TWIN TEMPTATION
âWho are you and what are you doing in my bed?â
The note of command in Jaseâs voice snapped Maddie out of the trance sheâd fallen into ever since heâd pulled back and sheâd looked into those mesmerising blue-green eyes. A moment ago, sheâd been sure he was going to kiss her again. And sheâd wanted him to. More than that, sheâd willed him to. But he hadnât. And now he seemed to be focused on getting answers. OK, maybe he had a right. But so did she.
She squirmed backwards, intending to get out of bed. But she was naked. Sweeping her hand beneath the covers, she searched for her tank top. Without success.
âIâm still waiting for an answer.â
TWIN SEDUCTION
She wanted to taste him. She had to taste him.
As if heâd read her mind, he turned his head until his lips were just brushing hers. For a moment, she hesitated and she sensed that he was hesitating too. She was tempted to open her eyes, to try to see what he was thinking. But she knew, didnât she? And if she opened her eyes, he might disappear.
She couldnât let that happen. She had to keep him here. Tightening her fingers on his face, she drew him closer and whispered, âItâs all right. I want you to kiss me.â
CARA SUMMERS has written more than thirty books. She has won several awards, including an Award of Excellence, two Golden Quills and two Golden Leaf Awards. Last year she was also honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award for Series Storyteller of the Year from Romantic Times BOOKreviews. She loves writing for the Blaze>® line because it allows her to write so many different kinds of stories â from Gothic romances and mystery adventures to romantic comedies. When Cara isnât creating new stories, she teaches in the writing programme at Syracuse University.
Available in July 2010 from Mills & Boon® Blaze®
BLAZE 2-IN-1
Twin Temptation
by Cara Summers &
Twin Seduction by Cara Summers
The Soldier by Rhonda Nelson
Made You Look by Jamie Sobrato
IT WAS a mansion right out of the books sheâd read as a childâJane Eyre, Rebecca, Wuthering Heights.
Those were Maddieâs first fanciful thoughts when she stepped out of the limousine and got a good look at the massive stone structure. Gray and solitary, Ware House soared up three stories and boasted three turrets and a roof edged in carved stone. A man could have tucked away a crazy wife in any of those turrets, she thought a bit giddily. And the fact that the sky was lead colored and cast the front of the house in shadows only added to the illusion.
But this wasnât some English gentlemanâs mysterious country home. It was the Long Island residence of the Ware family. And she was about to meet them for the first time.
A tall man who reminded her a bit of Michael Caine answered the door. He had to be a butler. His posture was ramrod-straight and his face totally expressionless. But Maddie thought she saw a flicker of surprise in his eyes before he stepped aside and said, âCome in, Ms. Farrell. Let me take your bag.â Just as if she were a regular visitor.
Still hesitating on the threshold, Maddie firmly reined in her imagination. It had rocketed into overdrive from the moment sheâd received the phone call from that attorney, Edward Fitzwalter III. Gripping the strap of her purse more tightly, she stepped into the dark-paneled foyer. Since she wasnât at all sure of her welcome, sheâd asked the limo driver to wait for her. She had an escape plan in place.
âThis way.â The man turned and started down a wide hallway. âThe family has already gathered in the library.â
Family.
The knot of anxiety in Maddieâs stomach tightened. She was about to meet a family she hadnât known existed until two days ago. Up until that time, sheâd believed that she was the only daughter of Mike Farrell, a successful cattleman whose ranch was located about an hour north of Santa Fe. Mike had been an only child, the last of a line of ranchers, and Maddie was supposed to carry on his legacy. All her life sheâd believed her mother had died when she was a baby. That was the story her father had told herâ¦and since heâd passed away a year ago, there was no way she could ask him why heâd lied.
And according to the gruff-voiced attorney whoâd called her two days ago, her father had indeed lied to her. And it had been a whopper. All these years, sheâd had a mother sheâd never metâa mother whoâd been raised in this house and who just happened to be renowned Madison Avenue jewelry designer Eva Ware.
Oh, Maddie was very well-acquainted with the professional persona of Eva Ware. Sheâd studied the womanâs designs ever since she was in junior high and had first dreamed of creating her own line of Southwestern-style jewelry. Her father had known of her admiration for Eva Ware Designs, but heâd never once mentioned that the woman sheâd so admired was her mother.