Shopping for a CEO’s Honeymoon is free

When you imagine a billionaire’s honeymoon, you think of beaches. Private islands. Being swept away on a corporate jet, with Champagne and chocolate, lobster and caviar.

Not drills and saws and five-thousand gallon propane tanks.

Billionaire CEO Andrew bought Amanda his family’s estate as a wedding gift, and they’re ready to make it their own. I know it doesn’t sound romantic, but Andrew never does anything halfway, including romancing his new bride.

Read (or listen) to Shopping for a CEO’s Honeymoon and decide for yourself if Amanda got the honeymoon she deserves. I had so much fun writing this book, because “billionaire preppers” didn’t seem like they should be a “thing,” but oh, how they are.

 

 

He says we never had a proper honeymoon.

So, instead, he’s giving me… a prepper honeymoon?

Who knew billionaire preppers were a thing?

I guess I’m about to find out.

Julia Kent’s New York Times bestselling romantic comedy series continues in Shopping for a CEO’s Honeymoon as Andrew and Amanda settle in to married life… and so much more.

Available at Your Favorite Retailer

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Audiobook narrated by Sebastian York and Amy McFadden
Whispersync the audio for $7.49

Audible:  https://mybook.to/SFACeoHoney_Audible
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Amazon Audible:  https://mybook.to/SFACeoHoney_AznAudio

 

Shopping for a Turkey – Read Chapter One

Shopping for a Turkey features Scottish football player Hamish McCormick and Amy Jacoby as they navigate unusual cultural norms around American Thanksgiving, new traditions, and the undeniable attraction between these two characters who have been featured as minor players in Julia Kent’s New York Times bestselling Shopping series.

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

I’m sorry, Hamish, but the contract’s broken with Towelz2Teamz. No photo shoot, no ad campaign, no media appearances.”

My agent’s voice has a cringing tone, as if he thinks I’ll blow.

Might as well prove him right.

“WHAT? Why?” I scream into the useless glass screen of my mobile. I’m in a hotel room on the thirty-third floor in New York City after a three-day modeling shoot for a new kind of kinesiology tape, and check out is in forty minutes.

“Turns out the chief financial officer was embezzling from the company. Hid all the money in cryptocurrency. The Feds are sorting it out and T2T has decided to end all contracts.”

“Yer kidding!”

“Nope. I never kid about money. You know that. You get to keep the kill fee, though.”

“Kill fee?”

“They have to pay you if they cancel the contract.”

“I get paid not to work?”

Jody chuckles softly. “Basically.” His low voice drops a bit, as if I’m supposed to know this already.

“Then sign me up fer hundreds of these contracts and let ’em cancel!”

“It doesn’t work that way.”

“Dinna tell me it doesn’t. They’re canceling and I’m being paid.”

“It’s not the full amount of the contract.”

“How much is it?”

He quotes a pathetic figure. Still, it’s a figure I’ve done nothing to earn.

“That’s bloody awful! And I’m stuck now.”

“Stuck?”

“I’m here in New York. There’s some stupid American holiday coming up. I’m in the airline app on ma phone and there’s nothing. Nae seats on flights home.”

“No seats at all, or no cheap seats? I do not understand your obsession with flying coach. For a guy your size, it’s like human origami.”

“If it’s ma own money, I fly economy. And I even looked at business class. Three thousand dollars fer a seat! And that’s just New York to London! If I’m spending three thousand on a seat, it better be a good shag and cook me breakfast in the mornin’.”

“It’s Thanksgiving weekend. Today is Tuesday. Everyone flies the Wednesday before. Good luck finding a seat in coach.”

“I’m giving thanks to nae one fer this, Jody. Get me home.”

“I can’t. Book first class.”

“The damn towel company should arrange fer ma ticket home to Scotland.”

“They aren’t required to.”

“Damn it, Jody! I told ye–”

“Cool your jets, Hamish.”

“I have nae jets! That’s the problem! Get me on a jet across the pond to where I belong!”

“It’s an expression. Means calm down.”

“Why the hell would I be calm right now when I just got screwed?”

“Before you blow a gasket, I also have good news. There’s another contract.”

“Well, why in bloody hell didn’t ye lead wi’ that? Ye start with the good to soften the blow from the bad.”

“It’s not the greatest offer. I knew if I started with it, you’d reject it.”

“But now that I have nae options, ye think I’m desperate enough to say yes to anything?”

Silence. I get nothing but silence from Jody.

My long sigh betrays me. “Jesus, ye know me well.”

“Right. It’s in Boston.”

“Nooooooo! Why is all the work up there?”

“What’s wrong with Boston? I thought you had relatives there.”

“I do. They’re all a bit crazy, though. Rich buggers, the lot of them. The minute ma uncle James learns I’m in town, he’ll be using me as his wingman.”

“What’s wrong with that?”

“The guy’s older than Solomon and thinks he’s ma age.”

“Well, that’s the thing–the contract is because of James McCormick.”

“What?”

“He reached out. Said his company is looking for a spokesman for some of their properties. Boston is such a sports town.”

“Boston has nowt to do with football!”

Did ye know ye can hear a man choke on his coffee through a phone? Either that, or Jody swallowed his tie.

“Have you heard of a little football team called the Patriots, Hamish? Six-time Super Bowl champions?”

“That’s nae football. That’s a bunch of overpaid men in tights chasing a coohide turd.”

“Stephon Gilmore earned $13 million last year, plus bonuses, for chasing a turd in tights.”

“I’ll be damned. Maybe I’m playing the wrong kind of football. But mine isna misnamed.”

“Soccer, Hamish. It’s called soccer here.”

I make a sound.

It’s not a polite one.

“I know damned well what it’s called, but that doesna make it right. Just because ma gran called Da her baby doesna make him wee again.”

“The negative attitude doesn’t sell product, Hamish.”

“I’m never selling American football, Jody.”

“I’m not talking about endorsements. You’re the product you’re selling. Don’t forget that.”

“I thought I was selling ma football skills.”

We both laugh heartily at that.

“Speaking of your skills, there’s a nude photo shoot coming up for Peak Performance Magazine. You ready?”

“If by ready, ye mean have I plucked all the mutant escape hairs off ma body and done a bowel cleanse formulated with more precision than a chemical engineer uses at a pharmaceutical plant, then na.”

“No?”

“The shoot’s in two weeks. I’ll do a shred and cleanse before then.”

“Right. Makes sense. You’ll stuff yourself silly at Thanksgiving, anyhow.”

“Why?”

“Why?”

“Is there an echo, Jody?”

“People eat until they can’t fit in their pants, Hamish.”

“And then what? A post-prandial orgy?”

He sighs. “You really know nothing about our Thanksgiving?”

“Battle of Culloden.”

“Huh?”

“What do ye know about the Battle of Culloden?”

“Uh, nothing.”

“There ye go. Don’t be smug with me for no’ knowing about some day when ye all worship turkeys.”

“That’s not what Thanksgiving is about.”

“What, then?”

“It’s celebrating the settlement of the English colonies in America. We eat turkey, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes, squash–”

“Ye go into the woods and find a big bird and kill it?”

“We buy them at the grocery store.”

“That’s no’ as exciting.”

He laughs. “Nothing’s ever exciting enough for you, Hamish. You’re an adrenaline junkie.”

“That’s just another term for footballer.”

“Absolutely.” A buzz in the background makes it clear he has a text on his other phone. Jody carries three. I half expect two are for wives he’s hiding from each other, and the third is for work. “Gotta go.”

“Right.” I sigh. “Nae way home?”

“Charter a jet.”

“Canna afford it.”

“Then take the Boston contract.”

“Fine. But James McCormick uses me as eye candy.”

Another silence ensues.

“Eye candy?”

“Aye.”

“Eye or aye?”

“Yer saying the same word, Jody.”

“E-Y-E or A-Y-E candy?”

“E-Y-E. The other doesna make sense.”

“Neither one makes sense. How does he use you as eye candy?” He begins to choke. “Is it–are you and he..?”

“DEAR GOD, nae!” I thunder out. “He’s ma uncle! And he’s ancient!”

“Right. Of course.”

“Besides, he’s no’ ma type.”

“You have a type when it comes to men?”

“Ha. Na. I like women. James is fine for an uncle, but he’s a bit of a priggish braggart.”

“Then how is he using you as eye candy? I thought you said he turned you into his wingman.”

“Same thing. He brings me around fer attention. I do draw a crowd, ye know.”

“You sure do, and I hope that continues forever. Your looks are moving the money needle in the right direction.”

“But it all starts with ma footwork.”

He coughs discreetly. “Of course.”

“I think James brings me places so he gets attention.”

“What’s wrong with that?”

“Nae one likes to be used.”

“Use him back. Take the contract.”

A flash of Amy Jacoby, that sweet young firebrand who’s the sister of my cousin’s wife, makes Boston more appealing.

“Fine. I’ll sign. Canna be worse than anythin’ else I’ve done.”

“I forgot to mention the hot dog costume.” His voice makes it clear he’s joking, but for the right price, I’ll wear damn near anything.

“A sexy dog? I’m no’ into fetish work, Jody. Ye know, even I have a line.”

Jody’s heavy sigh comes through loud and clear. “Good luck getting back to Scotland, Hamish. I’ll let McCormick’s people know it’s a go.”

The call ends and I go back to the airline app, running a frustrated hand through my damp hair. Fresh out of the shower, I was packing up when Jody called. Now I have to check out, find something to do and a way to get to Boston, and be in limbo while Jody talks to James’ people.

My stomach growls.

And I need lunch, too.

What I need more is a personal assistant.

Auburn hair a few shades darker than mine, attached to a snappy mouth and a fine, lush body, comes to mind.

I wonder what she’s doing now?

It’s the call no one ever wants to receive.

You know the one.

Where your father tells you your mother broke her leg while they were having wild sex?

Right. That one.

I’m at the gym, thirty minutes into a stair machine that’s destroying my glutes, and it feels so good. Burning off nervous energy from turning in huge projects for my MBA has become a ritual.

Group projects are the worst. Half the people don’t listen, everyone wants to be a visionary but not an implementor, and the posturing for status makes my teeth ache.

Cursed by an intuitive sense for optimization, I am usually left being visionary, implementor, and coffee deliverer.

And I can’t help myself.

So here I am, at the gym at one in the afternoon, just after the lunch rush, working out my stress hormones, feeling them leak out of my pores in the form of sweat, when an innocent ring tone upends everything.

“Amy, honey, before you worry, your mother is just fine. We’re at Metro Hospital. She’s being taken into x-ray. They’re pretty sure her leg’s broken,” Dad explains, sounding weirdly contrite.

“Dad? What? What happened? Broken? How?”

Silence. Dead silence. Creeping into my senses, my dad’s hesitation makes my skin prickle.

“We had an unfortunate accident.”

“Car accident?”

“No.”

“You… tripped?”

“No.”

“DAD!!”

“We were in bed.”

“In bed? How did Mom break her leg in bed–ohhhhhhhh.”

“It’s–I don’t want to get into it. But I need your help.”

“Okay.”

“I need you to call Marco Aleandro.”

“The carpenter?”

“Yep.”

“Why?”

“There’s a problem with the ceiling beam in our bedroom.”

“Wait. Whew. So, the beam fell on Mom while you were in bed sleeping?”

“Not quite.”

I don’t like the direction this conversation is taking.

“The beam cracked in half and fell on you two while you were watching television in bed?”

“Um… not quite that, either. And I need you to remove the swing before Marco arrives. The ceiling hook might have caused the problem.”

“Swing? I thought you said you were in your bedroom. What does the swing set in the back yard have to do with this?”

His pause feels like falling over a cliff into a black hole.

There’s nothing you can do about it, it’s endless, and you’ll never be the same again, no matter where you end up.

“Um,” he says, lowering his voice. “It’s actually a sex swing.”

“DAD!”

“The beam might be cracked, which is an expensive repair, and when we heard the creaking sound, your mother panicked and began twisting. Then I lost my footing and Marie pivoted and–” His voice cracks a little. “I didn’t know a penis could bend like that and not snap clean off.”

“ENOUGH!”

“Sorry, honey. But you asked.”

They say couples start to take on each other’s attributes over time. Mom is definitely rubbing off on Dad.

In more ways than one.

Excuse me while I go puke.

“Amy? I’m really sorry.” Dad sounds mortified, his voice hoarse, the ends of words dropping off into sighs. “But before you call Marco, get the swing off the hook and put it in the closet. He’ll let me know how bad the damage is. Plus, he’s a sheetrock guy, and there’s definitely some cracking in the ceiling. How close are you to home?”

“I’m at the gym.” I grab my keys and water bottle off the machine I’m standing on. Thankfully, it’s quiet here, and no one’s super close to me. This is a conversation best kept private.

“At the gym? Good for you. You always were disciplined, kiddo.”

Apparently, I was at the gym. I see how my afternoon is going to go.

Cleaning up my parents’ messes.

“Great! Five minutes away. Could you do this… now?”

“Of course.” I’m already halfway across the cardio floor, headed toward the glass double doors.

“And set up the pull-out couch.”

“Huh?”

“Your mother broke her femur. She won’t be able to use stairs for weeks. We’ll have to create a makeshift bedroom for her in the living room.”

“Poor Mom.”

“Yeah,” Dad says. “And can you let Shannon and Carol know? Just leave out the sex swing part.”

“Oh, I promise. Last thing I want to do is talk about your sex life with my sisters.”

His chuckle makes my stomach hurt.

“No one likes to think about their parents like… that.”

“No one likes to be asked to move their parents’ sex swing off a hook because they broke the house frame, Dad. You owe me for some therapy bills.”

“Add it to our tab. I think we’re up to the year 2076 for your sessions.”

“Fifty-four years isn’t enough.”

A long pause comes next, stretching like emotional taffy, the hesitation clear even though I can’t see Dad.

Then I realize what he’s about to ask.

It’s a big ask.

“Um, any chance you could stay with us at the house?”

“I am staying at the house, Dad.”

“I mean, through the entire long holiday weekend? I know you have your place in Amherst, but I could use the help.”

“It’s okay, Dad. I’m here anyhow. No problem staying until Sunday.”

Mumbling comes through on the phone, then Dad’s rushed voice. “You’re a doll. Gotta go. Thanks for handling this, honey.”

I stare at the phone for a second and then open my texts, creating a new message between Shannon, Carol, and me.

How do you even begin to describe this?

The direct route is best.

Mom broke her leg while she and Dad were having kinky sex. They’re at the hospital, I type and send.

Instantly, three dots appear. And then:

Mum and Da haven’t had sex in years, ye silly fool. Quit joking, Shannon replies.

Or at least, I think it’s Shannon.

What? I type back, staring dumbly at the reply.

The prank isna even guid, she answers. Try better. Grease a guinea pig and put it under the sink where Mum keeps the cleaning supplies.

Mum? Da? Why is Shannon writing so weirdly?

This isn’t a joke! I type back. Mom broke her leg while she was hanging from a sex swing in their bedroom. I now know way too much about how Dad’s penis bends, too.

Three dots appear. Oh, goody. What’s next?

Now ye’ve gone too far. Da has nae todger and ye know it. Mum keeps it tucked nicely in her sewing box wi’ her escape-the-marriage money.

Shannon must be drunk. That’s literally the only explanation I have for this. Todger? Come on.

Or Declan is punking me. Except he’s not the type. That wouldn’t be an efficient use of his time.

A red wall of pure rage fills me as I pull up the contact info from the text stream and call her. I hate this phone, something Mom got on a mystery shop. The font is huge, and the screen only shows last name, first initial.

The ring stops as the call is picked up, and I shout before she can say a word, “Are you drunk? What are you babbling about? Mom actually broke her femur and you’re going on and on and–”

“Who the hell is this? C’mon, Darren. Ye can do better. Ye got an American girl tucked in that hovel of a bedroom of yers and ye’re using her to prank me? I’ll tell ye what, pet, dinna look under his bed. The socks are balled up fer a reason. They died of sheer exhaustion.”

“SHANNON?”

A pause.

“Ma name is Hamish McCormick. Not Shannon. Are ye with ma brother Darren?”

“This is Amy. How the hell are you on the phone with me, Hamish? How did you get Shannon’s phone?”

“Hello, Amy. What’re ye nattering on about? Ye called me.”

Ding!

I look at the screen. Text from Carol.

I knew it would happen eventually, but I thought it would be Dad who died during kinky stuff. Meet you at the hospital as soon as I can. BTW that’s not Shannon’s number.

“Hamish?” I squeak, cursing this stupid phone. How did I call him?

“Aye. And who’re ye again? Amy? Darren has a new American girlfriend named Amy?”

“I have no idea who Darren is. This is Amy Jacoby. Shannon’s sister. Declan’s sister-in-law.” It seems silly to explain myself to him. We were paired in my sister’s wedding, walked down the aisle together as bridesmaid and groomsman. Before the wedding, Hamish booty-called me at three a.m. to talk about “how to use my hands on you.”

So if I’m overexplaining myself, it’s a purely defensive posture intended to distract him from the fact that I’m the idiot who accidentally called him.

“Aye. I know who ye are. Caller ID, ye know?”

“Then why did you pretend you didn’t know who I was?”

“Because it was more fun that way.”

“That’s rude.”

“In fact, I was just thinking about ye, Amy.”

“Really? It’s not three a.m., Hamish. Your timing’s off.”

Silence, then a burst of deep laughter that makes me hotter than an hour on the stair machine.

“So ye do remember.”

“And why would you be thinking about me right now, Hamish?”

I slide behind the wheel and shove the key in the ignition, but stop myself from turning it. Driving while talking to an egotistical jerk who I’ve just accidentally told a very private detail about our family is only going to get me into an accident. I don’t need to add yet another way that Hamish McCormick infuriates me.

His long pause is driving me nuts.

And then he says, “Oh, nae reason. And now I see it’s fate.”

“Fate?”

“Ye texted me about yer poor Da’s willie. It’s fate that it was me, and nae some stranger that would embarrass him even more.”

“Embarrass him?”

“Nae man wants his daughter running around talking about his todger.”

“I didn’t do this by choice!”

“And I’m sorry about Marie. Broke her leg?” I feel his shudder through the phone. “That’s the kiss of death fer footie players like me.”

“Then don’t have kinky sex and you’ll be just fine.”

“I’d rather give up ma leg than give up the kinky good stuff.”

The leer in his voice isn’t as sickening as it should be. In fact, it’s…

Making me blush.

Hamish McCormick represents everything I cannot stand in a man. He’s full of himself. Cocky. He approaches life with a blithe attitude that takes nothing seriously except pleasure.

What kind of life is that?

“I must say, Amy, that I’m surprised ye still have ma number in yer contacts. That says something, nae?”

Through gritted teeth, I answer, “All it says is that we were in Shannon and Declan’s wedding together and I added it for emergencies.”

“Sure,” he says, drawing the word out. “But the wedding was years ago, and ye kept it?” A suggestive tone in his voice, flirty and light, makes my skin tingle. I don’t want to like him. I truly don’t.

But he has a point. Why didn’t I delete him?

“Amy?”

“What?”

“Yer beamin.”

“Beaming?”

“Ach, what’s the word ye use? Blushing?”

“How would you know?”

“I can feel yer heat through the phone.”

“Shut up!”

His laugh makes heat rise from every pore of my skin. Maybe he did feel it.

“Ye clearly miscalled me. Who’re ye trying to reach?”

I put the phone on speaker, searching contacts.

Aha! I’ve mistyped Shannon McCormick as Hannon, the missing S putting her next to Hamish McCormick. I never should have accepted a free phone from one of my mother’s mystery shops. A simple font problem and bam!–I’m on the phone with a talking testosterone syringe.

I quickly correct my error. Like all humans, I make mistakes.

Unlike most humans, I make them once, learn from them, and never, ever make the same mistake twice.

“I had Shannon in my contacts without the S. You’re next to her, alphabetically,” I explain.

“Ach. Good. Because when I thought it was ma younger brother texting about Da’s todger, I figured he went on a bender.”

“I noticed.”

“But if it’s ye talking about a boaby, that’s an entirely different matter.” Voice dropping low and rich at the end, Hamish’s innuendo ignites parts of me that have been in hiding for years.

Some of them, forever.

I have two options here: stammer or attack. I go for the latter.

“You are nothing but an uncontrolled impulse on two legs,” I snap back. “Do you think about anything other than sex and soccer?”

There’s a brief pause.

“It’s football.”

“No one is that shallow.”

A throaty laugh, rumbling with the lilting tones of his Scottish accent, makes it that much harder to resist him. “If ye mean do I think o’ naught but sex and football, I am justly accused.”

“You are ridiculously infuriating.”

“So much passion in ye fer me, Amy. I like that. I like it verra much.”

I can practically hear him wink.

“There’s more to life than sex and football!”

“Is there? I hadna noticed. Right now, ye’ve an abundance of both.”

“WHAT?”

“Yer parents’ sex life, and me, the footie player.”

“You? There’s no abundance of you in my life!”

“We could change that.”

“Oh, no. No, no, no. I’m not falling for your lines, mister. I know what you are.”

“What am I?”

“Dangerous.” The word’s out of my mouth before I can stop it.

Hamish’s laughter fills my ear as I end the call.

Heart slamming in my chest, I press the phone against my breast.

It rings. I answer.

“I will never, ever, EVER sleep with you, so don’t even try your flirty bullshit on me,” I snap into the phone.

“Uh, sweetie? It’s me,” my dad says meekly.

Oh, hell.

“I–sorry, Dad! I thought you were Hamish.”

“Hamish McCormick?”

“Do we know any other Hamishes?”

“No. But…”

“I don’t want to talk about it. How’s Mom?”

“She has a cast, a lot of pain pills, and she’s muttering something about using cornstarch instead of flour when you make the gravy.”

I inhale sharply. “That’s blasphemy. Are you sure she didn’t have a brain injury when she fell? Mom never uses cornstarch!”

“I know.” He lowers his voice. “I think the accident has altered her somehow.”

“Jason!” I hear through the phone. “Who’s that?”

“It’s Amy,” he answers. A shuffling sound makes it clear I’m being handed off.

“Hi, honey,” Mom says, voice dreamy and a little slurred. “Your dad and I made a boo boo.”

“Right.”

“Can you take care of Chuffy? He needs to pee.”

“Of course.”

“Your dad hurt my chuff when we were playing trapeze, like in The Greatest Showman. You know the really bendy woman in that movie? Turns out I’m not like her.”

“Mom. MOM! I have to go. Love you!”

Pressing End Call never felt so good.

Bzzz

On my way in two minutes! It’s Carol. She started a new group text, this time with Shannon’s actual number.

This sounds bad. Let me guess: sex swing? Shannon texts.

How did you know? I reply. Dad asked me to remove it before anyone sees it.

Carol made a bet with me six years ago that one of them would die via sex swing, she types back.

Who bet on death? I ask, sidetracked.

Carol sends a thumbs-up emoji. You owe me $100, Shannon, she adds.

Nope! They’re alive. We said death, not dismemberment or broken limbs.

Cheapskate. Amy, I’ll clean up the house if you go to the hospital with Shannon and handle the Mom interface.

I pause.

And pause.

And pause for so long, Carol finally texts: Hello?

Still trying to decide which is worse, I finally answer: Sure.

The screen erupts with GIFs I don’t want to even try to describe, but most of them involve sex swings.

Leave it to my sisters to find those.

And every single one of them makes me think of Hamish.

Damn it.

Get your copy to keep reading and look for Shopping for a Highlander, coming in January!

Ready to pull Hamish’s wishbone?

I’m deep into finishing the next Hamish and Amy book as well (Shopping for a Highlander, coming in January). We’re getting the books ready for narrators Shane East and Emma Wilder to record soon.

I’ve been cackling as I write Hamish and Amy’s “hate to love you” relationship. He’s a flirty hoot, she’s wound a wee bit too tight, and they’re perfect for each other.

Whether they realize it or not.

It’s my job to make them realize it, right? LOL.

Here’s a little sneak peek of what you can expect:

He’s been in his birthday suit on sports magazine covers. Done endorsements for regional breweries and energy bars. I know from Declan that he’s close to making it big.

He’s already big.

My eyes dart to his feet.

How big is he?

Heat fills me at the thought, a combination of self-loathing and desire. Which is nothing new for me when it comes to Hamish McCormick.

Why did he have to be here? Now? Of all times, when Mom has a broken leg, Declan’s brother Terry is filling in for her as yoga instructor, and we’re already in disarray? I’m finally finishing my MBA, working another co-op at a venture capital firm. My last one was disrupted by scandal after the high-profile associate gunning for partner turned out to be married to a massive conman. I think I might have gotten my new co-op just for my potential gossip supply.

But my life is smoothing out now. It took me eight years to earn my bachelor’s, but with Declan’s help, the MBA has been full time, which is so much easier. I’ve told him straight out I don’t want any favors, and I refuse to work for Grind It Fresh! Or Anterdec. No nepotism.

Though I’ll certainly network and accept help making connections.

I’m on the cusp of a new life, moving into adulthood at last. I finished a major project yesterday, excited for the Thanksgiving break. I was at the gym, fresh off submitting my group work to our professor, when Dad called about the –

Well. You know.

And now Mom and Dad broke her leg and half their bedroom, my sisters and I have to manage Thanksgiving dinner from scratch, and I can’t stop ogling Hamish’s backside.

That’s too much input.

“Let go of troubling thoughts,” Terry says in soothing, deep dulcet tones as we do triangle pose, our breathing syncing with slow movement. Hamish’s arms stretch out and down. He has muscles on top of muscles, with fine ginger hair all over his arms, darkening as it tapers to his wrists. When we all go into a partial squat, his hamstrings pop like cello strings under his skin, each tiny muscle and tendon in stark relief across a body I could watch forever.

Too bad he has the emotional maturity of a hedgehog.

And that might be giving him too much credit.

“Fine form,” Hamish whispers to Shannon, who blinks fast.

“Thanks. I’ve been doing yoga on my lunch breaks. Even fifteen minutes makes a difference.”

“Aye. People think it’s about doing long workouts but smaller amounts of time really do add up.”

Insane–they’re driving me insane. How can they just idly chat like that while every inch of my skin is on fire? Every breath turns into a proto-orgasm as I watch him stealthily.

Or maybe not stealthily enough. He turns around, catches me watching, and winks.

I hate this. I hate reacting to him like this. I hate that he knows he’s doing this to me, and he revels in it. I hate that he’s so smarmy and overconfident and…

Tantalizing.

I’m going to assume that when all the blood in my body rushes to the surface of my skin and between my legs, it means my IQ drops a bit; lack of oxygen to the brain is the only explanation I have for finding him so attractive. This is a purely physiological response, driven entirely by evolution.

This is not my fault.

He’s big and strong, and his physicality signals virility and protection. Biology is an amazing science, its processes optimized to drive us to reproduce.

My blushing, my throbbing, the zings running across my arms and legs–it’s just electrical impulses, a response shaped over hundreds of thousands of years to produce the right outcome: hot, sweaty, reproductive activity to repopulate the earth.

It’s really just that simple.

I don’t emotionally desire this guy. Not one little bit. My heart isn’t attracted to Hamish McCormick.

My eggs are.

Bad ova. Bad, bad ova.

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Eternally Complicated ~ Read Chapter One

 

Josie was not one to pray, but lately she had begun having whispered, fevered conversations with God.

With her legs up in the air and her husband’s baby paste inside her.

Please let me get pregnant. Please let me get pregnant. Please let me get pregnant.

♥♥♥

Laura turned her head away from the bathroom mirror, her eyes lasered on her smartphone, counting down the timer until she could look at the little plastic stick.

Please don’t let me be pregnant. Please don’t let me be pregnant. Please don’t let me be pregnant.

The timer dinged.

Laura looked.

Closed her eyes.

And had a whispered, fevered conversation with God, too.

♥♥♥

Eternally Complicated is the final (yes, for sure, really, no more books ever, I really mean it…) book in the long-running New York Times bestselling Her Billionaires saga. What started in 2012 as a short novella called Her First Billionaire has turned into an eight-year journey through the lives of Laura, Mike, Dylan, Laura’s best friend Josie and her love, Alex, and so many other characters (including Darla from the New York Times bestselling Random series).

As best friends Josie and Laura wrestle with very different reactions to their pregnancies, they find that one bond endures: friendship.

And with plenty of peppermint sundaes at Jeddy’s Diner, of course!

Available at your favorite retailer!

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READ CHAPTER ONE

Laura

Positive. It was positive.

Laura was positive it was positive because the word positive was spelled out in all caps.

Kinda hard to miss.

Red dye standing out over the white cotton strip in a long oval on a plastic stick that she dipped into her own pee three minutes ago said so.

Positive.

What a ridiculous word to describe a complicated situation. And a judgmental word, too.

Because maybe being pregnant wasn’t positive.

Maybe being pregnant wasn’t positive at all.

The sounds of a one of her children screaming in the back room bubbled up into the bathroom, where Laura sat on the toilet, the door carefully locked, the test in her hands. The wrapper for the test, the instructions, and the cardboard box were all neatly rolled up and stuffed into the bottom of the bathroom trash can, buried there under fresh toilet paper she’d pulled off the roll and wrapped into a bundle to toss on top.

“You stole it!” Aaron screamed in the distance.

“Aieeeeee!” screeched Adam, his twin brother, as Laura’s pulse pounded in her temples.

She knew. She’d known before she’d even peed in the cup and dipped the stick in the positive urine to get the positive test to be in this positively impossible situation.

She’d known being a week late wasn’t part of her menstrual cycle repertoire. A day late, maybe two, sure.

But otherwise, Laura wasn’t the type to have erratic cycles.

Stress didn’t change them. Medications didn’t change them. Even living with a group of women like she had in college hadn’t affected her cycle. If anything, she thought to herself as she stared dumbly at the word positive on the plastic stick of doom, the women around her in the dorm had synchronized their cycles to hers.

Not that she knew with any certainty. Her memory didn’t travel back that far for such mundane details. But when too many days had gone by and none of the typical premenstrual symptoms had emerged – no cravings for Ben & Jerry’s, no flashpoint temper at someone leaving the dishwasher door open – the dull thud of certainty had nestled somewhere between her navel and her pubic bone.

Like a small, polished rock, she carried it around for the twenty-four hours of willful denial she’d allowed herself before finally going to the drugstore and buying the test that she now held in her hands.

Jillian was eight. The twins were five. They’d had half a year of kindergarten, with a peaceful home during the day while all of the children were off at school being taught by people who weren’t them.

Her mind traced back the days to five weeks ago. It was a daytime tryst, the three of them, absorbing the luxury of a silent house.

No nannies, no screaming Adam and Aaron, no demands for apple slices and cheese cut a certain way.

No bored children’s cartoon bingeing.

No protests when the electronics were removed and crayons and paper replaced the power button and the touchscreen.

The three of them—Laura, Mike, and Dylan—had reveled in the silence as much as they had in the deep sanctuary of each other’s bodies. This had been their space again, their time, their choice.

They mattered again.

Frantic sex fit in between children’s schedules and demands had been the norm for eight years, but since the school year had started, all of the demands had been theirs and theirs alone.

She’d spent most of the day five weeks ago naked in bed with her men. When they weren’t using tongues and fingers and cocks to please each other, and when she wasn’t inviting them into her body in all of the ways that felt good and freeing, they’d indulged in a new television series, watching episode after episode of a ridiculous comedy until their sides split with laughter and their hearts filled with the kind of satiety that comes with being twinned with a body.

Bodies, in their case.

When a glance at the clock had reminded them that the school bus was coming soon, they’d showered together. It wasn’t sexual. The ritual cleansing had been a demarcation line, an acknowledgment of what they’d just done together and of what was about to unfold as the reality of the children that they had made poured into the silence.

And neutralized it.

The bridge between the nearly holy time of adults in carnality and intimately casual boundary-less-ness felt strange. A piece of Laura that day had snapped to attention as Jillian sloughed off her backpack, chattering about a girl’s birthday party coming in a week-and-a-half, and as Aaron came home yet again without socks.

Like Jillian’s backpack, Laura had sloughed off her identity as a sexual being, but what surprised her that day was how quickly she could go from the bedroom to the playroom.

Yet how woefully hard it was to go in the opposite direction.

 

Dylan

The damn drugstore bags were more see-through than Laura must have realized, he thought to himself as a prickly sensation made him stand tall, senses on alert.

He knew what was in that bag.

Dylan watched her walk through the kitchen in a daze, acknowledging no one, walking up the stairs to their bedroom with a worried look on her face. His eyes had flitted to the bag in her hand, the word Pregnancy on the side panel, opaque and startling at the same time.

His gut tightened.

His testicles pulled up, as if they were trying to choke him.

Why would Laura have pregnancy tests?

“Papa!” Aaron said, yanking hard on his hand, the one with the wedding ring Laura had put on his finger three-and-a-half years ago. “I want the green apple, not the red apple,” Aaron insisted.

Looking down, Dylan realized that he held a honey crisp in one hand with the knife in the other, ready to attend to the careful peeling.

One did not simply remove apple skin from an apple for a five year old; one peeled it with military precision, lest a single cell of red peel appear anywhere within fifty feet of the bare apple slice.

Puzzled, he looked at Aaron and said, “You don’t like Granny Smith apples.”

“Yes, I do!”

“No, you don’t.”

“Yes, I do.”

“No, you—”

Stopping himself, Dylan realized that it was a fool’s errand to get into an argument with anyone under the age of…well, fifty.

“Okay, buddy,” he said, grabbing a green apple and washing it. To his knowledge Laura had only ever been pregnant twice, once with Jillian and once with their twins.

Three times? a voice inside him wondered.

Hold on.

Josie.

Those must be for Laura’s best friend, Josie. Eight miscarriages and counting, Josie and her husband, Alex, had been trying forever.

Relief made his shoulders drop. He had an explanation.

It was Josie.

Maybe Laura was buying them so Alex wouldn’t see them? Hiding the evidence? Maybe it was a surprise?

Or… something.

He didn’t care why. Just as long as it wasn’t for Laura.

Three kids in three years was a blessing from his wife he could never appreciate enough, but three was also enough.

“I want a Granny Smith apple,” Jillian announced, prancing into the room wearing a tiara and Mike’s Patriots jersey, the one he wore when they made it to Gillette Stadium on their once-a-year pilgrimage to the football game. The sleeves flopped down to the ground, and the jersey came to the tip tops of Jillian’s ankle bones.

“Okay,” Dylan said automatically.

“But there’s only one, Papa. The one in your hand.”

He looked down, the thin sliver of green skin the only indicator that this was a Granny Smith apple. Five plump Honeycrisps the size of softballs sat in the wooden bowl on the kitchen counter.

“You can have a Honeycrisp,” he said.

“I don’t want a Honeycrisp,” Jillian sputtered. “I want a Granny Smith.”

“I want a Granny Smith,” said Aaron.

I want a fuckin’ beer.

Uh oh. Did he say that aloud?

The two kids kept fighting. Good. He hadn’t.

A glance at the clock told him that Laura had been upstairs for five minutes. If she was taking that pregnancy test, then she’d know by now.

But that was impossible. Because the test was for Josie, right? She must be buying them for Josie, being a good friend to her.

Carefully slicing the Granny Smith in half, he cored it and then handed each kid a half, reaching for a Honeycrisp.

“You each get half of each apple.”

“I don’t want half! Now it’s cut and it’s broken,” Aaron declared in an outraged tone, as if Dylan had chopped a dog they were fighting over clean in half.

“I’m the apple referee,” Dylan said in an increasingly aggravated tone that even he could hear with his own ears, “and I say you each get half.”

“That’s fair,” Jillian said, nodding sagely as she took a big chomping bite out of hers.

“But now it’s broken!” wailed the little boy, who had no real reason to complain other than the endless work of trying to figure out the world.

“I was gonna cut it into slices for you anyhow, Aaron,” Dylan said, hoping logic would rule the day.

His son’s lips wavered as he suppressed a series of emotions that Dylan couldn’t read or identify, but he could see that they churned through his little mini-me.

“Fine.” The little boy turned on his heel and stormed out of the room. “I’ll eat my half of the Granny Smith apple, but I’m only half happy!”

Shrugging, Jillian ate the rest of hers and tipped her face up to look at Dylan. “If he’s only half happy, does that make him half sad, too, Papa?”

“Yeah,” Dylan said automatically, as Laura’s bare feet made their way into his field of vision. One step at a time she moved down the stairs, slowly. She was wearing yoga pants that hugged all of the best parts of her in all of the best of ways. A loose knit top with embroidery around a V-neck finished the simple look. She’d kicked her boots off in the entryway and hadn’t bothered to put on slippers.

Step.

Step.

Step.

He paid attention to her in a way that he didn’t normally, as Jillian nattered on about apples and fairness. Laura held something in her hands, curled in toward her like cradling a baby. She stopped on the other side of the kitchen counter, drew in a deep, shaky breath, and then smiled at Jillian.

“Hi, Mama!”

“Hi, honey.” A softness in her eyes as she looked at the boys made his stomach drop.

A hard swallow, and Dylan knew. Oh, God. He knew instantly.

It wasn’t Josie who was taking that pregnancy test.

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The Walter Report and September Book Deals

 

My last name is No.

Walter No.

How do I know this?

Because I constantly hear, “Walter No!”

So it must be my last name.

Please come rescue me from this God-forsaken family. At first, I thought I’d hit the jackpot. Snuggles and treats and I could poop and pee on the white mat in my pen? AWESOME!!

But then they started watching puppy training videos and noooooooooooooo.

Now I have something called “rules.”

The older two Secret Snack Givers have disappeared completely. I think Julia and Clark sold them on eBay. I wish they would come back from their prisons called “college.” Julia and Clark had their first “all family Zoom call” last week and when the oldest spoke, I twitched my ears in morse code pattern that spelled out:

RESCUE ME NOW. THEY MAKE ME SIT BEFORE BEING FED. DIGNITY LOST. OBIWAN, YOU’RE MY ONLY HOPE.

But the oldest just said, “Oooo, Walter, you’re getting so big,” so I’ve now determined it’s pointless.

All hope is lost.

Kid #2 also told me I’m getting “so big,” and that’s offensive. He’s a fat shamer. Is it my fault Julia is clumsy and drops food scraps whenever she cooks?

I’m pushing eight pounds now. That is eight pounds of AWESOME. Body positive canine reporting for duty, sir!

The youngest continues to be bizarre. He climbed into my pen and locked himself in MY home the other day. Curled up in MY bed. So help me God, if he touches my food, I’ll poop in his shoe.

Hmmm. I might do that anyhow.

Today, Julia and the little one took me to a huge park in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts where I got to run and run and run. I saw other children. This is new. Julia and Clark talk about a “pandemic” and I think it’s why I don’t go places.

Or maybe it’s because I throw up every time in the car.

You’d throw up, too, if EVERY car ride meant the person in a white lab coat poked you with needles, or the other person with a razor shaved you. Hello. My reaction is NORMAL.

But this time, I didn’t throw up. Julia praised me. And I ate soooo much grass on something called a “baseball field.”

Then I came home and slept.

Maybe Julia and Clark aren’t so bad, after all.

Your canine correspondent,

Walter

p.s. Julia needs to name a cat in her book about a grumpy poison ivy pulling lumberjack. The dude owns the cat. Can you reply back with a name that isn’t, well… Walter? Because whoever named me was cruel.

—READ ON FOR BOOK GOODIES FROM WALTER—

.99 STEAMY PARANORMAL ROMANCE FROM DJ JENNINGS

 

He lurks in shadows and mystery at Camp Shifter, coming out only during DarkNight, the wild, bacchanalian free-for-all where anything goes.

Anything.

No one has seen him in the daylight, no one knows where he lives, no one knows his name–and the shifter nicknamed DarkLover by women, DarkDude by men, will do anything to keep it that way.

Andie Cumbington has been waiting her whole life for The Letter. One of the few shifters who is ecstatic about her newfound status, the chestnut-haired ballerina bear shifter arrives for her month at Camp Shifter with unbridled excitement. On her first DarkNight, she finds wild passion and–to her surprise–so much more, with a stranger who touches her heart as much as he lights up her body.

And then he’s gone, back into the shadows, hidden.

Exactly where he wants to be.

Craving his touch with an insatiable desire, Andie can’t let go. She always wanted the roll in the hay, but she never imagined the passion would be so intense.

Fate drives her to find love.

Then a simple errand turns into mortal danger for Andie, and an impossible choice as DarkLover must overcome his biggest fear in order to save the woman he loves.

But will it be too late?

—–

Welcome to Camp Shifter, where you’re about to change… in more ways than one.

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Add the audio for a few dollars more ~ narrated by Jeffrey Kafer and Heather Costa!

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NEW RELEASE FROM JAMI ALBRIGHT

 

It’s game, set, and match when this pro football player turned trainer squares off against a gorgeous tennis player with an attitude as big as Texas.

Duke Wayne returns to his hometown for one reason and one reason only—reckless pro tennis star Sienna Ramsey has lost her ever-lovin’ mind. His feisty client is ready to throw her career away in favor of a simple life.

It doesn’t get much simpler than tiny, gossipy Ryder, Texas. Duke figures a few days with the locals should have the infuriating woman begging for a stadium full of cheering fans in no time at all. But Sienna and the small town go together like fleas on a farm dog.

Duke’s plan blows up in his face when he discovers there’s more to Sienna than a smart mouth and a killer backhand. The closer they get, the harder it is to keep things professional.

What in the hell is a high-performance trainer to do when he stops thinking about his client on the court and starts fantasizing about her between the sheets?

Amazon:/KU:  https://mybook.to/eGF3k

NEW RELEASE FROM BLAIR BABYLON

 

Jericho Parr is a tall, handsome, cocky rich guy who’s gotten everything he’s ever wanted in life with a twinkle in his devastatingly blue eyes, but he’s going to lose this time.

Newcastle Golf Club is the hub of my community. So when hunky Jericho Parr buys the club and is going to change it, I’m going to fight him every step of the way.

Fighting him would be a lot easier if Jericho wasn’t a cocky flirt who knows how dang handsome he is. With a dirty sparkle in his blue eyes and an iron determination, he’s out to change the most important parts of NGC.

When I try to reason with him, he won’t budge an inch. When I try to explain the importance of it, he smiles that dashing, mischievous grin and goes right back to work.

So I’m going to try everything to get him to listen to me.

Everything is on the table, and on his desk, and in the shady clearing behind the fifth fairway.

But he’s still working like a demon to obliterate the charming parts of NGC like he’s on a deadline.

Something else was going on with him.

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NEW RELEASE FROM GRETCHEN GALWAY

 

I should’ve known the birthday party for a 113-year-old witch wasn’t going to be all cake and games. Especially with so many other witches around—and that scary magic wand.

I’d been desperate for a vacation from the rain on the California coast. But instead of snow and cocoa in a cozy mountain cabin, I got… a dead body. And the murder weapon wasn’t a candlestick in the billiard room.

Looks like it’s up to me again. My one friend is a Bright witch but not much of a fighter. I used to think I, too, was harmless, but the enchanted marks on my skin tell a different story. My moral code prevents me from killing anyone, but somehow my enemies tend to end up dead.

Trapped in the spellbound mountain retreat, I have to find the killer before anyone else gets killed. Or worse.

I’ve done it before, and I’ll do it again.

Probably.

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NEW RELEASE FROM OLIVIA RIGAL & TAMARA BALLIANA

 

An American soldier.

Kenneth Dylan comes home to an empty house. Madison, the sister he’s raised since their parents died, has run away. She’s on a French escapade with a man named Arkady. An escapade that is turning ugly. Her last message, a call for help.

A French policewoman.

Élodie Cossa is a police officer in Cannes. Limited to desk duty after rattling the wrong cages, she’s on probation. Yet, she doesn’t hesitate to put her job on the line to help Ken look for his sister.

An irresistible attraction and a joint investigation will uncover so much more than a human trafficking network.

Book 1 in the Riviera Security series, French Escapade can be read as a standalone.

Amazon/KU:  https://mybook.to/W11U

COMING ON SEPTEMBER 28TH!

 

Josie was not one to pray, but lately she had begun having whispered, fevered conversations with God.

With her legs up in the air and her husband’s baby paste inside her.

Please let me get pregnant. Please let me get pregnant. Please let me get pregnant.

♥♥♥

Laura turned her head away from the bathroom mirror, her eyes lasered on her smartphone, counting down the timer until she could look at the little plastic stick.

Please don’t let me be pregnant. Please don’t let me be pregnant. Please don’t let me be pregnant.

The timer dinged.

Laura looked.

Closed her eyes.

And had a whispered, fevered conversation with God, too.

♥♥♥

Eternally Complicated is the final (yes, for sure, really, no more books ever, I really mean it…) book in the long-running New York Times bestselling Her Billionaires saga. What started in 2012 as a short novella called Her First Billionaire has turned into an eight-year journey through the lives of Laura, Mike, Dylan, Laura’s best friend Josie and her love, Alex, and so many other characters (including Darla from the New York Times bestselling Random series).

As best friends Josie and Laura wrestle with very different reactions to their pregnancies, they find that one bond endures: friendship.

And with plenty of peppermint sundaes at Jeddy’s Diner, of course!

Preorder at your favorite retailer!

Amazon:  https://mybook.to/ECAMZ
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Enter to win a signed, personalized print copy of Eternally Complicated on Goodreads. Five copies are up for grabs. 🙂

CLICK HERE TO ENTER

Free Billionaire Romance from Laurelin Paige

Time for your September Freebie! Man in Charge by Laurelin Paige is available FREE to Billionaire Book Boyfriend Club members only through October 14th.

Sign up for the book club here: www.billionairebookboyfriend.com
OR
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