Summer in Napa (A St. Helena Vineyard Novel) (28 page)

BOOK: Summer in Napa (A St. Helena Vineyard Novel)
9.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Abby eyed Marc. “Five minutes with her or I tell Nonna how you sold bootleg porn in high school to buy your truck. Is that really the way you want to introduce your
girlfriend
?”

Marc choked and let go.

Lexi looked at Marc and raised a brow. “Really?”

He shrugged. “It was a nice truck.”

“But porn?”

“I’m an entrepreneur.” Then he leaned in and his warm breath tickled her ear as he whispered, “Don’t worry, cream puff. Even back then I was all about quality. I think I still have a few DVDs left if you want to check them out later.”

Marc pulled back, and except for her nipples, which were standing up and cheering their support, Lexi didn’t move. She thought of herself and Marc lying naked in bed, watching someone else naked in bed, and by the time she got to the part where she should have been turned off, her whole body was reaching DEFCON 1.

“I think my soul just died a little,” Abby said, yanking Lexi by the arm.

She yanked her through the foyer, past three smiling grannies, a group of stunned DeLucas, one Hard-Hammer Tanner—minus tool belt and steel-toed boots—and into the bathroom, not stopping until they were inside the shower with the curtain pulled.

Marc wondered how he’d gone from date to third wheel as he watched his sister disappear down the hallway with Lexi, and her swaying, beautiful backside, in tow. When the bathroom door slammed with a resounding no-boys-allowed thud, he accepted that he’d have to enter the first family dinner he’d ever brought a girl to girl-less.

“What’s that about?” Jack Tanner, his old buddy, asked the second Marc entered the family room. His brothers and Tanner were all seated around the coffee table, sharing
a bottle of DeLuca cab. All except for Tanner, who held a longneck in his hand.

“Abby had to go to the bathroom, and apparently she needed Lexi to go with her,” Marc explained while he took a seat in one of the high-back chairs.

“No, I meant, since when did you start bringing dates to your family dinner?” Tanner clarified, sharing a smart-ass grin with Trey and Nate. Gabe ignored them all, instead glaring at his glass of iced tea.

“Since Nonna would kick my ass if I missed a family dinner and Lexi invited me over tonight.” He took in Tanner and frowned. Marc knew his kind. A smooth-talking, womanizing panty whisperer, just like Marc—only supersized. And he’d seen the way Tanner had been checking out his sister the other day at the farmers’ market when he was sure Abby wasn’t looking. “And since when do you do the hands-on shit for small remodels like the bistro?”

Tanner had started tearing apart and flipping high-end homes for fun, something to keep him busy after he retired from his career in the NFL. His company sometimes took on smaller jobs for longtime locals as a favor, and Tanner always did the initial inspection, but his crew were usually the ones swinging the hammers. Tanner was more of the seven-figure-project kind of guy.

“Since this one was a special request.” Tanner leaned back, stretching out his legs and making himself right at home. “Plus my hands started getting itchy, wanted to see some action.”

Marc was about to inform him that the only action Tanner was going to get was his ass handed to him if he
kept smiling like that when Trey said, “Don’t mind him, he isn’t getting any.”

“Fuck off,” Marc grumbled.

“So is that a no?” Trey’s grin spread across his face until Marc wanted to punch him.

Marc stood, not sure why he was so mad. Tanner was just giving him a hard time, and he and his brothers talked that way about women all the time. Well, all the brothers except for Gabe as of late. “What part of ‘fuck off’ did you miss? Do we need to go outside so I can make sure you get the point this time?”

“Take it easy,” Gabe said, chewing on a piece of ice.

“Like you did when you tried to take me out with the remote control?” Marc challenged, referring to the time several months ago when Gabe and Marc nearly came to blows over Gabe dating Regan.

Gabe froze, a small smile touching his lips. “Didn’t know we were there.”

Marc shrugged. He didn’t want to explain his relationship with Lexi. He couldn’t. Not when he didn’t understand what the hell their relationship was. Sure, he wanted to strip her naked, roll around until they were both sweaty and gasping for air, only to start over again when they finished. Problem was—and this was where it got confusing—for the first time in, well, ever, Marc found himself more attracted to the idea of snuggling than sex.

Then he conjured up the image of her in that dress she had on tonight and reconsidered his statement. Thought about the way she filled out the top to perfection and how the dress’s back was cut so low that there was no way she was wearing a bra under it, and thinking became damn
near impossible. Because when she’d sat in his truck earlier and her dress had ridden up, baring those mile-long legs to midthigh, his palms twitched with the need to stroke her from her red-tipped toes all the way up and under to see if she had forgone the panties as well.

He tugged at his jeans, grumbling under his breath when it didn’t relieve one damn bit of pressure. All he had to do was think about her and his southern region stood to attention.

“Fair enough.” Gabe nodded, a knowing flicker lighting up his eyes, and that made Marc nervous. “Does she know about the Monte deal, then?”

Trey jerked his gaze at Tanner, as though asking what the hell Gabe was thinking, talking about Monte in mixed company. As far as Marc was concerned, Tanner was a stand-up guy, had stood by the DeLuca family at a time when he could have made their lives a living hell. But he wasn’t family. And family business was reserved for family. Period. So what the hell
was
Gabe thinking?

Plus, he didn’t want to admit to his brothers that he was waiting for Jeff to return just one of his damn calls. Because admitting that would also make him face the fact that maybe he’d been wrong all these years. Maybe Jeff wasn’t the stand-up guy he’d always thought. Maybe what Marc has seen as a good friend not judging him had really been someone who didn’t care enough one way or the other.

Regardless, he needed to talk to Jeff first, have him explain a few things so that Marc had the facts straight before he went to Lexi. Because the more time he spent with Lexi, the more he began to understand what had gone down in the divorce, the more Marc got just how instrumental a role he’d played in Lexi’s situation.

And if that was the case, he didn’t want to tell her. Ever. Didn’t want to be another guy to drop a load of BS in her life that she’d have to deal with alone, because once she knew, there was no doubt in his mind that she would send him packing.

“It’s all right,” Gabe said, and for a moment Marc feared that he had spoken aloud. Then Gabe sipped his tea and, after a grimace, continued. “Tanner needs to know what’s going on since he’s staking his company’s future on this.”

Yeah, well, Marc knew what the women of St. Helena said about Hard-Hammer Tanner. He also knew that the guy was not only financially set, decent enough looking for a dude, and kind of ripped, he was—Marc froze, reassessing his earlier assumption—one of Lexi’s intended bachelors. What if he’d been checking out Lexi instead of Abby?

Oh hell no. There was no way Marc wanted Tanner’s tool belt stinking up the air when Lexi was around.

“Well, if sitting in as a celebrity judge is too much for you, man, I can just find someone else,” Marc said, standing and ready to show him to the door.

When he’d asked Tanner to help him out and fill the empty tribunal position, he hadn’t thought of how much additional time the former football star with mammoth biceps and a fancy Super Bowl ring would be spending with Lexi. He’d not only be nailing her walls and fixing her pipes, he’d be tasting her damn food, something that Marc had started to consider his job.

“You lose him and
we
lose half the ticket holders,” Gabe said, his voice full of exasperation and a little humor.

After word got out that Hard-Hammer Tanner was the celebrity judge, ticket sales exploded, and as of yesterday
the Showdown was officially sold out. Not that it surprised Marc. Back when Tanner was in the NFL, he couldn’t walk down the street without being mobbed by locals and tourists. Retirement might have softened the fanfare, but he was still a beloved town figure, and if word got out that he was off the tribunal, Marc might have to start refunding some of those thousand-dollar-a-plate tickets.

“So take a seat,” Gabe said, his expression making it clear he wouldn’t continue until Marc did as he said. So Marc sat. And stared down Tanner, who smiled back.

“Seems that Saul Sorrento is getting a divorce and moving to Florida,” Gabe began.

“Holy shit.” Nate sat up. “What’s he doing with his land?”

“His kids aren’t interested in running it, so he’s going to sell,” Tanner supplied.

Nate smacked his hands together and did some stupid happy dance in his chair, knocking over Nonna’s statue of St. Christopher and nearly taking out his glass of wine. He was so wound up he didn’t even notice.

Not much got their tight-ass brother excited, but everyone in the room understood. The Sorrento family owned the largest parcel of virgin soil in the St. Helena appellation region. Used as a pasture for Saul’s organic cow and alpaca farm, it had never been planted on, meaning it was the perfect soil for a new vineyard. It was also the land that Geno DeLuca had been in the middle of buying when he’d won the hand of Miss ChiChi Ryo. Since Charles Baudouin had lost the girl, he made sure that Geno never got the land. But what started out as a way to stick it to a former friend had ended up making Saul owner of one of the most exclusive parcels of land in the valley. And he was finally selling.

“Wait.” Marc paused, taking in the way Tanner and Gabe were sharing a knowing smile—a smile that was usually reserved for him and his brothers. “What does that have to do with Tanner?”

“Saul and my grandpa play poker. The other night he asked if I wanted to take it off his hands.” Tanner’s lips twitched. “Even though he’s moving, he still has kids in the area and doesn’t want them to get caught in the middle of the great feud of St. Helena.”

“My thought was, we partner with Tanner and let him work as the go-between to secure us the land,” Gabe said, and when all three brothers looked at him like he’d just committed a mortal sin by including an outsider in family business, he added, “Or we go it alone, he lists the property, and the DeLucas and Baudouins continue to outbid each other until neither of us can afford it.”

Made sense. Between Abby’s missing dick and the millions he’d stolen, Marc’s money pit of a hotel, and the Pairing project, the DeLucas were low on liquid assets. Plus, Tanner had helped them out before when he didn’t have to, and saved the DeLucas from a major lawsuit. That still didn’t mean Marc felt comfortable bringing an outsider into the family business. Especially when that outsider knew nothing about wine.

“Let’s say we all agree,” Marc said, reminding everyone in the room that even though Gabe ran the company, their parents had set up the trust so that there had to be a majority vote from the siblings in order to go forward with a major decision like this. “What’s in it for you? I didn’t even know you liked wine.”

“I don’t.” He saluted Marc with his beer and a smart-ass grin. “Allergic to tannins.”

“Tanner isn’t interested in the land or the grapes. He wants to be the exclusive builder for DeLuca Wines,” Gabe clarified.

“If I attach myself to your family, it will mean I could lose a good chunk of the town’s business. And since most of the projects I want to take on revolve around wineries and wine caves, I need to know that I’ve got your chunk locked in, exclusively.”

Tanner was right; the second word got out that he’d assisted the DeLucas in swiping the land right out from under old man Charles’s nose, his alliance with their family would guarantee a complete and total blacklist for Tanner Construction from all future Baudouin projects.

Marc leaned forward, rested his elbows on his knees, and said, “Then why help us? You could just sit back, watch our families fight it out, and maintain a healthy distance from the feud.”

“I’ve got my reasons,” Tanner said, taking a pull on his beer. “One of them being I want my company to handle the construction on that new cave you guys are digging on the south property. I know it will be one of the biggest caves in the valley and that you’ve already received bids from two other companies. I help you get Saul’s land, and you help me move into the cave-building space.”

“And the other reason?”

Tanner leaned forward, mimicking Marc’s stance. “None of your damn business.”

“Fine. Let’s talk terms.” As long as it didn’t involve the exchange of a woman, Marc was willing to hear the guy out.

BOOK: Summer in Napa (A St. Helena Vineyard Novel)
9.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Born Ready by Lori Wilde
Smilla's Sense of Snow by Peter Høeg
Open Heart by A.B. Yehoshua
His Spanish Bride by Teresa Grant
Under Pressure by Rhonda Lee Carver
Six Easy Pieces by Walter Mosley
The Harlot Countess by Joanna Shupe