Ready for Marriage?

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Ready for Marriage? Page 32

by Beverly Barton; Ann Major Anne Marie Winston


  ‘‘Isabela—’’

  ‘‘Vivi!’’ Isabela lifted her eyebrows in feigned surprise. ‘‘Well…finally—I called and called you to come get me from the airport.’’ Her black eyes flashed.

  Vivian swallowed. ‘‘I—I know. The battery of my cell phone went dead. I was at the airport on time, though.’’

  ‘‘When I couldn’t reach you to tell you I was coming home on an earlier flight, I felt like a peon…standing on the curb, felt like an idiota…with all my suitcases. I called you at least ten more times.’’

  ‘‘I couldn’t find the cord to charge my cell phone. I—’’

  ‘‘And Eusebio?’’

  ‘‘Sick.’’

  ‘‘If I find out he’s home drunk again, I’m going to fire him this time.’’

  Vivian slid her sunglasses and keys into her purse and rushed to her sister-in-law. ‘‘Please don’t, and I promise…it won’t ever happen again.’’

  Vivian steepled her fingers together and lowered her head in an attitude of repentance. ‘‘I’m the most terrible sister-in-law in the whole world.’’

  Isabela smiled at her gently. ‘‘I suppose anybody’s battery could go dead…especially yours, since we call you so much.’’

  ‘‘I missed you calling me,’’ Vivian whispered.

  Isabela wrapped her arms around her and they hugged.

  A few seconds later she let her go. ‘‘I wish I had time to stay mad at you, but Cash is coming! And I don’t know what to wear.’’

  ‘‘I told you before—nothing.’’

  ‘‘Stop with the jokes.’’ Putting her hands on her small waist, Isabela smiled at her dazzling reflection and then at Vivian with obvious pride in her hourglass figure and cameo-perfect face.

  Vivian flipped a red lock of hair out of her eyes and tried to act nonchalant. ‘‘When will Prince Charming arrive?’’

  ‘‘He is Prince Charming. My very own Prince Charming.’’

  ‘‘I’ve never seen you like this. You’re so in love.’’ Warily Vivian eyed the drawer where Isabela had stashed her photographs of Cash. Vivian wasn’t about to admit she’d snuck into Isabela’s room several times to moon over those dumb pictures, and every time, she’d gotten that same vulnerable feeling in the pit of her stomach followed by a weird sense of connection to him.

  ‘‘He’s coming tonight.’’

  ‘‘What?’’

  Isabela whirled again. Her black eyes danced. ‘‘So, how do I look? I didn’t eat a single french fry or chip in Houston.’’

  ‘‘You know perfectly well how gorgeous you are. You appear transformed by love.’’ Vivian’s voice was dry.

  Isabela arched a brow. ‘‘Transformed? Really?’’

  For the first time ever, Vivian felt a little jealous, not of Isabela’s beauty but of her joyous self-confidence. Isabela was like a peacock, while Vivian had always been shy about her body and worn clothes that camouflaged her curves.

  ‘‘Cash called me on my cell when I was in Houston….’’ Isabela rattled on about the phone call, repeating everything he’d said. ‘‘He wants to see the beach house. You see, he’s agreed to help me repair it and enlarge it. He doesn’t know that I intend to turn it into our very own paradise.’’

  ‘‘Where you’ll both live happily ever after?’’

  ‘‘If tonight goes well—’’ Isabela paused ‘‘—we’ll drive out there tomorrow.’’

  The beach house was located on a sugary strip of beach in the nearby fishing village and port of Progreso, the same town where Aaron kept his boat. The house had suffered extensive damage during a recent hurricane. Thus, it was now a magnificent ruin with all its windows and doors boarded.

  ‘‘We can swim and enjoy the grounds and picnic. He can sketch,’’ Isabela said.

  Vivian was forming a romantic picture of them there when Miguelito squealed beneath them in the walled yard. Rushing to the glass door that opened onto a balcony, she stared down at her son. He was walking hand in hand with Julio and Tammy toward the pool, smiling up at them lovingly, the way he did at everybody…smiling as if he were their little boy.

  Vivian wanted him to love everybody. Still, she pressed her fingertips to the glass and emitted a little sigh.

  Divorce—would it ever stop hurting? She still felt guilty about leaving Julio, about them not being a family. She’d been too young to marry, not that she regretted Miguelito.

  Julio was carrying a yellow beach ball. Golden-skinned Tammy, who was barely eighteen, looked sleek and sexy in a white thong bikini.

  Just like I did…seven years ago….

  Tammy was an American student at the Instituto. She’d come to the Yucatán to study the ruins and improve her Spanish. Unlike most of Julio’s girlfriends, Tammy loved kids, and Miguelito enjoyed her.

  Which was good.

  So why did her heart ache as she circled herself with her arms and squeezed herself hard? Ever since her parents and little brother died, all she’d wanted was to be part of a happy family.

  ‘‘What’s so interesting down there?’’ Isabela glided soundlessly across the room and joined her at the window.

  ‘‘Do you think he misses his real mommy at all?’’ Vivian whispered in a low, raw tone.

  Tammy squealed when Miguelito splashed her, and Julio pulled Tammy away from the boy, circling her with his bronzed arms. He gave her a kiss. The girl wrapped her legs exuberantly around Julio while Miguelito watched them spellbound.

  Vivian’s fingernails raked the warm glass.

  ‘‘Now, don’t get upset,’’ Isabela said. ‘‘You don’t want Julio for yourself, and you know he can’t exist without a girlfriend.’’

  ‘‘Even when I was pregnant. If I don’t get Miguelito out of this country fast, he’ll wind up just like his daddy, and history will repeat itself.’’

  ‘‘Julio is a wonderful father.’’

  ‘‘But not a wonderful husband. I don’t want Miguelito to see women, especially young pretty ones, only as sex objects, and other women as servants.’’

  ‘‘You worry too much,’’ Isabela said with a soft laugh.

  ‘‘I’m afraid I have very different views than you about sex and love.’’

  ‘‘Do you? Sometimes I wonder.’’

  ‘‘You are more than just a beauty. You have a mind.’’

  ‘‘I’m smart enough not to try to compete with men, if that’s what you mean.’’

  ‘‘It isn’t.’’ Vivian pounded on the glass to distract Miguelito from the fused pair, who were still engaged in an endless, torrid series of kisses.

  Tammy saw her first and shyly pushed against Julio’s brown shoulder and waved up at her. Then father and son waved sheepishly too.

  ‘‘Well, I hope you’re happy now.’’ Amusement glimmered in Isabela’s slanting dark eyes. ‘‘You sure broke them up.’’

  ‘‘You just don’t want me to spoil your mood.’’

  ‘‘Exactly. I’m in love.’’

  ‘‘With love.’’

  ‘‘With Cash. He was so shy on the phone. I’m almost sure he’s coming here to propose.’’

  ‘‘You don’t know? Why, Isabela, sex-goddess extraordinaire, you’re losing your touch.’’

  ‘‘Don’t tease me. Not about him. And if he does ask me, I’ll throw a huge dance to announce our engagement. We’ve got to act surprised, but we’ve got to be ready, too. So you’ve got to help me.’’

  ‘‘Of course, querida. Anything.’’

  ‘‘We’ve got to get the house and the guest room, everything into top shape. I told the servants when I got in.’’

  ‘‘I noticed the kitchen was in an uproar.’’ A pause, and then it occurred to Vivian how terrible life would be here without Isabela. She swallowed. ‘‘If you marry him, where will you two live?’’

  ‘‘San Francisco. Of course, Cash travels all over the world. Just like Papá.’’

  ‘‘If you leave, I’ll miss you….’’

  Th
eir glances met. Vivian struggled to hide the desperate sense of loss and abandonment that was a legacy of being orphaned at an early age.

  Isabela clapped her hands and moved closer, holding out her arms. ‘‘You are always teasing me and complaining—but you do love me. You do. Like a sister.’’

  ‘‘You’re the only family…’’

  The passionate Isabela enfolded her in a touching embrace and squeezed her waist tightly. For an instant Vivian’s eyes stung with hot wetness.

  ‘‘Silly, preciosa, you and Miguelito will come with me. Por supuesto, ven conmigo.’’

  ‘‘But—’’

  ‘‘Don’t cry!’’

  ‘‘Don’t be ridiculous! I’m not!’’ But her eyes burned, and her heart beat in painful, jerky strokes.

  ‘‘Your eyes are as bright as cherries. Don’t you know, I can’t live in the States—not without family. You are my sister. We will find you a little house near ours. You will help me catch him—yes?’’

  ‘‘You’re taking me with you?’’ Vivian dabbed at her eyes. She couldn’t believe Isabela’s generous offer.

  She and Miguelito might go home.

  ‘‘You’ve told me you want to go back to school and that there’s no opportunity here. This is our chance. If you help me, we will both realize our dreams.’’

  ‘‘I—I can’t believe you’d take—’’

  ‘‘Believe it. All you have to do is play fairy godmother and help me catch my prince.’’

  ‘‘But you are so beautiful. How could I possibly help?’’

  ‘‘I don’t understand you Americans, and when he arrives, he must have the most wonderful time of his life. Everything must be perfect. You say I am beautiful, but you don’t understand who he is. He is like a god. He could have any woman. And like you say, he is used to women who aren’t afraid to reveal they have minds.’’

  Vivian had never seen Isabela so filled with self-doubt, and because of her own self-doubts, she sympathized.

  ‘‘He is like royalty…an international celebrity in his own right. He is not in love with me—yet. He is still in love with her, his first wife. He never talks about it, but I can sense the way he feels. He can look so dark, so sad, and his eyes can look so empty.’’

  Vivian’s heart beat uneasily. She had felt what he felt too—just from looking at his photograph. ‘‘I know what you mean,’’ she said softly.

  ‘‘If I’m lucky, he’ll pop the question tonight, first thing. But until he does…’’

  Vivian shivered a little. ‘‘I’ll prepare the guest room for him,’’ she said, suddenly eager to end this discussion about Isabela’s Prince Charming.

  When she left Isabela, she knew she had to forget Cash McRay’s green eyes and that strange feeling of sorrow and connection she felt toward him. She loved Isabela like a sister. Her loyalty was to Isabela.

  The best way to quit fantasizing about a man who’d lost the woman he’d loved and wore his grief in his pain-ravaged eyes was to work hard. Vivian marched down to the kitchen and made long lists for the servants. Next she took two maids to Cash’s guest room and listed what needed to be done. As she was leaving, Vivian spotted a puddle on the bathroom floor near the water heater. When she turned the hot water heater on, water spewed out of a broken pipe, showering her.

  She screamed, and the maids doubled over with laughter. Then she started laughing too. Finally, she turned the water off, but a look at herself in the mirror brought more giggles. Dripping wet, her bright hair glued to her scalp, Vivian looked like a giant, drowned rat.

  Still laughing, she went to the garage to tell Rodrigo. Then she returned to Isabela’s bedroom to check in with Isabela, who laughed at her too.

  ‘‘Cash just called. You’ll have to change at once and repair your hair. His plane is on the ground.’’

  ‘‘I’m too tired. I’m going to shower and go to bed.’’

  ‘‘But I want you to meet Cash.’’

  ‘‘In the morning.’’

  ‘‘But, you said you’d help—’’

  ‘‘He’s an American. With an American man, you put romancing him first and family second. It’s important that you don’t overpower him. Trust me on this.’’

  Isabela hugged her until she was as soaked as Vivian. ‘‘All right. Tonight we’ll have a candlelight dinner by the pool, just the two of us. Lots of candles. And I’ll wear this.’’ She lifted a sexy red sheath from her bed. ‘‘How are these for glass slippers?’’

  The shoes, although made of plastic, did indeed look like glass slippers adorned with thousands of sparkling red stars.

  ‘‘You will be the most perfect Cinderella ever.’’

  An hour later, when Vivian was upstairs alone in her bedroom, with her stringy, wet hair and her sunburned face, she sensed him even before the outer door slammed and he entered the walled courtyard.

  One minute she was fine. Then it was as if her world shifted crazily on its axis. The air was suddenly so dense and hot she could barely breathe.

  More doors banged. A dog’s claws scraped tile. The animal began barking inside the courtyard. Isabela didn’t allow dogs.

  The mutt yapped again.

  Curious, Vivian stepped out onto her balcony, and a man’s deep, pleasant voice from the patio below made her quiver and slink into the shadows of the ancient pomegranate tree.

  ‘‘Anyone can see the mutt’s half starved, Isabela. Indulge me,’’ the voice said.

  ‘‘You can’t adopt every mangy dog in Mexico.’’

  Isabela moved toward him, hips undulating. He gulped his entire glass of wine and backed away from her.

  ‘‘My cabdriver nearly hit him.’’

  ‘‘Because he’s so stupid he sleeps in the middle of the street.’’

  ‘‘Just look into his eyes. What soul!’’

  ‘‘Oh, my God, Cash—he’s already eaten half our grilled chicken dinner.’’

  ‘‘We won’t starve, Isabela. Do you have soap and a hose? As soon as he eats, I’ll bathe him.’’

  ‘‘Surely one of the servants can deal with him. You’ve come such a long way. Why don’t we enjoy each other?’’

  Again he backed away from her. ‘‘If you don’t mind, I’d prefer to bathe him myself.’’ The beautiful voice was harder, crisper. ‘‘You can watch…if you’d enjoy that.’’

  Fisting her hands, Vivian stirred restlessly. She felt strangely possessive and jealous of Concho. Why had Cash McRay fixed on her skinny, orange stray? The last thing she needed was to feel another connection to the man.

  As if the dog sensed her, Concho trotted to the patio under her balcony, looked up and began to whine. When Cash followed, Vivian whirled inside and eased her glass door shut. Trying not to think about the couple outside, she peeled off her wet clothes, bathed, and washed her hair, standing in the warm shower far longer than was necessary, as if to wash the memory of Cash’s voice and presence from her consciousness. Finally, she slipped on a cotton nightgown and towel-dried her hair.

  She’d missed her swim this morning and now again tonight. Maybe that was partly why she felt so strange and restless as she moved about her bedroom straightening shelves and drawers that were perfectly straight already.

  Miguelito was still with Tammy and Julio, or she would have gone to his room and played games or read books with him. When she tried to read in bed, her mind was too scattered to concentrate. So, she got up again and paced.

  If only she could swim, but she couldn’t. Not with Isabela entertaining Cash down by the pool.

  Tonight was too important—maybe he’d propose. She had to stay focused on the fact that he was her ticket to a new life.

  When Vivian lay down on her bed a long while later, she felt exhausted, but too confused to sleep. She kept thinking about Concho and the fact that Cash cared about her dog. The feeling that they were connected in some mysterious way intensified.

  It’s been too long since you got any…

  She wished Aaron had
n’t said that. She wished the mattress wasn’t so soft. She balled the sheets in her hands and tried to lie still.

  Why couldn’t she sleep? Why was she dwelling on this fantasy about a man she didn’t even know? Worse—he was Isabela’s, and she adored Isabela.

  Finally Vivian got up, opened the door and padded barefoot out onto her shadowy balcony again. The sultry night air smelled of mango and avocado, and of grilled chicken and garlic.

  Hundreds of candles lit up the pool area. She could see the lovers from her balcony. Isabela pranced about under the ancient pomegranate tree in her sexy, strapless red dress that was the exact shade of the walls and her strappy, see-through heels, while Cash kept moving out of her range.

  Mostly Vivian watched Cash, who was half hidden by the tropical foliage. He was big and virile looking in jeans and boots. He was whipcord lean and had the tight-hipped swagger of a street fighter, and yet he was, apparently, a highly sophisticated, brilliant man.

  Vivian found that she liked watching him move. His big, raw-boned body somehow went with his rough, haunted face.

  Concho liked him too. Claws clicking, the dog padded after him everywhere, and when Cash’s brown hand fell to his side, the mutt’s head was there to lick his fingers and be stroked. Cash seemed much more comfortable with the dog than he did with Isabela.

  Don’t try so hard, Isabela.

  Still, Isabela would win. She always did. Broken-hearted or not, the rugged Cash McRay, who had a soft spot for mongrels, didn’t stand a chance against the seductive, fiery Isabela.

  And I want Isabela to win. I do.

  Remembering how gently Julio had courted her with candlelit dinners and dances, Vivian knew McRay was in over his head. Julio specialized in reluctant virgins, just as Isabela specialized in wounded rich men.

  And Isabela had broken too many hearts to count. Not that Isabela kept a list of conquests or heartbreaks. She was resilient and optimistic. In her mind, the present man was the only one.

  If Isabela pulled this off, Vivian would get to go home to the States. But oddly, Vivian wanted Cash to find true love and be happy and not simply be swept away.

  Suddenly Concho left Cash’s side and trotted over to stand underneath Vivian’s balcony. He lifted his head and began to bark excitedly as if she were a skunk or a raccoon he’d treed.

 

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