Bad Boy's Revenge: A Small-Town Romantic Suspense (36 page)

BOOK: Bad Boy's Revenge: A Small-Town Romantic Suspense
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“And what’s that?”

“My favorite part of the evening.”

“Dream on, loverboy.”

“Oh, believe me, Kiss. After tonight, that’s all I’ll be dreaming about.”

She would too. The little hitch in her breath gave her away. She wanted to know what it’d be like too. She could find out. I’d drag her from the restaurant, toss her in my car, and deliver her to my bed. I doubted she ever spent a night with her legs in the air and her inhibitions tossed on the floor beside her panties. I’d have her screaming my name and praising my cock before we were done.

And then I’d do it again in the morning.

Just how Jack Carson pleased the women lucky enough to attract him.

Fuck the music. I lifted her chin, staring at her full, parting lips. I only had to convince her.

I took another kiss. Not like the one at the practice facility. This wasn’t some juvenile posturing—overwhelming her just to crack that holier-than-thou façade. This was a kiss meant to promise everything she never planned to experience.

Passion.

Lust.

Excitement.

Raw, carnal fucking.

Her lips tasted sweet like wine. I never kissed a girl with lips as soft as hers. Then again, I hardly ever kissed women. Usually their puffy lips wrapped over my cock.

Just the thought of Leah on her knees, opening her mouth, worshiping me between the silky caress of her lips nearly had me explode.

Fuck.

Who the hell gave this woman such power over me?

And why hadn’t I tried to fuck it out of her before?

Her tongue darted over mine. I pulled her tighter, harder.

Then…a flash.

A quick, intrusive camera flash.

I knew the type. Heard the shutter before. I ripped away from Leah as the jackass with the camera stormed the dance floor.

A waiter and server pulled him back, but not before the asshole grinned at Leah.

“How ‘bout a picture for the Ironfield Almanac, baby? Jack Carson’s newest slut? Were you one of the whores from the accident?”

I saw red. Rage. The kind of aggression I only felt when the game clock ticked the seconds down after the championship game and my opponents celebrated in the end zone off my intercepted pass.

The bastard insulted Leah.

She shouted as I lunged for him, but I wasn’t aiming for his neck. That was the only reason he survived.

I grabbed the camera and spiked it onto the dance floor. The lenses shattered, but the equipment didn’t smash until I drove my foot into it. The photographer swore. I took Leah’s arm and hauled her away as the man broke down in ragged profanity.

“What the hell are you doing?” She hissed.

“Getting you out of here.” I nodded to the maître d'. He’d know where to send the bill for dinner. “No one talks to you like that.”

And no one would again.

Even if it was a fake relationship. Even if we were pretending.

Leah Williams was a goddamned lady who deserved better than a label of a
slut
.

She deserved better than me.

Chapter Five - Leah

 

Jack was pissed.

More than pissed.
Furious
. The kind of rage that made my job as his publicist exceedingly difficult.

Usually his worst scandals were sexual in nature. Occasionally he had a minor issue on the field. Fortunately, he had only one physical altercation since signing with the Rivets, and even that was settled quickly and quietly.

Lucky for anyone who crossed him.

Jack was a huge, imposing, utterly dominating beast of pure animalistic strength. Had he wanted to hurt that tabloid journalist, Jack would have reduced that bastard to a pile of broken bones.

It was the sort of problem the league expected, and exactly the type of crisis he hired me to handle.

Unfortunately, his reaction to the journalist would get us both fired. I waited for the call that’d summon us to the police station.

My heart thudded in my chest. That was good. I thought I left it at dinner, puddling on the ground at Jack’s feet while he delivered the single greatest kiss of my life. Jack slammed his car door. The Porsche was too expensive to mistreat, but we were damn lucky he kept the vehicle on the road and under one hundred miles an hour as we launched from the restaurant.

 “What are you doing?” I reached for his arm, but I didn’t have the courage to touch him. “Jack, please calm down.”

Rage strained his voice. “I’m getting you out of there.”

“Why?”

“So that cocksucker can’t harass you anymore.”

I couldn’t take a deep breath, and Jack stared at the road only to jerk the wheel and pass the other motorists. Apparently, normal traffic laws no longer applied to a man who single-handedly led the city to their first championship game in twenty-five years.

I had no idea what to say. “I’m fine, Jack.”

“What he said wasn’t.”

“You broke his camera.”

“He’s lucky that’s all I broke.”

He jammed the car in a higher gear and headed for the highway. I thought he would settle down, but every agonizing mile only pumped him more. I knew he had a temper, but he white-knuckle gripped the wheel. Was he really that upset on my behalf?

I didn’t ask where we were going. He drove me out of the city and took the exit for Teagan Heights.

This was a section of town where I didn’t belong. There, the houses were worth millions, and the men inside worth ten times that.

Jack took me to his house.

The mansion wasn’t the gaudy palace I expected, but it was gated, huge, and wrapped with a pool, hot tub, and evergreen trees to offer privacy. He pulled into a ten car garage. Only four of the bays were filled. A Mercedes, one motorcycle he was restoring, a totaled classic car, and an old Toyota. Jack stormed past it, but I pointed. He didn’t look.

“My dad’s old car.”

He waited for me at the door to the house. I remembered his file. “Your dad passed away?”

“Day of the league draft.” He toughened, intentionally, hiding the pain. “He didn’t live to see the Rivets take me. Come in.”

Jack’s extravagant living room was too classy for both of us. The parlor was a fancy, untouched slice of what a millionaire was
supposed
to like, complete with chandeliers and paisley patterns. He showed me the kitchen and dining room with a wave of his hand, but he steered clear of the sitting room that had probably gone unused since he purchased the home.

His den was downstairs, and it was a true man cave. He installed a wet bar and leather seats, a fireplace and every game system imaginable for the wall sized TV. It was dim, cozy, and served as an award room. He didn’t hang trophies and accolades, but jerseys and photographs. I lingered near the newspaper articles from his high school and the letters from old teachers and friends who congratulated him on everything from his college bowl games to getting drafted by the one of the most prestigious teams in the league.

This was the real Jack, but even in his familiar setting, he hadn’t recovered his temper. He poured a drink and downed it immediately. He had another before offering me anything with a grunt.

“Jack, it’s okay,” I said.

“He called you a
slut
.” He abandoned the hard liquor and opened a beer instead. The bottle shook in his hand. “I’ve been with a lot of girls. Most of them are easy, but you aren’t like them. I won’t let anyone talk about you like that.”

I wished my heart hadn’t fluttered a little harder. “I can handle my own PR.”

“That wasn’t good PR. He just wanted to snap a picture of me getting in trouble with a new girl.”

I raised an eyebrow. “But that’s exactly what we
want
. People have to see us together. Those pictures will sell the story. It’ll be proof that we’re a real couple.”

And the kiss the reporter captured on camera was evidence enough, damning or otherwise. Every part of my body still buzzed with the intoxication of Jack’s lips. My skin heated. My tummy flipped. Parts of me that should never have pulsed for a man like Jack suddenly came alive.

“We aren’t telling people like
that
,” he said. “Not with a big fucking headline calling you a
slut
. Christ, I’ve tried to get you into bed since the day I hired your damn company. If you’re a slut, you’re the slowest score I’ve ever had.”

“Isn’t that sweet.”

He set the beer on the bar and walked to me—long, confident strides that trapped me before I could position the couch between us. “Look, Kiss. I’m a little…protective of you.”

“Since when?”

“Since some asshole photographer with a blog decided to flash a camera in your face!” Jack bit his words. I pretended not to flinch, but he saw. Apologized. “You aren’t some random girl with me. Even if this wasn’t fake, even if we were a legit…you’re not like the other girls. You’re…Kiss. You’re Leah.”

I swallowed. It didn’t help. It was the first time in a year he actually called me by my real name.

I had no idea he was so protective, so valiant to defend my honor.

Craziest part of all? I don’t think he realized it either.

“Thank you,” I whispered.

He stood so close, close enough to shield me with his muscular body from any threat to my virtue in this world—except for him. I looked up, meeting the stunning gaze of his eyes, the striking blue pinning me in place.

“Did I ruin the night?” he asked.

“It won’t be a good morning when the story breaks…” I didn’t move as he reached for me. “And now I’m expecting a call from Jolene or the league or the police…but I don’t think you ruined anything.”

His hands fit over my waist, tugging me closer to him. His words rumbled deep inside me, shuddering my core, my heart, my mind. Nothing made sense this close to Jack Carson.

I had no idea he could even touch someone so gently.

“I lost a chance at my dance.” His voice melted me again.

“You were trying to seduce me.”

“Was it working?”

Like he couldn’t tell by how eagerly I’d parted my lips and accepted his kiss. “It’s not a good idea.”

“Why not?”

“We’re not dating.”

His hand trailed over my side, twisting in my dress, edging the hem into his curling fingers. “What’s the problem?”

“It’ll get too complicated.”

“Like faking a relationship isn’t complicated…” He leaned down, skipping my lips and aiming for my neck. “We can still be professional.”

I held my breath, capturing his spicy cedar scent. “There’s nothing professional about sex.”

“Sex is just sex, Kiss.”

“Not to me.”

His lips traced along my neck, nipping where my pulse beat and delighting me with every shiver he could force through my body. “That’s no fun. Sometimes you just gotta fuck. Ever felt like that before?”

No, but I was starting to.

Still, that didn’t make it right. Or good. Or anything I should have wanted from playboy Jack Carson and his conquests.

“I won’t be just another girl you take home,” I said.

“Afraid of being the one I keep here?”

Yes, because it would never happen. A man like Jack was trouble, especially when my life was already in shambles. The only plan I had anymore was to slink home and soak in the tub. I often pretended I hadn’t received the engagement announcement from Wyatt and my former best friend. Jennifer was pregnant.

She had conceived while I still wore the ring Wyatt gave me.

Jack wanted sex for sex.

I looked for stability. A relationship. The promise of romance, marriage, world-wide travels. Kids.

We couldn’t have been more wrong for each other. No one would believe we were dating.

But my head fell back. I offered him another taste of my neck. The shiver was distressing.

Amazing.

His kiss fluttered my eyes closed, and, for a long moment, I imagined what it might be like to be swept in Jack’s embrace. To let myself go. To take that desire and have sex for…fun. For pleasure. For myself.

I twisted, meeting his lips. The kiss was as sensual as the one in the restaurant, as powerful and confusing and absolutely
necessary.
His tongue flicked once, twice against mine, and every stroke shocked me completely, buzzing deep into places I wasn’t prepared to admit.

He loomed until the back of my knees struck the couch. Jack pinned me with the promise of something so frighteningly sexy I might’ve crashed into the leather from the sheer anticipation of where else he might’ve touched, kissed, explored.

“Such a bad idea…” I whispered. “We can’t.”

“Yes, we can.” Jack’s fingers tangled in the hem of my dress. “What would it hurt?”

“It’d ruin everything. We have a professional relationship…”

“Come on, Kiss.” The material tickled as he drew it over my thighs. He exposed the sheer, red panties I wore only because I didn’t think anyone would see that I matched my underwear to my wrap. “I drove you crazy every time I came to the office. We didn’t have a professional relationship to ruin.”

“We have one now.” The dress slipped too high. My flat tummy revealed to him, and the underside of my bare breasts peeked from the bound silk. A bad night to not wear a bra. “Don’t you think this will make
pretending
to be dating hard?”

“I’m used to things being hard around you.”

“I’m not.”

He smirked. “That’s because I behaved myself, Kiss.”

“And now?”

“What’s my nickname in your office?”

“…Trouble-Maker.”

“You’re the one in trouble now.”

I sucked in a breath as the dress slipped off. Jack surveyed my body, nude save for a pair of sheer panties that left none of my cocoa skin to the imagination.

Jack tossed me onto the couch, falling over me only once he tossed away the sport coat and ripped through the buttons of an expensive shirt. The bright, ragged ink on his chest peeked through, swirls of dark and expressive tattoos that seared through the façade of respectability he wove for the dinner we enjoyed.

Jack wasn’t appetizers and cocktails and fancy French restaurants.

He wasn’t gentle dances and soft whispers.

He was fierce—raw and passionate. Sex for sex and enjoying every last second of debauchery.

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