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Authors: Julie Leto

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BOOK: Too Wild to Hold
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She slipped her arms around his neck and kissed him. With her tongue, she parted the last of his resistance, and as she melted in his arms, his heart fused into her. They had so many things left to say to one another—so many things to learn and share. But he knew without a moment’s hesitation that he wanted to explore all the possibilities life and love had to offer—with Claire and only Claire.

“I love you, too,” Claire said, breaking away just enough to run her hands over his face and then spear them into his hair. “I’ve known you for two days and I love you, Michael Murrieta.”

“It sounds crazy,” he replied, but no crazier than what he felt.

She threw back her head and laughed. “My life has always been crazy, but I never imagined the insanity was just a prelude to this. If I had, I might have spent more time enjoying it.”

“We’ll enjoy it together from now on. How does that sound?”

Unable to resist any longer, he dipped his head and kissed the soft flesh on her neck. The way she cooed in his ear and clutched at his shoulders gave him a hint as to her answer.

“Sounds wild, Michael. Too wild.”

He braced her spine with his hand so that she arched her back, giving him clearer access to her throat.

“There’s no such thing as too wild, Claire. Not with us. Not ever.”

Epilogue
 

T
HE GOLD RING
clattered over the felt tabletop, but Daniel instantly caught it, not giving the family heirloom a chance to roll off the side or get mistaken for an up of his ante. The shock of holding the ring for the first time caught him unaware, and it took him a split second to realize that Michael had shooed away the dealer at the private blackjack table he’d been gambling at for the past hour.

“You were going to leave without saying goodbye?” Michael asked, sliding into the tall chair beside his.

Daniel grumbled, slid the ring onto the table in front of his brother, then shook the ice in the bottom of his tumbler to get one last taste of the Scotch. “I’m not big on goodbyes.”

“You pretty much suck at hellos, too.”

“I don’t generally like to announce my presence to people coming or going,” he explained. “Hurts my chances of ripping them off if they realize I’m around.”

Michael caught the attention of a passing cocktail waitress, ordered two drinks and then turned back to his brother. He gave him a powerful once-over that made Daniel yearn for a dark corner or shadow in which to disappear. Unfortunately, those were tough to come by in a brilliantly lit casino.

Unlike Alejandro, whose assessing stare tended toward the judgmental and was, therefore, easy to brush off, Michael’s gaze was more probing—as if he didn’t quite know what to make of his middle brother. As if he were a puzzle he desperately wanted to solve.

Daniel knew the feeling. He’d been trying to figure himself out his whole life, but never more than in the last few months. His brothers had forced the issue. Not because they’d wanted to and certainly not because he’d asked them to redefine who he was.

It was all because of the ring.

Just two months ago, he’d started on a path to retrieve his father’s most prized possession. He’d only met Ramon Murrieta once. He’d used the opportunity to let the old man know. He’d survived foster care without his intervention, so he sure as hell didn’t need him once he’d turned eighteen. He’d built his own family with a menagerie of thieves, fences, money-launderers and loan sharks.

The irony had not escaped him that years later, when he’d been unfairly accused of attempted murder, that “family” had deserted him. If not for Lucienne, his adopted sister, and the two brothers he did not know, he would have been entirely alone

And now, the brother who’d been the most doubtful of Daniel’s motives, the one who had grown up with Ramon Murrieta and deserved his legacy more than anyone, had tried to give him their father’s ring?

Again, Michael slid the emerald in front of Daniel. This time, he didn’t pick it up.

“What’s this for?” he asked.

Michael grinned. “Don’t need it anymore.”

“I didn’t realize the wearer had to need it,” he said. “I thought it was just about blood.”

“Didn’t Alex tell you what the ring does?”

Daniel scoffed. “Said something about the three qualities of Joaquin Murrieta or some shit. I wasn’t listening,” he lied.

He’d heard every word Alex had told him, of course, but how could he believe in such nonsense? Over the course of his career, he’d stolen more than a few items purported to have curses or luck associated with them and he’d never seen anything to make him believe the legends were even remotely based in truth.

But Alex, a dyed-in-the-wool skeptic of epic proportions, had given the ring credit for bringing him together with Lucienne. And from the grin on Michael’s face, he had also found the path to true love and was assigning some of the credit to the hunk of well-worn gold and damaged stones.

Daniel lifted his glass again, hoping for one last drop of Scotch. “Great. I’ll sell it.”

Michael’s smile did not falter. “No, you won’t.”

He was right. Just a couple of months ago, someone had wanted the ring so badly, they’d set Daniel up to take a murder rap. If he put the ring back on to the open market, that still unknown person might get it—and Daniel’s vengeful nature wouldn’t allow that to happen.

To keep the ring safe, it would have to stay in the family.

“I don’t need a woman in my life,” he said, tossing the emerald across the table. Michael caught it on a bounce.

“Oh, the ring isn’t about women. It’s about giving you what you’re missing.”

Daniel waved him off, not wanting to hear a lecture about which aspects of his character needed a magical intervention. “I’m not missing anything.”

Michael used the opportunity to snatch his hand. “Trust me, bro, you need this.”

Their wrestling caught the attention of the gamblers nearby, but before anyone could intervene, the burlier Michael had succeeded in sliding the ring onto Daniel’s finger. He tried to tug it off, but couldn’t get it past his knuckle.

Michael sat down on his chair and shook his clothes back into place.

“What the hell?” Daniel protested.

“Consider it a favor, brother. Your life has been going nowhere. Maybe you need a change. The ring might give it to you. Look at me. I’ve decided to take a break from the Bureau. I’m staying in New Orleans. With Claire.”

Danny gave the ring one last tug, then gave up. He’d ice his hand later. Maybe use some soap. In the meantime, he could at least admire the craftsmanship. If not for the Z-shaped scratch on the emerald and the somewhat sloppy repairs made to the worn gold band, it might have fetched a nice price in a foreign market.

Maybe he would still try, just to get rid of the thing.

Or maybe he’d see what the piece of crap jewelry could do.

The cocktail waitress returned with two glasses of Bourbon, neat. They each took a sip. Daniel preferred Scotch but the alcoholic burn on his tongue was nice all the same.

“So you’re sticking around to study for your P.I. license?”

“Wouldn’t be too hard, with my experience. And I have a bead on an internship with a local P.I. who for some reason seems to want me around.”

Michael put his glass down and leaned in close so his whispered words could be heard over the dinging bells and endless chatter on the casino’s main floor.

“Thanks for keeping an eye on her. You kept your word. That means a lot.”

Daniel eyed his brother intently. “For future reference, I’m a thief, not a liar.”

“I didn’t realize the two were mutually exclusive.”

“Don’t get me wrong. To be an effective thief, lying is often part of the deal. But I try to avoid it when I can.”

“So you’ll tell me the truth if I ask you whether or not you came to New Orleans just to steal Pop’s ring?”

“If you asked,” Danny said, hoping he wouldn’t.

“Then I’m asking.”

Daniel frowned and looked down at his hand. He hadn’t really expected it to fit. He remembered his father’s fingers being thicker and longer than his own. He’d met him only once, but he still remembered the strength in the old man’s hands.

He threw back the remaining Bourbon, impressed by how the light caught on the green stone, despite the scratch.

“The thought had occurred to me, yes, but then I asked myself, where was the challenge? You were so distracted by Claire and the Bandit, you wouldn’t have noticed if I’d cut your finger off to get it.”

Michael arched a brow. “So the only reason you take things that don’t belong to you is for the challenge?”

Daniel laughed. In the beginning, he’d stolen to survive. Once he’d figured out he was good at it, he’d done it for the sense of accomplishment—and the cash.

But since Alejandro’s lawyer and Michael’s influence had helped him beat the bogus attempted murder charges, he was no longer sure that any monetary reward was worth the risk—especially not to his tentative relationship with his brothers.

He had no idea what he was going to do next, but taking his father’s ring had not been a choice.

Again, he tried to remove it. Again, it did not budge.

Michael finished his drink, chuckling. “Funny. First you wanted it enough to steal it, and now you can’t give it back if you wanted to.”

He slapped his brother on the shoulder and stood.

“Wait,” Daniel ordered, objecting to Michael’s departure.

“Can’t,” Michael said, tossing down a twenty to cover the cost of their drinks. “I have a beautiful woman waiting to show me all the best make out spots—I mean, stakeout locations—in New Orleans. I suggest you stop wasting your time trying to take the ring off and just buckle up for the ride. Your life is about to change, Daniel. Whether you like it or not.”

ISBN: 978-1-4592-1200-8

TOO WILD TO HOLD

Copyright © 2011 by Book Goddess, LLC

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BOOK: Too Wild to Hold
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