In Love With The Firefighter. Amie Denman
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Название: In Love With The Firefighter

Автор: Amie Denman

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Контркультура

Серия: Mills & Boon True Love

isbn: 9781474077934

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ seat of Jane’s Volkswagen Beetle. The car was sunny yellow and decorated with ads for Jane’s art studio, Sea Jane Paint. It also enjoyed the luxury of having all its doors.

      “I’ll drive next time,” Nicole offered, smiling and trying to be cheerful despite the events of the day. “Even if I have to steal a car.”

      “Tourists leave rentals unlocked sometimes,” Jane suggested. “Just a thought.”

      The spring break weather and happy vibe of the beachside town was something to celebrate. People in colorful shorts and T-shirts strolled the walks, lovers kissed under awnings and the calm sea appeared in glimpses between the buildings they passed.

      The evening sky stretching over the Atlantic Ocean nearly transcended the sight of her almost-paid-for car being hauled off by a tow truck, its dismembered door tucked underneath it on the flatbed. Nicole had the feeling she was never going to see it again, but the insurance adjuster on the phone assured her that doors got lopped off all the time. The car might live to ride again—after a few weeks in the body shop.

      “We could go to a restaurant,” Jane said. “There’s at least a dozen of them within walking distance of my studio, some of them really good. But I don’t feel like fighting the spring break crowds on the strip.” She turned down a residential street, heading away from the ocean. “I’m taking you to a place on the edge of town the locals like.”

      “Do they have fried food and alcohol?”

      “That’s all they have,” Jane said.

      “Perfect.”

      The low brown building’s painted sign said it all: Cape Pursuit Bar & Grill. It was not the kind of place that would attract the tourist crowd. Out of the way and under the radar, it had local watering hole written all over it, from the pothole-riddled parking lot to the mismatched faux shutters.

      Nicole followed Jane inside to a row of dark, high-backed booths and slid in across from her. She picked up a colorful laminated menu and smiled. Fried macaroni bites. Fried mozzarella sticks. French fries. Fried onion straws. Five different kinds of burgers, nearly all with some combination of bacon, cheese, barbecue sauce, fried onions and fried pickles.

      Her stomach growled. The car fiasco had robbed her appetite for lunch, but she was starving now. She deserved saturated fat after all she’d been through, and she had a feeling she’d be on her feet working hard in the art gallery. Life in a sunny beach town where she’d be likely to walk everywhere now that she was without a car was a far cry from the sedentary office job she’d left several states behind.

      “Thanks for letting me stay with you until I find a place,” Nicole said. “I looked at some rental houses and condos online, but I was afraid to commit before I actually saw the properties.”

      “Someone’s looking for a place to live?”

      A man with a face straight out of a magazine slid into the booth next to Jane. He had blue eyes, rugged cheekbones, a day’s growth of beard and dark hair that was just a little too long. He wore a T-shirt with Cape Pursuit Fire Department screen-printed over the left side of his chest.

      “Charlie Zimmerman,” he said, extending his hand across the table. “I can help you buy or rent a place if you’re interested. I’m a part-time Realtor here.”

      “And a full-time pain in the butt,” Jane added.

      “Keeps me busy,” Charlie agreed, smiling.

      “This is Nicole Wheeler,” Jane said. “My best friend from college. We both went to Michigan State, but she majored in something far more practical than I did.”

      Charlie turned his seaglass-blue eyes toward Nicole. “Horseshoeing? Latin?”

      Nicole studied their guest and wondered what the heck he was talking about. Did she look like a horseshoer?

      “Anything’s more practical than what my flaky artist friend here does,” Charlie explained jovially.

      “Hey,” Jane said. “I helped personalize gifts for your last three girlfriends, not that it did you much good.”

      Charlie’s smile faded for a moment and he drummed his fingers on the table. “Can’t blame a guy for trying,” he commented. “And there’s no doubt your paintings will easily outlast any of my relationships.”

      Jane stacked up the menus and folded her napkin into neat triangles, creasing them mercilessly with one finger. “I hope so,” she said.

      “So you’re not an artist?” Charlie asked, looking at Nicole.

      Nicole leaned back in her seat. “I majored in business. I just finished my MBA and I’m trying to figure out what to do with it.”

      “And you’re new in town.”

      Five or six men, all big, all loud, burst through the door and headed straight for the bar.

      “Yes,” Nicole said, raising her voice over the noise. “I’m going to be Jane’s business manager.”

      Charlie exchanged a look with Jane, one eyebrow raised just enough to imply a question.

      “Lucky me,” Jane said. “You know I’m lousy at spreadsheets and paperwork. And Nicole’s a great photographer—”

      “Hey, Charlie,” one of the new arrivals, a big buzz-cut blond at the bar, shouted. “Get over here. You gotta hear this one.”

      The man next to him on the bar stool turned around and locked eyes with Nicole. From a short distance away, his green eyes reminded her of a stormy sea. His dark hair and shoulders as wide as a truck combined with those stormy eyes mesmerized her. The blond buzz-cut guy slapped stormy-sea man on the shoulder.

      “Kevin here has a peach of a story.” He paused to laugh. “He took the door off some stupid tourist’s car with the squad this afternoon.”

      Nicole felt her face fall, all the warm blood draining away to be replaced by ice water.

      “Those double-parking sons of guns,” one of the other guys added.

      Charlie laughed and Jane elbowed him in the ribs.

      “What?” he said. “I’m joining the cool kids at the bar.” He nodded to Nicole. “Nice meeting you. Jane can give you my number if you’re serious about finding a place.”

      “Thank you,” Nicole said coldly. She made brief eye contact with him and then turned back to the group at the bar. So Kevin of the stormy green eyes was the man who welcomed her to Cape Pursuit by slicing off her car’s door?

      “Maybe this wasn’t a good idea,” Jane said. “I forgot Thursday night was Testosterone Night.”

      A waitress appeared at their table, blocking off the bar stool crowd and asking for their drink orders.

      “I’m not sure we’re staying,” Jane said, raising a questioning glance to Nicole.

      “Sure we’re staying. They have fried everything on the menu, and we’re already here,” Nicole replied, her tone like that of a lion handler assuring СКАЧАТЬ