a woman, why?â
âYou were too annoyed at being called back to have been alone.â She smiled knowingly, aware she had him there. âIâm too tired to hoof it back to my own place. Iâm crashing in my old room. âNight, big brother.â
ââNight, Bea-Bea.â
Her door closed, and a few moments later the light went out from under the door frame.
Trace stared up at the ceiling once more. Yeah, he was annoyed, though less so than he thought he might have been. Seth was safe, Bea was going to survive, and thatâs what mattered.
But damn, why tonight? Heâd been so close. Since the first night heâd caught sight of Jo, heâd wanted her. That curvy body packed into jeans and those polo shirts everyone at the bar wore haunted his dreams. Her long hair, that thick rope of black silk, begged for his hands to wrap themselves in it. And though heâd never have guessed it before, the piercings even intrigued him.
Where else was she sporting some metal?
He needed to investigate. He smiled a little at that. Ah, the mysteries of women. Kept a man happy and healthy.
Heâd have another chance. Though he had no clue when, since heâd gone out twice in a short time, and wasnât comfortable just leaving Seth with either of his sisters again. They werenât last-minute nannies, and he tried hard to remember that whenever he got the itch to do something or go somewhere.
So heâd bide his time and wait. Hopefully, when he got the chance, Jo would be ready.
Jo grabbed her shoes and started lacing up. She was running way too late to count, thanks to sleeping late. At least, late in Joâs world, which was really about half an hour early. But was it her fault restless dreams kept her up most of the night?
No, it most certainly was not. The blame there would rest solely on the shoulders of one Trace Muldoon, and whatever it was that had pulled him away the night before.
After both shoes were ready to go, she stood and grabbed her cell phone, shoving it in her back pocket. But as she was grabbing her keys to lock up the apartment and open the bar, her apartment phone rang. She debated for two seconds, then answered.
âHello?â
âJosephine, how are you?â
Resigned, she sat back down and mentally deleted at least three tasks she normally completed before the lunch crowd came through. âHey, Mom.â
âOh, no, no, no. What did we talk about?â
Jo sighed. âHey, Regina.â
âAh, thatâs better. So much more mature, donât you think?â
No. She didnât think. Mature would be a woman of her motherâs age realizing it was okay to be called âmomâ by her own daughter, rather than wanting to pretend they were sisters and BFFs. But then again, when one was constantly between meal ticketsâoh, sorry, husbands âone couldnât stand to appear oneâs real age. âWhatâs up? Iâve got to open the bar soon.â
âOh, sweetheart. I just needed to let you know Iâve moved.â
âMoved, past tense? As in, already happened?â Most kids might be shocked to hear about such a thing after the fact. Jo was just asking for clarification.
âYes, about a month ago. I met the nicest man from Oklahoma City and . . .â
Jo tuned Regina out. What was the point? Same song and dance. In fact, Jo could probably tell it better than Regina herself. Met a nice guy, who just happened to be richâhow shocking!âand was willing to move her in with him. Or, even better, find her a sweet apartment just around the corner where she could do whatever she wanted. Of course, this meant uprooting her sweet daughter, but thatâs okay. A new city was a great place to start over. Again. And cities were just full of educational opportunities, werenât they?
âDonât you think?â
âHmm?â
Regina blew out a harsh breath. âHonestly,