Total pages in book: 121
Estimated words: 116362 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 582(@200wpm)___ 465(@250wpm)___ 388(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 116362 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 582(@200wpm)___ 465(@250wpm)___ 388(@300wpm)
Fucking song.
I think I’m going to need to add a little something to my coffee.
I’m about to get up and rummage through my rapidly-depleting liquor cabinet when the phone starts to ring.
Shit. Don’t tell me she’s calling me too.
I cautiously pick it up and see Amanda’s name flashing across the screen.
Seriously? She never calls me, I’m always calling her.
“Hello?” I answer urgently.
“Hey,” she says, sounding small and far away.
“You never call.”
“I know.”
“How are you feeling after last night? Did you guys stay long? Did you go somewhere else? Did you have fun?” I’m totally rambling like a runaway train here.
She laughs. “You goof. Of course I had fun. I’m good. I just went home after.” She pauses and it’s obvious there’s something on her mind.
“So…”
“Blake, uh, I’m not sure if this is appropriate or not, but my friend from high school, Sarah Price, she invited me to her engagement party tonight. I just saw her back when, well, months ago, and now she’s with some guy and anyway, I was wondering if you would go with me.”
Oh. Oh. Not at all what I was expecting.
“Of course I will. Why wouldn’t I?”
“I don’t know,” she says quietly. “Maybe it’s weird.”
“Hey, you ask me to do something, I’ll do it.”
Please don’t think something like this is weird.
“Do you still have that suit you wore for the cover?”
“Of course. I’ll wear it.” I pause. “Are you going to wear your hair down?”
“I’m not fucking Rapunzel,” she scoffs. “Anyway, uh…do you mind picking me up? Maybe around seven?”
“You don’t want to do some writing today?”
She lets out a dry laugh. “I’m going to a party where all my old high school friends will be. I need a dress, badly. Something to make them look twice.”
“Now I see why you need me,” I joke.
“Well, that’s part of it.”
“I’m flattered.”
“When aren’t you? See you at seven?”
“See you.”
I hang up and stare at the phone, going back to Rachel’s email and reading it over again.
At seven I’m knocking on Amanda’s door and swatting at a moth that’s taken a liking to my face. I have to admit, I’m actually nervous. I feel like I’m taking a date to the prom or something. My palms keep getting sweaty, and I have to wipe them on my pants.
The door opens a crack and part of Amanda’s face peeks out.
“Hey,” she says, and even though I can only see her eyes, lips, and cheeks, she looks bloody gorgeous. She isn’t even wearing her glasses. “You swatting at invisible elves?”
“There was a moth,” I explain.
“Insects just love you.” She looks me up and down and smiles. “You look pretty good.”
“Pretty good?” Damn. I thought I looked fucking amazing.
“You look more like a business man than you do James Bond.”
“James Bond?” I repeat, shaking my head. “I was going for the Bad Boy Billionaire who’s about to sweep you off to the opera in his Lotus.”
“So Richard Gere in Pretty Woman, then.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” I tell her, putting my hand on the door and pushing it open.
She steps back and does a little swing of her hips, arms out in open display.
“What do you think?” she asks hopefully.
What do I think? She looks like the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen. Her dress is simple, a golden yellow strapless number that sweeps the floor, but it pushes up her breasts and makes her curves stand out while her skin absolutely glows against the color. Despite her Rapunzel comment, she’s worn her hair down in loose waves that spill over her shoulders.
I’m immediately hard.
“You can feel exactly what I think,” I nearly growl at her, stepping forward through the doorway and pulling her toward me.
“You like it!”
Ana’s voice breaks through just as I groan into Amanda’s neck, my erection pressed firm against her hip. Damn this bloody woman.
I look up and do my best not to glare at her. “I didn’t realize you were here.”
Ana smiles, holding up a glass of wine. “I’m always here.”
I pull back and give Amanda a sheepish look. “Well, you did a great job on her makeup.”
“Thank you,” Ana says. “I also did her hair. I’m trying out a new career.” She takes a gulp of her drink. When she finishes swallowing she says, “It was either hairdresser school or become an anesthesiologist.”
“That’s makes no sense,” I tell her. I glance at Amanda expectantly. “Shall we go?”
She nods quickly as Ana chirps, “Have a good time, sweet things!”
We hurry up to the car and get in. The moment her door closes, I lean in, running my hands through her hair, the thick, silky feel of her strands causing something inside me to loosen, like all the tension from earlier is finally being released.
She stares at me, her eyes searching mine in the dark, probably wondering what I’m doing.