The Glory Game (55 page)

Read The Glory Game Online

Authors: Janet Dailey

“And you always get what you want, no?”

“Yes.” Luz smiled before she realized he wasn't making a small joke. She felt his arms loosen their hold. “Raul, is it wrong to try to keep what I have? Isn't there some compromise we can reach? I've already told Rob that he has no say in whom I see. He didn't like it, but he accepted it. Why won't you agree to let me attend practice?”

“It is a compromise you seek. Very well. Then you can watch occasionally, but not every day. Does that suit you?”

“Yes.” Raising on her toes, she pressed her lips against his mouth to seal the bargain. She wasn't prepared for the angry way he kissed her back, driving her lips into her teeth.

When she tried to pull away, his hand gripped the back of her head and she was caught between the vise of his mouth and his hand. It was a long moment before the fierce pressure eased and the touch of his lips became almost apologetic in its gentleness. Their lips moistly clung an instant as he slowly broke the contact, then pressed her head against his shoulder.

“I think neither of us is in the proper mood tonight.” His voice rumbled huskily from his chest. “It is best if I go, Luz.”

“Yes,” she agreed, relieved that he saw she wasn't in the mood for lovemaking, although she believed he could change that if he tried. Luz was also aware that he didn't understand her problem and made no pretense that he did. “I'm afraid my mind is elsewhere.”

“I noticed.” When he released her, she walked with him to the door. He paused there, studying her. “Rob sees tomorrow better than you do, Luz. The day will come when you will leave him, or he will leave you. It always happens.”

“I don't believe that.” She shook her head in a definite rejection.

“As you wish.” Raul shrugged, not arguing the point. Yet
the certainty in his expression vaguely frightened her. She held the door open as he stepped into the hallway.

“Good night.” Impulsively she moved to kiss him, seeking some kind of reassurance that nothing had really changed.

Before the contact was made, someone coughed delicately to warn them of his presence. Luz jerked her gaze toward the sound, instantly locating the source as Duke Sovine sauntered down the hallway.

“I left my cigarettes downstairs.” He held out the pack to show them, then stopped outside a room two doors away from hers. His knowing glance shifted to Raul. “You know, you're slowly wearin' a path on this carpet,” he drawled, then disappeared inside his room.

Luz realized that Rob was right. The others knew about Raul's late-night visits to her room.

“Did you think we were fooling them?” Raul asked, and she saw it was no surprise to him.

“Not really,” she supposed. “In the beginning, I guess I wanted to keep it private. Now … maybe it's better that it's in the open.”

CHAPTER XXIV

A
s the buildings of the
estancia
came into sight, Luz slowed her horse and waited for the slower-traveling Hector to catch up with her. The shoulder-high stalks of the pampas grass swished noisily as his palomino moved up alongside her liver-colored mount. The accompanying outrider, one of the modern gauchos who tended the
estancia's
cattle and horse herds, rode with them, maintaining a discreet distance.

“It's so beautiful out here I almost hate to go back.” Luz gazed at the sea of green grass that surrounded them, rippling in the wind like ocean waves. In the last two weeks, spring had exploded across the pampas as September had given way to October. Everything was a vibrant green, bursting with new life.

The palomino whickered, nodding its head. Hector laughed. “Rubio agrees with you.”

“Rubio, is that his name?” She glanced at the well-trained gelding, so palely golden in color with a flaxen mane and tail.

“His full name is El Rubio Rey, the blond king. You see how proudly he walks, never paying any attention to the fluttering of wings or the crash of a cow through the grass. He expects them to move out of his way, no?”

“He does.” Smiling widely, she agreed with the description. It was also this unblinking steadiness that made the palomino a reliable mount for the crippled man.

The outrider spurred his horse to ride ahead and open the pasture gate for them. After they passed through the opening in the fence, they crossed the dirt road and trotted their horses into the stableyard.

The area was astir with activity. The morning session on the polo field was over, and the yard was crowded with ponies and grooms while the riders drifted toward the house. Luz looked first for Rob, finding him, as expected, with Tony. Lately it seemed that he spent almost all of his free time with the young Argentine. Rob had always been such a loner that it was good to see him making friends. Still, she sensed that part of it was a means of getting back at her, showing her that he preferred someone else's company to hers as he believed she had done with Raul. Rob nursed his hurts for a long time, and was very slow to forgive an injury. He was deliberately going to make it tough on her.

It was a spoiled and selfish attitude. Luz could see that, but she didn't know what to do about it, other than to play his game. She had resumed watching his practices on an irregular basis, catching a morning or afternoon session almost every other day, sometimes staying for all of it.

Now that her affair with Raul was common knowledge, she no longer watched how she acted around him in front of everyone. She wasn't openly demonstrative with her affection, but neither was she shy about touching him or taking his arm, smiling at him warmly or simply gazing at him while he talked to someone else. Gradually, Raul had become less circumspect in his actions, too, sometimes putting his arm around her as they sat together in the evenings. Several times she had looked at him and seen the smile in his eyes. Two nights he had even walked upstairs with her.

Rob's reaction had thus far been a determined effort to ignore them, sometimes to the point of leaving the room. Luz was certain he'd get used to seeing them together in time. She liked this new dimension in her relationship with Raul. It was no longer a strictly sexual companionship, although the passion between them remained as strong as before. It was talking and having him listen to her, whether they were discussing the weather, horses, or training methods—and vice versa. Sometimes she believed she was falling in love with him, but she always backtracked from that thought. It was too soon. She couldn't open herself to that potential hurt yet.

Still her heart gave a very definite leap when she saw him walking to meet them. A small part of her, still sensitive from Drew's rejection, doubted that a man as handsome as Raul
could be seriously interested in her. He caught at the reins of her dark red chestnut and halted it beside him.

“Did you enjoy your ride?” His hand was at her waist, steadying her when she jumped to the ground. It stayed, maintaining the contact, while he gazed at her.

“It was wonderful.” But it was equally wonderful having him waiting here. She knew her expression indicated as much.

“It must have been to put such a sparkle in your eyes,” Raul observed.

“Are you on your way to the house for lunch?” Luz asked as Hector unbuckled the leg straps that held him in the saddle. Two stablehands waited to help him down.

“No. El Gato injured a tendon this morning. I will be there after I have looked at him,” he said, referring to one of the ponies on his playing string.

“Good. That will give me time to freshen up.”

“Leave the sparkle.” Raul smiled.

Filled with a warm, heady feeling, Luz watched him walk toward the near stable, then turned to check Hector's progress. As the two men lifted him from the saddle, she fetched the crutches lying nearby and gave them to him one at a time. It was difficult to remember how conscious of his handicap she had been less than two months ago. She rarely thought about it anymore.

“Ready?” she asked after he had adjusted his leg braces.

“Sí
.” With a swing of his crutches and a drag of his legs, he started for the house, moving briskly and forcing Luz to do the same. “You are good for Raul,” he stated. “Many times I have wished he would take himself a woman.”

“You'll never convince me, Hector, that he hasn't had a woman before,” she said dryly.

“He has had many women in his bed, Luz, but none in his home,” he informed her, his expression very serious. “He has not known this warmth a woman can give to his life.”

“It can't be for the lack of willing females,” she mused, then glanced curiously at Hector. “Surely there's been some he loved. You have been his friend for years. You must know.”

“Once or twice. But the leopard cannot change its spots and a man cannot change what he is. I think they did not like being alone so much while he was away playing polo. But that is
what he is. So, he goes alone. With you, it is different. You do not begrudge him the time he spends on the polo field, no?”

“No.”

“Then you are good for him.”

But was she? Luz found herself wondering. She had not considered before what she could give him. There wasn't much more she could offer him, but herself. Money, of course, but its importance to him was linked to polo rather than a desire for a personal accumulation of wealth. A home, yes, but a family—children of his own—at her age? It was doubtful that she would be able to conceive, and if she could, did she want to raise another family as Drew was about to do? She didn't think so. The realization sobered her. Raul was younger. He deserved those things.

When they reached the house, she automatically waited for Hector to open the front door for her as he always did. “I have said something wrong, no?” He leaned on his crutches and tipped his grizzled head to the side, to study her.

“No. I was thinking of something else,” she lied. Eyeing her skeptically, Hector turned the doorknob, then pushed the heavy door open with the end of his crutch. Luz walked past him into the house, then paused a moment while he followed her inside and pushed the door shut with his crutch. “I'm going up to my room and get cleaned up. I enjoyed the ride, Hector. Thanks for coming with me.”

“It is I who thank you. I do not often have the pleasure of a beautiful lady's company.”

“You are dangerous, Hector.” She laughed in her throat. “You make a woman want to believe your lies.”

But he had succeeded in pushing aside her pensive mood. A faint smile curved her mouth as she ran lightly up the stairs in her riding boots. Nearing the top of the steps, Luz heard a loud commotion in the upper hallway, a pair of voices raised in anger. One of them sounded like Rob's. She hurried the last few steps and rounded the newel post on the second-floor landing as a door banged open and the muffled voices became distinct.

“Get out of here! Get out, you gruesome old hag!” Rob emerged from his room, shouting at a confused and shrinking Anna: “If I ever catch you in here again, I'll—” He advanced on her threateningly, his face livid with rage.

“Rob!” Luz ran forward to intervene, stunned by his fury. Instinctively she put her arms around the stout woman, both to comfort her and to shield her from Rob's wrath. “What's going on here?”

“I walked in and caught her stealing!”

“No, señora, no.
For favor.”
Anna shook her head wildly in denial, and a spate of Spanish followed. Luz had picked up a little of the language since they'd been here, but not enough to understand the maid's frantic, rapid flow. Yet it was obviously a protestation of innocence and it sounded very genuine to Luz.

“Momento. Momento, por favor.”
She interrupted the incomprehensible flood of Spanish from Anna and turned to Rob. “Are you sure, Rob? What did she take?”

“Nothing, but only because I caught her in the act! That fat old bitch was going through my drawers when I came in! My watch, my billfold, my money, my credit cards—everything's in there. She was going to make a damned good haul,” he accused viciously.

“No. No, señora.” Again, a torrent of Spanish began.

“Anna,
m
á
s despacio, por favor.”
Luz asked her to say it again more slowly. The maid tried speaking more slowly, all the while throwing Rob wild-eyed glances. A great deal Luz couldn't follow, but she caught the word
lavado. “El lavado?
Laundry?” she asked to make sure she had understood.

“Si, sí
.” Between the Spanish that followed and the pantomime from the maid, Luz finally understood.

“Rob, I think you jumped to the wrong conclusion. Anna was only putting your clean laundry away.” She glanced through the open door to his room. “Look. Some of it is still sitting on top of your dresser.”

“She just used that as an excuse to protect her ass,” he jeered.

“Rob, I don't appreciate your language.” She could overlook the things he'd said in the heat of anger, but this continued vulgar abuse she found offensive.

A second later, she heard the rapid clump of Hector's crutches on the carpet runner in the hall. She turned to meet him, as did Anna, who immediately launched into vociferous Spanish. When she was finished, Luz explained Rob's side of the incident.

“Señor Rob, I am sorry, but Anna was only putting your laundry away as she always does,” Hector assured him. “She would take nothing. She is an honest woman.”

Displeased with the verdict, Rob pressed his lips tightly together, thinning out their line. “I know what I saw,” he muttered.

“Rob,” Luz murmured in exasperation, wishing he would simply admit he was wrong.

“I don't want her going through my drawers anymore—ever! From now on, she can leave the laundry on the bed and I'll put my own clothes away.”

Hector exchanged glances with Luz, then acceded to the demand. “If that is what you wish, I will tell her. I would be most happy to lock your valuables in our—”

Other books

Avalon by Seton, Anya
The Journalist by G.L. Rockey
On Her Six (Under Covers) by Christina Elle
Hero of Rome by Douglas Jackson
Story of My Life by Jay McInerney
Kill Two Birds & Get Stoned by Kinky Friedman
Surrender by Marina Anderson