younger than her voluptuous body, while he was far older than his years.
“Do you hold yourself as cheap underneath as all the others, baby?” he growled.
The minx flirtily tooted her horn and sped up. As if she wasn’t already driving fast, way too fast.
Her little car careened onto the shoulder, pinging his bike and long, denim-clad legs with gravel, but she regained control. The beat-up sedan behind her raced past Tag in hot pursuit. Gravel sprayed his boots and his bike like bullets. Only he didn’t get any hormonal bang from these punks.
Damn. He knew that junk heap. Rusty and Hank. Not kids. Two mean guys who were mad at the world in general and out for vengeance against him tonight. What if they took it out on her?
He’d lied to Jeffries. Those guys were bad news. As bad as the thugs who’d almost killed him in the swamp. After he’d fired them, they’d sprayed paint all over the cars in the parking lot out back of Frenchy’s restaurant. Painted the outer walls of the kitchen in purple graffiti.
Correction. His restaurant now.
He had a score to settle. A damsel as a trophy only upped the stakes.
Tag whipped his big bike onto the asphalt road, gunned it.
The cars raced north at double the speed limit, flying over the lighted bridge, veering left on screaming tires, onto Fulton Beach Road. The moonlit bay glittered to the east of them. The mansions on pilings that lined the canals loomed tall and dark to the west.
The quaint road along the beach, with its cottages, historic Fulton Mansion and motels, narrowed, roughened, but the girl and her pursuers kept driving like maniacs. Just as she got to the wharves and warehouses that lined the waterfront near his own restaurant, a black shadow raced from the water side into the road.
Her brake lights flashed.
Adrenaline pumped through Tag’s veins.
Had she hit whatever it was…killed it—
Animals touched a soft spot, especially strays. He had a collection of mongrel dogs and cats that lived out back in the woods behind his house.
Her car spun off to the right, bounced over something on the shoulder, and rolled to a crooked stop in front of the alley that ran between two abandoned fish houses. A long shadowy tail disappeared into the tall reedy grasses of the marshy wetlands on the other side of the road.
The junk heap came to a stop right behind her car, ramming her.
The woman in skintight white stumbled out of her sports car.
Rusty and Hank fell on top of her.
Party time.
Tag ripped his bike off road, stopping so fast, he nearly rolled. His right boot hit white shell, and he skidded in a geyser of white dust.
Party time.
Not their party.
His.
He’d been spoiling for a fight…and a woman.
Looks like he had his own personal wish fairy looking out for him up there in heaven.
Frenchy?
Stay with me, Frenchy.
A girl’s terrified scream went through Tag like a knife. He was off his bike—running.
Two
Tonight should have been the happiest night of Claire Woods’s life. Instead, tears of disillusionment stung her eyes. North had let her drive off. So, now here she was, forty miles from home, her blond hair whipping her face like a mop, and two unsavory goons honking on her tail.
She hit the accelerator. Nothing was turning out the way she’d planned. She had so wanted her wedding to be a fairy tale, but as the big day approached Claire Woods, who everybody thought spoiled and pampered, was feeling bereft and hollow.
If only Melody, her quirky, irrepressible, unpredictable sister, hadn’t come home to spoil everything!
It was just like Melody to helicopter off that freighter bound for China and fly home—tonight! Just like her to stage that provocative dance for North’s benefit and steal Claire’s show and maybe her man.
Claire had wanted to shout, “I’m the bride! North loves me now! Not you!” But, of course, she’d only stood there with a frozen smile while Melody hummed and did her cute routine.
And North…
“It’s not North’s fault!”
He hadn’t known Melody would pull one of her stunts. Who but Melody would fly in from China just to crash their party? From the second Melody had waltzed into the yacht club ballroom in those tight pants and shimmery blouse, looking like she owned the place, everybody had been electrified. Nobody could stop talking about that buffoon, Merle somebody, a fly-by-night P.I. their daddy had sent to find her six months ago. Melody had laughingly explained how she’d lured Merle on board her China-bound freighter and then tricked him into walking the plank, so to speak.
“Why did you come home?” North had demanded of Melody. “Why now?”
“I…I couldn’t miss your wedding.”
“You sure missed the last one.” North’s low voice was rapier-sharp.
If North truly loved Claire, he would be chasing Claire right now instead of the two hoods flashing their highbeams and honking behind her.
Instead, her fiancé and her sister were still at the party, probably making eyes at each other this very minute, while she was driving around alone.
No…. No….
A vision of Melody humming softly, Melody, in those skintight black jeans and a white silk shirt, eyes aglow, her honey-gold hair streaming down her slim back took shape in Claire’s too-vivid imagination. Her sister’s dance had been so enthusiastic, so spontaneous, and so original that everybody had stopped dancing and started clapping the moment she kicked off her shoes and threw them to North. Everyone except North who’d gripped those sparkly high heels in a strangle-hold. Not that he hadn’t watched her dance, his expression darkening when the other men had started clapping.
How much of her childhood had Claire spent curled up with a book or in her room alone with her dreams while bubbly Melody was out in the yard putting on a show that had all the neighborhood children, especially the boys, spellbound?
Applause and love and sheer sexiness came so easily to the uninhibited Melody.
All her life Claire had wanted to be first with somebody.
“Don’t think about Melody,” Claire whispered to herself. “Don’t think about the pain in North’s eyes when he’d watched her dance.”
“But I can’t stop.”
Claire had never outgrown the childish habit of talking to herself, especially when she was in her car alone or primping in front of her mirror.
“Chase me then!” she’d laughingly challenged North a little while after Melody’s dance.
The memory made her blush, made her eyes burn. What a brazen fool she was. When would she ever learn North was too cool and mature to play what he called her childish games?
Or was that really it? Did he love her, really love her as once he had loved…
He had told her once, “I can never love you as I loved Melody. But I believe what we’ll have will be better and stronger than what I felt for her.”
Claire was sick of driving around. More than a little scared, too, and not just of losing North. The jerks behind her were persistent. Her parents’ warnings played like tapes in the back of her mind.
A woman alone on the road is prey, Claire. This in a shrill tone from her bossy mother, Dee Dee.
When