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  ONE NIGHT IN RENO

  Rogenna Brewer

  One Night In Reno

  Copyright © 2013 Rogenna Brewer

  Cover Design Copyright © 2013 Rogenna Brewer

  All rights reserved.

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  This is a work of fiction. Names, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

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  For all the Jen, Jenn, Jenny and Jennifer’s in my life.

  Life is full of unexpected turns…

  Jenny Albright’s gas tank runs as dry as her luck in the Nevada desert. Then Navy SEAL Garrett “Itch” Erickson swoops in to rescue her, her young son and their beagle pup. Although the stranded single mom is reluctant to accept help from a stranger, befriending the Good Samaritan SEAL might be the best decision Jenny’s made in the past seventy-two hours.

  Whether Jenny is a victim of circumstance or a woman on the run, Garrett sees his past in her son’s future and it doesn’t look good. But does his offer to marry Jenny—until she lands on her feet—come from a sense of duty or the need to be rescued himself?

  CHAPTER ONE

  “Come on, come on,...” Jenny Albright coaxed the old Ford Fairlane off the road and coasted to the nearest pump at the Fernley 76 off US Alternate 50. It seemed inevitable both her gas tank and her luck would run dry in the Nevada desert.

  More precisely, her luck had run out seven years ago along with Josh’s father. Which was nothing compared to losing her job, home and sense of security all in one day.

  Six dollars and twenty-one cents.

  The total sum of everything she had left in this world.

  Except for Josh. Jenny set the car in park and stole a glance at her sleeping six-year-old son and his beagle curled up on the backseat among what was left of their material possessions.

  Dark lashes fluttered against flushed cheeks. She leaned over the seat and brushed the hair from his forehead. Buster shifted against her boy with a protective puppy sigh Jenny felt all the way to her soul.

  They’d never had much, but as she inventoried what was left; a garbage bag full of dirty clothes, a laundry basket filled with toys, and an overnight bag packed with a few essentials, she felt beyond despair.

  Jenny counted the change again from the dumped contents of her purse on the seat beside her. Four crumpled dollar bills and $2.21 in change--mostly pennies.

  At the last rest stop they’d made a game out of searching ashtrays, floor boards, seat cushions for anything they could find. That’s all they’d come up with. Now as she tallied the last of their limited funds, it didn’t seem like much of a game.

  Josh hadn’t eaten all day. She hadn’t eaten since she couldn’t remember when--maybe since before they’d left Colorado. But they’d coasted in on fumes and the nearest city and hope of a decent paying job was still some thirty-five miles up I-80.

  “Well, that’s it then...” She’d put five dollars in the tank and hope it would get them that far. The rest would go toward finding something to fill Josh’s tummy. Since she’d caught her son sharing his last sandwich with Buster, she knew the pup already had her fair share.

  Jenny got out and pumped gas, quickly rolling over her limit. “Darn it.” She hung up the nozzle. Like everything else about their current circumstance there was nothing she could do except pay the price.

  She felt a pang of maternal guilt as she cracked the window and locked Josh in the car with Buster. She’d be able to keep an eye on him through the convenience store’s plate glass windows. If she woke him now he’d wander the store wanting what he couldn’t have. That seemed crueler somehow.

  A dollar and change would only go so far.

  Once inside she realized just how impossible the stretch. Maybe they’d get lucky and find a grocery store handing out free samples since today was Sunday. That was one of the reasons she shopped during the busy weekends back home. Her paycheck had never kept them in style, but at least it put a roof over their heads. As it stood, she’d spend the rest of her life looking over her shoulder. Jenny settled on a pint of milk as having the most nutritional bang for her buck, chocolate because it would at least seem like a treat to Josh.

  “After you,” a masculine voice insisted as they stepped toward the register together. He wore jeans and a denim shirt to go with that rugged sound.

  “Thank you.” Jenny glanced in his direction, but avoided eye contact. He didn’t exactly smile back, but he had nice even teeth and she thought maybe brown eyes shaded by a ball cap with some sort of eagle emblem and ST-11 stitched across it. She had no idea what that meant.

  “Five, oh-six in gas?” the middle-aged clerk asked, punching in the number when she nodded.

  “And this.” She set the milk on the counter. “Are you hiring by any chance?” The panic button around his neck might have given her pause if she wasn’t so desperate.

  He looked her up and down. “Nope.”

  She covered her disappointment with a thin smile as he scanned the milk. It rang up $1.19. She could have sworn the posted sign read $1.09. She should make him check. Even though a dime wasn’t going to make or break her--she was already broken--and holding up the line.

  “Six, twenty-five.”

  Jenny put her money on the counter.

  “Sorry,” she said as the clerk counted out the change and took four cents from the take a penny, leave a penny tray. Bumping into the man behind her in an attempt to flee the embarrassment, she apologized again, “Sorry.”

  On her way out the door, she stopped to pick up a nickel from the floor near the slot machines. She considered taking a chance, but didn’t like her odds. Instead, she returned to the counter with as much dignity as possible and dropped the nickel into the tray. She would have left it at that, but she had a penny coming so she took it.

  For luck.

  #

  Garrett Erickson watched the woman as he set his Mountain Dew down at the check out counter. She’d picked up a banana several times while shopping and each time put it back in the basket. She probably couldn’t afford the overpriced fruit. Who could? She was too thin to be pretty, didn’t even fill out her loose fitting jeans, but there was something about her...

  “That gonna do it?” the clerk asked.

  Garrett grabbed a couple apples and a banana, and then added candy to the mix. Thanks to impulse marketing, he could spend several more dollars within easy reach of the cash register. Although, he had no idea how he’d get the waif to take the handout.

  Garrett exited the store directly behind her with his bag full of impulse buys. As he stuffed change into his pocket he let a twenty dollar bill flutter to the ground.

  “Ma’am,” he called after her. “You dropped this.”

  Just as she turned, he stooped to pick it up.

  She took a hesitant step toward him, saw the amount and backed off.

  “I didn’t--”

  “Somebody did. You’re the only other person here right now. Take it.”

  CHAPTER TWO

&nbs
p; Garrett saw the flash of pride in her pale irises as she hesitated. With her long blonde hair and translucent skin, she might even be pretty with some color in her cheeks, and without those deep purple smudges underneath her eyes. She looked as worn out as a BUD/S during Hell Week.

  “Thank you,” she said as she tucked the bill into her pocket.

  One look at her packed ‘79 Fairlane and he wished he’d thought to drop a hundred. He’d lose more than that in the casinos tonight. He’d paid for his new Ford Bronco in cash from his reenlistment bonus and still had money to burn. “Where you headed?” Not far, he hoped. He’d noticed the Colorado plates.

  “Reno.” A look of sheer panic flashed in her gray eyes. She’d just told a virtual stranger her destination. This was a gal used to watching out for herself, and if he didn’t miss his guess, used to bad luck with men.

  Garrett feigned disinterest, crunched down on a Granny Smith and tossed her the Red Delicious. She caught the apple and held onto it with two hands. As hungry as she must have been, he was surprised she didn’t bite into it.

  “On my way to San Diego with a stop in Reno myself.” But at the moment that seemed as wasteful as tossing his partially eaten apple to the patch of scrub grass at his side.

  “I have to go,” she started backing away.

  He didn’t want her to leave, not without the rest of the junk he’d purchased for her. Behind his waif, two heads popped up from the backseat of the car. A boy and a dog pressed wet noses against the window.

  “That your kid?” Now he knew why she hadn’t eaten the apple. “He like chocolate? Afraid I won’t fit into my wetsuit if I eat all of these. He shoved the bag full of candy and fruit at her before she could protest. “Have a safe trip.” Tipping his ball cap with the SEAL Team Eleven designation, he sauntered off toward the phone booth to make a call he’d been putting off for too long.

  Feeding the pay phone coins from his pocket, he wondered what her story was—a single mom down on her luck? A very young, single mom from the look of it. Early twenties, if he had to guess. His gut twisted into tight little knots. He remembered exactly what those kinds of hunger pangs felt like.

  Garrett punched the numbers by rote. This wasn’t a call he wanted to make using his cell phone. Damn caller ID. An eighteen-wheeler rolled by on the highway and he switched the phone to his good ear as he waited through several more rings.

  Finally, he got through to a recorded voice... “We’re sorry...the number you have reached has been disconnected.”

  #

  Jenny stole a glance in the rear view mirror as she put the key in the ignition. Her Good Samaritan leaned into the pay phone. He had to have dropped the twenty on purpose. She would have noticed money lying on the ground.

  Uniforms hung in his car. A pilot from the Naval Air Station they’d passed? What kind of pilot worried about fitting into a wetsuit?

  Whatever he was, she wished he’d looked at her with less pity.

  Grateful, however, that he’d felt something, she shifted her gaze to Josh. As he chomped down on the banana, her stomach churned and she broke out the candy. The chocolate would only melt as the day grew hotter anyway. She turned the key in the ignition--nothing. She tried again--still nothing. Her stomach turned over with dread.

  “Come on, come on.” She pumped the gas pedal. Her pleas didn’t work this time. Popping the hood, she got out and searched for a way to release the catch.

  “Problem?” Her Good Samaritan hung up the phone and headed toward her.

  “Can’t get it started.”

  He did something to the catch, and then propped the hood.

  “I just replaced the battery,” she said. “Plus paid four hundred dollars yesterday to keep it running...” Once she realized she was babbling she trailed off.

  “It’s just a coil,” he said. Not to worry. I can fix it. But I hate to be the bearer of bad news, this isn’t a new battery. See here…?” He pointed out the telltale signs of rust and corrosion as he reconnected the coil.

  Jenny liked to think she had enough street smarts not to let people take advantage of her, but in the past seventy-two hours, she’d found out differently.

  “Go ahead and start it up,” he said.

  “Mom?” Josh demanded her attention as she climbed behind the wheel and turned the key.

  “Just a minute, hon.” The engine turned over on the first try. The hole in the muffler made the roar almost deafening.

  Her Good Samaritan lowered the hood. Coming around to her side of the car, he shut her door tight and leaned into her window. “All set.”

  “Thank you.”

  “Not a problem. Name’s Garrett, by the way. Garrett Erickson.”

  Josh grew impatient in the backseat. Jenny wasn’t so eager to break the connection to her lifeline. “Well, thank you...again, Mr. Erickson.”

  “Garrett. You didn’t tell me your name.”

  “It’s Jenny--”

  “Mom!” Josh became more insistent.

  “What, Josh?”

  “Buster ate the toothpaste again.”

  She glanced over the headrest at the mess. “Grab a towel out of the dirty clothes.”

  Josh handed her a clean T-shirt, which she used without hesitation. Rear end up in the air, she stretched across the seat and put the tooth marked tube back in the over night bag because they had no other option. As she did, Jenny noticed the open bottle of Motrin.

  “Josh were you in Mommy’s medicine?”

  “No--”

  Even as he said it, Jenny noticed teeth marks on the plastic bottle. Buster stared up at her with innocent eyes and then retched—right before puking all over the backseat.

  “Let’s get her out of the car.” Garrett Erickson became the voice of reason. “Son,” he said, “grab the dog’s leash.” Josh got out, pulling Buster along with him. “How many pills did she get hold of?”

  “I don’t know,” Jenny dug through the bottom of the bag and managed to round up forty tablets. “Maybe half. The label says one hundred. But I have no idea how many I’ve taken.”

  “Mom! Buster’s eating grass.”

  “Why don’t I call a vet,” Garrett offered. “Or you can call and I’ll clean up the mess in back—”

  “I’ll clean it up.” It wasn’t the kind of chore she wanted to dump on a stranger.

  He came back a few minutes later. “There’s one right up the road.”

  She couldn’t afford to take Buster to a veterinarian.

  “Mom, Buster’s shaking.” Josh sounded as scared as she felt. They’d held up reasonably well until now.

  What was she going to do? She couldn’t just let the dog die. “Oh please, God, no.” Now she was shaking.

  “You don’t have the money for an emergency, do you?” There wasn’t the least bit of censure in Garrett Erickson’s voice or manner as he studied her face.

  “It’s been one emergency after another.”

  “Don’t worry about it. I’ve got this covered. Let’s get her to the vet.”

  “I can’t let you do that--”

  “What other option do you have?”

  CHAPTER THREE

  An hour later, the vet handed Jenny a one hundred and sixty dollar bill. She stood by red-faced while Garrett Erickson opened his wallet and paid, in cash, without hesitation.

  “I will pay you back, today.” She cradled Buster as they stepped outside the veterinary clinic. “Just as soon as I sell my car.”

  “I don’t need to be paid back.”

  “But I need to pay you. I was going to have to sell the car eventually. It’s been more trouble than it’s worth. I doubt it will even make it to Reno. And you’ve done more than enough for us already.”

  “You’ll get three, maybe four hundred tops. Then you’ll be stranded here in Fernley.”

  “Fernley, Nevada is as good a place as any. I could live with that mountain view. Josh and I come from a town a tenth this size. Besides, if Greyhound goes through here, we can catch
a bus to Reno and still come out ahead. It’s better than driving there on an empty gas tank and arriving broke.”

  Pride was the only thing Jenny had left to hold on to. Faced with her stubbornness, he agreed to help her sell the car. Their first stop was to a car wash. The exterior wasn’t the problem. After washing away the road dirt, it was still a rusty heap. There was, however, that awful smell to contend with. Even their belongings, now strewn from one end of the backseat to the other, reeked of sick dog.

  Jenny gathered up their clothes, clean and dirty and shoved them into the garbage bag. She wasn’t surprised when Garrett suggested they take them to a laundry mat they’d passed along Main Street.

  He got out of his car and met her at the hood of hers. "There’s a Country Store. How about I get an air freshener for the car?” he suggested. “Want to come along?”

  “No, thank you, I’ll stay here with the clothes.” She felt a desperate attachment to the few items they had left. As tempting as the thought of filling up on samples might be, going into the store would only remind her of the things they wanted and needed and couldn’t afford right now. “But if you could pick up a job application...”

  “Sure. Josh?” Garrett held out his hand to her son. Josh hadn't received much male attention in his young life, but she was surprised by how eager he was to go with a complete stranger.

  “Josh!” she called him back and silently reprimanded her son with a shake of her head.

  The smile fell from his face. His disappointment at not being able to go with the SEAL, made Jenny feel guilty. For that matter Garrett looked disappointed.

  But keeping Josh close was the right thing to do. Even though Garrett was a kind stranger—he was still a stranger they’d picked up at a gas station convenience store. Great, she’d been reduced to picking up men at convenience stores.

  Garrett accepted her decision with a slight nod and left them alone. Josh occupied himself by checking every coin return in the place. A few minutes later, he presented her with his find.