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Authors: Lora Leigh

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BOOK: Wild Card
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this dude is a major badass. He's going to crush my head and shove it in my pocket like a

damned baseball if you don't talk to him."

Her lips almost twitched. Toby, with his gangly, too tall body and intensity sometimes

reminded her of Nathan's brother Rory when she had first met him. And he could be just as

melodramatic as Rory had once been.

Sabella pushed tiredly against the underside of the motor, sending the creeper rolling across the

cement until her head was free, leaving her to stare up at Toby, the young man she had hired to

take care of the office.

His shoulder-length light brown hair was pulled back in a low ponytail, his brown eyes filled

with anxiousness as his forehead creased into a frown.

Dammit, she didn't have time for this.

"I told Mike the motor would be ready tomorrow, not today." She heaved herself upright,

sitting with her jean-clad legs spread over the narrow hard plastic device used to maneuver

beneath the vehicles as she lay back to work beneath them. She propped her arms on her knees,

staring up at him in exasperation.

She wiped her grimy fingers negligently against the side of her jeans before brushing the loose

strands of her dark brown and blond-streaked hair back from her face.

"We're not hiring, and Rory will be here when he gets here. That's all I know. Now take care of

it." She moved to lie back down, determined to finish the final tuneup of the sedan that the

mechanics had neglected to inform her was sitting out back. Mike Conrad wasn't the only one

waiting on his vehicle.

"Oh, no you don't." He shook his head fiercely as she moved to push herself back under the car.

"I can't handle this dude, Belle. He's like the Grim Reaper's cousin or something. He's not part

of my job description, ya know? You deal with him."

Sabella pushed back the anger, drawn more from her own impatience than Toby's attitude. The

boy was normally pretty stable and dealt with aggravated customers with a flair she envied.

"Just tell him to come back in the morning. Rory will be here…" She hung her head as he

began shaking his head violently. "Fine."

She struggled to her feet, picking up the creeper and propping it against the side of the garage

wall as she grabbed a stained towel and began trying to rub the oil from her hands. After a few

seconds, she tossed the rag back to the bench and stalked through the four-car holding bay to

the office beyond.

They couldn't afford a new mechanic, no matter how much she needed one to keep the garage

profitable. She was going to lose her ass here, and she knew it. If she didn't manage to

straighten up the mess she had allowed to develop in those first horrific three years after her

husband's death, she was going to lose the garage, and her home. The benefits she had received

just weren't enough to save it all.

She couldn't lose the home she and Nathan had shared. She'd worked three years to rebuild it.

She couldn't lose it.

God, she couldn't lose that last connection to him. It was all she had left.

"Tell Danny I want that car finished and out of here this afternoon." she ordered Toby as they

neared the office. 'Tell him we can finish the Carltons' truck later this evening, but Jennie needs

her car to get to work and it took too long to get those parts as it is. I have everything ready, it

just needs going over and testing."

"On my way." Toby nodded before turning and loping over to the far side of the garage.

"And don't run," she muttered, knowing he wouldn't pay attention to that order if he did hear

her. He was like a puppy. All gangly legs and nervous energy.

And she hadn't even asked him the employee wannabe's name. She shook her head, pushing her

fingers through her hair before jerking the office door open and coming to a hard, cold stop.

Arrogance shimmered off him. Dark blue eyes seared into her brain, glowing from a face that

was sun bronzed and savagely hard. Flat cheekbones, a nose that was just a little off center, lips

that were sensual but just a tad thin. A dark, short black beard covered his face, closely cropped

and giving him a dangerous appearance. Long black hair was pulled back from his face and

secured at his nape.

A shiver raced over her skin, a primal warning of danger, as she stared at him. He was lean and

tall, but she bet the muscles beneath that black leather jacket, T-shirt, jeans, and riding chaps

were like steel. Heavy boots covered big feet, and he stood staring her from beneath thick, too

thick, silky black lashes.

This man was a predator. It was her first thought. Long, lean, and dangerous, the kind of man

Sabella had learned to steer well clear of after her husband's death. Once bitten, twice shy. She

had learned her lesson about that air of danger, and she had no desire to revisit it.

He leaned casually against the desk, his palms flat on the surface as he watched her with

predatory intent. For a moment, just a moment, she went back in time, to that day she had first

pulled into the lot, her car overheating, her nerves frazzled because she was late for a job

interview. It was hot, she was sweating in the late-summer Texas sun, cursing her move from

Georgia and the Texas heat that seemed to take forever to get used to.

And standing in just mat position had been Nathan Mal, the owner, and later her husband. His

eyes had raked over her slowly, a smile tilting his sexy lips as his eyes, Irish eyes, brilliant,

seductive, stole her heart.

She felt her mouth go painfully dry. Her hands were shaking, her stomach cramping, as she

stared back at the stranger. She didn't know this man. she didn't want to know this man. but for

a moment, just a moment, she glimpsed the past with him. A bittersweet, painful knowledge of

love and loss and everything fate had denied her.

"There are no openings. Please leave."

Okay, so that was really rude, but she was really busy too. And she didn't need the headache

she knew would come with this man.

"Rory assured me there was an opening for a mechanic."

Oh God, that voice.

His voice was deep, raspy, almost guttural. It raked over her nerve endings and sent an edge of

dark response. Damn, damn, damn. She didn't need this. She didn't need her body awakening

now after so many years in a deep freeze. She sure as hell didn't need it awakening for a man

more dangerous and likely a hell of a lot harder than any other man she had ever known.

His voice was cool and filled with purpose, but the undercurrents were dark, hungry. She had

never heard that in her husband's voice, had never seen it in his eyes.

She turned back slowly, forcing herself to stare at his chin, the short clipped beard and

mustache blurring his features. Were those scars?

No, she didn't want to know. She didn't care.

"Rory isn't here." She had to force herself to speak, nearly wincing at the raw sound of her

voice. "And he doesn't run the place. I do. There are no openings."

He shifted. As though fascinated, Sabella glanced down, seeing the powerful lean thighs

covered in faded denim and leather, the hard abs beneath the thin cotton shirt he wore. Boots

covered big feet, a sturdy base for at least six feet four inches of hard male.

As her gaze moved back to his face, she watched as his eyes moved to the wide windows that

looked out on the gas bays and parking lot. Several cars sat deserted beneath the hot, midday

sun, awaiting attention. The gas pumps were empty, the blacktopped lot cracked and sporting

several lumps of hearty grass. Yeah, so the place wasn't looking so good, she thought, pushing

back her frustration, her pain. But she was doing her best. And it looked a hell of a lot better

than it had three years ago when she had dragged herself out of her grief enough to realize what

she was losing.

"You're doing a good job here, but if you want to survive, you need someone willing to do the

job right, and to get the best out of the men working under you." His gaze swung back to her,

the blue of his eyes threatening to steal her breath again.

His voice was quiet, reasonable, but it sent a flare of fury racing through her system. How dare

he be here, ruining the fragile balance she had found in her life with his blue eyes, his raspy

voice. She lifted her chin defiantly, hating it, hating his eyes, and the weariness that seemed to

fill them. And she refused to let herself care.

"I'm doing just fine, all by my lonesome, mister," she assured him mockingly. She drew herself

stiffly erect. "You're a stranger here—"

"Ma'am, I'm stating a fact."

Oh God… She wanted to scream at him, to beat at him for stealing her peace, for taking the

fragile calm she had finally managed to build around herself with the unexplained response she

could feel roiling inside her. "All I need is the job Rory promised." He flashed a hard smile.

"He is your partner, isn't he?"

"That's not the point,"' she snapped. "Look, mister—"

"Noah. Noah Blake."

Noah. Irish.
Go síoraí, I'll love you forever
. For a moment, the slightest wish whispered

through her mind and she thought of Nathan.

He hadn't loved her forever though. His need for danger, for the adrenaline rush and

excitement, had carried him away from her. and he'd found death instead. Leaving her alone.

Leaving her to survive without him for six heartbreaking years.

Now another Irish wildman was stepping into her life, trying to take it over? She shook her

head. No, never again. No man would ever fill her, ever own her as her husband had. It wasn't

possible. And she wasn't going to give this one the chance.

She opened her eyes, lifted her head, and stared back at him as the old, driving fury consumed

her once again. She straightened her shoulders and lifted her chin defiantly.

"I said no. Now leave. I have work to do and I just don't have time for you."' She turned on her heel and stalked back into the garage, stemming the hollow pain that beat at her throat and

moistened her eyes.

She was finally forgetting, she didn't need to be reminded of Irish eyes, soul-stealing kisses, or

promises broken.

Her husband was gone. He was dead, his body sealed in a government casket and lowered into

a dark, open hole. She had watched them cover it, watched each shovelful of dirt as it sealed a

reality she had fought to reject.

God, how she had loved him. His laughter, his voice, his big body and his temper.

She forced herself to breathe through the memories, to place one foot in front of the other and

to walk away from her response to the man who uncovered those memories within her.

"Belle Malone." A furious male voice sliced through her thoughts as she headed for the sedan

she had been working on earlier, bringing her to a stop as she turned slowly toward the open

garage doors and bit back a curse.

Ladies didn't cuss, she reminded herself. No matter the provocation. And she was being

provoked. God, why hadn't she just stayed in bed this morning? Mike Conrad was a bull of a

man. He'd been one of her husband's friends, but now he was becoming a pain in her ass.

"Mike, we're working on it." She lifted her hand in greeting, praying he hadn't been drinking.

"I'll have it ready in the morning."

"That's what that little bastard Rory has said for two weeks." He stalked into the bay, ignoring the sign that warned customers to stay behind the dingy yellow line. "You said two weeks, no

more."

Sabella bit her tongue and reminded herself she couldn't afford to piss him off too much. His

bank held the note on the garage and on the house, and he had threatened more than once to

make sure they foreclosed if she missed so much as the first payment.

Thinning blond hair was cut short, almost buzzed. Weak brown eyes were watering and

bloodshot from liquor and his bloated, reddened face was twisted in rage. Great. She needed

this like she needed the behemoth standing in her office right now.

"I still have today, Mike." She pulled on patience she didn't have. She couldn't afford to piss him off; he could make paying off that loan incredibly difficult. Besides, he had been Nathan's

friend.

Kinda.

"Like hell." His voice was surly, his broad, pitted face flushed ruddy red, as he neared her and the smell of liquor hit her in the face. "You finish that truck now, bitch, or you can kiss this

business goodbye, you hear me? Wouldn't Nathan be damned proud of your sassy little ass

then? This garage was his pride and joy."

Mike had definitely been drinking and his mood was as foul as any she had ever seen.

"Nathan is gone, Mike," she reminded him, fighting for the calm she swore she wouldn't lose.

Mike had always seemed to blame her for Nathan's death, for some reason. "How he would feel

is beside the point."

She drew herself stiffly erect, knowing her diminutive five-five frame had nothing on his six

feet. He was stocky, his paunch had grown over the years, but the man Nathan had once called

a friend had let the bottle and his own failures destroy him faster than her own pain had nearly

destroyed the garage.

"Nathan should have kicked your ass out and put his place in dependable hands before he

screwed up and got his ass blown away." The cruel words struck at her heart, no matter how

she fought to ignore them. "He should have known better than to trust a flaky little blonde to

BOOK: Wild Card
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