“Nope,” he answered. “Anything in particular I should see while I’m here?”

“The Liberty Ballet at the Emperor’s Theater.”

He smiled at her joke. “Wouldn’t miss that.”

“What interests you?” she asked. For that matter, what was he doing here? How long was he staying? And what were his expectations?

When he’d announced he was coming, he’d made some vague statements about seeing the City, maybe doing business even. He hadn’t so much as hinted that he had any intention of continuing their physical relationship. But she couldn’t help but wonder. Okay, she couldn’t help but hope. No. She couldn’t hope. She had to leave it alone.

“I wouldn’t mind meeting some of your ballet colleagues,” he mentioned evenly.

“Really?” That surprised her.

The car came to a smooth halt in front of her apartment building.

Reed gave a shrug. “If you don’t think I’d embarrass you.”

She took in his blue jeans, plaid shirt and the folding tool strapped to his belt in a worn leather case. “You might want to rethink the boots.”

“I promise I’ll clean up.” He leaned slightly forward. “Can you wait a few minutes?” he asked the driver.

The man nodded as he popped the trunk.

Reed turned back to Katrina. “I’ll walk you up.”

So he wasn’t staying. Okay. It would have been odd if he had. She only had the one bedroom. Not that she wasn’t willing to share. Still, he hadn’t asked about being her house guest.

“I’ll be at the Royal Globe Towers,” he told her with a wry half smile, making her wonder if he could read her mind.

Then he hopped out of the car, meeting her on the sidewalk with her suitcase in his hand.

The doorman nodded to her in recognition, and they moved smoothly onto the elevator, riding up ten floors to her compact apartment.

“This is nice,” said Reed, taking in the French Provincial chairs and love seat, the proliferation of plants and the small dining-room table tucked against the pass-through to her tiny kitchen.

“Not much of a view,” she apologized. If you craned your neck, you could just barely see past the stone building next door to the street below.

“You made it nice inside.” He gestured with the suitcase toward a closed door.

“Yes, please.” She quickly opened the bedroom door and flipped on the bedside lamp.

Reed set her suitcase down on the bed.

“You’re rehearsing all day tomorrow?” he asked, standing close.

She nodded, holding her breath. Would he touch her? Hug her? Kiss her?

“Dinner after?” he asked.

“Sure. Yes.” She quickly nodded.

“I’ll call you? Seven?”

She gave another nod, and her tongue flicked involuntarily across her lower lip.

He obviously caught the movement. His gaze held for a long second on her lips.

She felt them soften, tingle, part ever so slightly.

Reed cleared his throat. “I’d better get back to the car.”

Disappointment washed through her.

He took a step back. “Have a good rehearsal.”

“Thank you.”

He moved closer to the door. “Hope the ankle holds up.”

“Me, too.”

He was halfway through the door when he called back. “I’ll dress differently tomorrow.”

She couldn’t help but smile. “Okay.”

“You have a favorite place?”

“Anything will do.”

“Okay. Bye.” And he disappeared.

She heard the apartment door shut behind him, and she let out a heavy sigh, dropping down onto the bed.

He didn’t stay. He didn’t kiss her. He didn’t even hug her goodbye.

How was a woman supposed to feel about that?


Caleb’s assistant at Active Equipment had arranged for Reed’s hotel room at the Royal Globe Towers. Entering the opulent suite last night, Reed had decided his brother was getting spoiled from being so rich. What man needed a four-poster, king-size bed, a chaise lounge and two armchairs in his bedroom? The living room had two sofas, a stone fireplace and a dining table for eight, along with two dozen candles and three bouquets of flowers and a marble bathtub in the bathroom that could hold a family of six.

It was ridiculous.

He’d have moved into something more practical, but he wasn’t planning to be in New York very long. And Katrina lived in Manhattan, so he preferred to stay in this part of town.

Still, he didn’t want to spend his entire fifteen million in the clothing shops on Fifth Avenue. So, this morning, he’d taken the friendly concierge woman’s advice and hopped on the subway to Brooklyn. There he found a nice shopping district that seemed to cater to ordinary people.

After wandering the streets for a couple of hours, he was enticed into a small bakery by the aromas of vanilla and cinnamon. The place had only a few small tables with ice-cream-parlor-style chairs, but a steady stream of customers came in and out for takeout. He bought himself a sugar-sprinkled, cream-filled pastry and a cup of coffee from the stern-looking, rotund, middle-aged woman at the counter and then eased himself gently into one of the small chairs.

The doors and windows were open, letting the late-morning air waft through. The staff were obviously busy in the back, smatterings of English and Italian could be heard, bakers appearing occasionally as the middle-aged woman and a younger assistant served customers.

Reed could hear a truck engine cranking through the open door to the alleyway behind the store. There was a sudden clang of metal, followed by a male voice shouting in Italian. The bakery went silent for a brief moment, then the customers laughed a little. Reed didn’t understand the language, but it didn’t take much to get the gist.

The older woman marched away from the counter, through the kitchen hallway, sticking her head out the open door and shouting at the man.

Reed thought he could figure that one out, too.

The man shouted back, and she gestured with her hand, scowling as she returned to the counter. The last of the current customers took their paper bags and moved out onto the sidewalk, leaving the bakery empty.

“Engine trouble?” Reed asked the woman, wiping his hands on a paper napkin as he came to his feet.

At first, he thought he was going to get an earful himself.

“The delivery truck is ancient,” she offered rather grudgingly.

Reed gestured to his empty plate, giving her a friendly smile. “That was fantastic.” It was easily the best pastry he’d ever tasted. Same went for the coffee-it’d been strong but flavorful.

She nodded an acknowledgment of his compliment, but still didn’t smile in return. The younger woman, however, gave him a broad, slightly flirtatious grin.

Then another bang reverberated through the alley, and both women jumped. It was followed by a deafening clatter and clang, and another string of colorful swearwords.

Reed moved swiftly and reflexively around the glass display case, down the short hallway, past the heat and bustle of the kitchen, past stacks of boxes, buckets and bins, and out the back door.

The alley was narrow and dusty. Stained, soot-covered brick walls rose up on either side. The awful noise was coming from the engine of a five-fifty panel truck, with Gianni Bakery written on the side in chipping blue paint, that blocked the alley.

A balding man sat in the driver’s seat with the door propped open.

“Shut it down!” Reed called, making a slashing motion across his throat.

The man shot him a glare.

“Shut it down,” Reed repeated, striding forward. “You’ve dropped a valve.”

“Always takes her a few minutes to warm up,” the man responded with confidence.

Reed reached in and turned the key to Off.

“What the-”

“It’s dropped a valve,” Reed repeated. “If you keep it running, you’ll blow a connecting rod.”

“You a mechanic?” the man asked.

“Rancher,” said Reed, stepping back. “But I’ve worked on plenty of diesels in my time. Some older than this.”

“I’ve been limping her along for a few months,” said the man.

“Does it idle a lot?” asked Reed, knowing that was the most likely explanation.

“In the winter,” the man said, reaching for the key.

“Don’t do that,” Reed warned. “You need to call a tow truck.”

“I don’t have time to call a tow truck.”

“If you try to start it you’ll only make it worse.”

The man clamped his jaw, rocking back in the worn, vinyl driver’s seat. “We’ve got deliveries to make.”

“Do you have a backup? Another truck maybe?”

This one wasn’t going anywhere anytime soon, and probably never. Even on the ranch, where they jerry-rigged pretty much anything back together, they knew when it was time to put something out to pasture. There wasn’t much point in replacing the engine in a twenty-five-year-old truck.

The man shook his head. “I’ve been looking for another truck for six months. The used ones are as worn out as this, and the new ones cost a fortune.”

“Tough break,” Reed commiserated.

“Irony is, these days, I need two trucks.”

“Business that good?”

The man rubbed his hands along the steering wheel. “Walk-in business is slowing.”

“Doesn’t seem very slow today,” Reed observed.

“It’s slowing,” the man reiterated. “We need to strengthen distribution to other retail outlets. We also need to diversify.” Then he stuck out his hand. “Nico Gianni.”

Reed shook. “Reed Terrell.”

“You from Brooklyn?”

“Colorado.”

“On vacation?”

“More business than pleasure.” Reed’s interest had been piqued by Nico’s words, not to mention by his own experience sampling the bakery’s wares. “You’re saying you’ve got enough orders to run two trucks?”

“If I had two trucks, I’d bring my nephew in on nights, and run the kitchen twenty-four hours. The walk-in traffic may be going down, but catering, now there’s some expansion potential. Expensive parties, weddings, dances. The rich don’t stop getting richer.”