Rivals (22 page)

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Authors: Janet Dailey

BOOK: Rivals
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“Or you could opt for nothing at all,” Chance added suggestively, then said, “I'll have a car pick you up at work at four o'clock. Is that all right?”

“I'll be ready.”

“So will I.”

15

A
s
the limousine drove onto the concrete apron, a fuel truck pulled away from a sleek, white Gulfstream jet, with the distinctive “
S
” logo of the Stuart Corporation emblazoned in gold on its fuselage. Flame spotted Chance almost immediately, standing next to the wing with one of the flight crew. There was a turning lift of his dark head when he heard the limousine. A high alertness held him motionless for a split second, then he said something to the stockily built man with him and moved away to meet the approaching limo.

He was at the door when she stepped out. Again, she felt the jolting impact of his blue-eyed glance, followed by the heady warmth of his mouth moving onto hers in a slow, claiming kiss. As he drew back, Flame gazed at the rakish angles of his face, so smooth and yet so rugged. She had wondered if she would experience the same rush of feeling when she saw him again or if a week's separation would have changed that. It hadn't. Her pulse was behaving just as erratically and that vague breathless feeling of excitement was still there. But those were physical reactions, easily identified. What was harder to name was the strong pull of emotion, that elated feeling of having come home—the one that had to fit under the heading of love.

The creases in his lean cheeks deepened, suggesting a smile even though there was little movement of his mouth. “Hello again.”

She was amazed at how much meaning could be conveyed in that soft murmured greeting. “Hello again,” she whispered back. She would have gladly gone back into his arms but his glance to the side reminded her they weren't alone.

Half-turning, Flame saw the chauffeur as he lifted her two pieces of luggage from the trunk and handed them to a second man in a flight uniform, younger and slimmer than the first with a definitely Latin look.

“Juan Angel Cordero,” Chance identified the man for her, giving his name the full Spanish pronounciation. “But we call him Johnny Angel. He'll be flying the right seat. Johnny, meet Flame Bennett.”

“Glad to have you aboard, Ms. Bennett,” he acknowledged in flawless English, his dark-eyed look warm with appreciation.

“Thank you.”

“And our pilot in command, Mick Donovan,” Chance said, directing her attention to the man walking up to them, the one he'd been talking to when she'd arrived. “Flame Bennett.”

“Hello, Captain.” She noticed immediately that his strong, broad features seemed to be permanently etched in calm, unruffled lines. He had the kind of face that inspired confidence, and the touch of premature gray in the sides of his close-cropped hair merely added to the image.

“Ms. Bennett.” A faint smile of welcome lifted the corners of his mouth, gentling the crisply pale blue of his eyes. “I just received the latest weather report. Looks like I can promise you a smooth flight.”

“To where?” she asked, her own curiosity about their destination resurfacing.

He hesitated, sliding a brief glance at Chance, then smiled. “To paradise, Ms. Bennett—Stuart style.”

“You still aren't going to tell me where we're going, are you, you devil!” She flashed a mildly accusing look at Chance.

“I'm saving it for a surprise.” He smiled back at her, then turned to the pilot. “Everything set?”

“As soon as Johnny gets Ms. Bennett's luggage stowed, we'll be ready to leave whenever you are.”

“Then let's go.” His hand moved to the small of her back to guide her to the waiting jet.

As she turned, Flame thought she caught a glimpse of the hawk-faced man who'd been following her for the last ten days. She looked again at the man heading toward the office of the private aviation company. At this distance, she couldn't be sure it was the same man, yet a feeling of unease ran through her. She had previously dismissed the man as an irritating annoyance, thinking Malcom was responsible for the tail. But he wasn't. She had no idea now who was behind it. Maybe no one. The city had its share of crazies, and, for all she knew, this man could be one of them. And that possibility was a more frightening one.

When she got back, she'd have to do something about him, but not now. She didn't want anything or anyone intruding on her weekend with Chance. She reminded herself that she couldn't be sure it was even the same man. She could be seeing ghosts where none existed. After all, no dark green sedan had followed her to the airport. Of that, she was certain. Smiling, she walked with Chance to the jet's stairway.

A certain amount of luxury was to be expected in a corporate aircraft, but Flame wasn't prepared for the scale she found when she entered the stylishly appointed cabin. Leather suede in a pale ivory color covered the walls. The same shade was repeated in the upholstery on the swivel chairs, this time with the addition of threads of sea-foam green accented by French blue. The entire color scheme served to enhance the array of sculptures scattered through the cabin and invisibly secured, works of Brancusi, Giacometti, and Moore. The collection represented a veritable Who's Who of twentieth-century sculptors. Yet there was no sense of being overpowered by it. Instead, the effect was one of restrained elegance.

“Like it?” Chance was directly behind her, his hands warm on her arms, his breath stirring the edges of her hair.

“I love it. It has the feel of a…small sitting room in a private home—comfortable, beautiful, a place to relax and enjoy.”

“This is—for all intent and purposes—my second home,” he admitted. “If the truth was known, I probably spend more time in this one than I do at my house in Tulsa.” Behind them came the grinding hum of the steps being retracted, followed by the closing of the hatch door. “Sounds like we'd better take our seats,” Chance remarked. “Once Mick gets the green light, he doesn't like to dawdle. After we're airborne, I'll take you on a tour of my home-away-from-home.”

“I'd like that.”

As good as his word, shortly after the jet leveled off at its flying altitude, Chance showed her through the aircraft. The interior design was a marvel of understated luxury, compactness, and high tech. Fine leather, the same creamy pale shade as the suede walls, covered a low coffee table that—at the push of a button—became a conference table. In addition to a full entertainment center, there was also a work station with a microcomputer that allowed Chance to transmit information to his Tulsa headquarters by modem and remain in constant touch with his business operation.

And the small galley, Chance informed her, was capable of serving a full-course meal for eight. The galley cabinets, covered in the same ivory leather as the tables in the main cabin, contained a complete setting of Italian china and silver, as well as an appropriate quantity of linen.

The powder room had the same combination of suede and leather with its accents of sea-foam green and French blue, plus a carpet of gold on the floor.

Last, Chance took her into the rear compartment, sectioned off from the galley and main salon area by a door. As she looked around the small executive compartment, Flame noticed a double-width closet built into the wall next to a leather-topped desk, also built in. Impelled by curiosity, she opened its doors. Inside, there were hanger after hanger holding men's suits, sportcoats, blazers, and slacks.

“I keep a complete wardrobe on board,” Chance explained.

“How convenient.” She swung the doors closed, then turned to survey the plush sofa covered in a velvety fabric of French blue.

“It saves a lot of packing and unpacking,” he agreed dryly, then added, “The sofa makes into a double bed.”

“How
very
convenient,” Flame mocked suggestively, smiling as she rejoined him by the doorway.

“On international flights, it can be.” His gaze took on an intimately possessive look as he lifted his hands, tunneling them under her hair to lay on either side of her neck. “I can't believe how much I've missed you.”

The husky pitch of his voice made it easy for her to admit, “And I can't believe how much I've missed you, too.”

As she tilted her head back, his mouth found hers with unerring accuracy. Instantly, Flame was conscious of the warm feeling that sprang to life inside her, a feeling he could arouse so expertly without their bodies even touching.

With obvious reluctance, he shifted his attention to the corner of her lips. “I should have arranged to make this a longer flight. We would have had time then to see if that bed could be put to a more satisfactory use than sleeping.”

“Does that mean we're almost at our destination?” She slipped her hands inside his suit jacket and spread them over his shirt front, feeling the heat that emanated from his lean, hard body.

“We probably have another hour to go yet, maybe more,” he admitted, then forced himself to pull away, as if the temptation of her nearness was more than he could resist. “But after waiting a week to be with you again, I'm not interested in a quick romp. I want to take my time making love to you.”

“I admit a quick romp would merely be an appetizer,” Flame conceded, eyeing him with a playfully deliberate, seductive look. “But don't you usually serve your guests an appetizer before you offer them the main course?”

“Yes, but I like everything served in one sitting.” His mouth slanted in a one-cornered smile.

Sighing, she lowered her gaze to his shirt front and slid her fingers under his silk tie to trace the line of buttons. “I don't suppose there's any way you can get this plane to fly faster.”

“I wish.” He chuckled softly, bringing his hands down to capture hers by the wrists and end their tantalizing exploration.

“It never hurts to dream,” she said, offering no protest when he gently directed her back to the main salon area. Then recalling the hurt of previous lost illusions, she qualified that, “Almost never, anyway.”

“You have to dream,” Chance said. “Otherwise you'll never have a dream come true.”

“Have your dreams come true?” she wondered curiously.

“Some of them have. I'm still working on others.”

“Such as?” she asked, trying to imagine what he might dream about.

“Getting this jet to fly faster.”

She laughed in full agreement.

16

T
he
sun was riding low in the sky, setting fire to the clouds on the horizon, when the jet touched down at the private landing strip along the western coast of Mexico. That much Flame had guessed from the southerly route they'd taken from San Francisco, keeping the coastal mountains on their left and the Pacific Ocean on their right. Chance confirmed they were in Mexico but he wouldn't enlighten her further.

Alongside the runway stood a small open-air building set amidst a stand of palm trees and rampant mounds of lavender bougainvillea. As the jet taxied onto the tarmac, Flame had a glimpse of the sign on what was obviously the terminal building. But the glimpse was too brief and her knowledge of Spanish too limited. She still didn't know where they were. Not that it bothered her. On the contrary, this aura of mystery merely heightened her interest and added a further touch of excitement to her weekend away with Chance.

A car waited for them on the tarmac. On the driver's door was the now familiar logo of the Stuart Corporation. In the time it took Flame and Chance to walk to the car, her luggage was transferred from the plane to the limousine's trunk. Less than five minutes from the touchdown, they were driving away from the inland airport, following a paved road that wound over the mountain toward the ocean beyond.

As they approached a scenic overlook, Chance spoke to the driver in Spanish. Immediately the car slowed and pulled onto the graveled roadside, stopping well short of the viewpoint.

“Do you still want to know where we're going?” Chance arched an eyebrow at her, his sidelong look glinting with faint challenge.

She sensed his desire to show her, a desire that seemed to be couched in a pride and a need to share. That, coupled with her own curiosity, made it easy for her to answer quickly. “Yes, yes, yes,” she declared, grinning back at him.

He helped her from the car, then led her to the edge of the overlook, his hand firmly hooked around the side of her waist, keeping her close to his side.

The Pacific sprawled before her, the slanting rays of the sun laying a long golden trail across it. At the end of the sun's trail was a small bay surrounded by a dazzling blaze of gold that spread up the mountain slopes. Flame breathed in sharply at the sight, stunned by the discovery that the golden glitter came from the buildings stair-stepping the slopes in tier after tier. Here and there, she saw ruby splashes of cascading red flowers and the emerald fronds of tall palm trees.

“Welcome to Cuidad d'Oro de la Stuart…Stuart's City of Gold.”

“Chance, it's phenomenal.” She stared at the golden tower of a multistoried hotel that stood near a pearl white beach, its balconies strung with more ruby garlands of red flowers. “The buildings, they actually look as if they're gilded. They aren't, are they?”

“No. After six months of testing, we finally developed a stucco-like compound composed mainly of a micalike substance that reflects the sunlight. Its most effective at this time of day.”

In Flame's opinion, that was an excessive understatement. “I have the feeling I'm looking at the fabled city of gold.”

“Wait until you see it at night when it catches the silver of the moon and the stars.”

Back in the car, they resumed their journey down the winding mountain road to the secluded resort complex, driving past the bay with its yacht harbor and marina crowded with charter boats for deep sea and sport fishing. A strolling mariachi band played for the bathers still lingering on the beach to catch the last rays of the sun.

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