âDid you feel something just then?â
Kate asked in a hushed tone. âWhen Iâ¦When youâ¦â
âWhen we kissed?â Darren finished for her.
âYes.â
âI felt like this,â he said, pulling her to him. He put his hands on her shoulders and lowered his mouth to hers.
This time there was no accidental brushing of lips. He kissed her with everything he had, taking her mouth with gentle persuasion and making it his.
He kissed her until she swayed against him. She let her hands climb to his chest and link behind his back. Maybe they couldnât indulge in anything too sexual in a public park, but foreplay could take all sorts of forms.
She reached for a grape and slipped it between his lips. âWhen we get home, youâll get your real dessert.â
Dear Reader,
I donât know about you, but Iâm fascinated by those reality TV shows where people are in public dating contests to win the rich guy or gal. I always wonder about the men and women who are drawn to do that sort of thing. Naturally, as a writer, once you start wondering about people you begin to create characters who might find themselves in a certain situation. What if the âprize catchâ was unwilling and had been manipulated into being a celebrity bachelor?
A theme that I explore a lot in my books is appearance versus reality. Most of us create images of ourselves that we project to the world. Sometimes these are very close to the ârealâ us and sometimes quite different. What if my celebrity bachelor ran away from his unwanted fame and chose a disguise that was a lot truer to who he really is? What if he ended up falling for a woman completely different to the woman he thought he wanted? And what if this one didnât fall at his feet?
Darren and Kate were a lot of fun to write about. I hope you enjoy their story.
For info on my upcoming releases, contests and to join my e-mail fan group, come visit me at www.nancywarren.net.
Happy reading,
Nancy Warren
DARREN KAISER was literally on top of the world. He was chatting to one of the hottest-looking womenâand there was stiff competitionâat a rooftop cocktail reception in Manhattan.
âIâll call you,â Darren Kaiserâs new friend, Serena, said, her shoulder-length blond hair swinging against athletically sculpted shoulders perfectly displayed in a clingy black halter dress. She leaned forward to give Darren a kiss that promised a lot more than phone conversation.
âYou do that,â he said, giving her a kiss back that let her know he could keep up his end of whatever she had in mind. From the rooftop deck, all of New York City was laid out in noisy, sparkling splendor, far beneath the well-heeled feet of upwardly mobile twenty-and thirty-somethings.
He nodded to a couple of acquaintances, then decided heâd stayed long enough. He pulled out his cell phone to call his car service for a pickup, then slowed to redrape a sexy young womanâs shawl over her shoulder from whence it had dropped. She rewarded him with a blindingly white smile and an air kiss.
Not being much of an air-kisser himself, he winked at her and kept going.
Darren Kaiser loved being a single man in Manhattan. There were so many beautiful, smart, sexy women. He was crazy about the new female power-babes who were totally up-front about what they wanted, when they wanted it and with whom.
Especially when they wanted it with him.
He whistled as he left Studio 450, where the benefit for fibromyalgia was still in full swing. The benefit was a thinly veiled excuse for singles to check one another out. Darren was here on a corporate ticket paid for by Kaiser Image Makers, and he still felt as if he was working, since he was expected to hand out a few business cards and schmooze.
So, heâd schmoozed a beautiful woman. Or, more accurately, sheâd schmoozed him. These days, a man didnât even need to take a pen and paper with him to the dating-and-mating hunting grounds. If a woman was interested, sheâd do what Serena had doneâpull out her Palm Pilot and enter him into her database.
Thoughts of the sexy Serena almost made Darren contemplate blowing off work tonight. But he was anxious to get a few hours inâbefore his pseudo work in the morning. Heâd found a glitch in the educational software program he was designing and heâd suddenly had an idea for how to fix it right about the time he sipped his first martini and chomped his first hors dâoeuvres.
Heâd have bolted home right then, except that Serena had appeared with a toss of blond hair, an itâs-your-lucky-night smile and her hand extended.
Heâd enjoyed chatting with her and exchanging speculative eye contact, enjoyed the first few steps of a dance he never tired of: the dance of seduction. Unlike the bulk of Manhattanites, old and young, she hadnât wanted to talk exclusively about herself. Serena Ashcroft had seemed genuinely interested in him. His politics, his tastes in fashion, music, movies, clothes and women. Not being stupid, heâd described his ideal woman as someone a lot like Serena. Heâd looked into her cool, patrician blue eyes and said, âMy ideal woman is blonde, articulate, slim and sexy, and isnât afraid to go after what she wants.â He leaned closer so he could smell her expensive scent. âEspecially when what she wants is me.â Sheâd looked so enthralled with his answers he almost expected her to take notes.