âI have you right where I want youâ¦â
Rick smiled as he said the words and wrapped his arms around her. He hugged Lindsey so tightly that she actually felt a bit light-headed.
âI canât seem to keep my hands off you.â
âI noticed.â
âOr my mouth.â He nuzzled the side of her neck, then pressed light kisses across her collarbone.
She shuddered, and slowly, deliberately, moved her hips against his. Her entire body tingled with awareness. She couldnât believe their chemistry was still this strong after six years of not seeing each other. It was almost embarrassing.
âLetâs order room service,â he said. âWeâll eat on the balcony. Share a nice bottle of wine. Remember?â
Oh, she remembered all right. The cool air danced across her skin, making her shiver. Or maybe it was the way he stared at her, his eyes dark with promise and danger, as if his plans for her landed on the other side of wicked. The thought triggered a delicious tingle of anticipation.
âPerfect,â she whispered into his ear and kissed him gently once, twice on his cheek. âYouâre perfect.â
Dear Reader,
When I was a teenager living in Hawaii, surfing was big. You didnât have to watch the news or listen to the radio to know when the swells were up. Half an empty classroom said it all. I never thought about it then, but looking back now, I donât think many people considered ditching school to go surfing was the same as cutting class. If they did, the beaches would have been crawling with truant officers instead of sand crabs. Surfing was simply part of the culture. That said, because I attended a small private school until my senior year, absences were not tolerated and yours truly was stuck at a desk sweating over Algebra.
Still, that didnât keep me from the surfing beaches. Because there were boys there. Really cute boys with killer bodies. That was high school, though, and my tastes have vastly changed since then.
I never thought Iâd write a surfer hero. But when it came time to create a second story for my Spring Break series, Rick Granger wiggled his way into my brain and stuck. He was perfect for shy, sheltered Lindsey. Who better to convince her that she already was the strong woman she wanted to become? The kind of woman who ended up helping Rick put his own life into perspective.
I very much enjoyed crafting both characters. I hope you enjoy them, too, as well as a glimpse of the quieter side of Hawaii.
Best wishes,
Debbi Rawlins
Debbi Rawlins lives in central Utah, out in the country, surrounded by woods and deer and wild turkeys. Itâs quite a change for a city girl who didnât even know where the state of Utah was until four years ago. Of course, unfamiliarity has never stopped her. Between her junior and senior years of college she spontaneously left her home in Hawaii and bummed around Europe for five weeks by herself. And much to her parentsâ delight, returned home with only a quarter in her wallet.
Prologue
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
Epilogue
LINDSEY SHAW blinked when the champagne flute refused to come into focus. She couldnât be drunk, or even tipsy. Not after only two and a half glasses. But then she rarely drank alcohol, and hadnât eaten since the granola bar sheâd forced down while on the plane this morning.
She looked over at her friend Mia and then her other friend Shelby. They didnât look blurry. A bit flushed, happy, excited. She wished she shared her new business partnersâ optimism over the gigantic step theyâd just taken. But the truth was, she was scared to death.
âUh, Lindsey, you do know weâre celebrating, right?â Grinning, Mia picked up the champagne bottle and started to refill glasses.
Lindsey quickly grabbed her half-empty flute. âNo more for me until we eat something.â
âSeriously?â Shelby made a face. âAnd ruin our buzz?â
âIâm not flying back to Chicago tomorrow morning with a hangover.â Lindsey hadnât meant to sound defensive. Now wasnât the time to get squeamish. Sheâd agreed to take the plunge. Sign her life away. Give up her job. Move back to Manhattan. She wouldnât change her mind now. Even though she wanted to throw up just thinking about the uncertainty they faced in starting the new business.
âSometimes youâre just no fun.â
âShut up, Shelby.â Mia set the bottle back in the silver bucket. âThis is huge. Not that I donât have total faith in us, but letâs be real. We are taking a big risk.â
Lindseyâs stomach clenched. The three of them had talked about opening the concierge/rental business ever since junior year in college, when their sorority had used the concept for a fundraiser. Then they had only rented themselves out, but the new business would be more comprehensive, renting out everything from designer purses and iPhones, to college students willing to run errands or host parties. It was a perfect concept for a city like Manhattan, and in theory sheâd been all for it, until it meant giving up everything that made her feel safe and secure.