now, so I might as well enjoy myself. Where is our hostess, anyway?”
But he saw her then—with that fall of straight blond hair, she was impossible to miss. She stood near the bar with another woman, laughing with the bartender, whom Wyatt recognized as the guy who took care of Mesa Blue’s pool.
Without a green face, she was the most enchanting creature he’d ever seen. Not at all frog-like.
“I guess you spotted her,” Daisy said, giving him a knowing look.
Chapter Three
Wyatt closed his mouth. He’d been gaping at Phoebe like a lovesick schoolboy worshipping the head cheerleader from afar.
“She’s pretty hard to miss,” Daisy said. “I can’t understand why she didn’t get snapped up to star in some blockbuster movie when she was in Hollywood.”
“She’s an actress?” Wyatt asked, horrified. Somehow, his grandparents had neglected to tell him that part.
“Oh, yeah, don’t you recognize her? Vanessa Vance. From ‘Skin Deep.’” When Wyatt made no acknowledgment, she added, “You know, that nighttime soap a few years ago?”
“I, um, don’t usually watch soaps.”
“You didn’t miss much. The show was horrible. The only thing good about it was Phoebe. Then they went and killed off her character, the ratings tanked, and it got canceled.”
“She’s an actress,” he repeated. He could almost feel a wall going up around him. Lord save him from wanna-be movie stars and has-been starlets.
Phoebe had to know what he did for a living. His grandparents would have told her. So why wasn’t she all over him, trying to get on TV? A little national exposure on “Heads Up” could revive a stalled acting career.
“She’s not acting now,” Daisy said. “She’s st—” Daisy abruptly stopped. “She does beauty makeovers at the Sunrise Spa. But if you ask me, her talents are wasted there. She’s a lot smarter than that.”
The words actress and smart did not belong in the same discussion, Wyatt mused. Maybe Phoebe hadn’t hit him up yet. But she would. He could only surmise that she had some more elaborate scheme for getting to him. Something that would work better than throwing cat food onto his balcony.
STANDING NEAR the bar chatting with Elise, Phoebe savored the last few drops of her frozen margarita. She wanted another one because it was a warm evening, but she had a lot of studying to do tomorrow and couldn’t afford to wake up even slightly hungover. Since she seldom drank alcohol, it wouldn’t take much to give her a fuzzy head in the morning.
“Can I have a cola, Jeff, please?” she asked.
Jeff winked. “Sure thing, gorgeous. What’ll you give me in return?”
Phoebe snorted. Jeff was all of twenty-two and an inveterate flirt. But he was harmless. She suspected if she ever responded to his blatant come-ons, he’d run for the hills.
“I guess I better get back to my hostessly duties,” she said to Elise, as Jeff handed her the cola.
“And I better find my fiancé. I worked hard enough to get him. It’d be a shame to lose him now.”
They were about to turn and head for their various destinations when a man came up behind Elise and put his hands over her eyes. “Guess who?”
It took Phoebe a moment to realize this was Chance, Elise’s brother. He’d called earlier in the week to say he couldn’t come.
“Chance! What are you doing here?” Elise turned and hugged her brother. He looked especially handsome tonight, Phoebe thought, in casual khakis and a pale green knit shirt. She adored a man who dressed well. He put Wyatt and his old T-shirt to shame.
Then why was it her thoughts turned so frequently to how that T-shirt had molded to the planes of Wyatt’s chest, and the way his faded jeans had hugged his butt?
“My meeting got canceled,” Chance said. “Hi, Phoebe. I hope it’s okay that I showed up without warning.”
“No problem.”
“Hey, Elise,” he said, voice lowered, “who’s that gorgeous woman sitting with her feet in the pool?”
Elise looked in the direction Chance indicated, but she saw no one. “Who?”
Chance blinked a couple of times, as if his eyes were playing tricks on him. “She was there a minute ago. If I find her, will you introduce us?”
Elise gave him a playful tap on the arm. “You are not allowed to hit on any woman who’s a friend of mine. You’ll just break her heart, and then she’ll blame it on me.”
“Okay, okay! Jeez.”
Chance rubbed his arm, though Phoebe suspected Elise couldn’t possibly do him any damage, even if she tried. He had pretty good muscles for a lawyer.
“I’ll make my own introductions.” With a mischievous smile, he sauntered off, apparently intent on finding the object of his lust.
Elise rolled her eyes. “He’s hopeless.”
“But he’s cute. Why don’t we introduce him to Daisy?” Phoebe suggested.
Elise shook her head. “He is definitely not father material. Anyway, looks like Daisy’s otherwise occupied.” She nodded toward the buffet table. “Phoebe, who’s that she’s talking to?”
Phoebe peered at her friend, so easy to spot with that auburn hair shining in the light of the torches they’d set up for the party. Daisy was engaged in cozy conversation with a man. And not just any man.
“Holy cow, that’s Wyatt Madison.”
“You’re kidding,” Elise said. “I thought he wasn’t coming.”
“He said he wasn’t. What’s he doing here?”
“Enjoying himself, it looks like,” Elise said. “And look at Daisy. She’s laughing.”
“Holy cow.”
“What’s wrong with you?” Elise said. “This is exactly what we wanted! Maybe he’s the perfect one for Daisy.”
“He’s too old for her,” Phoebe said. “Now that I see them together, they just don’t look good. You know, as a couple.”
“Phoebe!” Elise objected.
“Maybe we shouldn’t have thrust them together,” Phoebe went on. “What if—”
“We didn’t ‘thrust them together.’ They found each other. Chill, Phoebes.”
“I think Chance would be a better bet. He’s gorgeous, nice, gainfully employed—”
“Don’t even start. I love Chance with all my heart, but he’s a cad in the worst sense of the word. Daisy’s looking for a husband, remember? A potential father for her potential baby. The last thing she needs is a guy who thinks wife is a four-letter word.”
“It is a four-letter word.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Well, I still think he’d be better than Wyatt Mad—” Phoebe stopped mid-name, then blinked her eyes a couple of times to clear them. Surely after one margarita she couldn’t be hallucinating.
“What’s wrong?” Elise asked.
“Daisy and Wyatt. They’re gone.” The buffet table, where they’d been huddling a few moments earlier, was now empty.
“Hmm. They certainly are. Maybe they hit it off, and they’ve gone somewhere a bit more private.”
“Bite your tongue.”
“Phoebe!”