Ignited

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Authors: Ruthie Knox

BOOK: Ignited
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Roman Holiday 5: Ignited
is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

A Loveswept eBook Original

Copyright © 2013 by Ruth Homrighaus.

Excerpt from
Roman Holiday 6: Mistaken
by Ruthie Knox copyright © 2013 by Ruthie Homrighaus

All Rights Reserved.

Published in the United States by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York.

LOVESWEPT is a registered trademark and the LOVESWEPT colophon is a trademark of Random House LLC.

This book contains an excerpt from the forthcoming book
Roman Holiday 6: Mistaken
by Ruthie Knox. This excerpt has been set for this edition only and may not reflect the final content of the forthcoming edition.

eBook ISBN: 978-0-345-54701-9

Cover design: Georgia Morrisey

www.ReadLoveSwept.com

v3.1

A Note from the Author

Dear Readers,

Welcome back!

It’s finally time for episode 5—the finale of
Roman Holiday
’s first season. After you read this one, we’re going to take some time off before season 2 begins. Feel free to treat this time as you would any lapse in network programming. You can reread the first season’s episodes, log in to the Roman Holiday forum (
http://forum.ruthieknox.com
) to speculate about what’s coming up, or hop on your favorite social media platform to talk about all the reasons you despise me for making you wait to hear the rest of this story. Whatever gets you through all those hundreds of hours until the next episode goes live!

But let’s not mourn the end of season 1 yet—not when we still have this fifth episode ahead of us, and one behind us in need of recapping. Last week, Roman and Ashley began their two-week “holiday” by driving from Georgia to North Carolina, where an encounter with Ashley’s friends Prachi and Arvind made it clear that Ashley’s vision of Sunnyvale isn’t quite universally shared.

Upset, unable to sleep, Ashley wandered outside, and when Roman went after her, she lured him to a community pond and badgered him into skinny-dipping. There was a hot-and-heavy interlude involving water, mud, and failure to fully disrobe, followed by Roman finally smiling like a normal human being before proceeding to ruin everything. Then, in the morning, a contrite call to Carmen.

Finally, our itinerant couple left North Carolina behind and headed east, stopping to camp along the way. Roman went for a slightly deranged hike, during which we learned quite a bit more about what happened in his youth to make him so … Roman. But in the end, he pulled himself back together and resolved to resist the lure of Ashley.

Shall we see how that’s working out for him? Onward to Pennsylvania!

xoxo,

Ruthie

Contents

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
A Note from the Author
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Other Books by This Author
About the Author
Excerpt from
Roman Holiday 6: Mistaken

CHAPTER ONE

Thirty-six. Thirty-seven. Thirty-eight.

Bleary-eyed and yawning, Ashley watched Roman out the window of the Airstream as he curled up into one sit-up after another.

Forty-two. Forty-three. Forty-four.

Quiet Pennsylvania morning. Dark green hills rising beyond the cleared patch of campground. Roman, punishing himself.

She’d only started counting a minute ago, but the sweat at the neckline and under the arms of his new workout shirt said he’d been at this for a while. The army calisthenics pamphlet from the surplus store lay facedown on the picnic table bench beside him.

It was enough to make a girl feel a little guilty about her pajama-clad voyeurism.

Fifty-nine. Sixty. Sixty-one.

The rhythm of the repetitive movement sank down inside her. The way his body curled up, then released. The perfection of him.

Every time he came down, his elbow brushed against the rainfly of his new tent, making it jitter and shed dew. With the exception of its color—bright green—the tent in no way resembled the model they’d admired on the floor at REI yesterday, where they’d gone to find Roman a shelter after he refused to sleep in the Airstream.

Or, rather, it looked like that floor model would have if Sasquatch had come along and stepped on it.

Any normal person would stop and shift his sleeping pad an inch to the left to keep from knocking against the nylon, but Roman didn’t. Maybe the moisture felt good against his flushed skin. Or maybe he just couldn’t bring himself to stop once he’d started. For any reason at all.

Seventy-eight. Seventy-nine. Eighty.

Unease lifted her feet onto the upholstered bench and wrapped her arms around her knees. He ought to have been sexy doing this—the curve of his biceps, his clenched jaw, feet planted, quads tense as he came up and lowered down again and again, slow and controlled.

But just how long had he been at it?

Ninety-eight. Ninety-nine. A hundred.

Come on, Roman. Give it a rest.

He didn’t. Even when she opened the Airstream’s door and walked down the wet metal steps into the silence of the morning, he kept going.

“Morning.”

He grunted without breaking rhythm.

She found a dry spot on the picnic table to sit. The grassy islands of Shamokin Campground were silvered with dew. The snack machines by the office hummed quietly. Roman rose and fell, implacable as the sea.

They’d rolled in last night late and taken this site in section H, the end of the loop closest to the office, moving stealthily in the hope that they wouldn’t wake up Stanley and Michael or any of the paying customers. Not that there were a lot of those—just a tent camper over in the primitive section and an RV in one of the loops with electrical but no water and sewer hookups.

The office door opened. Stanley came out with his coffee mug and sat at the concrete table where he liked to watch the bird feeders.

She lifted a hand and waved. He nodded, an economical acknowledgment across the thirty feet separating them. Very Stanley—he wasn’t the type to make a fuss, even when old friends dropped in on his doorstep without warning. He would come over and say hello, but not until he was good and ready.

The trick to loving Stanley was that it was important not to push him into anything. Or try to get him to talk when he didn’t feel like it.

Or make him do anything he didn’t want to do, actually.

The trick to Stanley was to just wait, and watch, and find out what he would accept.

“How many sit-ups are you planning to do?” she asked Roman.

“Five hundred.”

She picked up the calisthenics pamphlet. Her eyes scanned the instructions, but there were no counts on the page, just exercises. Roman was providing his own targets.

Five hundred sit-ups.
Yeesh
.

“Where are you at?”

“Four-oh-eight, four-oh-nine, four-ten,” he said, and then blew out an audible breath that she took to mean
Piss off and let me do my thing
.

“All right. I get it. I’ll leave you to your flogging.”

She ducked back into the Airstream for her bathroom stuff and took herself off for a shower in the bathhouse. An older woman was at the sink, blow-drying her hair.

“Morning,” the woman said.

“Good morning.”

“That you in the Airstream, with the sit-up guy?”

“Yeah.”

“Nice.”

“Thanks.”

“Airstream’s not bad, either.”

Ashley smiled, even though she didn’t feel like it.

The water was hot, the pressure strong. The walls and ceiling had been painted a sort of industrial mint since she was last here, years ago. Stanley took good care of his place, but he wasn’t big on aesthetics.

When she got back to the campsite, Roman had switched to push-ups. The back of his shirt had soaked through. His arms trembled.

“Would you like me to build you an obstacle course while you’re finishing up here?”

He ignored her.

“I bet Stanley has some old tires I could set out. You could use the bathhouse as your wall-climbing thingy. Pole-vault over the muddy area by the tent-camping sites.”

His body sank toward the earth, then rose again. Again. Again.

“I’ll make up a fifty-pound backpack, and you can wear it on your twenty-mile run.”

“I already ran.”

God
. “How far?”

“I don’t have any way to know.”

“Was it still dark when you started?”

His head came up, and his eyes found hers. He sank. Rose. Sank. Rose. “What do you think?”

She broke eye contact and kicked at a pinecone in the dirt. “How did you sleep?”

Roman shook his head and looked down.

“Tent’s on a bit of an incline, isn’t it? I tried to tell you.”

“It’s fine.”

“It looks like the stick you used to prop it up didn’t hold. Did it fall on your head and wake you up?”

Nothing.

“I tried to tell you it was a bad idea to set up a brand-new tent in the dark.”

“That pole was defective.”

“Or maybe
you
were defective, thinking you could just slap that puppy together without reading the directions. ‘I’ll just push this through the sleeve. How hard can it be?’ ”

“Give it a rest.”

But she wouldn’t. Not until he did.

“I bet you woke up a hundred times, and every time, you were crunched up at the bottom of the tent, and you had to crawl back up onto your sleeping pad like an inchworm.”

He ignored her.

“I slept like a baby,” she said mildly. “In case you were wondering.”

“Wasn’t.”

Sank. Rose.

“If you want, I can give you some tips today. How to pick a good spot for your tent and stake it out so it doesn’t fall on your head in the night. Camp craft stuff.”

“I know camp craft.”

“Really? Because your tent—”

“Shut up.”

Sank. Rose.

He wasn’t nearly as irritated as he wanted her to think, though. Not with all that light behind his face.

“I’m just saying. If we’re going to be doing this for the full two weeks.”

“We’re not.”

“Hey, we might be. I’ve still got ten days to change your mind.”

“You won’t last that long.”

Would she? Ten more days of this—the prospect unsettled her. Ashley wasn’t sure how much longer she could postpone the inevitable. But she wanted to go to Ohio, Wisconsin … she had people to see, people she wanted Roman to meet. This was
her
time, her chance to change
Roman’s mind and convince him Sunnyvale was too important to destroy, too essential to be taken from her.

If she failed, she’d promised to forget about the Key deer and get out of Roman’s way. He’d knock down Sunnyvale, and she’d go on with her life. Somehow.

Ten days.

“I’ll last as long as I have to,” she said. “And in the meantime, you should know how to start a fire and all that. Without cheating. A proper fire, with an A-frame and one match, little piles of tinder and kindling and all.”

Another few push-ups, and he said, “I know how to start a fire.”

“Just like you know how to put up a tent?”

Roman dropped to his knees.
Finally
.

When he levered up his torso and looked at her, projecting annoyance, the challenge in his eyes made her nipples bead inside the shelf bra of her sports top.

Roman wiped sweat off his forehead. His color was up, his chest heaving. “I can build a better fire than you,” he said.

“One match?”

“Anyone can build a one-match fire.”

“You can do better? Oh,
tell
me you bought flint and steel at REI, and you can strike a fire off one of those key-chain things.”

“Not flint and steel. I can start a friction fire.”

“With just sticks? You cannot.”

“I can.”

“Do it, then.”

“It’s a pain. I’m not going to do it just to show you.”

“Do it,” she repeated. “Doitdoitdoitdoooooit.”

“Does that actually work on people?”

“You’d be surprised.”

Roman stood up and reached for the camp towel he’d left on the bench next to her. She could feel the heat coming off him, all those charged particles in the air between them. He bumped her with his bare knee, and she looked at the black hair on his legs, the runnels of sweat.

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