the place through the eyes of a regular customer.â His brow furrowed as he noticed the temporary library being set up. âWhatâs going on over there?â
Libby noted he didnât look pleased. Briefly, she explained the problem, as well as her solution, adding, âThatâs the way things work in a small town. We all go the extra mile to help each other out.â
Jeff rubbed a hand across his jaw, considering that. âNone of the customers seem to mind.â
But, Libby noted, the next man coming into the dealership seemed wary. Not of what was going on in the corner, but of the man she was standing with.
Holden reached her and nodded at Jeff. âJohnston.â
âMcCabe.â
Libby fought off a second wave of surprise. She squared her slender shoulders. âYou two know each other?â
An inscrutable glint appeared in Holdenâs eyes as he informed her casually, âWe met a little while ago at the Daybreak Café.â
Which wasnât surprising, Libby guessed, since the restaurant owned by Holdenâs sister, Emily, was the place in town to have breakfast.
âI was chatting up the locals, asking around, to see how people felt about the dealership,â Jeff explained.
Libby tensed, not sure how she felt about that. Shouldnât any questions have been directed at her first?
âAnyway, weâre still on for dinner this evening, right?â Jeff asked.
She nodded.
âGreat. Iâve got a lot of questions and things Iâd like to discuss.â He inclined his head and strolled off.
Holden gave Libby a steady look that sent heat spiraling through her. âTell me youâre taking someone with you. Like a lawyer.â
Clearly, Holden didnât trust Jeff Johnston. For reasons that had more to do with his loyalty to her late husbandâand to herâthan to Johnstonâs overarching ambition, she suspected.
Libby folded her arms and moved closer to him. âIâm not paying a lawyer to sit through polite get-to-know-each-other chitchat.â
Holden looked at her soberly. âObviously, Johnston wants it to be more than that. He appears anxious to get you to sign on the dotted line, here and now.â
She stepped back. âThen Mr. Johnston will be disappointed,â she said firmly, uncomfortably aware that sheâd had the same impression of the businessman. âBut if it will make you feel betterâ¦you can tag along,â she offered reluctantly.
Holden grinned as happily as if she had invited him into her bedroom. âSeriously?â
Doing her best to quell her conflicting emotions, Libby nodded. She did not want to depend on Holden, emotionally or otherwise. She had allowed herself to do that once, right after her husbandâs passing, and the result had been disastrous for both of them. To the point that guilt and discomfort from that time were still with both of them.
But she was smart enough to know that the easiest way to keep one man from becoming too aggressive with herwas to put another equally driven and protective man into the mix. So for now, for tonight, she would allow her late husbandâs best friend to appease his conscience by employing his innate gallantry on her behalf, once more.
Having decided that, she sighed.
Glancing up at Holden, she couldnât help but note how good he looked in that green corduroy shirt and jeans. His short dark hair was thick and rumpled, and his face had the shadow of beard that came from going twenty-four hours without a razor. But it was the cobalt-blue of his eyes, the compassionate set of his sensual lips, that really drew her in.
âThanks for inviting me,â he said.
Libby gave him a glance that warned him not to get too carried away. âIt makes more sense to have you at the table with us than to have you hovering somewhere in the background, trying to watch over me from a distance.â Which, she knew, he was likely to do,