About the Book
When Rex Renaud, the COO of
Mercier Shipping, is arrested for a crime he didn't commit, he knows he'll need
a miracle to clear his name … and sassy lawyer Charlotte Andreko is the perfect
woman for the job. Charlotte has built her career defending pro bono clients
against womanizers like Rex Renaud, and she'd much rather let him sweat it out
in a jail cell than defend him in court. Yet Rex swears he's been set up, and
when he offers her a shocking sum of money in exchange for her legal counsel,
the financial security is too tempting to resist. The court dubs Rex a serious
flight risk—how many people have their own jet?—and he's released on one
condition: Charlotte's his new jailer, and he's stuck with her until his
arraignment. But when a bomb threat sends Rex and Charlotte on the run, neither
is prepared for the explosive chemistry and red-hot passion that flare between
them as they hunt for the truth about his arrest. -
Gwen Jones is a mentor and instructor in Western Connecticut
State University’s Master in Creative and Professional Writing program, and an
Assistant Professor of English at Mercer County College, in West Windsor, NJ.
Her work has appeared in Writer’s Digest,
The Kelsey Review, and The
Connecticut River Review, and she is the author of the HarperCollins Avon
FRENCH KISS series, Wanted: Wife, Kiss Me, Captain, and The Laws of Seduction. A writer of
women’s fiction and romance, she lives with her husband, Frank, near Trenton,
New Jersey.
Buy Links
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Chapter One
Alpha Nailed
Center City District Police Headquarters
Philadelphia
Monday, September 29
11:35 p.m.
In her fifteen years as an attorney Charlotte had never let
anyone throw her off her game, and she wasn’t about to let it happen now.
So why was she shaking in her Louboutins?
“Put your briefcase and purse on the belt, keys in the tray,
and step through,” the officer said, waving her into the metal detector.
She complied, cold washing through her as the gate behind
her clanged shut. She glanced over her shoulder, thinking how much better she liked
it when her interpretation of bar remained singular.
“Name . . . ?” asked the other cop at the desk.
“Charlotte Andreko.”
He ran down the list, checking her off, then held out his
hand, waggling it. “Photo ID and attorney card.”
She grabbed her purse from the other side of the metal detector
and dug into it, producing both. After the officer examined them he sat back
with a smirk. “So you’re here for that Frenchie dude, huh? What’s he—some kinda
big deal?”
She eyed him coolly, hefting her briefcase from the belt.
“They’re all just clients to me.”
“That so.” He dropped his gaze, fingering her IDs. “How come
he don’t have to sit in a cell? Why’d he get a private room?”
Why are you scoping my legs, you big douche? “It’s your
jail. Why’d you give him one?”
He cocked a brow. “You’re pretty sassy, ain’t you?”
“And you’re wasting my time,” she said, swiping back her IDs.
God, times like these I really hate men. “Are you going to let me through
or what?”
He didn’t answer. He just leered at her with that simpering grin
as he handed her a visitor’s badge, reaching back to open the next gate. “Thank
you.” She clipped it on, following the other cop to one more door at the other side
of a vestibule.
“It’s late,” the officer said, pressing a code into a keypad,
“so we can’t give you much time.”
“I won’t need
much.” After all, how long would it take to say, No fucking way.
“Then just ring the buzzer by the door when you’re ready to
leave.” When he opened it and she stepped in, her breath immediately caught at
the sight of the man behind it. She clutched her briefcase, so tightly she
could feel the blood rushing from her fingers.
“Bonsoir, Mademoiselle Andreko,” Rex Renaud said.
Even with his large body cramped behind a metal table, the
Mercier Shipping COO never looked more imposing, and in spite of his
circumstances, never more elegant. The last time they met it’d been in Boston,
negotiating the separation terms of his company’s lone female captain, Dani
Lloyd, who had recently become Marcel Mercier’s wife. But with his cashmere
Kiton bespoke now replaced by Gucci black tie, he struck an odd contrast in that
concrete room, yet still exuding a coiled and barely contained strength. He
folded his arms across his chest as his black eyes fixed on hers, Charlotte
getting the distinct impression he more or less regarded her as cornered prey.
All at once the door behind her slammed shut and her heart
beat so violently she nearly called the officer back. Instead she planted her
heels and forced herself to focus, staring the Frenchman down. “All right, I’m
here,” she said en français. “Not that I know why.”
“J’ai oublié que tu avez parlé ma langue,” he said.
“But we’ll keep to English so there’s no mistaking my meaning.” His immaculate
patent-leather shoe nudged the chair opposite. “Have a seat, s’il vous plaît.”
He tsked. “I mean—please,” he added, smiling brilliantly.
If there was anything she remembered about Rex Renaud—which was
nearly everything because he wasn’t easy to forget—it was how lethally he
wielded his physicality. How he worked those inky eyes, jet-black hair, and
Greek-statue handsomeness into a kind of immobilizing presence, leaving her weak
in the knees every time his gaze locked on hers. Which meant she needed to work
twice as hard to keep her wits sharp enough to match his, as no way would she
allow him the upper hand. Yet even though he was in jail, even with him jammed
behind that metal table, and herself looming over him, it was still a battle.
Because with every advantage on her side he still dominated the room, the
situation, the very airspace between them, so much so that Charlotte had to
curl her hand around the back of the chair to steady herself.
Too much coffee today, she reasoned. That’s all it
is. Even though she knew that didn’t even figure.
He nudged the chair again, his collar opened where his bow
tie had been, his only concession to the situation. “Please sit. You heard the flic.
We haven’t much time.”
“We haven’t any time at all.” She steeled herself. “It’s not
like we have anything to discuss.”
“Non?” His gaze offered her a challenge. “Then why did
you come?”
She smiled, with delicious, malicious intent. She waited a
long time to wound him—and all men like him who dismissed women so
easily—and as swiftly and as deeply as she could. “Maybe for the pleasure of
seeing you behind bars.”
“Really,” he said, his eyes darkening as he drew closer. “Though the idea of pleasuring you does
hold a certain appeal.”
Heat streaked through her as she slammed her briefcase atop
the table. “Then take a good look, because my watching you rot in here is about
as close as you’ll ever be to getting me off.”
He sat back, amused. “The lady finds her bliss in the strangest
places. Though if watching people in pain is your thing, I am acquainted with a
few gentlemen who’d pay you a nice piece of change to put all that aggression to
use.” He cast her a glance that near stripped the clothes from her body. “I
believe all you’ll need is a good deal of leather and some rather kinky boots.”
Her jaw dropped. “Are you—you—”
She waved her hand in front of her.
“Me? Why non. I do like a bit of spark in my women, but
I always prefer it on top.” His eyes hooded. “Metaphorically speaking, that
is.”
“You bastard piece of shit,” she uttered, pressing her knuckles
to the worn steel. “I had to be out of my mind to come here when it’s clear
you’re guilty of everything you’re accused of.”
“And what’s that?” he said, rising. “I’d love to hear it out
of your mouth.”
“Of sexual assault,” she spit out. “Of everything vile and
sick and violent that men and their disgusting appetites are capable.”
“Oh, how right you are, mon amie. How truly loathsome
we are. Repulsive animals.” He leaned in, so closely she could feel his breath
on her cheek, his eyes malevolent and cold. “Men are indeed beasts, always
stooping to the lowest common denominator. Using brutality to get what they
want, pugnacious and vicious to the end. Unlike women, who’ve crawled out of
the swamp and up the evolutionary ladder to become so much more ruthlessly efficient.
Who needs fists when you have feminine wiles?” He leaned in even closer. “Why
shed blood when you can suck out a man’s soul.”
“What do you want from me?” she said, backing away. “Why
would you ask me to defend you, knowing what I think of men like you?”
“Because I believe you’ll want to,” he said, his eyes bleeding
candor and reason and some indefinable quality she found, God help her, unable
to resist. “After you hear what I have to say.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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