As if Beauâs words had stopped time, Lola, Johnny and Beau stood frozen where they were. Lola didnât breathe. She mightâve thought Beauâs proposition was a joke and even laughed if it werenât for his composure when heâd said it. As if to him, the deal were already made. He wanted Lola for one night, and thatâs what heâd have .
âExcuse me?â Lola asked so quietly, she wasnât entirely sure sheâd spoken aloud.
Johnny stepped closer to the bar that separated him from Lola and Beau. He leaned his knuckles on the surface. âWhat the fuck did you just say?â
âGive me one night alone with Lola, and Hey Joe is yours.â
âYouâre offering me money to sleep with my girlfriend?â
Lola hadnât blinked in so long, her eyes watered. When she did, her mind caught up. It raced ahead. Emotions came as fast as her heartbeat. Thud. Shock. Thud. Indignation. Thud. Fear.
âWhat Iâm offering you is your dream on a silver platter.â Beau looked at Lola. âBoth of you.â
He had some nerve putting his eyes on her. Based on the last few hours, it wasnât even that surprising heâd come on to her. But to try to put a price on herâand on their time together? Her heartbeat was pure anger now, short, quick bursts that made her ears hot. âFuck you,â she said with her hands curled into two trembling balls. She wanted to say more, but she could only think of the crudest words possible. âRight, Johnny? Fuck him.â
Johnnyâs neck reddened from his T-shirt to his jaw. Her concern shifted from herself to him. He looked like he might lunge for Beau, but Johnny wasnât a fighter. Sheâd never seen him lay an angry hand on anyone. She reached out to touch him, but he ripped his arm away and pounded his fist on the bar. âTell me this is a sick joke, man,â he said through a clenched jaw. That was Beauâs cue to leave.
Beau raised one eyebrow. âI still donât have my answer.â
âYou want an answer?â Johnny asked. âHow about I jump over this bar and give it to you with my fist?â
âIâm not looking for a fight,â Beau said. âAs long as we both have something the other wants, this can be worked out peacefully.â He paused and removed his suit jacket by the lapels. âHowever,â he said, tossing it over a stool, âwe can do it your way too.â
A door slammed in the back. Beau rolled up his shirtsleeves. She needed him gone before any of the staff came back out. She jerked her hand to the exit and said, âHe told you to leave,â but no sooner had she looked away from Johnny than he was ducking to get out from behind the bar.
Beau didnât move except to turn and face Johnny, who was already past Lola. Johnny seized Beauâs crisp, white shirt. Beauâs body stiffened as he drew up to his full height and met Johnny head on. Johnny drew his arm back. In that split second, instead of raising his own fist or trying to get loose, Beau looked at Lola. There was no fear in his expression, and that scared her more than anything. Johnny wasnât a fighter. She had no idea what Beau was capable of. Somebody would end up hurt, and it could very likely be the man she loved. She jumped up and latched onto Johnnyâs bicep.
âStop!â Her feet were practically off the ground from giving Johnnyâs arm all her weight.
âLet go,â Johnny said.
âPlease donât do this, Johnny,â she pleaded. âYou wonât win.â
Johnnyâs head snapped toward her. The tension in his muscle immediately melted under her hands. âWhat?â he asked with his mouth hanging open.
Afraid Beau might sucker punch Johnny, she forced her way between them. More specifically, she pushed Johnny back behind her since Beau was immovable. âGet out,â she told Beau.
Beau held her gaze while he picked up his jacket from the stool. He blinked over her head. âFive hundred thousand,â he said to Johnny. âThereâs a number for you. Thatâs what this place is worth give or take.â
âWhat about what Iâm worth?â Lola asked immediately.
Beauâs eyes returned to hers.
Johnny grasped Lolaâs shoulders. âMove and let me handle this.â
But Lola could not be moved as she locked eyes with Beau. In her hasty reply, sheâd missed the number. Half a million dollars. It made her flush to be associated with any dollar amount, but this dollar amount was so high that she was absurdly impressed with herself. No person would walk into a bar and offer that to just anyone. It had to be something about her.
Lola tried to keep her thoughts from her face, but Beau looked as if he knew everything. She forced herself to see past the amount. It didnât matter whether this was about her specifically, because introducing money turned her from a person to a product. A service. The suggestion that she could be bought was a betrayal of her short but powerful time with Beau.
Beau raised his chin just noticeably. âWhat youâre worth depends on whom you ask,â he said to her. âIf you want to know what youâre worth to him, ask him his counteroffer. If you want to know what youâre worth to me, bring me that counteroffer.â He reached into his breast pocket and placed his card on the bar. âIn case you change your minds,â he said before walking away.
âWe wonât,â she said.
He paused a moment then turned around. âEarlier, before we were interrupted, you asked me my opinion. I was going to say that youâre captivating. Youâve held my attention from the start.â
It wasnât until the door closed behind Beau that Lola lost the strength thatâd been holding her together. Her legs trembled as she turned around to face Johnny. She put her face into his T-shirt. It smelled like him. She would never not know his scent. When she didnât feel his arms around her, she looked up into his face. His expressions were more familiar to her than her own, but this was one she didnât recognize.
âHow could you say that?â he asked through his teeth.
She blinked at him a few times and took a step back. âWhat did I say?â
ââYou wonât winâ? I was a second from pummeling him. Thanks for the vote of fucking confidence.â
âJohnny, seriously? A fistfight? Youâre above that.â
âWere we just in the same room?â he asked incredulously. âDid you not hear what he said?â
âOf course I heard. But itâs not worth it. Youâre of more use to me here than in a jail cell. Or worseâa hospital bed.â
âThatâs not why you stopped me,â he said. âYou didnât think I could take him.â
Lola raked her fingers through her hair. She had too much on her mind to be stroking Johnnyâs ego. âEverything happened so fast. If youâd seen the look in his eyesââ
âI did. I was standing right in front of him.â
She shook her head quickly. âYou didnât see what I saw. I said that to protect you. One or both of you couldâve gotten really hurt. You donât know his background. He could be dangerous.â
âDonât ever get in the middle like that again,â he said. âYou couldâve been the one hurt. I donât need you to protect me.â
Vero came out from the backroom, whistling with her bag swinging over her arm. âYou guys ready to lock up? The others went out the back, and I got somewhere to be.â
âYeah, letâs get the fuck out of here,â Johnny muttered, walking to the front to shut out the lights.
âWhatâd the suit want?â Vero asked. âHe going to make an offer?â
âNo,â Lola snapped, already headed the opposite direction to get her purse from the back. When she returned, the bar was dark and empty. She heard Johnny start the car. On her way out, she remembered Beauâs card on the counter. She went back to throw it awayâit was the last thing she wanted to see when they came in the next day.
It was gone.
Lola rubbed her wrist where her watch had been. Johnny brushed his teeth so hard, she heard the whole thing from where she sat on the edge of their bed.
It was always the normal-looking guys who were deranged. Given her past, she could usually spot them, but this guy, Beauâwho seemed to be things she wasnât used to, like charming and refinedâthat level of depravity on a guy like him surprised her.
The ride home had been quiet. Sheâd gone over her brief conversations with Beau for any clue of what was to come. The only thing out of the ordinary was his sudden coldness toward her at the end when she wouldnât accept his tip.
Sheâd apologized to Johnny right before theyâd gotten out of the car, but heâd sullenly ignored her. Her mind had still been playing catch up. Something in particular had nagged at herâshe just couldnât figure out what.
The faucet stopped and Johnny came out of the ensuite bathroom in his boxers. He leaned in the doorway with his arms crossed. âWhat interrupted you?â
âWhat?â Lola asked.
He sighed irritably as if sheâd checked out of a conversation she hadnât known they were having. âHe said you guys were interrupted before he could say you were âcaptivating.â What interrupted you?â
âIt was early in the night,â she said, swallowing. âI donât really remember.â
âTry,â he said.
Lola glanced at her hands. Beau had been standing across from her with his loosened tie and easy grin. Earlier. Before heâd become visibly stiff in those last moments. What had he said to her? That it was hard to get his attention, but that she had it. Such bold disregard for her relationship excited her more than it should. Nobody she knew went after anything that wayâexcept maybe her before sheâd settled down with Johnny. âI think he was trying toâ¦to flirt with me, I guess, but you came out from the back,â Lola said. âThatâs when I introduced you. He was being a little forward.â
âWhy didnât you tell me? I wouldâve thrown him out.â
âBecause I can handle myself,â she said. âBesides, you told me to flirt with him at the end of the night.â
âNot really flirt,â Johnny said tersely. âI meant in a way that he thinks youâre flirting but youâre really not. Whatever.â He pushed off the doorjamb. âSo did you give him a reason to make that offer?â
âJohnny,â she scolded. âItâs me. The woman you love and who loves you back.â She waited, hoping his expression would clear a little. âOf course I didnât give him a reason. The whole thing was stupid.â
âCome here,â he said.
âWhat?â
âI said come over here.â
She stood slowly and went to him. He took her chin and kissed her. Her upper lip pinched between their teeth, and she jerked back. âJohnny, stop. We need to talk about this.â
âLater,â he said. With a hand on her shoulder, he gently nudged her toward the bed.
âItâs four in the morning.â
âYeah.â He pulled her against him by her hips and kissed her again. He ran his hand down her backside and squeezed. âRight now, you know what I want.â
She knew. Most of the time when they had sex, it was after she and Johnny had fallen into bed, or in the late morning when they woke up. Once in a while, though, Johnny got really worked up, and then he liked her on her hands and knees.
She turned around willingly. When Johnny had his rare urges, he didnât fight them, and she didnât want him to. Those were the times he went absolutely crazy for her.
She climbed onto the bed in only a long T-shirt. He lifted it up and grabbed her ass in both hands. He rubbed against her. She dropped her forehead toward the mattress as he entered her. His first few thrusts were long and slow as she warmed up to him, but they soon turned quick and hard. It normally took time for her to climax from penetration alone, but she almost always did this way. She became putty in his hands to know he was so consumed, he couldnât even bother with foreplay.
âThatâs it. Damn, Lo,â Johnny said. âYou feel good.â
She gasped. âRight there. Donât stop.â
âYou like that?â He ran a hand up her back, then grabbed her hips and pulled her into his next thrust. âLike it hard, baby? Howâs that for fucking flirting?â
Her breath caught. He was thinking of Beau, which made her think of Beau. âWhat?â
Johnny pulled out and slid himself up between her cheeks.
âJohnnyââ
âPlease, babe. Just for a minute. I need this.â
âNo,â she said. She had no interest in anal, especially when Johnny was like this.
He breathed out some complaint she didnât catch and was inside her again as if heâd never left.
Beau had been planted in her mind, thoughâhis flirtatious, lopsided smile.
His sexy red tie, sexy five oâclock shadow, sexy, sexy, sexyâand she was so sure he had a nice, big cock to back up that suggestive grin.
Oh, God. Yes.
Maybe heâd even wear his suit while fucking her from behind, too eager to bother undressing.
Yes! Just like that.
Heâd pull her hair and tell her how badly heâd wanted her from the moment heâd laid eyes on her.
Lola toppled into a viscous climax as Beauâs image seared into her memory. Almost as quickly, guilt flooded in. Johnny didnât last much longer.
After heâd come, he smoothed a hand over her backside and up her back. He squeezed her shoulder. âYou good?â
âYes,â she said. She was breathless, not from her orgasm, but because sheâd never thought about another man while she was with Johnny. Ever.
When he pulled out, she practically ran to bathroom. She locked the door behind her, turned and confronted herself in the mirror. It was a serious crime, yes. But it wasnât even her fault. Johnny had brought Beau into bed with them. There were worse things. She was only human. In the desperate moments before an orgasm, there were no rules. It was what sheâd needed to cross the finish lineâthe thought of Beau inside her. Her sensitive clit was already throbbing again.
She forced herself to calm down so she could return to the bedroom. Johnny sat with his back against the headboard and his long legs extended in front of him. He knew. The look on his face said everything. He had to know sheâd been thinking of Beau in their most intimate moment.
âSo if he was flirtatious with you before I met him, that means he had his eye on you from the beginning,â Johnny said. âRight?â
Lola hid her relief that he didnât suspect sheâd been fantasizing. She took a tentative step toward the bed. This was a conversation best had once theyâd slept on things, but Johnny didnât look like he wanted to wait. âI guess,â Lola said. âUnless he was just there looking for anyone.â
âWhat about your dart game? Did he say anything then?â
She rolled her lips together and shook her head.
âBecause he made a weird comment during pool that I ignored, but now it makes more sense.â
âWhat comment?â Lola asked, edging closer and sitting at his feet.
âHe asked if I kept Amanda around to make myself feel good. Right in front of her.â
Lola caught her laugh before it escaped. It reminded her of something Veronica would say if Lolaâd ever let her. It became less funny, though, when she wondered what would make an outsider like Beau even ask that. âAmanda does flirt with you,â Lola said.
Johnny shrugged. âItâs Amanda. Sheâs just like that. Youâve said it doesnât bother you enough to get rid of her.â
âIt doesnât, because I know you. I know us. Give me the same credit, and donât hold me to a double standard about the flirting.â
He waved a dismissive hand. âAmandaâs harmless. I wouldnât even notice if she stopped showing up for work, except that weâd be one person short.â
âSo Beau made a couple harmless comments too. I can handle myself. You were nearby if I needed you.â
âYouâre comparing him to Amanda?â
Lola sighed. âJust to show that it was no big deal until it was. So whatâd you say when Beau asked you that?â
âI said no, I keep her around because sheâs a good waitress. Then he looked at you and said I already had the best waitress around, so why the fuck would I need anyone else? He actually said fuck, like he was pissed or something. Amanda sulked, then it was my turn to shoot and that was the end of it.â
âI donât get it,â Lola said, shaking her head. âNobody in their right mind would pay that much for one night of anything, even sex. Do you think he was being serious?â
Johnny sat forward on the bed. âHe wanted to get laid. Heâs got money to burn. Mustâve figured we were hard up for cash and low on decency.â
No matter how Lola looked at it, it didnât add up. A man like that wouldnât have any problem getting women. Even if he did, there were not-so-secret secret call girl services for men with his kind of money. Sheâd known a girl or two whoâd been through that. âMaybe he has a very specific taste,â Lola murmured.
âFor what?â
âI donât know. Maybe Iâm his type.â
Johnny had calmed down. She could sense it with him, but it never took him long to return to his easygoing self. He held out his hand and beckoned her. She moved to sit on her knees next to him.
âYou know I think youâre the most beautiful girl in five states. I see the way guys look at you when youâre waiting tables. Great figure, nice tits.â
âNice?â
âIncredible, babe.â
âWhatâre you getting at?â she asked.
âNothing. I just donât think thatâs enough to pay for one night what I donât even make in a decade.â
Lola finally pinpointed whatâd been bothering her on the ride homeâBeauâs insinuation that Johnny could put a dollar amount on Lola. Heâd suggested a counteroffer as if one existed and they just hadnât found it yet. âHow much would you say Iâm worth then?â Lola asked.
Johnny took her arm and pulled her forward. She leaned in for a more intimate moment than theyâd had all night. âDonât take it that way,â he said, kissing her once on the lips. âI respect you too much to even answer that.â He kissed her again and lay back on the bed, getting under the covers.
âItâs a lot of money,â she said quietly.
He fluffed his pillow. âI know youâre worried about Hey Joe, but itâll all work out. I bet you Mitch gets cold feet and ends up not selling.â
Lola stayed where she was, staring at the wall by the bed. He sounded so confident, but she didnât share his optimism. During the last few conversations sheâd had with the owner about Hey Joe, stress had etched his face. âJohnny, did you ever think about buying the bar?â
âGuess so, here and there. Kind of feels like mine already. But never seriously or anything.â
âThatâs the best of both worlds,â Lola said. âYou get the bar you love, and you donât have to start from the ground up.â
âItâd be like owning a piece of history,â Johnny agreed. âRock ânâ roll history. We could get it back to what it was, you and me.â
Lola glanced down at him. âWhatâs the first thing youâd do?â
âIâd work my ass off to get good music in there again. Maybe serve some food. Open earlier in the day. People in the door, no matter what it took.â
She smiled at him. She liked the times where Johnny got caught up in something bigger than their life. âYou could run that place with your eyes closed.â
âWith you by my side, sure could.â They grinned at each other, sharing the same dream. It faded from Johnnyâs eyes. âWhatâre you saying, Lo?â
âI donât know. Mitch hasnât bothered with the day to day for so long that, like you said, sometimes the bar feels like ours. But I never imagined actually owning it until tonight. I didnât think it was a possibility for us.â
âAnd what, it is now?â he asked.
âNo,â she said emphatically. She got under the covers too and snuggled against his side. âI told you my dad loved bikes. He used to collect Harley gear for the day heâd own one. I promised Iâd buy him one when I got older. That was before he left, obviously. Sad thing is, even if I could buy him one, I wouldnât know where to find him.â She paused, tracing one of the tattoos on Johnnyâs chest. âIâve never made someoneâs dream come true. Or given them anything.â
âYou made my dream come true.â
She looked up at him. âI did?â
âI have you, donât I? Thatâs something money canât buy.â He smiled and smoothed his hand over her hairline. âDonât worry, babe. Weâll figure something out.â
âBut by then, Hey Joe might not be around anymore,â Lola said. Theyâd been figuring things out since theyâd started dating. Lola still thought about going back to school some day. Some day, Johnny would propose. Theyâd talked about having kids some day when theyâd saved more and could afford things like a bigger apartment.
Starting a business didnât fit into any of that. It occurred to her that though Johnny wanted those things, he wouldnât go after them. He would wait for them to happen to him or for Lola to tell him it was time. Her role was to move them forward, a reality sheâd conveniently ignoredâuntil Beau had opened her eyes to it. If neither of them did anything, theyâd be in this bed ten years from now, wondering why they didnât have the things theyâd always hoped for.
Lola switched off the bedside lamp, turned back and kissed his chest. âItâs stupid, but right after my dad left, I thought if I could just get him that bike, heâd come back. Like me plus a bike would be enough for him.â She looked up at him. âIs this enough for you? If we never got further than where we are right now?â
He was quiet.
âJohnny?â she asked.
No answer. Heâd fallen asleep.