Playing the Part. Kimberly Meter Van

Playing the Part - Kimberly Meter Van


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after her.

      “You monster,” she muttered, dropping the plunger to chase after the girl, not caring at the moment that she was supposed to be the adult because she was about to tie the little nuisance to the nearest tree. “What did you stick down there this time?” she shouted, rounding the corner and nearly skidding into a tall man who was sheltering the aforementioned monster in his arms as if Lindy were the villain and the kid was actually a victim.

      “What’s going on?” he demanded, rubbing the girl’s back with soothing and gentle motions, as if Lindy had traumatized her. If anyone was suffering from an emotional upheaval it was Lindy. Being dragged to Cruz Bay in the Virgin Islands on family business and forced on janitor duty was punishment for crimes she hadn’t even committed yet. Unemployment sucked but unemployment in the entertainment industry was downright brutal. Her last gig had lasted only a few months and now she was on the hunt again, or rather, her agent should be hunting. In the meantime she had no choice but to stick it out at the resort with her sisters. At the moment she was looking at troubleshooting a clogged toilet—joy of all joys—that seemed to have been filled with sand, by the looks of it.

      “May I ask why you’re chasing my daughter with murder in your eyes?” the man asked.

      “Probably because I want to kill the little brat,” Lindy quipped, her kicked-up heart rate keeping time with her temper. “She filled the toilet with sand.”

      “How do you know it was Carys?” he asked stiffly, but Lindy suspected it was an act. Anyone with a kid that wretched had to know they had the devil’s spawn on their hands. “Maybe the problem is simply the fault of the plumbing.”

      “Yeah, sure. It can’t have anything to do with the beaches’ worth of sand she poured down its throat. Or the fact that this isn’t the first time maintenance has been called for problems with your toilet. Last week we fished five ties—presumably yours—from the trap.” At his startled look, she smirked. “You ought to check your underwear drawer. She might be throwing your boxers away next.”

      “She’s lying, Daddy,” the little heathen shouted before burying her face in his Hawaiian shirt. Nothing said I’m on vacation more than a rayon shirt with giant magnolias on it. Lindy looked away in disgust as the girl fervently assured her father. “I didn’t put the sand in the toilet, Daddy. I swear it.”

      “This is the first I’m hearing about the previous incident,” he answered, having at least the grace to look discomfited by the revelation. “Five ties?”

      “Yeah. Five. Expensive looking, too. We threw them out because they were mangled.” Ugh. That kid of his was a great testament as to why some animals ate their young.

      “Perhaps it was an accident....”

      “Whatever,” Lindy said, exasperated and severely annoyed by the whole situation and the man’s inability to admit that his precious daughter was a nightmare. Turning on her heel, she added over her shoulder, “Expect to see a plumbing bill on your invoice. Thanks for staying at Larimar. Please feel free not to come again.”

      Lindy stomped away from the two, her temper still percolating, and abruptly changed direction toward the beach. One of the perks of living on a tropical island was the ready access to paradise and right about now, she needed a good dose of calm before she dealt with any more resort issues.

      As she walked the path to the private beach belonging to Larimar, she realized someone was calling after her.

      She turned and groaned. Great. Little Miss Perfect’s Deaf Dumb and Blind Father. What she wouldn’t give for a guilt-free plane ticket back to Los Angeles. “What?” she asked when he’d caught up to her, thankfully sans the hellion. Maybe he’d dug a pit and pushed her into it. Ha. One could dream but she wasn’t holding out hope. She couldn’t help the irritation in her voice or her expression. Too bad his kid was such a pain in the ass. He wasn’t half-bad-looking for a lawyer type, which wasn’t her type, per se; she liked rugged guys whose trucks were usually crusted in mud from four-wheeling through rough terrain. This guy, with his clean cuticles—probably got manicures—and short-cropped dark hair—probably paid a fortune for that look at some high-priced salon—likely drove some overpriced European number—either a Saab or an Audi—and paid a valet to park it. But even with all those points against him, Lindy had to admit...he wasn’t hard on the eyes.

      * * *

      GABE WESTON STALKED after the striking long-haired honey-brown brunette, choosing to focus on his ire rather than the fact that she was wearing a lemon-

      yellow bikini top that lovingly cupped her breasts and a sarong that hugged the womanly swell of near-perfect hips. She pushed her white, wide-rimmed sunglasses atop her head and fixed him with a look that was both appraising and annoyed, if there was such a thing.

      “Do you know who I am?” he asked, mentally cringing that he’d actually said those words. He sounded like a pompous ass but her casual dismissal poked at his ego and frankly, after the situation with Carys, the filter he usually reserved for his mouth had fallen off, allowing him to spout crap he wouldn’t under normal circumstances. But seeing as he was already making a fine impression, he might as well go all the way. “My name’s Gabe Weston and I’m the one spending gobs of money at your resort right now during a down economy so I think a little respect or at the very least professional courtesy is warranted. An apology wouldn’t be out of line, either.”

      “I agree. Your kid is a brat. I have a feeling there’s probably a long list of people she ought to apologize to.”

      He didn’t appreciate her quip—it hit too close to the truth. Carys was a handful and nearly everyone she came into contact with wanted little to do with her for long. Secretly, it horrified him that his daughter had become such a terror but he couldn’t seem to find the answer as to how to return her to the little girl she’d been before his wife died.

      “I want to speak to your manager,” he said quietly.

      “Good idea, and while you’re at it make sure you let her know how your kid flushed a pound of sand down the toilet and how it’ll likely take three plumbers to figure out how to unclog it without having to rip open the sewage line. It’ll save me a trip.” She smiled. “Somehow I think I’ll be forgiven for my less-than-courteous delivery. And if not, oh well. My family owns this resort. So, do your worst but don’t get your hopes up. Like as not, I’m here for the duration.”

      “That doesn’t give you license to abuse your guests,” he said.

      “And it doesn’t give our guests license to be destructive. Listen, we don’t have a whole lot of rules here at Larimar but when your kid is doing her best impression of a rock star by trashing the place, someone has to say something and—lucky me!—I got the short straw. So, get control of the kid or we’ll have to ask you to find another place to chill. We savvy?” She slid her sunglasses back in place, obviously finished, and continued down the sandy walk to the beach, both him and his daughter seemingly forgotten.

      Gabe stared after the woman, half tempted to follow but what did he have to say? Not much. His daughter was a hellion. And he didn’t have a clue as to how to change that fact.

      Biting off a string of silent curse words, he returned to the bungalow, hoping against hope that Carys hadn’t destroyed something else in his short absence.

      He found the bungalow eerily quiet, something he’d grown to mistrust, and went to Carys’s bedroom door. “Are you in there, honey?”

      “I didn’t put sand in the toilet,” she called out with a watery sniff. “That woman was lying.”

      He sighed. Yeah, he suspected someone was lying but it wasn’t the brunette who had every right to be pissed off.

      In a Time magazine article about the modern-day shark in the boardroom, Gabe, CEO of Weston Enterprises, was once described as being a man who ate his competition with all the violent, single-minded focus of a great white. In short, he bit and chomped and what he left behind wasn’t enough to feed a goldfish.

      And


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