Knox
My problemโbesides the length of Naomiโs skirtโwas leaning against the bar in full uniform, making small talk with a handful of regulars.
I dragged Naomi with me into the alcove of the kitchen doors. โMy brother doesnโt get near that room. Got it?โ
Her eyes widened. โWhy are you telling me?โ
โBecause youโre going to distract him and get him the hell out of here.โ
She dug in her heels and crossed her arms. โI donโt recall the section on my job application that required me to lie to law enforcement.โ
โIโm not telling you to lie. Iโm telling you to get those good girl eyes and that cleavage over there and flirt with him until he forgets all about busting that game.โ
โThat doesnโt sound any better than lying. It sounds like prostitution, and Iโm pretty sure any family court judge would frown upon that during a custody hearing!โ
I blew out a breath through my nostrils, then dug out my wallet. โFine.
Iโll give you a hundred bucks.โ โDeal.โ
I was still blinking when she snapped the bill out of my hand and headed in my brotherโs direction. It was an asshole move on my part, using her need for cash and putting her in a sketchy position. But I knew my brother, and Nash wouldnโt do anything to hurt Naomiโs chances at
becoming Waylayโs guardian. Hell, any idiot with one good eye could tell the woman was several classes above her sister.
โFuck,โ I muttered to no one. โInteresting.โ
I found Fi leaning against the wall, smugly enjoying one of the lollipops that served as a cigarette surrogate.
โWhat?โ
Her eyebrows wiggled. โYou never freaked when Max or me served that party.โ
โYou and Max know how to handle yourselves,โ I argued.
โLooks like Naomi was handling herself just fine in there. Maybe the problem isnโt her?โ
โYou wanna be my new problem, Fiasco?โ I snarled.
She was not remotely intimidated. Which was exactly why a boss shouldnโt be friends with their employees.
โI think Knox Morgan is Knox Morganโs biggest problem. But, hey, what do I know?โ she said with an annoying little shrug.
โDonโt you have work to do?โ
โAnd miss the show?โ Fi nodded over my shoulder.
I turned and spied Naomi putting a flirtatious hand on my brotherโs arm.
When she laughed and tossed her hair, my brilliant plan didnโt seem so brilliant.
โGoddammit.โ
I left Fi and maneuvered my way through the crowd, getting close enough to hear Nash say, โLet me guess. Illegal poker game in the back room, and you were sent to distract me.โ
Fuck me.
Naomiโs eyes went wide, and I realized the woman had no poker face whatsoever.
โUhhhโฆ Are you always this handsome and intelligent?โ she asked.
โI am,โ Nash said with a stupid wink that made me want to punch him in his stupid face. โBut it also helps that this town doesnโt know how to keep its mouth shut. Iโm not here for the game.โ
โWell, youโre not here for my waitstaff. So what the hell are you doing here?โ I said, interjecting myself into their cozy little conversation like a jealous idiot.
Nash shot me a smug look as if he knew exactly how annoying I found him. โHeard an old friend was in town.โ
โThe rumors are true.โ
We all turned and found Lucian standing just outside our circle.
My brother grinned and shoved me out of the way. He welcomed Lucian with a hard hug and a slap on the back. โGood to have you back, brother.โ
โItโs good to be back,โ Lucian agreed, returning the hug. โEspecially since the waitstaff got even more interesting.โ He gave Naomi a wink.
Why the fuck the entire town suddenly decided winking at Naomi was a good idea was beyond me, and I was going to put a stop to it as soon as possible.
โYeah, yeah. Everythingโs great,โ I said. โDonโt you have drinks to serve?โ
Naomi rolled her eyes. โI didnโt get rid of your brother yet.โ
โYou can keep the hundred if you go away,โ I said, needing to get her out from between my brother and my best friend.
โDeal. Lucian, Iโll see you back in there with a fresh drink,โ she promised. โNash, it was fun flirting with you.โ
โThe pleasure was all mine, darlinโ,โ my brother drawled, tossing her a little salute.
We all watched her sashay to the bar.
My head hurt from not yelling. My jaw was so tight I worried Iโd crack a tooth. I didnโt know what it was about that woman, but Naomi Witt had me tied up in fucking knots. I didnโt like it one bit.
โWhat are you doing back in town?โ Nash asked Lucian. โYou sound like a cop,โ Lucian complained.
โIย amย a cop.โ
Chief Nash rankled me.
The three of us had grown up raising hell and bending laws until they broke. Nash growing up to be a cop felt like some kind of betrayal. The straight and narrow was too confining for me. I didnโt stray too far from the line these days, but I made sure to step into the gray every now and again for old timeโs sake.
Lucian was another story. Trouble didnโt follow him. He had a tendency to make it wherever he went. If he was back in Knockemout, it sure as hell wasnโt for a stroll down memory lane.
โA man canโt feel nostalgic for his childhood?โ Lucian mused, expertly avoiding the question.
โYour childhood sucked,โ Nash pointed out. โYou havenโt been back in years. Something brought you back, and it better not be trouble.โ
โMaybe I got tired of hearing how the Morgan brothers are too stubborn to remove their heads from their asses. Maybe I came back to help you bury the hatchet.โ
Naomi breezed by with a tray full of drinks and an easy smile for Lucian and Nash. The smile changed to a scowl when she looked at me.
โNo one needs any help with any hatchet,โ I insisted, stepping in front of him to cut off his view of Naomiโs curvy, retreating ass.
โThat hatchet that you two have been wrestling over for two years is stupid. Get over it and move the fuck on,โ Lucian said.
โDonโt use that Beltway Bullshit tone with us,โ Nash said.
Lucian had built a political consulting firm that involved far too many shadows for Nashโs liking. Our friend had a gift for putting the fear of God into his clients or the people who stood between his clients and what they wanted.
โThat shit donโt fly in Knockemout,โ I reminded him.
โYou two have nothing to worry about. Letโs have a drink for old timeโs sake,โ he suggested.
โCanโt tonight,โ Nash said. โOn duty.โ
โThen I guess youโd better get back to work,โ I told my brother.
โGuess I better. Try not to let any pissed-off poker players bust up the place tonight. I donโt feel like handling the paperwork.โ
โDinner. Tomorrow night. Your place,โ Lucian said, pointing upstairs. โWorks for me,โ I said.
โFine,โ Nash agreed. โIt is good to see you, Lucy.โ
Lucian gave him a half smile. โItโs good to be seen.โ He turned to me. โIโll catch up with you when youโre hovering over Naomi.โ
I flipped him off.
When he left, Nash turned to me. โYou got a second?โ โDepends.โ
โItโs about Tina.โ
Fuck.
โIโll walk you out.โ
The August night was still smotheringly humid when we went through the kitchen and walked out into the parking lot.
โWhatโs the problem?โ I asked when we got to Nashโs SUV.
โGot a few more details on Tina. She and her new man were moving stolen goods. Nothing major. TVs and phones. Tablets. But rumor has it the boyfriend is connected to some bigger criminal enterprise.โ
โWhoโs the boyfriend?โ
He shook his head. โEither no one knows his name or theyโre not sayinโ it to me.โ
โDonโt got much of anything, do you?โ
โJust a gut feeling Tina didnโt just decide to abandon her kid for fun. I think sheโs in deep with some shit.โ He looked up at the inky night sky. โHeard a couple of people saying they think they saw her over in Lawlerville.โ
Lawlerville was less than a half hourโs drive. Which meant Tina probably wasnโt planning on staying gone.
โFuck,โ I muttered. โYeah.โ
I knew what Nash wanted from me. Any other circumstance, I would have made him ask. But since this involved Naomi and Waylay, I wasnโt in the mood to fuck around.
โIโll ask around. See if any sources who avoid cops will feel chatty with me,โ I told him.
โAppreciate it.โ
INSTEAD OF GOING HOMEย like Iโd planned, I pretended to check a few things off my list. I played bar back for Silver while Max took her dinner break. Then I answered the two dozen or so emails Iโd been avoiding. I even ducked into the shopโs supply room and cut down cardboard boxes for the recycler.
The fourth time I caught myself heading in the direction of the poker game, I decided to remove myself from temptation and headed for the keg room. I hoped the chill and the physical labor of moving full kegs around would take the edge off my annoyance.
I had a whole list of reasons to be pissed off at the world. And most of them revolved around Naomi Witt. Every conversation with her ended in me having a headache and a hard-on.
Watching other men trip over their tongues when she was around only made it all worse. I didnโt want her. But I wanted to claim her as mine just to keep every other asshole away from her.
I needed to get drunk and laid. I needed to forget she existed.
My hands were fucking frozen and my temper had cooled by the time I finished re-stacking the kegs. It was almost eleven. I figured Iโd check in at the bar, then go the hell home.
When I hit the bar, Silver glanced up from the moonshine she was pouring.
โMind checking in on the private party?โ she asked. โWhy?โ
She shrugged. โBeen a while since Iโve seen Naomi.โ
My temper reignited like someone had thrown a gas can and a lighter on
it.
I didnโt exactly kick the door open, but it was a more dramatic entrance
than I usually made. Tanner, the skinny idiot who partied too hard to hold on to his money, fell out of his chair.
Naomi, however, didnโt bother looking up. She was squeezed in between Winona and Grim, tongue poking out between her lips as she studied the cards in her hand. โOkay. Tell me again what beats a pair,โ she said.
Ian launched into a Texas Hold โEm 101 lecture while Grim leaned over to look at her hand. โRaise โem,โ he advised.
Tentatively, she picked up a blue chip and looked at him. He shook his head. She added two more chips and, on his nod, tossed them into the pile at the center of the table. โRaise,โ she announced, wiggling her ass in her seat.
I rounded the table and leaned in. โWhat the fuck are you doing, Naomi?โ
She finally looked up at me, bemused. โLearning to play poker.โ โFold,โ Winona sighed. โNever trust a rookieโs luck.โ
โIโll see you and raise you,โ Lucian decided, dropping a fistful of chips onto the table.
โLeave her alone, Morgan,โ Ian told me. โOur drinks are full, and sheโs never played.โ
I bared my teeth.
โRelax, Morgan,โ Winona said. โWe all staked her some chips. Itโs just a friendly hand.โ
Lucian and Naomi were engaged in a stare down.
I leaned in again and whispered in her ear, โDo you know what those chips are worth?โ
She shook her head, watching as the action returned to Ian, who folded. โThey told me not to worry about it.โ
โThatโs twenty grand in the pot, Naomi.โ
Iโd pushed the right button. She stopped staring at Lucian and looked at me as she started to come out of her chair.
Grim put a hand on her shoulder to hold her in place, and I fixed him with a cold glare.
โFucking relax, Knox,โ he said. โWinonaโs right. Itโs a friendly hand.
No loans. No interest. Sheโs a quick learner.โ โTwenty-thousandย dollars?โ Naomi squeaked. โIโll call,โ Tanner decided, throwing in his chips.
โShow โem,โ Grim growled, shoving a matching stack of chips into the center of the table.
Tanner lay down a shitty two pair. Lucian took his time arranging his cards before revealing a nice little straight.
โUh-oh,โ Winona hummed under her breath.
โYour turn, sweetheart,โ Grim said, his face unreadable. Naomi dropped her cards face-up on the table.
โI believe this is a bigger straight than yours, Lucian,โ she said.
The table erupted in cheers. โYou just won $22,000,โ Winona told her. โHoly shit! Holy shit!โ Naomi looked up at me, and the joy on her face
was a sucker punch to my windpipe.
โCongratulations. Now get your ass up,โ I said, still capable of being an
ass.
Lucian groaned. โSuckered in by those innocent eyes. Every damn
time.โ
I didnโt want him looking at her eyes or any other part of her. I pulled Naomiโs chair out for her.
โWait! Do I get a victory dance? How do I pay everyone back?โ
โYou definitely get a victory dance,โ Tanner said, lecherously patting his lap. Ian saved me the trouble and slapped him in the back of the head.
โNaomi. Now,โ I said, hooking my thumb toward the door.
โHold your horses, Viking.โ She carefully counted out equal shares of the chips and started returning them to their original owners.
Grim shook his head and covered her hand with his tattooed one. โYou won fair and square. Youโre keeping the winnings and you can have my stake.โ
โOh, but I couldnโt,โ she began.
โI insist. And when I insist, people do what I tell them.โ
Naomi didnโt see a scary biker sort-of-criminal making that proclamation. She saw a cuddly, tattooed fairy godfather. When she tossed her arms around his neck and gave him a noisy kiss on the cheek, I saw the man actually smile. A feat previously thought to be impossible.
โFor that reaction, youโll keep mine as well,โ Lucian said. Naomi whooped and rounded the table and kissed him loudly on the cheek.
Ian and Winona did the same and laughed through Naomiโs stranglehold hugs.
โGet that niece of yours something pretty,โ Winona told her.
Christ on a cracker, exactly how much of her autobiography had she shared with them?
โIโm, uh, just gonna hang on to mine,โ Tanner said, pulling back the chips heโd loaned her.
The rest of the table glared at him. โCheap-ass,โ Winona said.
โCome on. Itโs been a rough week,โ he whined.
โIn that case, hereโs a tip from me,โ Naomi said, handing over a $100 chip.
The woman was a sucker. And it looked like Tanner was officially in love.
โLadies, gentlemen, what do you say we call it a night? I hear thereโs a band out front tonight. We could steal one or two of Knoxโs private bottles and reminisce about the good old days,โ Ian suggested.
โOnly if Lucy promises me a dance,โ Winona said.
I waited until theyโd cashed out and exited the room, leaving Naomi and me alone.
She looked up from the pile of cash theyโd left in front of her. It was one hell of a tip. โCan we leave the lecture for tomorrow so I can just enjoy?โ
โFine,โ I said through gritted teeth. โBut Iโm driving you home tonight.โ โFine. But youโre not allowed to yell at me on the drive.โ
โI canโt make any promises.โ