The Girl's Got Secrets (Forbidden Men #7)(45)
“Oh my God,” she whimpered and turned to gape at me. “He just called me beautiful.”
“And he also told you he was taken.” Grasping her shoulders, I manually tugged her backward away from Pick, forcing her to let go of his hand. She whimpered again when she was forced to separate contact with him.
“But...he’s so hot. Just one more touch? A lick? Sniff? Please.”
“Hey, is that Carter Lang?” I asked, noticing someone through the crowd that I’d seen sneak from her bedroom multiple times over the years. Knowing how easily distracted she was, I blew out a relieved breath when she glanced over.
“Holy shit, it is! I’ll be right back.” And she was gone.
Breathing out a breath, I turned to Pick. “I’m so sorry. She...” I had no idea how to describe Jodi. She was sweet and fun as hell, and not at all shy about going after anything she wanted, men included. But...yeah. She could be a handful.
Pick merely chuckled. “Don’t worry about it. I was flattered.”
So I began to turn to the two bartenders behind the counter to apologize in case either of them had been insulted, when Knox surged toward me...or rather, toward Pick.
“Pick, I swear Miller Hart just walked through the front door.”
“What?” Pick turned, scanning the club. “Where?”
Alerted by Asher’s surname in the conversation, I openly eavesdropped, glancing in the direction that Knox told Pick to look.
“Fuck. What the hell is he doing here? I thought he was still in prison.”
It took me, like, half a second after that to figure out who they were talking about.
Snapping my fingers, I pointed at each man, remembering the news report Jodi had been watching when I’d gotten home from practice.
“Was he being held at Statesburg?” I couldn’t refrain from asking because I suddenly remembered Asher mentioning that, and oh, shit.
Fuck was right. This could not be good.
When both Knox and Pick sent me scowls for butting into their conversation, I cleared my throat. “It’s just...they showed something on the news earlier, saying about fifty inmates from Statesburg prison had been set free on early parole because the place is being shut down, and the other surrounding prisons were too crowded to take them all in.”
“Holy shit,” Knox murmured, sharing a concerned glance with Pick, who also looked worried.
Since I’d already bulldozed my way into this much, I just kept going, because seriously, I had to know. “Who’s Miller Hart? He’s Asher’s dad, isn’t he?”
Unease crossed Pick’s face before he reluctantly nodded. “Yeah.”
“Ah...f*ck.” I turned back to study the man who’d killed Asher’s mother. “This can’t be good.”
“Do you think he’s here because of Asher?” Knox asked Pick.
But I was the one who answered. “Of course he’s here because of Asher. Why else would he come here? Asher’s his son...not to mention the only eyewitness to seeing the guy kill his wife. It was probably Asher’s testimony that put him away. If he’s at all vengeful, hell yes, this would be the first place he’d come.”
“Wait. How did you know Asher was the only eyewitness?” Pick eyed me with a funny kind of suspicion. “Did he tell you that?”
I shrugged. “It...came up.”
“Shit,” Knox spoke up suddenly. “He’s headed this way. What do we do?”
Pick took control, pointing. “Knox, get Asher to my office. Now. I’ll get rid of this f*cker.”
But Knox shook his head. “Screw that. You’re not dealing with Miller Hart by yourself. He’s old and pathetic, but untrustworthy as hell.”
“I’ll get Asher out of sight,” I offered.
Pick shot me a surprised yet grateful glance. “Thanks.”
As Knox leapt over the counter to follow Pick toward Miller Hart, I scanned the stage area for Asher. The karaoke machine started playing a One Direction song, so whatever he’d been helping a customer do, he must’ve finished. That meant he was probably headed back to the bar. So I started toward the stage to intercept him, weaving and sometimes pushing through people to get to where he had to be.
I ended up almost plowing into him as I dodged around a gossiping horde of women, and suddenly there he was.
We both pulled up short, not expecting to see each other.
His eyes went wide with surprise and what looked like leery apprehension. “Sticks. What—”
“Oh, thank God,” I blurted over him, urgently waving him to follow me as I darted toward a huge opening that led down a wide, but low-ceilinged hallway. “Come on, come on, come on. This way.”
I was shocked when he actually did come. “Why? What’s going on?”
“We need to get out of sight.” I clutched his upper arm as soon as we hit the less-crowded hall. “Which door leads to Pick’s office?”
Eyebrows crinkling with confusion, he pointed. “That one. Why? Wha...?”
I yanked him into the room with me and slammed the door. Then, panting hard, I leaned against it for good measure.
After stumbling off balance from my tug, he regained his balance to gape at me. “What the hell, man?”
Linda Kage's Books
- Linda Kage
- Priceless (Forbidden Men #8)
- Worth It (Forbidden Men #6)
- Consolation Prize (Forbidden Men #9)
- A Perfect Ten (Forbidden Men #5)
- A Fallow Heart (Tommy Creek #2)
- Hot Commodity (Banks / Kincaid Family #1)
- Fighting Fate (Granton University #1)
- The Trouble with Tomboys (Tommy Creek #1)
- Delinquent Daddy (Banks / Kincaid Family #2)