
Under His Skin
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Jeanie London
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18.5K
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15
1
“I WANT TESS HARDAWAY.”
The statement came out sounding more like a demand than a request so Anthony DiLeo forced a smile at the guy behind the registration desk and tried again. “Is she around yet?”
“She was, but she left again.”
“That’s what you told me an hour ago.”
“I know.” The guy gave a lame shrug. “Sorry. You just keep missing her.”
Anthony hoped like hell his bum timing didn’t fore-shadow the weekend ahead. Meeting Tess Hardaway was the only reason he’d come to Nostalgic Car Club’s annual convention. He hadn’t set eyes on her yet and already she’d given him the slip. Twice.
He tried not to look impatient. “You told me she’d be greeting people during registration.”
“She has been. But she’s also on the club’s board—vice president of programming. She’s been getting her presenters settled, too.”
Okay, Tess Hardaway was a busy lady. He got that part. Anthony also got that this guy was nothing more than a volunteer. Wearing a vintage leather flying cap and goggles, he looked ready to take off in an old barnstormer. Obviously no one close to the elusive Tess Hardaway.
But he seemed to take his job seriously. He wore a T-shirt with the convention logo—a cartoon of an oversize, powerful engine plunked down in the middle of the French Quarter. The catch phrase read: Big Banger and Bourbon Street.
Anthony glanced down at the volunteer’s name badge.
Timmy Martin, Montgomery, Alabama.
“All right, Timmy from Montgomery. Maybe you can tell me where to find Ms. Hardaway since I’m not doing such a hot job tracking her down on my own.”
“How about the AutoCarTex Foundation’s hospitality suite? Have you tried there yet?”
“Didn’t know AutoCarTex had a hospitality suite.”
Timmy from Montgomery frowned. “Let me make a suggestion.”
“Go.”
“I know you wanted to register with Tess, but why don’t you let me do the honors? I’ll give you the registration packet and you can check out everything that’s happening. Not only does AutoCarTex have a hospitality suite, but also they’re hosting an event. Tess will be at both. If you want, I’ll leave her a message. If she knows you’re looking for her, I’m sure she’ll contact you.”
“Yes register. No message.”
No forewarning. He couldn’t risk losing the slight advantage he had in her not knowing she was being pursued. There might be a picture of her in the program. If he knew what the woman who held the titles of AutoCarTex Foundation’s managing director and Nostalgic Car Club’s vice president of programming looked like, he could locate his target sooner.
The guy nodded and got down to business. “Name?”
“Anthony DiLeo.”
The Nostalgic Car Club apparently favored nostalgia in more than just cars. There wasn’t a computer in sight, so Timmy from Montgomery searched through good old-fashioned file boxes filled with alphabetized folders.
He withdrew one and skimmed through it.
“Everything’s in order, Mr. DiLeo.” He offered the folder. “This has your name badge, meal tickets, driving passes, room assignment and itinerary. Let me get your bag.”
Disappearing beneath the desk, he came up with a bag imprinted with the convention logo. “This has your shirt, a commemorative plaque and a booklet with all the requirements for the weekend’s events. That’s important if you plan to participate in any of the races. You’ve got paperwork to turn in.”
“Got it.” And Anthony did. He’d wanted Tess Hardaway and he’d gotten a convention bag instead.
He really hoped this wasn’t an omen.
After a pit stop at the front desk, he collected his garment bag from his car and headed to his room to stow his gear.
The room was standard trendy. The hotel was standard trendy. The Chase Convention Center sat on the outskirts of Metairie, a stone’s throw from New Orleans. Catering to traffic from the airport and Dixie Downs Speedway, the place was so close to Anthony’s house he could have driven here nearly as fast as finding a free elevator to get down to the first floor.
But Tess Hardaway was somewhere in this hotel, and he’d waste valuable hunting time if he had to drive back and forth every day. He planned to make the most of every chance to cross her path this weekend.
Once he finally caught her.
Grabbing the convention program, Anthony sat on the edge of the bed and studied the hotel map to get a lay of the land. All the hospitality suites were located on the second floor, promoting sponsors who’d paid big bucks to have their names appear in the brochure that would go to twenty-six hundred conventioneers and car enthusiasts from all over the world.
Anthony knew every one of the advertisers. Automotive suppliers. Major manufacturers. Classic car restorers. He’d even heard of the new car dealerships. Only the biggest and best could afford to host events and advertise in Nostalgic Car Club’s slick promotional program.
Turning the booklet over, he wondered what an ad in here would cost. Hell, what about the price of hosting a weekend hospitality suite for twenty-six hundred guests?
Ten, twenty grand?
While he could have afforded to spend that kind of money on advertising, this wasn’t his market. His business might have grown into New Orleans’s most reputable service and maintenance center in the years since he’d opened the doors, but vehicle owners wouldn’t travel from Maine or Washington state to have their car tuned up at Anthony DiLeo Automotive.
This sort of promotion only benefited the big boys.
Over the past few years, Anthony had watched AutoCarTex become a big boy. The used-car dealership had expanded its operation by opening new service centers all over the nation, growing slowly, steadily, successfully. If he hooked up with Tess Hardaway, he’d take a step toward becoming a big boy, too.
With that thought, he rolled up the program, stuffed it into his back pocket and headed downstairs.
He found AutoCarTex’s hospitality suite easily enough. People had already begun milling through, glancing at the full-color advertising spreads detailing AutoCarTex’s unique philosophy on used vehicles as they worked their way toward the buffet.
Anthony wasn’t interested in food. He was interested in the woman dressed in a dark blue business suit working the crowd.
Tess Hardaway?
He couldn’t catch her name badge from this distance but in that getup, she had to be with the company. He’d already had his fill of dealing with the AutoCarTex corporate types in his quest to get to the man who’d founded the company—Big Tex Hardaway.
Now those fruitless dealings had brought him to this convention to track down the man’s only daughter.
But as he neared the woman, Anthony second-guessed himself. From what he’d read about Tess Hardaway, he’d expected someone less…suit, precisely the reason he’d chosen her.
He waited. The woman didn’t take long to direct her guests to the buffet, and when she had, she extended her hand to him.
“Penny Parker of AutoCartex.” Her name badge read Marketing Director.
A serious suit.
“Anthony DiLeo of Anthony DiLeo Automotive.”
She had an easy smile and a sharp gaze that took him in all at once. “A business owner. Local?”
He inclined his head.
“Please tell me you’re not worried that AutoCarTex’s Louisiana expansion will cut into your bottom line.”
Anthony laughed. “I happen to respect smart business strategy, and Big Tex’s makes sense. He has made reliable used transportation more accessible. I think that’s a good thing.”
“Even when we open an auto showroom in your backyard?
“My service center is well established in town. I don’t have anything to worry about.”
Her expression suggested she approved his answer, and he continued, not above showing at least one of AutoCarTex’s suits that this auto mechanic was made of more than they seemed to think. “Too many people treat cars as if they’re disposable. Consumers pay through the nose to drive a new car out of the showroom when an older one only needs a little TLC.”
“You sound like a spokesperson for AutoCarTex, Mr. DiLeo.”
That made him smile. “Anthony.”
“All right, Anthony,” she said with just enough drawl to tell him she was Southern. “If you didn’t come to pick my brain about our new showroom, then what can I do for you? Interested in our mission statement? Our involvement with the Nostalgic Car Club? How about our service warranty contract?”
“I’m looking for Tess Hardaway. I heard she’d be around.”
“Really? Do you know Tess?”
“Not personally.”
“I’m afraid you just missed her.”
“I seem to be doing that a lot today.”
That sharp gaze cut across him again, seemed to notice there was more here than met the eye. And she clearly hadn’t decided if that was good.
“You don’t happen to know where she went, do you?”
Penny leaned back on her stylish pumps and folded her arms across her chest. “Normally, I wouldn’t dream of asking, but something about your interest is smacking of more personal than professional. Why do you want to see Tess?”
“I’m sorry if I gave you that impression, Ms. Parker.”
“Penny, please.”
“Penny. My interest is strictly business. I came to this convention to network with Ms. Hardaway.”
“Are you interested in the AutoCarTex Foundation?”
“So to speak.” That wasn’t entirely true, but close enough. “I’d rather keep my business between me and Ms. Hardaway.”
“Now I’m intrigued. Not even a hint?”
He spread his hands in entreaty. “Nothing mysterious. Just business.”
She eyed him again. He got the impression she couldn’t quite make out what a local service center owner might want with the director of the AutoCarTex Foundation, which dealt with the public relations and charitable donations parts of the corporation. He also got the impression her interest was more than professional.
“She went to the speedway for the race.”
“What race?” he asked. “I thought the convention didn’t start until the welcome reception tonight.”
“It doesn’t officially start, but we always kick off with a low-speed race. Gets everyone in the mood. Tess wouldn’t miss it for the world. Didn’t you read your itinerary?”
“Not closely enough.” He extended his hand. “A pleasure meeting you, Penny. Looks like I’m off to the races. I’m sure I’ll run into you again.”
She shook with a firm grip. “If you don’t catch up with her, try back here later. She’ll be in and out all weekend.”
“Thanks.”
Anthony left the hotel optimistic that he might finally catch the woman who’d been eluding him all day. His optimism lasted until he reached the speedway ticket booth.
“Gates closed to the public,” a grizzled man wearing a Dixie Downs uniform told him.
“I’m attending the convention.”
“Name badge? Driving pass?”
Damn it. “In my hotel room. I didn’t know I needed them.”
“Can’t let you through without your name badge and your driving pass.”
A car stopped at the nearby booth, flashed some papers and drove through the gates.
“I won’t be driving, just watching.”
The gate didn’t budge.
“When does the race start?”
The ticket-taker glanced at his watch. “Ten minutes.”
Not enough time to get to and from the hotel and still search the crowds for Tess Hardaway before the race began. He didn’t think she’d be hard to find, though. Probably in the stands with the event hosts. “Can you call someone with the convention to verify I’m registered?”
“Call who?” the man asked gruffly, clearly not thrilled that Anthony intended to give him a hard time. Cocking his grizzled head toward the parking lot beyond the gate, he said, “The whole car club is inside for the race.”
Anthony thought about dropping Penny Parker’s name, but decided against it. The woman had been skeptical enough about his interest in Tess. “The volunteer working the registration desk will confirm I’m with the convention—”
“I got my orders.”
“What about the hotel? They have me checked in with the car club’s room block.”
“Name badge and driving pass. It says so in the rules.” He flourished a copy of Big Banger and Bourbon Street’s program.
“But I—”
“Name badge and driving pass,” the ticket-taker repeated stubbornly. “Or I call security.”
First impressions were everything and being labeled a gate-crasher by speedway security was not the first impression Anthony wanted to make with Big Tex’s daughter. The success of his new career path now depended on her.
Scowling, he shifted his car into Reverse and backed out of the ticket booth. It wasn’t until he’d almost reached the road that a sign caught his eye.
Drivers.
Anthony was New Orleans born and bred. He might not have belonged to a fancy car club like Nostalgic until he’d wanted to meet Tess Hardaway, but he’d been around cars since he could sit up straight enough to be strapped into his dad’s vintage GTO.
Even more importantly, he’d been hanging around Dixie Downs for nearly as long. His first paying job had been in the pit working for a locally sponsored team. He knew his way around.
Without another thought, Anthony bypassed the gate and wheeled his car down the road leading to the track. He slid into the queue as if he belonged there.
When he reached the crewman in charge of registering the racers, he cranked down his window and said, “I’m looking for Tess Hardaway.”
The guy didn’t even look up over his clipboard. “The pole.”
Well, well, well. He’d been wrong. Tess Hardaway wasn’t in the stands, after all. She was lined up to race.
Leaning out his open window, he craned to see around the queue to the course and spotted her immediately. One look and every bit of his inner car enthusiast cringed.
A Gremlin? A purple Gremlin.
He couldn’t miss the florid paint, the custom parts or the jacked-up rear tires turning the classic that had inspired the phrase “What happened to the rest of your car?” into a hot rod to shake the streets. The driver wore a matching purple helmet.
He smiled. Here he’d been worried about first impressions. Anthony had to wonder if Tess Hardaway would want to know his first impression of her. He doubted it.
“Where’s your gear?” The crewman had finally glanced up from his clipboard. “Can’t give you a number without your gear.”
“In the trunk.” He’d expected to race sometime this weekend and now seemed as good a time as any to start. Hopping out, he circled his car, hoping he didn’t need anything more than a helmet and gloves.
The crewman gave a nod. “We’re running with the National Racing Council rule book. Helmet will work today, but if you want to race in Saturday’s high-speed autocross, you’ll need a fire suit.”
“Got it.”
The crewman must have assumed Anthony had shown his name badge and driving pass at the gate because he slapped a number twenty-one inside the windshield and waved him through. The next thing Anthony knew, he slipped into the third row of the grid to wait for the pace car.
He finally had Tess Hardaway in sight.
Pulling on his helmet, he revved the engine to drown out the low-slung Corvette showing off in the slot beside him.
Classic car owners could be a competitive bunch, and he easily admitted that he was no different. But in Anthony’s experience Corvette owners were the worst. Elitists.
A past president of the local Corvette club had officially endorsed Anthony’s service center as the place to cater to the classic crowd. Ever since, he had been servicing the bulk of their members, most of whom thought they were doing him a favor by letting his staff touch their showy wheels. Some even tried to make him see the error of his Pontiac-driving ways.
This Corvette looked mint, but his own first-generation Firebird had a 400-cubic-inch V-8. He’d personally disabled the manufacturer’s device that kept the engine from reaching full throttle. His Firebird would dominate that black Corvette before they’d pulled through the second lap.
Anthony might not have raced in a while, but his foot slipped onto the gas pedal instinctively when the pace car appeared to lead them around the track for a parade lap. One by one the cars pulled out to give the spectators a good look at the lineup.
Then came a pace lap before the official start of the race. The drivers traveled in formation, steadily increasing speed until they hit the ceiling before the starting line.
Then came the flag.
Anthony’s adrenaline shot into gear with his engine. The Dixie Downs Speedway was his course. He knew the groove by heart—when to shut off to negotiate banked turns, what turns to ride the rails. He knew when to lean into the accelerator to gain distance through the chutes.
His Firebird took to the track as if he’d just raced her yesterday, and when the black Corvette tried to shut him out, Anthony diced a little, forcing the Corvette to back off.
He blew past with a laugh, his fingers easily gripping the steering wheel. He sailed past a mint-condition Camaro. No contest. The Firebird had been designed to outrun the Chevy. It had been too long since he’d done anything that had gotten his blood pumping like this.
Too damned long.
His fellow contestants didn’t stand a chance. Anthony had a Gremlin to catch, and a driver leading the pack.
The feel of the track beneath his wheels and the silky way his car handled each turn brought back memories of the innumerable times he’d raced here. With his dad when he’d been alive. With his brother Marc, who had such a serious need for speed that their mother swore he’d given her every gray hair she kept meticulously dyed. When Anthony had worked in the pit, making passes around this track in his employers’ cars to clock some wickedly fast times.
Now each lap brought him closer to that purple hot rod.
Finally, he slipped into place behind her. After a few laps on her tail, Anthony admitted that not only did her funky little Gremlin pack more rpm grunt than he’d expected, but Tess Hardaway was one damned skilled driver. A little ruthless even.
She clearly enjoyed the thrill of the chase because she kept blipping to make him adjust his speed. Anthony let her play him for a bit. He intended to ride her bumper straight to the finish line. This woman would not get away again.
But the more she toyed with him, the harder he found it not to toy back.
Instinct finally took over. Slipping into her draft, he followed closely enough to take advantage of the decreased air resistance, so close that the chrome Gremlin character on her hatch grinned wickedly like a dare.
The race was on.
He sped up.
She slowed down.
He maneuvered the track.
She shut him out so he couldn’t pass.
While Anthony might not have Tess Hardaway’s maneuvers, he had the better car. And he put his Firebird to work when she fishtailed out of a hairy turn. She controlled the motion instantly—testimony to her skill—but skill was the only thing carrying her right now.
Instinct told him her hot rod was full out while his V-8 still had more to give. With a little more grunt and a lot of luck, he could maneuver past, well before that checkered flag came down to signal the end of the race.
Anthony had a split second to decide.
Whipping this woman’s butt on the track hardly seemed a better introduction than being dragged in by security for crashing the gate.
But even more important than making a good first impression was the question: could Anthony live with himself if he let that prissy purple Gremlin whip his butt?
THE FIREBIRD DRAFTED Tess all the way down the chute. She couldn’t shake him. Although she drove with her pedal to the metal, this muscle car clung to her bumper as though it had been painted on. And the second she misjudged a banked turn, it broke out of her draft to slingshot around and take the lead.
Now it was Tess’s turn to ride a bumper. But what a bumper it was. The shiny chrome and gleaming taillights blurred as the Firebird drifted into the chute, a neat, controlled slide that sealed the deal about who would win this race.
The distance between them lengthened as they neared the checkered flag. Her five-liter engine might give her lightweight Gremlin a lively performance, but it couldn’t touch what this driver had growling beneath his hood.
And she had to give him credit for not stroking all the way to the finish line. He could have rubbed her loss in her face by slowing down when he knew she couldn’t catch up, but once he took the lead, he ran with it.
As long as he was winning, he would win big. As far as Tess was concerned that sort of confidence said something about a driver. And by the time she wheeled into the pit lane, she wanted to know who he was.
She didn’t recognize the red Firebird with the white hardtop and gleaming chrome side pipes. Removing her helmet, she handed it to the volunteer who had been assigned to her pit and treated herself to a deep breath of fuel-tinged summer air. Mmm-mmm. There was nothing like it.
“Well now,” a familiar voice drawled. “There’s a sight you don’t see every day. Tess Hardaway in the number two spot.”
She turned to find a coworker strolling toward her on grossly expensive Italian pumps. “What are you doing in my pit? Your hair will smell like exhaust fumes.”
Penny ran a manicured hand over her smooth black bob and patted it in place. “Can’t be helped.”
“Why’s that? And aren’t you supposed to be working the hospitality suite?”
She nodded. “I passed the ball to our resident overachiever. He was happy to do his bit for the cause.”
This overachiever was the AutoCarTex Foundation’s newest employee, and Tess’s personal assistant, Hal. The new graduate could make typing a letter seem worthy of his business degree from a prestigious northeastern university. That knack had won him the job. His enthusiasm felt contagious, and she appreciated anyone who could spread it like butter around her office.
“I’ll bet,” she said. “Just don’t take advantage of my assistant. I need him this weekend. All I’ve been doing is putting out fires. Nothing’s coming together.”
“I’ll say.” Penny laughed. “We’ll be able to hear your Uncle Ray hooting from Texas when he finds out you lost a race. So who did the honors?”
Tess glanced to where the driver of the Firebird had pulled before the stand to accept his trophy. “Whoever’s driving that Firebird. My money’s on a local. He knew the track.”
But Penny didn’t respond. She was too busy staring at the man who emerged from the winning car. Even from this distance, Tess could make him out as a tall, very well-built man who filled out his jeans nicely. He pulled off his helmet to reveal tawny blond hair that waved back from his face, long enough that he’d tied it in a small ponytail.
“That’s Anthony DiLeo. You’re right. He’s a local.”
No surprise there. “Who is he?”
“A service shop owner who’s apparently so well established, he’s not in the least bit worried about us cutting into his business when we open our new showroom in town.”
No surprise there, either. The man drove confident, which meant he must be confident.
Penny shot her one of those expressions, one that declared something was up. “He came to the hospitality suite looking for you. Said he’d been missing you all day.”
“What does he want?”
“Business. Wouldn’t say what kind. Thought I’d give you the heads-up.”
Tess would have to be deaf to miss the innuendo in that statement. “Are you worried?”
“About this man? No. I liked him, but I did promise your father I’d stay on red alert so the wack job du jour doesn’t get anywhere near his precious baby.”
“Give it a rest, Penny.”
“Your father’s worried, Tess. He doesn’t want you driving the rally alone, and I can’t say I blame him. So don’t shoot the messenger. I’m just doing my job.”
This was a tired excuse Tess had heard all too often. “Last I heard you were a marketing director, not a babysitter.”
“With any other company the roles would be mutually exclusive. Not at your company, though. According to your father part of my job is watching your back, as you well know.”
Boy, did she ever. Shielding the late-afternoon sun from her eyes, Tess watched Anthony DiLeo toss his helmet inside his car. Nope, she’d never seen him before. She wouldn’t have forgotten a man who walked like that, long legs chewing up the track with possessive strides. And his car…that was one well-kept muscle car. She wondered if he’d restored it himself.
“No clue what he wants?”
Penny shook her head. “None. But I’ll be disappointed if he turns out to be the latest wack job. He is one handsome man.”
“Wouldn’t know,” Tess said dryly. “I’ve only seen him with his helmet on when he passed me on the track.”
“Then take my word for it. This one’s yummy.”
“You said the same thing about Daryl Keene.”
“That one’s yummy, too.”
Tess rubbed her temples. If she could just rub away Penny as easily. But no matter where she turned lately, she ran smack into someone her daddy had sent to watch her back.
“You know, it’s not so bad having people look out for you,” Penny admonished.
Spoken by someone whose back wasn’t being watched. Tess leaned against the railing and met Penny’s scowl. “Do you know how many people work at AutoCarTex headquarters? That’s a lot of back watchers. My daddy is on the wrong side of overprotective on a good day, and he’s gone off the deep end lately.”
Penny’s scowl faded fast. “I had no idea the commercials would turn into a trail of bread crumbs for the crazies.”
“You couldn’t have foreseen the problem. None of us could. Most of Johnny Q. Public thinks Daddy is their best friend. And look at all the good the commercials have done. Not only for corporate but for the Foundation.”
“I still feel responsible. I dreamed up the promotional campaign. And these letters your father’s been getting lately have him really worried. This latest one is threatening family and friends along with the accusations of gross capitalism.”
Boy, did Tess know all about that. Daddy hadn’t been this worked up since she’d gone to the movies on her first date with that cute hand from the Critchley ranch.
“Do you think this one’s trouble?” She glanced at Anthony DiLeo as he exchanged greetings with the car club’s president.
“He didn’t strike me as a crazy, but he wants something.”
“Who doesn’t? Another side effect of Daddy’s success, and one you’re not responsible for.”
Penny gave a low whistle. “If you don’t mind my saying, Tess, every drop of blood in your veins will turn to prairie dust if you don’t have some fun. Soon.”
How much fun could she have when all of AutoCarTex’s employees kept their eyes on her at work? Daddy and Uncle Ray tag-teamed at home, and dropping by her apartment unexpectedly and checking out her friends were both time-consuming jobs. She knew they had more important things to do than babysit her, so by necessity, Tess limited her activities.
This hadn’t proven much of a problem lately. Except for the convention, her schedule had been keeping her pretty close to home. And she hadn’t met any man who seemed worthy of checking out in a while.
“Penny, I’ll date again just as soon as I come across a man who isn’t more interested in Daddy than me.”
“What could Daryl Keene possibly want?” Penny sidled up to her and peered down the track to where the man himself directed the pit crew’s efforts with his black Corvette. “His daddy is richer than your daddy.”
Tess grudgingly followed her gaze. All right, she couldn’t argue finances. Or appearance, either. Daryl Keene had been cut from a very handsome mold. Tall, polished looking with his neat black hair and slick smiles.
“I don’t know. But he wants something or else he wouldn’t still be hounding me for a date. He’s even started e-mailing me through my corporate account. And now he’s checking out a dealership in Lubbock. He told me he’s heading up the project so he can spend more time in town.”
“Sure you’re not paranoid? Sounds like he doesn’t want more than to get inside your size-four jeans. You should go to dinner or a movie. Something fun.”
Tess rolled her eyes. “Not interested.”
“But why? Your daddy knows his daddy, so he probably doesn’t even need to run a background check on the guy. Not to mention he’s downright yummy.”
“He’s a trailer queen.”
“Who cares if he hauls his car or drives it? He’s cute, and rich to boot.”
Tess bit back a smile at Penny’s criteria. “Honestly, I can’t take Daryl up on his offer.”
“Why not? I’m talking dinner here, not marriage and two-point-five kids. Give me a reason that’s based in reality.”
“No sparks. Not a one.”
Penny considered that for a minute then pushed away from the rail with a heavy sigh. “Damn shame that.”
Although Tess didn’t consider Daryl much of a loss, it had been so long since she’d felt sparks for any man she’d begun to wonder if it wasn’t a hormonal thing. Did the libido die down the closer one got to thirty?
She couldn’t bring herself to ask Penny, who was around her age. While they were friendly, Penny was a career gal well aware of who approved her every step up the corporate ladder. The last thing Tess needed was her daddy getting wind of any medical concerns. Maybe she’d do some Internet research. This might be something a few herbal supplements could cure.
Or maybe Penny was right, and she was paranoid. But Tess had a right to be cautious. Most men weren’t interested in her, but in using her, a problem she’d first encountered long ago, while dating a man from upper management at AutoCarTex Corporate.
Everyone seemed to want to get close to her daddy.
“The winner of Big Banger and Bourbon Street’s first race is new car club member Anthony DiLeo.” The car club’s president rescued her from more self-analysis when he spoke over the microphone. “To celebrate his win, Mr. DiLeo is making a generous ten-thousand-dollar cash contribution to the Children’s Hope League in the name of his service center, Anthony DiLeo Automotive of New Orleans, Louisiana.”
The crowd roared approval and Penny said, “Well, well, well. Looks like my instincts are on target. Anthony DiLeo isn’t striking me as your run-of-the-mill wacko.”
“That remains to be seen.”
“Sour grapes. You can’t win every race. At least hear what the man has to say.”
Tess didn’t have to hear him speak a word—she already knew what he was up to. “He’s sucking up.”
“What makes you say that?”
“We’re sponsoring the Children’s Hope League this year.”
“And AutoCarTex is the only corporation contributing to this charity?”
“Of course not,” she huffed. “But I’m guessing he’s contributing to this charity because we are. The man definitely wants something. I want to know what it is.”
















































