Pursued by the Rogue (The Fairy Tales of New York Book 1) Read Online Free Page A

Pursued by the Rogue (The Fairy Tales of New York Book 1)
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and music carefully chosen to suit the attention span of a small boy.
    But Gil was back with Emmy now – a small violin in tow, and Finn smirked afresh at the memory of the dismayed resignation on Emmy’s face when Gil had shown her his new favorite instrument.
    “It’s time,” Finn had told her simply. “Josef would have wanted it. Gil knows what to do between now and when he sees me next.”
    “You’re not the one who has to listen to him practice,” Emmy had murmured on her way out the door.
    So true.
    “Thank you,” she’d whispered and bussed his cheek for good measure. “I know Joey would have wanted music for his children. My son’s a lucky boy.”
    Life was good.
    That wasn’t to say it couldn’t be better.
    Finn slid behind the bar and began stacking glasses into the dishwasher. It was always easier to get Faith’s attention when he was doing something useful. “So how went the reunion the other night?”
    “Not bad. Kind of a testing of the waters and the waters were … warm.” Faith’s eyes took on an unholy gleam. “Dawn thought Gil was your son.”
    Finn coughed. “What?”
    “I hated to disabuse her.”
    “But you did. You disabused her, right?”
    “What does it matter?”
    It mattered. “So are any of your school friends married now? Partners, significant others, children of their own?”
    “Mercy’s not. Neither’s Zel. No partners, no kids.”
    Finn waited, but nothing more was forthcoming as Faith headed down the other end of the bar to tend one of their regulars. She didn’t seem inclined to pick up where she left off when she returned.
    Finn heaved out a sighed. “Are you really going to make me do this the hard way?”
    “After your performance the other night? Absolutely. It’s what sisters are for.”
    “She wasn’t wearing a wedding ring.”
    He noticed things like that.
    “Doesn’t mean much these days,” Faith said blithely. “Would you wear one if you were married?”
    “You know I would. C’mon. You know what I’m fishing for.”
    “Brothers,” he heard her mutter beneath her breath. And then she took pity on him and reached up and wrapped her hand around his neck and tugged him close. “Dawn’s single too, no kids, and if you play her the way you play everyone else I will castrate you.”
    “You don’t even know how I play.”
    “Fast, loose and with a great deal of skill. Don’t you have enough other women to dazzle with your charms?”
    “Faith—”
    He pulled away. He didn’t know how to say what he wanted to say. “Have you ever heard a piece of music that you have to learn, no matter how difficult? Because you know you’re going to want to play it for the rest of your life? That’s me when I get anywhere near Dawn. Fast and loose isn’t what I want at all.”
    Not their usual level of disclosure, that was for sure.
    He’d managed to turn his sister mute.
    He rubbed his hand across the back of his neck, where Faith’s hand had just been. “Forget it.”
    “Unlikely,” she murmured, still staring at him. “What do you want to know?”
    “About Dawn? Whatever you can tell me. What she’s doing in New York. Whether she’s seeing anyone. Whether she wants to.”
    “Dawn’s not seeing anyone, she has an apartment in Soho that I suspect she owns and she’s made a lot of money out of medical research and streamlining various genetic tests. Gene mapping. That kind of thing,” Faith offered. “She’s driven when it comes to her research. Same way you are when it comes to your music. Whether she’s looking for a relationship …” His sister looked a little sad. “I don’t know. She’s successful by anyone’s standards but she still doesn’t seem to think much of herself.”
    “Why not?”
    “I don’t know. So whatever you do, don’t make that worse.”
    “You have no faith.”
    The pun was too old for her to do more than roll her eyes. “I know. I have bills to pay instead. Would you like some?”
    Sully’s
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