Vote Then Read: Volume II

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Vote Then Read: Volume II Page 238

by Lauren Blakely


  Nate’s eyes shone in the low light. “When I saw you in that conference room, all flushed and looking at me like I was the devil, you were the sexiest thing I’d ever seen. I figured I was going straight to hell thinking the things I was sitting across from you.” He slid a hand down my side, and it settled at my waist like it was made to be there. “You completely spelled me.”

  I frowned, trying to make sense of his words. “I’m not a very good speller. I was the first one out in the fourth-grade spelling bee.”

  He grinned. “I’m so fucking in love with you, Ava Cameron.”

  “I’m even more fucking in love with you, Nate Townsend.”

  “Sounds like a lot of fucking,” he teased.

  I raised my eyebrows. “You said it, Suit, not me.”

  That night we closed the bar after two, following three rounds of shots and some epic dancing. We poured Kirsten and others from the magazine into cabs and got me, Lex, Nate, and Jordan into another.

  Jordan stumbled to the couch and face-planted onto it. She was down for the count. Lex vanished into her room while Nate followed me into mine.

  He’d let his apartment go so he needed to find a new one. Fortunately, he had a lead on one in our building. But for this week he was living with us.

  Thanks to some research Nate had started while he was still in Minneapolis, he’d landed a job with Ty doing class-action lawsuits against big firms. He was starting Monday.

  I pulled the door quietly behind us, sidestepping the suitcase he’d left there earlier in the day. Then I turned back to see Nate looking around in fascination. Nearly all of the nights we’d found time to spend together, we’d slept at his place.

  His hands were shoved in the pockets of his jeans, his pressed blue shirt open at the collar. “I’ve never really looked in here. It’s such a girl’s room,” he said, turning in a slow circle.

  He walked around. Picked up a snow globe off the shelf. Shook it before setting it down again. Collected a few pencils, which were scattered on every surface, and set them in the half-empty vase that doubled as a pencil holder. Then he glanced over sheepishly like he realized what he was doing. “Can’t help it.”

  It didn’t bother me that he wanted to contain my mess, as long as he didn’t expect me to. “It’s OK.”

  Nate zeroed in on something over the bed.

  Shit.

  A second later he plucked the check off my bulletin board. “What’s this?”

  “Oh God!” My eyes bugged out as I crossed to him and jumped on his back in a tiny drunk woman’s best attempt at a football tackle.

  “Whoa!” He laughed as I fell off the side.

  I tried to swipe the check out of his hands, but he pulled it away, far enough I could see it but not take it. I re-read my handwriting that said “Pretty Boy Townsend.” “That’s you,” I told him solemnly.

  “You calling me pretty, Cameron?” he murmured.

  “You have some very attractive angles,” I declared. “This check was supposed to help me stop thinking about you. I might’ve had the teensiest bit of a hard time doing it.” I held my index finger and thumb a quarter inch apart. So he knew just how teensy we were talking about.

  Nate took the check and deliberately ripped it in two. “You don’t owe me anything. Even though I want more from you now than I ever did.”

  My heart did a somersault.

  Or maybe it was my stomach, post-alcohol.

  Either way I swooned.

  “I want you more than I ever did too.”

  “I’m a hard guy to stay away from.” A cocky grin crossed his face.

  I shook my head. “No! I mean yes. But it’s not that Nate that makes me crazy. Cocky Nate I can handle.” He nodded in agreement, pulling me toward him. “God, Nate. I didn’t mean that I handle your cock. Though I do. And I really like to.”

  His eyes were hot and I could feel him hard against me, but I needed to make him understand.

  “It was the other Nate that got to me. The night you wouldn’t let me sit on the floor in the hall, even though I was being a brat. The way you looked at me when you begged me to stay at your parents. How you helped me with Travesty when I didn’t ask for it, because you knew I needed it. It was who you were deep down.”

  He kissed me. It was deep and a little sweet and a lot hungry. “You mean that I’m a lawyer? Or a Townsend?” he murmured.

  “I wish you weren’t,” I said earnestly. “A lawyer or a Townsend.”

  He chuckled, trying to keep his voice down for the sake of the others sleeping a wall away. “How’d I get so fucking lucky with you?”

  “You wanna get lucky?” I was a sure thing tonight.

  His eyes darkened. “Come here, kitten. There are a lot of things I want to do with you, but you’ll have to purr quietly.”

  Thank you for reading STRIPPED! I hope you enjoyed Ava and Nate’s story.

  Can true love survive when it’s stretched across a continent?

  Watch Lex and Dylan fight for their forever in SEALED!

  “Dylan somehow got even hotter. My only complaint? I want more. Now.”

  -Goodreads reviewer Sara

  “It. Melted. Me. I was a puddle of gooey feelings on the floor.”

  -Red Hot Ink

  One-click Sealed now!

  * * *

  Click here to sign up for my VIP list. You’ll receive exclusive content, news, and awesome things direct from me each month.

  Books by Piper Lawson

  RIVALS SERIES~

  (Annie + Tyler)

  Love Notes

  A Love Song for Liars

  A Love Song for Rebels

  A Love Song for Dreamers

  ~ WICKED SERIES ~

  (Jax + Haley)

  Good Girl

  Bad Girl

  Wicked Girl

  Forever Wicked

  ~ MODERN ROMANCE SERIES ~

  Easy Love

  (Wes + Rena)

  Bad Love

  (Logan + Kendall)

  Twisted Love

  (Ben + Daisy)

  ~ PLAY SERIES ~

  PLAY

  (Max + Payton)

  NSFW

  (Avery + Charlie)

  RISE

  (Riley + Sam)

  ~ TRAVESTY SERIES ~

  Schooled

  (Dylan + Lex)

  Stripped

  (Nate + Ava)

  Sealed

  (Dylan + Lex novella)

  Styled

  (Ethan + Jordan)

  Satisfaction

  (Kent + Dahlia novella)

  Acknowledgments

  Developmental editing by Rachel Daven Skinner.

  Line and copy editing by Jenny Govier.

  A giant thank you to my readers, Sophie, Suzanne, and Jillian, for taking the time to tell me what made you swoon and what made you frown. Thank you to Sadie for helping a random author get some of her facts straight.

  INCRIMINATING EVIDENCE

  Copyright © 2015 Rachel Grant

  All rights reserved.

  Ebook ISBN:

  ISBN-13: 9780989301060

  ISBN-10: 0989301060

  Print ISBN:

  ISBN-13: 978-1508528562

  ISBN-10: 150852856X

  Copyediting by Linda Ingmanson

  This book is a work of fiction. References to real people, events, establishments, organizations, or locations are intended only to provide a sense of authenticity, and are used fictitiously. All other characters, and all incidents and dialogue, are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in encouraging piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

  About the Book

  From enemies to allies…

  When archaeologist Isabel Dawson
stumbles upon an unconscious man deep in the Alaskan wilderness, her survival skills are put to the test. She tends his wounds and drags him to shelter, only to discover she’s saved the life of Raptor CEO Alec Ravissant—the man who may have covered up her brother’s murder to save his senatorial campaign.

  With no memory of the assault that landed him five miles deep in the forest, Alec doesn’t know what to believe when he wakes in the clutches of the beautiful redhead who blames him for her brother’s death, but he quickly realizes he needs her help to uncover the truth about his lost hours.

  Isabel never imagined she’d find herself allied with Alec, and he’s the last man she ever expected to find attractive. But the former Army Ranger-turned-politician proves seductively charming, and he’s determined to win much more than her vote. When their quest for answers puts Isabel in the crosshairs, Alec must risk everything—his company, his campaign, and his life—to protect her.

  Dedication

  This one is for Jocelyn,

  Because she goes to Cross-Fit even though she hates it, has vehement opinions on which Doctor is the best Doctor, and knows how to answer the question, “What is the airspeed velocity of an unladen swallow?” Plus, she loves cats.

  1

  Tanana Valley State Forest, Alaska

  September

  It was a show tunes kind of afternoon, which was unusual for Isabel, but the words to the old songs came to her effortlessly as she walked downslope, deep in the Tanana Valley State Forest. Loud, full-voiced singing was necessary to warn bears she was working in this remote Alaskan wilderness and was intended to scare the creatures away. Given her off-key voice, singing pretty much guaranteed humans would stay away as well. A decided bonus.

  Although, now that she was on day four of the timber sale survey, she was ready to be done. She’d had enough solitude this week and wouldn’t mind meeting up with Nicole for a beer at the Tamarack Roadhouse. It was getting late, already after five p.m., and she was still a two-hour hike from her truck, but her extra-long lunch excursion put her behind schedule and she had one more parcel to inspect before she’d be done with the archaeological survey. It was worth the long day to avoid hiking all the way back here tomorrow.

  Most of this week’s survey soundtrack had been sad songs, but yesterday had been Vincent’s birthday, so her melancholy was understandable. Then suddenly, this afternoon Rodgers and Hammerstein popped into her head. She’d started with Oklahoma!, continued with The Sound of Music, and now she’d moved on to Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance, specifically, “I Am The Very Model Of A Modern Major-General.”

  She’d feel ridiculous singing at the top of her lungs, except after months of working in Alaska, she’d grown used to the need to make noise while conducting pedestrian survey. She’d found straight-up talking to herself disconcerting, so she’d taken to singing. Now it was second nature. She barely even heard her own voice as she studied the ground for telltale signs of prehistoric human activity.

  She paused, taking a deep breath, preparing for the next rapid verse, when she heard a branch crack, followed by a grunt.

  Not the grunt of an animal, but one of a human. In pain?

  She stopped. With her head cocked toward the wind, she listened. Again she heard a sound. Faint. Human. Definitely not happy.

  She scanned the woods. The underbrush was thick and mosquitoes vicious. Whenever she stopped walking, they swarmed. She fought the urge to wave her arms to shoo them away so she could listen.

  But all she heard was wind. Birds. Buzzing mosquitoes as the bloodsucking females feasted on her cheeks and arms. Normal forest sounds.

  She slapped away the biters. Maybe she’d heard a wolverine. Their grunts could easily be mistaken for human. Shaking off the foolish notion she’d cross paths with another person out here on the edge of the bush, she resumed walking and singing, but the happy beat was lost. Now she sang solely to ward off bears. She scanned the ground as she walked, looking for signs of prehistoric occupation or use. Her job was to find archaeological sites that would be destroyed by the coming timber harvest. That was what she was here for. She needed to focus on what paid the bills.

  The ground sloped at a grade above fifteen percent. Poor conditions for finding a site, because the ground was too steep for occupation. If there were a site in the vicinity, she’d find it at the base of the slope. She continued in that direction, determined to do a good job for her employer, the Alaska Department of Natural Resources.

  Branches snapped below her, to the right.

  She stopped signing midword.

  Any number of fauna could have triggered it. She hadn’t seen any scat, at least nothing fresh and therefore worrisome, for the last half mile. But still, she dropped a hand to the grip of her pistol while the other grabbed the bear spray. Of the two, the pistol was the least effective, but the noises had her on edge. While a pistol wasn’t good defense against a bear, it was excellent for dealing with humans.

  These woods, remote, abundant with resources, yet marginally accessible due to logging roads, could be a gateway to the bush for people on the run. Maybe she’d been foolish to brush off the noise as a wolverine.

  Another sound carried on the breeze, and she ducked behind a tree to listen and wait. In her gut, she knew she wasn’t about to face down a bear. She held the gun in front of her, pointed upward, clasped between both hands like a prayer. Her heart pounded, but she had no real understanding why. This just didn’t feel right.

  She couldn’t stay behind a tree gripping a gun forever and eased out from her feeble hiding spot. Slowly, silently, she crept down the hillside toward whatever—or whoever—had made the sounds.

  She spotted him immediately. Sunlight filtered between the leaves, highlighting the red splatter of blood that covered the man’s face. He lay still. Unconscious or dead?

  She’d heard of archaeologists finding bodies on survey before, but the accounts always had the earmark of urban myths—two people removed from the teller of the tale. She’d never met anyone who’d actually encountered a corpse themselves. She supposed she’d considered how scary such a find would be, but hadn’t really thought beyond that, because really, it just didn’t happen.

  It was like planning for a head-on collision. She’d been certain that sort of thing would never happen to her. Car accidents, kidnappings, tornados, and random bodies in the woods were all on the list of things that happened to other people.

  And yet here she was. Adrenaline flooded, frozen with shock, and facing a body in the deep, bear-infested woods.

  Her past speculation had been wrong. It wasn’t scary; it was utterly terrifying. Worse than facing down a bear, a pair of rattlesnakes, and a brown recluse all at the same time. Nature, she could handle. This wasn’t nature.

  This was murder.

  She glanced left and right. She would never hear anyone approaching over the roar of her racing pulse. She stepped toward the man, slowly. Gun out. Pointed at the body.

  As she neared, she caught the slightest rise of his chest. He was alive.

  Not murder, then. Attempted murder? Assault?

  His face was swollen. He’d taken several blows in addition to the gash on his temple that bled profusely. She dropped to her knees at his side. She had no choice but to holster the pistol to check his vital signs.

  His pulse was solid even though his breathing was shallow. It was likely a blessing that he was unconscious, because if he were awake she’d bet his head would hurt like a sonofabitch.

  What to do? Whoever had done this to him could return. But if she left him here, unconscious, vulnerable, he could die. No. Would die. There were too many scavengers and predators in the area to believe he could survive, bleeding, unconscious, and alone.

  But then, he could be the villain in this. Drug dealer. Poacher. Criminal on the run. This could be his just reward. She searched his pockets for a wallet with ID, but came up empty. His clothing didn’t argue for poacher. His clothing—business casua
l slacks and a blood-saturated button-down shirt—didn’t belong in these woods at all.

  She checked his mouth, looking for rotting teeth, signs of drug use, anything that would indicate she had something to fear from helping him. But his teeth’s perfect alignment could only be attributed to orthodontia. Bright white and nary a silver filling.

  She opened his shirt, searching for other causes for his blood-soaked clothing besides the gash on his temple. All she found was hard muscle. Whoever this man was, he took good care of himself.

  Given his build, in spite of his city clothes, he could be a Raptor operative who’d strayed from the compound. That thought had her considering leaving him. The bears and wolves could have him. Or whoever had done this to him could come back and finish the job.

  She shook her head, knowing her thoughts were unfair. Not all the operatives on the Raptor compound were rotten. She got along with most of them and was even drinking buddies with Nicole. But she knew without a doubt a few operatives were up to no good, and she had a serious problem with their boss. But then, it was hard to have kind feelings for the person who might have covered up her brother’s murder, especially when yesterday would have been that brother’s thirty-fourth birthday.

  She had to assume, given this guy’s condition, he could be one of the operatives involved in dirty deals. The fact that she didn’t recognize him only made him more suspicious.

 

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