“Julia,” Trent Groaned.
“Let Me In.”
“Is that an order from the boss?” she asked lightly.
“If it needs to be, darlin’.”
His soft words and Southern drawl were enough enticement. She moved away from the door and he made his way inside. He glanced at the large bouquet on the sofa table.
“You do flowers well,” she said. “You’re a talented man.”
He arched a brow and devoured her with a look. “You know I am.” He grabbed at her robe sash.
Julia closed her eyes. “Trent.”
“You’re naked under this robe, Julia. And in my arms.”
“I work for you now,” she said, announcing the obvious.
“It’s after hours.”
“It doesn’t feel right.”
A low ripple of laughter escaped Trent’s throat. “Don’t lie.”
Dear Reader,
I love cowboys! I guess I always have, so when Texan-born, Stetson-wearing Trent Tyler appeared in his brother’s story, The Corporate Raider’s Revenge, I had no option but to make him a Western man with all the trimmings. The rugged, sexy millionaire heading up Arizona’s Tempest West Hotel soon became my Five-Star Cowboy, and the SUITE SECRETS series took shape.
Set against the backdrop of stunning wild sunsets and natural lakes at Crimson Canyon, Five-Star Cowboy is the first of a trilogy, and all are set in some of my favorite locations. This first is set in Arizona. New Orleans is the backdrop for Do Not Disturb Until Christmas—out this November. And the final book will be set in Hawaii. I’ve traveled to each of these locales for research as well as pleasure. I know…a tough job, but someone has to do it, right?
I hope you fall in love with Trent and Julia from page one, as I did. Once you get past the deceptions you’ll find the pair remarkable and really quite likable. Keep your eyes peeled for Cody Landon and Brock Tyler, too. Their stories won’t be far behind!
Happy reading!
Charlene Sands
CHARLENE SANDS
FIVE-STAR COWBOY
Recent books by Charlene Sands
Silhouette Desire
Bunking Down with the Boss #1746
Fortune’s Vengeful Groom #1783
Between the CEO’s Sheets #1805
The Corporate Raider’s Revenge #1848
* Five-Star Cowboy #1889
Harlequin Historical
The Courting of Widow Shaw #710
Renegade Wife #789
Abducted at the Altar #816
CHARLENE SANDS
resides in Southern California with her husband, Don—her high school sweetheart and best friend. They boast proudly that their children, Jason and Nikki, have earned their college degrees. The “empty nesters” now have two cats that have taken over the house. Charlene’s love of the American West, both present and past, stems from storytelling days with her imaginative father—sparking a passion for a good story and her desire to write romance. She’s written more than twenty romances and is the recipient of a 2006 National Readers’ Choice Award and, the 2007 Cata Romance Reviewer’s Choice Award, with nominations for numerous other awards. When not writing, she enjoys sunny California days, Pacific beaches and sitting down with a good book.
Charlene invites you to visit her Web site at www.charlenesands.com to enter her contests and see what’s new. She blogs regularly on the all-western site at www.petticoatsandpistols.com and you can also find her at www.myspace.com/charlenesands.
To my wonderful son Jason and his sweet girlfriend,
Lindsay. May you always share great times,
deep respect and never-ending sports!
You both are very close to my heart.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
One
“T here’s my miracle worker.” Trent Tyler smiled as he sauntered out of the Arizona hotel’s wide, high-arched front doors, his rich sexy voice doing a number on Julia Lowell already. It still amazed her that all of this belonged to Trent.
She steadied herself against the limousine that had brought her to Crimson Canyon, her breath catching in her throat seeing Trent again. She reminded herself that he was her boss now. She could no longer think of him as the man who knew how to push all her sexual buttons.
He strode over to her with a sure-and-easy gait that always attracted female eyes. As he approached, wearing crisp denim Wranglers, a black studded shirt and a western buckle that reflected the last glimmers of Arizona sunlight, he put a finger to his Stetson in a polite tip.
“We’re going to need a miracle, Trent.”
“I’ve got faith in you, darlin’. You’ll pull it off.” He turned to the limo driver. “Put Miss Lowell’s gear in her room, Kirby.”
“Will do, Mr. Tyler.”
Once the driver took her luggage away, Julia stared into Trent’s dark eyes and reminded herself of their professional relationship now. She’d handed him her full resume in person that told him of her accomplishments. A master’s degree in business and landing a job fresh out of graduate school as an executive in the biggest marketing firm in Los Angeles had been enough of a recommendation for him. She was Laney’s best friend and could be trusted, he’d said when he’d offered her the job.
They’d met months ago when Laney had married Trent’s brother Evan. Sparks had flown immediately, the tall, handsome Texan catching Julia’s eye from the get-go. Directly after the wedding, Julia and Trent had had a wild weekend affair and she’d never heard from him again.
Until two weeks ago. When he’d shown up on her doorstep in Los Angeles with flowers, champagne and an apology for not calling.
Trent lifted his lips in a devilish grin. “You look gorgeous.”
She would have blushed if her olive skin tone allowed it. How could she forget those hot sizzling nights spent in Trent’s arms? They’d nearly combusted and gone up in a big puff of smoke. How could she forget the way he’d whisper her name right before her body shattered into a thousand pieces?
She had debated her spontaneous decision to accept this marketing position a dozen times over the past weeks. Trent had the markings of a confirmed bachelor who was dedicated to his project. He’d made it clear he wasn’t interested in a relationship. Tempest West was his priority, claiming all of his time and energy. Yet every time they’d been together, at his brother’s wedding and then just weeks ago, they couldn’t keep their hands off each other.
Her friend Laney had always insisted that the right woman could sway any man and that she and Evan were living proof of that. Julia feared she was in too deep already. Trent affected her in ways she’d never felt before and when she looked at him, she envisioned a real life with him, and a family.
Trent pulled her near, closing his hands around her waist, and bent his head, his hat brim shadowing his eyes. “It’s good to see you.”
Be strong, Julia.
She sucked oxygen deep into her lungs and set her hands on his chest. As she felt his strength through the fabric of his shirt, her resistance faded like the last crimson blaze of sunshine.
Trent smiled and leaned in for a kiss.
She gazed at his mouth right before his lips touched hers briefly. Sensations rippled wickedly through her body. The kiss ended quickly, but the impact of his sensual mouth caressing hers remained. Unable to meet his eyes, she peered at his throat. “Maybe, uh, we need some ground rules, Trent.”
“I agree,” he said instantly. Then he put
his arm around her waist and guided her toward the front door. “I’ll take you to your room. Let you settle in. We’ll have dinner in an hour and talk.”
He agreed…just like that? Julia slanted him a glance. He didn’t flinch. Maybe he’d realized that once she’d become his employee, and she’d be living on the premises as part of her contract, they’d have to draw a line in the desert sand.
“Okay.” Was she disappointed or relieved?
A second later, she decided she was both.
Trent dived into his work at his hotel the same way he did everything else in his life, giving one hundred percent. He could be ruthless at times, tenacious when necessary and as immovable as rock when he believed he was right about something.
He was right about Tempest West. Down in his bones, he knew he’d make a success of it. He wasn’t cut out to work in a big city like his brother Evan or schmooze with an elite crowd like Brock, the party animal of the Tyler brothers. So the declaration he’d made had fallen easily from his lips—“Tempest West will make more money than any new Tempest Hotel in its first year of operation.”
Brock, never one to shy away from a dare, took the bet without blinking. He was scheduled to open a new Tempest Hotel on Maui and Evan had been hauled into the challenge to referee. It was reminiscent of their youth, when the two headstrong boys would compete and the oldest would make sure they both played fair. Evan and Brock both thought Trent didn’t stand a chance in hell of winning.
Tempest West’s rustic, western-themed hotel called to a different clientele and didn’t fit in with the smooth, sleek style of the other well-established hotels in their chain. Trent had sunk his own money into his dream hotel. Tempest West was his, and his alone. He’d put his whole heart into it and now his reputation, pride and ego were on the line.
Tempest West had opened with flair, but in the few months since, occupancy rates had dropped off, meaning they were only making a marginal profit. Trent had fired his last marketing VP. He’d needed a fresh approach, someone with a new vision. He’d needed Julia Lowell.
And he’d done everything in his power to get her here.
With his arm loosely on her waist, Trent steered Julia toward the massive lobby of the hotel. “This is my favorite spot inside the hotel.”
Julia scanned the surroundings with a look of sheer wonder in her eyes. “The pictures in your brochures don’t come close. This is amazing, Trent.”
“Amazing’s a good description.” He couldn’t deny it. He’d spared no cost to bring the allure and amazing Crimson Canyon sunsets into the lobby. Tall, expansive windows banked the entire west wall and brought the beauty of the outside, inside. Majestic red rock mountains concealed the lower edge of the setting sun now. Golden light put a glow onto the land Trent owned, dotted with cottonwoods in the distance.
He put one hand on Julia’s shoulder and pointed with the other. “See way out where your eyes skitter across a sea of blue? That’s Destiny Lake. There’s a legend that goes along with that name. I’ll tell you about it someday.”
“Trent, this is wonderful. You’ve brought the west here, with the furnishings and stone fireplaces. It doesn’t feel like a hotel lobby, but a warm and friendly greeting place.”
Trent squeezed her shoulder. “I want you to see it all—the land, the lake, the riding stables. There’s a modern-day bunkhouse where the wranglers stay. Tomorrow I’ll take you on the nickel tour.”
Julia’s satisfied smile made his groin twitch. He’d put that look on her face before when she’d fallen into his arms after a powerful orgasm. Then she’d curled herself into him and he’d held her until sleep claimed them.
She had a slender body, gorgeous legs, pretty light green eyes and dark chestnut hair, but it was more with Julia. The sex between them was the best he’d ever had. When they were together, they detonated like dynamite.
He’d been ruthless in his quest to get her to Tempest West and felt a twinge of guilt, but not enough to tell her the truth and jeopardize the hotel’s success. As long as she didn’t find out he’d orchestrated her losing the Bridges Restaurant account in New York to bring her here, he’d be in the clear. He’d do whatever necessary to keep her in the dark about his high-handed manipulation. He couldn’t afford for her to find out.
Trent wanted her in the boardroom and in his bedroom. She’d turn the hotel vacancy rate around, helping him prove to his brothers Tempest West could keep up with the other hotels, while he and Julia filled their unquenchable thirst for each other.
Both stood to gain.
“I’ll come get you in an hour. We’ll have dinner,” he said as he guided her from the lobby to the small open-air elevator that would take her to a private suite on the third floor. Reaching into his pocket, he pulled out a key card and set it into her palm. Stroking his thumb over her fingers reminded him of breathless whispers and nights of desperate, crazy sex. “I’d come in with you, but then I doubt you’d get the rest you need.”
She shook her head. “Trent.”
He let her go and glanced down her long legs to her red-sandaled feet. He’d never forget making love to her, demanding that she take everything off but those sexy shoes. “You wore them.”
Julia’s eyes flickered. “They match my outfit.” She didn’t pretend not to catch his meaning and that brought his appraisal of her up a notch.
He sent a smile. “Sure do like a woman with good fashion sense.”
Julia kicked off her sandals the minute she entered the room. She took a big breath, filled her lungs and blocked out the memory flash those sandals evoked. She walked over to a beautiful arrangement of flowers waiting for her on the sofa table and read the card’s greeting.
Once she noticed her surroundings though, her mind shifted into business mode. The suite fulfilled all of the expectations she’d envisioned for Tempest West.
Rustic with class and style. Luxurious with understated amenities. Simple, yet elegant in design. Trent had spared no expense and took great pride in the décor, the views and the unpretentious use of space. She walked the length of the suite to look out the rectangular wide-paned window to the view below.
The hotel itself was only three stories high but the heart of the grounds was in the one-story attached cottage suites that circled out in a horseshoe shape from the main hotel in both directions and overlooked the stables, the lake and the canyon beyond.
“You’ve outdone yourself with this place, Trent,” she murmured, a smile emerging. Everything Trent did, he did with positive enthusiasm, giving of himself one hundred percent. Julia had the erotic memories to prove it.
She walked into the spacious bedroom and unpacked her clothes, placing her casual attire in the armoire drawers and hanging up her work clothes in the walkin closet. Next, she strolled to the double oak doors that led to a large private balcony and flipped open her cell phone, hit auto-dial and waited. After the second ring, her father picked up. “Hi, Daddy,” she said. “I’m here, safe and sound.”
“That’s good, sweetheart. I appreciate the call.”
Julia was nearly thirty years old but she didn’t mind checking in with her dad. Her mother had died two years ago and she knew her father was extremely lonely. They’d always been close and although she’d been terribly disappointed when she’d lost the contract she’d vied for with a national restaurant chain, she’d witnessed relief on her father’s face when she’d told him she wouldn’t be moving to New York after all.
A few days later, Trent had shown up on her doorstep in Los Angeles apologizing for not keeping in contact with her after their weekend affair after Evan and Laney’s wedding. Flowers, champagne and a night in Trent’s arms had gone a long way in consoling her, especially after the ego hit she’d taken losing the Bridges account. Before long, she’d had to break the news to her dad that she’d be moving to Arizona to work for Trent Tyler. He’d made her an ideal offer that she couldn’t justify refusing.
“So, how is Tempest West?”
“Dad
, it’s stunning. The place has so much to offer. I think I’ll be able to help Trent make it a destination for the elite.”
“I know you will. You’ve got my genes.”
She laughed as she was reminded of her father’s success in the banking industry. He had a good head for business and apparently, she’d taken after him. “I know I do. You gave me smarts and I intend to use them here.”
“That’s my girl,” he said and once the conversation ended, Julia stripped out of her clothes and turned the spigot to Hot in the oversize, tiled shower. She made quick work of stepping in, soaping up and rinsing off. Minutes later, she donned a fluffy white robe from the vanity closet and hugged herself around the middle, enjoying the lush feel of soft cotton against her skin. She flopped onto the king-size four-poster bed, seeking a little rest before dinner, and promptly fell asleep.
“Julia. It’s Trent. Are you in there?”
Julia rose, disoriented for a moment when she heard Trent’s voice calling her from behind the suite’s double doors. The hour had flown by. She’d overslept.
“Yes, yes. I’m here, Trent,” she called out, tying the robe’s sash tightly around her waist and padding over to the front door.
Julia unlocked the door and opened it a few inches, making eye contact with Trent. “Sorry,” she said, “I took a nap and lost track of time.”
“You’re not letting me in?”
“I’m not dressed. I’ll meet you—”
“Julia,” he groaned, “let me in.”
“Is that an order from the boss?” she asked lightly.
“If it needs to be, darlin’.”
His soft words and southern drawl were enough enticement. She moved away from the door and he made his way inside.
Five-Star Cowboy Page 1