âAnyway, you were slow, and I wasnât. Finders keepers.â
âRules of salvage,â she said, struggling for calm. âYou were in my space.â
âThe way I see it, you were in mine. Better luck next time.â
âTate, honey.â From the deck of the Adventure, Marla Beaumont waved her hands and called out. âLunch is ready. Invite your friend and come aboard.â
âDonât mind if I do.â In a few powerful strokes, he was at the stern of the Adventure. The sword hit the deck with a clatter, his flippers followed.
Cursing the poor beginning to what had promised to be a wonderful summer, Tate headed in. Ignoring his gallantly offered hand, she hauled herself in just as her father and the other diver broke the surface.
âNice meeting you.â He dragged a hand through his dripping hair and smiled charmingly at Marla. âMatthew Lassiter.â
âMarla Beaumont. Welcome aboard.â Tateâs mother beamed at Matthew from under the wide brim of her flowered sun hat. She was a striking woman, with porcelain skin and a willowy frame beneath loose and flowing shirt and slacks. She tipped down her dark glasses in greeting.
âI see youâve met my daughter, Tate, and my husband, Ray.â
âIn a manner of speaking.â Matthew unhooked his weight belt, set it and his mask aside. âNice rig here.â
âOh yes, thank you.â Marla looked proudly around the deck. She wasnât a fan of housework, but there was nothing she liked better than keeping the Adventure spit and polished. âAnd thatâs your boat there.â She gestured off the bow. âThe Sea Devil. â
Tate snorted at the name. It was certainly apt, she thought, for the man, and the boat. Unlike the Adventure, the Sea Devil didnât gleam. The old fishing boat badly needed painting. At a distance, it looked like little more than a tub floating on the brilliant platter of the sea.
âNothing fancy,â Matthew was saying, âbut she runs.â He walked over to offer a hand to the other divers.
âGood eye, boy.â Buck Lassiter slapped Matthew on the back. âThis boy was born with the knack,â he said to Ray in a voice as rough as broken glass, then belatedly held out a hand. âBuck Lassiter, my nephew, Matthew.â
Ignoring the introductions making their way around the deck, Tate stowed her equipment, then tugged out of her wet suit. While the others admired the sword, she ducked into the deckhouse and cut through to her cabin.
It wasnât anything unusual, she supposed as she found an oversized T-shirt. Her parents were always making friends with strangers, inviting them onboard, fixing them meals. Her father had simply never developed the wary and suspicious manner of a veteran treasure hunter. Instead her parents shimmered with Southern hospitality.
Normally she found the trait endearing. She only wished they would be a little choosy.
She heard her father offer cheerful congratulations to Matthew on his find, and gritted her teeth.
Damn it, sheâd seen it first.
Sulking, Matthew decided as he offered the sword to Ray for examination. A peculiarly female trait. And there was no doubt the little redhead was female. Her copper-toned hair might be cut short as a boyâs, but sheâd certainly filled out that excuse for a bikini just fine.
Pretty enough, too, he mused. Her face might have been all angles, with cheekbones sharp enough to slice a manâs exploring finger, but she had big, delicious green eyes. Eyes, he recalled, that had shot prickly little darts at him in the water, and out.
That only made annoying her more interesting.
Since they were going to be diving in the same pool for a while, he might as well enjoy himself.
He was sitting cross-legged on the forward sundeck when Tate came back out. She gave him a quick glance, having nearly talked herself out of the sulks. His skin was bronzed,