He lifted up the wooden barrier that blocked off the bar area, opening his mouth to address her just as a tall, bulky man with a shaved head stalked up to them. Darcy recognized him as one of the bouncers, but she couldn’t remember his name.
“What’s up, boss?” the behemoth said brusquely.
“Jeff. Hey. You tended bar back in the day, right?”
The bouncer nodded. “Yeah…”
“Good. I need you to man the fort until Henry or Sue get here,” Reed replied. “I’ve got something I need to take care of.”
The bouncer’s dark eyes shifted from Reed to Darcy, then back to Reed. “Everything okay?”
Reed leaned in and murmured something in the other man’s ear. Darcy wasn’t certain, but she thought she heard the words “our little problem” and “keep an eye out, seven o’clock” but Reed ushered her away before she could ask him what he’d said.
“So how are we doing this?” She had to bring her lips close to his ear, and his intoxicating scent immediately grabbed hold of her senses and stole her ability to think properly. She held her breath so she wouldn’t have to breathe him in, once again reminding herself that she had no business thinking about how good he smelled. Or how yummy his ass looked in his black trousers.
“Not sure yet. We’ll just wing it.”
His cavalier response didn’t surprise her. Reed had always come off as the kind of man who didn’t put much thought behind his actions.
They traveled along the edge of the dance floor toward the other side of the cavernous room. Sin had an open-concept design—exposed beams all around the main floor, a bar spanning one side and tables lining the other walls, and a spiral staircase leading to the second-floor VIP lounge that overlooked the club. Tucked in various points of the club were little alcoves sectioned off with blood-red velvet curtains. Some of them contained plush loveseats for customers who wanted to take a breather in privacy, but according to AJ, most people ducked into those hidden nooks to fool around.
The alcove where the dealer had directed her didn’t have any furniture. It was nothing but a dark, cramped space. Standing room only, which placed her in perilously close proximity to Reed.
There were ten minutes left in their allotted thirty, but Darcy wasn’t ready to raise the subject she’d come here to discuss. Her hands had gone clammy, her pulse racing as she and Reed squeezed into the tight space. She wondered if a few of the walls in there were sound-proofed, because the music from the club sounded muffled in the alcove, making it much easier to hear each other.
“What are you going to do when he shows up?” she asked.
The flashes of light streaming in from the slight gap in the curtain highlighted the deadly expression on Reed’s face. “I don’t know yet.”
“Bullshit. You’re totally planning on roughing him up, aren’t you?”
When he shrugged, his shoulder jostled hers, and the heat of his body seared her bare skin. Her heart beat even faster.
“Maybe,” Reed said in a vague tone. “Depends on how agreeable he is.” He paused. “But if I ask you to leave, please don’t argue with me, okay?”
She wasn’t sure she liked the idea of Reed getting violent with anyone, even a lowly drug dealer, but she was discovering that arguing with Reed was about as effective as trying to teach a dog to speak French. Total waste of time.
“So…school starts soon, huh?” His expression was tinged with awkwardness, as if making small talk wasn’t his forte.
Darcy nodded. “Next week.”
“Are you looking forward to it?”
“Definitely. I already started all my prep work last week. Setting up my classroom, going over the curriculum. Plus a lot of boring meetings, but I’ve gotten pretty good at secretly playing Candy Crush while Principal Donnelly babbles on about budgets and rules of conduct.”
Reed chuckled.
“I’m dying to see my students again.” She glanced over with a smile. “I teach eighth-grade homeroom and English for grades six to eight, so a lot of my seventh graders from history last year will be in my homeroom this year. I’m excited.”
“AJ said you’re really good with kids.” His voice turned gruff. “That’s a damn good skill to have. A lot of folks don’t know how to relate to kids.”
“Oh, I love them.” She grinned. “It helps that most of the girls watch all the same shows I do. Last year we held a weekly American Idol discussion group after school.”
He cringed. “You’re into all that reality show crap? I’m disappointed in you, Darce.”
She was quick to voice a defensive protest. “I have a thing for Keith Urban, okay? So sue me.”
Reed’s head tipped to the side. “Keith Urban, huh? Is that your type then, Australian cowboys?”
“Naah, he’s just pretty to look at.”
He made a disapproving noise with his tongue. “Ha, and people accuse men of objectifying women. But you ladies are way worse, and you know it.”
“Yeah, we’re pretty terrible,” she confessed. “I can’t deny that.”