“What kind of rule is that? Most groupies can’t wait to jump on a famous dick.”
Frisco chokes out a laugh. “Rip is about as far from a groupie as I can imagine. I’ve been trying for a few months and gettin’ nowhere. Maybe if I’d met her before the label signed me, I would’ve had a chance. I don’t know. At this point, I’m pretty sure I’ve been friend-zoned.”
“Ouch.” I give him a mock wince.
“You win some, you lose some.”
“Or your girl marries some stranger in Vegas, and you find out from a skank in a bar.” Even though I’m trying to make a joke, it comes out harsher than I intended.
Frisco gives me a rueful look. “You win on that one.”
“For all the good it does me.”
Frisco waits for me to make my way to the door and pull it open before throwing the Jeep in reverse and gunning the engine to pull out like an asshole. The sound carries inside, and a dark head pops up from behind the bar.
“We’re closed,” the husky-but-feminine voice calls before she turns to face me with a box clutched to her chest.
In the dim light, she’s just as built as I remember from last night—not that it makes a damn bit of difference to me right now.
“Not here to drink. I’ll take my keys and be on my way.”
When she frowns, I step into the light. Recognition flashes over her face as I leave the shadowed entry.
She cocks a hip. “Too bad. I was hoping you’d forget and leave that gorgeous piece of muscle here long enough for me to consider it abandoned.”
“Not a chance.”
She sits the box on the bar before coming toward me. “Pity.”
“You got those keys?”
“I put ’em in the safe just in case Brandy got any ideas about coming back and trying to take it. Let me go grab them.”
Brandy ... the skank who shook me down for a grand.
Ripley turns toward a door behind the bar as I ask, “She gonna cause problems?”
She pauses, cutting her gaze to me with a thoughtful expression on her face. “Brandy doesn’t know how to do anythingbutcause problems. I don’t know what she’ll do, if you want the truth. I can’t control her any more than I can control the weather.”
My mood darkens like a thunderstorm rolling in, which is the visual I get from her answer.
“You better hope she doesn’t, because I promise you won’t like the consequences.”
Her posture stiffens, her fingers flexing on the door handle to what I assume is the office with the safe she mentioned.
“Are you threatening me?” Her question comes out more as a challenge.
“I’m telling you the truth. She needs to forget last night ever happened, and we’ll be all set.”
Ripley’s gray eyes match the thunderstorm I pictured as they narrow on me. “If you want to make sure Brandy forgets, you’re gonna have to take that up with her. I don’t have a damn thing to do with it. And what’s more, you don’t get to walk into my bar and start throwing down threats like you own the place.” She releases her grip and crosses her arms over her chest. “If that was your plan from the beginning, you should’ve waited until you had your keys first, because I think I’ve just gone and forgotten the combination to the safe all of a sudden.”
Oh no, she fucking wouldn’t.
I open my mouth to deliver another warning, but she talks faster.
“Guess you’re gonna have to call a locksmith or a wrecker to help you out. And God forbid if they realize who you are and call the press. You’ll be up to your ass in cameras and reporters before you can say, ‘I’m sorry for being a dick, Ripley.’”
My temper, already strained to its limit in the last twelve hours, is close to jumping its chain.