“Why a day spa?”
“I knew I had to open my own business. Who in Dallas would hire Jed Titan’s daughter? I wasn’t interested in moving to L.A. or New York. I could put together a business plan and I had a small inheritance from my maternal grandmother, but no idea what to do with it. So I started doing research. A day spa met all my criteria. I found the industry interesting, I like working with women. I’m surrounded by professionals and I get my facials for free. It’s win-win.”
“Your dad must be proud of you.”
“I guess. He doesn’t say.”
Typical Jed, Cruz thought. Don’t give anything away.
She’d come a long way from that leggy college girl who’d thought she could beat him.
He rolled over and sat up. With him on the table, they were nearly at eye level.
“We are so not having sex here,” she teased.
“I know.” He touched her cheek, then her mouth. “Lexi, why was I your first time?”
He hadn’t meant to ask the question, although he’d always wondered. Why him? Why then? Why not some college kid who’d grown up with a country club membership? Why give that to a guy from the barrio who wasn’t going to stick around?
She turned smoothly and crossed to the door. “I’ll get Val back to finish your massage. By the time you’re done, I’ll be ready to go.”
And then she was gone.
CHAPTER NINE
LEXI WOKE BEFORE DAWN, which was pretty easy as she hadn’t slept much the previous night. She’d been unable to forget Cruz’s question-mostly because she didn’t have an answer.
Why
Cruz had confirmed that last night when he hadn’t joined her in the large bed in his room. She suspected he was concerned she might get emotional, and what guy liked that? So he’d stayed in safer territory.
She showered and dressed and was about to leave the bedroom when the door opened and Cruz strolled in. He was dressed as well, in jeans and a long-sleeved shirt.
“Good,” he said. “You’re up. We’ll be leaving in a few minutes.”
She folded her arms across her chest. “It’s Sunday.”
“I know.”
“I might have plans.”
“You don’t. I checked your calendar. Yesterday I saw your world. Today you’re going to see mine.”
“Meaning?”
“We’re going to a race track in Louisiana. There’s a kid there I want to see drive.”
“Louisiana? Do you know how far that is?”
“Closer than you think.”
After checking on C.C., they went down to the garage. But instead of heading east, Cruz drove them to a nearby airfield where a helicopter was waiting.
“You’re cheating,” she said as they climbed into the helicopter. “No wonder you said it wasn’t that far.”
“I’m getting the job done.”
The helicopter took off as soon as they were settled.
Cruz pointed to a headset with an attached microphone. She set hers in place and flipped it on. Immediately the noise from the engine seemed to disappear and she could hear him clearly in her ear.
“Noise canceling headphones,” he said. “You okay? Some people don’t like the movement.”
She looked out the window and watched as they rose straight up. “I don’t mind it. Izzy hates it, which is pretty funny. She’s such a daredevil, but helicopters make her crazy.” She smiled. “She’s always listening to rap and rock music on her iPod, but when she flies, she has relaxation meditations to get her through. You know-close your eyes and picture an empty beach with the surf rolling in. She’s working on an oil rig right now, doing underwater welding.”
“Your sister Izzy? The one I met at the party?”
Lexi understood the question. Izzy knew how to be as sexy and girly as the next woman, but given the choice, she would rather scale a mountain or wrestle a grizzly.
“That’s her. She’s always been wild.”
“Interesting sisters,” he said.
“Do you have family other than your parents?” she asked.
“No. I was an only child. My mom has a couple of sisters in California. I don’t know about my dad’s family. They have reason not to like me very much.”
“Because you ran him off?”
He nodded.
Family was a complication, she thought. Cruz had run off his father while her mother had simply walked away after the divorce. Lexi didn’t know how she’d come to be left in Texas. Had Jed insisted or had her mother simply not bothered to take her?
“Did Jed really arrange Skye’s marriage?” Cruz asked.
“You two had a lot to talk about in the few minutes you were together at that party,” Lexi said, wondering what else her father had told him. “Yes, he did, although we don’t talk about it much.”
“Why would he do that? Did he owe the guy?”
“I don’t know. Maybe. Ray was actually pretty nice. Older, maybe twenty years older than Skye. He adored her and they seemed to have a relatively happy marriage.” Or so it had looked from the outside. Of course, someone could look at her faux engagement and think she spent her days writing “Mrs. Cruz Rodriguez” over and over again.
“Why did she agree to the marriage?”
“Another question I can’t answer. Skye and Jed are really close. When her mom died, Skye stepped in to be his hostess. At least as much as she could until she got old enough for it to be a full-time job. She takes care of the house, keeps his personal schedule and generally makes his life easier. I don’t think it would have occurred to her to tell him no.”
The price would have been too high, Lexi thought. Skye wouldn’t have been willing to risk losing her father’s love. Not that she, Lexi, was all that different.
“There was another guy-Mitch. He owns the ranch next door. He and Skye were involved. I thought it was serious, but in the end she walked away from him and married Ray. They had a daughter. Erin. She’s seven.”
“Ray died?”
“A couple of years ago. Skye moved Erin and herself back to Glory’s Gate. She’s been Jed’s unofficial hostess ever since.”
“Hell of a thing to be a Titan,” he said.
“Sometimes.”
They landed within walking distance of a racetrack. Lexi stepped into the humid morning and heard the sound of engines revving in the distance.
“Racing for pinks?” she asked as Cruz grabbed her hand and headed toward the track.
“Not today. Like I said, I’m looking at talent.”
That’s right, they were there to see a kid drive. “How did you hear about him?”