“Tender leaves this boat at ten tomorrow morning and collects Mr. Wolf from shore at nine a.m. the following day. That means you have to be back on this boat, sober and ready to work by eight. Do I make myself clear?”
Everyone grinned from ear to ear, nodding their agreement, and tossed the occasional “Yes, sir” into the excited atmosphere for good measure.
Twenty-four hours in Taormina? That was twenty-three more than I’d ever had before, and if I could have chosen the one place in the Mediterranean to have a day off, Sicily would be the place.
“I want this boat perfect before you go, so get your Q-tips out,” Captain Moss warned.
I elbowed August when she groaned. When she’d first started, I’d told her that the bathrooms needed detailing and explained I wasn’t joking when I said every inch needed to be cleaned with Q-tips. She’d nearly passed out, but she’d done a good job. She might be a bit flighty and a little too noisy, but she worked hard and that was what mattered.
“Captain,” I called as he made for the exit. “I’ll stay if you—”
“No. I’ll be on board. You’re to have the day off with the rest of this lot.”
I glanced behind me. The crew had already begun to plan the following day, the boys talking about the bars, the girls, the beaches and cocktails.
“But I don’t mind—”
“Take a freaking day off to relax, Avery. This is a gift. Take advantage of it.” Conversation over, he swept out.
“Avery,” Skylar called. “Isn’t Taormina your dream destination? This is fate. There’s bound to be a ton of rich, handsome men waiting for me on shore.” She squealed and turned back to the table.
Taormina was the place I told everyone about. I’d only managed an hour on shore a couple of times and always yearned for longer. The idea of a whole day there was almost too good to be true
For a split second I remembered my conversation with Hayden about always wanting to come to Taormina. He wouldn’t have remembered that, right? This wasn’t about me, was it? In another lifetime, we’d go together, explore the narrow streets and the amphitheater, sit in the piazza with the beautiful people while being overlooked by Mount Etna. But that wouldn’t be this lifetime.
“The boys are just going to drink all day, aren’t they?” Skylar came up to stand beside me and we watched them plan which Italian beers they were going to order.
They’d been weeks without alcohol. I was sure they’d make up for it. “I’d say so.”
“I want to lie on a beach. Dinner and drinks in the evening. Somewhere glamorous. Where the beautiful people go,” Skylar said.
“Should we get a hotel?” Eric called out to us. “Then you don’t need to worry about us wrecking the boat if we come back hammered.”
There was no way I was going to book a hotel room. I needed to save every penny.
I put on my best, professional grin. “I don’t need to worry about you wrecking the boat because you know if you do I’ll kick your ass so hard you won’t sit for the rest of the charter.”
Eric’s smile faltered, but he nodded and turned back to the table. “I think we should definitely pay for a hotel.”
“Sounds good. Then we can order drinks from the beach. And we have somewhere to change for the evening,” August said. “I want to eat pasta in Italy. I’m sure it must taste different, right?” she asked, turning to me.
I smiled. Eating pasta in Sicily sounded just about perfect, even if it was at a table for one. Maybe with some Chianti while people-watching in the piazza, even without Hayden. I tried to hold back a smile, not wanting to get too excited in case Captain Moss came back and told us he’d made a gigantic mistake.
“Ready to top up your tan?” August asked as she came toward Skylar and me, grinning like a Cheshire cat.
I could totally understand why the girls would want to laze on the beach for the day, but I wasn’t going to waste the opportunity I had to explore even if I had no one to share it with. I was going to take my dad’s advice and take some time for myself, be a tourist, get waited on in a restaurant. I was going to think about nothing but the sun and the buildings and how beautiful everything was. And then Hayden kissing me under the fireworks would no longer be the best thing that had happened to me in seven years.
Twenty
Hayden
I couldn’t remember the last time I’d had nothing to do.
I’d left the tender just before ten with a small overnight bag that included my satellite phone and my bug sweeper. Once I’d checked into the hotel, worked out in the gym and had a shower, my skin had started to itch from boredom and boredom led to more thoughts of Avery. Maybe this hadn’t been such a good idea. I’d come ashore to escape Avery Walker and here I didn’t even have work to distract me.