Games of the Heart (The 'Burg #4)(89)
“Fuck you, Mike. She had her words, I’ll have mine,” Debbie snapped.
Mike took his position, turned to Debbie and replied, “I’ll repeat, we’re not doin’ this.”
“And I’ll repeat, f**k you, Mike –” she started.
Mike cut her off as the cars rolled down the lane. “That’s Bernie McGrath.”
She crossed her arms on her chest. “I know who it is.”
“You haven’t been around The ‘Burg much but that is not a man you do business with,” Mike informed her.
She threw an arm out toward the lane then tucked it back in while saying acidly, “Oh, I see. Mr. McGrath is interested in this land, he’s willing to pay more than fair market value to see his vision come to life and what? Is he a mobster, Mike? Does a small burg in Indiana have the mob crawling through it?”
“You’re all fired up to break up this land, there are others who’d give you a fair deal and understand the rest of the farm is off-limits. It’s been known through these parts by developers that the Hollidays are stayin’ so they long since have left the family be. By entering negotiations to make a deal with the devil, you opened that up to McGrath and put your family at threat,” Mike replied and Debbie rolled her eyes then rolled them back.
“Bullshit drama,” she snapped. “I see Dusty’s rubbing off on you.”
“It isn’t,” Colt put in and Debbie’s eyes sliced to him. “McGrath doesn’t intend to build on a quarter of this land. He doesn’t do small ventures. That amount of land is a parking lot to him. Whatever McGrath’s intentions are, his vision includes this entire farm.”
“Well good,” Debbie fired back, “considering the money he’s offering will make my family very comfortable.”
“You may think you are, but you are not doin’ them any favors,” Sully put in quietly and Debbie transferred her glare to him.
“Explain to me why a sister’s visit to her family home requires four police officers and,” her scathing glance slid over Cal, “whoever he is.” Then her eyes narrowed on Cal and she her memory opened up. “Oh my God. Joe Callahan. Now this is a surprise considering you and that girlfriend of yours would do anything to stay away from cops. Not do ride alongs on Tuesday mornings when real men are working.”
“It’s good she got the business from Mike when they were teenagers ‘cause I’m seein’ she doesn’t get laid very often anymore,” Cal muttered to no one, eyes on Debbie then he addressed her. “Advice. You might wanna see about gettin’ you some. It might improve your disposition.”
Debbie’s face got red.
“Cal, you’re not helping,” Colt murmured.
“Haines got a call from his woman and shot outta the Station like someone yelled fire,” Cal returned. “In case you hadn’t noticed, Colt, shit goes down in this burg and when it does, it tries to drag good women down with it. That happens, it’s all hands on deck.”
Terrific. Cal was throwing down for Dusty.
“I can say as definite you’re not invited to participate in my family’s business, Mr. Callahan,” Debbie stated snidely.
“Knew your brother, not well, but I knew him and respected him,” Cal returned softly and Debbie’s red face immediately paled. “Doesn’t matter how well I knew him, since he died, lotta talk about him around town. Know he’s got two good kids. Know they now gotta look out for their Mom. And know they do not need this shit. You feel this is truly a good idea and have their best interests at heart, you approach them when their Dad isn’t under fresh dirt. You’re doin’ this because you’re alone, bitter about it and your ex-boyfriend has hooked up with your sister, then you got some soul searchin’ to do, woman, before you mark it so deep it sends you straight to hell.”
And there it was. Violet Callahan and her daughters, Kate and Keira might not have managed to modify Joe Callahan’s wardrobe but the man they made it safe for Cal finally to be didn’t need any further modifications.
It was then Mike decided to get things in hand.
“Debbie,” he called and her eyes came to him. “I don’t know how long you’re in town but how about you go somewhere, cool off and you, Dusty and me sit down and talk tonight. Get some things sorted.”
Her color came back and her eyes grew sharp when she declared, “I’ve already got what I want sorted, Mike, and I don’t need to sit down with you and Dusty to sort it or explain it. I think I’ve made my intentions clear.”
“What we need to talk about isn’t Dusty and me. It’s Rhonda, Finley and Kirby,” Mike explained, seeking patience.
“Right, and Dusty’s woven her golden web around you, singing her angel song, dancing her bullshit dance until you’re deaf and blind to anything but what Dusty wants to manipulate you to believe,” she retorted and Mike lost his way to patience so he decided to shut this down.
“Right, you wanna believe that, you’re clearly gonna hold onto it. So do it.”
“I don’t need your permission, Mike Haines,” she returned.
“Well you have it anyway,” Mike muttered. “Now you mind we end this scene?”
She glared at him then proclaimed, “I’ll be wanting to talk to Rhonda before I go back to DC.”