Ready for Marriage? (25 page)

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Authors: Beverly Barton Anne Marie Winston,Ann Major

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‘‘She’s charming, vivacious and sexy. She makes me laugh.’’

Leo looked both surprised and impressed. ‘‘Smart move, marrying Marco’s daughter. More like a merger than a marriage, I’d say.’’

‘‘It will be a marriage, damn it.’’

‘‘So—was it love at first sight, this spark between you and fiery Isabela?’’

Cash couldn’t meet his friend’s eyes, and his own voice hardened ever so slightly. ‘‘My plane tonight goes to London. And then in a few days I go to the Yucatán peninsula. She lives in Mérida.’’

‘‘You didn’t answer my question.’’

‘‘As an architect’s daughter, she would understand my dreams and my obsession about my work. We share mutual interests and mutual friends. Our love would grow.’’

‘‘I see,’’ Leo said with way too much understanding.

‘‘Isabela is perfect in every way,’’ Cash persisted a little heatedly. ‘‘Love will come—’’

‘‘But what if it doesn’t? What will you do with your vivacious Isabela then? Leave her behind and amuse yourself with others while you are away working?’’

Cash’s hand shook as he shut the box and jammed it into his pocket. ‘‘I wish I hadn’t told you.’’

‘‘Does
she
know that you intend to ask her?’’

‘‘She knows that I’m coming—yes. That I’m going to propose—no.’’

‘‘You’re a fool.’’ Leo laughed. ‘‘Women always know these things. Especially a woman like Isabela. She’s probably planning the exact spot where you’ll propose. There will be moonlight and candlelight and soft music. You’ll be at the beach or by a pool and she’ll be wearing the sexiest outfit you ever saw. Knowing Isabela, she’ll be in black or red, depending on her mood. She’ll touch you, and before you know it, she’ll have you down on bended knee.’’

‘‘What does it matter if I’m going to propose, anyway?’’

Leo dismissed the matter with a wave of his hand. ‘‘If this isn’t a merger, and it isn’t love at first sight, what propelled you into…this marital adventure?’’

‘‘Love at first sight—at my age?’’ Leo was beginning to annoy him.

‘‘What are you—all of thirty-five?’’

‘‘Thirty-eight.’’

Leo glanced up at the painting again. ‘‘I’m afraid the Greeks would beg to differ with you on love at first sight. Troy fell because of this goddess.’’

‘‘That’s just a myth.’’

‘‘Myths are very powerful. So is love. Life can be very dull if a man doesn’t have a grand passion for a beautiful woman.’’

‘‘Maybe for you Italians. But I am an American.’’

‘‘The most unromantic people on earth.’’

‘‘Oh, we have our share of romantic fools. But I’m too old and too practical for that sort of thing.’’

‘‘How long will your fiery, flirtatious Latina be content with a cold fish for a husband if you don’t fall madly in love with her?’’

Suddenly the repetitive conversation was bothering the hell out of Cash. But like that cold fish in his friend’s metaphor, he was baited by Leo’s barbs and couldn’t wriggle off the hook. ‘‘Life…love…turn out better if you plan them first.’’

‘‘One should never marry just to marry.’’

‘‘Maybe no one should ever give anyone else advice,’’ Cash lashed out.

‘‘Too true,’’ Leo conceded in his deep gentle voice. ‘‘Congratulations, then.’’

‘‘I’ve got a plane to catch to London—’’

‘‘Indeed. And then Isabela. And Mexico.’’

As they began to stroll toward the exit sign, Cash said, ‘‘I am going to redesign and rebuild her beach house on the Caribbean. As a wedding gift.’’

‘‘Wouldn’t she rather have…something more personal?’’ Leo paused as if trying to find a way to phrase his thoughts. ‘‘A final warning, my friend. I’ve spent time in Mexico. It is a land with a powerful mythology and ancient gods.’’

‘‘What does that have to do with getting married?’’

‘‘To go there is to tempt fate.’’

‘‘What the hell are you trying to say?’’

Leo stared at him and shrugged. After that they spoke of inconsequential things. It was pouring when they stepped outside. It had been pouring the day of the funeral too.

In a blinding flash, Cash knew that whether or not he could ever love Isabela, he had to marry.

If he didn’t make new memories with someone soon, he’d go mad.

Two

Progreso, Mexico

W
aves lapped against the hull of Aaron’s yacht as Vivian Escobar swirled her crystal flute and tried not to fume. She couldn’t believe Aaron, her Spanish student, of all people—sedate, fatherly Aaron—had hit on her and then gone below and expected her to follow.

Did he actually believe she was panting to have him? Did he think she was going to strip off her bra and fling it down the hatch and then throw herself topless into his waiting arms?

She was perspiring. The idea of going topless wasn’t totally unappealing.

She stared at the aqua water, trying to decide how to handle this. Did she or did she not care if she made him mad? After all, he was enrolled in the Instituto where she taught. He might complain about her to the director.

Being a pretty redhead and a divorcée in Mexico was
downright dangerous. Men chased Vivian with more gusto than bulls charging a matador’s red cape. Everywhere she went they ogled her, flirted with her, and made inappropriate remarks. And now…Aaron…even Aaron.

Did she give off a scent or what? They all thought she’d be an easy conquest. Was there a rule in the male mind that said once a woman had been initiated into the rite of sex, she had to have it? She needed a lover who saw her as nothing more than a piece of female meat, like she needed a hole in her head. Since her divorce, she’d said no to one and all, including her ex. Today wasn’t going to be an exception.

She drew a tight breath and pressed her lips together as she studied the golden, bubbly liquid sparkling in the tropical sunlight. She was more disappointed in Aaron than she was angry. He was old enough to know better, and he was her best student. He loved diagraming grammar even more than she did. Until today he’d been a perfect gentleman. Maybe she should have known what he’d wanted even before he’d splashed all that champagne into her glass.

Still wondering what to do next, she glanced at her watch and was shocked that it was so late. Three o’clock. That got her going. She had to get her textbooks and leave. Unfortunately, they were down below on the bunk. Where
he
was.

Her former sister-in-law, Isabela, with whom she lived had given her a long to-do list this morning. Vivian had warned Isabela she had a Spanish lesson and might not get all the errands run, but she hadn’t confessed she was driving all the way to Progreso for the lesson.

Vivian reviewed Isabela’s list. She had to pick up the ironing and get home—fast.

The rigging sang in the warm sea breeze as Vivian leaned backward and flung the champagne into the water.

‘‘What’s taking you so long? Come on down,’’ Aaron yelled from the cabin below.

‘‘I have to go. Hand me my books.’’

‘‘Come down and get them.’’

Before she could reply, her cell phone rang.

‘‘Damn,’’ he said. ‘‘Your in-laws, no doubt.’’

Nodding, Vivian smiled. The only two people who ever called her were Isabela or her brother, Vivian’s own exhusband, Julio, who still thought he could boss his ex around. Glad of an excuse to avoid a confrontation, Vivian grabbed her phone out of a bunch of tangled papers in her purse and answered it.

‘‘You said you’d be here with the ironing an hour ago,’’ Isabela said cheerfully. ‘‘The roofers…’’

‘‘I’m sorry,
querida
. Aaron’s Spanish lesson ran a little longer than usual. I’m in Progreso. On his yacht.’’

‘‘Don’t you dare trust him if he has you on his yacht.’’

If there was one thing Isabela understood, it was the predatory male mind.

Vivian hung up smiling. Her sister-in-law was wonderful. She’d done so much for Vivian and her darling little son Miguelito since Vivian’s divorce.

Even so, the one thing Vivian wanted more than anything was to leave Mexico and get her life back on track. She wanted to go back to college and become a certified teacher. She’d been too dependent on her wealthy sister-in-law’s charity for too long, but Isabela always got so hurt when she said she wanted to return to the States, she hated to mention it.

‘‘If you want your books, come on down,’’ Aaron teased huskily.

Dreading dealing with Aaron, Vivian wiped her brow and scooted her bottom along the cockpit seat on her way to the hatch. The muggy air that stirred the turquoise waters felt hot, almost steamy. The sun set the tropical sky on fire. It was only April, and already the day was a scorcher. Thank goodness she was wearing shorts, and she was used to the heat.

Aaron shot her a challenging smile as he lifted her book satchel onto the counter beside the sink and dared her to come and get it. When she put her foot on the first step leading into
the cabin, Aaron leaped toward her and tried to pull her down onto the bunk. Before she knew what had happened, she tumbled into his arms.

He laughed.

Regaining her balance, she jumped back and her hairpins scattered onto the flooring. Her red hair cascaded over her shoulders in waves of soft, bright silk.

‘‘What do you think you’re doing?’’ she sputtered.

‘‘It’s my turn to play teacher, Teacher,’’ he whispered, moving so close, she felt his warm lips against her ear. ‘‘How about a little love lesson?’’

‘‘You drank too much champagne.’’

‘‘Not really.’’

Aaron White was a retired doctor. He’d sailed to Mexico to enjoy the exotic locale and improve his Spanish. She gave him weekly Spanish lessons. As a change of pace this morning, because it had been sweltering in the city of Mérida where she lived and taught, she’d agreed to drive out to Progreso, which was on the coast, to have lunch and give him his lesson on his yacht.

Some lesson. All he’d wanted to do was guzzle champagne, sit too close to her and learn dirty words.

‘‘Until today, I felt safe with you because you were a perfect gentleman,’’ she said. When he kissed her cheek, she leaned against the wall and said, ‘‘I shouldn’t have come here.’’

‘‘What’s wrong with enjoying yourself?’’

She wasn’t interested in Aaron. Not at all, but his holding her made her realize how long she’d done without a man’s kisses or caresses. Or was it just the fierce, tropical heat that flooded her senses with sensual stirrings?

Her vulnerability frightened her. She
had
to get away.

When he tried to kiss her mouth, she twisted her head. Then he fingered the top button of her blouse, and she went rigid. Pushing his fingers away, she clenched her limp cotton collar against her throat.

‘‘What’s the matter?’’ he murmured.

‘‘Everything.’’ With a tight smile, she pushed him away.

‘‘Relax. It’s obvious it’s been way too long since you got any…’’

He touched the tip of her chin and she jumped away from him. ‘‘Who would have thought you’d look this hot with your hair down, when you’re always so uptight and proper—’’

Vivian gasped, feeling confused as she began scooping up hairpins off the sink and floor and re-pinning her hair into a prim little knot on the top of her head. ‘‘Don’t you dare tell anybody at the Instituto about this.’’

‘‘Or you might get fired?’’ He grinned at her, liking his power. ‘‘Calm down. I like the sexy divorcée better than the school teacher.’’

Her voice shook. ‘‘I—I need this job. I don’t make much, but…’’

‘‘Relax.’’

When he slid a fingertip down her arm, her body went taut again and her breathing stopped.

‘‘How long has it been since you’ve let a man touch you?’’

She grabbed her books off the counter. ‘‘That is none of your business.’’

Aaron wasn’t bad looking. Like her, he was a redhead, or he had been until a lot of the red had faded to silver. His eyes were blue, but not nearly such a brilliant shade of blue as hers. There were crow’s feet beneath his eyes—he was, after all, thirty-one years older than she.

The humid heat was so stultifying in the cabin, she felt a little dazed as she began climbing the steps.

‘‘Aaron, look, I ate too much, and you drank too much. Why don’t we finish our Spanish lesson at the Instituto later this week?’’

He laughed. ‘‘I liked our lesson today,’’ he teased, grinning.

‘‘I’m a single mom, Aaron. I have a little boy.’’

‘‘Miguelito. Six years old. I’ve seen him at the Instituto. You’re so cute I can tolerate one brat.’’

‘‘He’s not a brat. He’s my darling little angel!’’ Miguelito had such a sunny disposition, he radiated love.

‘‘In a few years you’ll change your mind. I have three in college. Because of Miguelito, you didn’t finish college, and you sacrificed seven years of your life down here as a glorified gofer for your in-laws.’’

‘‘No.’’ She could have gone back to the States, but the Escobars were the only family she had. Miguelito loved them. Her parents were dead and her dear uncle Morton had died, too, shortly after her marriage.

‘‘They’re using you.’’

‘‘Isabela loves me.’’

‘‘She’s using you. That’s why you have to sleep with me, so I’ll fall in love with you and rescue you and your precious little Miguelito.’’

His remark annoyed her. ‘‘I want to be independent. I want to be a certified teacher.’’

‘‘Teachers starve. A smart woman would at least consider…a doctor.’’

‘‘You just want sex.’’

‘‘Vivian, you can’t hold what one rotten
manzana
did against all men,’’ he said.

‘‘It’s not the
manzana
that terrifies me.’’

‘‘I want to forget today,’’ she said. ‘‘I’m sorry if by coming here I gave you the wrong idea.’’

‘‘Or the
right
idea.’’

Before she could frame an adequate retort, her cell phone rang again.

‘‘Which one of them is it this time?’’ Aaron demanded, just as Julio started yelling.

‘‘Where are you, Vivi?’’

She covered the mouthpiece. ‘‘It’s Julio, if you must know. He wants to know where I am.’’

‘‘Tell him it’s none of his damn business. I’m sick and tired of him calling every time we have a lesson.’’

So was she…usually.

‘‘Vivi, who are you talking to?’’ Julio demanded.

‘‘I’m teaching a Spanish lesson. So I’m talking to Aaron, my student. On his boat.’’

‘‘You’re on his boat?’’ Julio’s voice grew shrill. ‘‘Whatever you do, don’t go below.’’

Vivian held the phone away from her ear until he was silent.

‘‘You have no right to be jealous. You have a girlfriend…Tammy.’’

‘‘The roofers are here,’’ Julio said, his tone petulant. ‘‘Why aren’t you?’’

‘‘They said they were coming two days ago,’’ she replied.

‘‘They’re here—now.’’

‘‘Tell them the pool house is leaking to the left of the back door.’’

‘‘Me? I’m here to visit my son. Eusebio didn’t show up. Drunk again, I suppose, so Isabela needs somebody to drive her to the airport. You’d better hurry home. She’s nearly ready to leave on this insane shopping trip. As if she needs clothes!’’

Julio had a point. Isabela was flying to Houston to shop for clothes because a rich, famous architect named Cash McRay was flying in from London to visit her next week. She’d been writing him letters and dousing them with so much perfume that every time Vivian mailed one, her car reeked for hours.

‘‘I can’t deal with the roofers, watch Miguelito, and drive her to the airport, too,’’ Julio said.

‘‘I’m on my way,’’ she replied, turning off her phone.

Like a lot of the men she knew down here, Julio was bossy, jealous, possessive, and totally helpless when it came to practical matters.

Divorce was the pits. Julio still thought he could run her
life. Worse, every time he got the chance, he tried to hit on her.

What she needed was stability. Why couldn’t he just be a better, more consistent father?

She looked up at Aaron. ‘‘I have to get home now to see about Isabela’s roofers and to drive her to the airport.’’

‘‘Always errands for your spoiled sister-in-law.’’

‘‘She’s in love,’’ said Vivian, her voice going dreamy. ‘‘That’s a very special time in any woman’s life.’’

‘‘I hope she doesn’t think she can manipulate him the way she does you.’’

‘‘Look, I’ve gotta go—’’ Vivian hopped off his boat and raced toward her battered Chevy.

‘‘Call me when you change your mind about sex, baby.’’

She got in and shut her door.

‘‘A sexy woman like you can’t do without it forever—’’

She rolled her window up, hoping she wouldn’t be able to hear him.

What is it about this testosterone-ridden country?
She started her engine and drove off, leaving him in fumes of exhaust and plumes of dust.

She had to get her life back on track. Aaron White wasn’t the answer. No man was.

There were some things, like making a life for herself, a real life, that a woman had to do on her own. Too bad it had taken her this long to figure that out.

Tires squealing, Vivian took the final turn on two wheels to her sister-in-law’s sprawling, modern mansion with its shaded terraces and huge, airy rooms. The high walls surrounding the house were painted in bright Gauguin colors and had been a design of Isabela’s world-famous father.

It was almost too late when Vivian saw the mound of orange fur in the middle of the road and hit her brakes. The dog lifted its head. His huge, brown eyes gave her a trusting stare.

Oh dear!
‘‘Concho!
Idioto
!
Move!’’ Honking and swerving, she barely missed him.

The skinny orange dog had turned up in Isabela’s wealthy neighborhood a week ago and instantly won Vivian’s heart. At first Vivian had tried coaxing him out of the street. When that hadn’t worked, she’d sprayed him with the hose every time she caught him, but, dumber than a zero, he still napped in the street every chance he got.

When Vivian parked her battered Chevy in the carport beside her sister-in-law’s luxurious black, gold-trimmed Suburban, Concho trotted up, whining for a handout.

His velvet brown eyes got to her every time. Instantly, she began to dig in her purse for a treat. ‘‘All I’ve got is a sugar cookie.’’

He jumped, placing dusty paws on her thighs, and barked wildly, wolfing the cookie in a big gooey bite. She got out the sack of dog food she’d bought and filled his bowl in the carport and made sure he had water.

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