Delayed.
Which figured. It was four days before Christmas -- not like she had anything better to do than sit in a packed airport and wait on the arrival of a late plane.
Augusta Chamberlain glanced up at the arrivals board, but there had been no magic change in the past three seconds. Then, before she could blink her tawny-coloured eyes, the planes above and below the flight her guest was flying in on blinked red.
Cancelled.
“If that’s supposed to mean I should count my blessings, forget it,” Augusta muttered under her breath as she glared up at the screen. When she noticed the amused look on the face of the man in the trench coat, she whirled on her heel and marched away from where he lounged back in his plastic chair.
The airport was packed, delayed and stranded holiday travellers littering the building like Christmas mice with no place to scurry. Here and there a solitary, free chair remained, but Augusta couldn’t bring herself to sit. Instead, she wandered (prowled) at a dignified, strolling pace (Mach ten) back and forth between the baggage carousels (empty) and the uncooperative (Still? Really?) announcement board.
When that board clicked on her expected flight and announced a further thirty-minute delay, she hissed to herself. Only then did she find a chair and sink her tight little butt (thank you evil squats, and I still hate you) onto the seat.
She fidgeted in the chair, squirmed – airport chairs were a zero on the comfort factor – and tapped the tip of her toe against the airport floor. She lasted three minutes, then bounded up and strode off with purpose.
When she returned a few short minutes later, she held a paper coffee cup in her hand. She did what Josh had started to think of as her route, standing under the arrivals and departures board, scowling up at it, then striding off to pace a path between the rotating baggage trolleys and back.
She was a looker, this girl. Long legs propelled a tight package of a body. Short spikes of glossy dark hair layered around a face made with high cheekbones, gigantic eyes the colour of the whiskey he distilled and was here to promote, a pert, rather adorable button of a nose, and the kind of lush mouth capable of birthing some highly fantastic fantasies from all the way across a crowded room.
She was also the last person on the planet who ought to be drinking coffee. Probably ever.
He watched her openly from his seat across the room. Her impatience amused him. Josh had learned a long time prior that worry and hurry were the devil’s tools -- they did nothing to improve the moment and much to destroy peace of mind. Still, watching the babe and her barely containable energy made for, in a rather endless, boring leg of his travel journey, an interesting diversion.
When she again headed for the arrivals board, Josh found himself on his feet, ambling that way himself. Deliberate, not coincidence. She was as compelling as she was restless, and he found himself eager for a chat.
“Pity about the weather.”
She barely cast him a glance, then folded her arms under her breasts, unintentionally pressing them up so they strained against the button of the blouse containing them. No pity there, as far Josh was concerned. He tried again.
“You’re waiting on a flight, then, are you?”
Augusta looked sideways at the man, the scowl the delay had put on her face now directed his way. It was on the tip of her tongue to comment on his genius deduction -- she was in an airport staring up at an arrivals board, was she not? But she sighed instead. It was Christmas, after all. She wasn’t the only person being inconvenienced today, and it was the Season.
Yada yada yada.
“And you are?”
“Name’s Joshua McLaughlin.” He stuck out his hand, and offered his friendliest, most disarming smile to the girl, who, to be frank, looked all the better close up like this. “And you would be?”
“Oh, for the love of Mike.” She tilted her head, studying his face openly, the frown deepening even as her cheeks shaded pink. He looked, with his sharp chin and his jaw cleanly-shaved, nothing whatsoever like his photograph. The smile, though, yes, the smile was the same. If she’d been paying attention, she might have noticed, but…
“I believe I’m your ride.”
His grin deepened then. His gaze dipped to her chest a nanosecond before zooming back in on her face. Still, she caught the errant look, and it was enough to have her doing a mental head slap over her choice of words with this stranger.
“I wasn’t expecting you yet. In fact, the board says your flight is due to be late, not early.”
“Well, luv, you can’t always believe what you read, now, can you?”
Augusta stared at him. With that Irish accent of his, it was hard to know if he was being straight with her or not. She thought not. He was kind enough not to wait long before confirming that suspicion.
“In point of fact, I caught an earlier flight.”
“Okay,” she shook her head slightly, eyes widening in disbelief. “You should have called. I would have come earlier if I’d known.” Then she looked over his shoulder to the chair he had occupied. “Where are your bags then? Have they not unloaded them yet?”
“Well, it’s a funny story, that.” He shrugged, and the movement was so philosophically accepting that she knew the end of the story without being told.
“The airline lost your baggage.”
“They have, yes. The good news, though, is I travel with all the important items on my person.”
Augusta’s eyes flashed down to the leather attaché case Mr. McLaughlin held in his left hand. Then she blinked, peered more closely in an attempt at making certain she was seeing what she thought she was seeing. The man had only four fingers on his left hand. She hadn’t read that in any of the bios.
“The other good news,” he said, drawing her attention away from his missing finger and back up to his face, “Is I’ve already made the necessary claim. There’s no need for us to remain here.”
“Oh.” Augusta smiled at him as if that was the best news she’d heard in a week. “We don’t have to wait for the plane?”
“Well,” Josh said, the teasing lilt once again coating his tongue, “Not unless you’re waiting on the arrival of some other dapper Irishman, Miss….”
She recognized that he was teasing her this time, and her face flushed as she realized she hadn’t given him her name. Joshua McLoughlin was important to her partners at Far and Away Magazine. No doubt, they’d be horrified to learn she’d been anything less than ingratiating and hospitable welcoming him to the country. They wanted his business, after all.
Although, apparently not badly enough that Isla could be bothered to drag herself away from J.T. and his ranch, nor Mellie from Travis and the extended holiday they were enjoying in Santa Cruz.
They just trust you, girl, you know that.
Although, considering the look on Josh McLoughlin’s face and the fact that she still hadn’t given him her name, perhaps that was a mistake.
“Augusta,” she said quickly, “Please, just call me Auggie.” She smiled briefly. “Right. Let’s get you to your hotel then.”
“About that.”
Augusta froze, then turned so she was facing him directly. No one needed to tell her she wasn’t going to like what he was about to say. He was smiling at her in a way she figured was meant to be charming but had every single one of her nerves on high alert.
“It’s kind of a funny story, that, but err, there was no room at the inn, as it were.” The man gave her a smile that was as smooth as his whiskey was reported to be, then added, “Your Mellie said there’d be a room for me where you lot are.”
“Oh, did she, now,” Augusta narrowed her eyes. “Well, that is a funny story then, isn’t it? Because she said nothing like that to me.”
Josh made a non-committal, not particularly sorry-sounding noise in his throat. He stood, watching and waiting patiently as Augusta came to the conclusion that she was taking him home with her, and when he saw first irritation and then acceptance shade her expression, he smiled to himself. He was going home with the pretty lady.
Seemed like a good plan to him.
When she gestured for him to walk with her and then headed for the airport door fast enough that he had to stretch out his own legs in order to keep up, he felt a somewhat smug sense of anticipation. His working holiday had, in his personal opinion, just gotten interesting.
“Are you honestly telling me that every hotel room in town was booked?”
Josh looked over at Augusta, amused to learn she was still mulling over this information. Not one to accept things at face value, apparently. When he said nothing, merely raised an eyebrow as he matched her pace, she clearly read the amusement in his eye, because she sighed, and seemed to give herself a little shake.
“Never mind,” she said, “You’re only telling me what you were told.”
This fiasco wasn’t his fault. And he was important. And even kind of cute. Even if his eyes did sparkle with amusement every time she wanted to explode. The least she could do was try to be nice. And later, she would have a little chat with one Melissa Samms.
“Well now.” Josh’s brows rocketed up and a broad smile creased his face. “This is your vehicle?”
“Yeah,” Augusta’s voice was wary. She had no idea what he found so amusing about the Jeep Wrangler she had led him to. She stepped back from the door she’d just unlocked. “That amuses you?”
“You are the accountant?”
Her chin whipped up. “And?”
“Well, luv,” Josh said, grinning at her again, “This is a fun vehicle. And accountant’s do have something of a reputation. Or is that different on this side of the pond?”
“I’m fun,” Auggie said with the smallest toss of her head. She glared at him, but his smile only widened. When their eyes caught, his held hers fast. And the expression in his changed.
Where his green eyes had been irritatingly full of humour at her expense, a much hotter emotion now flared to life inside them. Despite herself, Auggie’s breath caught in the back of her throat at the look in his eyes. There was no mistaking the meaning of the smoldering intensity that lit the greens in his irises. Now this man resembled the photographs she’d seen of Joshua McLaughlin.
This man could trap a woman with a look. Auggie spoke, simply to keep from becoming one of those females.
“I’ll have you know that the Jeep Wrangler depreciates less than any other vehicle.”
The sensuality in his look vanished with Josh’s bark of laughter. He was still looking at her with appreciation, but of a totally different variety now.
“And I’ll be betting you know the exact percentages too, then.”
“Of course, I do. Thirty percent,” she said. Ignoring his smile, she pivoted and started walking away. When she reached the taillights, though, she couldn’t resist. She tossed the rest of the stat at him over her shoulder. “The Toyota Tacoma is next, at thirty-two percent.”
He stared after her, lips twitching, as she rounded the back of the vehicle. If he’d had any reservations about his decision to come to Vernon, British Columbia, in Canada so near the holiday, those questions were behind him. At the moment, there was nowhere else he’d rather be spending his time than with the sexy little tornado of an accountant. It was going to be a most definite pleasure getting to know this woman more.
“This,” he murmured to himself before opening the door to the jeep and climbing inside, “Is going to be one jolly fine Christmas.”
His driver, waiting impatiently for him to sit, didn’t look near to being as convinced. Josh looked at her expectantly, then offered her the smile his sister teased him over without mercy.
“There ‘tis,” Cara would say, “The irresistible shall-I-get-to-know-you-better. Gets them every time. Mind, you can’t seem to figure what to do once you’ve gotten them, can you, brother?”
If she’d said it once, Cara had said it a million times. The smile his sister believed so potent appeared to have no effect whatsoever on Augusta Chamberlain, however. His dear sister would love that. No, Augusta gave him barely a glance.
“Strap in,” she ordered. Waiting just long enough for him to comply, she gunned the engine, and appeared entirely unphased when the tires skidded sideways in the snowy parking lot. With a driving technique which mirrored the impatience she’d manifested inside the airport, Augusta guided the jeep forward. And smirked when Josh grabbed hold of the door handle and braced himself for the ride.