She closed her eyes, struggled to keep her voice even. “You shouldn’t believe everything Charlene says. She’s working with cooking sherry.”
“Are you denying you care deeply about North Beach, that you put everything of yourself into it?”
To this, she said nothing. She couldn’t, or she’d give herself away.
“Odd that you’d do so much for just a job,” he continued, and she could feel him watching her. “Why, when Sally knew this place wasn’t hers.”
“I don’t know that.” Not yet.
“Why would I lie?”
She turned back to him. “After what your father did to Sally…?
In a blink, all hints of heat and amusement vanished, leaving in their place a cold, tough, impenetrable hostility.
“I just don’t see how Sally could be the bad guy,” she murmured, willing him to try to understand. “You’re holding the deed. If Sally swindled your father, as you say, then where’s the money? The plane?”
“Where’s Sally?” he countered.
They stared at each other, at an impasse. Finally, Mel conceded, and buried her head back in the engine compartment, going back to the only sure thing in her life: work.
Chapter 11
Bo watched Mel busy herself in the plane again, and decided she had the sweetest ass he’d ever seen in a set of grungy brown coveralls.
But as he stood there watching her work on the Hawker, he was filled with so much frustration he didn’t know what to do with himself.
She didn’t believe him.
No one believed him that Sally had stolen from his father, that his father had been a good, kind man who couldn’t have conned a fly-much less a woman.
Putting his fist through a wall sounded good. So did dragging Mel down to the floor and stripping off those coveralls to find the soft, warm woman he knew hid in there somewhere. Oh, yeah, getting her to whimper and pant his name in hungry desperate need would go a long way toward dissolving his temper, that was for damn sure.
But chances were she wouldn’t go easy. She’d probably fight and claw and bite, and though that might be fun another time, he wasn’t in the mood for that kind of thing at the moment. At the moment, he wanted a soft, warm, willing woman, one who’d wrap him in her arms and offer to kiss his hurt away.
As if she’d ever do that. Because it turned out she was holding a grudge against him for his father’s sins.
Sins his father hadn’t even committed.
Damn, he was tired. Tired of the battle. He’d come here with some half-baked idea of getting his justice, of selling out from beneath Sally’s feet. But now he was thinking of something else entirely.
This woman, the most troublesome, annoying, frustrating woman he’d ever met. “Mel.”
She didn’t bother to answer. She still had her head buried in the Hawker. She was filthy, smelled like fuel and oil, and God he must have hit his head at some point this morning because she still revved his engine.
“Shit on a stick,” she muttered.
He stuck his head in next to hers, surveyed both the situation and the spot of grease on Mel’s nose-wisely not mentioning the latter-and said, “I can get the bolt off.”
She turned her head and leveled those icy eyes on him. “Yeah, but it’ll cost me.”
He wished he understood the female mind better because he had no idea what she was thinking other than wishing he was far, far away, preferably dead.
“Ratchet, please.” She jerked her head toward the toolbox.
Willing to play along, he backed out of the engine and peered into the toolbox. “Not here.”
“Try the parts closet, there’s a box of tools there on the floor.”
He turned toward the closet, opened the door.
“Sorry, there are no blondes in there,” Mel called out.
“What?”
“You don’t remember the second time I ever saw you?” she asked. “Right there in that closet, banging some blonde?”
He looked at the shelves. He didn’t often think about the past. It was filled with memories best forgotten. His mother’s cold voice and colder heart. Eddie’s plane habit, which caused frequent moves from one small airport to another…
Then, Sally, the woman Eddie had lost his head and then his heart to, despite the fact she didn’t possess one.
A heart, that is. Brains, Sally had in spades, and it hadn’t taken her long to sink her hungry claws into the love-struck Eddie, or his bank account.
Buh-bye savings account.
Buh-bye hopes and dreams.
And then, finally, buh-bye Eddie.
Bo’s jaw tightened as he looked inside the closet. Hell, yeah, he remembered being here, missing home, worrying about his dad, burying all that stress into the one thing a male teenager couldn’t stop thinking about.
Sex.
It hadn’t been too difficult, not when American girls had flocked to him, drawn by his accent and, as he’d discovered, his earthy nature and athletic body. Yeah, he’d gotten quite the education here in the States. “I had a good time in this very closet several times, if I remember correctly.”
Mel had pulled her head out of the engine and was watching him with her own memories all over her face. “I only found you in there the once.”
“You stood right there,” he said. “Mouth hanging open, soaking up the sights.”
She bristled. “I couldn’t help but see the sights! You didn’t bother to try to hide a thing!”
Ah, he was getting an interesting vibe here. “Admit it. You wanted the same thing the blonde was getting.”
“Did not,” she said hotly. Too hotly.
“Liar.”
Oh, yeah, there was that steam coming out her ears again. Damn, she was something all riled up, but a part of him wanted to see the other Mel; the soft, sweet Mel she showed everyone else. But never him. “I can’t believe you’re going to be so stubborn about me helping you fix that plane.”
“I don’t trust you.”
Odd how, given everything he’d been through, it was that that hurt him. “It’s a fucking bolt, Mel.”
“Fine.” She tossed down her wrench. “What do you want in return?”
He’d have settled for one of her smiles instead of the frown he seemed to generate at every turn, but that seemed too revealing a request, and besides which, made him feel stupid. “It won’t be painful, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
“Tell me.”
“A kiss,” he said, and shocked the hell out of the both of them.
She looked at him for a long beat, then went back to studying the engine.
And that got him. Had he ever done anything to her? No. Had he ever, in any way, hurt her? Bothered her? Got in her way? No. He’d been pretty balls-out patient if you asked him. Now he could help her, and she didn’t even want to accept that help.
Or another kiss.
Since he knew damn well she’d nearly gotten off on their last kiss alone, it wasn’t a lack of wanting on her part. Which meant it must be fear. Fear of it going too far, of her letting it. Wanting it.
Which in turn meant she must like him a helluva lot more than she’d let on, because he’d bet she didn’t lose control often.
If ever.
“I can do this myself,” she said stubbornly, and bashed yet a third knuckle against the casing. “Shit.” She sucked on the offended finger, straightened, and bumped her head. “Shit shit!” She had a knuckle in her mouth, her other hand on the top of her head as she backed off the ladder, tripped on a wrench on the floor, and staggered backward.
Before he could nab her, she’d fallen butt first into the large tub behind her filled with cleaning fluid and various parts-industrial-strength cleaner that he knew if he dropped a penny inside, it’d clean it down to shiny copper in two seconds. It would skin her alive. “Jesus, Mel.” He reached for her, knowing she had to strip in a hurry. Yanking her out of the tub, he reached for the zipper of her drenched coveralls, one mission in mind: save her skin.
“Hey.” She slapped his hands away.