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"For
I know the plans I have for you," says the Lord.
"Plans to prosper you and not to harm you. Plans to give you hope
and a future."
Jeremiah 29:11
Chapter
One
Chloe Caldwell was
in trouble--deep, deep trouble. She tried to stand up straight against
the intent, ice blue stare of her boss, Luke Hunter. He wore the look
some of his business rivals had compared to being pierced by a laser.
She began to understand the feeling.
Southern women have
skin like magnolia blossoms and spines like steel. Gran's voice echoed
in her mind. Have you lost yourself up north among them Yankees, Chloe
Elizabeth?
Maybe she had. She
took a strained breath and met Luke's gaze. "I don't know what you
mean."
His black eyebrows
arched. "It's a simple question, Chloe." He held up a sheet
of off-white notepaper covered with spidery handwriting. "Why does
your grandmother think you and I are a couple?"
Possibly, if she
closed her eyes, she'd open them to find this was all a dream-- no, a
nightmare. Oh, Gran, she thought despairingly, whatever possessed you
to write to him? Gran couldn't have known that Luke's habit of arriving
early at the office meant that he saw the mail first. If she'd seen it--
but she hadn't.
Luke was waiting
for an answer, and no one had ever accused Luke Hunter of an abundance
of patience. She had to say something.
"I can't imagine."
Liar, the voice of her conscience whispered. "May I see the letter?"
She held out her
hand, trying to find enough of that steel Gran insisted she had so that
her fingers wouldn't tremble and give her away. Luke held the paper just
out of her reach for a moment, like a cat toying with a mouse, and then
surrendered it. He leaned back against the polished oak desk that the
Dalton Hotel Corporation considered appropriate for a rising executive.
He should have looked relaxed. He didn't.
She shot a hopeful
glance toward the telephone. It rang all day long. Why not now? But the
phone remained stubbornly silent. Beyond the desk, large windows looked
out on a gray March day in Chicago, an even grayer Lake Michigan. No sudden
tornado swept down to rip the sheet from her hand.
She forced her attention
to Gran's letter. She'd barely begun to decipher the old-fashioned handwriting
when Luke moved restlessly, drawing her gaze inevitably back to him.
She'd long ago realized
that Luke Hunter was a study in contradictions. Night-black hair and eyebrows
that were another slash of black contrasted with incredibly deep blue
eyes. The strong bones of cheek and jaw reflected his fierce tenacity,
but the impression was tempered by the unexpected widow's peak on his
forehead and the cleft in his chin.
It didn't take one
of Gran's homegrown country philosophies to tell her what to think of
Luke. A man with a face like that had secrets to hide. He wore the smooth,
polished exterior that announced a rising young executive, but underneath
was something darker, something that ran against the grain. She'd been
his good right arm for nearly six years and never seen more than a hint
of it, but she knew it was there.
She took a breath.
"I'm sorry that you received this." The paper fluttered in her
grasp. "I don't know why Gran decided to send you an invitation to
her 80th birthday party."
"Oh, she says
why." Luke leaned forward, invading her space. "She thinks I'm
your 'beau.'" His tone put quotes around a word she'd never expected
to hear from him. "Why does she think that?"
"My grandmother
is an elderly lady." She tried to convey the image of someone frail
and confused, while sending a fervent mental apology to her peppery Gran.
No one who knew her would dare to call Naomi Caldwell frail or confused.
"She sounds
pretty coherent to me." He plucked the letter back from her, and
she had to fight to keep from snatching it. "If she thinks that,
it must be because someone gave her that idea."
Please, Lord.
She stopped the prayer
before it could become any more self-serving than it already was. Obviously
no heavenly intervention was going to excuse her from the results of her
own folly.
"I'm afraid
I must have." She picked her way through the words carefully, as
if she were back on the island, picking her way through the marsh grasses.
"I think it happened when you gave me those symphony tickets. When
I told her about it, she misunderstood. She assumed we went together."
"And you didn't
correct her?"
She felt color warm
her cheeks. "I thought . . . " Well, that sentence was going
nowhere. Try again. "My grandmother worries about me. You have to
realize she's never been farther from home than Savannah. Chicago is another
world to her. Once she thought I was dating someone safe, she stopped
worrying so much."
His eyebrows lifted.
"Am I safe, Chloe?"
She'd stepped in
a bog without seeing it. "I mean, someone she'd heard of. Naturally,
I've often spoken of my boss." Probably more than she should have.
"I didn't tell her any lies. I just . . . didn't clear things up."
It was time to get out of this situation with as much remaining dignity
as she could. "I'm sorry you were bothered with this. Naturally I'll
tell her you won't be coming to Caldwell Cove."
Luke looked again
at the letter, with some sharpening of attention she didn't understand.
"That's in South Carolina, isn't it?"
She nodded. "It's
on Caldwell Island, just off the coast."
"Caldwell Cove,
Caldwell Island. Sounds as if you belong there, Chloe."
The faint trace of
mockery in his voice stiffened her. "I belong here now."
"Still, to have
a whole island named after you must mean something."
"It only means
that my ancestors were the first settlers. They gave their name to the
village and to the island. It doesn't mean every descendant stays put."
She hadn't.
She held out her
hand, hoping he'd give her that embarrassing missive so she could destroy
it. "Again, I'm sorry."
But he turned away,
dropping the letter onto his desk. He glanced back at her, amusement in
his eyes. "I'm not. It's been an interesting break in the routine."
"Speaking of
which--" She looked at her watch. "You have a meeting with Mr.
Dalton at eleven."
"No." The
amusement disappeared from his face. "He was in early, and he talked
with me then."
It went without saying
that Luke had been in early. She sometimes wondered when he slept.
"I see. Are
there any meeting notes I should take care of?"
"None."
His voice contained an edge. "Just get me the Branson file, that's
all."
He moved effortlessly
back to Dalton Hotels business, obviously dismissing her and her small
problems from his mind. She could escape. She'd reached the door when
his voice stopped her.
"Chloe."
"Yes?"
She turned back reluctantly.
"Too bad I won't
be seeing Caldwell Cove. It might have been fun at that."
Fun? She tried to
imagine Luke Hunter, urban to the soles of his handmade Italian shoes,
in Caldwell Cove. No, she didn't think that would have been fun for anyone,
least of all her. She gave him a meaningless smile and scurried out the
door.
Once safely behind
her desk, she took a deep breath, trying to quell the flood of embarrassment.
It's your own fault, the voice of her conscience said sternly, sounding
remarkably like her grandmother. You set this in motion with your fairytales.
Fairytales, that's
all they'd been, innocent fairytales. Letting Gran believe she and Luke
Hunter were a couple had let her believe it, too, for a time. She shied
away from that thought.
She should have realized
that sooner or later this would backfire. She pressed her fingers to her
temples, trying to erase the pounding that had begun there the moment
she'd seen her grandmother's letter in Luke's hand. She'd known he'd never
give up until he had the whole story. That tenacity of Luke's had played
a major role in his success at Dalton Resorts.
She'd seen that quality
when she'd first met him, when she came to Chicago six years ago. His
office had been the size of a broom closet then, and she'd been the greenest
member of the secretarial pool, homesick for the island and trying to
find her way through the maze of corporate politics.
She'd learned fast,
though probably not as fast as he had. She'd discovered that she'd better
get rid of her soft Southern drawl if she didn't want to be made fun of,
and she'd found that there were as many alligators in the corporate structure
as she'd ever seen in the lagoons on the island. She'd realized that if
you wanted to survive, you attached yourself to a rising star.
That star had been
Luke Hunter, with his newly minted MBA and his fierce, aggressive intelligence.
They'd come up together, working long hours until they'd become a team,
almost able to read each other's thoughts. She'd identified herself with
his interests, and she'd never regretted that move. Until, possibly, today,
when her two worlds had collided.
She looked at the
framed family photo on her desk, and warmth slipped through her. The Caldwell
kin, everyone from Gran to little Samuel, aunts, uncles, brothers, cousins,
even second cousins twice removed, had gathered on the dock for that picture.
It was a wonder the weathered wooden structure hadn't collapsed. She could
still smell the salt tang in the air, feel the hot sun on her shoulders
and the warm boards beneath her bare feet, hear the soft Southern voices
teasing.
She'd told Luke she
belonged here now, but she wasn't sure that was true. She'd made friends,
found a church home, learned her way around, but she'd never developed
that sophisticated urban manner her friends wore so easily. Maybe the
truth was, she was trapped between her two worlds, and she wasn't sure
which one claimed her.
But Luke Hunter didn't
need to know that. Any more than he needed to know the real reason she'd
let Gran believe she was dating him. Not for Gran's sake, but for her
own.
You've got a crush
on that corporate shark. She could still hear in incredulity in her friend
Marsha's voice when she'd let her secret slip. Girl, are you crazy? That
man could eat you alive.
Chloe hadn't been able
to explain, but she hadn't been able to deny it, either. Marsha hadn't
seen the side of himself that Luke sometimes showed her.
Chloe traced the
family photo with one finger. When the call had come about her father's
accident, it had been Luke who'd taken control in that nightmare moment.
She'd been almost too stunned to function at the thought of her strong,
vibrant father, the rock they all depended upon, lying still and white
in a hospital bed.
Luke had arranged
her flight home, he'd had a limo rush her to the airport, he'd even watered
her plants. He'd never questioned her need to stay on the island until
Daddy was on his feet again.
No, Marsha didn't
understand that, but she'd been right. Chloe Caldwell did indeed have
one giant-sized crush on her boss.
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