The Saint's Devilish Deal (4 page)

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Authors: Kristina Knight

Tags: #reunion romance, #vacation romance, #Puerto Vallarta, #contemporary romance, #Mexico

BOOK: The Saint's Devilish Deal
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“Or to leave linens unchanged,” she interrupted.

Santiago carried on, talking over her. “I estimate that for every fifteen minutes they don’t spend in-room, we’re saving about two hundred dollars in wages and electricity. That’s per day—not a huge amount, but it adds up. We’re also making it easier for the guests to come and go.” He stepped around the chair but she countered, maneuvering herself behind Constance’s desk. “Unless you want unhappy, inconvenienced guests writing up complaints about our establishment on every message board they can find, hmmm?”

“No, I’ll leave that job up to your brother. Did you ever consider, before blaming me, he was behind the cancellations?” She rallied, placing both hands on the chair back she leaned forward. “Even you can’t expect our guests to spend a thousand dollars a night for cold sandwiches and beer.”

“I was thinking more like twenty-five-hundred per night.” Santiago bit back another smile when her eyes widened at the number he threw out. Arguing with Esme had always been fun. He took another step toward her, mimicking her pose across the chair until they were nearly nose to nose. “But if you check the register you’ll see that we are the only full-time residents, and I could use your help, if you’re interested in teaming up to whip this place into shape.” A look of unease flickered across her face. She pushed back from the desk, stepping toward the door. He knew she wasn’t in physical fear of him, so what was it? Maybe she wasn’t as immune to him as she pretended to be. Now, that was an interesting thought.

She crossed her arms over her chest once more. “We could still get last minute stopovers. People on daytrips or taking an unplanned vacation along the coast,” she said, the confidence in her voice belied by the fact that she wouldn’t meet his gaze. And her constantly tapping toes.

“Perhaps. But we need more than a few random stopovers. We need a makeover of this entire place. Everything must go, Esmerelda,” he said and bit back a sigh as her face blanched.

“You can’t do that, Santiago. Forget for a minute that you hate this place. There isn’t money for renovations right now.”

He shrugged one shoulder. It wasn’t hatred of Casa Constance. The feelings he had for this place were much more convoluted than that. But there was no need to go there now. “There is, if we’re careful.” No need to tell her there was plenty of money at this point because he’d filled the coffers.

“Even renovated, you can’t expect guests to pay that kind of money for white bread, peanut butter, and beer.”

He wondered how long it would take for her to ask what his idea of teamwork was. He already knew how he would answer her.

“As far as Gloriana’s kitchen is concerned, why waste money on supplies that won’t be enjoyed? You and I don’t need a five-course meal every night. Besides, I am quite comfortable eating a cold sandwich in the kitchen while she uses the extra time to develop new and innovative dishes which will please our guests’ palates. It might even increase the number of reservations from the locals at our weekend dinner services and Sunday brunches.”

“But—”

“No buts, pequeña. This is my time in charge—unless you decide to take me up on my teamwork idea.” No harm reminding her that they didn’t have to be at war for the next six months. Even if watching her work up a good mad had him feeling a little uncomfortable below the equator. “Feel free to let the staff wander aimlessly around the guest rooms and to have Gloriana prepare thousand-dollar dinners for nobody on your own dime. Not mine, and certainly not Constance’s.”

“Well. . . well, stop calling me pequeña, I’m not seven years old any longer.” Fire flashed in her eyes, not from anger this time, but from exactly which emotional touchstone Santiago wasn’t certain.

He ran his index finger along her jaw, breathing in the sweet-but-spicy scent of eucalyptus that had always enveloped her.

“A status I am well aware of, Esmerelda.” His skin tightened. Her mouth fell into a smooth, surprised O at his touch, and his blood began to simmer. Her cheeks pinked up and her breaths came in short puffs as his index finger traced her lower lip, starting a slow burn at the tips of his fingers. The simmer went straight to boil. He tried to pull back. Dios, he tried, but her tongue flicked against her pouting lower lip. In and out in a heartbeat, pushing Santiago way past his limit.

He imagined her tongue tangoing with his in the hammock beneath the palms poolside. Trailing down his chest as she tasted him. Would it be like before? Better? Personally, he couldn’t imagine better but she was too tempting not to do a little tasting of his own. He anchored his finger under her chin and pushed up so that he got the full effect of her mesmerizing, shamrock eyes. Her pupils dilated and she swayed toward him. Leaning down, Santiago pressed a kiss to her jaw, her sweet lips. The feel of her soft skin urged him to find that hammock or any other nearby edifice where he could get her on her back. Daring him to go much farther than the simple brushing of his lips against hers. He didn’t dare. Not just yet.

“But ‘small one’ is not the only definition of the word.” He breathed the words against the sensitive skin of her neck and stepped back, leaving her swaying in his wake.

Oh yeah, she wasn’t nearly as immune to him as she pretended to be. Maldito, neither was he to her. Seducing Esme, which seemed like the perfect solution to their problems five minutes ago, wouldn't be nearly as simple as he'd envisioned. They were both likely to go down in flames, and where would that leave Constance’s villa?

 

Chapter Three

 

Three grueling hours passed before Esme ventured back into the lobby. Her new plan was simple: focus on the wall behind his head, admit he was right, and ask about his ideas for working as a team. And now here she was, fidgeting outside the closed office door like an unruly child afraid of being grounded.

Lord, but he looked good in a suit. She shook herself. Stop thinking of his looks and start focusing on the villa, Esmerelda.

She fiddled with the cuff of her navy blue suit, switching her balance from her left foot to the right. The crisp suit, deep pink shell, and strappy sandals made her feel feminine but in charge. Amethyst earrings deepened the green of her eyes.

Come on, E. This is as good as your armor is going to get, now let’s go charm the charmer.

She knocked lightly once. No response, not even a slight creak of the desk chair. Esme pressed her ear to the door. Was he ignoring her?

Reaching for the doorknob, she twisted it right and then left. It didn’t give. Locked? He had locked her out of her own office? This was utterly ridiculous. He couldn’t shut her out of the running of the villa because it was his time in charge. What did that say about teamwork?

Esme spun around and stomped over to the front desk where Constance kept a spare key. If Santiago were trying to shut her out, he would have to do better than locking a single door. She pawed through three drawers and one shelf before she found the key in the cash drawer under a mountain of American pennies and quarters, Canadian nickels, and other change she didn’t recognize. She should take the collection, which filled the bottom of an entire drawer, to the bank to replenish the dwindling petty cash box.

“I see things are progressing well between you and my brother,” said a deep voice. Esme froze. Tobias Cruz. He lounged in a chair near the front door, set the magazine in his hands aside and stood. How long had he been there? There was no need to ask why – he must be waiting for Santiago.

She should have trusted her instincts rather than buying into Santiago’s assurances that he wanted to repay Constance’s kindness. She was a fool.

Tobias, his dark gaze so similar to Santiago’s that she nearly had to look twice, stalked across the tile floor.

“I’ve been listening to the gossip for days now, but I didn’t believe Constance would be stupid enough to leave you two to fight over ownership of this villa.” Tobias waved his hand in a dismissal of Constance’s pride and joy. Of her home. “But then, people do strange things when they’re sick and tired. So, what is the plan? Are you going to fight against my brother as if you’re both still schoolchildren? Locking each other out of rooms? The financial reward for admitting defeat now will be much higher than in six months.”

Esme realized she had the key to Constance’s office pointed at his chest like a saber and quickly lowered her arm. Nothing like being caught with her hand in the proverbial cookie jar. His mouth twisted into a menacing grin as he stepped up to the desk. Esme fought against her instinct to retreat, closing her fist around the key as if it alone could anchor her to the villa.

“If you’re here to request a room, we’re at capacity.” Esme smiled, praying he hadn’t noticed the empty car park. “Why don’t you try us again in six months? By then I’ll be running things without the nuisance of any Cruz.” She cocked her head as if inspecting his countenance. “You’ll have to leave your massive ego at the door, but the rest of you could fit nicely here.”

“You won’t catch me within ten miles of this place in six months’ time.” He laughed at her.

“Could I have that in writing?”

  He went on as if she’d said nothing. “Because in six months Casa Constance will no longer exist.” He turned, surveying the room, distaste at the décor evident in the pursing of his lips. “This shabby inn will be another Cruz Resort, decorated to reflect the exquisite tastes of my moneyed guests. Guests who fill my pockets with their hard-earned cash. How did they pay Constance? Oh, yes, with their sad stories.”

Esme clenched her jaw. He saw his guests as nothing more than cash cows? She knew she shouldn’t be surprised and yet. . . wasn’t this exactly how Eduardo wanted both of his sons to act?

“I wonder if your guests know what you really think of them?”

“Cruz Resorts guests don’t care what anyone thinks of them. That is the difference between us. Constance always thought her guests needed handholding and talking to, when all any vacationer really needs is another reason to spend money. I thought you would have learned that in Napa.”

“You know, Tobias, I really didn’t believe I could think less of you and Cruz Resorts. And then you opened your mouth. Feel free to see yourself out. Now.”

Tobias walked to the entryway, ran his large hands over the doorjamb and turned. “Between my brother’s inability to stick with a project and your inability to run an efficient inn, I’ll take ownership of this slice of the Mexican Riviera before the summer is out. If you need a job, we always have openings in housekeeping.”

The insult sent fingers of rage down Esme’s spine. She straightened behind the front desk, glad for the four-inch stiletto heels that pushed her to nearly six feet tall.

“I am more than happy to clean Cruz Resorts straight out of Puerto Vallarta, but I don’t need a Cruz Resorts paycheck to do that. As for Santiago, I didn’t realize that a number one, worldwide ranking in surfing made one inadequate,” Esme said, wondering even as the words passed her lips why she was defending Santiago. But she couldn’t stop. “I’d say the millions in endorsement deals and tournament wins would have shown you that Santiago has much more to offer Cruz Resorts or Casa Constance or whatever business he chooses to run than you ever gave him credit for.”

Anger flashed behind Tobias’s smoldering gaze. “How certain are you that my brother won’t cut out on the villa to go surf the Indian Ocean? You should sell to me now. I’ll make it worth your while.”

“Casa Constance isn’t for sale, Tobias. And the lady asked you to leave.” Santiago stepped around the corner before Esme could round the front desk and physically show Tobias the door. His hand-tooled leather loafers clacked against the hardwood floor with an angry, staccato sound. He looked like a sexy version of Lucifer in the tailored suit, the pin stripe making his tan look even deeper. Where had he been that he needed to wear a suit rather than this usual board shorts and sandals attire?

He continued, “The villa wasn’t for sale when Constance was running things two weeks ago and it isn’t now that I’m running things. I see you found the door, feel free to use it.” Santiago strode behind the front desk to stand beside Esme. She supposed they looked like a united front, but a sneaky voice reminded her this was a competition with the villa as the ultimate prize.

“Ponce,” Tobias said, grinning. The last time she’d heard Tobias use the nickname, Santiago had dragged him to the ground until he swore never to call him “fifth-born”—the equivalent of “baby,” since Santiago was the fifth and final Cruz son—again. She watched the two closely, seeing no sign of anything other than sibling rivalry. “You will sell, ponce, because this is not the life you want. Why don’t you sell now and get it over with?”

Tobias watched them carefully for a full minute—Esme watched the wall clock over his right shoulder—before turning on his heel and walking away. She breathed a sigh of relief. Long after his footfalls stopped echoing in the hall, they stood side by side behind the front desk.

The perfect united front.

Several minutes later, still standing side by side, Esme realized that at some point Santiago had taken her hand and was now carelessly caressing her thumb with his. She snatched her hand away.

“Where have you been?”

Santiago rolled his eyes. “No more lectures about how proper business people construct their days, Esmerelda, I’ve had enough. I’m even wearing a suit. Don’t push me.”

He pulled at the tie around his neck as if it was suffocating him. How could he look so divine—the suit somehow showed off more of his surfer physique than board shorts and tight tees did—and be so uncomfortable at the same time? Esme’s cheeks flushed and her fingers itched to straighten the tie. Or remove it completely along with the rest of his clothes. God, she had to get a handle on this physical reaction. Esmerelda Quinn was over Santiago Cruz, his ability to under-react to almost every life situation, and his surfer-god looks. She most definitely was. Not. Looking.

“I asked where you were because you locked me out of my own office. It wasn’t intended as a lecture. I have a right to come and go as I please. You may be in charge, but I still have rights, Santiago. I need access to Constance’s office. Unrestricted access.”

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