If Montana Jones has learned anything, it is that nothing much ever changes. She looks as stunning as she did the day her met her. His eyes drink up the careless flip she gives her hair as she enters the lounge-a place with a doorman out front holding a list of the who's who of Vegas. He is sure that Mira's name is not on the list, but when a woman looks like she does her name needn't be known by anyone.
She is painfully gorgeous. Deep, dark skin, large round breasts on a thin, lithe body. Her face is an anomaly, at least that's what his mother had said when she met her. She smells like sunshine on a bad day, the earth on a good one. Her voice is a familiar melody, her core as hot as fire.
It is for this reason that he aches for her. He is not proud to admit that she remains the one woman he can never get enough of, even after all of the turmoil.
She will never know it, but every time he sets someone on her trail he cries and sleeps and mopes. He feels a regrettable wave of relief every time the Murder Twins dispatch one of his goons. While his brother's death remains a punch in the gut he hasn't quite recovered from, to this day he feels a dull pang of relief every time he considers Fowler's failure.
In his most desperate moments, he even ventures to wish that she might stop this madness and come back to him.
He knows that he was not always what he should have been to her. He isn't sure he knows how to love a woman, is certain that he does not know how to love a woman as complex as Mira. She is a charming, calculating cheat with a penchant for crime, after all. The type of woman who can enter into any situation and fit seamlessly within it.
It is in this way, Mint had told him when they were close, that she completely and totally disarms you, breaches your defenses, and rips you hollow in the end. Mint was drunk when he said it, and Montana was, too, which is why he hadn't questioned how Mint could know such a thing-and also why he hadn't taken Mint's words as the golden piece of guidance that they were.
He enters the lounge a bit after her, his name is on the list. He watches her make the rounds and chuckles to himself as she shuns the advances of no less than five men who approach her in fast succession. She stands up on the bar foot rail and orders a translucent drink, probably some sort of vodka cocktail.