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Lure of the Tiger (Aloha Shifters: Jewels of the Heart Book 4) by Anna Lowe (10)

Chapter Ten

“Hey. What’s gotten into you?” Silas prodded Cruz.

Cruz snapped to attention, trying to remember where he was. Right — in the akule hale, the meeting house on Koa Point. His feet were propped on the lower edge of the stool he’d pulled up to the breakfast counter, and Tuesday’s newspaper lay before him. A mug of coffee steamed at his elbow, and the rich scent woke a dozen memories, like his father and mother standing in the kitchen of the house Cruz had grown up in. A place far away in place and memory.

Always crooked, his mom would fuss over his dad’s tie and jacket in that mix of adoration and exasperation she’d perfected over the years. A tone she had used on Cruz, too.

Good thing I have you, his dad would say, giving her a parting kiss. And you and you and you, he’d say, kissing each of the kids in turn.

Cruz closed his eyes. So many good memories, but so much pain, too. And, damn. The more time passed, the more he had let himself get mired in dark memories instead of good ones.

Life is beautiful. Love is beautiful. You just have to believe.

He took a sip of coffee — carefully, because it was hot. But, oops. The steaming coffee was lukewarm. Apparently, he’d drifted off again. He’d done a lot of that in the past few days, sometimes reliving the pain of losing his family, other times marveling over the sunshine that Jody seemed to carry wherever she went.

Jody. Let’s think about Jody, his tiger said, preferring more recent memories. Good ones.

So, yeah — he’d spent far too much time thinking about her. The two of them had spent Sunday confronting her slimeball manager then retracing her steps at the club. Despite his best efforts, he hadn’t been able to pick up any clues to the gunman. Then they’d hunkered down at Koa Point for most of another day, with Cruz making investigative calls while Jody worked out on the shore and in the water, carving stunning moves into the waves at Koa Point’s private surf break. Not that Cruz had been watching or anything.

Well, okay — maybe he had watched for a little while. How could he resist? It was so damn effortless, the way she harnessed those waves. Even the way she paddled out fascinated him. Left arm, right arm, left arm, all the way through the incoming surf. And just when he thought the next wave would push Jody back, she would duck and shove her board under the oncoming wave. Then she’d pop up on the other side, not even sputtering.

And that was just paddling out. Watching her lie on her board waiting for the perfect wave was just as fascinating. Quietly, patiently, she bided her time exactly the way a tiger lay in wait for his prey. Watching. Waiting. Coiling her muscles and coming out of nowhere to jump on the perfect wave. She would take off ahead of a ripple of water that looked like it wouldn’t amount to anything. But that ripple would lift and climb higher, chasing Jody in an all-out race to shore. A split second after the crest lifted and broke, Jody would rise, too, jumping to her feet and zooming down the face of the wave.

Of course, he’d seen plenty of surfers in his time. But he’d never really stopped and studied one — especially one as good as Jody.

It was breathtaking. Thrilling. Exhilarating — and hell, he was just observing from shore. What would it be like to fly down a rushing wall of water moving with that force and speed?

He had no idea, but, damn. It looked amazing.

The biggest waves, Jody rode diagonally, running away from the curling, foaming tip, crouching lower and lower in the tunnel of water underneath the breaking wave. Cruz crouched, too, listening to the roar of the waves, practically tasting the salt water on his sun-dried lips. He couldn’t even imagine how loud it must be for Jody inside. A thunderous roar? A continuous hiss? She wore a look of total glee all the way down the ever-closing barrel until Mother Nature gave up and let her go. Jody would surf out the waning wave, give her surfboard a barely visible pump, and turn around over the tail end. Then she’d drop down to her board to paddle out and do it all over again.

Of course, she switched it up every couple of waves. Sometimes, she rode out a wave in one long, effortless glide. Other times, she’d spin her hips and twist the board around, carving a white line across an aquamarine wall of water like an artist signing a masterpiece. And sometimes, she’d launch off the lip of a wave and rocket into the air. Like gravity didn’t apply to her. Like a bird. Her feet stayed rooted to her board even though she was nearly upside down, and she’d yank her head around to judge her landing the way a cat came out of a fall. When she landed, she bent her knees, adjusted her balance, and sliced right into her next turn.

Every once in a while, she’d goof, and the foamy crest of a wave would consume both woman and board. The wave would thunder as if to proclaim victory, but Jody would pop up laughing a minute later, still having a ball.

Life is beautiful. You just have to believe.

Cruz had to shake his head, impressed. Jody didn’t just say the words. She lived them.

You just have to believe, his tiger had echoed as she turned and paddled out again.

Cruz blinked a couple of times and cleared his throat. Okay, okay. So he had spent a little time watching Jody surf. So what?

“You have to stop obsessing about the past,” Silas said, pacing back and forth, pulling his focus back to the business at hand that Tuesday morning on Koa Point.

Cruz kept his eyes fixed on the coffee. Actually, he was obsessing about the lithe, lanky human who was getting closer and closer to his heart. A human he absolutely, positively, was not attracted to. Not in the least.

Not when she smiled that special way of hers — straight from the heart. Not when she brushed against him the couple of times they’d drifted close, sending shots of electricity through his body. Not even when she lay spread out on his futon at night, staring at the sky. Because yes, he’d prowled by once or twice in tiger form and peeked. Bodyguards had to keep an eye on their clients, right?

“Right,” he muttered.

Silas gave a satisfied nod as if Cruz was affirming his comment — whatever it had been.

“So, let’s go over this again,” Silas said, stalking around and around. His pacing was driving Cruz crazy.

“Yes, let’s,” Kai, Silas’s cousin, said. “I’m still not following you.”

Kai and his mate Tessa had returned late the previous night from their trip to the Big Island — too late for Cruz or Silas to fill him in on the details, which they’d agreed to catch up on now.

Cruz frowned. He might be obsessed with Jody, but Silas was fixated on Moira, his ex-fiancée. In the past two days, the dragon shifter had grown sullen, haggard, and shifty-eyed. He’d been taking marathon flights in dragon form that lasted half the night. The beat of mighty wings had reached Cruz at his perch in the jungle, and he’d caught glimpses of Silas’s shadow sweeping over the trees. Years ago, Moira had betrayed Silas, and those wounds ran deep. Open wounds, apparently, not the healed scars Cruz had assumed them to be.

“How does Moira fit into all this?” Kai asked.

“Moira owns and runs the Elements fragrance line,” Silas said. “It took me a while to dig through all the middlemen she’s set it up through, but I was able to track the final connection yesterday. It’s her, all right.”

Kai scratched his brow. “So Moira owns Elements, and Jody is one of the models. And someone tried to kill Jody…”

Cruz scowled. He’d snuck over to the Kapa’akea resort a second time and still hadn’t been able to find a trace of the gunman. Not a whiff of a trail, not a footprint except for those of the police. It was uncanny. What kind of hit man didn’t leave a scent?

“And Jesus — what’s this about McGraugh?” Kai went on.

Cruz shook his head, because he still hadn’t digested the latest news from their friend Ella, a desert fox.

Silas heaved a weary sigh. “Ella has been assisting our investigation on the mainland. McGraugh was found murdered in his office twelve hours ago. Ella said the police were calling it a botched burglary, but she doubts that.”

“Moira…hitmen…modeling… And we fit into this…how?” Kai asked.

“I wish I knew,” Silas said. “Moira must know we’re based here on Maui. She could be trying to provoke us — or frame us. Cruz was close to killing Jody himself. And if he had—”

Cruz looked at his shoes. God, he’d been so damn close.

“—he might have been caught. Imagine the trouble we’d have with half the Maui police force investigating everyone at Koa Point.” Silas set his mug down with an aggravated thump. “That’s the last thing we need.”

Cruz scowled. Other than the occasional speeding ticket, everyone at Koa Point abided by the law. They were shifters, a secret that could never be revealed.

“Does Moira know about the gem?”

Cruz wanted to groan. Yet another complication he didn’t need. “Moira has to know about the three Spirit Stones we have. But from what Jody says, I doubt Moira knows about the jewel the product manager is trying to bring in. It’s all his idea, and he wants to pop the secret on his bosses to make a big bang.”

Silas stood wearily and checked his watch. “I’m going to go call Ella and see what else she might have discovered. That, and I’ll try to find out which jewel this Richard person is planning to bring in.”

Kai and Cruz watched him go, exchanging silent glances. Then Kai leaned closer. “Okay, now you fill me in on what’s going on.”

Cruz furrowed his brow. “We just did.”

Kai lifted one eyebrow. “Did you? Because I still don’t understand why you’re the one sitting here, clean-shaven like it’s date night, while Silas is the one pacing around like a caged tiger. Pardon the cliché.”

Cruz was about to protest when Kai caught sight of something behind him and murmured, “Let me guess. She’s the reason.”

Cruz whirled far too eagerly. Yep, it was Jody, who’d been teaching Tessa to surf in the calmest patch of water off their private beach. Jody broke off from saying something to Tessa and focused on him. Their eyes met and—

His breath caught, and his blood rushed.

Mate, his tiger rumbled.

Jody’s step hitched, but she covered up quickly, strolling up as casual as can be.

Cruz struggled to do the same. Every time he saw her, he lost his breath. And not from her clothes or her makeup or the way she did her hair, because he rarely noticed any of that. It was the sparkle in her eyes, the bounce in her step, the grin on her face. Yes, she was beautiful. But she could inhabit an entirely different body and still take his breath away. It was all in her personality, her breezy way of dealing with — even celebrating — life.

“That was great,” Tessa said as they ducked under the shade of the meeting house. “I could surf all day.”

“Me, too,” Jody sighed. “But I have to go to the photo shoot. Are you ready to go?” she asked Cruz.

“Ready,” he said, standing quickly.

Rea-dy, his tiger growled, licking his lips.

Cruz scolded him. Stupid beast. You know you can’t have her.

He’d been trying to compartmentalize his feelings for Jody into clear halves. Not always succeeding, but trying. His tiger side could covet Jody all he wanted, but his human side was smarter than that.

A rumble of protest built in his chest.

“Hmm?” Jody asked, looking around.

He covered up with a cough and a last sip of his coffee. “Nothing. I’m ready.” He ducked under the lowest edge of the thatched roof and cast a glance at the sky. “I’m not sure the weather will cooperate with the photo shoot, though.”

Jody’s mouth twisted in a wry grin. “Fingers crossed.”

“See you later,” Tessa called.

Cruz watched Jody from the corner of his eye as they walked to the garage. Her bracelets jangled as she walked, and the breeze played with her hair. She must have rinsed in the outdoor shower, because her scent was more wild rose than salty, and that drove his tiger wild.

“Which car today?” she quipped, waving at the low, arched bays of the garage.

Cruz hesitated. The Land Rover had tinted windows so no one could spot the passengers. The Ferrari was usually Boone’s ride. Cruz preferred the Lamborghini for raw speed.

“Lady’s choice,” he said.

“Lady’s choice?” She faked a bored sigh. “Well, I suppose the Lamborghini will do.”

He grinned in spite of himself and motioned her in. A minute later, they were humming down the road with the coast blurring past on the makai side and cane fields on the other. They got stuck behind a slow-moving rental car, though, and he couldn’t help muttering under his breath.

“You don’t like people much, do you?” Jody asked.

Visions of his loved ones, lying lifelessly with wide, shocked eyes flashed through his head. Or so he’d taken to picturing the scene of the crime. Having been stationed in a war zone when it happened, he hadn’t been able to see for himself.

So, of course, he hated people. They’d murdered his entire family in cold blood.

His hackles rose, but when he took a deep breath, Jody’s soft scent calmed his pulse. Without thinking, he brushed a hand against hers, and that helped, too.

He shrugged, struggling to make sense of the conflicting emotions welling up inside. “People are irrational.”

“Says the guy who lives in a tree house.” She laughed.

His lips moved, but his brain just wouldn’t supply an answer, so he gave up. Maybe he needed to stop thinking everything through so much. And okay, maybe humans weren’t the only irrational beings on earth. But he liked his tree house, damn it.

Jody does, too, his tiger said in a satisfied undertone.

“Are you okay?” she asked a moment later, all gentle and concerned. “Whatever’s got you so worked up—”

You, he wanted to say. You have me all worked up.

“—you’re better off putting it behind you.” She made a tossing motion over her shoulder.

As if it was as easy as that.

Maybe it is, his tiger whispered. Maybe you should give it a try.

“You need to lighten up a little. Laugh more.”

He made a face, but she just grinned and launched into a joke. “So, you know how to get a surfer to school on time?”

Cruz looked over. It was kind of cute, the way the corners of her mouth twitched, ready to laugh at her own joke.

“Tell her the waves are no good.” She grinned at the punch line and went right into the next joke. “What’s the difference between a surfer and a large pizza?”

Cruz tapped his fingers on the steering wheel.

“A large pizza can feed a family of five.” She giggled. “Oh. Oh. I have a good one.”

“Finally,” he murmured, trying not to smile.

“Why is surfing like sex?”

He looked at her expectantly. That, he had to hear.

“When it’s good, it’s really, really good. And when it’s bad, it’s still pretty good.”

She joked all the way down the Honopi’ilani Highway and through the high-end resorts of Makena. Her eyes shone like a little girl’s, and Cruz couldn’t help smiling either.

But the joy faded out of both of them the closer they got to the turnoff to the secluded beach where Richard and the photographer would be.

Make that, Richard, the photographer, and several other people Cruz wished he never had to meet.

“Finally, you made it,” Richard snipped, flicking his cigarette butt into the sand of the pristine beach.

A rumble sounded in the distance — a storm cloud moving in.

“Finally?” Jody muttered under her breath.

A woman hustled over with a happy wave of her hands. “Just wait till you see the outfit I’ve picked out for you!”

Jody looked like she really could wait, but she trooped dutifully over to the trailer parked at the side of the road. Well, she started to before turning back to Cruz. Her eyes were mournful. and her shoulders drooped like they were parting forever. Cruz’s gut churned. They hadn’t spent much time apart in the past seventy-two hours, and even when they had, they had both been at Koa Point. Time had a way of stretching there, while distance felt compressed, so even when she’d been out surfing, she hadn’t felt far away. But now…

Her lips moved, but no sound came out.

“So where’s that jewel?” the photographer, Guy, asked.

Richard grumbled. “We couldn’t get it, after all. That son of a bitch said he’d have it for us, but he didn’t come through.”

Cruz was so focused on Jody, he barely registered the words. When he did, he was strangely relieved. Obviously, Silas had been wrong about another Spirit Stone being called to by the three they already had at Koa Point. And a good thing, too. Spirit Stones brought trouble, and Jody had enough of that as it was.

“You coming?” the wardrobe lady called.

“Coming,” Jody said, turning away slowly.

Cruz watched her for a long minute before pinning Richard, the photographer, and the other men present with a Don’t even think about it glare.

She’s mine, his tiger added, lashing its tail.

Five pairs of eyes hit the ground in submission, and Cruz grunted in satisfaction.

“Get moving,” Richard barked at the others. “We need to get this shoot finished before the rain sets in.”

Cruz set off to secure the area, hoping the storm would sweep in as fast as possible and cut the photo shoot short. He sniffed the air, inspected every path, and eyed the hills that boxed in the bay. Richard had an assistant stationed at the head of the dirt road to turn casual visitors away — something Cruz was sure Richard didn’t have a permit for, though it suited him. The fewer people who wandered through the area, the better.

He kicked at the dirt and sniffed the air for the tenth time. No sign of interlopers, but then again, neither had there been that night at the resort. Then he set off to comb through the area a second time. He said he’d guard Jody, and he meant it.

He was just coming back from his third pass when the trailer door slammed open and a woman called out in glee.

“We’re ready.”

It was the wardrobe lady — or maybe the hair lady — Cruz wasn’t sure. He didn’t care either, not when he saw Jody step out.

“Gorgeous, honey,” Guy, the photographer, called. “Let’s get started.”

Cruz’s mouth hung open. The woman in front of him was gorgeous — undeniably, amazingly, mouthwateringly gorgeous. But she wasn’t Jody. Not the Jody he knew.

Her hair had been twisted and teased, sort of like she would look when she came back from surfing, but nothing like that at all, because it had all been arranged to look that way. Her lips were a shade too red, her eyelashes a tick too dark. And her bikini — two little purple triangles and a high-cut thong — well, that was about four sizes too small. Jody never would have picked it out herself. He knew; he’d seen the loose-fitting, comfortable clothes she brought over from the condo.

“Gorgeous. Jeanette, get a little more shadow on her. We want those tits to stand out,” the photographer said, snapping his gum.

Jody winced.

Cruz growled. Was the man serious?

Apparently, he was, and Cruz was powerless to stop the transformation of the spunky woman who so fascinated him into little more than a hunk of flesh. Guy led her over to the water’s edge and turned her by the shoulder — actually turned her like a potted plant — dispensing orders the whole time.

“George, move the light over there. And put some of that seaweed around that rock. Jeanette, what can we do about her ears?”

Cruz narrowed his eyes. What was wrong with Jody’s ears?

The makeup lady scurried over and sprayed something then attacked them with a little brush.

“All set. On your knees, baby,” the photographer said.

“Was that thunder?” The makeup lady squinted into the sky.

No, it was him, barely swallowing a growl. What right did that asshole have to tell Jody to drop to her knees? It was all so coarse. So overtly sexual. So, so…wrong.

Jody didn’t like it one bit either. Her eyes blazed.

“Um, boss?” George, the assistant, ventured. “How about we start with the boulder shots? The light is perfect for that.”

Cruz decided George was okay. Richard and the photographer, he could kill.

Guy stuck out his hands like a frame. “Not a bad idea. Hop up on that rock, honey.”

George offered Jody a hand up, but she ignored it, hopping up to the four-foot boulder in one easy bound. Cruz would bet she could scale a cliff if she had to.

“Okay, good. Turn a little,” Guy said, still chewing his gum. “A little more… Right leg back… More. Perfect.”

Then Richard cut in. “Wait — what’s with the bracelets? Jeanette?” His voice dropped to a threat.

“Not my idea,” Jeanette rushed to her own defense.

Jody made a face. “I always wear them. I told you last time.”

Cruz’s eyes froze on the bracelets as a memory flitted through his mind — Jody, fingering the bracelets as she talked about her mom.

These were my mom’s. I never take them off.

“They’ll ruin this shot. Lose them,” Richard barked. “George, get us a light reading, damn it.”

For a moment, Jody looked defiant, but she managed to hold on to whatever words she was about to launch off the tip of her tongue. Then she pulled her teeth over her lower lip and slowly pulled the bracelets off.

“I’ll take them.” Jeanette reached up.

Jody looked down, and he could practically read her thoughts. But they were my mom’s. Then she looked past Jeanette and right at Cruz. “Will you hold them for me?”

He stepped forward without thinking, and when he reached out, their fingers brushed, sending a tingle all the way up his arm.

Damn it, it was just a couple of bracelets. Why did he feel like she’d just entrusted him with a royal heirloom?

He slipped them into one of the deep pockets of his cargo pants, snapped the button over the top, and patted them to let her know they were safe.

Jody smiled, and for a moment, his whole world lit up. But then Richard opened his big mouth and ruined everything again.

“All right, already. We don’t have time to lose.”

A roll of thunder sounded over the mountains, underscoring his point. The light was spectacular, with a perfect blue sky to seaward and the leading edge of ominous clouds to the east.

“Chin up. Eyes to me. Shift your weight to the back leg.” Guy motioned with one hand. “Don’t slouch, baby.”

Don’t call me baby, Jody’s eyes blazed.

“Right hand on the hip. Give me negative space.”

Cruz formed and reformed a fist. He’d love to give the man some negative space — whatever that was.

“Trace your hands over your hair and twirl the end,” the photographer went on. “Perfect. Everything but that expression. Don’t give me ax murderer. Give me sex. Hunger. Desire.”

Jody’s jawline went even stiffer. She looked more like an ice queen than a sex kitten, but who could blame her?

“Come on, already,” Richard called over the photographer’s shoulder. “You’re acting the story, remember?”

Jody rolled her eyes, and Cruz wondered what the story was supposed to be. A woman swallowing her pride to work for a sexist, asshole boss?

“Okay, let’s back it up a little. Hop down and walk out into the water to about knee-deep.”

Jody did as she was told, and for a second, Cruz thought she might bolt and swim out to sea.

“Perfect. Now turn around and walk toward me.”

Jody walked while the photographer backed up, shadowed by George who held an oversized white umbrella that had something to do with the light.

“Come on. I need to feel you come up this beach,” Guy said. “We need to see how much you want this in your eyes.”

All Cruz saw in Jody’s eyes was grim resignation.

“Do it again. And remember the story. You’re a mermaid, washed up on the beach.”

Cruz covered his face with one hand and shook his head. He could come up with a better story than that.

“Swing your hips more. Give me attitude.”

Cruz hid a grin. She was giving him attitude, all right.

“Back up. Do it again. But dunk this time. I need mermaid vibes,” the photographer insisted, popping his gum.

Jody dunked, keeping her head back when she stood. Salt water washed over her body in a thousand little rivers and waterfalls.

Cruz’s mouth opened a crack, and time slowed down then suddenly rushed ahead. The dunk had washed away a little of the model and brought more of the real Jody to the surface. Her hair was slightly less than perfect, her makeup more subdued. And wow, she really was beautiful.

“Gorgeous, sweetheart. Now walk toward me.” The photographer motioned. “Slower this time. Remember the story. Something drew you here, though you’re not sure what.”

That part wasn’t so outlandish, Cruz had to admit. Shifter lore was full of stories of heroes or heroines following instincts to fulfill their destiny. There were even stories of mermaids, though like many shifter species, those had gone extinct.

“You’ve been having the same dream over and over,” Guy narrated as the camera clicked away. “But when you wake up, you can barely remember what it was. Only that it took place on this beach.”

Cruz grimaced. He had lots of recurring dreams, and he remembered every one in detail. The nightmares about his family, and more recently, hot dreams of him and Jody, wrapped around each other in his bed…

…beside his bed…

…in the shallows of the rock pool…

Jody’s eyes drifted to his and warmed, making him wonder if she, too, wished for a different ending to their encounter by the rock pool that first morning on Koa Point.

“That’s the look we want!” Richard cheered. “That exact look. Are you getting this, Guy?”

“Bet your ass, I am. Now one more time. Give me heat, baby. Heat.”

Jody splashed back into the water, dunked, then turned and strode up the beach with a little more sass in her step.

Cruz stood perfectly still. Now he was the one feeling the heat.

“There we go. Work it. Work it. Be the mermaid. Look for your destiny.”

Jody’s eyes drifted over the beach as the camera shutter clicked madly away.

Cruz watched her. Humans used the word destiny so lightly. Did they even know what power it possessed?

“Okay, let’s do it again.”

Jody repeated the coming-out-of-the-water shot a dozen more times, warming up to the camera on each pass. The stiffness faded from her limbs, and her expression grew ever more wistful, like she really had bought into the story. Cruz had to admit he was getting sucked into it, too. Between the repetition and the singsong quality of the photographer’s voice, the scene took shape before his eyes — with one addition. He was the guy that mermaid was drawn to. He was her destiny.

“One more time. You’re the mermaid, and you’re following an invisible force that brought you here.”

Jody sauntered slowly up the beach as droplets of water accented her perfect curves.

“You’re hungry. Give me hungry, baby. Give me desire.”

Jody faltered for a moment, and her eyes wandered listlessly over the beach. But then her gaze landed on Cruz, and the heat in her expression shot up a hundred degrees.

“That’s it! Perfect,” the photographer called, crouching between Jody and Cruz. “Now you know what’s drawn you here.”

In a tiny, almost imperceptible movement, Jody licked her lips.

“Yes! Yes! That’s what we want,” Guy said. “That need. That desire.”

That desire was about to make Cruz’s army pants much too tight, but he couldn’t drag his eyes away. Jody’s chest rose and fell with every breath, and her nipples pebbled under the fabric of the bikini.

“You’re hot. You’re hungry…” the man droned on.

Cruz stared at Jody, imagining everyone else right out of existence. Imagining Jody coming to him just as wet and hungry, but back at his place where they would have some privacy. Like she’d come straight from her silent fantasies in the rock pool and over to him in the bed.

She dipped her chin the slightest bit, and his tiger growled inside, forming a picture in his mind. Jody would be assertive but submissive enough to let him take the lead. He’d lay her out on the mattress, pin her arms over her head, and give her all the loving a hot-blooded woman ever desired.

The photographer clapped once and lowered his camera. “I could not ask for a better take. Let’s move on to the next shot while this light lasts.”

Jody jolted the way a person did when yanked out of a dream. Cruz did, too. The air tingled, and he couldn’t tell whether the electricity stemmed from the impending storm or the sheer chemistry between them.

Jeanette handed Jody a bottle of water, and she gulped it down. Cruz gave himself a little shake and turned away to scan the surrounding hills. He was supposed to be guarding Jody’s life, not lusting after her. And damn it, she was human. There was no way he could be thinking — dreaming — desiring all those fantasies in his mind.

“Okay, now get on your knees.” The photographer snapped his fingers, and Cruz whipped around.

Jody looked at him, not Guy. Slowly, she dropped to her knees. A puff of wind swept through the enclosed bay, teasing her hair.

Cruz’s mouth went dry. Sweet Jesus, how was he supposed to look at Jody and not imagine her as his? He looked up, praying the gathering storm would put him out of his misery — his sweet, sweet misery — before it was too late.

Too late, a voice chuckled in the back of his mind.

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