Publisher: Avon Impulse
Date of publication: August 2017
An accident changed Leighton Clarke’s life
forever.
When she awakens
from a coma, her childhood memories are intact but she possesses no memories of
the past six years of her life. Terrified, anxious and disoriented, she’s only
calmed by the presence of the gorgeous celebrity chef with compassionate brown
eyes, the man who turns out to be her fiancée, Jonathan.
Jonathan Moran is
tormented over his part in the deception that he’s Leighton’s fiancé. In truth,
she’s engaged to his brother! Any day now, her memory is destined to return and
she’ll remember it’s his fault she was injured. Meanwhile, the more time they
spend together, the closer they become until Jonathan begins to wish the
pretense of them being a couple was real.
And then
Leighton’s memories come flooding back…
Enjoy this excerpt!
“What can I get for you?”
An elegant brow lifted. “You’re going to serve me?”
“I do it all.” He reached beneath the bar for a towel and slung it over his
shoulder.
“I bet you do,” she murmured.
He stiffened. Had she actually said that or had his fantasy life taken over
for a brief moment? He glanced at her, but her cool expression gave nothing
away.
“Special service from a James Beard Award–winning chef. I’ll try to contain
myself.”
“I’m sure my brother didn’t waste his breath extolling my achievements, so
you’ve been checking up on me?”
He braced his arms against the bar and her eyes followed the motion,
lingering. He could barely breathe. He had to force the oxygen into his body.
No other woman had ever affected him in this way. Why her? He didn’t understand
it.
She averted her gaze. “I check on everyone who comes into my life.”
He frowned. “I was just joking.”
“I wasn’t.” She placed her purse on the bar stool next to her.
Interesting. That type of vigilance made for a very lonely existence. And
it wasn’t natural. Something had happened to make her believe such action was
necessary. However, he didn’t get the feeling she would be amenable to sharing
that information with him.
He straightened. “Now, about that drink . . . a cosmo,
apple-tini, strawberry daiquiri?”
She exhaled and her lips quirked. “I appreciate you offering me some of your personal favorites, but I’ll take a
Macallan 21 on the rocks.”
He hesitated. “You drink whiskey?”
It was rare, but he did know a few women who enjoyed the smooth spirit. He
suspected his disbelief would annoy her.
He was right.
“Sexist, much?”
“Maybe, but it’s borne out by my fifteen years in the restaurant business.”
“Isn’t it wonderful to still be able to discover something new after all
that time? An old dog can still learn . . . something.” Her
sweet smile had him struggling to contain his grin.
He grabbed a lowball glass off the stack, added a couple of ice cubes and
poured the drink. “M’lady.”
She took a sip. Her lashes fluttered and her jaw moved laterally as she
coated her tongue with the flavors. The blood rushed straight to his dick
again—it must have an E-Z pass—leaving him momentarily light-headed. Thank God
he was standing behind the bar.
She set the glass down on the black cocktail napkin he’d provided. “What do
you drink besides your beloved apple-tinis?”
She had jokes. One corner of his mouth tipped upward. That’s all he’d allow
her. “Macallan’s good, but I prefer bourbon. Jefferson’s Presidential Select.”
“I’ve heard good things about Jefferson but I’ve never had the opportunity
to try some,” Leighton said. “The stock is limited, right?”
“Yes, but I tracked down a case of the Seventeen.” He smiled, recalling the
night he’d shared a bottle with Adam and Mike last year. “I’d be willing to
part with a little bit.”
Silence met his offer. Then— “Maybe I can get Thomas to try it. He tends to
stick to craft beers.”
His brother.
Her fiancé.
Right.
Big guilt keep on churning . . .
He turned to put the bottle he’d used on the back bar shelf where it
belonged. “Yeah, well, my brother’s taste has always left a lot to desired.”
Only after the words were out did he realize how they sounded. He turned
back in time to see the hurt on her face morph to anger. “I’m sorry. That’s not
what I meant.”
Her expression cut into him like an extremely sharp gyuto knife. She held
up a hand as if to halt his words. “Then it’s a good thing your opinion makes
no difference to our life at all.”
“No seriously. Leighton.” He rushed around the bar and reached for the hand
that had fallen to her lap. He didn’t question his need for her to understand
his words weren’t aimed at her. He dipped his head until he forced her to meet
his eyes. “I swear, I wasn’t talking about you. My brother should be on his
knees kissing someone’s ass every day, thanking his lucky stars that you’ve
agreed to marry him.”
She stared at him, stone faced, and he feared he may have ruined whatever
accord they’d managed to form.
Which was probably for the best.
But when her features began to soften and forgiveness seemed to follow,
relief made him giddy and he couldn’t have stopped what he did next even if his
very survival depended on it.
One taste. That’s all he needed.
He touched his lips to hers.
Time stopped.
He’d been wrong. He’d need much, much more.
He deepened the kiss, tasting, nibbling then moaning when her lips parted
and she let him in. Her soft tongue glided against his and desire roared
through him.
Her arms snaked around his waist and clutched his ass. She scooted forward
on the stool, spreading her thighs and pulling him between them. His fingers
skimmed along her jaw and slid through her hair, like air moving against silk.
His heart was pounding so loudly it drowned out any protests his rational
mind tried to put forth. He didn’t care who she was, who he was, or why this
could never be. He’d never experienced this kind of raw passion with anyone and
in that moment, his only concern was giving her as much pleasure as she was
giving him.
“Chef, do you want us to leave you—” Gib’s voice acted as fingers on a
chalkboard, jarring and cringeworthy.
Leighton’s eyes flew open, and fear and disgust contorted her features. She
pushed against his chest, catching him off guard, and he fell back into a
neighboring bar stool.
Before he could process what was happening, she’d jumped from the stool and
was running—quite a feat in her heels—to the front door.
He hurried after her. “Leighton!”
She pushed out into the night and paused looking left and right.
He saw the metal scaffolding falling and a roaring filled his ears.
Oh no! No! GODDAMMIT!!
He started to run. “Leighton, wait!”
He was too late.
A former criminal
defense attorney, Tracey Livesay finds crafting believable happily ever afters
slightly more challenging than protecting our constitutional rights, but she’s
never regretted following her heart instead of her law degree. She lives in
Virginia with her husband—who she met on the very first day of law school—and
their three children.
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