Fast & Loose by Elizabeth Bevarly (best classic books to read txt) š
- Author: Elizabeth Bevarly
Book online Ā«Fast & Loose by Elizabeth Bevarly (best classic books to read txt) šĀ». Author Elizabeth Bevarly
So obviously Bree had detected the weird sizzle. Damn. Though why, exactly, Lulu was cursing that development, she couldnāt really say. What she did say was, āYes, Bree.ā Because there was no way she would ever stand in the way of her friendās lifetime dream.
Even if it was a stupid dream. And even if, suddenly, Lulu was starting to think maybe she had a dream of her own.
COLE WATCHED THE TWO WOMEN AS THEY MADE their way to the exit, wondering when someone had snuck up behind him and hit him with a brick. Because sitting with Bree and Hortenseāwhat had her parents been thinking to name her that?āheād begun to feel and think things he hadnāt felt or thought for a very long time.
Like how nice it felt to spend an evening doing nothing but chatting and drinking beer. Cole couldnāt remember the last time heād just kicked back and relaxed for the hell of it.
A beer drinker, he marveled about Hortenseāwhat had her parents been thinking? He couldnāt remember the last time heād been out with a woman whoād ordered a beer, either. Hell, he couldnāt remember the last time heād ordered a beer himself. Although he loved an ice-cold longneck at the end of the workday when he was on the ranch, or if he was at a track when he didnāt have a horse running and didnāt have to be King Cole. He just didnāt order it when he was out, because it wasnāt the sort of thing major players in the horseracing industry drank.
And that was another thing. Although Bree had been pretty knowledgeable about the industry he worked in and pretty much lived for, Hortenseāwhat had her parents been thinking?ādidnāt know squat. Cole didnāt normally associate with people who knew so little about bloodlines and broodmares and gate assignments and all the things heād built his careerāhell, his very lifeāupon. Even worse, she knew nothingāand cared lessāabout āKing Cole.ā How could anyone in this town, at this time of year, after the way heād been hounded by the local press, not knowāor careāabout him? Sheād talked to him as if he were a regular guy, not the larger-than-life image of a man heād cultivated for himself in the business.
And that was when anotherābiggerābrick hit him. Because he realized then how enjoyable it had been to drink beer with Hortense Waddy who knew nothing about horses and cared less about him. And then he was slammed by another projectile, this one about the size of a basement foundation: Drinking beer with Hortense Waddy and her friend had kept the groupies and autograph hounds at bay for a good part of the evening. Once the three of them left the Ambassador and came here toā¦whatever the name of this place was, the celebrity-seekers had dwindled to nearly nothing. Having the women with him had created a nice buffer zone that kept the Trainer Hangers at bay. Of course, that hadnāt been the case at the Ambassador. Heād been constantly interrupted in his conversation there. Here, though, it hadnāt been a problem at all.
So what was the difference, he wondered? The two bars were both popular, active nightspots. They were both filled with people. The clientele here was a little younger than the other bar, but that should have lent itself to more autograph-seekers, not fewer. The only difference was that, at the Ambassador, Cole had been alone when he entered, something that, he supposed, made him fair game. Here, heād entered with someone else. Two someone elses, actually, but it would have been safe for any observer to conclude that at least one of the women was a date. People were polite enough to make allowances for a man when he was out socially with a guest, more so than they were when he was out alone.
So it stood to reason that if Cole started going out in public with a guest, people would be more likely to leave him alone. Certainly there wouldnāt be any more offers of sexual encounters that might send a lesser man right to the nearest hotelāand, later, to the nearest clinic for a penicillin shot. If Cole could avoid any more of those offersāhell, if he could just avoid more requests for autographs and interviewsāheād be a very happy man. Not only were the sexual overtures even more annoying than the demands for signatures and photographs, but when it came to sexual encounters, he wanted to be the one to decide the who, what, when, where, and why. Okay, and also the how. So he was old-fashioned that way. Except for some of the hows, in which case, all modesty aside, he could be pretty damned inventive. So sue him.
Heād also be a more focused man if he could avoid those things. Heād be less stressed out about the race. Heād be able to concentrate on what he needed to be doing between now and Derby Day.
Obviously, what he needed to ward off the Trainer Hangers and preserve his peace of mind for the next week and a half was a buffer zone. To create a buffer zone, heād need a buffer. Someone of the feminine persuasion who would look to the casual observer like a romantic interest and inhibit the casual observerās approach. Someone who wouldnāt compromise Coleās focus on Silk Purse or distract him from his single-minded pursuit of winning the Derby. Someone who wouldnāt distract him by being sexually attractive to him, but whose company he would still enjoy. Someone who knew littleāand cared lessāabout King Cole and wouldnāt be sexually attracted to him, either.
Someone like Hortense Waddy.
She was pretty enough that no one would question his reason for wanting to be with her. If you went for the wholesome, decent, down-to-Earth-shoes type. Which Cole, of course, did not. And although he could see now why some guys might go for her
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