California Wishes

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California Wishes Page 40

by Casey Dawes


  Elizabeth stifled a laugh and handed the woman a credit card. As she waited for the transaction to clear, she wondered if the woman was right. Was the opportunity too good to let pass even if there was no future? Would making love to Marcos produce the same wonderment that kissing him had?

  She shook the thought from her head. Too much, too fast. She needed to find out the secret he was hiding.

  “Good luck,” the shopkeeper said.

  After they got into the car, Marcos asked, “What was she saying to you?”

  “Girl talk,” Elizabeth said and started up the engine, chuckling to herself.

  “About … ?”

  “I think she’s got the hots for you.”

  “The hots?”

  “She wants to … you know … hots!”

  “Ahhh … I see.”

  NPR chattered as Elizabeth pulled onto the mountain highway.

  “That means,” Marcos said slowly, “I must have ‘the hots’ for you.”

  Oh hell.

  • • •

  Elizabeth dropped Marcos at his hotel and drove home to change clothes for dinner and refresh her makeup. After she was done, she took a glance in the mirror. Highlighted eyes, sultry lips, a low-cut blouse and slim skirt were saying, “Yes,” even if her mind was saying, “No.”

  Should she change? Or see what happened?

  Looking at her watch, she realized she didn’t have time to change, even if she wanted to. Maybe if she kept the focus on Marcos, try to uncover whatever he was hiding, he wouldn’t notice her clothes.

  Right.

  She drove a little faster than normal through the back streets of Costanoa to the hotel. Once again, Marcos waited in the lobby.

  He was gorgeous. The casual elegance of a white shirt unbuttoned lower than an American male would be comfortable with contrasted with creased flowing pants that accented the lower half of his lean body in all the right places. He took her breath away.

  He smiled at her, a look that demonstrated he knew exactly what part of his anatomy she’d been examining.

  “Shall we go?” He said as he walked up to her, smelling like fresh cloves and citrus.

  “Yes. I have reservations at the Blackbird and we can’t be late. You’ll love it there. The food’s great … sometimes the service is slow … but it’s worth the wait. My favorite is the lamb with mint. I try not to think about it being a lamb … well, maybe I won’t have that tonight — ”

  “Shh.” Marcos put his hand on her arm and steered her toward the door. “The dinner will be fine. I am with a smart, beautiful woman who makes me feel special. She adds all the spice to the food I need.”

  The charge of his words and the heat of his hand made her skin sizzle. She was going to have a very difficult time refusing his kisses tonight.

  She took a deep breath and then asked. “Were you able to get in touch with the other vineyard owner?”

  “Yes. We can see him at one tomorrow. Perhaps we can see another winery or two when we go there?”

  “Sure, if there’s time.”

  The conversation remained casual until they reached the restaurant. Elizabeth was unsure how to bring up the questions she longed to ask. What did he mean by untrustworthy partners? How had his relationship with his wife ended? Had she cheated?

  Or had he?

  Elizabeth slipped her car into the parking place. Marcos helped her out and up the steps to the wooden boardwalk that served as the sidewalk in that part of town.

  The Blackbird was housed in a squat clapboard building on the main road. Pale yellow walls were accented with off-white antiques and latticework. Mismatched tables and chairs topped highly polished, but uneven wood floors.

  Would Marcos approve?

  “Different,” Marcos said.

  “What do you mean?” Elizabeth asked after they were seated. “Different?”

  “I mean unusual. It is, how do you say, antiquato?”

  “Antique? Oh, maybe quaint.”

  “Yes. Quaint. I am glad you brought me here.” He lightly touched her hand. “It is a unique place.”

  She looked up to see him staring at her, a slight smile on his face battering at the wall she was trying to build against him. Heat began to rise through her body.

  “My name is Kathy.” A young, bright voice interrupted them. “I’ll be your server this evening.” Kathy went on to list the specials and then asked them if they wanted anything other than water to drink before their meal.

  “I think,” Marcos said, “We should have a Syrah since the lady is having lamb.” He looked at Elizabeth. “A favorite winery for Syrah?”

  “Martella,” she answered.

  “Good choice,” Kathy chirped. “Do you know what you wish to have for dinner?” she asked Marcos.

  “We wish to relax and take our time with our meal. After you come back with the wine, I’ll be able to tell you what we wish for appetizers.” He gave her the smile that had melted the waitress in Italy.

  It had the same effect on Kathy. “Whatever you wish, sir.”

  Unfortunately, the smile also melted Elizabeth. “I think you impressed her,” she said.

  He smiled at her. “There is only one woman I wish to impress.”

  Very deep trouble.

  The waitress brought the bottle of wine and showed it to Marcos. He gestured toward Elizabeth. “It was the lady’s selection.”

  “Of course.” Kathy turned the bottle to Elizabeth.

  Elizabeth read the label and nodded, startled by Marcos’ courtesy. Neither Joe nor Bobby would have let her pick the wine, much less participate in the tasting ritual.

  Kathy uncorked the wine and laid the cork in front of Elizabeth.

  Elizabeth glanced up at Marcos and he smiled when she didn’t pick up the cork to sniff it. The proof was in the wine. She swirled and sniffed. Aromas of ripe fruit tickled her nose. A sip confirmed the flavor and a smoky finish rounded the taste of the wine in her mouth.

  Marcos looked at her eagerly, as if he were a young boy waiting for the first summer’s ice cream.

  She smiled and nodded.

  He waited until both glasses were full before he tasted. As he sipped she watched him enjoy the taste of the wine in his mouth for several seconds, wondering what it would be like to sample the magnificent Syrah accented by the spice of Marcos’ mouth.

  Immediately, she stuffed the thought back into the forbidden box in her mind. She had to resist the temptation of this man.

  “Ahh,” he breathed. “Well done. Excellent choice for our meal.”

  She smiled, her cheeks warming with his compliment.

  Once their wine was served. Elizabeth turned the conversation to the vineyard they’d seen in the afternoon. “Is it totally hopeless?”

  He shook his head. “No. In fact it is ideal. Because it needs so much work, I can probably negotiate the price lower than what he is asking. I sense he is tired. The death of his wife has made the place less interesting to him.”

  “I wonder what it would be like to have a love that lasted a lifetime,” she said.

  “I wondered the same.” He put down his glass and caressed her hand. “Bella, I am very attracted to you.”

  “But — ”

  He raised his finger. “I know. You have mentioned the obvious so many times I have come to believe that you really do live in California and I live in Liguria. And it complicates things.” He put his hand down and caressed her again. “All I am asking is that you open up a little to me and to the unknown possibility.”

  “How can I when I don’t know you.” Or the secret you are hiding.

  He leaned forward. “The knowing happens when we spend time together.”

  But the more they knew each other, the more she�
�d be open to hurt. She started to speak and he raised his finger again. “When I buy a vineyard here, I will need to spend time in California, particularly if the place is like the one we saw today. There is much to do. We will be able to get to know each other.” He shrugged. “Then we can surmount the impossibility that we live on different continents. It will be easy.”

  Nothing about you will ever be easy.

  Their server checked in with them and Marcos gave her the order he’d confirmed with Elizabeth.

  He took another sip of his wine. “Even if I can get the owner of the vineyard to lower the price, it’s going to take a great deal of money to get it into shape. The rootstock looks good and the vines will thrive once they are properly pruned. If I were able to close by early January, I could clear enough to start pruning by March.” He smiled at her. “Of course, it would go faster if I had help.”

  Elizabeth laughed. “Me? You expect me to remove scrub brush?”

  “It is no different from gardening, I think. The weeds are just a little bigger.”

  She shook her head. “I don’t think so.”

  “We’ll see.”

  The challenge glove had been thrown. He was daring her to do something, anything out of her comfort zone. And damn it was tempting.

  The dance continued through their meal. She’d attempt to keep the conversation on neutral subjects and he’d counter with a double-loaded statement. At the end of the dinner, her nerves were on fire from desire and denial.

  “Perhaps tomorrow you will let me drive?” Marcos asked as they settled into her car.

  She arched her eyebrows at him.

  “That looks like a ‘no’,” he said. “I am a good driver. You went with me in Italy.”

  “That’s why I won’t let you drive. Too risky.”

  “Ah.” He was silent for a moment. “Why are you so afraid of risk?”

  Elizabeth halted the car at a four-way stop sign. She revved up the hill toward his hotel before she answered. “I take risks in my business. That’s enough for me.”

  “Are you sure about that?”

  No. She wasn’t sure. But she wasn’t about to let him know that.

  “Why don’t you let me off here,” he said when they reached the darkened end of the parking lot.

  She pulled over and stopped, her heart racing.

  He stepped out of the car, came to her side, opened the door, and extended his hand.

  She placed her hand in his and stepped out of the car. He tucked her hand under his arm and began to walk down the sidewalk, away from the hotel.

  “I imagine the moon is quite beautiful when it is full and shining brightly on the cove,” he said. “Tonight I am glad it is only a sliver.”

  She looked at the crescent moon hanging over the Costanoa Bay, providing enough glow to make out the small shops, motels and houses that made up the seaside village.

  “Can you see your shop from here?”

  She pointed it out to him.

  “I would like to kiss you,” he said.

  She turned to him. “I … ”

  “If you do not wish … ” He shrugged and dropped his hands from her.

  Suddenly she was desperate for the taste of his lips.

  “Yes,” she said. “I wish.”

  His lips were on hers and she gave herself into the kiss, finding out exactly what a Martella Syrah with a dash of Marcos tasted like. She melted into his kiss.

  His hard male body pressed against hers and she was pleased by her ability to arouse him — ridiculously happy for the mother of a college-aged daughter. After the grappling that had produced Sarah, her sex life with her husband had almost disappeared. She supposed that was why Joe …

  She tried to push the thoughts from her head, but fear was raising its ugly head. Would Marcos be any different? She moaned, half in desire and half in despair.

  Marcos’s hands caressed her back, eliciting whispers of flames from the skin beneath her silk blouse. He gently broke off the kiss and looked at her. “Are you okay with this, cara? You are so beautiful and you taste so good. I don’t want to stop, but … ”

  “No … no … don’t stop.” She touched his face and ran the tip of her finger over his lips. He was different from anyone she’d ever kissed, but his lips were oddly familiar, as if she’d been waiting for them all her life. Maybe he was her once-in-a-lifetime, the man that Joe had never really been.

  His mouth covered hers and she was lost again. She reached around him, exploring his muscled back with her fingers, excited by the wiry leanness. Her fingers longed to cup his butt, pull him close to her.

  Her wantonness made her flush. Who was she? What had happened to the staid matron of thirty-eight? She was acting like the crazy schoolgirl she’d been, the one who hadn’t been able to keep her hands off of Joe.

  Marcos slipped his fingers under her blouse. The cold touch of reality brought her back to her sense.

  She pulled back. “I can’t. There’s … too much we don’t know … about each other.”

  He studied her. “I know I want you.” He smiled. “And from the way you were acting, I think the feeling is mutual.” He paused and dropped his hands. “If you were another woman, Elizabeth, I would press to what we both want. But I want more than a night in bed with you.”

  He kissed her lightly, slid his arm through hers and turned her back to the car. He opened her door and waited for her to slide into the driver’s seat. “I will see you tomorrow, cara. Our appointment is at one. Shall we leave around noon?”

  All she could do was nod.

  He closed the door, standing there until she started the car before turning back to the hotel.

  She pulled out of the parking lot, aware of her swollen lips and hard nipples pressing against the soft cloth of her blouse.

  Her mind whirled with only one question. What am I doing?

  Chapter 15

  At eleven-thirty the next morning, Marcos flicked off his computer. What was Jacques doing? The yields from Marcos’ vineyard in France were even lower than his vineyard manager had projected.

  A new thought occurred to him. Was Jacques stealing from him? He didn’t see how, the numbers all appeared to add up, but nothing else made sense. Maybe he should follow Elizabeth’s lead and lay the man off.

  He smiled. Many years had passed since he wanted to risk opening up to a woman. And, of course, he picked one who lived half a world away and was afraid to take a chance.

  He tapped his fingers on the hotel-room desk. The distance was obvious, but there was more going on. Their kiss had ended abruptly last night, as if a thought had made her afraid. Her desire had been obvious, although not as physically obvious as his. Was that what had scared her? His passion?

  He shook his head. He didn’t think so. She was right. They didn’t know each other. Well, he’d just have to change that. He stuffed his keys in his pocket and left the room.

  He waited outside the hotel lobby for Elizabeth. The sun glinted on the bay framing the colorful cottages nestled on the seashore. Seagulls swooped and lines of pelicans skimmed over the water in the distance. As a bright red sports car made its way up the long driveway to the hotel, his smile broadened.

  A great day to be alive!

  “Buon giorno, Elizabeth,” he said when she stepped out of the car. “It is going to be a beautiful day! Have you decided to let me drive your little car?”

  She laughed and he thought of the legend of laughter creating fairies. If anyone’s laugh could create supernatural beings, it was Elizabeth’s.

  “Not on your life,” she said. “Or mine either! The door is open.” She gestured to the passenger side.

  “You do not trust me! You break my heart!” He laughed and took his place in the passenger seat. Laughter was a good way to begin any
day.

  The road took them up and out of town, past small bungalows and large ranches where horses grazed behind gleaming white fences.

  “John lives there.” Elizabeth pointed to a green Victorian perched on a knoll. “He’s going out with my best friend, Annie.”

  “It is a beautiful home. Very big.”

  “Smaller than it looks. I think he bought it hoping Annie would someday move in.”

  “And is that likely?”

  “I think so, but she keeps telling me it’s too soon to tell.” Elizabeth smiled. “She’s as scared of romance as I am.”

  Marcos cocked his head. “And why should you be scared of romance?”

  Elizabeth pursed her lips. She made a sharp turn to the left, narrowly avoiding a delivery truck and squealing her tires.

  “And you were afraid to let me drive?” Marcos asked.

  “Sorry.”

  “I believe I have upset you again. But I really do want to know what you are afraid of. Because I don’t want to add to your fear.” Marcos relaxed his death grip on the armrest only slightly as the road began to twist and turn beneath tall redwoods. How could someone have hurt Elizabeth?

  “I’m not sure I’m ready to talk about it,” she said.

  “Perhaps later? Over dinner?”

  “We’ll see.”

  In his experience, “we’ll see” meant “no,” especially when a woman said it. But his curiosity was aroused. He would find a way around the “no.”

  Elizabeth turned right onto an even narrower and darker road.

  “There is a vineyard here?” he asked.

  “Quite an old one, as a matter of fact. About the same age as the one we saw on Stargold.” She veered onto a steep gravel drive. They emerged into the sunlight and Marcos took in a breath. Cordoned vines stretched down a small hill, with dense purple-ink clusters of berries nestled in fading leaves. Pinot Noir, the holy grail of the Santa Cruz Mountains.

  The gravel road angled back down the ridge and around to a ramshackle building made of stained and aging plywood.

  “Is there a prosperous vineyard in these mountains?” he asked.

 

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