Author: Regina Cole
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Date of publication: August 7, 2018
You may now kiss the biker
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Date of publication: August 7, 2018
You may now kiss the biker
Bethany Jernigan owes her bestie. Big time. So when wedding planning overburdens the bride-to-be, Bethany steps in to handle the nitty-gritty. But the guy in charge isn’t anything like she imagined. He's gruff, tattooed, and 100% male. His staff is even rougher around the edges, and it's not long before she feels as if she's stepped into some kind of crazy alternate reality.
Are those…bikers? Arguing about wedding favors?
Trey Harding never wanted this to get so out of hand. One little lie somehow snowballed into a world of dresses and flowers and food and holy-hell-he's-in-over-his- head. But it’s not like he can confess he’s not the wedding planner he’s pretending to be—especially now that he's falling for the maid of honor! His charade is becoming a farce, and as engines rev and ribbons fly, Trey’s running out of time to figure out how to tell the truth without losing his new family, his crew…or the woman of his dreams.
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2MS0d5m
iBooks: https://apple.co/2JzjH0F
Kobo: http://bit.ly/2Kakgdd
Enjoy this excerpt:
Bethany followed him out into the night. This far out in the
country, the stars twinkled brightly. Crickets chirped, the low thump of music
from inside muffled by the closing door.
Gravel crunched under Bethany’s shoes as she followed Trey a short
distance from the building, around the corner to a concrete pad that held a
good dozen-plus motorcycles.
“What can I do for you?”
Bethany shivered.
It wasn’t the night air. It was the way he stood, feet braced apart,
shoulders square, arms loose and ready, body big and strong and near enough for
her to sink into.
If she wanted. Which she didn’t. Really, she didn’t.
She cleared her throat. Focus, Beth.
“That was…an interesting event.” She chose her words carefully.
Though she’d clearly won, she didn’t want to make him feel bad. Weird, that.
She didn’t want to make a liar feel bad for lying? What was wrong with her?
“Thank you,” he said shortly, his stare direct. She fought the urge
to squirm. She hadn’t done anything wrong. A little rude, maybe, but not wrong.
“Now will you agree that you can’t handle Sarah’s wedding?”
“No.”
His short answer took her aback, and she blinked. “I’m sorry?”
“I said no.”
Her temper rose, blood heating as her pulse quickened. “That’s my
best friend you’re talking about. You think you can get away with something
like this for her? A wedding at a bar with shrimp and orange bagels and peanut-butter
pickle boats?”
Trey’s glare shot toward the bar. “Damn it, Stone, I told you to
drop the pickles.”
“You can’t do this to them. To Sarah, to Mama Yelverton. They’re
trusting you, and you’re lying to them!”
“I know!” he roared, and the sound was so loud and close that her
heart jumped into her throat. “I know they’re trusting me! That’s why I’m
trying to do the best job I can. And you’re always in the way and trying to
ruin it! Why aren’t you letting me help them?”
“Because I don’t trust you!” She went toe-to-toe with him, shoulders
heaving as she stared straight into his glowering eyes. “You’re too—”
“Too what? Too rough? Too mean? Too bad to plan
a wedding?”
“Yes! All of that! You don’t know what you’re doing, and you’re
going to ruin things for them and take their money and break their hearts, and
I won’t let you do it! I love them, and you’re not going to take advantage of
them like this!”
Trey stopped, his expression blanking. “You think I’m trying to take
advantage of them? For money?”
Bethany’s insides stuttered, uncertainty creeping into her voice. “Well,
aren’t you?”
He looked away from her, an unnamed emotion rolling off him in
waves.
“No. I’m not. I don’t want anything from them but a relationship.
And I hope you understand that you’re doing your best to ruin any chance of
that.”
For the first time, the certainty that she’d held about Trey began
to crumble. Standing there in front of her, with his strong, broad shoulders
silhouetted against the parking lot lights, he looked—human. Angry and hurt and
lonely, as if her words had peeled away the outer shell he presented to the
world. His gaze swung back to her, and she saw in that moment just how shallow
she’d been. How wrong. How prejudice had blinded her, how the exterior of the
man in front of her had shielded her eyes from the true heart of him.
“You were lonely. Weren’t you?”
Her whispered question rocked him on his heels as if it were a
gunshot.
“Yeah. Yeah I was. I thought I’d been dumped by the woman who’d
given birth to me in a gas-station bathroom.”
Her hand covered her mouth, and she just stared. As if a tourniquet
had been released, words flew from him.
“I had nobody. The system yanked me back and forth so many times, I
had whiplash by the time I was eight. Nobody wanted me. Nobody—”
He gritted his teeth and stared straight out at the horizon, as if
by simply looking at it, he could stem the tide of emotions she’d unwittingly
released.
But they hung there, unspoken, and Bethany’s heart ached for him.
She’d known love. She’d had the most amazing father for fifteen
years. And after that? She’d had the Yelvertons to rescue her from her
grandmother. Without them…
Without them, she might know a little more of his pain.
God, how wrong she’d been. Because he looked like a roughneck, she’d
judged him as unfit for the Yelvertons. But now…now she could see a glimpse of
the little boy he’d been once. Lonely, afraid, abandoned. She longed to comfort
him, to heal him, to take away the pain her thoughtlessness had inflicted.
Her father would be ashamed of her.
“I’m sorry,” she said, and without thinking, she stepped forward and
wrapped her arms around him. He was warm and hard, his body unmoving, like a
living rock. “I’m so, so sorry.”
For a moment he didn’t yield, didn’t budge, didn’t return her
embrace. And then his big, broad hands swept up her back, and he relaxed into
her embrace, taking the physical comfort she offered.
With each heartbeat, she tried to communicate her true feelings to
him. To return the kindness he’d shown her in the kitchen. To apologize for
ripping open his decades-old emotional wound. To make amends for the fact she’d
stood in his way when all he’d wanted was to get to know his family.
But it wasn’t enough. She needed to do more.
Of its own accord, her hand wandered up and cupped his cheek. As she
looked into his eyes, twin mossy pools of pain and sadness, she did the only
thing she could think of.
She kissed him.
“I’m sorry. I’ve hurt you, and I
know what that feels like, and I’m so damn sorry.”
The words went unspoken, but she prayed he could feel them in the
brush of her mouth against his.
About the author:
Regina Cole, lover of manly muscled arms, chest hair, and mini-marshmallows, has been reading romance since her early teens. When she’s not frantically pounding away at the keyboard, she can be found fishing with her family, snuggling with her hubby and tiny twin boys, or slinging mud in her magical home pottery studio. She lives outside Raleigh, North Carolina.
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