Lessons From A Latin
Lover
Chapter One
The trouble with blinding flashes of inspiration, Molly McGillivray
decided as she scowled into the innards of the ancient Jeep she was
removing the carburetor from, was that they were never in one's comfort
zone.
If they were, of course, they wouldn't be blinding flashes of brilliance.
They would be ‘ho hum, yes, of course' notions that one would
have thought of long ago.
The other trouble with blinding flashes of inspiration was that,
once you thought of them, they wouldn't go away.
They were so outrageous, so perverse, so downright awful that you
couldn't forget them!
They nagged and pestered and generally haunted you all the live
long day.
Like today.
Ever since her long-time fiancé, Carson Sawyer had come home
last month, Molly had been wracking her brain for some subtle way
to make him wake up and remember that they were, in fact, engaged.
Well, not exactly remember. Carson remembered. It was handy to remember.
Having a fiancée allowed him to keep his attention on business
and kept the fortune hunters at bay. It was ‘useful' to be
engaged, he'd once told her cheerfully. And back then she'd been
quite happy to agree.
It had been useful to her, too.
But that was then. Enough was enough. They'd been engaged for years.
It was time to do something about it – like get married.
But try telling Carson that.
Actually she had tried. But Carson's mobile phone had rung the first
time she'd broached the subject. And he'd had an emergency appointment
another time. And the last time he'd been home, well, he certainly
hadn't noticed what she wanted him to notice – that they weren't
getting any younger, that everyone else was married and having kids
and it was time they did, too.
She didn't suppose things like starting a family were high on his
list of priorities. She remembered well enough what Hugh had said
when she'd asked him what had attracted him to Syd, his wife.
"Sex," he'd said.
Syd had punched him.
"She's a great housekeeper, too," he'd added with a grin,
dodging a second blow and then circling around to catch her in an
embrace. "But I think it was mostly how unbelievably sexy she
was." He'd nuzzled her ear. "Still is," he'd added
with a wink, reaching down to pat her four month pregnant belly.
Syd had rolled her eyes, but the light of love had been in them and
Molly knew the feeling was mutual.
It was true, Molly realized. Sex did play a part. A big part. And
her sister-in-law had sex appeal in spades. Sydney had probably been
born with a come-hither look in her eyes. Molly figured she'd been
born with safety lenses over hers so she wouldn't get grit in them
when she worked on engines which she did every day as the mechanic
at Fly Guy Island Charters, the business she owned with her brother
Hugh.
Molly loved the business. She loved the engines. But men didn't
notice women who worked on engines. Not as women anyway.
And they certainly didn't have sexual fantasies about a woman who
could take apart a carburetor and put it back together with no pieces
left over. They didn't want to take her to bed and make hot sweet
love to her. They didn't want to set a wedding date.
It didn't even occur to them. To him. To Carson.
So she needed help. She needed to get his attention. To appeal to
him on the same basic elemental level that Syd had appealed to Hugh.
She needed to become a sexy, alluring woman.
Something of a stretch, she thought grimly, when she was generally
covered in motor oil and wearing her brother Hugh's t-shirts and
steel-toed boots.
But she was willing to work. She just didn't know where to start.
Or she hadn't.
Until last night.
Last night she'd gone to the Grouper, the island's most "happening" watering
hole and had sat at one of the tables by the wall, watching the "happenings" -
all the flirting and teasing and male-female innuendo and stuff – trying
to get an idea of how to do it. From a distance she didn't have a
clue.
All she'd seen was who was at the center of it all – Joaquin
Santiago.
Of course.
Molly grappled with the carburetor a little more fiercely than was
absolutely necessary, her jaw bunching as she remembered the moment
the idea had entered her head.
She'd been sipping a beer and watching God's gift to women, until
recently one of Spain's most important exports to the soccer world,
Joaquin Santiago, assessing the females who were attempting to charm
him. An accident had ended his career just months ago and according
to Lachlan, he was still feeling the effects of it. Molly, watching
him, couldn't see it had left any lasting effects at all.
It certainly hadn't done anything to dim his legendary appeal – or
charm.
He smiled at this one, chatted with that one, flirted with them
one and all. And then something happened. One woman appeared to catch
his attention. Molly saw him straighten, zero in. His wicked grin
flashed. The devil-may-care glint in his eye was evident clear across
the room as he focused on that one woman and cut her out of the crowd.
Like a cutting horse with a cow, Molly thought, having seen some
Texans doing exactly that last weekend on the television.
As Molly watched, Joaquin's gaze locked with the woman's. They'd
smiled. Flirted. They'd moved closer together as they talked. The
others didn't leave, but it became clear they were a couple. Joaquin's
hand lifted as he gestured. The grin flashed again and when his hand
came down it was on the woman's arm. She moved in closer.
Molly watched intently. Two tourists moved between her and the unfolding
drama. She leaned sideways, practically tipping off the bar stool
to get a better look. But it wasn't fifteen minutes until Joaquin
and tonight's conquest – or had she conquered him? Molly
wondered – left the bar together. Obviously the man was a sex
god.
But just as obviously, the women had something too. What?
What caused a man to single one out? Hone in on her?
Want her?
Ask him, her idiot brain suggested. Right there in the
middle of the Grouper the notion had come to her, and had almost
knocked her on her butt.
Yeah right, she'd countered her own idiocy. Just walk
up to the playboy of the western world and ask him what he finds
appealing about any given one.
For him they only had to be breathing.
But even as she thought it, she knew it wasn't true. Joaquin had
standards. He had his pick of women, and he only chose certain ones.
"I'd take his leftovers," Hugh had said once in his pre-Syd
days.
Ask him, the voice persisted.
Molly snorted again, just thinking about it. Joaquin Santiago didn't
even know she was alive.
Well, he knew. He was one of her brother Lachlan's best friends
in the world. He'd been in and out of her life ever since he and
Lachlan had played soccer together in Italy when he was nineteen.
He'd come to Lachlan's wedding and to Hugh's, bringing a different
equally gorgeous French model to each. He'd been charming to everyone,
even Molly, giving her a taste of the Santiago charm as he'd asked
to be introduced.
"Introduced?" Hugh had goggled. "That's Molly! In
a dress."
It had been almost funny to see the unflappably debonair Santiago
looking momentarily nonplussed as he'd had to admit he hadn't recognized
Lachlan's sister wearing one of her friend Carin Campbell's outfits.
"Dab a little engine grease on your nose, Mol," Hugh had
suggested cheerfully. "Then he'll know you."
"Shut up," She'd laughed because she hadn't cared what
the likes of a playboy like Joaquin Santiago thought of her. Still
didn't.
She'd refused to dance with him then. She didn't want to talk to
him now. But clearly he knew what men found sexy and alluring in
a woman. He knew what man a man sit up and take notice. He knew what
made him sit up and take notice.
Ask him, that irritating little voice in her heard plagued
her again.
But still she resisted. It would be too awful, too humiliating.
How girly was it to admit you didn't even know how to act like a
girl? Molly shuddered at the thought. She hated admitting any weakness.
She'd spent her life determined to keep up with her two older brothers,
and damn it, she had. Anything they could do, she could do better.
Almost.
There were some things, she was beginning to realize, that they
would never have to do, blast their miserable hides.
She finished disassembling the carburetor and plunked the pieces
in a pan of cleaner to soak. Surely she could come up with a better
idea before Carson came home again.
She'd assumed he'd come to the Pelican Cay Homecoming Festival this
month. It was going to be a big deal. Everyone on the island had
got behind the plan and Molly had thought Carson's return would be
a given. But when she'd mentioned it, he'd shaken his head.
"Can't. Got to go to Ireland."
She'd smiled and done her best to hide her disappointment, telling
herself he needed to do his job, and that it wasn't important. There
would be time for them. Hadn't he just recently bought that big house
in Savannah he was planning to restore? Didn't that mean he was thinking
about marriage and family?
Maybe she didn't need to do anything to entice him.
Carson was a dark horse, after all. He kept his own counsel and
did his own thing in his own time. No one else from Pelican Cay had
gone from a poor fisherman's son to a multi-millionaire in twelve
short years. Carson had because he had always known what he wanted
to do.
And he'd simply gone out and done it. He hadn't talked about it.
Perhaps next time he came, he wouldn't talk about marriage either,
he'd just bring a license and they'd get hitched.
Or perhaps he'd be as distracted as ever, Molly thought wearily.
The phone rang. She had gunk on her hands and let the answering
machine get it. Whoever wanted to schedule a flight could leave a
message and Hugh could call them when he got back..
"Mol? Sorry I missed you. Thought you'd be there."
Oh God! She stumbled across the room and punched the speaker button
with her elbow. "Carson? Hi! I'm here! Where are you?"
"In Miami. Just got a break in a meeting. I ran into a couple
of islanders last night and we got to talking. Got a little homesick." There
was a catch in his voice that made Molly smile.
"Really?"
"Yeah. Missed it. Missed you," he said gruffly.
Molly's heart kicked over. "Me, too. But I know you're busy."
"I was. Still am," he said. "But some things are
more important, you know?"
"Oh, yes."
"Good. So I just wanted to let you know I've rescheduled Ireland.
I'll be there for homecoming."
Molly grinned. "You will?"
"Yep. And we can talk and – Oh hell. Gotta run. See you
next Saturday." There was a click and Molly stood staring at
the dead phone.
Outside she could hear the Pelican Youth Soccer team yelled as they
practiced and her brother Lachlan shouted out instructions for a
drill. Inside she could hear the pounding of the blood in her ears.
Carson was coming home!
A surge of hope shot through her. He wanted to talk! Fine. Good.
She wanted to talk, too.
But she and Carson had been talking for years. That's pretty much
all they had ever done beside some dreaming and some kissing and
some teenage groping and fooling around. Everything else had been
set aside because Carson had been far too busy.
And because he'd never been especially inclined to make love to
a woman who smelled like engine oil and wore steel-toed boots? Molly
wondered.
Well, she could get rid of the smell and buy a new pair of shoes.
And then what?
Joaquin Santiago would know, her irritating little voice
reminded her.
And yes, that was true. He would. But she did not want
to ask him!
Copyright © 2007 by Barbara Schenck. This
edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
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