“That’s right.”

“I’d be glad to have it printed on the schedule, but you’re going to have to get up and explain to the stockholders why, I’m afraid,” Alastair said cheerfully. “Since Dar will be presenting first.”

Ankow stared at him hatefully. Everyone else got up to leave and Yves even chuckled at the comment, shaking a finger at the CEO playfully. After a moment of relishing his victory, Alastair got up as well and walked past Ankow towards the door.

“You won this time.” Ankow stood up, circled him, and held the door shut as the rest left. “But not next time.”

The CEO paused and regarded him. “Y’know, David, I’d be careful if I were you.”

The younger man snorted. “Not to overstep my bounds going after her?” he asked, tauntingly.

“No.” Alastair smiled. “Be careful she doesn’t turn and come after you.” He removed the hand holding the door shut, opened it, and walked past Ankow and into the outer hallway without a further backward glance.

KERRY’S EYES DRIFTED open, taking in the clear, blue sky she could see beyond the edge of the porch roof. It was a beautifully warm, sunny day, with a nice cool breeze coming off the ocean, brushing over the two somnolent figures cuddled together in the rope hammock.

She was perfectly content to remain right where she was, curled up with Dar in the late afternoon light, with a belly full of lobster salad and garlic rolls and a banana milkshake comfortably digesting. It was Wednesday and they were halfway through their vacation. Chino had been having a blast as well and was now sprawled near the hammock, her nose covered in sand.

Kerry sighed happily, as she snuggled a little more closely to the soundly sleeping Dar. The taller woman’s arms were wrapped around her and she could smell the nutty scent of sun tan lotion with its hint of coconut still clinging to Dar’s skin. They were both wearing soft, loose fitting cotton shorts and T-shirts, having gotten back just before lunch from a long morning’s dive off a catamaran diving boat. They had a bike ride planned for just before dinner, then Dar had suggested they merely meander down the main street in Key West and pick out some place to eat that they hadn’t tried yet.

Sounded good to her. Kerry wiggled her toes. She had never, ever, in her life felt this relaxed and she mentally thanked Dar yet again for suggesting the time off. They’d spent their days so far sunning, diving, tak-Eye of the Storm 437

ing long lazy naps like this one, and getting their heads into a completely different space that had nothing to do with work or the bustle of their usual lives.

She’d gotten some killer pictures, including one of Dar sitting on the bottom of the clear, green tinted ocean, nose to nose with a curious dol-phin. That one she was going to have enlarged and framed. It would look fantastic on the wall next to the dining room table and she had two smaller ones of colorful fish she could put on either side. Dar was dubious about the one of her, but Kerry knew it was going to turn out great, especially since she was wearing just a light tank kit and you could see most of her body, including those real, long legs stretched out on the white sand, with her flippers crossed at the ankles.

Mmm. Kerry could picture it, the sleek form in its black swimsuit, with the sheer fabric that just barely let her see the skin underneath.

Gorgeous. She only hoped Dar let her get the thing framed and hung before she realized just how sexy she looked in it. Kerry chortled softly to herself.

The place they were staying in was a small, sort of exclusive resort with little cottages and she found she liked that better than the tiered hotels a little further down the shore. They had privacy, for one thing.

The cottage was surrounded by sea grapes and palms and had two doors, one opening to a path leading towards the resort’s tiny restaurant and shop, the other leading directly out onto a smooth white beach and the sea.

Inside, the cottage was comfortable, more weathered than fancy, with wooden walls and furniture, and colorful, roughly textured fabrics.

There was a small refrigerator, and a two burner gas stove, and best of all, a gorgeous back porch with a two person swing, a chair, and the huge rope hammock they were both currently nestled in.

Heaven. Kerry stretched, feeling the tingle of a faint bit of sunburn on her skin.

Of course, the office was in chaos. She and Dar had decided on a compromise and every night after dinner they sat down and picked up mail, trading the more frantic bits with each other as their respective staffs scrambled to try and handle things while they were gone. And to be fair, they carried their pagers, carefully reviewing the various text messages and deciding which ones were really urgent and which would be good to let junior people handle.

Everyone was learning, and that wasn’t a bad thing at all. Kerry briefly wondered if they couldn’t just make this arrangement permanent, what with teleconferencing and all, then admitted to herself that their positions really did need a little more hands on than this, at least to be done right.

On the other hand... Kerry eyed a bit of color moving past. She hadn’t been able to try parasailing yet, in deference to her healing shoulder, and she really, really wanted to. Maybe she could ask Dar to continue their exile just a little while longer.

“No.” A low, sexy rumble tickled her ear.


438 Melissa Good Kerry peeked upward and grinned. “If we stay here long enough, I’ll be able to.” She waggled her fingers. “It feels a lot better. Honest.”

Dar’s half open eyes regarded her. “Hmm…maybe,” she replied thoughtfully. “If we went double I could sorta hang onto you.”

“Ooo.” Kerry’s eyes lit up. “Yeah!” She squirmed around and ended up half sprawled over Dar’s body. “I like that idea.”

“Really?” Dar tickled her sides and watched her squirm some more.

“Okay. Let’s give it a try tomorrow. Worst they can say is no.” She yawned and closed her eyes again, taking a breath of the salty air with a sense of decadent pleasure. “Mmm. I could so get used to this.”

Kerry stifled her own yawn. “Me too.” She gave Dar’s shirt an idle nibble. “How about we chuck ILS and open up an E-commerce consulting firm down here? Something we can run from a pair of cell phones and a laptop.”

“Okay.”

Kerry paused, then lifted her head and peered at her half dozing partner. “You’re not serious.”

Dar nodded.

“Really?”

A blue eye appeared. “In a frigging heartbeat.” It closed again.

“Hmm.” Kerry put her head back down. Dar had visibly unwound in the past couple of days, erasing, to Kerry’s eyes, years off her age. Even her speech had slowed down a little, taking on just a touch of her father’s distinctive drawl, and Kerry suspected her lover was going to have a tougher time than she was getting back into work mode come next Monday morning. “You like being a beach bum, don’t you?”

Dar opened her eyes and studied the wood ceiling as it swayed over head. “I guess,” she replied. “Yeah. Maybe I do, I mean…” She shifted a little. “I don’t mind working hard, but yeah, I’d like to do it in cutoffs and sneakers sometimes.”

“Well, you are the CIO and top honcho in Miami. Change the dress code,” Kerry replied practically. Then she paused and winced. “Oh. Wait.

No. José in shorts.” She buried her face in Dar’s shirt. “Never mind.”

Dar laughed. “I know, I know.” Her lips pursed slightly. “Besides, I’m pretty sure you don’t feel the same way. I think you like the snazzy office and it fits your style.”

Kerry glanced up, startled.

“That was a compliment,” Dar assured her.

“Mmm. You make me seem so preppy.” Kerry’s nose wrinkled. “But yeah, you’re right. I like dressing up. It makes dressing down on the weekends so much nicer.”

“Well,” Dar considered the issue, “how about I let you take over ILS

and I can run a consulting firm out of the condo in my jammies and we can get a place like this to bum around in on the weekend?”

Kerry’s brow contracted, as she tried to figure out if Dar was joking, or serious, or halfway between both of those things. Maybe it was just the general chaos they’d been through, which wasn’t over, either.


Eye of the Storm 439

Maybe Dar was only joking.

Kerry watched the pale eyes open and gaze dreamily up at a black-bird perched on the edge of the roof. “Is that what you really want to do?” she asked quietly. “Leave the company?”

Dar took a long time to answer, as though she were looking at the question from a number of different angles. “I’ve done a lot there,” she commented.

“Yes, you have. But there’s a lot more to do,” Kerry replied. “You’re changing the way the entire company does business, Dar, and you’re doing a hell of a job at it.”

“Thank you.” She paused. “Part of me wants to finish that.” She looked at Kerry. “But part of me wants to stay right here. The part of me that got the shit scared out of it in the building.”

Kerry stayed quiet.

“I don’t want to put so much energy into my job anymore, Kerry,”

Dar admitted. “I want to spend more time doing things like this. Enjoying the act of living. Enjoying being with you.” She shook her head. “It can go so fast.”

Kerry let out a little breath. “Well, if that’s what you want to do. Do it.”

“But that’s not what you want to do.” Dar touched her nose. “I don’t know. Maybe we can compromise or something.”

“Maybe.” She smiled. “We’ll work it out, Dar. But you know, a weekend place down here isn’t a bad start.”

Dar smiled back. “No? Hmm. Well, it’s further north, but I know of a little spot you might be interested in. It’d take a lot of work though. The place is pretty run down.”

Kerry lifted her head right up. “I get to see you use power tools?”

She watched the grin form. “Ooo, I’m not gonna pass that up. It’ll be fun.

I’d like to kinda start from scratch. See what we could make of a place.”

“We’ll go take a look, then,” Dar promised, then glanced at the sun.

“Hmm. I think we’ve got a date with a couple of bikes, don’t we?” She stretched her body out, yawning again. “And something spicy for dinner?”

“Sounds good to me,” Kerry agreed, sitting up and carefully getting out of the hammock, the wood floor warm under her bare feet. She walked over to the railing and leaned on it, then turned as Dar joined her and walked hand in hand with her partner inside the cottage.

THEY WATCHED THE sunset from the beach, the sky painted in so many shades of color Kerry lost count of them. She lifted her camera and took another shot, then lowered her hands, to wait a few minutes before her next exposure. Chino had tired herself out racing up and down the sand and was now curled at Kerry’s feet in a damp ball.

“That’s going to be a nice series,” Dar commented, leaning back against a piece of driftwood.


440 Melissa Good

“Sure is.” Kerry lifted her longneck beer bottle and took a swallow.

She was seated between Dar’s legs and now she leaned back against her, as Dar wound an arm around her waist. They were both barefoot and half covered in the grainy sand of the beach, and Kerry sighed as she finished off her beer.

Her third, as a matter of fact, since today was the first day she’d been able to drink, having stopped taking the pain medication for her shoulder. Her head buzzed gently and she could feel the faint displacement as the alcohol hit her system. “Think I better stop.”

Dar peered over her shoulder, then nibbled her ear. “Getting light-headed?”

“Mmm.” Kerry closed her eyes. “Yeah and I don’t feel like staggering back to the cottage.” Dar’s arms tightened around her. “It’s so beautiful here.”

“You’re not looking at anything.” Dar chuckled.

“Here.” Kerry put her hand over Dar’s and squeezed. “Right here, where I am.”

“Oh.”

“I’m really glad you thought of this, Dar. I’m having such a good time. Are you?” Kerry murmured.

Dar gazed out at the sunset, which washed them in golds and reds.

“Oh yeah,” she agreed, with a smile. “Best vacation I’ve ever had.”

“Like that’s saying much.” Kerry laughed. She opened her eyes and lazily lifted her camera, focused on the newly painted sky and snapped a frame. Then she shifted and turned around, rolled onto her back, and aimed the lens at her companion.