he?” Elle asked, her eyes twinkling.
Vanessa sighed. “You’re not going to let this go are you?”
Julie grinned. “Nope.”
“We met, we danced, we had dinner, we got a hotel room. End of story,” Vanessa said in a rush. She shifted in her seat, looked out past the restaurant to the antique section of the store. “Is that armoire new? I don’t remember seeing it the last time we were here.”
But Julie wasn’t having any of it. “You had a one-night stand?” Her voice was filled with a mixture of shock and admiration. “I’d never have the courage for something like that. Weren’t you scared?”
“Actually,” said Elle who’d broken a few rules in her affair with Dante. “That was probably part of the charm. Right, Vanessa?”
Julie sighed. “Not to me. I love being romanced too much for a one-night fling. With those you don’t get any flowers or chocolates or tickets to a Longhorns game.”
“Sometimes,” Vanessa said, “all you want is someone to help you wash away your troubles.”
Elle sat up straighter and narrowed her eyes. “Is there something you’re not telling us, Vanessa?”
She met her friends’ interested gazes. How could she tell these two women about her secret past? A past she was so ashamed of that even fourteen years later she couldn’t bring herself to talk about it to the two people who meant the most to her in the entire world.
Knowing it was the only way she was going to get out of this conversation, Vanessa forced a grin. “You guys, please don’t read anything into this. It’s cut-and-dried. I just needed to get laid.”
“AMANDA BET ME that you would come,” Texas State Senator Robert Garcia said as he turned the steaks on his backyard grill. He was a little over six feet and narrow of face. His thick salt-and-pepper hair was combed back off his forehead. He flashed the megawatt smile that had helped him get elected.
“Now I’m going to have to let her buy new draperies for the living room.”
“That’s what you get for gambling,” Tanner said to his uncle-in-law and took a sip from the beer bottle the senator had pressed into his hand. Was Robert still his uncle-in-law, now that Maria was gone? he wondered.
“Seriously, this is the first time you’ve been to our house since—” Robert snapped off his sentence.
Since Maria died.
The words hung unuttered in the air.
“I had a reason for coming,” Tanner said. “Besides the barbecue.”
Robert closed the grill, hung the tongs from a hook and turned to look at him. “Oh?”
“This job you asked me to do for you.” Tanner put his palms to the back of his head. “I can’t do it.”
“Of course you can. It’s all set. Everything’s been arranged.”
“I’m not talking about the head of security position at Confidential Rejuvenations. I’m talking about being Vanessa Rodriquez’s bodyguard,” he said.
Robert cast a surreptitious look over Tanner’s shoulder. His wife and some of their guests were standing on the other side of the patio admiring the new garden landscaping. Robert leaned in closer and lowered his voice. “What do you mean you can’t do it?”
Tanner drew in a deep breath. How did you tell your late wife’s uncle that you’d slept with the woman he’d hired you to watch? “I just don’t think I’m the best man for the job. I can recommend someone else.”
“Are you kidding? You’re the best bodyguard in the business. You were guarding the governor until—” Robert stopped again.
Until Maria had been killed in a convenience store robbery while Tanner had been out of town on a security detail.
He still hadn’t forgiven himself for not being there when she’d needed him. “This just doesn’t feel right.”
“What do you mean?” Robert kept looking over Tanner’s shoulder, keeping an eye out for his wife. He was definitely keeping something from her.
“Level with me,” Tanner said. “Why are you putting a bodyguard on Dr.