how hard it is to move in one of these things?”
Katrina gestured to her slim-fitting dress. “As opposed to moving in this?”
“Nobody expects you to hop out of the car and change a tire.”
“You’re planning to change a tire tonight?”
“You never know what might happen.”
She couldn’t help but laugh at that.
He took her hand and pressed it to his jacket pocket.
She felt a hard, rectangular lump against his hip. “What on earth?”
“Multitool,” he told her. “Knife, screwdriver, file, pliers.”
“You’re armed with a tool set?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“We’ll be in a ballroom,” she pointed out. “I expect there’s a maintenance crew. And the worst thing likely to happen tonight is a broken shoe buckle.”
They passed through the hotel exit to the sidewalk, where a lineup of shiny black SUVs waited for guests. She glanced around but didn’t spot her sisters and brothers.
“I can fix a broken shoe buckle,” said Reed. “I can also repair a harness, remove a splinter, whittle some kindling and fix an outboard motor.”
“I can’t do any of those things, with or without a multitool. Well, maybe remove a splinter,” she allowed. Then she glanced ruefully at the tiny clutch purse that contained nothing but the bare necessities. “But not with anything I brought along tonight.”
Reed opened the back door to one of the vehicles. “That’s the beauty of the system,” he told her, cupping his palm over her elbow to help her into the seat.
She glanced up questioningly.
He gave her a grin and a waggle of his brows. “You brought me. You don’t need anything else.”
“You’re a living, breathing multitool?” she guessed.
His eyes darkened ever so slightly, and his tone went low. “That I am.”
Had he just turned shoe-buckle repairs into a flirtation?
Before she could decide, he gently shut the door behind her, rounding the back of the vehicle to climb in the other side.
“To the Hospital Ball?” the driver asked Reed.
“Yes, please,” he answered, stretching his arm across the back of the seat.
The driver nodded and pulled the vehicle into traffic.
Reed angled his body so that he was gazing at Katrina. He didn’t say anything, just watched her while they made their way along Seventh Street toward Main.
She gazed back, meeting his eyes, strangely not feeling the need to break the silence. The moment stretched on, and she found herself remembering their kiss, his touch, his taste, the sound of his voice rumbling next to her ear and the woodsy scent of his skin.
“You going to be able to dance?” he asked gruffly, with a nod toward her left ankle.
“I think I can make it through a waltz or two,” she answered.
Progress was slow on her ankle. Then again, at least she was making progress. For the few days before she’d come back to Colorado, the healing had seemed to stall. She’d been terrified it would never get better, or it would take so long to get better that she’d lose her position with the ballet company.
A shiver ran through her at the unsettling thought.
“Save a dance for me?” Reed asked quietly, his eyes glinting silver.
“I will.” Katrina realized once again how safe she felt with Reed. There was nothing to worry about right now. Nothing was going to cause her any trouble tonight. Not even a flat tire.
As Reed would have expected, Katrina was the belle of the ball. Dinner had ended, but the dancing was not yet underway. So far, it had taken her nearly twenty minutes to make it halfway across the ballroom toward the ladies’ room. Men stopped her, clustered around her, asking questions, obviously offering compliments, lingering when they shook her hand, making excuses to touch her.
Reed downed a swallow of champagne, wishing he had something stronger to quench his thirst.
Travis Jacobs took the chair next to him, nudged his elbow, and offered him a single malt, neat, in a heavy crystal glass.
Reed gratefully accepted. “Thanks.”
Travis slouched back, propping his elbow on the opposite chair, his voice a drawl. “I see the way you’re looking at my sister.”
Reed took a swallow of the Scotch. “Same way every other guy in the room is looking at your sister. You don’t like it? Don’t let her dress like that.”
“You Terrells need to keep your hands off the Jacobs women.”
Reed gave a snort of derision. “Caleb’s marrying one of them, and I haven’t touched any of them.”
Kissing Katrina didn’t count. It was a well-accepted fact that touching in this context meant something considerably more than kissing.
Just then the orchestra came up and the lights went down.