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Excerpt from SMALL TOWN GIRL
by Patricia Rice
His badass days were
over. Flynn Clinton rubbed his whisker stubble with his aching
left hand and gazed over the dance floor of lithe gyrating bodies.
He might be bad, but he sure the hell wasn’t young enough to make an
ass of himself any more.
The thick smoke of the bar
seared his eyes and throat. He’d forgotten that North Carolina was
tobacco country. Smoke never used to bother him. Hell, he wouldn’t
have noticed a bomb exploding when he had music pounding through
him. Like a narcotic, music had blinded him. Withdrawal hurt, but
he could see clearly now. Music was as addictive as cigarettes,
more lethal than narcotics.
He surreptitiously brushed
his hand over his hair to reassure himself that it hadn’t receded
further since the morning’s shock of noticing more brow than used to
be there. He even had friggin’ gray threading through the chocolate
brown the ladies once ran their hands through. Fitting for a man
turning his back on his carousing life and sailing toward
respectability.
At least months of working
out his frustration in a gym had kept him wiry, even if he hadn’t
been able to punch bags while wearing the cast. Maybe he’d grow a
paunch to prove he was a staid old man. Then his kids really would
laugh at him.
He winced, remembering the
painful scene at his parents’ house earlier today. He supposed he
deserved every bit of their castigation. His sons had totally
ignored him while his parents had laid out the ground rules for
getting them back in his life.
Basically, if he wanted
his sons to come home with him, he had to change his ways.
He definitely wanted his
sons back. He remembered each of their births with shocking
exactitude, the awe and responsibility and love that had welled up
in him the first time he’d held those tiny lives in his wicked
hands. He’d made promises then that he hadn’t kept too well.
Looked like Fate had
caught up with him, and he had no choice except to grow up and start
keeping those promises. Flint turned his back on the stage and the
bright lights and signaled the bartender.
Once upon a time he would
have been in the center of that crowd of hot bodies performing
mating rituals to the music of a rocking band. He would have had a
beer bottle in hand and been howling along with the songs as he
two-stepped with the best-looking lady in the bar.
He took a long pull on the
cold beer the bartender set in front of him. Dirk was an old friend
who’d known him when, but like any good friend, Dirk had the good
sense to keep his tongue in his head.
“How’s Betty Sue?” Flint
asked to open the conversation on a good note. It wasn’t as if he
was here to have fun. Dirk’s bar was a place to start searching for
answers to questions raised by the scrap of paper burning a hole in
his pocket. Flint fully expected the answers to be painful, but
shouldering responsibility was part of his new maturity.
He had a feeling he wasn’t
going to like adulthood.
“Betty went back to school
and sells real estate now. Hardly ever see her.” Dirk dried a wine
glass and set it on the rack. “What are you doing back in these
parts?”
Flint wasn’t much inclined
to share his troubles, so he shrugged and took another swig.
Tomorrow, he was moving to a dry town to become the staid owner of a
coffee shop, if he could just get the hooks of his old life out of
his hide. “Got tired of the city lights, I guess. I’ve got two
boys to raise, and I want them to grow up with a simpler life.”
Dirk snorted. “I think
they’re building snowmen in hell these days. Tell me another one.
Did the rebel finally find a cause?”
Flint contemplated the
possibility for all of a second before shaking his head. “It’s
complicated. Melinda checking out like that was hard on the kids.
Even at their age, they understand alcohol and driving don’t mix.”
Another reason why they thought he was a major asshole. He didn’t
blame them. He’d never had a problem with alcohol until the
divorce. According to his mother, his accident on top of Melinda’s
had robbed the boys of all security.
Currently, the kids liked
it right where they were—with their yuppie grandparents who provided
a fancy house with a big rec room, video games, and soccer. In
addition, his parents provided a stable home that didn’t include two
screaming semi-adults who used to spend most of their time anywhere
but with their offspring.
That was going to change.
He couldn’t bring back Melinda, may she rest in peace, if peace was
what she wanted. And he wasn’t about to bring back the open
lifestyle they’d shared. This time, he was taking a different
route. Somewhere in this wide world had to be the maternal sort of
woman who would provide the nurturing his kids needed. He’d woke up
and smelled the coffee, so to speak.
While Dirk made
sympathetic noises about Melinda’s death, Flint turned to gaze over
the tables of couples laughing and talking while he looked for a way
to broach the subject fretting at his mind. “You’ve got a good
crowd.”
It wasn’t the kind of
crowd that would include the kind of woman he was looking for as
wife, but it was just the kind of crowd that would attract RJ and
his friends. He had a bone to pick with his best old ex-friend, but
he had no desire to be sued again, so he was moving cautiously.
“Asheville is booming,”
Dirk agreed. “We do pretty well on weekends with the tourists.
It’s a little slower the rest of the week.”
Flint nodded as if he
understood. He’d learn soon enough. Even a bonehead like him could
figure out why business was better on weekends. Maybe he could
figure out how to do something about it. He’d need more cash than
weekends could bring in if he meant to give his kids the same
lifestyle that his parents provided.
“I remember playing here
way back. Betty Sue used to wait tables then, didn’t she?”
“Yup, but she had high-falutin’
ideas of how a bar should be run, and I wasn’t adding no ferns to
keep her happy. It’s been easier since she quit to have the kids.”
“Amen to that, brother.
Women don’t understand that a man needs a place where everything
stays the same so he feels comfortable. You can’t fill a bar with
frilly girl things.” Flint sure intended to keep his shop just the
way it was, a place a man could read a newspaper and drink his
coffee in peace. He had fond memories of his dad taking him and his
brothers there for fat muffins on Sunday mornings. That’s what he
wanted for his boys.
Flint stopped from
reaching for his beer as a frilly girl thing caught his eye.
“Although I sure don’t mind admiring the women ornamenting a place.”
Dirk chuckled. “You
haven’t changed all that much after all. I swear, I never saw a
woman in here besides Betty Sue until you started playing.”
“I was never much of a
player,” Flint protested, but he was talking guitar, and he knew
Dirk was talking women. He’d learned a lot since those days. Women
messed with his head. He didn’t particularly like them anymore
except in his bed, and it had been a scary long time since he’d seen
one there. But for his boys, he was willing to look around again
for someone a little more suitable than their mother, some quiet,
mousy woman who would love them and leave his head alone. Melinda
had taught him that wild women don’t make good parents.
That didn’t mean he
couldn’t howl a little tonight, especially if he could howl with
that blonde number flirting those long fake lashes at him. He
leaned his elbows back on the bar and enjoyed the view. “You got a
film crew in town that’s bringing in starlets?” he inquired, winking
at the blonde but not making his move yet.
“Not hardly. It’s the
usual lot out there far as I can see, mostly locals at this hour.
It’ll pick up later. Who you eyeballing?”
“The blond bronze
bombshell with the big gold earrings.”
“Ah, you’ve got good
taste,” Dirk responded with an inflection that passed right over
Flint’s head and out the door.
He was too busy studying
the scenery. His engines were revved and roaring as she leaned
forward to say something to one of her girlfriends—giving him a full
view of her most excellent cleavage. She wore a big gold heart that
dangled right between her breasts. Over this past grim year, he’d
forgotten how much he enjoyed this part of the game, the teasing and
being teased.
He ought to be too old for
this. With his hand aching like it was decrepit, he’d been feeling
too old for it just five minutes ago. Irritating how one
flirtatious look from a pretty young thing and an instant hard-on
could turn him into a randy chowder head.
He turned back to the
bar. “Bring me another, and hit me if I look again.”
***
“He’s hecking you out,
girl. Quit pretending you don’t notice.”
Joella Sanderson sipped
her daiquiri and pretended not to notice. “I’m not doing men
anymore, remember?”
“Even tall, dark, and
yummy? Give me a break. If you don’t want him, can I have him? I
swear, I need ice just looking at him. That man is hot.”
Dot fanned herself with her hand and continued to stare in the
direction of the bar.
“You can still do
men and not get involved,” Rita said seriously. “You can’t give up
sex entirely.”
Rita had a point there.
Joella stole a surreptitious glance at the bar. Tall, dark, and
dangerous had turned his back on her. That got under her skin a
little. He’d got her all hot and bothered for nothing? If he
thought she would come on to him, he needed to find another girl to
play games with.
“He’s not my kind,” she
said decisively. “I want an accountant this time around. A steady
man with a steady job.”
Both Dot and Rita laughed
until they nearly fell off their chairs. Jo figured it was high
time to cut off their alcohol intake if one lousy daiquiri had them
this giddy.
“Not her kind,” Dot
spluttered, drawing letters in the air. “He’s got Jo’s Kind
spelled out right across his forehead.”
“Arial, all caps, and
bold,” Rita agreed with secretarial humor. Rita had moved down the
mountain to find office work and wore her new-found sophistication
in blond highlights and bright blue contacts.
Jo kind of liked the image
of branding the cowboy, but she bit back a grin rather than let her
friends know it. “I mean it,” she asserted. “He’s too good looking
to be anything but married.” That was as good an excuse as any for
his turning his back on her. “I’m not messing with any more lying
cheating lowlifes. I’m buying my own ticket out of town this time
around. Men are off my radar.”
“They’re not all Randy,”
Dot objected. “You’ve had a long dry spell since he left. It’s
time to jump back in the ring.”
“Jump back in bed, you
mean,” Joella corrected. “Didn’t your mama warn you about sex with
men you don’t know?”
But warnings and common
sense didn’t apply when her hormones were humming, and just looking
at broad shoulders in a sexy cowboy shirt and a tight ass in
designer jeans had her squirming in her seat. Her friends were
right. Upright businessmen were not her style.
But she’d sworn off lying,
cheating men who promised fame and fortune. As her mama always said,
she had ambition far beyond her means. That didn’t mean she was
giving up making something of herself. She was just wise enough not
to expect a man to get her where she wanted to go. That didn’t mean
she had to swear off men entirely.
Still, she hesitated.
“Besides, I have to get up early tomorrow. The Stardust’s new owner
is coming, and I want to impress him with my promptness.”
“He’ll probably have a
family to run the place, and you’ll be out on your rear,” Rita said
with a pessimistic wave of her hand. “Go for the joy now.”
Joella set her mouth in a
firm line. “I can’t get fired. Mama’s unemployment runs out next
month. I want to try that singing server idea out on him.” Her
gnawing ambition again, but she had so many ideas. “Charlie
wouldn’t let me change anything, but a new owner might listen. The
place is a dump. A few ferns, some pretty paint, and an espresso
machine could turn the café right around.”
“We live in Hicksville,
Joella,” Dot reminded her. The purple stripe in her long black braid
showed her opinion of their rural home’s values. “No one drinks
espresso, and they’ve all heard you sing at church. Forget it. Go
after the gold.” She sighed and admired the same sight Jo had been
studying.
“I’m not doing sex without
commitment these days,” Jo said airily.
Rita hooted. “You’re
scared, admit it. He’s out of your league.”
“Is not. I may not have
your brains or Dot’s artistic talent, but I know men. I just don’t
want one,” she added hastily when Rita opened her mouth to argue.
Dot gave a disparaging pffttt.
“Chicken, squawk, squawk. You gonna let wimpy Randy burn you?”
“Hell, no. In the
immortal expression of Granny Clampett: Thems was fighting words.
With a glare, Jo scraped her chair back and stood up.
Rita and Dot cheered.
“You go, girl! Strike a blow for jilted women everywhere.”
Jo tugged her spandex
shirt into place and plastered on her whitened-teeth smile. So,
maybe she needed to test her skills again. One itty bitty dance
couldn’t hurt.
© Excerpt of
Small Town Girl copyright 2006 by Patricia Rice
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