Authors: Linda Cajio
Hot and Bothered
is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
A Loveswept eBook Edition
Copyright © 1995 by Linda Cajio
Excerpt from
Taking Shots
by Toni Aleo copyright © 2013 by Toni Aleo.
Excerpt from
Along Came Trouble
by Ruthie Knox copyright © 2013 by Ruth Homrighaus.
Excerpt from
Hell on Wheels
by Karen Leabo copyright © 1996 by Karen Leabo.
All Rights Reserved.
Published in the United States by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
L
OVESWEPT
is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc.
Hot and Bothered
was originally published in paperback by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. in 1995.
eISBN: 978-0-307-79915-9
v3.1
No one would find her here. No one would even think to look.
Judith Collier slowed her Mercedes to a crawl on the pothole-covered dirt road. The car bucked and rocked as the wheels bounced viciously, and the steering took on a life of its own. She now knew where all the wide-wale corduroy had gone. This roadway.
“And I thought I’d live past thirty,” she muttered as she grappled with the wheel and tried to keep her seat. She yelped in horror when the front end of the vehicle suddenly rose up like a zombie from a coffin. Then the car dipped over a lip in the road, and she sighed in relief. Laid out before her was the little trailer encampment by a cove that she had spotted from Mexico’s Baja Highway One.
She finally got the car down the steep incline
without mishap, although she felt as shaken as a soda bottle by the time she stopped the Mercedes. And about to pop, too, she thought, if she didn’t get out of the damn car.
She turned off the engine, while sending up a little prayer that it would start again. One could never be sure after that jaunt. She opened the driver-side door.
A furnace blast of July air hit her, taking the breath from her body. Judith gasped as more heat entered into her lungs. Anyone who said low humidity and high temperatures was tolerable had obviously never spent the summer on the Baja Peninsula. Her scalp was already feeling like a too-tight band around her head.
The conditions in the encampment didn’t make her feel any better. A mishmash of house trailers of all ages and sizes was laid haphazardly up one side of the hill that sloped away from the cove. Several half-built houses populated the other side. There were no paved roadways or even walkways. Wash hung like weary soldiers from clotheslines strung between the trailers. Dogs lay everywhere, and most were a sickly blue-gray color with long legs, narrow heads, and skin rather than far. Several barked at her from the ends of their chains. The only bright colors came from a red and white painted corrugated hut not much bigger than an outhouse. Its legend read
SHOWERS
—4
PESOS
.
Judith swallowed. At least there was electricity,
she thought, eyeing the thick wire strung down from the highway. She hoped. She needed a hideaway where she could decide how to handle all the shares her great-aunt Edna had left her in the family business, Collier Chocolates. Judith had no idea what Aunt Edna could have been thinking of to leave the shares to her of all people. The bequest meant Judith’s lifetime of avoiding involvement in the family business had ended—and at a point when another company was trying to buy it. She needed to think without having to deal with all the pressure and persuasion her father and mother, aunts and uncles, even cousins, would put on her, telling her how she should vote her shares in the upcoming stockholders meeting. A quick disappearance across the border had seemed perfect. Maybe hiding here wasn’t such a good idea, though—not with showers on the hill rather than in the home.
The cove itself was absolutely stunning, Judith thought, gazing at it. Its beach curved in a wide but perfect horseshoe, rising into small promontories. The water glittered a brilliant azure blue, even in the waning sunlight. The first pinks and oranges of sunset already streaked the sky. Dark coarse sand iced the beach. Gentle waves washed over it one after the other, endlessly continuing the work started at the beginning of time.
Judith smiled in spite of her predicament. No
wonder people camped here. With this view, even she was lured. At the rate her body temperature was climbing, she intended to throw herself right in the water and to hell if a shark ate her. Of course, if one did, her problem would be neatly solved.
As she looked away from the water, she noticed a house farther up on a point. It looked well built, with stucco and sliding glass doors, a contrast to the madcap mobile park. Just below the house sat a junkyard of refrigerators, a weathered, broken-down fence surrounding it.
She heard something behind her and turned around, bracing for the unexpected. Alerted by the dogs, a small crowd headed her way. Some people had napkins tucked under their chins. She must have arrived at the dinner hour. All of them were Mexicans, which surprised her. She had thought this was a fishing camp and that there would be a fair number of Americans here.
One man, young, short, and squat, stopped directly in front of her and said something in such rapid Spanish, she couldn’t even hear it. Not that she would have understood it, anyway. She had lived in San Diego all her life, and somehow had wound up taking French throughout school. She could speak a little Spanish, but not much.
“
Retardar, por favor
,” she said, hoping he understood her request to slow down.
“I speak English,” he said with a sudden
smile. “Are you lost, lady? You got car trouble? That’s a real nice car you got too.”
“Thank you.” Judith smiled back gratefully. “I’m not lost or anything. I was on my way … Is this a fishing camp?”
He shook his head. “No. It’s the
ejido
of Cala Puesta del Sol. Sunset Cove. We are a kind of village, as you would say in English. People have a … ummm, government grant to live here because
ejido
is common land, open to any who claim it. I’m Pedro Sedaño. I run the office for the land claims.” He pointed up the hill to a small wooden building she’d passed on the way in.
“Oh.” She tried not to be disappointed. It meant she was back on the road again, and that was dangerous. The family would be looking for her. Colliers did not give up without a fight, and even then they still didn’t give up. Unfortunately, she was lacking in that main family trait; even her mother called her a changeling. She just couldn’t stand up to a confrontation with any of her strong-willed, outspoken relatives. Recognizing her limits early on, she had retired deliberately from life in the business world to work as a volunteer in San Diego’s ConVis, the convention and tourist bureau. If she made the wrong decision on this vote about selling the company, people could pay with their jobs. She had to have time to think.
The sooner she got under cover, the better;
and a village was much more ideal for a single woman than a fishing camp. Too bad she’d probably need an
ejido
permit or something for this one. “I’m sorry,” she said to Pedro. “I had wanted to rent a trailer if this was a fishing camp and if one was empty. Do you know where I can find a trailer to rent?”
The man stared at her for a moment. She was aware how incongruous her beige raw silk pants and white crepe silk top looked in the wilds of this place. Then he said, “We have an empty trailer. Some squatters were in it for a time, but they didn’t stay. They had no heart for the Baja.”
“Could I rent it for a few weeks, do you think?” she asked hopefully. “Or do I need a permit or something?”
“A permit? No, not just to rent the trailer for a little while.
Sí
, you can rent it.” He glanced away and back again. “Four hundred and fifty pesos a month …”
The crowd gasped, as if in shock.
Pedro corrected himself. “No, no. That’s forty-five pesos now. Sometimes I forget we have the new peso.”
Judith had a feeling this Pedro didn’t forget very much. That extra zero made a big difference on the rent cost. At least she could do the money—except she had forgotten to get her money changed. She’d been trying to get over the border as fast as she could.
“I have only dollars—”
“No problem,” Pedro rapped out before she could blink.
The crowd behind him went still. Judith didn’t know why and didn’t care. She held out her hand. “You have a deal. I’m Judith.”
She left off her last name deliberately.
Pedro wiped his hand on his napkin, then shook hers firmly.
“Shall I pay you now?” she asked.
He nodded.
She opened her car door and reached for her purse on the passenger side. As she did, she saw something begin to rise out of the waters of the little cove.
Not something. Someone. The scuba mask and breathing hose couldn’t disguise the shape of the male head. Dark hair was plastered down and captured by the mask strap, although strands stuck out at funny angles like a drunken halo. The shoulders emerging were broad, the chest dark with silky hairs and a year-round tan. The arms were well muscled,
very
well muscled. In one hand he clutched a fishing spear, in the other a mesh bag filled with bounty. Judith stared. The beautiful sea creature moved forward like Neptune in all his glory rising out of the sea. She had thought the cove magical, but this was ridiculous.
The water lapped around his tight waist, as if trying to suck him back down into its silky blue depths. It lapped lower, enticingly, around a sea-green bikini, directing the eye to his …
Judith fanned herself with her free hand, the furnace blast now taking on positively hellish proportions. Neptune in all his glory was far too close for comfort with the skimpy bathing suit he was wearing. “Did it get hot, or what?” she muttered.
“
¿Que?
” Pedro asked behind her.
“Nothing.” She had a feeling the temperature hadn’t changed in the past few minutes. It was he.
Him
.
The man in the water revealed at last that he had no fishy tail. Just long thighs and calves bunching with muscles with every step he took. Leashed sexuality radiated from his body. Oddly, he reminded her of a film she’d seen once about great white sharks. He had that same leisurely pace of a predator watching its territory, looking for its next victim. Little did he know he’d found her.
He walked out of the sea finally and turned, going up the path to the house on the hill. He never once glanced her way.
Judith sat heavily in the driver’s seat, taking a deep breath to draw air into her starved lungs. Lord in heaven, what had that been? None of the other villagers seemed the least concerned with the fisherman, all of them obviously waiting for her to pay up. She rummaged in her purse with shaking hands until she found her wallet. She took out two twenties and a ten and gave them to her new landlord.
Pedro shoved the bills in his pocket. “The trailer’s up the hill, a silver one. I will show you. You better leave your car here.”
Judith frowned, not thrilled with being separated from her Mercedes in a strange place. The people seemed nice, though. She locked the vehicle and followed Pedro up the incline. The dirt was iron hard and pebbles were everywhere, tripping her up in her low-heeled pumps. She bet Adolfo never meant his shoes to walk over anything but marble and carpet. Her pumps would be a wreck by the time she got to this trailer of hers.