The Billionaire Of Coral Bay. Nikki Logan

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The Billionaire Of Coral Bay - Nikki Logan Mills & Boon Cherish

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censure made her flush. ‘I’m just wondering what filter to put on the tour. Are you a journalist? A scientist? You don’t seem like a tourist. So that only leaves Corporate.’

      He glanced out at the horizon again, taking some of the intensity from their conversation. ‘Let’s just say I have a keen interest in the land. And the fringing reef.’

      That wasn’t much to go on. But those ramrod shoulders told her it was all she was going to get.

      ‘Well, then, I guess we should start at the southernmost tip of the Marine Park,’ she said, ‘and work our way north. Can you swim?’

      One of his eyebrows lifted. Just the one, as if her question wasn’t worth the effort of a second. ‘Captain of the swim team.’

      Of course he had been.

      Ordinarily she would have pushed her sunglasses up onto her head too, to meet a client’s gaze, to start the arduous climb from stranger to acquaintance. But there was a sardonic heat coming off Richard Grundy’s otherwise cool eyes and it shimmered such a curious tone—like five sounds all at once, harmonising with each other, being five different things at once. It wiggled in under her synaesthesia and tingled there, but she wasn’t about to expose herself too fully to his music until she had a better handle on the man. And so her own sunglasses stayed put.

      ‘If you want to hear the reef you’ll need to get out onto it.’

      ‘Hear it?’ The eyebrow lift was back. ‘Is it particularly noisy?’

      She smiled. She’d yet to meet anyone else who could perceive the coral’s voice but she had to assume that however normal people experienced it, it was as rich and beautiful as the way she did.

      ‘You’ll understand when you get there. Your vehicle or mine?’

      But he didn’t laugh—he didn’t even smile—and her flimsy joke fell as flat as she inexplicably felt robbed of the opportunity to see his lips crack the straight line they’d maintained since she got up here.

      ‘Yours, I think,’ he said.

      ‘Let’s go, then.’ She fell into professional mode, making up for a lot of lost time. ‘I’ll tell you about Nancy’s Point as we walk. It’s named for Nancy Dawson...’

      * * *

      Rich was pretty sure he knew all there was to know about Nancy Dawson—after all, stories of his great-grandmother had been part of his upbringing. But the tales as they were told to him didn’t focus on Nancy’s great love for the land and visionary sustainability measures, as the guide’s did, they were designed to showcase her endurance and fortitude against adversity. Those were the values his father had wanted to foster in his son and heir. The land—except for the profit it might make for WestCorp—was secondary. Barely even that.

      But there was no way to head off the lithe young woman’s spiel without confessing who his family was. And he wasn’t about to discuss his private business with a stranger on two minutes’ acquaintance.

      ‘For one hundred and fifty years the Dawsons have been the leaseholders of all the land as far as you can see to the horizon,’ she said, turning to put the ocean behind her and looking east. ‘You could drive two hours inland and still be on Wardoo Station.’

      ‘Big,’ he grunted. Because anyone else would say that. Truth was, he knew exactly how big Wardoo was—to the square kilometre—and he knew how much each of those ten thousand square kilometres yielded. And how much each one cost to operate.

      That was kind of his thing.

      Rich cast his eyes out to the reef break. Mila apparently knew enough history to speak about his family, but not enough to recognise his surname for what it was. Great-Grandma Dawson had married Wardoo’s leading hand, Jack Grundy, but kept the family name since it was such an established and respected name in the region. The world might have known Jack and Nancy’s offspring as Dawsons, but the law knew them as Grundys.

      ‘Nancy’s descendants still run it today. Well, their minions do...’

      That drew his gaze back. ‘Minions?’

      ‘The family is based in the city now. We don’t see them.’

      Wow. There was a whole world of judgement in that simple sentence.

      ‘Running a business remotely is pretty standard procedure these days,’ he pointed out.

      In his world everything was run at a distance. In a state this big it was both an operational necessity and a survival imperative. If you got attached to any business—or any of the people in it—you couldn’t do what he sometimes had to do. Restructure them. Sell them. Close them.

      She surveyed all around them and murmured, ‘If this was my land I would never ever leave it.’

      It was tempting to take offence at her casual judgement of his family—was this how she spoke of the Dawsons to any passing stranger?—but he’d managed too many teams and too many board meetings with voices far more objectionable than hers to let himself be that reactive. Besides, given that his ‘family’ consisted of exactly one—if you didn’t count a bunch of headstones and some distant cousins in Europe—he really had little cause for complaint.

      ‘You were born here?’ he asked instead.

      ‘And raised.’

      ‘How long have your family lived in the area?’

      ‘All my life—’

      That had to be...what...? All of two decades?

      ‘And thirty thousand years before that.’

      He adjusted his assessment of her killer tan. That bronze-brown hue wasn’t only about working outdoors. ‘You’re Bayungu?’

      She shot him a look and he realised that he risked outing himself with his too familiar knowledge of Coral Bay’s first people. That could reasonably lead to questions about why he’d taken the time to educate himself about the traditional uses of this area. Same reason he was here finding out about the environmental aspects of the region.

      He wanted to know exactly what he was up against. Where the speed humps were going to arise.

      ‘My mother’s family,’ she corrected softly.

      Either she didn’t understand how genetics worked or Mila didn’t identify as indigenous despite her roots.

      ‘But not only Bayungu? Nakano, I think you said?’

      ‘My grandfather was Japanese. On Dad’s side.’

      He remembered reading that in the feasibility study on this whole coast: how it was a cultural melting pot thanks to the exploding pearling trade.

      ‘That explains the bone structure,’ he said, tracing his gaze across her face.

      She flushed and seemed to say the first thing that came to her. ‘His wife’s family was from Dublin, just to complicate things.’

      Curious that

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