resigned but accepting. His daughter, on the other hand, appeared close to tears. Her shoulders slumped and her chin quivered.
“But I really wanted to come to camp with Sage,” she wailed. “It sounded super, super fun! I don’t want to stay in a boring house all day long while you talk on the phone!”
“Chloe, that’s enough. If the camp doesn’t have room for you, that’s the way it is.”
“You think I’m a little poop, too, don’t you?” Chloe’s chin was definitely quivering now. “That’s why you don’t want me in your camp. You don’t like me, either.”
“Oh, honey, that’s not true. We just have rules about how many children we can have in our camp.”
“I would be really good. You wouldn’t even know I’m here. Oh, please, Sage!”
She studied them both—Chloe so dejected and her father resigned. She had to wonder how much pride he had forced himself to swallow for his daughter’s sake to bring her here and ask Sage for a favor.
How could she disappoint them?
“We’re at capacity,” she finally said, “but I think we can probably find room to squeeze in one more.”
“You mean it? Really?” The girl looked afraid to hope.
Sage nodded and Chloe squealed with delight and hugged her again. “Yes! Thank you, thank you, thank you!”
Sage hugged her in return. “You’re welcome. You’re going to have to work hard and listen to me and the other grown-ups, though.”
“I will. I’ll be super super good.”
Sage glanced up to meet Eben’s gaze and found him watching her with that same odd, slightly thunderstruck expression she had seen him wear earlier that morning. She didn’t fathom it—nor did she quite understand why it made her insides tremble.
“I’m busy with the class out here,” she spoke briskly to hide her reaction, “but if you go inside the center, Amy can provide you with the registration information. Tell her I said we could make an exception this once and add one more camper beyond our usual limit.”
“Thank you, Ms. Benedetto.” One corner of his mouth lifted into a relieved smile and the trembling in her stomach seemed to go into hyperdrive, much like the Harder twins after a little sugar.
Somehow that slight smile made him look even more attractive and her reaction to it alarmed her.
“Amy will give you a list of supplies you will need to provide for Chloe.” Annoyance at herself sharpened her voice. “She’s going to need waterproof boots and a warmer jacket this afternoon when we go out to Haystack, though we can probably scrounge something for her today.”
“Thank you.”
“May I go with the other children?” Chloe asked, her green eyes gleaming with eagerness.
“Sure,” Sage said. She and Eben watched Chloe race to the picnic table and squeeze into a spot between two girls of similar ages, who slid over to make room for her.
She turned back to Eben. “Our class ends at four, whether your conference calls are done or not.”
He sent her a swift look. “I’ll be sure to hang up on my attorneys if they run long. I wouldn’t want to keep you waiting.”
“It’s not me you would be letting down. It’s Chloe.”
His mouth tightened with clear irritation but she watched in fascination as he carefully pushed it away and resumed a polite expression. “Thank you again for accommodating Chloe. I know you’re stretching the rules for her and I do appreciate it.”
Without waiting for an answer, he turned around and walked toward the center. She watched him go, that fast, take-no-prisoners stride eating up the beach.
What a disagreeable man. He ought to have a British accent for all the stuffy reserve in his voice.
She sighed. Too bad he had to be gorgeous. Someone with his uptight personality ought to have the looks to match, tight, thin lips, a honker of a nose, and squinty pale eyes set too close together.
Instead, Eben Spencer had been blessed with stunning green eyes, wavy dark hair and lean, chiseled features.
Didn’t matter, she told herself. In her book, personality mattered far more than looks and by all indications Eben Spencer scored a big fat zero in that department.
“Ms. B, Ms. B.! What’s this one? Lindsey doesn’t know.”
She turned back to the picnic table. She had work to do, she reminded herself sternly. She needed to keep her attention tightly focused on her day camp and the thirteen children in it—not on particularly gorgeous hotel magnates with all the charm of a spiny urchin.
Chapter Three
“Your daughter will just love the day camp.” The bubbly receptionist inside the office delivered a thousand-watt smile out of white teeth in perfect alignment as she handed him the papers.
“It’s one of our most popular summer activities,” she went on. “People come from all over to bring their children to learn about the rocky shore and the kids just eat it up. And our camp director is just wonderful. The children all adore her. Sometimes I think she’s just a big kid herself.”
He raised an eyebrow, his mind on Sage Benedetto, and her honey-blond curls, lush curves and all that blatant sensuality.
“Is that right?” he murmured.
The receptionist either didn’t catch his dry tone or chose to ignore him. He voted for the former.
“You should see her when they’re tide-pooling, in her big old boots and a grin as big as the Haystack. Sage knows everything about the coastal ecosystem. She can identify every creature in a tide pool in an instant and can tell you what they eat, how they reproduce and who their biggest predator might be. She’s just amazing.”
He didn’t want to hear the receptionist gush about Sage Benedetto. He really preferred to know as little about her as possible. He had already spent the morning trying to shake thoughts of her out of his head so he could focus on business.
He smiled politely. “That’s good to hear. I’m relieved Chloe will be in competent hands.”
“Oh, you won’t find better hands anywhere on the coast, I promise,” she assured him.
For a brief second, he had a wickedly inappropriate reaction to that bit of information, but with determined effort, he managed to channel his attention back to the registration papers in front of them.
He quickly read over and signed every document required—just a little more paperwork than he usually faced when purchasing a new hotel.
He didn’t mind the somewhat exorbitant fee or the tacked-on late-registration penalty. If not for Sage and her summer camp, his options would have been severely limited.
He didn’t have high hopes that the agency in Portland would find someone quickly, which would probably mean he would have to cancel the entire trip and abandon the conference calls scheduled for the week or fly in his assistant to keep an eye on Chloe, something neither Chloe nor Betsy would appreciate.
No, Sage Benedetto had quite likely saved a deal that was fiercely important to Spencer Hotels.
He would have liked to surrender Chloe to someone a little more…restrained…but he wasn’t going to quibble.
“All right. She’s all set, registered for the entire week. Now, you know you’re going to need to provide your daughter with a pair of muck boots and rain-gear, right?”
“Ms. Benedetto already informed me of that. I’ll be sure Chloe is equipped with everything she needs tomorrow.”
“Here’s the rest of the list of what you need.”