“Thank you, Liam.”
“Your nose isn’t a-shinin’ or anything, Moira Kathleen,” Seamus added.
“Thanks, guys, thanks so much,” she said softly, and her words were genuine. The men were all sincerity, her true supporters. “Dad, I think I’ll take Michael up to meet Mum—”
“Aye, daughter, don’t be a’ leaving me now! The place is getting busy. Come back here and give your old man a hand.”
“Colleen—”
“Now, do you see your sister? She’s escaped somehow.”
“I’ll take Michael up to meet your mother and Granny Jon,” Josh volunteered cheerfully.
She tried to skewer him with her eyes.
Michael looked at her with a rueful smile and a shrug, his countenance assuring her that he totally understood her situation. “I’ll be fine with Josh.”
“Be prepared for strong tea,” she warned him, walking around the bar to join her father.
He caught her hands and whispered softly, “Save those kisses for later. Maybe at the hotel—after pub hours? Totally discreetly, of course,” he teased, his eyes rolling. “I don’t want your father hating me before he gets to know me.”
“Just make sure he knows your family is Irish. He’ll love you,” she whispered.
“Come on, Michael,” Josh said. “I’ll show you the back way.”
As Josh brushed by Moira, she caught his arm and hissed at him. “Just you wait! See if I ever baby-sit again.”
“Turning coward on me now, are you, Moira Kathleen?” he teased. “Sorry, kid, face this den of lions yourself. Or is it only one lion that frightens you?”
With that, he was gone, leading Michael behind the office and storeroom to show him the stairs.
“Bastard,” she muttered.
“You don’t mean me, do you, Moira Kathleen?”
She spun around. She should have known that Dan O’Hara had joined her behind the bar. He wore his distinctive brand of aftershave. She should have felt him there, next to her, helping himself to a beer from the tap.
“Does it fit?” she inquired sweetly.
He didn’t respond, just drank deeply and looked her up and down. “Maybe it does,” he said at last, with a casual shrug. “You’re looking quite the sophisticated lady. Lovely, as usual.”
“Thank you so much.”
“Work is good?”
“Wonderful. And you? Stirring up strife and rebellion, as usual?”
“Ah, now, my weapon, if I have one, is the pen, you know. Or the computer, these days.”
“Whatever.”
“You never understood me, love.”
“I think I understood enough.”
He leaned against the bar next to her. Too close. “You need to spend time with me, Moira.”
“Can’t, this trip. Sorry, I’m in love.”
“Ah, yes, with perfect Michael.”
“He’s quite wonderful, really.”
“As good as me?”
She was surprised to find herself moving closer to him, eyes slightly narrowed. “Better. So damned good, in fact, that it was only my father’s presence that kept me from full-fledged sex on the bar.”
To her annoyance, he started to laugh.
“I’m so glad I always amuse you.”
He shook his head, sobering. “Sorry. It’s just that…well, if he were that good, you wouldn’t have felt the need to tell me.”
She straightened, staring at him with all the cool dignity with which she could cloak herself. “No, no, it’s different this time. Sure there were those years when I just hopped from man to man, affair to affair, my heart bleeding for you, but things change. Now I’m in love.”
“Sure you are. And like hell you hopped from man to man. You want a dossier on a man before you go to dinner with him.”
She turned, clearing away empty glasses. “Things change, your ego doesn’t. Did you really think you were the only man who ever made me happy and fulfilled?”
She was surprised at the seriousness with which he spoke. “I didn’t think I could ever make you happy, and that’s why I never stayed,” he said. His tone changed instantly, so that she thought she might have imagined the strange passion in his first comment. “Now, as to the fulfilled part…come see me. I understand the love of your life travels all the time, as well. On your business, of course, but still…I’ll be just down here, right in ye olde guest quarters, for the next few days. Come see me when you admit to yourself that it’s exactly what you want to do.”
He tipped an imaginary hat to her and started around the bar.
“That will be a freezing day in hell, Danny boy,” she called softly after him.
She couldn’t see his face as he left her, but she thought she saw his shoulders shaking slightly.
He was laughing.
He stopped, suddenly and came back to her, leaning against the bar. “A freezing day in hell before you admit it—or before you do it?” he asked.
She didn’t respond fast enough.
“I feel a chill coming on,” he said softly, and once again turned to thread his way through the crowd and head for the stage.
This time, he didn’t turn back.
She was tempted to throw a glass.
Is it only one lion that frightens you?
Josh’s words came back to haunt her. She wasn’t frightened, she was furious. And she was furious because…
Because she was afraid of lions. Or at least…
One lion.
Yet, turning to look at that lion, she realized he wasn’t looking at her. Danny was playing the drums again, apparently enjoying his time with the band. His interest seemed to be totally on the task at hand.
Yet when he looked up, she got the sense that he was watching the room. Not casually. It was as if he was looking for something, or someone, in particular.
Moira looked around. The room had gotten busy. Couples, nine-to-fivers easing down after work, the old crowd at the bar, a few loners at tables. One man alone, in a casual suit, sitting at a table in the far corner. Business traveler, probably.
Everyone seemed as ordinary as ever.
So just who was Danny looking for?
Josh’s word flitted through her mind again.
Lions.
That was it. Danny was watching the room like a lion. Lying in the sun. Tail twitching. Calculating. Watching…
As if he could spring into action at any moment. She couldn’t help but wonder, just what prey was Danny watching?
Strangely, she felt a sense of fear. As if something near and dear to her was somehow being threatened.
She turned to a man at the bar who had asked her for something, determined then to shake her feelings. It was Danny doing this to her, damn him.
Just