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Take A Chance On Me (A NOLA Heart Novel Book 2) Page 2
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You tended to get that way when your father was a raging alcoholic who liked to push his wife around, and then got started on his children.
Even though Nathan had never begged for Dad 2.0, he was thankful that his mom had met the love of her life. That Beth’s “love of her life” was also the cold son of a gun seated across the desk from him was just one of life’s funny ironies.
Cartwell and Nathan had never been close, but the distance between stepfather and stepson had truly escalated after Nathan got on the force. Everything had been fine during his early days as a P-1 patrolman—hell, Nathan had never even seen the old man save for Sunday family dinners. But then a slot had opened up in the homicide department and Nathan had wanted it bad.
So badly, that he’d made one fatal mistake: asking Joshua Cartwell to pull a little leverage.
If Nathan had the ability to time travel, he’d look his younger self in the face, hogtie the bastard to a chair, and stop him from ever knocking on Cartwell’s office door. Because nothing, nothing, was worse than your stepfather limiting your ability to do your job. Nathan understood that Brady had made the paper-pushing comment as a joke, because their friendship was founded on trash talk, but the same couldn’t be said for some of his coworkers.
If they ever found out that he was Lieutenant Cartwell’s stepson?
He might as well kiss his career good-bye.
“Are you done?” Cartwell asked stonily. “I have something to discuss with you.”
You always have something to discuss with me.
Swallowing the hot retort, he cleared his throat. He’d learned early on that silence was best—when he managed to keep his big mouth shut, that is.
The old man leaned back in his desk chair and crossed his arms over his chest. Despite being in his late fifties, Josh Cartwell was as robust and athletic as a man half his age. The only sign of aging was his thinning gray hair, and the fact that a pair of glasses sat perched on his nose.
“I know it’s Thursday, but we’re having a guest over for dinner and I’d like for you to be there.”
Nathan didn’t miss the unspoken words: Your mother would like for you to be there.
Thursday nights were usually dedicated to volunteering at the local V.A., not that he expected Josh to know that. Nathan wasn’t exactly forthcoming about his work with veterans. He didn’t want to hear the compliments for helping a fellow vet or see the interest spike when the speaker inevitably asked about Nathan’s time spent overseas, as though they secretly hoped that something horrendous had happened to him, so they could hear the gory details. Nathan wasn’t interested in spilling anything, gory or otherwise.
He tilted his head. “Who’s the special guest?”
“Old buddy of mine—you don’t know him.” Cartwell’s gaze lost its focus as he stared at something behind Nathan. Then, quick as a shot rifle, Cartwell looked his way. “His girl was looking to get out of Miami.”
“You helped his girlfriend leave him? Now that’s a friendship.” Nathan said it so flippantly that to anyone else his comment would have elicited a good laugh.
Cartwell’s mouth didn’t so much as twitch. “His daughter, Danvers. I’m not stealing the man’s wife.”
“Ah. That makes more sense.”
“I’d hope so, considering I’m married to your mother.”
The pause that followed signaled Cartwell’s expectation that Nathan might feel compelled to make another asinine comment, but no, he’d reached his quota. Not to mention that Beth and Josh were a great match. Even if Nathan wasn’t the man’s number one fan professionally, he wouldn’t wish anything less for his mother than a man who loved her as much as her second husband did.
“Are you going to ask me why she’s here?”
Nathan lifted his shoulders. “I figure you’re about thirty seconds away from telling me yourself.”
“Do you ever lay off the sarcasm?”
“Not on Thursdays.”
Cartwell’s brows lifted, revealing for the first time that emotion existed beneath the gruff exterior. Nathan shifted in his chair. “So, you want me to go to this dinner. Am I supposed to bring flowers? Is she old—how does she feel about scratch tickets?”
If looks could kill, Nathan would already be filleted, skewered, and smoking on the grill.
“You’re not dating her, Danvers.” Cartwell’s gaze dipped to Nathan’s work shirt, which was still lightly creased despite two go-rounds through the dryer. The disapproval in the older man’s eyes could have been etched in stone, it was so clear.
“Okay, no flowers. No scratch tickets. Why do I need to be there again?”
“It’s her first time in N’Orleans. I’m assigning you to be her personal tour guide. Show her around. Share some of that . . . great personality of yours with her. She doesn’t know anyone, and your mother told me you need more friends.”
Nathan winced. He had friends. They were, however, mostly of the one-night-stand variety. “I’m not lonely,” he muttered. He liked his life just fine. Really. Though maybe he should cut back on hanging out with Brady and Shaelyn. They were so damn affectionate that they’d make Hugh Hefner rethink monogamy, and, lately, Nathan had started to think insane thoughts. Insane, maybe I should try dating, thoughts. Okay, so maybe he did need a new friend or two—outside of the bedroom, that is.
“I’m going with a woman’s intuition on this one,” Cartwell said.
“Fine.” Nathan dropped his elbows to the desk. “Just spit it out, Josh. I’m her babysitter but not her date. I’m just gonna pretend it’s because she’s got the face of a bulldog and the voice of a Chihuahua, and deep down inside you don’t want to do that to me.”
“She got a job with crime lab,” Cartwell said, completely ignoring Nathan’s side commentary. Per usual. “You’ll probably run into her in the field. Take her out. Show her around. Make her comfortable—but not that comfortable, ya heard?”
Yeah, Nathan “heard” all right. “You got her that job with the lab, didn’t you.”
Cartwell’s expression didn’t crack. “That’s classified information.”
“So, yes.”
“What do you think ‘classified’ means?”
“Hold on, let me think.” Nathan held up a finger, then snapped his middle and thumb together. “Oh, yeah—it means that nepotism isn’t dead.”
Cartwell’s brows furrowed so tightly together, each could have fused with the one next door. “It worked out well for you, didn’t it?”
The jury was still out on that one, but there was no reason to go down that particular road. “Can’t complain.”
“So, you’ll show her around?”
For the first time, Cartwell sounded uncertain and it was nice to be on the other side of the coin. But Josh had to know that Nathan would say yes—at the end of the day, Nathan was a “yes” man when it came to helping others, even if that meant he screwed himself over in the end. Didn’t mean that he couldn’t make his stepdad sweat a little bit.
He popped his ankle on his opposite knee and resumed his stance, lacing his fingers over his flat stomach.
“Danvers.” Cartwell’s tone was all impatience.
“Yeah?”
“Answer.”
And so, with a grin that he didn’t much feel, he said, “Don’t worry, L-T. I’ll be sure to show her the time of her life.”
Chapter Three
GRETNA, LOUISIANA
Louisiana was hell.
Not because of the people, or the food, or the European flare that clung to the city’s coattails, but because of the godforsaken heat. It was only the first week of April, her second day in the city, and Jade felt like she was sledging through a bowl of soup (Flavor: 100% Humidity).
Miami was hot, but this was . . . Jade paused mid-step as she felt her only-just straightened hair begin to frizz at the temples. She bet that she looked like a poodle—a poodle with sweat gathering between its bra cups.
She definitely should have opted for a tank t
op tonight instead of her skinny jeans and soft black sweater ensemble. Sighing with resignation, Jade switched the bottle of red wine from one hand to the other and reached for the doorbell.
After a few weeks, she’d find her footing. She’d remember to wear shorts and sundresses, just like she’d remember that New Orleanian drivers were just this side of crazy and that most of the roads were one-ways.
There was nothing more mood killing than blasting down a one-way street with Beyoncé singing at an octave that should have punctured Jade’s eardrums, only to see flashing blue lights approaching. Despite her Florida license, car registration, and plate, the cop had gifted her with her first New Orleans Municipal traffic ticket within five hours of arriving in her new home.
Jade wasn’t the sort of girl to simper and flutter her eyelashes, so she’d grudgingly accepted the white slip of paper.
Gracias al cielo she’d managed to find her way to the Cartwell’s home on what she’d learned was called the “West Bank.” Her GPS had informed her she’d actually been driving east, which had provided ten minutes of panic as she’d clutched her steering wheel at ten and two, and crossed the sky-high bridge over the grand Mississippi River.
Speaking of the Cartwells, were they even home?
Jade hit the doorbell again.
“Get the door, Lizzie!”
“Mom, I’m holding the gumbo—how am I supposed to get the door?”
“Is Danny here? Make him get it.”
A pause. “He’s not here yet. Seriously, can I put the gumbo down first?”
The sound of heavy footsteps crunching over the gravel walkway alerted Jade that she wasn’t alone, and she immediately turned around. Under the darkening sky, he was a shadowed silhouette.
“They disinvite you?”
His voice was dark, smoky, which appropriately matched his obscured form marching through the night. His heavy footfalls halted beside her, and Jade had to tilt up her chin in order to look at his face.
He was tall. Definitely taller than John Thomas, who topped off at about 6’2”. Compared to this guy, Jade, at 5’8”, finally knew what it was like to feel petite. But his height also felt threatening, overpowering, and Jade was done feeling overpowered by men.
“I hope not,” she replied, deciding after a quick once-over that he was friend and not foe. His hands remained loose at his sides, the timbre of his voice more amused than aggressive. Not exactly the signs of an attacker. “I nearly lost my life crossing the bridge—I’m hoping for a meal and good company before we face off again.”
In the shadows, she saw him dip his head to look at her. “They don’t got bridges like that in Miami?”
His roughhewn accent was like a seductive caress against bare skin. A little more Italian New Jersey than Sweet Tea Drinkin’ Georgia. She’d imagined the New Orleanian accent to be a close sibling to Savannah’s, but found that she actually preferred the rough way his vowels merged with the hard hits of his consonants.
Call her crazy, but she wanted to hear him say her name. Would it roll off his tongue like sweet molasses or sharp and succinct the way Lucia said it?
Wait—no, no. She was taking a break from men. All men.
She’d come to New Orleans with only two rules. First, no dating—Jade needed to try out the single life. Second, focus on her new job. The two went hand-in-hand.
She glanced up at the guy standing next to her and mentally added him to her Stay Away From list. Without even having seen his face, she knew he was dangerous to her well-being. It was in his stance, the confident way he held himself. It was in the deep baritone of his voice, the amused glint signaling that he didn’t take himself too seriously.
That he didn’t take life too seriously.
And his big frame . . . Jade was a sucker for tall men with broad shoulders, and the shadows of the night expertly proved that this man ticked off both of those boxes. He was the sort of guy you fantasized about when you were home alone and feeling horny. The kind of guy your mind brought to fruition when your fingers dipped beneath your panties and your breathing hitched with the possibility of what if.
Jade brought the wine bottle to her chest. “We’ve got a lot of things in Miami, including decent drivers.”
She could have sworn he flashed a grin, but whatever he might have said next was silenced by the front door swinging open. The brown-haired woman on the other side was in her late twenties, about Jade’s age. Her feet were strapped into a pair of pink stilettos, while the dress hugging her body left little to the imagination.
Were the Cartwells hosting dinner or the next rage party? Abruptly, Jade felt not only overheated but also underdressed.
“You gonna let us in, Lizzie?”
Lizzie jumped into action, miraculously balancing on the thin points of her shoes like they were platform wedges, and waved them through. “Sorry, sorry,” she muttered with a glance at the still unnamed man beside Jade. “I was trying to find a place to leave the gumbo.”
“The kitchen might work.”
“Obviously, Einstein. That’s what I did.”
Jade turned to look up at the man, and nearly stumbled.
His sultry voice matched him to perfection. Hair as dark as her own was brushed back from a chiseled face. His eyes were the color of slate, or the turbulent gray of storm clouds as the wind whipped up into a frenzy over Miami’s white, sandy beaches. They remained locked on Lizzie, as if Jade weren’t even there.
Good. That was good. Fantasy guys like him, with their broad shoulders and muscular frames were dangerous to a girl’s . . . ambitions.
“I’m so sorry, I haven’t even had the chance to introduce myself!” Without warning, Lizzie wrapped her arms around Jade in what should have been one of those introductory, nice-to-meet-you hugs, but turned into the Clashing of the Cleavages.
“Sorry,” Jade said weakly, feeling heat climb her throat.
Lizzie waved a dismissive wave in the air. “You don’t think I’ve never had a boob-hug before? Girl, this just means we’re automatic friends now.” She gave a wide, disarming grin. “I’m Lizzie. This knucklehead here is my brother.”
Lizzie’s brother.
You are not relieved, you are not relieved, you are not relieved.
Jade plastered a smile on her face and stuck out her free hand. “Jade Harper.”
Stone gray eyes flicked over her, their pewter depths dancing in amusement. Probably over the boob smashing—what guy didn’t like a little girl-on-girl action? It was too bad for him that despite Lucia’s proclamation just two days beforehand, Jade was still firmly entrenched in the “I like dicks not chicks” camp.
Realization slowly dawned that her hand had yet to be shaken, and she let her arm drop back to her side with an uncomfortable laugh. “Nice to meet you, too.”
To her right, Lizzie groaned like this was a common problem with her brother. “His name is—”
“Nathan.”
“—Danvers.”
Jade glanced between the two siblings. “Which one is it?”
“Danvers.”
“Nathan.”
Lizzie made a choking noise like she wouldn’t mind strangling her brother. The accompanying hand motions went with it, and Jade felt a sudden stab of longing for her two sisters—specifically Sammie, who’d been Jade’s rock since they were kids. The six-year age difference between Rita and Jade had somehow always proven too large to overcome, even as adults.
With a bubbliness that Jade was already beginning to expect from her, Lizzie plucked the wine bottle from Jade’s grasp and looped their arms together. “His first name is Nathan, but no one calls him that. Even Mom calls him ‘Danvers’ or just ‘Danny,’ if she wants to mix it up.”
Jade glanced over her shoulder to the man following them with even, long-gaited strides. “A nickname?”
His gaze turned cool, and Jade’s interest piqued.
“My surname,” he said in a low voice. A raspy voice. Was he a smoker? Jade’s father had been
a two-pack-a-day kind of guy for years before kicking the bad habit. This man’s voice shared the same gruff quality.
For a moment he only looked at her, as though debating whether or not to reveal more. He must have decided she’d passed whatever test he’d put her through because he added, “From my mom’s first marriage.”
Ah.
“What do you prefer I call you?” she asked. “First name, last name—do you have a preference?”
Please don’t say you go by both, together. Life would prove only too cruel if she’d managed to break up with a John Thomas, only to be attracted to a Nathan Danvers.
Not, of course, that she was interested in him. She was here in New Orleans for a reason, and that reason did not include the mountain of a man standing next to her with slate-hued eyes and biceps the size of her head.
“Just Danvers,” he said.
A dangerous thought hit her: what type of women would it take for him to go by his first name? On the heel of that thought was another: in the course of ten minutes, had he written her off as not his type?
Don’t go down that road, Harper. He’s not for you.
Her gaze latched onto his broad shoulders encased in a soft-looking T-shirt.
Easier said than done.
Chapter Four
Jade Harper looked nothing like a bulldog. Sounded nothing like a Chihuahua.
Nathan reached into his back pocket for a pack of gum, slid a single strip from the pack, and popped it into his mouth. He’d given up cigarettes six months after his final tour of duty, and gum had become the replacement for when he was nervous, uncomfortable, bored, excited.
It was safe to say that he’d been a heavy-handed chain smoker during his military days.
And Jade Harper? Just the sight of her standing on his parents’ front stoop had been like a punch to his left nut. He slid his gaze over to her as she pulled her long black hair into a ponytail. Her features tightened as though she’d squeezed too hard on the elastic band—but he couldn’t be upset for it, because with her hair out of her face, Nathan was again struck dumb by the realization that she was stunning.