Authors: Nora Roberts
“I can enjoy that and still hate you.” She tossed her hair back. “And I can make you pay for it.”
Maybe she could. There were women in the world who had the innate gift of knowing just how to make a man suffer and burn and beg. All of them could have taken lessons from Margo Sullivan. But he wasn’t fool enough to let her know
it. He walked back to the stairs, picked up the papers.
“Just so we know where we stand, darling.”
“I’ll tell you just where we stand,
darling
. I don’t need your insulting offer. I’m running my life my way.”
“And that’s been such a rousing success so far.”
“I know what I’m doing. Take that ridiculous smirk off your face.”
“I can’t. It sticks there every time you say you know what you’re doing.” But he tucked all the papers back in his briefcase, closed it. “I’ll say this, I don’t think it’s an entirely moronic idea—this place.”
“Well, I’ll sleep easy now, knowing I have your approval.”
“Approval’s a little strong. It’s more like hopeful resignation.” He gave the banister a last wiggle. “But I believe in you, Margo.”
Temper died into confusion. “Damn you, Josh. I can’t keep up with you.”
“Good.” He strolled over, flicked a finger down her cheek. “I think you’re going to make something out of this shop that’ll surprise everyone. Especially you.” He leaned down, and when he kissed her this time it was light and friendly. “Got cab fare?”
“Excuse me?”
Grinning, he pulled keys out of his pocket. “Fortunately, I had a spare set to the Jag. Don’t work too late, duchess.”
She didn’t smile until he was well out of sight. Then she gathered up her bag, her clipboard. She was going to put her newly healed Visa card to use and buy a paint sprayer.
It took Josh less than two weeks at Templeton Monterey to fine-tune his strategy for dealing with Peter Ridgeway. He had already made it clear with a single phone call from Stockholm that it would be best for his brother-in-law, personally and professionally, to take a brief leave of absence from Templeton.
Until, as he’d put it, all reason and bonhomie, they’d gotten this little domestic matter ironed out.
He had always steered clear of his sister’s marriage. As a bachelor, he hardly felt that he qualified to hand out marital advice. And as he adored his sister, and had mildly despised her husband, he’d also had to consider the indisputable fact that his advice would have been heavily one-sided.
Since Peter had always performed well as a Templeton executive, there’d been no cause for complaint there. He was, perhaps, a bit rigid in his view of hotel management, more than a bit distant from the staff and the day-to-day problems and triumphs, but he’d had a fine hand with the corporate groups and foreign businesses that poured money into Templeton coffers.
Still, there came a time when professional efficiency had to be weighed against personal disgust. Because nobody, but nobody, messed with Joshua Templeton’s family and walked away whole.
He’d considered taking the corporate route, simply amputating Peter from any connection with Templeton hotels and using his connections and influence to see to it that the son of a bitch never managed so much as a roadside motel in Kansas.
But that was so easy, so . . . bloodless.
He agreed with Kate that the sensible route, and the most straightforward, was to—in Kate’s words—drag Ridgeway’s sorry flat ass into court. Josh knew a half a dozen top family lawyers who would rub their hands together in glee at the prospect of nailing the greedy, adulterous husband who had cleaned out his own daughters’ little savings accounts.
Oh, that would be sweet, Josh mused as he drew in the early-morning scents of sea and oleander blossoms. But it would also be a painful and public humiliation for Laura. And again, he thought, bloodless.
Still, such matters were best handled in a civilized fashion.
Josh decided the most civilized place to balance the scales was the country club. So he waited, patient as a cat, for Peter to return to California.
Peter accepted his invitation for a morning set of tennis without hesitation. Josh had expected no less. He imagined Peter calculated that being seen exchanging lobs with his brother-in-law would quell some of the rumors over Peter’s position with Templeton.
Josh was happy to oblige him.
Golf was Peter’s game, but he considered himself a fair hand at the net. He’d dressed for the match in spotless whites, his shorts pressed with lethal pleats. Josh wore a similar uniform, if slightly less formal, with the addition of a Dodgers fielder’s cap to shade his eyes from the dazzling morning sun.
Later, Minn Whiley and DeLoris Solmes, who’d been playing their regular Tuesday morning set on the adjoining court, would sip after-match mimosas and comment on what a picture the men had made, golden and bronzed and fit, muscular legs pumping as they thwacked the bright yellow ball back and forth.
Of course, Minn would tell Sarah Metzenbaugh after she joined them for a steam, that had been before The Incident.
“I don’t take time to do this often enough,” Peter commented as they unzipped their rackets. “Eighteen holes of golf twice a week is all I can squeeze in.”
“All work and no play,” Josh said affably, and didn’t miss Peter’s smirk of disdain. He knew exactly what Ridgeway thought of him. The pampered golden boy who spent all his time jetting from party to party. “I feel deprived if I don’t get at least one decent set in every morning.”
Taking his time, Josh set out a bottle of Evian. “I’m glad you could manage to meet me. I’m sure that between us we can straighten this uncomfortable business out. You’re staying at the resort now that you’re back from Aruba?”
“It seemed best. I’d hoped that if I gave Laura a little time and space she’d see reason. Women.” He spread his elegant hands, uncluttered now by the gold band of his marriage. “Difficult creatures.”
“Tell me about it. Let’s warm up.” Josh took his place behind the line, waited for Peter to set. “Volley for serve,” he called out and hit the ball easily. “How was Aruba?”
“Restful.” Peter returned, pacing himself. “Our hotel there has a few kinks. It should be looked into.”
“Really?” Josh had done a complete check on it less than eight months before and knew it ran brilliantly. “I’ll make a note of that.” Deliberately he fumbled a backhand, sending it wide of the line. “Rusty,” he said with a shake of his head. “Your serve. Tell me, Peter, do you plan to contest the divorce?”
“If Laura insists on going through with it, I hardly see the point. It would only add fuel to the gossip. She’s dissatisfied with my responsibilities to Templeton. A woman like Laura doesn’t understand the demands of business.”
“Or a man’s relationship with his secretary.” Teeth flashing in a feral grin, Josh sent the ball whizzing by Peter’s ear.
“She misinterpreted a situation. My point.” Testing a fresh ball, Peter shook his head. “Frankly, Josh, she’d become unreasonably jealous over the time it was necessary for me to spend at the office. I’m sure you’re aware of the recent influx of conventions, and the ten-day visit last month of Lord and Lady Wilhelm. They took two floors and the presidential suite. We couldn’t offer them less than perfection.”
“Naturally not. And Laura didn’t understand the pressure you were under to deliver.” She’d only been nursed at the breast of the grande dame of hoteliers.
“Exactly.” Puffing a little as Josh mercilessly worked him cross court, Peter missed the return. “It only got worse when that ridiculous, foulmouthed Margo showed up on the
doorstep. Naturally, Laura would take her in without a thought to the consequences.”
“Softhearted, our Laura,” Josh said easily, and let the conversation lag until he’d taken the first set 5–3.
“It wasn’t exactly gallant, old man, cleaning out the bank accounts.”
Peter’s lips hardened. He’d expected Laura to have more pride than to go whining to her brother. “On my lawyer’s advice. Simple self-preservation, as she had no sense about finances. The move has certainly been justified now that she’s proved her lack of sense by going into partnership with Margo Sullivan. Shopkeepers, for God’s sake.”
“As bad as innkeepers,” Josh murmured.
“What was that?”
“I said who knows what puts ideas in a woman’s head.”
“She’ll have lost her capital within six months—if Margo doesn’t abscond with it before that. You should have tried to talk her out of the whole insane notion.”
“Oh, who listens to me?” He thought about letting Peter win the second set, then decided he was bored and wanted it over. He played it out for a while and, just to make it interesting, allowed Peter to break his serve.
“Bad luck.” The pleasure of beating his brother-in-law at his own game pumped through Peter’s blood like fine wine. “You’ll have to work on your backhand.”
“Mmm.” Josh jogged to the sideline, mopped his face, glugged down Evian. As he recapped the bottle, he flashed a smile toward the women in the next court. He was darkly pleased at the idea of an audience for the show he had in mind. “Oh, before I forget, I’ve been doing some spot-checking at the hotel. There’s been an unusual number of staff turnovers in the last eighteen months.”
Peter arched a brow. “It isn’t necessary for you to involve
yourself with Templeton Monterey, or the resort. That’s my territory.”
“Oh, don’t mean to trespass, but I was here, and you weren’t.” He tossed his towel aside, plunked the plastic bottle onto it, then went back behind the net. “It’s odd, though. Templeton has a tradition of long-term employee loyalty.”
Interfering bastard, pampered fool, Peter thought, carefully controlling his temper as he walked in the opposite direction. “As you can see if you read the reports, lower management made several errors of judgment in hiring. Weeding out was necessary to continue our standard of service and appearance.”
“I’m sure you’re right.”
“I’ll be back at the helm tomorrow, so there’s no need to concern yourself.”
“Not concerned at all. Just curious. Your serve, isn’t it?” Josh’s smile was as lazy as a nap in a hammock.
They resumed play. Peter faulted his first serve, then bore down on his irritation and slammed the next cleanly. Biding his time, Josh entertained himself by bouncing Peter back and forth across the court, forcing him to dig and pump. Barely winded himself, he kept up a steady flow of conversation as he took the next game, forty-love.
“I noticed a few other things while I was fiddling around. Your expense account, for instance. Seventy-five thousand in the last five months for client entertainment.”
Sweat dripped into Peter’s eyes, infuriating him. “My expense account records have never been questioned in the fifteen years I’ve worked for Templeton.”
“Of course not.” All easy smiles, Josh gathered balls in preparation for the next game. “You’ve been married to my sister for two-thirds of that time. Oh, and there was that bonus to your secretary.” Idly, he bounced a ball on the heart of his racket. “The one you were fucking. Ten thousand’s very
generous. She must make a hell of a cup of coffee.”
Stopping, bending with his hands on his knees to catch his breath, Peter squinted over the net. “Bonuses and financial incentives are Templeton policy. And I don’t appreciate your innuendos.”
“That wasn’t an innuendo, Peter. Listen up. It was a statement.”
“And a pathetically hypocritical one coming from you. Everyone knows how you spend your time, and the family money. Cars and women and gambling.”
“You’re right about that.” With a friendly smile, Josh stepped behind the serving line, bounced the ball lightly. “And you could say it was hypocritical of me even to mention it.” He tossed the ball up as if to serve, then caught it, scratched his head. “Except for one little detail. No, no, it would be two really minor details. One, it’s my money, and two, I’m not married.”
He tossed the ball up, swung and served an ace. Straight into Peter’s nose. As Peter dropped to his knees, blood gushing out from between his fingers, Josh strolled over, twirling his racket.
“And three, it’s my sister you’re fucking with.”
“You son of a bitch.” Peter’s voice was muffled and thick and breathless with pain. “You crazy bastard, you’ve broken my nose.”
“Be grateful I didn’t aim for your balls.” Crouching down, Josh jerked Peter up by the collar of his blood-splattered Polo. “Now listen to me,” he murmured while the women on the next court squealed and shouted for the tennis pro. “And listen carefully because I’m only going to say this once.”
There were stars wheeling in front of Peter’s eyes, nausea welling in his stomach. “Get your damn hands off of me.”
“You’re not listening,” Josh said quietly. “And you really want to pay close attention here. Don’t you even speak my
sister’s name in public. If I decide you’ve so much as had a thought about her I don’t like, you’ll pay with more than your nose. And if you ever talk about Margo again the way you’ve talked about her to me, I’ll twist off your nuts and feed them to you.”
“I’ll sue you, you bastard.” Pain radiated through his face like sunbursts; humiliation darted after it. “I’ll sue you for assault.”
“Oh, please do. Meanwhile, I suggest you take another trip. Go back to Aruba, or try St. Bart’s, or go to hell. But I don’t want to see you anywhere near me or mine.” He let Peter go in disgust and as an afterthought wiped his blood-smeared hand on the front of Peter’s shirt. “Oh, and by the way, you’re fired. That’s game, set, and fucking match.”
Well satisfied with the morning’s work, he decided to treat himself to a steam.
Miracles could happen, Margo thought. They only took six weeks, aching muscles, and somewhere in the neighborhood of three hundred and fifty thousand dollars to create.
Six weeks before, she had become the official one-third owner of the empty building on Cannery Row. Immediately after glasses of Templeton sparkling wine had been passed around, she’d rolled up her sleeves.
It was a new experience, dealing with contractors, surrounding herself with the sounds of saws and hammers and men with tool belts. She spent nearly every waking moment of those weeks in the shop or on shop business. The clerks at the supply stores began to weep with joy when she walked through the door. Her carpenters learned to tolerate her.
She debated paint samples with Laura, agonized over the choice between Dusty Rose and Desert Mauve until the slight
variance in shades became a decision of monumental proportion. Recessed lighting became an obsession for days. She learned the joy and terror of hardware, spending hours picking through hinges and drawer pulls the way she had once perused the jewelry displays at Tiffany’s.
She painted, learning to love and despise the eccentricities of her variable-speed Sears-brand paint sprayer. Growing neurotically possessive, she refused to allow Kate or Laura to try their hand with it. And once after a particularly long session, she jumped at the reflection in the mirror.
Margo Sullivan, the face that launched a million bottles of alpha hydroxy, stared back, her glorious hair bundled messily under a dirty white cap, her cheeks flecked with deep-rose freckles, her eyes naked and a little wild.
She didn’t know whether to shudder or scream.
But the shock sent her straight into the clawfoot tub for a hot, frothy soak in sea salts and urged her to give herself a full treatment—facial, hot oil, manicure, just to prove she hadn’t completely lost her mind.
Now, after six weeks of insanity, she had begun to believe that dreams could be made. The floors gleamed, sanded smooth and slicked with three satiny coats of varnish. The walls, her personal pride and joy, were a soft, warm rose. Windows she’d washed herself in her mother’s secret solution that relied heavily on vinegar and elbow grease, sparkled in their frame of new trim. The iron stairs and circling banisters had been securely bolted and shimmered with fresh gilt.
Tiles in both bathrooms had been regrouted and ruthlessly scrubbed and were now accented with fancy fingertip towels with lace edging.
Everything was rose and gold and fresh.
“It’s like Dorian Gray,” Margo commented. She and Laura were huddled in the sitting area of the main showroom, struggling to price the contents of a crate.
“It is?”
“Yeah. The shop keeps getting prettier and shinier.” She pinched her tired cheeks and laughed. “And I’m the picture in the closet.”
“Oh, that explains those warts.”
“Warts?” Instant panic. “What warts?”
“Easy.” It was Laura’s first good laugh in days. “Just joking.”
“Christ, next time just shoot me in the head.” As her blood pressure returned to normal, Margo held up a faience vase painted with stylized flowers. “What do you think? It’s Doulton.”
It was no use asking Margo what she’d paid for it, Laura knew. She wouldn’t have a clue. Following routine, Laura glanced at the stack of price guides and catalogs they’d collected. “Did you look it up?”
“Sort of.” Over the past weeks, Margo had developed a love-hate relationship with price guides. She loved the idea of marking prices, hated the knowledge that so much money had already slipped through her fingers. “I think a hundred fifty.”
“Go for it.”
Tongue caught between her teeth, Margo slowly tapped the keys on the laptop Kate had insisted they couldn’t live without. “Stock number 481. . . G for glassware or C for collectibles?”
“Um, G. Kate’s not here to argue the point.”
“481-G. Damn it, I said
G
.” She deleted, tried again. “One hundred fifty.” Though it was probably inefficient, which Kate would have pointed out, Margo tagged the vase, rose to carry it to the glass étage`re that was already filling up, then came back to light a cigarette. “What the hell are we doing, Laura?”
“Having fun. What made you buy something like this?”
Smoking contemplatively, Margo eyed an undoubtedly ugly urn with wing handles. “I must have been having a bad day.”
“Well, it’s Stinton, and signed, so maybe . . .” She flipped busily through a price book. “About forty-five hundred.”
“Really?” Had she really once been in the position to pay so much for so little? She nudged the laptop toward Laura. “They’re coming to paint the sign on the window tomorrow. And the crew from
Entertainment Tonight
is supposed to be here by two.”
“Are you sure you want to do that?”
“Are you kidding? All that free publicity?” Margo stretched her arms up. Her shoulders were aching, a sensation she’d gotten used to. “Besides, it’ll give me a chance to deck myself out, get in front of the camera. I’m thinking the sage green Armani or the blue Valentino.”
“We’ve already tagged the Armani.”
“Right. Valentino it is.”
“As long as it doesn’t make you uncomfortable.”
“Valentino never makes me uncomfortable.”
“You know what I mean.” Laura hefted the urn, decided it looked slightly less unattractive on the corner shelf. “All those questions about your private life.”
“I don’t have a private life at the moment. You’ve got to learn to shrug off the gossip, honey.” She tapped out her cigarette and knelt to explore the crate. “If you let every whisper and snicker about you and Peter sting, the wasps will know and they’ll keep after you.”
“He came back to town last week.”
Her head jerked up. “Is he hassling you?”
“No, but . . . Josh had an incident with him a few days ago. I didn’t hear about it until this morning.”
“An incident?” Amused, Margo studied a little Limoges box replicating a French flower stall. Christ, she loved these little bits of nonsense. “What did they do, draw their Mont Blancs and duel?”
“Josh broke Peter’s nose.”
“What?” Staggered between shock and glory, she nearly bobbled the box. “Josh
punched
him?”
“He broke it with a tennis ball.” When Margo collapsed into hoots of laughter, Laura scowled. “There were people in the next court. It’s all over the club. Peter had to be taken to the hospital, and he might very well file charges.”
“What, assault with a forehand lob? Oh, Laura, it’s too delicious. I haven’t given Josh enough credit.” She pressed a hand on her stomach as her ribs began to ache.
“It had to be deliberate.”
“Well, of course it was deliberate. Josh can bean a speeding car at fifty yards with his backhand. He could have played center court if he’d taken himself seriously. Damn, I wish I’d seen it.” Wicked delight sparkled in her eyes. “Did he bleed a lot?”
“Profusely, I’m told.” It was wrong, Laura had to continually remind herself, it was wrong to enjoy the image of bright red blood geysering out of Peter’s aristocratic nose. “He’s gone to Maui to recuperate. Margo, I don’t want my brother smashing tennis balls into the face of the father of my children.”
“Oh, let him have his fun.” Without remembering to tag or log it, Margo placed the Limoges in a curved-front cabinet where a dozen others were already displayed. “Ah, is Josh seeing anyone?”
“Seeing anyone?”
“You know, as in dating, escorting, having hot sex with?”
Baffled, Laura rubbed at her tired eyes. “Not that I know of. But then, he stopped bragging about having hot sex around me years ago.”
“But you’d know.” As if it were vital to world peace, Margo rubbed at a smudge on the display glass. “You’d have heard, or sensed.”
“He’s awfully busy just now, so I’d say probably not. Why?”
“Oh.” She turned back, smiling widely. “Just a little wager we have going. I’m starving,” she realized abruptly. “Are you starving? I think we should order something in. If Kate comes by after work and we’re not done with this shipment, she’s going to lecture us on time management again.”
“I don’t have time for lectures on time. I’m sorry. I have to pick up the girls. It’s Friday,” she explained. “I promised them dinner and a movie. Why don’t you come with us?”
“And leave all this luxury?” Margo spread her arms wide to encompass boxes, heaps of packing material, half-empty cups of cold coffee. “Besides, I have to practice my gift wrapping. Everything I do still looks like it was wrapped up by a slow-witted three-year-old. I don’t mind, really—”
She broke off as the door swung open and Kayla burst through. “Mama! We came to visit.” With a beaming smile, she launched herself into Laura’s arms, clung just a little too hard.
“Hello, baby.” Laura squeezed back, worrying how long these small reassurances would be necessary. “How did you get here?”
“Uncle Josh picked us up. He said we could come and look at the shop ’cause we should take an interest in our legacy.”
“Your legacy, huh?” Laughing now, Laura set Kayla down and watched her older daughter come more cautiously, less happily into the room. “Well, Ali, what do you think?”
“It looks different than it did before.” She walked unerringly to the jewelry case.
“A girl after my own heart,” Margo declared and wrapped an arm around Ali’s shoulder.
“They’re so beautiful. It’s like a treasure chest.”
“It is. Not Seraphina’s dowry this time, but mine.”
“We got pizza,” Kayla called out. “Uncle Josh bought lots
and lots of pizza so we can eat here instead of in a restaurant. Can we, Mama?”
“If you like. Do you want to, Ali?”
Ali shrugged, continued to stare at the bracelets and pins. “It doesn’t matter.”
“And here’s the man of the hour.” Margo crossed the room as Josh elbowed the door open, his arms loaded with pizza boxes. She leaned over them and gave him a smacking kiss on the mouth.
“Just for pizza? Hell, I could’ve gone for the bucket of chicken.”
“Actually, that was a reward for your tennis prowess.”
She kept her voice low, and at the answering gleam in his eyes, she took the boxes from him. “Still sleeping alone, darling?”
“Don’t remind me.” He arched a brow. “You?”
She grinned and trailed a finger down his cheek. “I’ve been much too busy for sports of any kind. Ali, I think there’s a bottle of Pepsi in the refrigerator upstairs.”
“Got that covered, too,” he said, torturing himself with the scent of her perfume. “Can you handle getting the drinks out of the car, Ali Cat?”
“Me, too.” Kayla bulleted for the door. “I can help. Come on, Ali.”
“Well, well.” Josh tucked his hands in his pockets and scanned the room as his nieces slammed the door. “You have been busy.” He wandered toward the adjoining room, had to smile. It looked very much like Margo’s closet back in Milan, except that all the clothes were now discreetly tagged.
“Lingerie and nightclothes are upstairs,” Margo told him. “In the boudoir.”
“Naturally.” Idly, he picked up a gray suede pump, turned it over. The sole was barely scraped and the price was ninety-two fifty.
“How are you pricing?”
“Oh, we have our little system.”
He set the shoe back, glanced at his sister. “I didn’t think you’d mind if I brought the girls by.”
“No, not at all. What I do mind is you taking it upon yourself to fight with Peter.”
He didn’t bother to look contrite. “Heard about that, did you?”
“Of course I heard about it. Everyone from Big Sur to Monterey’s heard about it by now.” She refused to warm when he walked over and kissed her. “I can deal with my marital problems myself.”
“Sure you can. That ball just got away from me.”
“Like hell,” Margo muttered.
“Actually, I was aiming for his caps. Listen, Laura,” he continued when she bristled under his hands, “we’ll talk about it later, okay?”
She had little choice, since at that moment her daughters came back, carrying bags from the car.
He’d thought of paper plates as well, and napkins and silly party cups for soda and a good red Bordeaux. There seemed to be very little, Margo mused as they spread the makeshift picnic on the floor, that Josh Templeton didn’t think of.
It was a little lowering to realize she had underestimated him all these years. He would be a formidable foe, which he’d proved by one swing of the racket. And she was certain he would be a memorable lover.
Josh caught her staring and passed her a plate. “Problem, duchess?”
“More than likely.”
But she enjoyed herself, listening to the children. Ali seemed to brighten shade by shade under Josh’s teasing and attention. Poor thing wants a father, Margo mused. She understood the need, the empty ache of it. It had been Thomas
Templeton who had helped fill that void for her, and who at the same time, simply by being kind and caring, had made her constantly aware that he was not hers.
She had never had her own—or had had him so briefly she couldn’t remember him. Her mother had always been so closemouthed about the man she had married and lost that Margo had been afraid to ask questions. Afraid, she realized, that there had been nothing there, for any of them.
No love, she mused. Certainly no passion.
One more tepid marriage in the world hardly made a difference to anyone. Even those, she thought, involved in it. A good Irish Catholic girl married and had children, as was expected of her. Then accepted God’s will with a bowed head. Ann Sullivan wouldn’t have mourned and tossed herself, cursing God, into the sea as Seraphina had done. Ann Sullivan had picked herself up, moved on, and forgotten.
And so easily, Margo mused, that there had likely been little to remember. It was as if she had never had a father at all.
And hadn’t she sought to fill that lifetime gap with men? Often older men, like Alain, men who were successful and established and always safely beyond commitment. Married men, or oft-married men, or loosely married men with wives who turned a blind eye to an affair as long as their husbands turned a blind eye to theirs.
There had always been a cozy cushion with men who looked at her as a lovely prize to be pampered and fussed over. Displayed. Men who would never stay, which of course only made them more attractive, only more forbidden.