The Redemption of Rico D'Angelo
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‘Good dog,’ Neen said, finally releasing Rico and giving Monty a lusty scratch all the way down his back.
The dog groaned and arched against her. Rico didn’t blame him one little bit.
‘How come you know so much about dogs?’ he asked, in an attempt to take his mind off the curve of her hips in those jeans that she wore. The sun. The beach.
‘I grew up with them.’
‘But you don’t like them.’
‘That’s right.’
He watched as she pulled a tennis ball from her pocket. ‘Okay, Monty, let’s really wear you out.’ And she threw it.
Rico shook his head. ‘My teenagers aren’t going to know what’s hit them.’
* * *
Neen returned home from the beach with Monty early the next morning to find workmen waiting by her front door. Her palms turned clammy. She scanned the complex and its surrounds, but nothing looked out of place.
Except for the workmen. Her hand tightened about Monty’s lead as she approached them.
‘Are you Ms Cuthbert?’ one of them asked. At her nod he said, ‘We’ve been booked to fit new screen doors, as well as security systems to each of the five apartments here.’
She straightened. ‘Who hired you?’
He glanced at his clipboard. ‘The real-estate agency responsible for these properties.’ He named the company.
‘May I see?’
He handed the order form across to her. As he’d said, the agency’s name appeared in the requisite box, but she didn’t doubt for a single moment that Rico was behind this somehow. Exactly how escaped her, but she was starting to see he was the kind of man who got things done.
‘I’m Unit Three.’ She handed back the order form. ‘Shouldn’t you start at Unit One?’
‘The tenant in Unit One is away, and the real-estate agent isn’t available to open the place up to us until tomorrow. According to my records Unit Two is currently vacant so, again, we have to wait on the agent.’
Audra’s apartment. Or at least it had been.
‘If you have any enquiries I’ve been told to direct you to the real-estate agency. Do you mind if we start work now? It should only take us an hour...two at tops.’
‘Not at all.’ She had no intention of looking such a gift horse in the mouth. She unlocked her front door and gestured inside. ‘Be my guest.’
She sat in the courtyard with a pot of tea while Monty dozed in the patchy spring sunlight. On impulse she pulled out her phone and punched in the number Rico had given her.
‘D’Angelo,’ a voice barked without preamble, and for some reason she found herself having to fight back a smile.
‘Hello, Rico, it’s Neen here.’
‘Is everything okay?’
‘Yes, thank you.’
It was a long time since anyone had made her feel so cared for.
Her hand tightened about the phone. Wanting to be looked after, taken care of, loved, was what had got her into this trouble in the first place.
‘I...um...I just wanted to thank you. I don’t know how you managed it at such short notice, but the security company is here already.’
He didn’t say anything and her scalp started to prickle with self-consciousness.
‘Rico?’ The self-consciousness turned into something more sinister. If this was one of Chris’s tricks... ‘I...if you didn’t organise for a new screen door and security system for me, you’d better let me know right now.’
She’d have to ring the agency to check this was all aboveboard.
Which was what she should’ve done in the first place! What on earth had prompted her to ring Rico? Because he’d made her feel cared for? Her throat burned. Hadn’t she learned her lesson?
‘The real-estate agent in charge of your block of units owes me a favour. I decided to call it in.’
She sagged.
‘I’m afraid it’ll mean a slight increase in your rent.’
She didn’t mind that in the least. ‘Well...’ She swallowed. ‘It was kind of you. I just...I wanted to thank you.’
‘I’m just protecting my investment. Did you get a chance to read through the contract?’
She sensed his efforts to distance himself and it made her frown. Not that she’d expected yesterday’s confidences to have made them bosom buddies or anything, but she’d developed friendships with all her other employers. She didn’t know why Rico should be any different.
But he was.
She recalled the dark fire in his eyes, the way his hands had clenched yesterday when he’d said he would make a difference. She suppressed a shiver.
‘I did read over the contract. I made an amendment.’
‘Which was?’
‘I’m not signing a two-year contract, Rico. I thought I’d made that clear. I changed it to twelve months.’
He didn’t say anything.
‘An oversight, no doubt.’
She wondered if he sensed her eye roll, because he suddenly chuckled and the sound filled her with warmth. ‘Believe it or not, it was an oversight. Even though I would like you to reconsider.’
And just like that she believed him. After all, she had an entire security company tramping through her house at this very moment to prove the man’s honour.
‘It’s just once I make a decision I like to get the ball rolling as soon as I can. I forgot to have that line changed.’
She reached out to trace the pattern on her teacup. ‘Why does this project mean so much to you?’ Why was this man so driven?
‘As soon as the caf'e is up and running and I have the figures to prove its success, I can start canvassing for funds for additional caf'es in other parts of the city.’
‘You want to run a chain of charity caf'es?’
He blew out a breath. ‘Why not?’