didnât have to spend the night in it. It was great for lazy afternoon naps.It was fine for wiling away a summer evening drinking a beer and reading a book.
But nightsâwhole nightsâgot long. Very long. Especially if a guy couldnât sleep.
Hugh couldnât sleep.
Ordinarily he slept like the proverbial baby. âItâs all that innocence and virtue,â he always claimed.
âAll that beer more like,â his sister, Molly, always countered.
But neither beer nor virtue nor a good long swim had taken him to dreamland tonight.
Maybe, Hugh reasoned as he tried for the hundredth time to find a comfortable spot, it was just too damn hot. Or maybe there wasnât enough support for his back. Or maybe it was not being in his own bed that was keeping him awake.
More likely, he decided grimly, it was who was in his bed instead of him that was making him turn over and over like a chicken revolving on a spit. It was well past three in the morning and heâd barely shut his eyes.
Every time he did, visions of Sydney St. John lying between his sheets popped into his brain. He ground his teeth and shifted again. And again. And again. The swim should have tired him out. It certainly should have taken the edge off his desire.
He wasnât a teenager anymore, for heavenâs sake! He was an adultâa man in control of his urges.
Finally, in a fit of irritation, he flipped over with enormous forceâand flung himself right out onto the porch floor.
âDamn it!â
Belle, who had leaped off her blanket by his feet, whined and looked at him warily. Then she took hold of the corner of her blanket and pulled it away from the hammock. Heâd get away from him, too, if he could.
âHell,â he muttered, rubbing the shoulder on which heâd landed, then hauling himself to his feet. He eyed the still-swaying hammock with distaste. No point trying it again. It wouldnât work.
He might as well head over to the shop. There was a couch there. But even more likely to put him to sleep was the pile of paperwork he had been avoiding for the past couple of weeks. If anything could knock him out, he knew from boring experience, it would be that.
Hugh bent down to scratch Belleâs ears. âGo back to sleep. I wonât bother you anymore.â Then, yawning, he padded across the porch and opened the screen door to the kitchen.
He flipped on the lightâand stared in amazement. The place was spotless. There wasnât a dirty dish in sight.
He grinned. So snooty Miss Sydney could turn to, when she was challenged. Somehow he wasnât surprised. Any woman who had the guts to jump overboard in the middle of the damn oceanâ
Hugh shook his head, reminding himself that she was seriously wacko. She had to be to have done that. And she was even crazier to think that she was going to get a managing directorâs job on Pelican Cay.
Sheâd just been babbling over dinner, annoyedâand rightly so, he admittedâthat sheâd been wasting her time in a job where she was obviously capable but not appreciated. He didnât blame her for wanting to prove herself.
He just didnât want her proving herself here.
Well, he didnât have to worry about that. Only his brother Lachlanâs inn-and-resort business was extensive and complex enough to require a managing director. And Lachlan did that himself. All the rest of the islanders ran their own smaller operations by themselves, too. Multinational corporations were not thick on Pelican Cayâs sandy beaches as Sydney St. John would discover damn quick.
And then sheâd be on her way.
The thought cheered him enough that he took down the sugar bowl where he kept a stash of dollars and coins, dumped it all on the table and scrawled a quick note: âUsethis to get yourself some clothes. If you need more money, give them this note. Iâll cover for you. H.â
Neither place would be what she
Cynthia Eden
Erica Graham
Andrew E. Kaufman
David Rocklin
Anah Crow
Matt Ingwalson
Alan M. Clark
James Axler
Hugh Howard
Carol Lea Benjamin