said, going from put-upon to downright wounded.
“Talk is cheap,” Briana said.
“Do you want me to come or not? I can be there Saturday.”
“I work on Saturday.”
“That’s okay,” Vance responded, magnanimous now. “I can hang out with the boys until you get home.”
Briana thought of Alec, his face so full of hope, and then of Josh, who’d threatened to run away if Vance made good on the visit. “Alec will be thrilled,” she said, in all truth. “Good luck with Josh, though.”
“What’s up with my buddy Josh?”
“I’d say he sees right through you, Vance,” Briana said. Josh didn’t need a buddy, he needed a dad—a concept well beyond Vance’s capacity to grasp.
“And that’s supposed to mean
what?”
Vance asked furiously.
True colors, Briana thought. No more Mr. Nice Guy.
Stop baiting him,
said the better angel.
Sometimes she’d like to throttle that better angel.
“You figure it out,” she said.
“Look, I don’t need this. Maybe it would be better if I just stayed clear.”
Briana closed her eyes, but Alec’s image was still there, yearning for a visit from the father he adored. She had to stop thinking about what she wanted—never to lay eyes on Vance Grant again—and consider her children’s needs. Right or wrong, Vance was their dad, and as much as Josh protested, he wanted a relationship with him as badly as Alec did.
“I’m sorry,” she said, nearly choking on the words.
“You know what’s wrong with you?” Vance countered. He’d changed tactics again, turned the dial to “charm.” “You need sex.”
Instantly, Logan Creed came to mind. Would his chest be hairy or smooth, when he took off his shirt?
Briana gave herself an inward shake. “Maybe I do,” she admitted. “But not with you, so don’t get any ideas. You
are
sleeping on the couch.”
“I’d planned on that anyhow,” Vance said. “Which reminds me—does it fold out?”
He’d asked that same question in the message he’d left on the answering machine. Briana was puzzled, and a little alarmed.
“Yes,” she said slowly. “Why do you ask?”
Vance’s chuckle sounded false. “I’ve been thrown from a lot of broncs in my time,” he replied. “Have to think about my back, now that I’m getting older.”
“Right,” Briana said, still curious, but unwilling to pursue the subject any further. She’d been talking to Vance too long as it was. Twenty minutes out of her life, and she’d never get them back.
“See you Saturday,” Vance said cheerfully, like shewas looking forward to his arrival instead of dreading it with every fiber of her being.
“See you Saturday,” she confirmed glumly.
And then she hung up.
“I OUGHT TO PUNCH you in the mouth,” Jim Huntinghorse said, the next morning, when Logan tracked him down at the Council Fire Casino.
Logan grinned. “I’m real glad to see you again, too, old buddy,” he said, drawing back a chair at one of the tables in the coffee shop and signaling the waitress for a cup of coffee. Since Sidekick was out in the truck, he didn’t plan to stay long. He’d get the java to go. He ran his gaze over Jim’s fine black suit. “You’ve come up in the world,” he said. “General manager. Who would have thought?”
“Who would have thought,” Jim retorted, softening a little, but not much, “that you’d leave town without saying goodbye to your best friend? No calls. No e-mails. No nothing.”
“When the judge let me out of jail after that brawl with Tyler and Dylan, he told me not to show my face in Stillwater Springs until I’d cooled down.”
“It took you
twelve years
to cool down?”
“Chip off the old block,” Logan said as he nodded his approval when the coffee arrived in a take-out cup and reached for his wallet.
Jim waved both the waitress and the money away.
“You can say that again.” Jim scowled, still glowering. He stood beside the table, showing no signs of sitting down, his big fists bunched at