Davis hopped off the stool. “Just don’t stir up any trouble for the festival. This town has endured enough this summer. We deserve to end it on a high note.”
Kylie muttered something under her breath as Davis sauntered away, stopping to shake hands with a couple by the window.
Matt planted his hands on his knees and swiveled around to face her. “What are you doing in Coral Cove, Kylie?”
She blew a wisp of hair from her face. “I guess you can’t keep secrets in small towns, or at least not many. I’m here to investigate the disappearance of Bree Harris. She fell off the face of the earth at the time of the music festival three years ago.”
Matt squeezed his eyes shut and pinched the bridge of his nose. This wasn’t happening.
She touched his forearm and he nearly jumped out of his skin. It was the first time she’d voluntarily touched him all night…and it felt good. At least it would’ve if she were here for a different reason.
“What’s wrong with you? Ever since that joke of a mayor stopped by, you’ve looked like a volcano ready to blow its top.”
He skimmed his fingers through his hair. “You’re in Coral Cove to do a job, and that job is finding Bree Harris. Did her parents hire you?”
She tilted her head and her long hair slid over one shoulder. “Well, sort of. Her mother hired me. Why? What’s wrong?”
Matt smacked the bar and shoved to his feet. “What’s wrong? Bree Harris’s father hired me to do the same job.”
Chapter Three
Kylie dropped back onto the leather stool from which she’d half risen. Matt Conner was here for Bree Harris? She pressed the heel of her hand against her forehead.
Matt Conner. What had she heard about the bad boy of Coral Cove High through the grapevine over the years? She’d been so preoccupied by her mission and so disoriented from her fall and so distracted by the way Matt’s jeans hugged his…
She shook her head. She’d never bothered to ask him what he did for a living.
Cop. That’s what she’d heard. LAPD. The ludicrousness of Matt becoming a cop had even filtered into her universe.
She grabbed her drained wineglass and dumped the final few drops of wine down her throat. What was a cop doing out of his jurisdiction working a three-year-old missing persons case?
He’d been watching her through dark slits of eyes, his sensuous lips a stern line. At what point during this wild night had she noticed his lips?
“I-in what capacity are you here?” She wasn’t going to give him the satisfaction of revealing how much she knew about his life since he’d left high school. She’d already done that and hadn’t liked the smug look on his face.
He crossed his arms over his massive chest, and Kylie swallowed. Hadn’t he been tall and skinny as a teenager? Now he was tall and…built.
“I’m a private investigator. Mr. Harris hired me to look into Bree’s disappearance.” He shifted back, almost straddling the stool. “He didn’t tell me I’d have a partner.”
A P.I., not a cop. The grapevine was wrong.
She grabbed her purse from the bar and hitched it over her shoulder. “I don’t work with partners.”
“You call what you do work?”
“Do you even know what I do?”
He snorted. “I have a pretty good idea. You sit in front of a Ouija board and say in a spooky voice—Where’s Bree?”
The blood pumped hot and fast through her veins and it had nothing to do with the way Matt’s T-shirt molded to his perfect pecs. “You’re a bigger idiot now than when you were riding fast bikes and playing loud music in high school.”
Okay, she had to stop thinking about the love-hate obsession she’d had with Matt when she was a stupid teenager.
She drew in a deep breath and tucked her hair behind one ear. “I’ve worked with police departments all over the country, even the FBI, to help with cases. And my success rate is phenomenal. How many cases have you solved lately? Or have you been too busy following cheating spouses around?”
His eye twitched, and his hands curled into fists against big biceps. If she were a man, she’d be very afraid right now.
“I’ve solved a few cases.”
“Yeah, whatever.” A thought slammed against her brain and she drew back her shoulders. “You were following me, weren’t you? Mayor Whatsisname knew why I was here, so it’s no leap that you knew, too. You followed me to Columbella House because you thought I was tracking a lead on the Harris case and you wanted to horn in on it.”
“That’s ridiculous.” He slammed a fist on the bar and the bartender dropped a glass in the sink.
“Really?” Her heart skittered in her chest. “Because it sure felt like someone pushed me through that railing…and you’re big enough to do it.”
He threw his head back and laughed. This time the bartender and the couple by the window openly stared at them.
“You’re nuts. First of all, why would I be pushing you if I was trying to steal your info? Secondly, wouldn’t you have noticed someone behind you on the landing? I mean, I’m no ballerina. I think you would’ve heard me coming.”
“I—I…” She bit her lip. Oh, to hell with it, he had her pegged as a loon anyway. “I was in a trance.”
That wiped the sarcastic smile right off his ruggedly handsome face.
“You mean like—” he closed his eyes and held his arms out to his sides and hummed “—om.”
She poked him in the chest, and his eyes flew open. “A trance, not meditation.”
“So what happens in a trance and how do you get there?” He parked his very fine rear end on the bar stool and hunched forward.
She studied him through narrowed eyes. The man could change moods faster than a rat slipping beneath a door. “Are you serious? You really want to know?”
The bartender edged toward them, a towel bunched in his hands. “Are you folks going to order another round?”
“I’ll have a club soda, lots of lime.” Matt cocked an eyebrow at her. “Do you want another?”
She just might need another glass of wine to unwind from the roller coaster named Big Matt. “Yes.”
“Does that prove it?” Matt pointed at the bartender spritzing club soda into a glass.
“What?”
“That I’m serious. I really want to know how you do what you do.”
“Even though you don’t believe in it.”
“You believe in it.”
She rubbed the back of her neck and glanced at her watch. “We’re going to close this place down.”
“It’ll be the first time I’ve closed down a bar, but I’m always up for new experiences.” He flicked the straw out of his glass and downed half the fizzy, clear liquid.
Matt’s dad had been the town drunk, and Matt obviously didn’t want to follow the same path. That gave them even more in common since she had no intention of following Mom’s path either.
She peeled her gaze away from Matt’s strong hand wrapped around his sweating glass. The man oozed masculinity