wouldnât you know? The Nugget had a main dining room and another room next door, which contained one of the townâs two bars.
A stocky waitress in jeans and a polo shirt greeted Buck by name. He gave her that grin that bowled all the women over. âNadine. How you been?â
âCanât complain.â Nadine led them to a booth. âWhat can I get you to drink?â She handed them each a menu.
Buck ordered a whisky and soda. B.J. asked for water. The waitress hurried off through the door to the bar.
B.J. opened her menu. âWhatâs good?â
âHow would I know? I havenât eaten here in over a decade.â
The menu was big enough that, held upright, itblocked him from her view. Which was fine. After all, every time she looked at him, she only wanted to look some more.
He said, âYou probably canât go wrong with the filet.â
She grunted in answer, staring blankly at the menu, wondering why sheâd bothered to ask for his recommendation. It wasnât as if she would be eating or anything.
Morning sickness. Who ever thought of calling it that? Probably some idiot with a disgustingly positive attitude. For B.J., the problem went on all day and all night. If it kept up, sheâd be the skinniest pregnant lady in Manhattan. She might die of starvation, and her poor unborn baby with her.
And she just knew he was waiting over there across the table for the moment when she had to stop hiding behind the menu and look at him again.
Might as well get it over with. She shut the menu, set it aside and went ahead and met his eyes.
Wouldnât you know? Compelling as ever.
She glanced away. For something to do as she tried not to look at him, she studied the decor.
The place was aggressively rustic, a virtual sea of knotty pine. Knotty pine crawled up the walls and spread across the ceiling. Their booth and the tables grouped in the center of the room were all made of knotty pine. The ladder-back chairs? Yet more knotty pine. Even the wagon-wheel chandeliers overhead were knotty pine, stained dark enough that it was hard to make out the knots. But B.J. wasnât fooled.
She knew knotty pine when she saw itâand she didnât care for it in the least. B.J. had history with knotty pine, history that involved a dead animal, a rifle and a hunting lodge in Idaho.
In October, the year she turned twelve, L.T. had taken her to Idaho to hunt elk. B.J. had always loathed hunting. She didnât want to watch her dinner die, she truly didnât.
But sheâd learned to shoot and how to handle herself in the woods just to prove to L.T. that she could. That trip, sheâd actually shot an elk. A gorgeous big bull with a massive rack. It was one of those things that just happened. She had the rifle and she knew how to use it and she knew what L.T. expected of her.
In the sub-freezing pre-dawn, sheâd crouched behind a big, gray rock and waited there for hours, being quiet and tough and self-reliant, the way L.T. expected her to be. She had it all figured out in her twelve-year-old mind. No elk was even going to come near her, so she wouldnât have to actually shoot anything.
Wrong.
The animal appeared out of nowhere. All at once it was just standing there in the early-morning gloom, looking off toward the snow-capped mountains to the east and the bright rim of light where the sluggish sun was slowly rising. Soundlessly, she shouldered her rifle, got the creature in her sightsâand pulled the trigger. A perfect, clean shot. The bull dropped dead where it stood, forelegs crumpling, big brown eyes going glassy, making no sound but a loud thump as it hit the ground.
B.J. emerged from behind her rock and stood over it, still not believing that sheâd actually killed the poor thing.
The knotty pine had come into play that night. Their hunting lodge was paneled, like the Nugget Steakhouse, all in pine. L.T. and the other men stayed up late, drinking
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