured toward the restaurant. “Well, I have to go.”
“Okay.” His grin widened. “Watch out for obstacles in your way.”
She rolled her eyes. Actually rolled her eyes. “Yeah. Thanks. I’ll watch for the killer newsstands from now on.”
She hurried off, and Thomas stood there watching her leave. Her hips swayed with as much attitude and sass as she showed him, and he couldn’t tear his eyes away from her. He didn’t look away or move until she rounded the corner and he couldn’t see her anymore.
Then and only then did he shake off the odd encounter and walk the rest of the distance to the restaurant. With a sigh, he ducked into the restaurant’s shaded coolness. A hostess approached with a stack of menus and an overly perky smile. “Two, sir?”
He scanned the dining room behind the hostess, trying to guess which woman could be Brianna. There were too many women sitting alone for him to make a guess. “I have a reservation for a four o’clock meeting with—”
“Oh, with Brianna Faulk? She’s already here.”
Why did women always finish men’s sentences? Did they think men couldn’t complete a thought without their help? He pasted a smile on. Some days he smiled so much his face hurt. And not once did he ever mean it. He’d never really intended to be good at marketing, but when his ex-wife had started sleeping around on him…
It was something to do, at least. Something to throw himself into so he wouldn’t track down one of Nicole’s many lovers and put him in the hospital. “Yes, that would be her.”
“Follow me.” Still smiling with a little too much come and get me, big boy for Thomas’s tastes, the hostess led him through the central dining area to more private seating in the rear. She nodded to a corner booth. “Your party’s waiting for you there. A waitress will be with you shortly.”