your ass. Got my sports bar. Very cool. Only funny thing, and
I may lose man points here, but I figured out after a few months I actually didn't want to be in a bar every night of my life."
She glanced around Swifty's, where the music had gone slow and dreamy. "Yet you have two. And here you are."
"Yet. I sold half interest in Dune's to this guy I know. Well, almost half. Figured, hey, Irish pub."
"Hence Swifty's."
"Hence."
"No travel, no flashy car?"
"Some travel, some flash. Anyway, how did you-"
"Oh no, the question begs to be asked." She wagged a finger at him. "It's rude, but it has to be asked. How much?"
"A hundred and thirty-eight million."
She choked on her pretzel, holding up a hand when he tapped her on the back. "Jesus Christ."
"Yeah, that's what I said. You want another beer?"
She shook her head, gaped at him. "You won a hundred and thirtyeight million dollars on a lottery ticket?"
"Yeah, go figure. Best six-pack I ever bought. It got a lot of play at the time. You didn't hear about it?"
" I... " She was still struggling to absorb. "I don't know. When?"
"Seven years ago last February."
"Well." She puffed out a breath, pushed a hand through her hair. Million replayed through her mind. "Seven years ago last February I was busy giving birth."
"Hard to keep up with current events. You got a kid? What variety?"
"A girl. Carly." She saw his gaze shift down to her left hand. "Divorced." "Okay. Lot ofjuggling, single parent, high-octane career. I bet you've got excellent hand-eye coordination."
"It takes practice." Millions, she thought. Millions stacked on top of millions, yet here he was, nursing a Guinness in a nice little pub in Savannah, looking like an average guy. Well, an average guy with a really cute dimple and a sexy little scar, a killer smile. But still. "Why aren't you living on an island in the South Pacific?"
"I like Savannah. No point in being really rich if you can't live where you like. How long have you been a cop?"
"Um." She felt blindsided. The cute, funny guy was now a cute, funny multimillionaire. "I, ah, started with the FBI right out of college, then-"
"You were with the FBI? Like Clarice Starling? Like Silence ofthe Lambs} Or Dana Scully-another hot redhead, by the way. Special Agent MacNamara?" He let out a long, exaggerated breath. "You really are hot."
"Due to this, that and the other thing, I decided to shift to the Savannah-Chatham PD. Hostage and crisis negotiator."
"Hostage?" Those dreamy eyes of his sharpened. "Like if a guy barricades himself in some office building with innocent bystanders and wants ten mil, or the release of all prisoners with brown eyes, you're the one he's talking to?"
"If it's in Savannah, chances are good."
"How do you know what to say? What not to say?"
"Negotiators are trained, and have experience in law enforcement. What?" she said when he shook his head.
"No. You have to know. Training, sure, experience, sure, but you have to know."
Odd, she thought, that he'd understand that when there were copsArnie Meeks sprang to mind-who didn't. And never would. "You hope you know. And you have to listen, not just hear. And listening to you, here's what I know. You live in Savannah because there wouldn't be enough to do on that island in the South Pacific, or enough people to do it with. You don't discount the sheer luck of buying a winning ticket along with a six-pack, but neither do you discount that sometimes things are simply meant. Telling me about the money wasn't bragging, it was just fact-and fun. Now, the way I reacted to it mattered, in as much as if I'd suddenly put moves on you, we'd end this evening having sex, which would also be fun. But I'd no longer be stuck in your mind."
"Something else I really like," he commented. "A woman who does what she's good at, and is good at what she does. If Suicide Joe was still working for me, I'd give the son of a bitch a raise."
She had to smile, and by God, she was charmed right down to the balls of her feet. But... "That's quite a bit for one drink," she decided. "Now I've got to get on home."
"You love your kid-that's first and last. Your eyes lit up when you said her name. The divorce still bothers you on some level. I don't know which, not yet. Your work isn't a career, it's a vocation.