Excerpt:
“Carl! Carl, damn it, wake up!”
Carl groaned and rolled over, frowning at
Kat’s strident shriek. “Goddammit, woman, it’s
my day off.”
“What did she do to you? Are you okay?
Where are you hurt?”
Carl finally opened his eyes, bright sunlight
nearly blinding him. When he realized where he was, that
he was naked and Kat was on the bed with him, he almost
rolled off the edge. “What the fuck are you doing
here?”
He gathered the sheet around him toga-style
and dodged Kat’s hand as she tried to touch his forehead.
“Carmen said she—well, she didn’t
say what she did to you, just that she was so sorry, and
I—”
“Carmen...” Looking around, he
couldn’t find her. “Where is she?”
Kat stared at him as if she thought him mad,
raised a finger toward the door, and said, “She left.”
“Left? She can’t!” He scrambled
from the bed, tripped as his feet tangled in the sheet,
and stumbled through the door.
“Hey! Carl...?”
He didn’t stop at Kat’s concerned
call. Holding the sheet at his waist with one fist, he slammed
the other against the front door to shove his way outside,
and ran down the path—just in time to see Carmen slip
behind the wheel of a sleek little convertible.
“Carmen, stop!”
She glanced his way. The engine rumbled to
life.
Carl ran, uncaring of the expense his bare
feet would pay for his dash across the crushed seashell
lot. He darted past Dalton, vaguely heard him say something
about a torn-up check, and skidded to a halt in front of
the car. He slapped a hand on the hood.
Having been looking over her shoulder to
back up, she spun around to face him and frowned. He could
tell she’d been crying. Her cheeks were damp and splotchy.
Her eyes still glistened with unshed tears.
“Get out of the way.” She fought
with the gearshift to get it into first, grinding the gears.
“Mistress, stop. Please—”
“Don’t call me that. I’m
n-not your mistress. K-Kat is. I’ve no right to do
what I did to you. I’m s-so sorry.”
“No, wait. What you did? Mis—Carmen,
wait. Let’s talk about this.”
Her grip tightened on the steering wheel.
She squeezed her eyes shut tight.
He took advantage of that, rounded the hood
of the car, and leapt over the door to plop onto the passenger’s
seat. The move startled her.
“What do you think you’re doing?
Get out.”
“No.”
She scowled at him. “I said, get out.”
He turned toward the door but, instead of
opening it, he buckled himself in with the seatbelt.
She gaped then shouted, “Katriona,
come and get your slave out of my car.”
Carl crossed his arms over his bare chest,
cast a glance down to ensure the sheet still hid everything
important, and gave her an I’m-not-going-anywhere
smirk.
“What seems to be the problem now?”
Dalton said, approaching the car with Kat by his side.
“Your slave will not obey and get out
of my car.”
Kat looked at him then at Carmen. “He
does have a tendency to misbehave, but you see, today’s
his day off. He only answers to my orders when on the clock
so-to-speak. The rest of the time...” She gave a sympathetic,
and completely helpless, shrug.
Carl bit the inside of his right cheek to
keep the smile from escaping.
“Dalton...?” Carmen asked in
a tone emblazoned with last-ditch hopefulness.
“Don’t look at me. He’s
never obeyed me worth a damn.”
She slapped the steering wheel with an exasperated,
“Ugh!”
Carl ducked his head to hide his grin as
she rattled off a string of Spanish—expletives, no
doubt.
“I’m afraid you’ll have to explain to
him what you told me,” Dalton continued. “Trust
him to hear you out, and listen to whatever it is he’s
so determined to discuss with you. Then, if you still want
to part company, I’m sure you’ll find a way
to kick him out, sheet and all.”
She gave him a long, hard look. He didn’t
see it, but he felt it. “Will you. Please. Get. Out.”
She spoke as if she were talking to a hardheaded child or
thought he lacked understanding of the English language.
“No, ma’am.” He kept his
face and gaze down, although he could spot her scowl out
of the corner of his eye. “Not until we talk...in
private,” he said, adding the last part as a not-so-subtle
hint to the other dominant persons present.
The crunch of seashells told him they heard
his message and willingly offered him the privacy he needed.
“I’m warning you; I’m leaving.”
He didn’t budge, not even an eyelash.
“You can’t ride around town like
that. Get out, and I’ll call you later.”
He grinned, shook his head, and didn’t
believe her for a minute.