Flushed

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Authors: Sally Felt

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Flushed

Sally
Felt

 

Blush sensuality level: This is
a sensual romance (may have explicit love scenes, but not erotic in frequency
or type).

 

Kissing a stranger in the middle of
her dinner party wasn’t in Isabelle’s plans—after all, she’s sworn off dating.
But when Kim Martin, plumber to the rescue, charms her guests and poses as her
new guy to spare Isabelle the humiliation of an uninvited ex, she makes an
impromptu exception—and gets carried away.

At first being Isabelle’s faux beau
suits Kim Martin just fine, Isabelle’s hot, intriguing and won’t disrupt his
plans to blow town and build a business he loves. But Isabelle just isn’t cut
out to be a goodtime girl, and Kim can’t seem to keep things casual.

Kim is everything Isabelle believes
of men—confident, flirtatious and too attractive for his own good. Yet the more
Isabelle tries to fit him into a box, the harder he fights his way out of it.
He’d be maddening if he weren’t so intriguing.

 

A Blush®
contemporary romance
from Ellora’s Cave

Flushed
Sally Felt

 

Chapter One

 

Isabelle’s house smelled like Monday—all was right with the
world. The rich scent of buffalo wings in the oven, whiffs of floor cleaner,
earthy smells of dusk through the open kitchen window, the citrus tang of
bubbly dishwater that wet her to the elbows…

Of course, the phone rang.

Crap.

But Charlie was probably still around, and hey, answering
phones was what brothers were for.

“Charlie!” she yelled. “Can you get that?”

From across the house, she heard him reply, “Bathroom!”

Men.

She wiped her hand on her vintage apron and grabbed the
phone mid-ring, expecting one of tonight’s guests to be offering to bring
something, or asking to bring a friend.

“Isabelle? It’s Steven. How are you?”

She hadn’t heard that voice in months—a relief to both her
blood pressure and her temper. Just six words from his mouth and her stomach
churned.

Great. Perfect. “What do you want, Steven?”

“I suppose dinner is out of the question?”

“You suppose correctly. Can’t your flavor of the week cook?”

“Whoa. You’re still mad.”

“If that’s what you called to find out, then we’re done
here. Goodbye.”

Isabelle threw the phone to the far end of the kitchen
counter where it crashed against her pasta jars. Luckily, nothing broke. Steven
had broken enough.

Damp silk clung to her ribs. She must have pressed against
the sink’s edge while talking to Steven. Figured. She’d made it through all the
kitchen prep, including giving the chicken wings a field promotion from
marinating to baking, without mishap. But one call from the oxygen thief named
Steven and she needed to change clothes before her friends arrived.

The phone rang again. She snarled at it. Gone was her sense
of happy fulfillment. This was not the day she’d planned when she got up this
morning.

Charlie glided into the kitchen on bare feet and opened the
squat, antique refrigerator. His sweaty t-shirt had once had something printed
on it about the athletic department at Southern Methodist University, but a
couple of years hard wear and repeated washings had all but erased SMU’s
letters and reduced the Mustangs logo to a flaking blob. The phone rang again.
“You gonna get that?” he asked, emerging from her refrigerator with a cold
longneck. He looked toward the phone.

“Men suck.”

Her brother winced, helping her throw the verbal brakes
before she could snap at him about wearing that nasty t-shirt to her party. He
would go home and change. Besides, he’d sweated on her behalf today, helping
her load her van with the shelving and hardware she’d need for her upcoming
closet installations.

The phone kept ringing. They both ignored it.

Charlie swigged beer and wiped his mouth with the back of
his hand. “Toilet’s clogged again.”

“Crap.”

“‘Fraid so.” Her brother grinned, as entertained by bathroom
humor as every other man she knew.

“I mean damn. There will be ten of us in,” she checked the
kitchen clock, “less than two hours.”

“Chill, party mama.”

“Chill?”

Charlie winced again.

The phone kept ringing. Damn voice mail was taking its time.

“Just call that guy,” Charlie said. “The plumber guy. Earl,
or Burl or whatever. Isn’t he on your speed dial by now?”

“Burt. And I’m not calling him again.”

“Why?”

“Butt crack.”

“And?”

“Criminal pricing.”

Charlie grinned, shaking his head. “And?”

He could be so annoying.

“C’mon, tell me the rest of it.”

“He called me ‘little missy’,” she said. “Twice.”

Charlie hissed sympathetically. “He’s lucky you weren’t
armed.”

“Weren’t you on your way home to change?” she asked, mad she
couldn’t be mad at him, not on the heels of him doing her a favor. Besides, it
wasn’t his fault she was miffed.

“Going.” He left the kitchen, grinning. “Later!”

The front door shut loudly enough to hear all the way across
the house. “Thank you,” she called belatedly. She smacked the dishwater’s
surface in frustration.

At least the phone had stopped ringing.

Time to find a new plumber. The bungalow’s plumbing needed
updating, especially the one and only bathroom, which became unusable at least
once every couple of months. But the thought of moving out of the house she
loved so much—even temporarily—kept her from scheduling the work.

She found the little notebook in which she recorded home
repairs and its trove of business cards tucked in the front pocket. Her friend
Stacey worked at a home improvement store and sometimes gave Isabelle the
heads-up on recommended suppliers.

The first plumber in the stack was named Kim. Unlikely a
female plumber would flash butt crack or use patronizing language, so Isabelle
phoned the number on the card. It reached a service. Crap. Now she’d have to
answer every call, even though it might be Steven.

Why was he calling, anyway? He couldn’t possibly imagine
she’d want to hear from him. Ever.

The open kitchen window brought in the scent of damp earth
and new grass—hopeful smells of springtime and new beginnings even a big city
like Dallas couldn’t smother—and he’d had to go and ruin it.

Isabelle turned her anger on hapless veggies, using her
biggest knife to chop jicama and celery for the spinach dip Stacey always
supplied for Isabelle’s Monday-night gatherings.

How dare Steven? Sleeping with other women while he was
living with her. Nobody did that to her. She was no longer the trusting kid
she’d been in college. She would not be taken for granted.

Of course, she’d known he was trouble. But Mom and Stacey
had ganged up on her, urging her to “get back on the horse” and he’d seemed
like a good guy when they met at a charity event. He’d had those dimples and a
way of making her feel so special…

At least until he’d had a place to keep his spare socks.

No, not even onions could make her shed one more tear over a
waste of skin like Steven. Not a chance.

By the time the phone rang, she had her blood pressure in
check. Still, she gritted her teeth before answering.

A man’s voice said, “I’m returning a call for Martin
Plumbing.” There was noise in the background, as if he were outdoors on a busy
street or in a moving car. Maybe Kim had a team of plumbers working for her.

Isabelle sketched her emergency—one toilet, houseful of
guests due, no plumber she could trust.

“It could be forty-five minutes, maybe an hour before I can
get there,” he said.

Not what she wanted to hear. But he sounded respectful
enough, and Isabelle didn’t know if anyone else could be quicker, so she
agreed. He assured her he was on his way.

A break. Still, she wondered what had happened to Kim.

 

An hour later, scores of lit candles added extra hominess to
the scents of warm wood and furniture polish, of oven-barbequed chicken wings
nearing perfection. The only thing better than living here was sharing it with
friends every Monday. She loved the wide, squared-off archway connecting the
bungalow’s living and dining room. She loved the built-in bookcases and the
extravagant dining room buffet, all with mullioned-glass doors. She loved the
long sunroom where she could enjoy sun-warmed catnaps. She even loved the
cantankerous radiators and the old fixtures.

The plumbing, less so.

She headed for the lone bedroom to find something to replace
her water-stained silk shell. Her friends would arrive soon.

The doorbell rang.

She hurried through the den and living room, pulling loose
the apron’s string tie with one hand as she swung the heavy wood door open.

The man on the porch was a stranger to her. Nikes. Khaki
pants. Dark, long-sleeved pullover that clung to his whipcord body. Maybe he
was an offering sent by a well-meaning friend, a move she normally wouldn’t
appreciate. Tall. Long neck. Cleft chin. Lips. Smile. Eyes.
Oh my, eyes.
Pale irises, ringed with dark, the color impossible to determine in the
harshness of the porch light. If a friend had dared send him, it was a friend
with good taste. And a little taste—rather, a little flirting, of course she
meant flirting—wouldn’t kill her, would it?

“Ms. Caine?”

Presence. Charisma. Voice.

Isabelle nodded, not wanting to disturb the flutter in her
entire lower body by speaking. His dark, very short hair stood up every which
way as if he’d just rolled out of bed. Mmmm. A taste might spice tonight’s
dinner.

“I’m here for your toilet?”

The flutter faltered.

Toilet?

“I’m Kim Martin. The plumber.” He hefted the toolbox she’d
failed to notice.

“Oh my.”

* * * * *

Orange-covered breasts.

It took Kim way too long to climb to his client’s face from
those orange-covered breasts. Ungentlemanly, for sure. More importantly,
unprofessional.

Her ear was translucent in the light, too delicate to hold
back wild curls of dark, bobbed hair that licked her chin. He got a glimpse of
the tip of her tongue between lips brimming with sensual promise. Definitely a
climb worth making.

She opened the door wider and beckoned him inside. If
something in the gesture seemed vaguely predatory, being devoured by this
lioness sounded like an ideal way to go.

He followed her into the Craftsman-style home across
hardwood floors. He couldn’t say how many rooms there were or what was in them.
Her swaying hips held his undivided attention. Short white skirt, creamy pale
legs, ankles that did unnerving things to his professional focus.

He’d noticed her ankles? Probably had to do with spending
the last three hours riding home from Austin in Damon’s ancient van, marinating
in his own sweat. He was glad he’d returned this particular call. Very glad
he’d showered.

He enjoyed a closer view of those orange breasts as she
turned around.

“Thank you for coming so quickly, Mr. Martin.” Even her
voice held heat. For barely standing shoulder height to him, this woman filled
the room. A bedroom, he noticed. Mirrors all around the room reflected the
light of dozens of candles. His eye was drawn to the king-sized bed, furnished
like something out of the
Arabian Nights
, with swirls and tassels and
richly textured surfaces that called for bare skin.

“No trouble,” he said, though he suspected she was. The kind
of trouble lesser men threw themselves at and broke themselves against. Kim was
willing to have a run at it.

“Heck of a setup for seduction,” he said. “Is there
something I should know?”

She matched his half-grin with one of her own. “I hadn’t
meant it to be seductive, but then, I hadn’t met you.” She leaned a little
closer, looking at him through lashes sexy as lingerie.

She was trouble, all right. “And now?” he asked.

“Why don’t you show me what you’ve got first?” she said.

Surprise kicked him back a step. Kim laughed. It had been
too long since flirting had been this fun.

She pointed to a doorway near a floor-standing mirror. “I
ask you to slay the toilet of doom. Should you return alive, you may escort me
to dinner.” She smiled.

That was how she did it. A look, a smile, a promise. What
man could resist her? What man would want to try?

“I’ll do better than slay it,” he said. “I’ll tame it.”

She continued to smile. He took his toolbox into the long,
narrow bathroom. The pedestal sink seemed an original fixture to the bungalow.
Likewise the iron tub. The toilet had been replaced, probably no more than five
or so years ago. At a glance, he knew the installer had been a
do-it-yourselfer. Likely not the lioness.

She watched him from the doorway. He knew it before he even
turned around, awareness centered at the base of his spine. He wondered whether
her invitation simply meant he was welcome to stay for the party that had
motivated her call, or whether she might actually be available. Surely not.
Husband or lover—someone looked out for her. A woman who oozed fertile, flaming
passion like this orange-breasted creature did not live alone. The laws of
nature prohibited it.

“I want it known,” she said, her hands fidgeting in contrast
to her royal tone of voice, “this was not my doing.” She waved vaguely in the
toilet’s direction.

She held her head high even when embarrassed. Helluva lady.
A lady who, as he’d suspected, did not live alone.

“It never crossed my mind.”

“Well, Kim Martin,” she said, once again in complete
control, “I’ll get out of your way. Do you mind if I close the door a moment?
I’ll be changing clothes out here.” He made himself nod, sorry to see her close
the door on their banter. This job was often all too straightforward. One of
the many reasons he planned to give it the heave-ho in favor of new adventures.

While his client changed clothes—something he tried not to
think about—Kim stepped into canvas coveralls that had spent too much time
rolled up and wadded into the top of his toolbox. He’d judged his compression
shirt nice enough to be seen by guests at a party, but only the coveralls would
keep it that way. As he zipped up the heavy protective layer, something
crinkled in the breast pocket.

A crumpled yellow Post-It note with just two words on it.
Underlined and followed by three exclamation points. His friend and climbing
partner, Damon, had handwriting as flamboyant as everything else about him.

Call him!!!

Kim crumpled it a second time, balling it in his fist. He
chucked it into a bell-shaped wastebasket that fit right in with the bathroom’s
vintage style.

A few days earlier, he’d been tracking an elusive leak at
Wall Werx, the indoor climbing gym Damon owned, when his friend had handed him
the note. Damon hadn’t specified a name because there was no need. Kerry. Damon
had the idea Kim and Kerry should be inseparable, live next door to one
another, marry sisters and name their firstborns after one another.

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