by Elisabeth Naughton, Cynthia Eden, Katie Reus, Alexandra Ivy, Laura Wright, Joan Swan
“Rafael Sullivan. You were right. He’s American. Born and raised in sunny Florida. Thirty-nine years old, arrested once for breaking and entering, charges dropped for lack of evidence. Address lists a place in Key West.”
Lisa ran a shaky hand across her forehead. “Give it to me.”
She jotted down the information as he recited it.
“Now, you gonna tell me what this is all about?” he asked.
“Yes.” But not now.
“Lis?”
She stood, brushing off his concern. “I gotta go, Shane. I’ve got a flight in just about two hours.”
“Lis—”
She ripped the paper off the notepad by the phone. “I promise I’ll explain everything when I get back to the States.”
“I’m going to hold you to that.”
She smiled, knowing he would. “I love you, little brother.”
“I know.” She heard the frown in his voice. “Call me when you get home. And don’t do anything stupid.”
He knew her so well.
“Trust me. I learned my lesson.”
Chapter Four
Lisa tugged off her sunglasses and peered into the dark windows of the small two-story home on Olivia Street in Key West. No sound echoed from inside the house, and she couldn’t see a thing past the small entry with its sage-colored walls and rustic pine flooring. She blew out a frustrated breath, pushed the hair off her forehead and frowned.
Sweat slid down her back, adding to her bad mood. Back home in San Francisco she’d be wearing a leather jacket and her snazzy black boots at this point in October, but down here in the southernmost city in the continental U.S., it was twelve thousand degrees. The tank top was a good idea. The denim capris were not. Only idiots lived in this kind of heat year-round.
“He’s not there.”
She turned at the fragile voice and looked toward the elderly woman with a big straw hat standing on the other side of the white picket fence that separated this house from its neighbor. Plastering what she hoped was a pleasant look on her face, Lisa eased down the front steps, moving around the dwarf hibiscus and palm shrubs. “I’m looking for Rafael Sullivan. Do you know where I might find him?”
The woman snipped a flower with the shears in her hand, dropped it into the basket at her feet. “He came by and fixed my ice maker yesterday. Such a nice boy.”
Lisa frowned. Nice boy and Rafe Sullivan did not go together. He’d obviously snowed the old lady, too. The elderly woman looked like she weighed about fifty pounds soaking wet, her frail body covered in long sleeves, full cotton pants and canvas shoes. She had to be sweltering, but you’d never know it by her chipper mood.
“So he’s around today?” Lisa asked.
“Rafael? Oh, he’s probably down at the marina tinkering on his boat. He does love that boat of his.”
“I bet he does,” Lisa muttered. She couldn’t help but wonder how many sex-starved women he’d hustled to finance that little trinket. Shifting her feet, she tried to keep her tone even. “You wouldn’t happen to know which marina that was, would you?”
“Now let’s see.” The woman tapped her gloved finger against her lips. “It had a shell name in it, I think.”
Lord Almighty. Lisa forced a smile and stepped back. “Thank you. I’m sure I can find it.”
Luckily, there was only one marina in Key West with a shell name. Pulling into the parking lot of the Conch Harbor Marina, Lisa crossed her fingers and hoped this was the right one. Palm trees flanked the front lawn. Bougainvillea ran along the gray building.
She didn’t really want to spend all day looking for the jerk. But she would if she had to.
She slammed the car door, adjusted her sunglasses and followed the path around the side of the structure toward the docks. Her stylish pink sandals crunched on the white stones, and she paused when she reached the deck at the back of the building to look out over the vast view of water and sailboats lined up in neat rows. Lisa’s gaze swept over the patio as she searched for Rafe. Round tables with wide green-and-white-striped umbrellas littered the deck. A few people lingered over drinks, chatting in the afternoon sun, but no one reminded her of her almost Latin lover, the man she wanted to drop-kick with her bright-red-painted toenails.
A waiter rushed by with a tray of drinks. Lisa stopped him with a hand on his arm. “You wouldn’t happen to know where I could find Rafe Sullivan, would you?” She tossed a ten-dollar bill on the tray.
The kid’s eyes lit up. He reached for the bill and slipped it into his pocket. “Sullivan’s boat is moored on B dock. Sea Witch. You can’t miss it.”
“Thanks.” Lisa looked out over the docks and set her jaw as the kid walked away. Just the thought of seeing Sullivan again made her blood boil.
Sea Witch, huh? How appropriate. In a minute he was going to see just how much of a witch she could be.
She headed down the ramp toward the massive yachts and quaint sailboats and located B dock easily. As she rounded the corner, her gaze lifted and she focused on a man near the end of the dock dressed in loose-fitting jeans and a black T-shirt. His back was to Lisa, and he was waving his hands as he talked to a skinny brunette in a skimpy bikini, but Lisa didn’t need to see his face to know who he was.
She’d recognize that ass anywhere. And dammit, it looked even better in worn denim. Not giving herself time to change her mind, she strode down the dock toward the pair. Over the man’s shoulder, the brunette’s gaze snapped to her, eyes narrowed and curious, but Lisa ignored it. All she heard was Rafe’s voice making some lame-ass comments about the weather, and fury welled up in her stomach before she could stop it.
He paused midsentence, noticing the brunette’s expression, and turned. A split second of surprise registered in his dark eyes. And Lisa didn’t even hesitate.
“Nice to see you again, querido.” Her flat palms connected with his solid chest. She pushed hard, catching him off guard, knocking him right off his feet.
His hands waved. A startled yelp slipped from his lips before he lost his balance and fell backward into the turquoise water.
The brunette’s eyes grew wide as they followed Rafe off the end of the dock. Startled, she held out her arms. The pink cocktail in her right hand splashed over the glass as water from his fall doused both her and Lisa.
Rafe broke the surface, sputtered and drew in a breath of air.
Lisa pushed the sunglasses into her hair, wiped her hands together and smiled. “Wow. That felt good.” She rolled her shoulders and turned toward the brunette. “I’m Lisa, and I don’t plan on catching your name.” She leaned closer as if she were sharing a dark secret. “A piece of advice. Run. While you still can.”
The brunette flicked her a quizzical expression. “I…”
Lisa straightened, raised her brows and waited.
The brunette looked back at Rafe in the water, then quickly skirted Lisa and stepped away. “Um. Okay then.” Her flip-flops echoed quickly down the dock.
Lisa crossed her arms over her chest and stared down at the shimmering water. Knocking him on his ass should have made her feel better. Seeing him in the midst of hustling another woman should have reinforced what a creep he was. Instead, she was remembering those sensual lips pressed against hers and that gorgeous face flushed with passion when he’d looked at her with those dark and probing eyes.
She tightened her jaw and forced the thought from her mind. No way she was going there again. Ever. And she was an even bigger idiot for even thinking about it now.
He didn’t make any attempt to get out of the marina, simply treaded water as he watched her with amusement. It wasn’t the reaction she’d expected, and it only infuriated her more.
“Where’s my rock, Sullivan?”
A slow smile spread across his features. He ran his hands over his dark hair, wiping water back from his rugged face. He seemed to fit this atmosphere so much better than he had the suit and tie in Milan. Why hadn’t she noticed?
“And here I tho
ught you came all this way ’cause you missed me.”
She tapped her foot against the dock. “Think again, Slick. Where’s my marble?”
Without responding, he swam toward a nearby yacht and climbed up the swim ladder. Water ran in rivulets down his body, the wet shirt molding to his broad chest, the jeans sculpting strong thighs and firm, toned muscles.
He wasn’t sexy, dammit. He was a thief. A no-good lying sack of shit.
He disappeared around the back of the yacht and reemerged on the other side as her temper bubbled and brewed. The dock swayed when he jumped onto the finger separating the boat from its neighbor. Eyes trained on her, he walked forward until he was only a few inches away.
Her pulse kicked up. The heat from his body slid over her, igniting an odd tingle in her stomach. Her gaze flicked from his hard eyes to his lips before common sense finally registered and she remembered why she was there.
“Feel better?” he asked, resting his big hands on his narrow hips.
“Nice accent.”
“Like it?” A sexy half grin curled one side of his mouth.
“There’s not a single thing I like about you.”
Laughter danced in his ebony eyes. “That’s not what you said the last time we were together.” He turned and climbed onto a pristine white, thirty-nine-foot Beneteau sailboat to her left and disappeared down the companionway.
She stood slack-jawed for a moment before she caught herself and straightened. He wasn’t going to turn this around on her again.
When his head darted back up from the depths of the fancy sloop, he was rubbing a towel over his wet hair. He moved up the steps to stand on the deck of the boat and leaned against the grab rail to look down at her. Sunlight glinted off his shiny hair. The black T-shirt molding to his arms and chest only accentuated his physique. “You come all the way down here to make sure I got a bath?”
Disbelief raced through her. She forced her eyes away from his broad chest up to his eyes. “No, you son of a bitch, I came down her to get back what you stole from me.”
“Stole?” he asked as if the word shocked him. “I don’t have a clue what you’re talking about.”
“You’re a piece of work,” she managed. “You seduced me, and then—”
“Wait.” He held up a hand and straightened. “Who dragged who into her hotel room?”
Anger pumped like hot lava through her veins. “Just give it back and I’ll be on my merry way.”
“What makes you think I even have it? Whatever ‘it’ is.”
Panic slid through her. He wouldn’t have sold it already, would he? The moron probably didn’t even know what he’d taken from her.
“Hand it over and I won’t press charges.”
He pushed away from the railing and laughed, a smooth sound that rushed over her like a wave, warming her stomach in a way that should have made her sick.
“You think that’s funny?”
He ran the towel over the nape of his neck and tossed it on the helm seat. “I think you’re full of shit, Querida. You’re not gonna go to the cops.”
“What makes you think I haven’t already?”
He climbed over the side of the boat and dropped onto the finger. “Two reasons. First, if you had, you wouldn’t be here with me now. Some burly cop with bad teeth would be reading me my rights.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Familiar scenario?”
One dark eyebrow snapped up. “You could say that.”
“And the second?”
His expression hardened. “If we’re gonna get technical, that relief technically belongs to the Jamaican government. I know you never filed the necessary paperwork to excavate that cave.”
Lisa’s stomach tightened. How long had he been watching her?
“Hey, Mr. Sullivan!”
Rafe’s gaze flicked over her shoulder. His face softened as he waved toward a group of teenagers climbing aboard a nearby yacht.
It was all she could do not to tear into him right there and then.
He waited until their laughter disappeared inside the massive forty-eight-foot powerboat three slips down before swinging his gaze back toward her. “We’re not going to do this here.”
“You expect me to go somewhere with you?”
Boredom ran across his face. “Look, you want the marble back or not?”
He was suddenly going to give it to her? Just like that? Suspicion ran through her, mixed with relief that he was at least admitting he still had it. “Where is it?”
He tugged keys out of his wet pocket. “Not here.” He cast her a tight look. “Take it or leave it, Querida. You wanna see your goddess, you gotta trust me.” He stepped past her and headed for the end of the dock. “I know it’s a stretch.”
Trust him? Was he serious?
A pathetic laugh slipped from her lips, and she turned to look after him. “How do I know you’re not going to drug me again and this time, rape or murder me?”
He turned. “If I’d wanted to do either, I already would have. You didn’t exactly put up a fight.”
She drew in a calming breath. At her side, her fingers dug into her palms. The son of a bitch was right. She’d been primed and ready when she’d been in that hotel room, and if he’d told her he was a thief at that moment, she probably wouldn’t have cared. And that fact only infuriated her more.
He headed for the end of the dock again. “Pick up the pace, Maxwell. I don’t have all day.”
***
The bad-tempered mood settling over Rafe was a hell of a lot easier to deal with than a woman who didn’t want to have anything to do with him. A woman who looked hotter in a pair of low-slung denim short pants and a tight-fitting tank top that accentuated her full, round breasts than most of the women parading around Key West did in their skimpy bikinis.
Hell, he was a man. He noticed things like that. And she’d worn that outfit to tease him. He was sure of it.
But did she have to wear those strappy beaded sandals that showed off her tiny feet and red—hot-red—toenails? He hadn’t pegged her for red. And damn, if that little surprise hadn’t triggered a flash in his brain back there, stripping off her clothing piece by piece to see what other surprises she had underneath, starting with those sandals so he could lick and suck on her sensual toes as he slowly moved his way up her tantalizing body.
Oh, hell. He ran a hand over his face. One look at the curvy archaeologist and he’d nearly forgotten why he’d scammed the woman in the first place.
Family. Future. A chance to make up for the past. Don’t forget it, Sullivan.
He wouldn’t. Now that he was back in control, he could handle anything. Seeing her less than a week after their last sultry meeting was just a shock to his system. Those emerald eyes of hers had reminded him exactly why he’d almost tossed this chance away—all for one night of sex. He blew out a breath. Good thing there was no chance of that happening again.
With a grunt, he jerked open the passenger door of the Tahoe. “Get in.”
“I am not getting in your car.” She fisted her hands on her hips, tilted her chin up at him in a clear challenge. “I have a rental that works perfectly fine. I’ll follow you.”
He hadn’t expected the fight in that tiny body. Heck, he hadn’t expected her to track him down so fast, either. It wasn’t like he’d covered his tracks all that well. He hadn’t, and on purpose. The truth of the matter was he still needed her, but he’d expected to use her on his schedule, not hers.
And being waylaid by her on the docks had not been part of his plans.
“Your rental’s fine here. Get in. We’re not going far.”
When she didn’t respond, he pinned her with a look. “Don’t make me ask again.”
She leveled him with a measuring gaze. He could see the indecision swirling in her eyes, could practically feel the anger pumping off her in waves.
Good. That would make this easier all around. He wanted her to think he was a prick. Better for both of them.
W
ith a scowl, she climbed into the vehicle. He snapped the door shut and walked around the Chevy. Tamping down the frustration, he eased into the driver’s seat, clicked his seat belt and turned on the ignition.
“You’re an ass,” she muttered when he pulled out onto the street, her gaze fixed ahead.
A smile curled his lips before he could stop it. No, she definitely hadn’t tracked him down because she’d missed him. On the contrary, it looked like she wanted his head on a platter.
“You’re not the first to tell me that, Querida.”
“I have a name,” she said, looking out the side window.
He turned down Olivia Street. “Right. Lisa.”
“Dr. Maxwell, Slick.” She glanced his direction with steely eyes before looking back out the window. “Don’t forget it.”
Like he ever could.
He pulled into the drive of his small house and killed the ignition. She opened the car door and slipped from the vehicle before he even released the latch on his door.
Bitchy. Probably a good thing nothing more had happened in that hotel. Domineering, obnoxious women weren’t his type.
“Oh, there you are, Rafael.”
He tucked his keys in his pocket and looked up at the sound of the frail voice. “Hey, Mrs. Kimbel.”
Scissors in one hand, Anita Kimbel stood near the small picket fence and wiped her other hand down her long-sleeved cotton shirt, leaving a smudge of dirt in its wake. “Do you think you could take a look at my ice maker again? The ice is getting all stuck inside. You know I just can’t drink my lemonade without my ice.”
He shot a quick look at her front porch where her worthless grandson Jimmy sat in a plastic deck chair, shirtless in the afternoon sun, sipping a beer and scowling their direction. The punk was sucking the old woman dry of cash and beer and food. And she was letting him.
He glanced back at his elderly neighbor and tried to smile for her sake. He hated she was being taken advantage of. She was a nice old lady who’d never done a thing wrong in her life, except help some whacked-out kid who didn’t deserve her generosity. And her situation rang just a little too true for his liking. “Sure thing. I’ll do it later.”