Wrapped in only her towel, Ivy opened the hotel room door with her hair still dripping from the shower and prepared herself to face her husband’s anger. But it wasn’t Dax at the door at all, the six-foot tall visitor had light brown hair and a smile that could melt the panties right off a woman. But his brown eyes didn’t captivate like Dax’s did, and Ivy knew just how false an impression that smile gave. Its disarming nature would make a woman believe that this man was harmless, Ivy knew different.
‘Saul,’ she said.
‘Hey, baby,’ he said, ducking to kiss her cheek. ‘Why didn’t you tell me you were in town?’
‘How did you find out?’ Backing off, she tucked in her towel and let him enter the room.
‘I heard you were in the old neighbourhood,’ he said, sauntering in and scrutinising the details of the room. ‘Where’s the hubby?’
‘California,’ she said.
Saul spun around to land her in his sights. ‘It’s finished already?’
‘It’s not finished, he’s working,’ she said. ‘I came here to tie up my loose ends.’
‘Am I on that list?’ he asked, sinking down to sit on the end of the bed. He stretched his legs out and relaxed back on his hands.
‘Actually yes,’ she said. ‘But I hadn’t gotten to you yet.’
‘Now I’m here,’ he said, leaning forward to tug on the flap of her towel. ‘Just in time to show you a good time.’
Her smile flared. ‘No fun,’ she said, stepping over his legs to head back toward the bathroom. ‘You wait out here, I’ll talk to you in a minute.’
She hadn’t locked a bathroom door in months, but she did it now, which just proved how little Ivy trusted Saul Haynes. Saul was a great friend to everyone who met him, he was a guy who knew how to get things and networking was one of his best assets. Saul knew everyone, she had never known a person with so many connections. So it shouldn’t have surprised her that he knew she was back in Vegas, what did surprise her was that he’d come here looking for her.
After drying her hair and pulling on the clothes she’d selected for the day, Ivy went into the bedroom to find Saul standing in front of the window with her wallet in hand. Her purse was on the small round table beside him, next to the proud lamp also located there. Without an ounce of shame, he slid her credit card out of its slot.
‘Harrow,’ he read.
‘That’s right,’ she said, crossing the room to take both wallet and credit card away from him.
‘Don’t know him.’
Putting her purse back together, a smile tilted her lips. ‘I thought you knew everyone.’
‘Everyone in Vegas,’ he said.
‘You used to say that you knew everyone on the West Coast.’
‘Does he have siblings? Who does he work for?’
‘You don’t know him,’ she said, unwilling to reveal too much of who Dax was.
‘I might, maybe I’d know him if I saw him.’
Placing her purse back on the table, she squinted up. ‘Does it upset you that there’s a stranger out there? Someone you don’t know?’
He shrugged and sat down in the tub chair angled in the corner near the table. ‘Not really, I know him now, don’t I? You can introduce us.’
‘He’s in California,’ she said. ‘Did you not hear me say that a few minutes ago?’
‘Yeah, but we’ll cross paths eventually. You’re not planning to cut me out of your life. We’ve shared a lot… is he the jealous type? Possessive? If he’s controlling—‘
‘No man can beat you on that score, can they?’ she said, leaning away when he snagged her skirt.
‘You loved being my girlfriend,’ he said. ‘We had a lot of good times.’
‘Yeah, but not exclusively,’ she said.
‘That why you ran off and married Harrow? You looking for payback?’
‘I left you, Saul, don’t re-write history, and I did it months ago.’
Ivy met Saul on one of her few nights out in Las Vegas, and he had pursued her with zeal. But after six months together the sheen had definitely faded. By the time she encountered Trystan Stark in his GoldSpring suite, she and Saul had been broken up for around five months.
Breaking up with Saul had been such a relief for her and for a time she had worried that he wouldn’t let her go. But when he moved on to another busty brunette, Ivy was quickly forgotten.
One thing that Saul was not short of was female attention, or any kind of attention. His attention span was notoriously short, but he didn’t just drop people once he was bored with them, they got shifted onto his periphery.
Saul liked to be adored, he liked to do people favours and to be seen as a good guy, and he could keep a secret too. Somewhere along the way he had learned that a part of winning people’s confidence meant having a reputation for being discreet, another thing that Saul excelled at.
‘Do you want to go to a casino?’ he asked. ‘Your choice. We could take in a show if you want, I made dinner reservations for—‘
‘You’re that eager to impress me all over again?’ she quipped, folding her arms. ‘What were you doing in my purse? You’ve never been short a few bucks.’
‘Your phone made a noise, and I was curious,’ he said.
He would never have offered that information without her prompt, sometimes he enjoyed keeping secrets a little bit too much. Taking her phone from her bag to see why it had made a noise, Ivy saw a message from Dax, one that Saul had read.
Just got in. Going for a nap, then we’re going to talk.
‘Sounds like there might be a little bit of trouble,’ Saul said, he slid down in the seat and patted his thigh. ‘Come sit down and tell Daddy all about it.’
‘Yeah, right,’ she smiled at his tease, then responded to Dax’s message.
Going to breakfast with my ex-boyfriend. Call me when you wake up.
She was still getting used to texting. Before Dax, she hadn’t had a cell phone because devices weren’t a priority and she didn’t have the expendable income. Being unreachable was one of the things that Saul had hated about her. When Saul bought her a cell phone, she’d thrown it right back at him because she knew it was a tool meant to increase his control over her and her social calendar. Dax got her one out of concern and he knew better than to manipulate her with it.
Texting Dax had become a habit while they were both working on the East Coast. He would text her when he was bored at work, or when he was at home waiting for her to come home from her job. Because they worked opposing shifts – he on the night and she on the day – texting each other when they woke up, got home, or were about to go to sleep, was part of their routine.
One thing they never did was ignore each other’s calls or texts. More than worrying about appearing rude, they knew that a lack of response would cause the other to be concerned, which was justified given their history.
When there was no immediate reply to her text message, she put the phone away. Dax had to be asleep by now; that was the only explanation for her message not prompting an instantaneous retort telling her that she was going nowhere with an ex-boyfriend. But she wasn’t keeping any secrets from Dax.
‘Dinner is out,’ she said. ‘I’m not going on a date with you, Saul. But you can take me to breakfast.’
‘It’s a start,’ he said, leaping out of the chair and going forth to open the bedroom door for her.
It was almost eleven AM, so it was closer to lunchtime, but Saul had done her a favour without any hesitation when she asked him to, so the least she could do was share a meal with him. She would do it out in public and wait for Dax to call because she was pretty sure his reaction to her text wouldn’t be immediately understanding.
Having Saul back in her life turned out to be fortuitous. When Ivy relayed her plan to get hold of Trudi, he jumped right on it and offered to help. A male voice would be more convincing than a female one, so Ivy accepted his assistance. They arranged to meet in her hotel room that night, at ten PM, to put the plan into motion.