Synopsis:
Callie Franklin doesn’t do one night stands.
Ever.
She’s far too responsible and focused on her career to ever
let herself give in to temptation. But, on the eve of her best friend’s wedding,
she meets that temptation . . .
And his name is Devin McAllister.
Devin, on the other hand, has no problem with meaningless
hookups. The very last thing he needs—or wants—is a relationship.
Relationships come with strings.
Relationships come with heartbreak.
A late-night encounter in the hotel’s piano bar finds the
two unable to resist each other. With her angelic voice and bright blue eyes,
Devin’s sure he’s never met anyone as beautiful as his Songbird.
Six weeks later, when two pink lines confirm Callie’s worst
fears, she and Devin have to face the consequences of their wild weekend.
And they have to deal with each other—whether they like it
or not.
With a love story that’s far from traditional, Callie and
Devin begin to wonder if their one-night stand could turn into something
neither of them anticipated.
A happily ever after.
Excerpt:
Traffic’s insane, but I finally make it to Callie’s
apartment just after two. I anxiously knock on the door, ridiculously eager to
get my hands on her. Maybe she’ll be wearing some flimsy lingerie.
Maybe she’ll
be naked. My mind’s busy conjuring all the possibilities when she opens the
door . . . wearing a sweatshirt and jeans.
“Hey,” she says softly, stepping aside to let me in.
“Hey. You okay?”
She looks pale as a ghost. Is she sick? She looks sick.
Maybe I should call an ambulance. Or my dad.
“I’m okay.” Callie leads me over to the sofa. “Look, Devin,
I know you probably have some plans for us for tonight, but that won’t be
happening.”
“Oh.” Disappointment floods me, but if the nauseated look on
her face is any indication, it’s probably best. Besides, there’s the next
night. And the next.
“But we need to talk, so I’m glad you’re here. I have
something I need to tell you.” She abruptly jumps to her feet and walks toward
her kitchen. “Would you like something to drink?”
I can’t tell if she’s being a good hostess or simply
stalling, but I ask for a beer. It looks like I’m gonna need it. I hadn’t
pegged her for the kind of woman who needs to talk about her feelings.
When she returns to the living room, Callie hands me a
bottle and sits down next to me. I notice she only brought one.
“You’re not drinking?”
She curls her feet beneath her. “Unfortunately, no. I won’t
be drinking for a long time.”
I’ve had it with the
riddles.
“All right, what’s going on? My brother and his girlfriend
threatened to murder me if I make you cry. Something’s obviously up with you
because you just want to talk.”
Her forehead creases. “Don’t you ever just talk to a woman?”
“Not if I can help it.”
“Why not? The girls you usually date don’t have enough sense
to carry on an intelligent conversation?”
“I don’t date, Callie.”
“I see. You just sleep with them.”
“Sometimes. Is there something wrong with that?”
“And are you careful?”
“Careful?”
“Safe,” she says softly. “We didn’t use protection. I just
wondered if that’s typical for you.”
Oh. It’d be easy
to blame the alcohol, but honestly, using protection was the very last thing on
my mind that night.
“No, that’s not typical. I’m sorry about that.”
“So am I.”
Callie seems far more relaxed after my apology. Maybe this
night won’t be an epic failure after all. I slide closer to her, but she raises
her hand in warning.
“We’re not finished.”
I groan and lean back against the couch.
“Devin, I need you to listen. Something happened that
weekend. I’m almost positive you won’t want to sleep with me after you hear
what I’m about to say.”
“I seriously doubt that.”
“I don’t.” Callie sits up a little straighter and squares
her shoulders. “I want you to know I expect nothing from you. Our weekend
together was a mistake, and I’ll deal with the consequences of it. I don’t know
exactly what I’m going to do at this point, but I thought you should at least
know what’s going on.”
“What’s going on?”
Her eyes flood with tears.
“Devin, I’m pregnant.”
Pregnant.
Pregnant?
I stare at her. She stares at me. I watch her closely,
hoping that at any moment she’s going to burst out laughing.
But she’s not laughing. She’s crying.
I hear Lorie’s voice in my suddenly throbbing head.
Don’t make her cry.
“Why . . . why are you telling me?”
She wipes her eyes. “What do you mean?”
“You’re assuming it’s mine?”
“Of course it’s yours!”
I snort. “Really? How can you be so sure? Maybe it was that
bartender in the hotel’s piano bar. Or maybe it was the guy who sat with you at
the reception. Or maybe—just maybe—it was the photographer you were with
tonight. You two seem pretty close.”
Even as the bitter words drip off my tongue, I know better.
Her face is just too furious . . . her eyes too heartbroken.
Suddenly, Callie stops crying. Her eyes flash with fury just
seconds before she slaps me across the face.
Despite the ringing in my ears, I can hear my brother’s
warning.
Don’t be an asshole
tonight.
Too late.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author:
A native of East Tennessee, Sydney enjoys playing piano and
relaxing on her porch with her wonderful husband and their very spoiled cat.
No comments:
Post a Comment