Title: Three Little Words Erotic Romance 18+
Author: Maggie Wells
Sexual Content: Explicit
Publish Date: December 15, 2014
Publisher Lyrical/Kensington
Type of book: Stand-alone novel
Synopsis
It’s never too late to make the best impulsive decision of your life.
Jo Masters isn’t the party girl she used to be, but now that she’s a woman without obligations, she’s ready to recapture a little of her misspent youth. Her niece’s wedding, with its open bar and dark dance floor, proves to be the perfect opportunity to let loose.
Gregory Stark is just trying to make it through his son’s wedding day... and make some time with the gorgeous brunette on the bride’s side of the aisle. His kid’s wedding probably isn’t the best occasion to put the moves on the sexy woman, who introduces herself only as ‘Josie’, but his best friend is closing in on her too and he has to act fast. With a couple of tequila shots under his belt, Greg propositions Josie -- and neither wants to refuse.
Maggie Wells is a deep-‐down dirty girl with a weakness for hot heroes and happy endings. By day she is buried in spreadsheets, but at night she pens tales of people tangling up the sheets. The product of a charming rogue and a shameless flirt, this mild-‐mannered married lady has a naughty streak a mile wide. Fueled by supertankers of Diet Coke, Maggie juggles fictional romance and the real deal by keeping her slow- ‐talking Southern gentleman constantly amused and their two grown children mildly embarrassed.
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Excerpt
The line at the bar wasn’t long,
but she needed a drink--a real drink--and she needed it fast. Jo twirled her
empty champagne flute and tapped her toe as the DJ made a cringe-worthy segue
between Louis Armstrong and Pink. A pang of regret tweaked her stomach when she
spotted her eldest brother, Tony, leading his baby girl from the dance floor,
but that was nothing new. She’d suffered so many pangs in her life they’d
become a part of her autonomic system. Breathe in, breathe out, pang. Blink, sniffle, sneeze, pang. Go to bed alone--again--pang!
At the tender age of twenty-six,
her niece had managed to accomplish everything Jo never had. Kaylin had a
career, a home of her own, and a man she loved so much she actually glowed.
Literally glowed. Jo hadn’t known such a glow since her mother stopped
slathering her sunburns in Noxzema.
Radiant happiness was enough to
drive a woman to drink.
Three groomsmen bellied up to the
bar and jockeyed for position in front of the pretty blond bartender. Their
voices rose as they trumped each other’s orders. Each successive suggestion was
an obvious attempt to prove the issuer was more worldly, and therefore manly,
than the last. The misguided boys must have believed their ability to chug
grain alcohol might make or break their chance at ending the evening in the
poor girl’s bed. The bartender eyed them with hardly-contained disdain. The
posturing little pricks didn’t notice. Jo couldn’t help but smile when the girl
rolled her eyes and went back to stacking glassware.
What little buzz Jo had managed
to eke out of two glasses of table wine and a flute of champagne began to wane.
She considered goosing one of the guys to shock him into gear, but then another
tuxedo-clad man, murmuring quiet excuses, slipped in front of her. The
groomsmen jumped when the newcomer gripped their padded shoulders.
“Three beers for these guys,
please. Give them the imported stuff.” Casually, he stuffed a twenty-dollar
bill into the pitcher serving as a tip jar. “Having fun, fellas?”
The groomsmen replied in the
affirmative, but their cheeks glowed pink. Bravado squelched, they grabbed
their beers and beat a hasty retreat. The hero of the hour turned to face Jo.
Recognition kicked in. Saliva pooled in her mouth and a tingle of awareness
prickled the fine hairs at her nape. Her savior was none other than the father
of the groom. It took a fraction of a second for her brain to source the
pertinent facts Kaylin had imparted on Ben’s father. Gregory. Greg. Divorced,
devoted dad, and hot as Hades on a summer day. Confronted with him now, Jo was
happy to confirm the acute case of the bright shinies hadn’t skewed her niece’s
powers of observation. Gregory Stark was all that and more.
He’d
sneaked glances at her all through the ceremony. Now, he grinned right at her. “Good
to know I’ve still got it.”
His dark eyes glinted with
amusement. She wasn’t sure if he was referring to his ability to circumvent a
bar line, or the fact that she’d been unable to resist returning every one of
the furtive glances he’d tossed her way. Jo decided to play it neutral.
Rolling her parched tongue up off
the carpet, she nodded the approbation he was obviously seeking. “Effective.”
No lie. He was the most
attractive man she’d laid eyes on in forever. Which made perfect sense in a
bizarre Karmic way. Of course she had to meet this man after she’d poked a nail
through her last pair of control-top pantyhose.
Still, there was no reason she
couldn’t catalog every bit of him for later use. With a practiced eye, she
gauged him to be a few years older than her. Her guess put him somewhere in his
mid-fifties. Unlike most men, he hadn’t packed on any extra cushioning for the
slide into the AARP years. He was tall and lean, his movements as taut and
compelling as the lines bracketing his eyes and those sculpted lips. His jaw
was smooth and shiny, clean-shaven, but the shadow of a heavy beard loomed
below the surface. Jo wanted to know what else he kept hidden under the slick
exterior.
He’d been seated in the front pew
at the ceremony beside his ex-wife and her husband. Jo wondered what he’d done
to earn ex status. For the life of her, she couldn’t imagine any woman
willingly giving this man up for the paunchy redhead who’d taken his place.
He nodded toward the array of
bottles behind the bar. “Champagne?”
“God, no.” The response was
automatic. She hated champagne. Pure desperation forced her to resort to the
glass poured for the toasts because the dinner wine was long gone. Now he was
offering her more. The sparkling wine seemed an apt choice for him. He looked
like Cary Grant, what with the wings of silver in his dark hair, the crinkly
brown eyes sparkling with mischief, and the tuxedo. Maybe he was offering her
champagne because Cary Grant would offer her champagne. Cary would call her “darling.”
Would Gregory Stark call her “darling?”
Something tugged at her fingers.
She stared in rapt fascination as he removed the forgotten flute from her hand
and placed it on the bar. “Oh. No. No more champagne.” She managed a weak twitch
of her lips. “Thank you.”
A proprietary hand landed in the
small of her back. Jo surrendered to the gentle pressure, closing her eyes and
imagining the pads of his fingers to be electrodes. Sparks sizzled along her
spine. He spread his fingers wide as he drew alongside her at the bar. Arousal
swept through her like a hot flash. Unlike those endless minutes of core
meltdown, this heat wasn’t something to be endured. His touch was a treat to be
savored. She opened her eyes and found him staring at her, his lips parted and
his eyes shining bright.
“What’ll it be, then?”
“Tequila. Three shots.”
The answer popped out before her
brain engaged. It was a ghost from her past. A remnant of the reckless youth
she’d left buried under a pile of soul-crushing responsibility.
“Whoa. Three?” He craned his neck
and scanned the room. “Maybe I should get one of the younger guys back.”
Once upon a time, three was her
magic number. The key to managing everything life had thrown at her. Good and
bad. The magic of three stopped being effective not long after she’d turned
thirty--a bitter disappointment she’d never managed to reconcile with herself.
Turns out, fate had her number in another way.
Well, screw fate. She’d played
the good girl long enough. Emboldened by the wine and the heat of his hand
scorching her back, she looked him square in the eye. “I have no use for boys, thankyouverymuch. Don’t worry. It’s okay
if you can’t keep up. I won’t think less of you.”
He laughed. Not a chuckle or a
chortle, but a deep, rumbling, full-throated guffaw that wrapped itself around
her and drew her closer still. Or maybe he pulled her in with his hand. Either
way, she was within sniffing distance, so she took a hit. Pure man. No flowery
cologne masked the warm and musky mix of soap, shaving cream, and some kind of
whiskey. Thank God.
“Set ’em up,” he told the
bartender.
The girl lined six tiny glasses
along the side rail. Pale amber liquid dribbled onto the bar when she moved
from glass to glass. She piled wedges of lime on a napkin and plunked a
saltcellar beside it. The furrow of concentration between the bartender’s
over-tweezed eyebrows smoothed when Greg shoved another bill into the tip jar.
His hand fell away from Jo’s back
as they moved to the side of the bar. She kept her gaze purposefully averted,
trying not to pout over the loss. She raised one of the shot glasses in silent
salute then downed the tequila without benefit of salt and lime.
The alcohol blazed a trail of
fire in her throat. Jo gave her head a toss to soothe the burn. The frank
admiration in her companion’s gaze made her pussy tingle with arousal. Her
body’s response to this gorgeous stranger startled her. Deep in her heart, she
feared she was past all desire.
He leaned in closer. “What’s your
name?”
The answer leapt to her tongue,
but she bit it back. For one night, this night with this man, she didn’t want
to be sad old Aunt Jo. She wanted to be the woman she’d been back in the days
before she had to be seated with one of her cousins to round out a table. She
wanted to be the girl who thought she had all the time in the world.
Fixing Kaylin’s new father-in-law
with a bold stare, she raised a challenging eyebrow. “Jose.”
“As in Cuervo?”
“Exactly.” When he opened his
mouth again, she held up one hand and dredged up the name she used in those
wild days of time and tequila. “But you can call me Josie.”
He blinked once then cocked his
head, studying her for one long moment. He reached for a glass. The wry twist
of his lips told her he was certain she’d given him a fake name, but he didn’t
seem to care too terribly much. He eyed her over the rim of the tiny glass.
“Nice to meet you, Josie. I’m Greg.”
Silver cufflinks flashed as he
tossed the shot back. He chased the booze with a low growl. A golden drop clung
to his upper lip. Jo wiped it away with the pad of her thumb but froze as she
pulled away. They stared at one another, arrested by her sheer audacity.
Mortification set the tips of her ears on fire. She tried to finish her retreat,
but he captured her wrist.
“Thank you.” He gave her a gentle
squeeze. “Tell me, Josie, are you a pussycat?”
Jo laughed. And, damn, it felt
good. She was flirting with a handsome man, and he was flirting back with
enthusiasm. Quite a rush for a woman long out of practice. She swallowed the
lump in her throat and lowered her gaze along with her wayward hand, wondering
if her rusty skills were obvious.
“Uh-uh. Don’t try to play shy
with me now,” he admonished. When she didn’t respond, he leaned close. His
breath stirred her hair and tickled her ear. “You’re the most intriguing woman
here, and you damn well know it.”
Pleasure ran warm and thick in
her veins. Jo closed her eyes, giving herself over to the vague pain of her
nipples tightening and the quickening of her pulse. “Do I?”
“I noticed you in the church.”
A shiver tripped along her spine.
She tipped her head, surrendering to the moist caress of his breath. “You did?”
“I couldn’t stop looking at you.”
Though she’d noticed, the bold
confession still stunned her. In the way of women too used to being invisible,
she’d denied the tingle of knowledge. Hard to believe a man so handsome might
find her attractive. For too long she’d played the part of plain old Aunt Jo.
“I can’t stop looking at you
now.” The husky admission pried her eyes open. “I had to find you.”
The urgency in his tone gave her
the boost she needed. Oh, how she wanted to be Josie with the tequila shots
once more. With him. For him. Flashing a sly glance, she reached for a second
tiny glass. “And now you have.”
He snatched a glass from the bar
and touched the rim to hers. His gaze bore into her, unwavering and intense.
“And now I have.”
About the Author
Maggie Wells is a deep-‐down dirty girl with a weakness for hot heroes and happy endings. By day she is buried in spreadsheets, but at night she pens tales of people tangling up the sheets. The product of a charming rogue and a shameless flirt, this mild-‐mannered married lady has a naughty streak a mile wide. Fueled by supertankers of Diet Coke, Maggie juggles fictional romance and the real deal by keeping her slow- ‐talking Southern gentleman constantly amused and their two grown children mildly embarrassed.
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