A Dark & Stormy Knight
The third Installment to the McKnight Romances
As Sol came up behind her, he saw she had some creamy chick-drink on ice in front of her. He propped one cowboy boot on the bar's brass foot rail, braced a forearm on the bar and leaned on it. Without greeting her, he picked up her glass between forefinger and thumb and took a sip. “Whoa!” He ran his tongue across his lips, sucking a stray drop from the fine hairs of his mustache. “Tasty way to drink whiskey.” Not quite the chick drink he'd expected.
She didn't look surprised to see him. “That's not whiskey. It's Baileys Irish Crème.”
“Honey,
I know whiskey when I taste it.” How could she not know she'd been drinking
whiskey? “You put it in a milkshake, it's still whiskey.” Sol looked at her,
evaluating. She'd never been a big drinker. She didn't look drunk now except
for the sheen in her eyes, like they weren't focusing quite as well as they
should. “How many of these you had?”
“A
few.”
His
erection got stiffer. Opportunistic
Bastard. If he let her drink a few more, she'd be easy to get into bed. “Okay,
it's not whiskey,” he said, happy to humor her. “Let me buy you another.”
“It's
not whiskey. It's a liqueur.”
“I
ain't arguing with you.” He gestured to the bartender. “Tommy, get the lady
another. On me. And get me a barley pop.”
Tommy
brought a Lone Star with Georgia's Baileys. “When did you start drinking those?”
Sol asked as he watched her take a sip.
“A
guy I dated introduced me to it.”
A
guy she dated? Damn. “Pretty pansy
drink for a guy.”
Georgia's
eyes narrowed. “You think so?”
Sol
took a swallow of his beer. “Yeah, I think so.”
Her
foot slipped as she tried to stand on the brass foot rail, but she got it
repositioned and leaned over the bar. “Tommy! C'mere.” Tommy responded quickly,
and Sol wondered if Tommy had been trying to make time with Georgia before he'd
walked in.
“I
want two shot glasses, Tommy. Half Baileys, half Jameson's Irish Whiskey.”
Sol's
eyebrow twitched as Tommy turned to make the drinks. “Shooters?”
She
looked disdainfully at him. “Of course. You don't sip out of a shot glass.”
“This
concoction got a name?”
“A
Shillelagh.”
When
Tommy put the shot glasses in front of them, Georgia threw hers down in one
quick motion. Sol felt a smile trying to pull at his lips as he calculated how
many it would take to get her loose enough to go home with him.
She
looked up at him. Her beautiful baby-blues sloe-eyed. Still glazy. “Come on,
tough guy. You're not afraid of little pansy drink, are you?”
“Nothing
in a shot glass is a pansy drink,” Sol said, but he picked his up and threw it
back. He licked his lips then rolled his lower lip up over the edge of his
mustache as he looked into the empty glass. The sweet of the Bailey's on the
flat of his tongue and the whiskey burn on the edges made an interesting
combination.
“Not
bad.” He pushed his cowboy hat back on his head. “Tommy, set up a couple more.”
When
the drinks were in front of them, Georgia reached for her glass, but Sol put
his hand on her wrist. He held his drink up and waited for her to raise hers. “To
women and horses . . . And the men that ride them.” Then he threw the drink
down his throat.
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