“I would stick to standard diner fare. Pancakes, bacon, burgers, and such. Hal is a fantastic fry cook. Unfortunately, he considers himself an artist. Stella gives him complete artistic control over the daily specials.” Callie turned a little green as she spoke.

Zane looked up at the chalkboard over the counter. It proudly claimed that Ceviche de Hongos with black beans and lemon was the special of the day. “What is that?”

Callie shrugged. “I have no idea. It doesn’t sell really well in small-town Colorado. Although the people around here are free-spirited, their spirits still tend to like burgers and fries and ice box pie. Except for Henry and Nell. They’re vegans. They protest here regularly.”

Despite feeling sorry for himself, Zane felt his lips curl at the thought of people protesting at a hole-in-the-wall diner. The brunette from last night walked up to the table. She was dressed in jeans and a shirt with the diner’s name across the chest. Her eyes were red and puffy. The night before had not been kind to her. Zane looked out the window as she talked to Callie, sensing she wouldn’t want his pity.

He knew that feeling. He watched as people strolled down Main Street. Just down the road was the sheriff’s office where he’d left Nate to deal with the reports required from last night and this morning. He knew what Nate intended to do. He was calling their old boss at the DEA. He was hoping to get some sort of backup. Zane was on Callie duty, and he couldn’t think of anything he’d rather do.

Well, he’d be happier if they were back at her cabin. He didn’t like to go out much anymore. Again, not a trait that led to gainful employment. Callie was really entrenched in this little town. If he stayed here with her, where would he work?

“He’s an asshole.” The brunette, Jen—yeah, that was her name—had tears seeping from her eyes.

“Oh, sweetie, he’s just confused,” Callie said, her hand reaching out to pat Jen’s.

It had been like that all day. Wherever Callie went, hard luck stories found her. When the smoke had finally cleared and they salvaged what they could, he’d found Callie rocking a baby so one of the neighbors could grab a cup of coffee. A teen had begged her for a ride into Bliss, and Callie had obliged. Before they had even set foot in the station house, the crazy dude with the tin foil hat had run up to Callie and hugged her, telling her he was glad she hadn’t been abducted. Apparently tragedies like fires or earthquakes were just ripe opportunities for alien abductions. In the end, Callie had ended up comforting the older man and promising him that some sort of detector thing would be here by the end of the week.

Callie had been a pretty butterfly, flitting around offering advice and comfort and an ear to bend to anyone she saw. Zane had been the big, hulking beast who followed her around. No one was going to flatten his butterfly, damn it.

Jen sniffled. She looked Zane right in the eyes. “Well, I hope you’re not an asshole.”

Not sure what to say to that. “I’ll try.”

“You do that. You take care of my friend or I swear I will…I don’t know what I’ll do, but it’ll be bad.”

The slender woman seemed perfectly serious. Zane had been intimidating all of his life because of his height and build. The scars had only added to his badass factor. People turned away from him in Dallas or stared in horrified fascination. Not this one, though. She’d said he was stunning. A fallen angel. She was a little crazy, but she seemed awful nice.

“Who’s the asshole? You’re Callie’s friend. I’m Callie’s man. I’ll beat him up for you.” He would get in good with Callie’s friends. That seemed like a good thing to do. He might not be here for too long. Callie deserved far better than him, but he could certainly help her and her friends out in the short term.

“Stefan Talbot.” Jen gave up the guy who hurt her really easily.

“Consider him broken.” Zane sighed. Life was looking up. He’d wanted to kick that pompous rich boy’s ass for years.

Callie poked her index finger at him like an enraged school teacher. “You most certainly will not, Zane Derek Hollister. You are going to behave yourself.” She turned that judgmental finger on her friend. “And you are not going to put a hit on the man you love. He needs time. Give it to him. Pushing him will only make things worse. Now, we’ll take the bacon cheeseburger loaded with fries and the special.”

Jen nodded and, with a sigh of resignation, flounced off.

“I thought you said to avoid the special.”

“Everyone avoids the special. It hurts Hal’s feelings,” Callie explained.

Zane reached for her hand. He loved how small it was in his. Small but solid. That was his girl. “You need a keeper.”

Just like that, he was wondering if he wasn’t exactly what she needed. Some pussy rich boy would let everyone take advantage of her. Maybe she needed a guy who didn’t care what people thought.

She grinned. “I kind of thought I had one.”

Before Zane could reply, a sarcastic voice interrupted. “Well, damn, Cal, I thought I had to come rescue you, but it looks like you hired some muscle.”

Zane looked up at the man who had walked into the diner and made a beeline for his woman. He looked like he’d just ridden in off the range. A Stetson sat on his head. He wore jeans and boots and a shirt with pearl snaps. He stared at Zane for a moment and finally whistled.

“Damn, man, what does the other guy look like?”

“Max!” Callie turned to the newcomer, a startled look on her face.

Zane actually didn’t mind. The cowboy was the first person he’d met in a long time to simply ask him about the scars. It should have made him self-conscious, but Zane found forthrightness put him at ease. “The other guy was actually ten guys, and they look pretty bad themselves. They drugged me and tied me down. Three of them are dead, though. The rest are mostly in prison.”

The cowboy’s eyebrows climbed into his Stetson. “Mostly?”

“I wasn’t very happy when I came to. Unfortunately for them, the only people in a position to help them were DEA agents. They were indisposed, and I managed a good ten minutes with a couple of them.”

“Damn.” The cowboy named Max looked impressed. He slid into the booth beside Callie. His hand ran across the back of the booth. “That is impressive.”

His arm went around Callie’s shoulders, and Zane’s blood pressure ticked up slightly. Everyone in the town was friends with Callie. Keep it cool. Keep the caveman buried.

Zane shook his head. “Nah, it was really just painful.”

“So you with the DEA? What’s drugs got to do with my girl Callie here?” Max squeezed her shoulders in a familiar way that had the caveman in Zane clawing to get out.

He took a deep breath. His fingers tightened on the tabletop. He saw the way Callie playfully elbowed the cowboy. It did nothing to make him comfortable. It was past obvious that this Max fellow knew Callie really well. Max. That name triggered something in Zane. “Nothing. I’m not an agent anymore. And she isn’t your girl.”

“Really? You left a job like that?” Max completely ignored the important part. “Is that how you ended up as a bodyguard?” The cowboy reached over and grabbed Callie’s coffee like he had a right to steal a sip.

“I’m not a bodyguard. I’m her boyfriend.” That damn Max was riding an awfully thin line. Somewhere in the back of Zane’s head, logic was telling him he should back off. He might have to leave at any moment. He might have to break Callie’s heart again. He wasn’t listening to logic. He was listening to his ego, and it wanted to get Max away from his woman. Maybe it was time to shake the asshole up a little. “Well, I’m one of her boyfriends, anyway.” Let that sink in. Maybe if he shocked backwoods Max, he would go away.

A big grin spread across the cowboy’s face. He turned to Callie. “I hope the other one is a little smaller, darlin’.” He took a long drink from Callie’s mug. “This one looks like he could do some damage.”

Callie flushed prettily and didn’t seem to care that the jerk was drinking her coffee. “Max, you hush, and don’t you say a word to Rye.”

Just like that, it clicked. Max and Rye Harper were the twins Callie had been in love with. They had been the reason she wanted a ménage in the first place. This jerk with the perfect face was Callie’s ideal man. He wasn’t ridiculously oversized, and he didn’t have a face full of scars. He probably didn’t come with enough baggage to strangle an elephant, either. Old pretty-boy Max didn’t have a past filled with regret. Max leaned over to Callie. He invaded her space.

“You know I gotta tell Rye, sweet thing. He’s going to think it’s real damn funny that you’ve taken to the lifestyle.”

Max put a hand on Callie’s head, and Zane lost it. He didn’t even think about what he was doing. It was like watching a movie. He felt a bit outside of himself. He moved quickly, exiting his side of the booth, reaching for the asshole cowboy who dared to put a hand on his woman. He neatly picked him up by the throat and slammed him onto a nearby table. It was just chance that it was empty.

“Zane!”

Zane heard Callie’s outraged shout, but it seemed a far-off thing. There was only him and Max in that moment, and Zane needed to clear up a few issues before they could proceed. As for Callie, well, she’d made her choice the night before when she accepted him into her body. When she’d offered up that sweet pussy of hers, he’d taken more. She fucking belonged to him, and no goddamn cowboy was going to drink her coffee and touch her hair.

“Now, maybe we should talk about this, big guy.” Max was staring up at him with a slightly rueful expression. “You know, I think of her as my sister.”

“You touch your sister’s hair as often as you touch Callie’s?” Zane wasn’t letting him get off with that excuse. At least Talbot had taken a step back when he understood Zane and Nate had marked her as theirs.

“Yeah, but I’ll be honest, Brooke is more like my daughter than my sister. I had to raise her after my mom died and my dad left town. I’m a very affectionate guy. I swear on my unborn child’s life that I have zero interest in Callie on a sexual level.”

“Gee, thanks, Max,” Callie said, sarcasm dripping as she stood beside him. Zane’s hand was still wrapped around Max’s throat, but he wasn’t squeezing. Callie rolled those gorgeous dark eyes and sighed. “Do you mind, Zane? You’re causing a scene.”

Zane looked around the diner. Sure enough, every eye in the place was on them. Some were horrified at the scene and had cell phones in hand. Most, though, had big grins on their faces, including Stella, the diner owner, who was walking toward their table. She seemed completely unfazed by the potential ass kicking that was taking place in her establishment.

“Go rough on him,” Stella said as she neatly placed their food on the table. “He deserves it.” She looked at Callie. “I like your man, hon. He makes up for the other one. You gotta talk to the sheriff, girl. He keeps ticketing the tourists. I need the tourists in a good mood.” She frowned as she looked down at Max. “You know, I’ve been around enough of these crazy threesomes to know that there’s a hardass and a sweet one.” She patted Zane’s scarred face. “You’re the sweet one, hon. You get free fries.” She walked off, her boots ringing across the floor.

“Damn,” Max said, turning his head to watch Stella. “I don’t get free fries. Cal, I think Stella thinks I’m the hardass. She doesn’t know Rye at all, damn it. I am completely misunderstood.”

A few things fell into place, and Zane let his hand drift to his side. “You’re in a threesome?”

Max sat up and felt his neck for damage. “I don’t consider it a threesome. It’s a marriage. My brother and I are married to a lovely woman named Rachel. We have a baby on the way.” A sly grin crossed his face. “Did you think you were shocking me, city boy?”

Zane wasn’t sure how to answer that. He had thought it would shock him.

Max gave him a good-natured punch in the arm. “Nothing shocks a Bliss boy.” His face suddenly went cold and dark, and Zane decided he’d completely underestimated the cowboy. “But we take our relationships serious, you understand? I wasn’t joking. Callie’s like my sister. You play around with her, and you deal with me and Rye.”

“I’m not playing,” Zane said automatically.

Max seemed to take his measure. Callie’s arm wound around Zane’s waist, and he pulled her close, waiting for the judgment of her childhood friend.

“All right then,” Max said, scooting back into the booth. “As long as we understand each other.”