Kiss Me, Dancer

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Authors: Alicia Street,Roy Street

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KISS ME, DANCER

Dance ‘n’ Luv Series

Book One

By

Alicia Street & Roy Street

 

 

Kindle Edition

Copyright © 2011 Alicia Street, Roy Street

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from Alicia Street and Roy Street, with the exception of brief quotations embodied in reviews.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

Cover Art by
EarthlyCharms.com

 

 

Table of Contents

 

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Epilogue

About the Author

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

Casey Richardson stopped correcting the drooping hands and unpointed feet of her nine and ten-year-old students doing ronde de jambes at the barre when a man barged into her sunny mirrored studio, interrupting her Saturday morning ballet class.

A man who just happened to resemble a Greek god walking the earth in jeans and silky black tee. She ignored the flush of heat going through her at the sight of this hunk and said, “Excuse me, sir, but we have a class in session.”

He shot Casey an impatient glance, stunning her with teal blue eyes. Grabbed little Josh by the arm and tugged him toward the lobby.

She’d seen Josh’s parents at the last dance recital, and this guy definitely was not one of them. “Wait a second,” Casey said, trying to cut him off as he made his way from the studio. “What do you think you’re doing?”

He stepped past her.

The classroom of students fell silent. Casey turned to them. “Same drill. Ronde de jambes. Let’s go.” She nodded to Jiao at the piano. Her accompanist went into Chopin’s Waltz in C-sharp minor.

Casey raced out to the lobby after the man (trying not to notice he had the most splendid back she’d ever seen). Timid Josh gave him no resistance, but looked like he was about to cry.

“Lisa, block the door.” The eighteen-year-old intern at the desk just sat there wide-eyed, unprepared for the sudden call to arms.

But Casey wasn’t about to let some pervert make off with one of her precious flock. As the hunk reached for the door handle she slipped in front of him, her back to the door, her palms pressed like stop signs against his chest. She told herself she didn’t notice the hard curve of muscle beneath her hands. Or that his face looked even better up close. “Hold it or I’ll call the police. Who are you, and what do you want with Josh?”

He gave her a cocky smirk, shifted his focus to her low-cut leotard and continued down her body with an assessing gaze. Casey practically lived in tights, but she suddenly felt undressed and exposed. She dropped her hands.

He murmured, “And who are you?”

His challenging tone struck an old chord of self-doubt deep within Casey. After so many years of not quite fitting anywhere and seeing everything she tried go up in smoke, she’d begun calling herself “Calamity” Richardson. But at twenty-eight the hard won accomplishment of running her own studio gave her a chance to silence that internal voice.

And after the troublesome letter she received this morning, Casey already had enough on her plate without letting some dude reeking in attitude come marching in from nowhere with an intimidating side dish of his own bad day.

“I’m Casey Richardson, the director of North Cove Dance Academy. And you are?”

“I’m his father. So, don’t go all rabid on me, pixie.”

“Josh, do you know this man? Tell me the—”

Mr. Handsome cut her off. “You want my I.D? Or maybe you need a sample of my DNA?”

“I want to hear from Josh.”

“He’s my other dad,” the boy said sheepishly.

The man snorted. “
Other
dad? I’m his
real
father. Now let’s go, Josh.”

“Except, Dad, I’ve got to change my clothes.”

Coming out of his agitated state, Josh’s father seemed to finally look at the boy, who still wore tights and ballet slippers. “Oh. Okay. Go ahead.”

He turned those keen blue eyes onto Casey once more as Josh ran off. “Don’t tell me you never noticed his last name is different from his mother’s.”

Oops
. Casey suddenly remembered that Josh’s mom and the man she’d seen her with at the dance recital introduced themselves as the Wentoffs, but the boy was registered as Josh Byrne. “I’m so sorry. Then you must be…”

“Drew Byrne.” He said it with the air of someone used to impressing people with his name.

Was she supposed to recognize him from somewhere? A lot of her students had wealthy, sometimes famous, parents. “Um, yes, of course. Exactly. I forgot about—”

“Forgot, huh? Guess all those pirouettes make you kind of dizzy.”

She wanted to belt him. “I was trying to protect your son from a stranger who came rudely stomping unannounced into the middle of my ballet class. Normally when a parent needs to contact their child during class they simply go to the desk and Lisa or someone else in charge will come to me.”

The self-important Mr. Byrne wasn’t even listening. He was gazing around at the dance academy’s humble waiting lobby that probably looked to him as if it were decorated by the Salvation Army. Which wasn’t far from the truth, since the worn green sofa and armchair came from her late grandmother’s cellar.

But Casey did not appreciate being treated like some irritating gnat. She gritted her teeth, fuming inside. “Mr. Byrne, I’m sure you wouldn’t want me barging into your office while you’re…”

Drew Byrne stepped so close her voice shrank to nothing. She could feel the heat coming off his diesel cut frame. His warm skin smelled of soap and sandalwood and something incredibly male. He was at least a head taller than Casey, and when he looked down, a lock of sun-streaked sand-colored hair fell across his brow. “If you’re dressed like that, Ms. Richardson, it might be fun.”

Uh-oh
. Maybe it was better being an overlooked gnat. She controlled the shiver in her body, but couldn’t stop the blush that flamed her cheeks. This was clearly a man who knew how to play a woman. “What I mean is next time you—”

“Won’t be a next time. Josh isn’t coming back.”

“What? Is his mother aware of this? She told me Josh loved his classes here. It’s good exercise for him. And he’s exceptionally talented.”

“I’m not often in the neighborhood to keep an eye on what’s going down with Josh, but there is no way I’ll let Heather or you turn my son into some prancing fruitcake.”

Good thing Josh came shuffling out of the dressing room or Casey might have indulged in the terribly unprofessional and bad for business move of giving a nasty piece of her mind to a student’s parent.

The boy tossed a shy half-smile at Casey. But Drew Byrne showed her his back. Without so much as a nod, he pushed open the door and led his son outside.

“How obnoxious,” Casey growled. But she couldn’t stop herself from sneaking to the side of the window and peering out.

It was a bright July morning and a gleaming white Escalade limo waited along the curb. The driver got out and held open the back door of the car. Josh hopped inside as if he knew the drill all too well. Drew Byrne gracefully folded his large frame into the back seat next to Josh and gestured to his driver.

As the car took off, Casey suddenly remembered she had a class full of students waiting for her. She rushed back into the studio, determined not to let this arrogant jerk ruin her day any more than the tsunami of bad news that came pouring out of the letter she’d received this morning. This academy was the only thing in her life that she’d ever done right. And she wasn’t about to see it go down the tubes.

 

***

 

They drove east through the North Fork toward the ferry. Drew relaxed into the Escalade’s soft leather seat and gazed out the window at the flattened runways of green earth that stretched across the horizon. Most people had no idea Long Island’s East End was so rural, a part of New York that more closely resembled New England, with farming hamlets and briny fishing villages.

For Drew Byrne, staring out at the acres of eye settling and nerve calming open space was as close as he ever got to being the slightest bit meditative. But he couldn’t deny there was something enchanting about the sunlight on this skinny strip of land that jutted over a hundred miles into the Atlantic.

Josh peered up at his father, his eyes wide with worry. “Dad? Did I hear you tell Miss Casey I can’t go back to her school?”

“You don’t need her. We can work out together at my gym. I’ll get you in better shape than some ballerina can.”

Josh turned away and rested his head against the window glass. Silence filled the space between them.

Drew watched his son, at first irritated. Then the dejected resignation in the slump of the boy’s narrow shoulders touched his heart. What was so wrong with his idea? This always happened. Every time Drew thought things were going along pretty well, Josh would bail on him. But he never knew how to fix it.

He rested his arm over the sulky boy’s shoulder and squeezed. “Hey, dude, you hungry? What say we knock down some burgers?”

Josh shrugged.

“We’ve got the whole Fourth of July weekend together. Figured we might get a jump on the day.”

The boy stared at the floor of the car and mumbled, “Weekends begin on Friday night.”

“Well, I was busy yesterday.”

“You said we’d go to see the new Harry Potter movie.”

Damn, he’d forgotten about that. Maybe because a kid flick was hardly the way he liked spending a Friday night. At thirty-two he still preferred to chill down from an intense week of business with some female assistance. And when it came to hooking up with delicious new playthings, Drew could compete with Manhattan’s best.

“Maybe we’ll go tonight.”

“What about now? Sean saw it already.”

“Sure you want to waste a beautiful sunny day like this inside a dark movie theater?”

“Sean said it was awesome.”

“Look, I’ll check out what’s showing around Southampton this evening. In the meantime we’ll spend today on the boat. Fish a little. Stop at the yacht club to eat. And tomorrow we’ll go to that horse farm where—”

“Tomorrow?” Josh sat forward. “You have to bring me back to North Cove tomorrow. For our show at the community bazaar.”

“What are you talking about?”

“The Fourth of July bazaar. Mom said she told you about it.”

“She did?”

Josh shook his head. “You’ve got too much going on, Dad. Better slow down or you’ll end up with a bad stomach like Grandpa.”

“Hey, I’m the father here, remember?” He gave Josh a gentle punch on the shoulder. “So what’s this about?”

“Miss Casey picked me to dance in the piece she choreographed.”

Drew’s voice rose. “You’re gonna dance in public?”

“Chill, Dad. Nobody’ll see me in tights. I’ll be wearing sneakers, baggy jeans and an oversized tee. We’re dancing to “Hey Ya!” by OutKast. Too cool.”

“OutKast? That’s hip-hop. Miss Casey does hip-hop?”

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