“I guess. Maybe it would knock some sense into him.”
He shook his head. “That’s been tried. Mallory even let him stew in a cell for two days. Finally bailed him out, and he went back and did it again that same weekend. Our black sheep there is out of control.”
“I’ll see what I can do to rein him in,” she promised.
She got out of the truck, ran a hand through her short black hair and grimaced. Her brown eyes were somber as she hesitated on the porch for just a minute, and then, finally, opened the door.
The mess was bad. Tables knocked over. Chairs everywhere. One was upside down behind the bar in a pile of glass, and the place smelled like whiskey. This was going to be an expensive mess, too.
“Cane?” she called.
A thin man in a Hawaiian shirt peered over the bar. “Bodie? Thank God!”
“Where is he?” she asked.
He pointed to the bathroom.
She went toward it. She was almost there when it slammed open and Cane walked out. His long-sleeved beige Western shirt with the fancy embroidery was stained with blood. Probably his own, she thought, noting the caked blood around his nose, which was bruised, and his square jaw. His sensual mouth had a cut just at the corner, where blood was also visible. His thick, short, slightly wavy black hair was mussed. His black eyes were bloodshot. Even in that condition, he was so attractive that he made her heart pound. He was tall and broad-shouldered, with long powerful legs encased in tight jeans; his big feet in boots that still had the mirror polish on them despite his exploits. He was thirty-four to her twenty-two, but right now, he seemed much younger.
He glared at her. “Why do they always bring you?” he demanded.
She shrugged. “My unusual ability to subdue charging tigers?” she suggested.
He blinked. Then he chuckled.
She went forward and took one of his big hands in hers. The knuckles were bruised and swollen and smeared with blood. She couldn’t tell if it was his or somebody else’s. “Mallory’s going to be mad.”
“Mallory isn’t home,” he said in a loud whisper. He even grinned. “He and Morie went to Louisiana to see a bull. They won’t be back until tomorrow.”
“Tank won’t be happy, either,” she added, using the nickname that family used for Dalton, the youngest brother.
He shrugged. “Tank will be knee-deep in those old Tom Mix silent cowboy movies he likes. It’s Saturday night. He makes popcorn, takes the phone off the hook, locks himself in and saturates himself with black-and-white cinema.”
“That’s what you should be doing, instead of wrecking bars!” she muttered.
He sighed. “A man’s got to have some recreation, kid,” he said defensively.
“Not this sort,” she said firmly. “Come on. Poor Sid will have to clean up this mess.”
Sid came around the bar. He was huge, and dangerous-looking, but he kept a few steps away from Cane. “Why can’t you do this at home, Cane?” he groaned, looking around.
“Because we’ve got delicate objets d’art in glass cabinets,” Cane replied reasonably. “Mallory would kill me.”
Sid glared at him. “When Mr. Holsten sees the bill for replacing all this—” he waved his hand “—you may be getting a visit…”
Cane pulled out his wallet and pressed a wad of hundreds into the bartender’s hand. “If that’s not enough, you let me know.”
Sid grimaced. “It will be enough, but it’s the principle of the thing! Why can’t you go up to Jackson Hole and wreck bars?”
Cane blinked. “It would take too long to get Bodie up there. I’d be arrested.”
“You should be!”
Cane’s black eyes narrowed and he took a step forward.
Sid backed up.
“Oh, come on,” Bodie grumbled. She tugged on Cane’s hand. “I’m going to fail biology because of you. I was studying for exams!”
“Biology? You’re majoring in anthropology,” he argued.
“Yes, but I still have to pass the minimum required courses of study, and that’s one of them! I couldn’t put it off any longer so I had to take it this semester!”
“Oh.”
“See you, Sid. Hope not soon,” she added with a laugh.
He managed a smile. “Thanks, Bodie. Especially for…” He gestured toward Cane. “You know.”
“Oh, yes, I do know.” She nodded.
She pulled Cane out the door and onto the porch. “Where’s your coat?” she asked.
He blinked as the cold air hit him. “In the truck, I think. I don’t need it. ’S’not cold,” he said, his voice beginning to slur.
“It’s below freezing out here!”
He gave her a woozy look and grinned. “I’m hot-blooded.”
She averted her eyes. “Come on. Darby’s waiting. I’ll drive your truck out to the ranch. Where’s the key?”
“Right front pocket.”
She glared at him. “Going to get it for me?”
“No.”
Her bow lips made a thin line. “Cane!”
“Go fish,” he teased.
She glanced around him at Darby.
“No,” he said, putting his hand over his pocket. “Not giving it to him.”
“Cane!”
“Not!” he repeated.