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Blurb
Forensic
accountant Annie Griffin has always suspected she's a bit jinxed, so
when she finds herself 35, single, temporarily homeless, and pregnant
on a technicality by a gigolo, her fears are confirmed.
Adrenaline
junkie and professional stuntman Max Bowen needs a house-sitter to
watch after his pets while he's out of town. Annie needs a place to
stay. Standard quid pro quo. No biggie. She can handle that, whatever
hellhounds he owns. Until Max, the most sought-after bachelor in the
county, comes back ahead of schedule and suddenly she's roommates
with a 27-year old sex God who turns out to be so much more than what
she expected.
Max
might have had the attention span of a humming bird on crack when it
comes to women, but that was before Annie. Her quirkiness and sweet
contradictions soon captivate him, not that she's inclined to give
him the time of the day. With his reputation preceding him, he knows
the odds are badly stacked against him, but he will do his best to
prove her that he's what she needs, stuck-up socialite grandmothers,
doomsday preppers, groupies, pregnancy hormones, and repentant
biological dads be damned.
Excerpt
Chapter One
“You
know, if the idea behind a midnight wedding was to discourage people
from attending, I think we can fairly say it hasn’t worked,”
Annie Griffin heard from behind her.
Shit,
busted.
She
whirled around so fast, she not only got a dizzy spell but almost
fell from the hammock she was sitting on. Thank God someone with a
very strong grip reached out and steadied her.
“Wow,
careful there.”
As
she regained her balance, Annie lifted her gaze to find Max Bowen,
the groom’s younger brother, smirking at her. She brought her hand
to her thumping heart. “Jeez, you scared me, Max.”
“Sorry,”
he said, his light eyes sparkling with amusement. “What are you
doing here?”
They
were in the unlit part of the backyard, as far away from the wedding
reception as possible without actually leaving the Bowens’
property.
“I’m
in hiding. Go away.” She shooed him, peeking around to make sure no
one had followed him. “You always have a string of girls attached
to your hip. Soon they’re all going to be gathered here giggling,
drawing attention, and I don’t want to be found.”
Her
duties as bridesmaid were done. Tate and James were already on their
way to their honeymoon; she could disappear in good conscience.
“Hey,”
he complained, sounding offended. “I may need to go into hiding for
a while too.”
She
gave him a disbelieving look. “You? Why?”
Max
loosened his tie and, unfastening the first button of his shirt, sat
beside her on the hammock. “Why? Because my ass has been pinched so
many times tonight, I swear I can barely feel it anymore.”
Annie
stifled a giggle. “Your ass is sore?”
“Like
you wouldn’t believe,” he said, breathing out slowly and running
his hand through his shoulder-length hair.
She
locked eyes with him, realizing too late he was smiling less than
three inches away from her face. The sight of him all but knocked the
wind out of her. Max in faded old jeans and a tee was breathtaking.
In a tuxedo? A total heart-stopper.
She
wasn’t too fond of blond men, but Max was in a league all his own.
With model-perfect masculine features, wicked blue-green eyes, and
his usual weeklong golden stubble, Max was sexy as hell. Add to his
Hollywood looks his laid-back disposition, kick-ass body, and roguish
smile, and, well, it was almost impossible not to drool in his
presence. A fact the charming devil knew very well and played to his
full advantage.
Annie
wasn’t sure how, but she managed to break eye contact. “I think
the senior contingent from Eternal Sun Resort might be the ones
primarily responsible for your ass condition.” She got it that both
Mr. Bowen and Tate’s mom lived down there—were neighbors, in
fact—but they should never have told the other residents about the
wedding. The Bowen brothers were popular enough in the greater Boston
area. No need to bring reinforcements from the South.
“Probably.”
Max pondered for a second and then grinned at her. “I should just
count my lucky stars those ladies are on the short side and can’t
reach my nipples, huh?”
Annie
burst into laughter. God, Max was such a clown. Although on that one
he might be right. “I hear they chartered a bus and made regular
stops along the way from Florida to Boston to pick up their
granddaughters and nieces.”
And
who could blame them? It was not every day that one of the Bowen
brothers tied the knot. The standard guest plus one had transformed
into guest plus ten. Not to mention the groom’s wedding party,
which alone was a sight to behold. All those hunks in tailored
tuxedos, standing tall and proud and yummy. Talk about eye candy. She
must have gotten a couple of extra cavities tonight just from
staring.
Max
smiled. “That would explain it. This is the first wedding I’ve
attended where there are more people crashing the damn event than
actual guests. James should’ve hired his own security company to
guard the place.”
He
should have, but judging by the way he’d looked, he’d been so
over the moon lately that he probably hadn’t thought about anything
besides putting his ring on Tate’s finger.
Max
seemed to be able to read her mind. “Yeah, I know my brother is in
married-man bliss, but there is Cole and me to think about. Well,
okay, just me now that Cole is engaged,” he conceded with a rueful
grin. “But seriously, with how fiercely protective Cole is of
Christy, and the mean right hook she’s developed, I’d say some
guests would have thanked him for the extra protection too.”
“Please.
Christy is a pussycat.” Nevertheless, Annie sure relished the
yellowish remnants of the black eye Rose was still sporting, which,
by the way, she’d totally deserved. A real pity no one had gotten
that on video. “And you, mister, don’t need protection from
women.”
If
anything, it was the other way around. He was the ultimate ladies’
man. He’d never hurt for female attention before, but now with
James married and Cole engaged, Max was getting so much action he was
gorging on it.
His
cheeky grin lit his face. “True, under normal circumstances, but
that back there is a bit overwhelming, even for me.”
Annie
was about to answer, when suddenly Max moved, making the hammock rock
like crazy. “What are you doing?” she squeaked, gripping the net
hard.
“Lying
down. I need to give my poor, abused ass a respite. Come on,” he
said, patting the spot near him. “Lie down with me. I don’t
bite.”
Oh,
she wouldn’t bet on that.
She
warily eyed the net. Forget the spiky high heels she was wearing and
the skintight bridesmaid’s dress, which was the shit but didn’t
allow for much movement. She’d spent three hours in the beauty
salon getting her unruly mop of hair pinned up and adorned with
dozens of tiny white flowers. “If my hairdo gets tangled in that, I
won’t be able to yank it free without looking like the modern
version of Medusa.”
“Here.”
He stretched out his arm and offered it as a pillow.
Annie
doubted this was a good idea, but she was so tired. “I’m not that
great with hammocks. I may roll us both over.”
“I’m
a professional stuntman. I think I can handle a hammock.”
Well,
he had a point there. She’d seen him on the big screen doing the
craziest things. Not to mention his fondness for extreme sports.
“I’ll
keep us steady,” he insisted. “Come on. You’re messing with the
center of gravity by sitting there.”
She
hesitated for just a second, then shrugged. “Fine. But I’m not
too coordinated. Don’t come crying to me when we find ourselves on
the grass, Mr. Hotshot Stuntman.” She slowly moved to lie beside
him.
It
was a two-person hammock, but he was so big and his shoulders were so
damn broad, he took more than his fair share of space. She rested her
head on his arm and tried to keep her body at a distance from his,
but he was much heavier and her whole left side ended up glued to his
right.
“Comfy?”
he asked.
Actually,
yes, but that was beside the point.
“Hmm…”
She
tried separating herself from him, but gravity and his massive body
worked against her. The more she moved away, the more the net bounced
her right back against Max.
“Not
that I’m complaining, but you’re rubbing against me. Anything you
want to tell me, Miss Griffin?” he asked, his words laced with
laughter.
This
was the closest she’d ever been to Max. She could feel every flex
of his muscles, his warm breath tickling her face. In spite of
herself, his low, deep rumble and hard body had all her girlie parts
tingling, which was so inappropriate on so many levels, she refused
to even think about it.
She
cleared her throat, trying to sound outraged. “Of course not.
Besides, you’re way too young for me.” Eight years younger. Not
to mention that at thirty-five, Annie was a good decade older than
the women Max usually dated.
“Sure,
you’re ancient. Now stop squirming, Ace. You’ll break your femur,
and at your age any fracture could be fatal.”
She
saw the smirk on his face and went to elbow him, but there was not
enough space between them to get a good jab in.
“Watch
it. You could easily dislocate a shoulder. I hear all you have to do
is sneeze, and there goes the hip.”
“Oh
please. Just shut up,” she said, unable to contain her laughter.
Annie
hadn’t had much contact with Max before. But since Tate and Holly
had started to hang out together, and Christy and Cole had become an
item, the Bowen brothers and their crew had ceased to be a bunch of
gorgeous guys she admired from afar and had become permanent fixtures
in her life. It was hard to get used to such an overabundance of
panty creamers, but she was coping. With the occasional panic attack,
but she was coping.
Chuckling
himself, he pinned her by his side and turned his gaze to the sky.
“Settle down and look up, Ace.”
Bossy
guy, she thought, but she found herself obliging him. “Wow,” she
whispered as she took in the view.
“Everything
looks better from a hammock, doesn’t it?”
It
sure did. “I’m going to take one to the Friday-night outdoor
movie instead of sitting on those wooden chairs. The Arnie marathon
they’re running won’t be better, but at least the hammock will
improve my viewing experience.”
“I
hear they’re preparing a Mel Gibson marathon for next year.”
“That’s
marginally better.”
His
low voice rumbled in the night. “How do you figure that?”
“More
rom-coms, less commando crap. Plus, I could stand to see his
milky-white ass again in Braveheart.”
She
felt him turn to her and shake his head.
Max
lowered a foot to the ground and kicked, gently rocking the hammock.
They lay there in silence for a long while, enjoying the view. She
should have been more freaked about being there with Max Bowen, but
the truth of the matter was she didn’t have the energy to get
herself worked up.
It
had been a very hectic day. The wedding had been beautiful, and
everything had gone according to plan—more or less—but it had
been taxing. For a while she’d felt dizzy and out of breath from
the excitement and the place being packed. And then there had been
the cake. Annie loved cake, even risqué ones, but she must have
eaten the poisoned piece intended for Tate—or Christy—because,
boy, the little sucker had repeated on her. Now though, away from the
crowd, her gaze on the black sky, gently rocking, she felt totally
relaxed and at ease.
“The
wedding was beautiful,” she said.
“Aunt
Maggie and Tate’s mom really thought of everything.”
“Except
for the electrified fence around the yard.”
Max
chuckled. “Yes, except for that. I could have done without the
impromptu conga line during the reception too.”
“Come
on, Max, you rocked the conga line.”
It
had been one of the highlights of the night, second only to seeing
Tate all but run down the aisle and kiss the living daylights out of
James before the priest had gotten a word in, that amazing green
dragon tattoo swirling on the small of her totally exposed back. Ah,
and the dance of the best man and the maid of honor. There had been
so much tension rolling off Jack and Elle, it was palpable.
“Did
you see Elle’s face when the bouquet hit her on the head?” Annie
asked.
Max
nodded. “Epic. I hope the photographer got it. That picture is so
going to the wall of fame in Rosita’s.”
Elle
hadn’t looked happy the bouquet had defied physics, changed
trajectory in midair, and landed on her head while she’d been
standing beside her date—Kai, a gorgeous Japanese American full of
tattoos. Jack hadn’t looked much happier either. It wasn’t clear
if his displeasure had to do with Kai or the bouquet. Both, probably.
Not that Jack himself could talk, considering the exuberant blonde
he’d had perched on his arm.
“So,
why are you in hiding?” Max asked, turning his captivating gaze on
her and disrupting all her thoughts. God, the guy was stunning. And
this close, there was all the olfactory and tactile data to deal
with. Even in his relaxed position, Max oozed masculinity and
testosterone. His smell, a mixture of aftershave, clean sweat, and a
hint of tobacco from the cigar James had given him, was so male it
gave her goose bumps. She couldn’t explain it, but to her, Max
smelled like summer and sunshine. Even now, in the middle of the
night.
She
sighed and turned her face up to the sky. “I’ve been in the
dating arena long enough to know that when your date starts talking
about himself in the third person, it’s time to hide.”
The
hammock shook with his muffled laughter. His hard body too.
“Not
to mention the more he drinks, the more arms he grows. And the more
his eyes bulge every time he sees a pair of boobs. It’s bad enough
that he’s spent the last two hours talking to my nipples, but
ogling other women’s goodies on top of that? Gross.”
Steven
was a coworker from her office. She’d gone out with him once this
past month. The first date hadn’t turned out too horribly, so she’d
given it a second try. Bad, bad idea.
He
tsked. “Moron. Doesn’t he know your goodies are the best?”
She
felt her face flame. Then she realized what he was probably referring
to. “You’re talking about the candy basket from the fund-raiser,
right?” A couple of weeks ago, for the annual town fund-raising
dinner, her candy shop had donated a basket of gourmet candy, which
Max had bid on and won.
“Those
goodies too.”
God,
he was such a shameless flirt. Gorgeous, charming, easygoing. Pity
when it came to women, he had the attention span of a hummingbird on
crack. Which was irrelevant, really. Not only was he totally out of
her league, but there was the age difference to contend with. Eight
years might not seem like much, but in mind-sets, they were light
years apart. Annie was ready to settle and marry, and Max was…
Well, Max was most definitely not. He wasn’t playing the field; he
owned the damned field.
“Behave,”
she admonished him.
“I
am, Ace. I am,” he said with a chuckle. “I’ve been meaning to
tell you those chocolate things were fantastic.”
“You
liked them?”
He
nodded. “Don’t misunderstand me; traditional candy is great, but
this new shit you’re bringing…mouthwatering.”
Annie
smiled, pleased as all hell. She’d inherited the little candy shop
in Alden five years ago, when her mom remarried and moved to Ohio.
Annie already had an office job in Boston, but she hadn’t wanted to
close the place down. So she’d hired a girl to run it during the
week, and Annie took care of Saturdays and the odd afternoons when
the girl couldn’t.
The
shop had barely been turning a profit. With the extra salary to foot,
Annie had decided to upgrade the whole concept. Along with jelly
beans and candy canes, she went for a more sophisticated line,
sporting gourmet chocolates and truffles from Brussels, strawberries
with champagne and white-chocolate frosting, and all sorts of
products for special occasions.
“Remember
to come ready to tweet.”
He
winked at her. “Don’t worry. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, the
whole shebang.”
“You
have all of those?”
“Actually,
no, but I’ll sign up. How did you think of the whole concept?”
“Honestly?
I didn’t. Christy did.”
One
day, brainstorming while chatting with Christy about how to reach
more customers, her friend had come up with the idea of using
Twitter. The shop Sweets had become Sweets and Tweets, and clients
got a discount if they tweeted on the spot about the goodies they
were buying. Word got out about the new products, and in no time they
had people coming from Boston to get their sugar fixes or to buy
treats for special dates. This past Valentine’s Day had been crazy.
The line had gone all the way to the street and around the corner.
Max
smiled. “My future sister-in-law is a charming geek.”
“That
she is.”
Annie
and Christy had met in college and had kept in contact ever since. A
bit over six months ago, Christy had taken a sabbatical from her job
as a software engineer and moved temporarily from LA to Alden to get
away from her ex-fiancé. Now she was engaged to Cole Bowen and ran
Alden’s library. Funny how things changed.
They
swung in comfortable silence for a while longer.
“So,
I have to ask,” he said after a long pause. “How often do you end
up in hiding during your dates?”
She
snorted. “You wouldn’t believe me if I told you. I’d be hiding
in the bathroom right now if I could be sure that the Women Only sign
would stop that self-absorbed pompous ass from entering.”
Annie
was an active dater—an optimist. Yeah, the world was full of frogs,
but there were princes out there. She just had to persevere until she
found hers; it was a matter of probabilities, pure and simple. Easier
said than done. A romantic at heart, she’d always kept faith that
everyone got a happily ever after, but with the luck she’d had
lately and all the frogs she’d had to deal with, she’d begun to
suspect “everyone” just didn’t include her.
Max
barked out a laugh. “Self-absorbed pompous ass?”
Annie
nodded. “Aka Steven.”
“You’re
dating the wrong guys.”
Didn’t
she know it.
Not
that Max would understand her predicament. The guy went through women
like most men went through potato chips, a handful at a time. He
charmed girls out of their panties as if it were an Olympic sport.
Nevertheless, Annie hadn’t heard a single complaint from the female
population. Far from it.
“What
about the stud gala? Did you end up in hiding there too?”
Annie
stilled. “How did you know about the gala?”
“You
kidding me? I heard Cole grumbling about you guys buying the gala
invitation for Christy. Then I had to listen Tate complain about not
getting one. And then James growling and threatening Elle with bodily
harm if she dared to buy one for Tate.”
She
cleared her throat. “That wasn’t a date. But, no, I didn’t end
up in hiding then.”
No,
sir, not at all.
“Guys,
what are you doing there?” a woman asked.
Annie
turned her head to see Christy and Cole approaching.
“His
ass was hurting and he needed to lie down,” Annie blurted, tensing.
Under somebody else’s scrutiny, lying there with Max felt suddenly
awkward.
Christy
looked confused. “What?”
“Never
mind,” Annie mumbled, clumsily hauling herself up and out of the
hammock. Max followed her much more gracefully, holding her when her
wobbly legs and the rocking made falling on her face a very distinct
possibility.
“How’s
it going?” Max asked his brother. “Is the party winding down
already?”
Cole
looked toward the reception and grimaced. “Nope,” he muttered.
Then he turned to Christy. “We’re eloping.”
She
smiled widely. “Sure, let’s elope to Vegas.”
Cole’s
expression tightened. “I’m not getting hitched by Elvis,” he
warned, wrapping his arm around her shoulders and bringing her front
to his side.
“Who
said anything about Elvis? I was thinking more along the lines of
Captain Kirk.”
“So
not happening.”
Christy,
bless her heart, ignored him and smiled even wider. “Or Spock. We
could book the Star
Trek
package, marry with a Vulcan and a Klingon as witnesses. And wire the
chapel so that our friends could follow the wedding through the
Internet. Wouldn’t that be a blast?”
He
kissed her hard, then whispered against her lips, “I love you,
baby, but no fucking way.” If his expression was anything to go by,
it was a good thing Cole loved Christy to pieces, because he sure as
hell wasn’t a man to be led by his dick, much less into a Star
Trek
wedding.
“Elope
all you want, but I’m organizing your bachelor party. Imagine all I
could do with Vegas as the backdrop,” Max said, to which Cole
grimaced even more strongly.
“Here
you are,” Annie heard someone say.
Shit.
Steven, aka Pompous Ass. Her stomach roiled and realization dawned.
Oh God, the spell of sickness she’d experienced during the
reception? Apparently it had nothing to do with the crowded yard or
the cake. She’d reached a milestone—her dates were physically
making her sick. Way to go.
Max
came closer and whispered, “Is this the guy?”
She
nodded and turned to Steven, who was obnoxiously grinning.
“Ready
to dance with the king of the night, darling?”
He
was now close enough that his sugary smell reached her. Nausea rose
in her belly. Trying not to cringe, she took a step forward, frantic
for an excuse.
Suddenly,
someone tugged her hand from behind. “Sorry, man,” Max
apologized. “The prettiest girl in this wedding owes me a couple of
dances, and I’m ready to collect.”
Max
twirled her and wound her in, winking. “Let’s give him a show,”
he whispered. Before she could react, Max wrapped one hand around her
neck, the other around her waist. Exaggeratedly bending her backward,
he placed his lips over hers.
She
hadn’t regained her breath or her bearings when he pulled her up
for another spin.
Oh
God, too much movement.
“I’m
not feeling good,” she managed to get out. Then she leaned over and
threw up all over Max’s shoes.
*
* * *
“Okay,
spit it out, Annie,” Holly prompted, tapping at the table. “I’m
the dispatcher for the sheriff’s department. Whatever it is, I’m
sure I’ve heard worse. Although, if memory serves, Ben switching
teams on you was a DEFCON3 emergency. I truly have no clue what
possible planetary disaster DEFCON1 could refer to.”
Annie
glanced around, making sure they were alone in the terrace. Then,
trying not to hyperventilate, Annie uttered those two tiny words, the
ones that had her freaked out of her ever-loving mind.
Holly,
Christy, and Sophie gaped at her, totally shocked. Thank God they’d
been sitting; otherwise her friends’ behinds would have had very
close encounters with the floor.
“Definitely
DEFCON1,” Christy mumbled and Sophie assented.
“Pregnant?
What do you mean pregnant?” Holly asked, sounding stupefied.
“Pregnant,”
Annie choked out. “As in knocked up.”
“How?
When? Who?” Then, before Annie could answer, not that she was too
eager to answer anyway, Holly continued, “Please don’t tell me
it’s Steven’s.”
At
least there was that: a positive side of this whole mess she hadn’t
thought of. “Eww. You nuts? I didn’t have sex with Steven.”
Her
friends let out a collective sigh of relief. “Thank God,” Holly
muttered.
Annie
had been about to chide them for even thinking she’d had sex with
Steven after just two dates, but she saw the irony in her predicament
and decided to bite her tongue.
“If
it isn’t his, then…?” Christy asked, motioning with her hand
for Annie to go on.
Annie
cleared her throat. “Remember the StudsRus.com gala a while back?”
she said with a grimace. “The nice Italian escort I met there?
Luigi?”
Complete
silence.
Annie
had attended the yearly gala in Christy’s place. The most
prestigious escort agency in Boston had hosted it a month ago at the
Ritz Carlton downtown. The girls had managed to buy an invitation for
Christy’s birthday, after her vow to get professionally laid, but
once Cole had heard about it, he’d put a damper to the whole plan.
So they had drawn straws, and surprise, surprise, Annie had won.
“You’re
shitting us,” Sophie said.
Annie
shook her head. No, she wasn’t shitting them. She wished she were,
but she wasn’t.
It
had been a great night. Magical, with all the candlelight, the
unending flow of expensive champagne, and the great company. That it
was a masquerade ball had also added an extra layer of magic and
privacy that had been exhilarating.
Apparently
StudsRus.com’s escorts were highly sought after. They traveled all
over the country accompanying clients, some of them very powerful
people, to high-profile events. They were not only gorgeous; they
were extremely well educated and charming. One of the escorts she’d
met that night was a dark-haired, handsome man by the name of Luigi.
One thing led to another, and she most definitely had not ended up
hiding in the bathroom.
Holly
cursed. “What about the whole stash of condoms I put in your purse?
Didn’t you think of using them?”
“I
used condoms; I swear I did.”
“How
exactly did you use them, sweetheart?”
“What
do you mean, how did I use them? How does anyone use condoms? Are
there so many different ways of using them?” Annie asked, out of
breath, her tone of voice rising. She was freaking out. Big-time. But
all in all, she thought she was entitled to. “I certainly didn’t
put them on my head as new-age hats.”
“Did
it break?”
She
shook her head. If it had, she would have gotten the morning-after
pill, and she wouldn’t currently be about to pass out.
“Are
you sure it’s not a false alarm?” Sophie asked, trying to calm
her down.
“No
false alarm. Five peed-on sticks and two blood tests confirm it. I’m
pregnant up to my eyeballs,” Annie said as she, very ineffectively,
fanned herself with a napkin. Damn hot flashes. Before she found out
about the pregnancy, she’d been having so many of them, she’d
even considered going to the doctor to make sure she hadn’t entered
some sort of freaky early menopause. Wouldn’t that have been a
laugh.
“How
did this happen?” Holly asked.
Sophie
waved at her. “The usual way?”
“Not
helping, sweetie.” Holly chastised Sophie with a look and then
turned to Annie. “If you used condoms, how did you get pregnant?”
And
here was where it got embarrassing. “It seems there’s an
infinitesimal chance of getting knocked up if you start rolling the
condom on, realize it’s inside out, and then turn it the right way.
Drops of precum get onto the outside of the condom, and voilà , if
the semen is of quality and has great mobility, you’re in deep
shit.” Annie looked at them, fidgeting. “I was a bit nervous, and
there wasn’t too much light…”
She
should have left the logistical details to the pro.
All
the head shaking she’d done when women in her office got pregnant
out of carelessness, and look at her: knocked up on a technicality.
Sophie
whistled. “Wow, some super-duper power sperm those studs have,
huh?”
“Tell
me about it,” Annie muttered.
“Could
it be someone else’s?” Christy asked.
“It’s
either Luigi’s or an immaculate conception.”
The
good thing about getting laid so seldom was that she could pinpoint
the conception date with 100 percent accuracy, which meant that if
her baby was as anal as she was, he or she should be born in the
early hours of March thirty-first.
Holly
looked at her, worried. “I hate to say this, honey, and I know
these guys are the best of the best, but did you get checked for
diseases?”
“Yeah,
no STDs.” That was what she’d done first once she’d found out
about her pregnancy. And hadn’t that been fun, explaining to
Alden’s only doctor, the same one who had treated her all her life,
why she needed testing for STDs right after he told her she was
pregnant. “All I got from the superstud is a baby.”
“At
least you had a valid excuse for throwing up on Max the other night,”
Christy said.
Annie
cringed at the memory. Talk about making an ass out of herself. The
most sought-after bachelor in the whole state was being sweet and
offering her a way out so she wouldn’t have to dance with Steven,
and what had she done in exchange? She’d puked her brains out all
over his shoes, messing his pants too. Well, on the flip side, the
second she’d started throwing up, her oh-so-attentive date had all
but run in the opposite direction.
Max,
on the other hand, had been very nice and understanding. He’d even
joked that if he’d been saddled with a date like Steven, he
would’ve been puking too.
“Does
Luigi know about any of this?”
“Nope.
And I never got a last name, so I don’t know how to contact him.”
Or even if she wanted to.
Annie
had been dazzled by Luigi, who had been so not what she’d expected.
He wasn’t a young, buff stud with more muscles than brains. No, he
was in his mid-to-late thirties, sophisticated, elegant, and a great
conversationalist. She wasn’t a knockout, but she was pretty
enough. And so far her body was holding its own against gravity and
time, if one could ignore the expansionist tendencies of her ass.
Still, Luigi favoring her company had kind of blown her mind. Between
that, the alcohol, and the privacy the masks offered, she’d just
let go. In the morning, though, she’d panicked and, much to her
shame, run out on the guy before he even woke up. How the hell was
she supposed to face the proverbial morning after when she had slept
with a professional escort in his spare time? At least she thought it
had been in his spare time. She didn’t even dare consider he’d
been working and she’d stiffed him of his fee. That was just too
much.
“It
seems Italian escorts are in fashion. StudsRus.com has eight Luigis
on staff. I’m going to have to ask them for pictures.”
If
the conversation at the doctor’s had been fun, she shuddered to
think about the one with the stud-agency receptionist.
She
might never find Luigi again, and she couldn’t say she felt
particularly sorry about it. After all, she didn’t know the guy.
But a man had the right to know he was a father. And although she
didn’t need a husband, the thought of raising a kid all by herself
sucker punched her. Money was not an issue; she had a good job, the
shop was doing well, and she still had the untouched trust fund her
paternal grandparents had created for her. They hadn’t trusted her
flighty father, and thank God for that, because the man was already
on his fifth bimbo wife, who was bleeding him dry like three of her
predecessors.
So
financially she was more than covered, but there were other things to
consider. Some mornings it took her forever to decide whether she
wanted to have cornflakes or honey puffs—how the hell was she going
to choose a school for the kid? He or she would be old enough for
junior high by the time Annie had made up her mind.
“You
know, I somehow envisioned embracing motherhood differently. Not at
thirty-five, without a partner, and knocked up by a gigolo who might
or might not be named Luigi.”
After
all, maybe Luigi was just his stage name.
“It
beats the hell out of a sperm bank, which is what I can see in my
future,” Holly muttered.
They
were silent for a while. Then Annie sighed. “I’m so screwed,
guys. I’m a forensic accountant. What do I know about kids?”
“You
own a candy store. I’d say you’re already ahead,” Christy
offered.
Well,
there was that.
“I
should have never gotten up on that flower pot after you,” Annie
said to Christy. “You got the good stuff. I got…backlash.”
Annie covered her face with her hands. “This is so unfair. You and
Cole are the ones humping like rabbits all the time. Me? It was just
once. One little screw. Why me? The universe hates me.”
She
should have suspected there was some mega cosmic catch to it when
she’d won that gala invitation. She never won anything. Ever. On
the contrary. She was that jinxed.
Holly
interrupted her mental rant. “Wait a second. What do you mean, only
once? Wasn’t he, you know, up for a rematch?”
“It
was good, don’t misunderstand me, but let’s just put it this way:
when an overpriced European escort isn’t working, he starts snoring
after the deed.”
“Are
you sure he was a member of StudsRus.com and not some nutcase
impersonating a stud, like in True
Lies?”
Sophie asked.
Oh
crap, she hadn’t thought of that possibility. Annie panicked for a
second, then shook her head. “No, can’t be. He knew everyone
there.”
“True
Lies?”
Holly repeated.
“You
know, the waiter in that Arnie movie, the one who got chicks by
impersonating a spy,” Sophie explained.
Christy
frowned. “A waiter? Wasn’t he a car salesman? I—”
“People,
people. Concentrate,” Holly interrupted, out of patience. “I told
you to quit with the outdoor movies.” She turned to Annie. “Are
you going to keep it?”
Annie
looked at her friends. “Forget the fact I’m thirty-five and my
clock is ticking. What are the chances of getting pregnant like this?
One in a frigging billion. This baby hasn’t been born yet, and it’s
already a damn superhero. Of course I’m keeping it.”
Bowen Series Reading Order
More
than Meets the Ink (Bowen, #1)
Amazon
US: http://amzn.to/1BHLGvQ
Amazon
UK: http://amzn.to/1AddDA2
Barnes
& Noble: http://bit.ly/1DjeSLD
iTunes:
http://bit.ly/1BLgSg5
Kobo:
http://bit.ly/1yVS0xC
Heavy
Issues (Bowen #2)
Amazon
US: http://amzn.to/1ymbIUo
Amazon
UK: http://amzn.to/1yZFYrN
Barnes
& Noble: http://bit.ly/1vn91q6
iTunes:
http://bit.ly/1tN4oEo
Kobo:
http://bit.ly/1DjiFbW
Inked
Ever After (Bowen, #2.5)
Amazon
US: http://amzn.to/1yVIYkq
Amazon
UK: http://amzn.to/1AddNYq
Barnes
& Noble: http://bit.ly/1DshXJJ
iTunes:
http://bit.ly/1HB27mj
Kobo:
http://bit.ly/16duB52
To
The Max (Bowen, #3)
Releasing
2/10/2015
About
the Author
After
a colorful array of jobs all over Europe ranging from translator to
chocolatier to travel agent to sushi chef to flight dispatcher, Elle
Aycart is certain of one thing and one thing only: aside from writing
romances, she has abso-frigging-lutely no clue what she wants to do
when she grows up. Not that it stops her from trying all sorts of
crazy stuff.
While
she is probably now thinking of a new profession, her head never
stops churning new plots for her romances. She lives currently in
Barcelona, Spain, with her husband and two daughters, although who
knows, in no time she could be living at the Arctic Circle in
Finland, breeding reindeer.
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