there by the next morning, with enough money to get into a hotel and get her life back.
âToo rich for me,â Mouser said, throwing down his cards. âIâll let you two duke it out. Come on, Henry. Itâs getting late, and Iâve got work tomorrow.â
Dillon hadnât moved. âSince when do you work for a living, Mouser?â he drawled.
âOh, I make an effort every now and then. Henryâs going to help me, arenât you, Henry?â
Henry simply nodded, pushing back from the table.
âArenât you going to cash in your chips?â Jamie asked.
âTell you what. I wanna see Killer get his comeuppance.â He leaned over and pushed his moderate pile of chips onto hers, then shoved Henryâs, as well, without asking him. âKick his butt, Jamie. I figure any time he gets a beating itâs long overdue.â
The door closed behind them, leaving Jamie in the kitchen with the last person she would have chosen to be alone with.
She took a deep breath and a drink of her third beer. It was more than she usually drank, but since there seemed to be no chance in hell that sheâd be driving, and Dillon was drinking a hell of a lot more than she was, she figured she could risk it. After all, she was trapped here no matter whatâit didnâtmake much difference if they were both awake and reasonably alert after midnight.
And she had nothing to worry about. She kept holding on to this absurd belief that some part of him wanted her, when common sense and experience had told her just the opposite. It didnât matter that he made suggestive comments to gauge her reactionâthat was just Dillon. He liked to stir up troubled waters, and Jamieâs were troubled, indeed.
She looked up at him. âIâm tired,â she said. âWhy donât we call it quits? Split the pot and Iâll go on up to bed.â
âI donât think so.â He wasnât even slurring after all that whiskey.
âLook, what are we playing for? A dollar a point, right? I have enough to get out of your hair tomorrowâyou should be grateful I have the chance to leave you alone.â
âI never do what I should, or feel what I should. The hand is dealtâweâll play it.â
She looked down at her cards. Good enough. They were back to playing five-card stud, and she had a straight, queen high. Heâd have a hard time beating that, especially since both Mouser and Henry had had decent-enough cards to ante.
âAll right,â she said coolly. âWeâll play it.â
âDouble or nothing?â
She took another gulp of beer. She wasnât a natural gamblerâwith so much riding on the outcome she should play it safe.
âCoward,â he said softly. âWhat are you afraid of, little girl?â
It came back to her, a flood of memories, his voice in her ear, his hands on her body in the front seat of that car, and she felt hot color wash over her. She pushed her entire pile of chips into the middle of the table without a word, then looked up at him with a stony expression.
He stubbed out his cigarette, a faint smile drifting over his mouth. That mouth. It was no wonder she was feeling unsettled, crazy, wanting to hide. It was bad enough that she was trapped and helpless, a thousand miles from home.
Trapped with Dillon Gaynor was her worst nightmare. âYou show me yours and Iâll show you mine,â he said softly.
She lay the cards out on the table, slowly, deliberately, savoring his inevitable discomfort and frustration.
He didnât look the slightest bit frustrated as he glanced down at her cards. âVery nice,â he said in a lazy drawl. âBut not nice enough.â He spread four kings on the table.
She couldnât move, couldnât speak. There was noway he could have all four kingsâthe likelihood was just too damned improbable. Not when so much was riding on it. Not the
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