Hearts in Vegas (Harlequin Superromance) Read Online Free Page A

Hearts in Vegas (Harlequin Superromance)
Book: Hearts in Vegas (Harlequin Superromance) Read Online Free
Author: Colleen Collins - Hearts in Vegas (Harlequin Superromance)
Tags: AcM
Pages:
Go to
about my do-nothing, go-nowhere, get-nothing life?”
    “It’s all right, dawlin’,” Val said, drawing out the word dawlin’ like a slow pour of molasses. “It must be awful bein’ a former playboy. Like bein’ an ol’ James Bond sent out to pasture.”
    As if he needed that mental picture. An old Bond bull with a bunch of over-the-hill Miss Moneypennies.
    “Look,” he said, “I know you two mean well, but let’s put the brakes on the matchmaking, ’kay? That includes any blind dates, Craigslist ads, surprise walk-ins, you get the picture.”
    Val frowned. “Surprise walk-ins?”
    “Some hot blonde walks into the detective agency, needs to talk to a P.I. He falls for her story and her, and that’s when his real troubles start. It’s in every clichéd private-eye film.”
    “F’true,” Val said, her eyes lighting up, “I recently saw Chinatown, and just like you said, the trouble started when a blonde walks into private eye Jake Gittes’s office.”
    “I dunno,” Drake said. “You’ve been a monk so long, maybe you need a little blonde trouble.”
    “Monk.” Braxton snorted. “Now you’re stepping over the line, bro.”
    “Yeah?” Drake countered. “Well, since I’m already there, gotta ask...still watching Donald Duck cartoons?”
    “I don’t need this.” Brax picked up his phone and stood. “I’m heading home to tell Grams that as much as I appreciate her—and your—concern to find me a date, I’d prefer not being auctioned off to the highest bidder.”
    He started walking to the door.
    “Good luck saying no to Grams, bro.”
    “I never claimed to be a wise man,” he said over his shoulder. “Just a savvy, determined monk.”

CHAPTER TWO
    C LOSE TO THREE , Frances cruised her rented Mercedes sports car past the Passage-of-Love drive-through wedding chapel, its tunnel bright with gaudy lights and gold-painted cherubs. In the lot next to it was a run-down duplex, where a scrawny girl in cutoff shorts and a T-shirt sat hunched on the porch steps, solemnly watching a couple ride a motorcycle into the chapel. To Frances, those two buildings summed up downtown Las Vegas—glitz, business and tough times.
    At the end of the block, she pulled into Fortier’s lot and parked. After patting the inside pocket of her jacket to confirm the presence of the replica brooch, she exited the car.
    The winds were picking up, but brooding clouds still hovered, as though unsure whether to take action or not. February forecasts were like crapshoots in Sin City—if the weather report called for fair skies, it might snow.
    Heading toward the silver-tinted jewelry-store windows, she spied Enzo Fortier’s Bentley, one of the inheritances from his late father, Alain Fortier. Enzo’s siblings were angry their father had given the bulk of his estate, including the Bentley and jewelry store, to his youngest son, Enzo. The ongoing family drama, with its litigation, accusations of extortion, fraud and theft, had left Enzo distracted and vulnerable to criminals.
    That was what she and Charlie believed, anyway. The person who stole the Lady Melbourne brooch had taken advantage of Enzo’s distraction to fence the pin. Not that Enzo was innocent—he had to know he was receiving stolen goods, but was probably too frightened to say no.
    Whatever the situation, Charlie had tapped her for this case because she knew about Georgian jewelry. Being a woman didn’t hurt, either, he’d said, because Enzo had a roving eye.
    So one reason Charlie had picked her for this case was because she was pretty enough to attract Enzo’s attention.
    Not much of a compliment, really, as it was her artifice, not her, that would attract him. Not to say she wasn’t proud of her skill applying silicone gel and concealer. Sometimes she even wondered if she could market this talent, help other people struggling with facial scars.
    And then sometimes, usually late at night when she’d run out of distractions, she wondered if any man
Go to

Readers choose