Authors: Anne Marsh
Tags: # Winner takes it all...off Former diving champion Piper Clark never loses. Unfortunately, #if she doesn't land this lucrative contract, #her diving business will fail. Worse still, #it will be at the hands of her childhood nemesis, #Cal Brennan--six feet of hard, #rugged former Navy SEAL. So Piper proposes a wager: whoever loses the diving contract must take orders from the winner...in bed. Cal needs this contract for his own reasons. A former rescue swimmer, #he may be having a few issues with diving since his last mission ended, #but Piper doesn't need to know that. Something about her impulsive nature makes Cal rise to the bait, #and there's nothing he'd like more than to show Piper exactly what rules are good for. All bets are on. And someone's about to start playing dirty....
Daeg whooped. “She’s taking you to the cleaners.”
Then, darn it, the four ball ricocheted off the table’s side, and she knocked one of Cal’s balls into the
pocket.
“My turn,” he announced, satisfaction filling his voice.
* * *
Spectacularly. If he sank his seven balls, the game was his. So much for losing intentionally.
He looked over at her. “What do you think I should buy with my hundred bucks?”
He wouldn’t actually take her money, but teasing her was too much fun to resist. She belted out a curse
and stepped away.
“Didn’t I hear you were trying to stop cursing?” His mother had pointedly mentioned Piper’s endeavor,
apparently under the mistaken belief Cal might want to try the same himself.
He picked out a cue stick from the rack while he waited for her answer.
Her yes, when it came, was grudging. “I’ll put a quarter in the swear jar later.”
He didn’t know where Piper had learned to curse, but she could definitely outswear many of the SEALs
he’d served with. Plus, not only was she creative, but she was loud. Her jar probably held enough quarters
to fund an entire new wing for the library she’d apparently announced was the jar’s beneficiary. Over the
course of the next ten minutes, he proceeded to sink his seven balls, one after the other, and Piper’s
obligations to the swear jar grew more substantial.
Tag whistled. “I shouldn’t have bet against you.”
She stepped up behind him as he eyed his final shot. It was game over as soon as he sank the eight ball.
“I’d like to propose a side bet unrelated to this game,” she said.
This
game. Not
a
game.
His critical-thinking skills suddenly became nonexistent, which was probably part of Piper’s master
plan. She had to stand on tiptoe to reach his ear. God knew what it looked like to the other guys in the bar.
Since her front was pressed against his butt, he wasn’t complaining.
“What are we negotiating?” His voice sounded gruff, but some things were definitely beyond his
control.
“The Fiesta contract.” She didn’t retreat. Nope. If anything, she pressed in tighter.
“I’m not stepping away,” he warned. If he wanted to bring more veterans out here to Discovery Island
to work, he had to have the additional business. No pool game got in the way of that.
“I wouldn’t ask you to bow out...more than once.” He felt rather than saw her smile against his throat.
Piper had always been honest. It was one of the things he liked about her. Her next words were a whisper
meant for him alone. “Loser takes orders from the winner for one night—in bed.”
Whoa. He hadn’t seen this bet coming.
“You’re crazy.” Of course, he’d known that for years. Piper had never met a chance she didn’t want to
take. Twice.
“If you’re so sure you’re going to win, you’ve got nothing to worry about.”
He looked down at her arms, caging him in place, and wondered if she’d thought her bet all the way
through. “There are other ways to take a man to bed, Piper, if you’re desperate.”
The bar’s noise gave them just enough privacy that the others couldn’t hear their low-voiced exchange,
but this still wasn’t a conversation he wanted to have in public.
She gave a little laugh. “I’m not desperate, Cal.”
He eyed his cue stick and wondered what his next step should be. “Then, maybe you could explain it to
me.”
“We’ve always had a certain...chemistry. Aren’t you curious?”
Oh, yeah,
his inner bad boy growled.
“I’m going to take my shot,” he warned, all thoughts of deliberately throwing their match vanishing.
“I’m winning. You don’t want to give me that kind of opening.”
“Go right ahead,” she said, and he had no idea what she was inviting him to do. And then...she blew on
his ear. Right as he shot.
He scratched, the eight ball rolling into the pocket. Well...hell.
She stepped away. “Too bad, Cal. You lose.”
Scratching the eight ball was an automatic loss. Piper was clever. And at least now he wouldn’t worry
about her grocery money for the week.
“You going to pay up?” She parked her butt on the edge of the table and smiled at him. “Because I think
we’re done here.”
He pulled out his wallet from his back pocket and handed over a hundred. Had she even been serious
about their new bet?
“You shouldn’t walk around with this much cash in your wallet. Someone might take advantage of
you.”
She hopped down and started for the door, and the sassy twitch to her hips was the last straw. He
opened his mouth.
“Drinks are on me tonight,” she called back, pouring oil on his fire.
“Piper.” Her name shot out before he could stop himself.
“Yeah?”
“I accept,” he growled.
3
PIPER BREEZED INTO the conference room with precisely one minute to spare. Cal wondered briefly
if she’d sat outside, timing her arrival for maximum impact. Probably. Piper had always loved pushing
boundaries, pushing buttons.
Particularly
his
buttons.
He, on the other hand, had shown up early for the meeting with the Fiesta Cruise Lines team, tested his
equipment and made small talk with the visiting executives, getting a feel for the terrain. His audience today
consisted of two males, one female, all somewhere between forty and fifty-five. Sal Britten, Ben Lloyd and
Margie Kemp were recreational divers who had logged some fairly adventurous dives. He didn’t anticipate
any difficulty selling them on his planned program.
Piper dropped a mammoth white tote bag onto the chair beside him. “Did you miss me? Getting
anxious?”
He shot her a look.
She grinned back. “You were. That’s positively sweet. I’d almost think you were looking
forward
to
losing. To me. Maybe you’ve been thinking about it since our game earlier this week?”
Her eyes twinkled as she needled him. She wore a white dress that stopped several inches above her
bare knees. The perfectly modest V-neck showed no cleavage but drew his eye anyhow, as did the narrow
brown leather belt wrapped around her waist beneath the fitted blue-and-white-striped blazer. She looked
fresh and energetic. The cruise ship woman eyed her outfit and he could practically feel the two guys
melting. Piper had that winning effect on people.
“I’m not falling for your game,” he warned softly.
“And I’m not playing.”
She turned away to introduce herself to the Fiesta executives, rings flashing on her fingers as she
worked the room. He eyed her ring finger and discovered it was bare. Of course, he couldn’t imagine who
would take her on for keeps, but there were plenty of crazy men out there. Or men who’d abandon caution
when they got a good look at those high-heeled shoes of hers, which made him think of bondage clubs.
Not, of course, that he’d ever been to one, but he had internet, and the tan straps crisscrossing her feet were
suggestive.
She finished her meet and greet and turned back to him. Sal Britten paused in the middle of a long-
winded story about his most recent shark-cage dive off the coast of Australia (Cal would have killed for a
look at the man’s logbook, because he had his doubts about the man’s dive creds) and looked between
them. “Do you two know each other?”
“You
bet,
” he said, deliberately needling her.
Piper’s eyes narrowed, then she winked at him. “Cal here was hoping I’d be a no-show.”
If Piper didn’t get her butt in gear soon, they’d run late, so he ignored the wink and headed for the back
of the room. “This meeting starts now.”
She grinned at him, keeping pace with him. “Ready to lose, big boy?”
She made everything into a competition, a game. He was tired of it, frankly, but she wouldn’t let it go. If
she wanted to
compete,
he’d compete. He was a SEAL. He didn’t ring out. He didn’t quit.
Except when it
came to diving,
the unwelcome voice in his head pointed out.
The cruise ship guy looked over at them. “We’re ready to get started when you are. Who’s up first?”
Time for the opening salvo. “Ladies first. I insist.”
* * *
Cal waved her to the front of the room, inviting her to lead off the pitches with a lethally charming, “Ladies
first,” when they both knew going first was the weaker position. Their judges would hold back on scoring
to leave room for the last diver.
He grinned and settled back in his seat, arms folded over his chest. If he looked good in nothing more
than a pair of jeans and a faded cotton T-shirt, he cleaned up even better. He wore an open-necked shirt—
she’d never seen Cal bother with a tie for anything other than funerals and weddings—and a dark suit
jacket, which didn’t disguise the breadth and power of his shoulders. He had the build of a swimmer, his
body advertising that it was trained to pull him through the water at a killer pace. She’d seen him swim, and
it was a thing of beauty. She’d give him that much credit.
He was also big and bad, irritatingly calm as he sank back onto his seat, leaning slightly away from her,
his legs stretched out in front of him, his arms crossed over his chest. The conference-room table hid his
feet, and she fought the urge to peek and see if he was wearing steel-toed work boots. It was hard to
imagine him in dress shoes, but he radiated control and competence.
He raised an eyebrow. Right. Her pitch. She hadn’t prepared slides or a formal talk, but she knew her
message. She’d also loaded up her laptop with images she’d shot at the diving sites she was promoting,
because a picture was definitely worth a thousand words. All she had to do was get Sal, Ben and Margie to
imagine themselves in those waters, and she’d have them. She quickly tugged on her ear, hoping the lucky
gesture would bring her the same good fortune she’d had every time she’d climbed the dive tower and
competed.
“You’ve got a cruise ship full of passengers, most of whom have never dived before. The number of
newbies seriously outweighs the number of certified divers. I’d like to go after that segment, grow your
tour numbers. Why
wouldn’t
those passengers want to dive?”
She’d fallen in love with recreational diving during her own summer trips to Discovery Island. As soon
as she’d turned twelve, she’d been fitted up with gear and taught to dive. Her first excursions had been off
Discovery Island pier, fifteen-footers, where she could have dived to the bottom without the gas, but the
tank meant she could stay under for thirty minutes. She’d loved it and she’d been hooked. Sharing her
passion through her dive program just seemed...natural.
Cal sprawled in the back of the room, all hot-eyed, hard-bodied charm as she started walking the
executives through a cost comparison of land-based tours with diving excursions. There was more money
to be made on booking diving than most of the other shore excursions, and pretty soon her audience of
three was nodding along. Except for Cal, of course. His expression said he wasn’t convinced.
“If the passengers have never dived before, are you proposing resort dives?”
“Good question.” She smiled at the woman and launched into the next part of her talk, walking the
room through the shallow, baptismal dives she’d planned for the harbor as she displayed different images
on the screen. At thirteen to fifteen feet, anyone in reasonable physical health could give diving a try.
Pointing out the window at the gorgeous, light turquoise water, she asked, “Who wouldn’t want to get in
there and see what’s happening beneath the surface?”
Cal raised a brow. She knew that look of mocking disbelief. It was, she decided, too bad for him she
had every intention of winning this contract and wiping the smug look off his face.
* * *
seemed like a smart tactical move, but now he was second-guessing himself. She’d been every bit as
unprepared as he’d expected, talking off the cuff without a formal set of slides—and she’d captivated the
room with her charm and casual photos. The Fiesta executives leaned forward in their seats, hanging on her
every word as she walked them through a novice dive. Her sassy suit probably didn’t hurt, either, because
looking at her while she talked was no hardship.
She strolled past him as she returned to her seat, mouthing, “Gotcha,” and then shifted her monstrosity
of a bag to
his
seat when he stood up.
If she thought he was going down without a fight, she was even crazier than he remembered. The Piper
of his childhood had relished a good fight. Even as a girl (or maybe because she was a girl with three older
brothers), she’d always done her best to outrun, outjump and generally outdo anyone who crossed her path.