Roberts, Nora - Stanislaski 05 - Waiting For Nick.txt

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Roberts, Nora - Stanislaski 5 - Waiting for Nick

Waiting for Nick
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Nora Roberts
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Stanislaski - book 5
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Contents
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    Chapter One
    Chapter Two
    Chapter Three
    Chapter Four
    Chapter Five
    Chapter Six
    Chapter Seven
    Chapter Eight
    Chapter Nine
    Chapter Ten
    Chapter Eleven
    Chapter Twelve
    Epilogue


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Chapter One
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Contents - Next

She was a woman with a mission. Her move from West Virginia to New York
had a series of purposes, outlined carefully in her mind. She would find
the perfect place to live, become a success in her chosen field, and get
her man.

Preferably, but not necessarily, in that order.

Frederica Kimball was, she liked to think, a flexible woman.

As she walked down the sidewalk on the East Side in the early-spring
twilight, she thought of home. The house in Shepherdstown, West
Virginia, with her parents and siblings, was, to Freddie's mind, the
perfect place to live. Rambling, noisy, full of music and voices.

She doubted that she could have left it if she hadn't known she would
always be welcomed back with open arms.

It was true that she had been to New York many times, and had ties
there, as well, but she already missed the familiar--her own room,
tucked into the second story of the old stone house, the love and
companionship of her siblings, her father's music, her mother's laugh.

But she wasn't a child any longer. She was twenty-four, and long past
the age to begin to make her own.

In any case, she reminded herself, she was very much at home in
Manhattan. After all, she'd spent the first few years of her life there.
And much of her life in the years after had included visits--but all
with family, she acknowledged.

Well, this time, she thought, straightening her shoulders, she was on
her own. And she had a job to do. The first order of business would be
to convince a certain Nicholas LeBeck that he needed a partner.

The success and reputation he'd accumulated as a composer over the past
few years would only increase with her beside him as his lyricist.
Already, just by closing her eyes and projecting, she could envision the
LeBeck-Kimball name in lights on the Great White Way. She had only to
let her imagination bloom to have the music they would write flow like a
river through her head.

Now all she had to do, she thought with a wry smile, was convince Nick
to see and hear the same thing.

She could, if necessary, use family loyalty to persuade him. They were,
in a roundabout way; semi-cousins.

Kissing cousins, she thought now, while her eyes lighted with a smile.
That was her final and most vital mission. Before she was done, Nick
would fall as desperately in love with her as she was, had always been,
with him.

She'd waited ten years for him, and that, to Freddie's mind, was quite
long enough.

It's past time, Nick, she decided, tugging on the hem of her royal blue
blazer, to face your fate.

Still, nerves warred with confidence as she stood outside the door of
Lower the Boom. The popular neighborhood bar belonged to Zack Muldoon,
Nick's brother. Stepbrother, technically, but Freddie's family had
always been more into affection than terminology. The fact that Zack had
married Freddie's stepmother's sister made the
Stanislaski-Muldoon-Kimball-LeBeck families one convoluted clan.

Freddie's longtime dream had been to forge another loop in that family
chain, linking her and Nick.

She took a deep breath, tugged on her blazer again, ran her hands over
the reddish-gold mop of curls she could never quite tame and wished
once, hopelessly, that she had just a dash of the Stanislaskis' exotic
good looks. Then she reached for the door.

She'd make do with what she had, and make damned sure it was enough.

The air in Lower the Boom carried the yeasty scent of beer, overlaid
with the rich, spicy scent of marinara. Freddie decided that Rio, Zack's
longtime cook, must have a pasta special going. On the juke, Dion was
warning his fellow man about the fickle heart of Runaround Sue.

Everything was there, everything in place, the cozy paneled walls, the
seafaring motif of brass bells and nautical gear, the long, scarred bar
and the gleaming glassware. But no Nick. Still, she smiled as she walked
to the bar and slid onto a padded stool.

"Buy me a drink, sailor?"

Distracted, Zack glanced up from drawing a draft. His easy smile widened
instantly into a grin. "Freddie--hey! I didn't think you were coming in
until the end of the week."

"I like surprises."

"I like this kind." Expertly Zack slid the mug of beer down the bar so
that it braked between the waiting hands of his patron. Then he leaned
over, caught Freddie's face in both of his big hands and gave her a
loud, smacking kiss. "Pretty as ever."

"You, too."

And he was, she thought. In the ten years since she'd met him, he'd only
improved, like good whiskey, with age. The dark hair was still thick and
curling, and the deep blue eyes were magnetic. And his face, she thought
with a sigh. Tanned, tough, with laugh lines only enhancing its
character and charm.

More than once in her life, Freddie had wondered how it was that she was
surrounded by physically stunning people. "How's Rachel?"

"Her Honor is terrific."

Freddie's lips curved at the use of the title, and the affection behind
it. Zack's wife--her aunt--was now a criminal court judge. "We're all so
proud of her. Did you see the trick gavel Mama sent her? The one that
makes this crashing-glass sound when you bop something with it?"

"Seen it?" His grin was quick and crooked. "She bops me with it
regularly. It's something, having a judge in the family." His eyes
twinkled. "And she looks fabulous in those black robes."

"I bet. How about the kids?"

"The terrible trio? They're great. Want a soda?"

Amused, Freddie tilted her head. "What, are you going to card me, Zack?
I'm twenty-four, remember?"

Rubbing his chin, he studied her. The small build and china-doll skin
would probably always be deceiving. If he hadn't known her age, as well
as the age of his own children, he would have asked for ID.

"I just can't take it in. Little Freddie, all grown up."

"Since I am--" she crossed her legs and settled in "--why don't you pour
me a white wine?"

"Coming up." Long experience had him reaching behind him for the proper
glass without looking. "How're your folks, the kids?"

"Everybody's good, and everyone sends their love." She took the glass
Zack handed her and lifted it in a toast. "To family."

Zack tapped a squat bottle of mineral water against her glass. "So what
are your plans, honey?"

"Oh, I've got a few of them." She smiled into her wine before she
sipped. And wondered what he would think if she mentioned that the
biggest plan of her life was to woo his younger brother. "The first is
to find an apartment."

"You know you can stay with us as long as you want."

"I know. Or with Grandma and Papa, or Mikhail and Sydney, or Alex and
Bess." She smiled again. It was a comfort to know she was surrounded by
people who loved her. But??? "I really want a place of my own." She
propped her elbow on the bar. "It's time, I think, for a little
adventure." When he started to speak, she grinned and shook her head at
him. "You're not going to lecture, are you, Uncle Zack? Not you, the boy
who went to sea."

She had him there, he thought. He'd been a great deal younger than
twenty-four when he shipped out for the first time. "Okay, no lecture.
But I'm keeping my eye on you."

"I'm counting on it." Freddie sat back and rocked a little on the stool,
then asked--casually, she hoped--"So, what's Nick up to? I thought I
might run into him here."

"He's around. In the kitchen, I think, shoveling in some of Rio's pasta
special."

She sniffed the air for effect. "Smells great. I think I'll just wander
on back and say hi."

"Go ahead. And tell Nick we're waiting for him to play for his supper."

"I'll do that."

She carried her wine with her and firmly resisted the urge to fuss with
her hair or tug on her jacket again. Her attitude toward her looks was
one of resignation. 'Cute' was the best she'd ever been able to do with
her combination of small build and slight stature. Long ago she'd given
up on the fantasy that she would blossom into anything that could be
termed lush or glamorous.

Added to a petite figure was madly curling hair that was caught
somewhere between gold and red, a dusting of freckles over a pert nose,
wide gray eyes, and dimples. In her teenage years, she'd pined for sleek
and sophisticated. Or wild and wanton. Curvy and cunning. Freddie liked
to think that, with maturity, she'd accepted herself as she was.

But there were still moments when she mourned being a life-size Kewpie
doll in a family of Renaissance sculptures.

Then again, she reminded herself, if she wanted Nick to take her
seriously as a woman, she had to take herself seriously first.

With that in mind, she pushed open the kitchen door. And her heart
jolted straight into her throat.

There was nothing she could do about it. It had been the same every time
she saw him, from the first time she'd seen him to the last. Everything
she'd ever wanted, everything she'd ever dreamed of, was sitting at the
kitchen table, hunkered over a plate of fettuccine marinara.

Nicholas LeBeck, the bad boy her aunt Rachel had defended with passion
...
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