"Do I need to drop you off or something?" Because there was no way I was attending service with them. "Do you walk? Is there some sort of shuttle service?"
"Sandy's parents pick us up and bring us back." She lifted her chin and sniffed. "Or you could come with us."
"Tammy, I'm more than happy to do any number of things for you kids but subjecting myself to organized religion isn't one of them." I stood, stretching my arms overhead and sighing. "I'm going to guess the only place open on a Saturday night is the place you were talking about-the Watering Hole?"
"Yes." If she stuck her nose any higher in the air, she'd drown with the first hard rain. "It's the only bar in Cotton Creek."
"That's depressing." I sighed again and shrugged. "Still, one bar is better than no bar." I detoured across the room to where she was sitting, leaning over and kissing the top of her head. "I should be back before morning but if I'm not don't panic. I'm not leaving."
She wrinkled her nose, her confusion evident. "What could you possibly do at a bar all night?"
I stared at her for a moment before shaking my head. "Oh, honey. I'll explain when you're older."
CHAPTER SEVEN
The Watering Hole was on the far side of town, away from the more respectable businesses and residences. If memory served, the land had originally belonged to the Hansoms and as I pulled in the parking lot I wondered idly what would have caused Marcus Hansom to sell any part of his property. Off the top of my head, the only thing I could think of was bribery or blackmail because the Hansoms had been richer than everybody except God and even that was up for debate.
I flipped the visor down, checking my makeup one last time in the mirror. Even knowing the chances of finding anyone worth my time fell somewhere in the slim to none range, there'd been no way I was going out without making some sort of effort. So I'd taken a shower and washed and dried my hair and put on the sort of makeup I'd wear if I was on a work assignment. Same for my clothes-it would be hard to offend someone wearing chucks, jeans, a tank top and a flannel shirt. I probably would, because that was my luck, but at least I'd made an effort.
Flipping the visor back in to position, I slipped my phone, ID, credit card, and a couple of twenties in my back pocket before opening the door and sliding out. I studied the exterior of the building as I walked to the entrance. Unlike the other buildings in town, which looked dingy and worn out because they weren't taken care of, the distress I saw on the wooden shingles and shutters seemed more affected-the type of thing you'd see on a hipster bar in a major city. It was a tiny detail, something I doubted any of the other patrons even noticed, but it had me pausing and readjusting my expectations on what the interior looked like. Squaring my shoulders, I grabbed the oversized handle on the perfectly distressed door and yanked it open, not quite stumbling inside but close.
Thankfully, nobody paid the slightest bit of attention to my less than graceful entrance.
As far as bars went, it adhered to the basic setup-booths lining one wall, a bar with high-backed seats lining the other, and tables occupying the space in between. The back corner held a stage, currently unoccupied, although I imagined any band which took up residence there would lean toward country of some variety. The dance floor was small but adequate, a handful of couples dancing to the jukebox blaring through what sounded like a first rate sound system.
But the wood appeared to be actual wood and not laminate. There were no visible cracks in the leather seats. The light fixtures were brushed metal, probably nickel, and repurposed Mason jars. Every surface gleamed as if a tiny army of elves had spent hours polishing.
If I'd been working, I would have been over the moon about the place. What I was, instead, was suspicious. Maybe a little curious. But mostly suspicious. Nobody in Cotton Creek would pour this much time and attention and money in to a bar. Not in this so-called good, Christian community.
I settled myself on the stool at the far end of the bar, taking the opportunity to study the shelves of liquor lining the wall. It was better than I'd anticipated. It wasn't the best I'd ever seen but considering where I was, I'd resigned myself to the sort of alcohol which barely cost twenty bucks for a case. I was still deciding between Patron and Don Julio when a man I could only assume was the bartender stepped out of the back room.
He was definitely, definitely better than I'd anticipated.
I wasn't ashamed to say I tended to think of men-especially men in bars-as disposable. One was usually as good as the other and none of them were worth more than a night of my time. In my experience, they were all the same: a cheesy pickup line or two, a few hours of drinking, and then a few minutes of formulaic sex which may or may not result in an orgasm.
This man, though... I had the feeling sex with him would be anything but routine and cookie-cutter and underwhelming.
Tattoos twined over both his forearms, disappearing under sleeves rolled up to the elbow. The black button down managed to hug every muscle in his torso without revealing anything and the dark denim did the same to his legs and, when he turned around to serve a grizzled old man at the other end of the bar, an ass which was just shy of mouth-watering. His beard, too long to be called scruff but too short to brand him a hipster, was a few shades lighter than his hair, buzzed on the sides and longer on top, brushed back from a face which, even with the piercing over his left brow, still edged more toward pretty than tough.
The face was familiar, annoyingly so, but I'd worry about getting a name to go with it later. Right now, I was content to imagine it between my thighs.
He turned toward me, still half laughing at something the old man said. He froze, hesitating for a split second before walking over to me, bracing both hands against the bar and giving me the sort of lazy, practiced smile which probably had every straight woman between the ages of eighteen and eighty fanning themselves. "Hey, there."
"Hey yourself." Like the face, there was something about the voice which tugged at some distant memory but there was no way anybody I'd gone to high school with had grown up to look like this man. I nodded at the bottles behind him. "If you were drinking, which would you choose? Patron or Don Julio?"
"Tequila, hmm?" The smile widened, edging toward genuine. "My kind of woman." He glanced over his shoulder, studying the bottles, clearly giving my question some thought and not just spouting off whichever was more expensive. Shifting his attention back to me, he said, "I suppose it depends."
I lifted a brow, more than willing to play the game. "On?"
"Are you looking to unwind or are you trying to get fucked?"
I smiled. "Are you offering?"
"Maybe." He pulled a pack of cigarettes out of his back pocket, sliding one free before holding the crumpled box out to me. When I shook my head, he shrugged, setting the pack on the bar next to me and pulling out a lighter, dropping it next to the cigarettes after lighting up. He sucked in a quick breath and then exhaled, the cloud of smoke carrying a faint whiff of menthol. "But I was referring to alcohol."
"I know." I leaned back in my seat, swiveling from side to side, my curiosity increasing by the second. "And I don't know. It's been a rough few weeks."
"Has it?" He took a step back, grabbing the bottle of Don Julio off the shelf without looking, something which I couldn't help but find impressive. He upended two shot glasses, pouring a double in each before setting the bottle down next to the cigarettes. Pulling over a stool, he picked up one of the glasses and nodded at the other. "As the sole bartender in town, I'm required to lend my ear when somebody needs it."
"Are you?" I hadn't done this in... I couldn't remember the last time I'd flirted with someone. Usually-almost always-it was a few drinks, a few lines, and then a quick tumble in bed, gone before they woke in the morning. Even with Riley, which had gone on far longer than I'd wanted or was wise, there hadn't been flirtation. It was... interesting. "I'll be honest, I'm surprised there's even one bartender in a place like Cotton Creek."
"Until about four or five years ago, there wasn't." He shrugged and took another long drag from his cigarette. "Not that folks around here don't drink. They just prefer to do so in the solitude of their home, where they think people won't know and won't judge them."
"Everybody in Cotton Creek knows everything about everybody." I took the cigarette from him, indulging in a quick puff before handing it back. I'd never been a smoker, not really, but every now and then I had a craving for a hit of nicotine. "Although the only thing people care about are the vices, not the virtues."