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Lessons From A Latin Lover
Sometimes, Molly thought, life was bizarre beyond words.
Here she was, plotting to seduce her own fiancé, and at the same time allowing another man to move into her house.
And not just any man, either.
A stud. A heartthrob. The Casanova of the pitch. A man who could take his pick of almost all the women in the western world. And quite frequently did.
Her fiancé would be appalled—that’s if he even noticed.
Harlequin Presents® is proud to bring you a brand-new trilogy from international bestselling author
ANNE MCALLISTER
Welcome to
The McGillivrays of Pelican Cay
Meet:
Lachlan McGillivray—he’s ready to take his pretend mistress to bed!
Hugh McGillivray—he’s about to claim a bride…
Molly McGillivray—she’s ready to surrender to her Spanish lover!
Visit:
The stunning tropical island of Pelican Cay—
full of sun-drenched beaches,
it’s the perfect place for passion!
The McGillivrays of Pelican Cay:
McGillivray’s Mistress—November 2003 #2357
In McGillivray’s Bed—July 2004 #2406
And Molly’s story in Lessons from a Latin Lover
Lessons from a Latin Lover
Anne MCAllister
www.millsandboon.co.uk
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
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 livelong day.
Like today.
Ever since her longtime 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. She knew 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.
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 her brother 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 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 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 her other brother, 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 that night’s conquest—or had she conquered him? Molly wondered—left the bar together.
Back to the Moonstone, undoubtedly, where she would share his bed.
Molly gave the wrench a vicious twist, and the nut came off and clanked to the floor. “Damn it!”
She scrabbled after it. Got it. Then pulled back and came up too soon, banged her head. She saw stars—and a vision of Joaquin with last night’s blonde in his arms.
The night before that it had been a brunette. In the last week, Molly could recall half a dozen women she’d seen him with. 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 had 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 woman.
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. Years later 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 made 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 head 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.
It wasn’t like he would be here anytime soon. She had assumed he would come to the Pelican Cay Homecoming Festival this month. It was going to be a big deal. It had been Syd’s idea almost from the start. Working with Lachlan and Lord David Grantham, she had come up with a way of bringing ex-islanders home and enticing tourists to the island for a weekend of fun and revelry. 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 multimillionaire 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! I’ve got oil, er…” She didn’t need to spell it out for him. “Never mind. How are you? Where are you?”
“In Miami. Just got a break in a meeting. Just wanted to say 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. “God, it’s so damn hectic all the time. The business. The house. Stuff…We never really got to talk last time I was home.”
Molly’s heart kicked over. “No,” she said carefully. “But I knew you were busy.”
“I was. Still am,” he said. “But some things are more important, you know?”
“I know.”
“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.”
“Carson—”
“Not now, Mol’. Can’t talk. Sorenson’s off the phone. I’ve gotta go. We will, though. Promise. 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 yelling 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, followed at once by the tempering memory of his promise that they were “going to talk.”
Fine. Good. She wanted to talk. 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!
OF ALL THE PLACES ON EARTH Joaquin Santiago had been—and he’d done his share of moving around in more than a dozen years of playing professional soccer—he had always liked Pelican Cay best.
He’d first visited the tiny Caribbean island at age nineteen when he’d come to spend a holiday with his soccer teammate Lachlan’s family. It had seemed an idyllic lazy paradise to a boy born and bred in the hustle and bustle of Barcelona. It had been his bolt-hole ever since, the perfect getaway from the demands of his fast-paced frenetic lifestyle.
Not that he hadn’t loved that lifestyle, too. In those days he’d sat on the beach, relishing the quiet, yet always aware, whenever he’d stared east toward the horizon, that it was out there—his fame, his fortune, his “fantastic foot” which had made him one of the most feared strikers in football.
No longer.
For the past four weeks he had tried not to even look at the horizon. He knew what it held: nothing. It was empty. Distant. Barren. Bleak.
He had no future.
People hadn’t forgotten him yet. It had only been five months, after all, since he’d been at the top of his game. Five months, one week and five days. If he thought about it, he could have come close to the number of hours since his accident, since he’d leaped up to head a ball at the same time as Yevgeny Pomasanov.
He’d hit the ball. Pomasanov’s head had hit his. And his career had ended—just like that.
It was ridiculous. He still couldn’t believe it. God only knew how many times he’d been hit in the head before Pomasanov’s blow. Thousands, no doubt. It meant nothing, was an occupational hazard.
But this time it had been different. This time when he’d attempted to get up he couldn’t. His arms, his legs didn’t respond. He felt nothing. Couldn’t move!
His brain still told his body what to do. But it was as if the connection had been severed. Unreal. Unthinkable!
He was young. In his prime! Soccer was his life!
But life as he’d known it for thirty-three years was over. They’d taken him off the field on a stretcher in a neck brace. For four days he’d lain in the hospital, paralyzed, motionless, as doctors hovered and poked and prodded. He’d felt nothing but an occasional tingling sensation and a desperate sense of panic.
The sports pages and tabloids had been full of speculation. Would he move again? Would he walk? Would he play?
Of course he would. He had to!
Life had always been about soccer. Soccer was what had saved him from having to spend his life in the mind-dulling Santiago family business. Of course he knew that one day it would be his destiny, but not right away. Not yet!
He loved soccer. He couldn’t imagine doing anything else.
So the morning that the tingling sensations in his fingers and toes actually led to his moving them, he’d breathed an enormous sigh of relief. If he could move, he could come back.
It was just a matter of time. After all, he’d been hurt before. Three years ago he’d lost his spleen as a result of a motorcycle accident. He’d nearly died from loss of blood before the injury was discovered. But he’d recovered from that. He’d come back. And this time would be no different.
He’d worked his tail off. He’d done everything the docs told him to—and more. He’d rehabbed until he was sure he was as fit as ever. It had taken him four months. Then, a month ago, he’d walked into the training room and said to the docs, the trainers, the team owners, “I’m back. I’m as good as new. I can do everything I ever did.”
And he went out onto the pitch and showed them.
They had watched politely. And then, to his amazement, they had shaken their heads. “You’ve recovered wonderfully,” they agreed. “But you can’t play soccer. It’s too risky.”
“What?” He’d stared at them, disbelieving.
“Spinal stenosis—” the congenital narrowing of the spine that had contributed to his paralysis and which they had discovered while treating him “—is nothing to mess around with. Next time you might not recover feeling at all.”
“How do you know there will be a next time?” he’d demanded.
They’d just looked at him. “How do you know there won’t?”
He’d argued. Damn it, he’d had to argue!
But in the end, it was the insurance companies who carried the day. They wouldn’t insure him. It all came down to liability. Joaquin Santiago was too big a risk for any team.
Ergo, he couldn’t play.
His world collapsed. He felt fine. He felt fit. He felt gutted. His father expected him to come back to Barcelona and get on with life.
“There’s nothing wrong with you,” Martin Santiago had said. “You just need something to do. A job,” he’d added pointedly, “which has been waiting for you for fourteen years.”
But Joaquin couldn’t face it. Not yet.
“Take your time,” his old teammate Lachlan McGillivray advised. “I know it feels like the end of the world. It felt like it to me when I retired. You get over it,” he promised. “You just need some space while you find something else to do with your life.”
Easy for Lachlan to say. Lachlan had long ago found something he wanted to do. He’d begun buying property and rebuilding and restoring old buildings, turning them into a series of one-of-a-kind small elegant inns across the Caribbean. Since retirement he’d made his home here on Pelican Cay where he’d married a local girl and had a baby son. His future, even out of soccer, was of his own making.
Joaquin’s was not.
His future had always been a given. Soccer had given him a reprieve, but his life had been foreordained since birth. Santiago men went into the family business. It was as simple as that. For the past five generations all of them had devoted their lives to the company Joaquin’s great-grandfather, for whom he’d been named, had begun.
Since there had been telephones, the Santiagos had been involved in communications. The company had evolved with the times, and now had its corporate fingers in a lot of pies. It was thriving, growing, facing daily challenges.
“Santiago men always faced the challenge,” Martin was fond of saying.
Joaquin would, too. He knew that. His father expected it. So did he. Martin had been tolerant of the years Joaquin had spent playing soccer only because he was a strong vigorous man in good health who didn’t need his only son and heir trying to take over before he was ready.
“So you play a while,” his father had said, waving a hand dismissively.
But it had always been understood between them that when Joaquin’s soccer-playing days were over, Santiagos was waiting and real life would start.
Joaquin was no fool. He’d always known he wouldn’t play forever. He’d accepted that.
But that had been when “real life” was somewhere in the future. Not now.
Not yet.
But with one blow yet had become now. His father and the business were waiting. His mother with her lineup of prospective brides—more “real life”—was waiting.
But he couldn’t face it.
He had been back in Barcelona two days when he knew he needed more time.
“I just need to get my head together,” he’d told his father. “I need a little space before I start.”
“Space? You’ve had four months!” Martin sputtered.
But his mother, Ana, the more patient of his parents, had taken his side. She’d patted his hand and said to his father, “Give him time, Martin. A month. Two. What’s the difference after we have waited all these years. He needs to grieve for what he has lost.”
His father had been skeptical, but in the end he’d agreed. “We will be waiting, though,” he’d said giving Joaquin a stern, expectant look.
And Joaquin had nodded. “I know. I’ll be here.”
“Of course he will,” his mother had said. “And then we will all be happy and Santiagos will be waiting and—” she’d kissed his cheek “—finally you will get around to giving me those grandchildren I’ve been waiting for!”
That was the other half of his future—getting a mother for the inevitable Santiago offspring.
His mother had shaken her head with bemused tolerance at all the groupies who’d trailed after him during his soccer career. She didn’t take them seriously. They were silly and transitory.
None of them would become “the Santiago Bride.” She knew that. So did Joaquin.