by Nelson, Cara
Brea smirked. “Yes, he came up to my room.” Brandy raised an eyebrow, and Brea laughed. “Nothing like that. He came up to make sure that we can be friends. He wants to make sure that I understand that he and I are over and that he is moving on with his life.” Brea laughed again, this time more heartily. “He came in just as I was throwing out all of the photos of us, and all he saw was a fistful of photos.”
“Wait, throwing them out?” Her sister looked to her incredulously. “Are you actually getting over him? Finally?”
Brea blushed, thinking of George. How could she even think of Eric in any way after having been with George? There was no comparison. “No, I’m not getting over him. I am over him.” Brandy beamed. “I’d better get this to Mom before she comes hunting me and her glass down, and then I’ll come back to help.”
Brandy narrowed her eyes at her sister. “Mom’s already in a bad enough mood with you being late. Don’t give her more reason to give us hell by you ignoring her.”
Brea rolled her eyes but knew that Brandy was right. Christmas was for appeasing their mother, not for enjoying it as a family. “Just give her ten minutes and then get your ass in here. This kitchen is chaos, and I’m going to need help in digging things out.”
She sat off to the side, her mother to her left, Eric and his girlfriend to her right. She felt awkward, out of place, and unwelcome as the three continued to talk as if she weren’t there. She slumped in the chair, her dad’s soft snores lulling her to sleep as well. Her mother’s voice droned, and Stephanie cackled in reply. Was her mother that funny? No, she thought not, but Eric and Stephanie were eating up every word.
She could take no more, and standing rapidly before she could lose her nerve, addressed her mother and the woman’s inconsideration when it came to her daughter. “That’s it! What are they even doing here?”
She did all she could to not scream at Mrs. Nelson as she pointed towards Eric and Stephanie, who both looked as shocked by her outburst as she felt. “Eric and I are no longer together, and we never will be again. He is not a part of this family and never was, so why is he in my house, spending Christmas with my family?”
Her mother feigned surprise, exaggerating her shock and concern for Brea. “I thought you would be happy to see Eric and meet his bride-to-be? I don’t understand why you’re so upset.”
Mrs. Nelson had a knack for acting and making those around her remorseful for something they couldn’t fully understand, but this time, the first time she could recall, Brea wasn’t buying. Her mother could see it almost instantly.
“It’s not Eric’s fault that he isn’t a part of the family, and you’re not going to come in here pointing fingers like it is. If you had only done what was expected you, had you only been the woman that your father and I raised you to be, that Eric needed you to be, this wouldn’t have happened.” She turned to Stephanie, suddenly pleasant. “No offense to you, darling, because you are a doll. I only mean that had my daughter been half the woman you are, things might have gone much differently for her.” Stephanie smiled that beautiful but insincere grin.
Brea stood there incredulously as her mother attempted berating her. “We’ve not asked a lot out of you, but the one thing we did ask of you, you failed at, and look at what you’ve lost as a result.” Her mother shook her head. “Such a disappointment. You’ll never be anything other than…” her mother fluttered her hands in the air as she searched for the term, as if the mere thought of the word were a nuisance, “just a barista. You’ll forever be alone if you don’t get your priorities in order and stop being so stubborn! What man is going to want you when you’re so headstrong? Maybe you’ll learn a little something from Stephanie. Maybe you’ll learn how to be a woman!”
Brea closed her eyes for a moment, hoping to drown out her mother’s voice with her own thoughts, only to be interrupted by a knock at the door. This time, the front door.
Mrs. Nelson didn’t budge, didn’t even stop talking long enough to acknowledge the door. Another knock. Brea grumbled as she pushed up from the comfort of the chair. It was Christmas, a day for family, and she was in no mood for the nosy neighbors’ uninvited visits. She glanced into the kitchen as she walked by and told Brandy that she’d be right back to help with the cookies and ham. Her parent’s massive entryway dwarfed her beneath an elaborate, overdone chandelier and a hulking double door, with milky glass window panes on either side.
The heavy door swung open gently, but Brea only stood in the open doorway, the cold air breathing in, circling around her and enveloping her into an icy hold. Snow drifted in at her feet, but she did not move. On the other side of the threshold of her family home stood the one man that, last night, she had never wanted to see, but today, was the only man she wanted to see.
“I’m sorry,” George smiled, “but my car broke down and I need to call someone. Do you mind if I use your phone?”
She grinned, her cheeks burning as she stepped into the winter air. She slung her arms around him and kissed him deeply. “Merry Christmas.”
END OF BOOK I
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Men of the Capital Series
The Billionaire’s Hotline (Excerpt Below!)
A Matter of Taste
The Doctor’s Damsel
Bareknuckle Boxing Brotherhood Series
Fight (Excerpt Below!)
The ProVokaTiv Rockband Series
Gauge
Excerpt from ‘The Billionaire’s Hotline’ Download Instantly Today!
“That’s right, Miss Hollingford, number nine on the list. Rebecca, actress, 27. Tonight at the Blake, say eight o’clock,” Jasper told his social secretary.
So far, the project had worked like a charm. Hot and cold running blondes at the touch of a button. Last night’s text had delivered a stunning lab assistant to his favorite sushi place in a barely-there bandage dress. She wouldn’t eat, swearing that there were bacteria in raw fish, so he didn’t even have to buy her dinner, just a dirty martini. Tonight he wanted someone light and fun. An actress sounded just right, although 27 was a little on the elderly end of the spectrum for his taste.
Jasper had had a productive day, finalizing the acquisition of two more promising competitors in the wind energy industry. He didn’t care much about green energy, but he liked to breathe and figured it was easier to make a profit off people who were healthy and generating income to buy his other products. It seemed a sound investment. Better than those e-cigarettes he’d passed up; although they were gaining popularity, he still thought they looked ridiculous. He hoped the actress didn’t smoke plastic cigarettes or anything else…he couldn’t stand the taste.
At eight, Jasper was sitting at the bar at the Blake in the same suit he’d worn to work. If it had been a date or an event, something where he had to worry about the impression he’d make, he would have gone home to change. As it was, he was able to work straight through until 7:45 and still make it to his rendezvous on time. He congratulated himself again on the sheer convenience of his planning…investing in a hotel with a lux bar close to the office, hiring a secretary and ersatz bagel boy to orchestrate his social life. It was good to be king, he mused complacently.
At 8:10, his actress had not arrived. He called Miss Hollingford with instructions to text the woman again. At 8:20, he demanded the number and texted her himself. There was no response, and certainly no delectable blonde on the menu at the Blake Bar. Exasperated, he texted again five minutes later. Didn’t she rea
lize his time was valuable? If she showed up by 8:30 and apologized, he’d still sleep with her, he decided magnanimously. If she showed up by 8:40 and was suitably gorgeous, he might even buy her a drink first, although to his mind she had already wasted the getting-to-know-you courtesy quarter hour with her appalling lateness. He knew he should give up and return to the office, but he was reluctant to admit that his system had failed. It was a matter of pride now. Even though he could be at the gym or signing off on a leveraged buyout. Irritated beyond the telling of it, Jasper texted again. It felt good to plague her with obsessive reminders. It was satisfying somehow. He didn’t even admit the possibility that she’d discarded the phone or forgotten to charge it.
At nine, a vagrant entered the bar, her cut-offs and tank top spattered with paint. Messy brown hair was coming out of a lopsided ponytail and her face was flushed. Perhaps she was mentally ill, Jasper thought idly. Security should come take care of this before the patrons were importuned with some sort of scene. Even his house cleaner dressed better than that. What business she thought she had in an upscale hotel bar was beyond him. He punched in another text angrily. Seconds later, an absurdly loud message beep sounded…from the phone that vagrant creature held in her hand. She brandished it with disgust and marched directly up to him.
The mentally-ill street person addressed billionaire CEO Jasper Cates.
“Who the HELL do you think you are?” She hissed. People had ceased to talk and were avidly listening to the confrontation. Jasper let his derisive gaze sweep her from head to toe languorously.
“That depends entirely on whom exactly you think I am.”
“You’ve been texting this phone incessantly for the last hour and a half now what do you want?”
“There appears to be some mistake. I was trying to reach Rebecca,” he said smoothly, pleased that he remembered the actress’s name and wondering why in God’s name the half-witted bagel boy would have given a phone to this harpy. She wasn’t blonde, she wasn’t happy, and she clearly wasn’t overfond of Crossfit, judging by the softness of her shape. She wasn’t even clean.
“Becca is my sister,” she said. “You need to leave her alone. She’s happy. She’s with someone now, and she doesn’t need you fucking things up for her with your stalking.”
“Did you just say fucking in the Blake Bar?” Amusement quirked the corner of his sardonic mouth.
“Yes, I fucking did,” she spat. “Now stop texting and calling this number. It’s not Becca’s phone anymore, and I’m certainly not interested in you.”
“I assure you I won’t be trying to contact anyone at that number again. Clearly Rebecca’s life is going another direction now. I cherish the effort and grace required to inform me of that fact when a simple text message would have been adequate.”
“You were texting her obsessively. It was—alarming. I wanted to make sure you backed off.” A number of sophisticated diners were gaping at her, and her courage withered. “I know how I must look. I was painting my apartment when you started texting and…I guess I didn’t think it through.”
“I’ll take the phone back.”
“No. I need it. She gave it to me because she was through with it. It was hers. Were you the guy who gave it to her?”
“No but the phone belongs to my company.”
“Then how did Becca—never mind. My sister gave it to me, and I’m keeping it.”
“Listen, Miss—“
“Largent. Hannah Largent,” she said, hands on her hips, fury at defending her phone burning away her fit of embarrassment.
“Miss Largent, your sister was given the phone for a reason which is no longer viable. Return it to me.”
“Forget it.” She turned around and stalked out of the bar.
Without hesitation, Jasper left his drink and took off after her. The idea of this harpy keeping one of his phones when it could be redistributed to a woman who met his criteria was offensive. That was his thirty dollar disposable phone, and he’d be damned if some stupid actress was going to get away with giving it to her frumpy sister. He caught up to her. Maybe she wasn’t as out-of-shape as he had thought, considering her speed. Grabbing her by the arm, he stopped her. She whipped her head around, her ponytail flicking him across the face.
“Seriously? You’re going to follow me, because all the text stalking didn’t make you seem psycho enough?” She scoffed.
For the first time, he noticed that her voice was gorgeous, low and husky. It made him think of a dark cabaret, a pair of red lips closing around a white cigarette, the tip of a pink tongue darting out to form a perfect pale smoke ring drifting up to the rafters. Her voice was like velvet, and he had a fierce urge to cover her mouth with his.
“My phone,” he gasped.
“No, that’s MY phone. Were you going to give it to some other girl? Wait—that’s it, isn’t it? You gave the phone to Becca or had someone else do it so you could call her to hook up. How many phones have you given out?”
“Twenty-nine.” He smirked.
“That is repulsive. Who does that?”
“I’m a busy man, Miss Lawson.”
Hannah leaned closer for emphasis. “Largent. But if you’re as successful as you act, you already knew that and just said my name wrong to put me in my place.”
Now Jasper knew she sounded like Nina Simone and smelled like cinnamon gum. He found it hard to regulate his breathing, much less keep his hands to himself.
“Excuse me?” His eyebrows shot up.
“You dropped your voice to make it sound confidential, but your eyes cut to the left. You’re trying to manage me with a falsehood.”
“Are you a criminal profiler or something?”
“Actually, I do voiceovers and some sound effects editing. I work both sides of the sound board. I know how to manipulate intonation linguistics. It’s part of my job. You, Mr. Cates, have a Machiavellian inflection.”
“Is that a clinical term?”
“No. I just made it up, but it suits you, because you’ll say anything to achieve your objective. You belittle me, lie to me, and harass my sister.”
“I merely tendered an invitation which she no longer wishes to accept. Return my phone so it can be recirculated.”
“I refuse to abet such a blatantly patriarchal attempt at human trafficking.” Her low voice grew haughty, but no less irresistible for it.
“Human trafficking entails financial gain or compensation. I read Half the Sky, so don’t try to give me a vocabulary lesson and mischaracterize my dating methodology as an atrocity against women and children.”
“Prostitution, then.”
“Again, by definition, a financial transaction. I have never had to pay for or even coerce sexual favors from anyone.”
“You’re awfully insecure for such an arrogant man. I’d like to add you to my repertoire. May I record you?”
Jasper bristled at the implication and set his jaw. “No,” he barked.
“I’ll give you back the phone in three days—that’s when I’ll get my real phone back—if you’ll let me record you being arrogant and manipulative. I’d like to study your intonation and see if I can imitate it for work purposes. It’s more complex than I first thought,” she offered, dropping her voice so he had to step closer.
“No one is studying my voice. I’m not a test subject. I’m a CEO.”
“Congratulations. You must be very proud,” Hannah said slyly. “You’re not getting the phone tonight, and you’re obviously not going to get laid unless you mobilize another disposable tart. So I’ll buy you a cup of coffee if you’ll keep talking to me.”
“I don’t drink coffee,” he spat reflexively.
He was tempted to go to a diner with her, to keep talking to her, to see if he could win her over and perhaps to convince her to put that luscious mouth on him. She had full lips, bordering on a pout, but a tight, cross expression ruined their sensuality. Jasper thought that, given a chance, he could do away with her look of profound dissatisfac
tion.
“Okay. I’ll have coffee and you can have water or something healthy like that. Unless you’re afraid of tap water, too.”
“Why would I be afraid of tap water?” he said sourly.
“You acted like I asked you to tip back a mug of battery acid when I mentioned coffee. I assume it’s got additives or carcinogens or some crap like that and you’re afraid to drink it. Live a little.”
“I was trying to, but you took her phone,” he said with a rakish grin. “What kind of coffee do you drink? Isn’t tea better for your vocal chords?”
“Yes, Mom. I like coffee. The kind with lots of caffeine and sugar, and whipped cream if I can get it.” She laughed at him.
He stuffed his hands in his pockets, equally irritated and aroused by her. This, he supposed, was banter…that snappy nonsense from black and white films that Clare used to go on about. He recalled her perpetual whining that he was a terrible communicator and never engaged with her. Why had he thought of her now? She had been utterly unlike this street urchin with the sexy voice and the fierce opinions. Banter was easy with Hannah Largent because she got a rise out of him.
“I’ll buy you a cup of coffee, all the whipped cream you want, and you can listen to me speak while I convince you to relinquish the phone to its rightful owner.” Jasper dialed up the charm, knowing full well that his smile was warm and showing just the hint of a dimple in his right cheek. Women loved that dimple.
“Sure. I’ll drink free coffee, but you’re not getting the phone. Let’s say it’s in the name of linguistics research.”
Excerpt from ‘The Billionaire’s Hotline’ Download Instantly Today!
Excerpt From Fight (Bareknuckle Boxing Brotherhood)
Zoe watched, biting her lip. This was the sort of pugilistic display she had always ridiculed—all that testosterone and all that macho posing. Now it was strangely thrilling, the sweat glistening off taut muscles, the tension and conflict, the broad power of his shoulders and back, the wet look of the blue-green ink of his tattoo. She shrugged out of her jean jacket, feeling suddenly overheated just watching him. She tried to hold the camera steady but all she could think of was climbing between the ropes and running her hands all over his bare chest and arms, licking the sweat from his neck and kissing his mouth. It was primitive and visceral, the sexual tang of battle coursing through her as she watched him fight.