Jacob chuckled softly. “You really know your music, don’t you?”
Ana closed her eyes. “I grew up with it. I woke up and went to bed with music. Daddy installed speakers in every room of the house, including the laundry room and pantry. Never mind he had a recording studio in one part of the house, he just had to hear music whenever he went.”
“So, I guess it stands to reason why you went into the music business.”
“Three of us did. Alexandra is an architectural historian. Although she likes music, she never was as passionate about it as my father and brothers.”
Concentrating intently, Jacob spun her around in an intricate dance step. “You don’t write it?”
“No. I leave the writing and composing to Jason and Gabriel. That’s a gift I wasn’t blessed with.”
“What are you blessed with?”
Ana was going to say “you,” but quickly dismissed the thought. She was blessed to have him accept the responsibility of keeping her safe. “I seem to have an innate gift for recognizing musical talent. As soon as a vocalist opens his or her mouth I know within under a minute whether they have something unique, special. It doesn’t matter if you can imitate Aretha Franklin, have the range of the indomitable Whitney Houston, Christina Aguilera or Adele, a female singer must have something that sets her apart. It’s the same with the male performers.
“That’s why I fought so hard to sign Justin Glover. He wasn’t just another pretty-boy with talent. He was the whole package. Justin can segue from R&B to rap, jazz and pop with the ease of taking a breath. When I heard him scatting I knew I would spend Serenity’s last copper penny to sign him.”
“Why did Irvine go after you and not the golden goose?”
“That’s because if he gets me out of the way, then eventually he will get Justin to sign with his label.”
“But, why you? Why doesn’t he wait until Glover’s contract is up, then go after him?”
The song ended and Ana stood in the middle of the dance floor, staring up at Jacob. Shadows from the dimmed overhead lighting flattered his lean face. “Irvine wants revenge because he’d heard I challenged his manhood.”
Resting his hand at the small of her back, Jacob led her slowly back to their table. “How?”
“I said something about when he got up to put on his pants he should also remember to strap on his cojones if he planned to challenge Serenity.”
“Oh, shit!”
Ana stopped short, Jacob stumbling when he nearly lost his balance. “What are you shitting about?”
“Did you or did you not say that?”
She lifted her shoulders. “I may have alluded to it. But only after he’d called me a bitch that had gotten out of pocket, and he was just the man to take care of me.”
Jacob seated Ana, then pulled her chair close enough to his for their shoulders to touch. “Who was there when you said that?”
Exhaling an audible breath, she then bit her lip. “Of course Jason was there.”
“Think, Ana!”
Her brow furrowed. “I guess it was the executive staff.”
Beckoning to a waiter, Jacob asked him for a pen and a sheet of paper. “When that waiter comes back I want you to write down the names of the people who make up your executive staff.”
“Why?”
“One of your employees is a rat, m’ija. Someone who knew you were going to be at that restaurant the day Tyler was shot.”
Ana’s eyes were as large as silver dollars. She shook her head. “I don’t want to believe that.”
“Why not?” Jacob whispered harshly.
“Because every employee has to sign a confidentiality agreement.”
“Wake up, Ana. People take oaths every day, but that doesn’t stop them from spying on their country or breaking the law.”
Looping her arm through Jacob’s, Ana rested her hand on the sleeve of his jacket. She didn’t want to believe that someone at Serenity was leaking information to Slow Wyne. The employees had become her extended family. In fact, she saw them more than her own family members, with the exception of Jason. She tried thinking of a situation where the result ended with a disgruntled employee, but drew a blank.
“What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to get these names to Diego. He’ll know what to do with them.” Jacob kissed her hair. “I don’t want you to concern yourself with this.”
“But...I...I have to be concerned, Jacob.”
“No, you don’t. Right now Serenity is on hiatus, and that means Jason will only have to interact with a smaller number of employees.”
“What about Jason? Who’s going to protect him?”
Ana’s wide-eyed look was one he would remember all of his life. It was the first time he saw fear in her. Occasionally he would detect it in her voice, but this time it was different. She wasn’t frightened for herself, but her twin. “I’m certain Jason can take care of himself.”
Jacob wanted to remind Ana that her family had enough resources to hire a small army of mercenaries to carry out their wishes. Her disclosure that she’d verbally emasculated Basil Irvine was the linchpin to identifying those responsible for shooting Tyler.
“I want you to promise me one thing, darling,” he crooned.
Her expression softened, eyes glowing like amber in the candlelight. “What is it, m’ijo?”
“You’re going to let me handle this.”
There came a beat, then a smile when she said, “Okay. I promise.”
He angled his head and kissed her, moaning softly when her lips parted. “That’s my baby.”
The waiter returned with a pad and pen stamped with the resort’s name. Jacob tore off a sheet. “Thank you.”
“Will there be anything else?”
“No. Thank you,” he repeated.
Ana wrote down the names of three men and two women. “That’s it.”
Jacob folded the paper and slipped it into the breast pocket of his jacket. “I’ll be right back.”
Ana grabbed his sleeve. “Where are you going?”
Cradling the back of her head, he touched his mouth to hers. “I have to go to the cottage for something.” Raising a questioning eyebrow, she met his steady gaze. “Don’t run away.”
Her dimples winked at him when she smiled. “Where would I go?”
Her question lingered with Jacob as he left the restaurant. Where would she go after leaving the Bahamas? Back to Boca Raton? Back to pick up the reins of operating Serenity? And back to a lifestyle that was as predictable as a sunrise.
He would also return to the States to resume his own familiar lifestyle, but with a difference. Jacob doubted whether he would ever forget Ana. Taking long strides he covered the distance between the main house and the cottage in record time. Retrieving the netbook he went online. The island had a cell-phone antenna, a satellite dish for limited television viewing, and the resort had what was touted as secure Wi-Fi connections, yet Jacob still felt uneasy about accessing the internet with what he considered sensitive information.
He connected to Diego’s email and clicked on the instant-message feature. Jacob had to wait three minutes before Diego responded. Typing quickly, he listed the names Ana had given him. The coded messages went back and forth, until Diego asked how he was enjoying his honeymoon.
His hands stilled as he willed his fingers to type what lay in his heart. Then, as if they were detached from his body, he typed, I love my wife. Later. Logging off and not giving Diego the opportunity to reply, he sat motionlessly staring at the blank screen.
He’d admitted to his godson’s father he loved Ana when he hadn’t told her. He’d never been reticent when it came to speaking his mind, but staring down the barrel of a loaded gun was preferable to admitting those three little words to Ana.<
br />
The beginnings of a smile found its way to Jacob’s eyes. It was apparent he was no different from his father—one glance and he’d known almost instantaneously the woman with whom he wanted to share his future. Ana was sexy, uninhibited and innocently seductive. And he suspected she had no inkling of how seductive she could be. She was also unpredictable and that kept him slightly off-balance. Unpredictable, independent, feisty and smart. These were characteristics he admired and looked for in a woman.
Jacob finally got up from the dining table to put away the computer. It was time he got back to his wife.
* * *
Ana averted her gaze when she heard the scathing interchange between the couple sitting at a table several feet away. What had begun as a disagreement had escalated into a noisy argument when the young woman stood up, called her boyfriend a drunken fool and then stalked out of the restaurant. Good for you for walking out on that clown, she mused, silently applauding the woman.
“Hey, beautiful. Wanna dance with me?”
She went completely still when the stench of stale alcohol wafted to her nose. Ana didn’t want to believe the man had shifted his attention from his girlfriend to her. He was so close she could hear his raspy breathing. “No, thank you.”
He leaned even closer and she shifted off her chair and onto the one Jacob had vacated. Where are you? the voice in her head screamed. Her husband had taken the most inopportune time to leave her alone. Ana didn’t want to cause a scene, praying her unsolicited admirer wouldn’t come any closer or attempt to touch her.
“Come on, baby. Don’t be like that. Come on, dance with me.” He grabbed her arm.
Ana fisted her hands. “Get the hell away from me.”
“I—”
Whatever he attempted to say was cut off when he slumped, groaning in pain. Ana glanced up just in time to see Jacob catch him before he fell. The look in his eyes and the expression on his face didn’t bode well for the inebriated man.
“Touch my wife again and I’ll put your ass in the ground,” Jacob threatened between his teeth. Supporting his sagging body, he steered him toward the entrance. He waved to the clerk manning the front desk. “Call security and have them take him back to his room.” Within minutes two men appeared.
Jacob didn’t wait around to see where they’d taken him because he wanted to get back to Ana. He found her, eyes closed and cradling a glass of water. The bottle of wine sat in an ice bucket next to a pitcher of water. Folding his body down to the empty chair, he whispered, “I’m sorry about that, baby.”
She opened her eyes. “What did you do to him?”
“I turned him over to the security people.”
Ana met his eyes. “Did you Taser him?”
“No! And where would I get a Taser?”
“He went down like he was hit with a bolt of electricity.”
Jacob blew out his breath. “Let it go, baby. I rescue you from a drunk and you want to know what I did to him. He’s lucky I didn’t break his neck.”
She shook her head. “I can’t let it go, Jacob. What did you do to him?”
Waves of frustration washed over him. Ana was like a dog with a bone. She just wouldn’t let it go. “I grabbed his midsection just below his heart. If I’d applied a little bit more pressure his heart would’ve ruptured. Now, are you satisfied?”
Ana knew Jacob was upset with her questioning him. “I’m only asking because I need to keep a low profile. I didn’t leave Florida to become headline news in the Bahamas because of some idiot who just may decide to sue you for assault.”
“Don’t worry about him, m’ija. He probably won’t remember anything after he sleeps it off.”
The tense lines around Ana’s mouth relaxed. She was more anxious than she’d originally thought. If the circumstances were different she was certain she could’ve repelled his advances, because it wasn’t the first time she’d been harassed by someone who’d had too much to drink. Driving a heel into someone’s instep usually got their attention.
Looping her arm through his, she leaned against Jacob’s shoulder. “What is there about me that attracts crazies?”
Jacob pulled her closer. Ana didn’t know how close he’d come to causing the drunk bodily harm. It was as if his protective instincts had gone into overdrive, superseding his promise to her cousin. “Even the crazies have good taste. You have to know you’re hotter than a habanero pepper.”
“Stop it.” The shadow of a blush washed over her face, throat and chest.
“Well, you are. I really got lucky when I got you for a wife.”
Ana closed her eyes. “And I got real lucky when I got a superhero masquerading as my husband.”
Husband.
The word had flowed off her tongue as naturally as breathing. When had she begun to think of Jacob as her husband? She’d always believed she would meet a man, fall in love, marry, have several children and they would grow old together. What had been her predictable lifestyle was now a thing of the past. Even if she were able to return to Florida, Ana knew her life would never be the same because someone else had determined the course of her destiny.
“I’m no superhero, Ana. I’m just a man, a mere mortal who likes you more than he should.”
Turning her head, she gave him a long, penetrating stare. “What you talking about?”
Jacob winked at her. “I like being married to you.”
She smiled. “Same here,” Ana agreed.
“What are we going to do about it? Do we try to stay together or do we call it quits before we get too involved?”
“We’re already too involved, Jacob. We should’ve had this conversation before we slept together.”
“Sleeping together should have no bearing on whether we decide not to annul our marriage. I’ve slept with other women and I knew I’d never marry them, and I’m certain it was the same with the men you’ve slept with.”
Ana blushed again. “Men I should’ve never given the time of day.”
“Don’t beat up on yourself, sweetheart. I haven’t always chosen wisely either. Maybe it took a third party to make a decision we were unable to make for ourselves.”
“You’re telling me this to say what?” Ana asked Jacob.
“I’m asking you to give me a chance to prove that I can be a good husband.”
“You’re already a good husband, m’ijo.”
Jacob clamped his jaw in frustration. Why was Ana making it so difficult for him? For them? “You’re missing the point, baby.”
Ana closed her eyes. She loved him, but doubted whether she was in love with Jacob. She’d didn’t want to be cynical only because she’d heard the word bantered around much too often and loosely. She loved music because it provided an emotional foundation and stability harkening back to her childhood. She loved her parents, her siblings and her extended family. The love she was beginning to feel for Jacob was different, and Ana didn’t want to confuse it with sex or gratitude.
Her eyelids fluttered wildly. “Okay.”
Jacob kissed the end of her nose. “What if we have date night back at the cottage? We’ll order room service, watch a movie, then I’m not going to be responsible for what happens after that.”
Ana gave him a dazzling smile. “Let’s do it.”
Chapter 13
Ana sat in the oversize claw-foot tub between Jacob’s outstretched legs. Bubbles from pulsing jets washed over her breasts as she sipped champagne from a delicate crystal flute. Their request to be served dinner in their cottage was nothing short of spectacular. Waiters had arrived with serving carts with table settings for two and dishes from which wafted the most delicious mouth-watering aromas. If Diego wanted feedback on his resort, then she would’ve given the service five stars.
One waiter lingered, serving and removing course
s, while surreptitiously keeping his distance to not be intrusive. The roast pork was fork-tender; the steak broiled to the perfect medium-well. The piquant dressing on the mixed green salad with tiny mandarin oranges, plataños maduro—thinly sliced ripe bananas, and a dessert of caramel coconut flan set the stage for a candlelight dinner, followed by a black-and-white Hitchcock thriller, and finally a shared bath surrounded by dozens of candles.
“Do you plan on getting me buzzed so you can take advantage of me?” Ana teased Jacob.
He chuckled softly in her ear. “How did you know?”
“Because you’ve refilled my glass twice, and you know champagne makes me sleepy.”
“All the better to eat you, my dear.”
Staring at him over her shoulder, Ana flashed a lopsided grin. “Not if I don’t eat you first.”
“No, Ana. I won’t let you do that.”
She set the flute on a table next to the tub and managed to turn around without sloshing water over the rim of the tub and straddled Jacob’s muscular thighs. “What are you afraid of, baby?”
His scowl deepened. “Nothing.”
Moisture had curled her hair and spiked her lashes. Pressing her breasts to his chest, she whispered in his ear, “I think you are.” Curving her arms around his neck, Ana rested her head on Jacob’s shoulder. “I’m slightly tipsy.”
Burying his face in her short hair, Jacob kissed her scalp. “Are you ready to go to bed?”
“Yes. But you’re going to have to help me out.”
Setting his flute on the table beside Ana’s, he managed to stand up without dropping her and stepped out of the tub onto a thick chenille rug. Reaching for a bath sheet, he wrapped it around her body, swaddling her like a mummy. Supporting her body with one hand, he picked up another towel, then carried her out of the bathroom and into their bedroom. Ana had tied the mosquito netting to the posts, turned back the bed and adjusted the table lamps to the lowest settings.
“Don’t go to sleep on me, baby.”
Ana smiled, but didn’t open her eyes. “I’m just resting my eyelids.”
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