Bounty (Colorado Mountain #7)

“I see your point, Deke, but the woman’s bringing you sandwiches,” Wood said. “She might not be what those bitches treated you to. And if she’s into you, be cool.”


“Not bein’ a dick,” Deke told the lake, though he was, just enough of one to put her off.

He could be a bigger dick but she didn’t deserve it. He knew that even if he had no idea about her and the little he knew he wished he didn’t.

He also wasn’t being a bigger dick because when she was being cute, he didn’t have it in him. No one could be a dick to Jus when she was being cute, and if you didn’t wake her up, she was cute all the fucking time.

He didn’t share this with Wood. He also didn’t share that he still could not shake the fact that there was something familiar about her.

But Deke knew he couldn’t have met Jus before, and not just because she was so damned friendly, if he had, she’d be all over that.

Because he’d remember her, no way he’d forget meeting a woman like Jus, those eyes, that hair, those legs, that ass, all that fucking cute. No way in hell.

Even knowing that, something in his gut told him he’d seen those eyes, that ass, those legs and definitely that fucking amazing hair.

He had to get through this job and get paid.

That was it.

“More to all this too, I reckon,” Wood noted. “Seein’ as she’s settlin’ in up there and not a lotta women are good to leave it all behind, jump on the back of their man’s bike and take off to nowhere whenever the winds change.”

“There’s that too,” Deke agreed.

He agreed but he hadn’t thought of that.

It was good Wood threw that out there. As gypsy princess as her clothes and truck were, no way a woman like Jus would close down a house like she was going to have and take to the open road with no destination, no purpose, just riding until the breath you were breathing felt right again.

“Have you noticed nothing’s biting?” Wood asked, ending the conversation because there was nothing left to say, he knew it and he knew not to push Deke if he didn’t agree there wasn’t.

Yeah, Wood was a good friend.

“Have you noticed we’re sittin’ on our asses on the shore, not in a boat, so odds are, anything bites, it’ll be an inch long?”

“Not feelin’ rowing out to the middle of that fucker,” Wood remarked, leaning to his left and pulling out a cold one.

“That’s good ’cause I got no boat.”

Wood burst out laughing again.

This time, Deke joined him.



*

Justice



Sunday afternoon, I swung up on the barstool next to Jim-Billy.

He turned his baseball-capped head my way as I did and grinned his broken grin, one tooth missing.

I didn’t figure he was going to get it fixed but I hoped he didn’t. As I’d noted thus far in my journey through life, there were some imperfections that were perfect. Jim-Billy’s missing tooth was one of them.

“What’s shakin’?” I asked.

“Nothin’,” he answered.

“I don’t know whether to be happy or sad about that,” I remarked.

“I do. Simple life, simple pleasures.” Jim-Billy lifted up his draft. “Means you always avoid disappointment.”

I stared at him a beat, rocked by this wisdom, before I asked, “What are you, a mountain man maharishi?”

“Yup,” he muttered and looked away, chugging back a big gulp of his beer.

I burst out laughing.

I finished laughing with Jim-Billy again looking my way and grinning.

Krystal appeared, throwing a beer mat on the bar in front of me.

“What you drinkin’?” she asked.

“Beer. Cold. I don’t care what kind but none of that fancy shit or you’ll make me testy,” I answered.

She looked from me to Jim-Billy. “I know this is goin’ against all I am, but I already like her,” she declared, jerking her head my way.

That felt great.

“Pregnancy is softening you up,” Jim-Billy commented.

Uh-oh.

Wrong thing to say.

“Take that back,” she snapped, proving my assessment right.

“Not a bad thing, darlin’,” Jim-Billy pointed out.

She leaned in to him. “Take that back.”

“Krys—”

“My name is Justice Lonesome,” I blurted the reason I was there (outside to hang, have a beer and get to know my Carnal neighbors some more).

Both Krystal and Jim-Billy looked to me.

I’d started it, it was time. Shambles and Sunny knew. Although I’d asked them to keep it quiet until I was ready to let it loose, and they’d promised to do that, the more I got to know these folks, the longer I left it unsaid, the bigger the chance of me courting the possibility of hurting people’s feelings. Because anything important left unsaid eventually became a lie if you let it get to that.

“My father is Johnny Lonesome. Aunt and uncle Tammy and Jimmy. Granddad was Jerry.”