Free Read Novels Online Home

Ready to Run by Lauren Layne (4)

Chapter 4

Jordan was more than used to surprises in her line of work. Heck, television was nothing but one surprise after another.

Surprise hits, surprise cancellations. Surprise pregnancies, surprise hissy fits, surprise hookups. Hell, surprise was pretty much the currency of reality TV.

But somehow Jordan hadn’t been prepared for Luke Elliott being a surprise.

She’d been so damn sure she’d had him pegged from 2,500 miles away.

She’d thought he’d be good-looking but not as good-looking as he thought he was. Figured he’d be cocky as heck, but label it charm.

He was supposed to be irresponsible and a little reckless—with his life, his choices…with other people’s emotions.

But based on her first impressions of the man?

She’d never been so wrong.

Jordan took a sip of the white wine her hosts had poured her and tried not to be obvious as she studied Luke across the deck.

Not that she really needed to be sly. The impromptu BBQ had been under way for nearly an hour, and Luke hadn’t made eye contact with her once.

Every now and then, Jordan could swear she felt his gaze on her, but the second she looked his way, he was back in conversation with someone else. Anyone else but her.

Well, not anyone. Luke was avoiding Simon too, which was impressive, considering her friend had taken the dinner party by storm. Jordan considered herself to be a friendly, likable sort. It’s why she was so good at her job. But next to Simon, she was a reserved wallflower.

She leaned against the railing, only half-listening as Simon regaled the group on the one and only time he’d ventured into Times Square on New Year’s Eve to watch the ball drop, standing in the freezing rain for seven hours, only to lose his spot when he had to leave to go to the bathroom.

Jordan had heard it a dozen times, but the dinner-party crew was new to it and ate up every New York moment.

She felt something nudge her wineglass and glanced down to see it being topped off.

Jordan met the friendly dark gaze of Bree Henderson, Ryan’s wife. “Looked like you could use a bit more,” Bree said, adding a little more to her own glass before shoving the bottle into a bucket of ice beside her feet.

“You’re a skilled hostess,” Jordan said with a smile.

Bree clinked her glass against Jordan’s. “I am, aren’t I?”

“Especially since you had, what, a couple hours’ warning? I still feel so awkward we just showed up like this. Ryan assured me it was no problem, but—”

“Because it is no problem,” Bree insisted. “It’s hardly the first time we’ve done a last-minute gathering, and the kids are at the grandparents’ tonight. Plus, in case you haven’t guessed, the fare’s not going to be fancy, and that’s if Ryan ever finishes whatever the heck he’s doing to the steaks.”

She paused in the process of taking a sip of wine. “You’re not a vegetarian, are you?”

Jordan bit her bottom lip. “Um—”

“Ah crap,” Bree said, before turning her head toward the grill. “Ryan! Add some of those big mushrooms I got yesterday to the grill.”

Ryan looked at his wife, tilting back the bottle of beer to his mouth. “Mushrooms?” He made it sound like a dirty word. “What the hell for?”

Bree tilted her head toward Jordan. “Vegetarian here. Simon, what about you?”

Everyone had stopped chatting now, and Simon gave their hostess a wide smile. “I eat everything, ma’am; I’m sure whatever you serve will be absolutely delicious.”

Jordan gave him a dirty look, before obviously mouthing traitor and making the group laugh.

Well, most of the group. Luke didn’t crack a smile.

He did, however, meet her gaze when she glanced out of the corner of her eye, and just as with that first time this afternoon, Jordan felt it straight in her belly.

He was so…intense.

Not surly intense. He smiled—a great smile, although it was rarely directed at her. He laughed easily, although it sometimes seemed just a touch forced. But there was a quiet energy to him, as though he had boiling emotion on lockdown deep inside and tried to hide it with good-guy ease and a backward cap.

“One giant mushroom coming right up, along with a side of judgment,” Ryan called, winking at Jordan before he headed into the kitchen.

“Has everyone had enough to drink that we can finally get to the good stuff?” Bree asked the group. “Anyone else dying to know more about this show Jordan and Simon are trying to recruit our boy for?”

The half dozen or so Lucky Hollow locals nodded enthusiastically.

Jordan tried to evade. “I really should discuss it with Luke first….”

“Not interested,” he said, ambling forward and pulling another beer from the bucket.

“Ah, come on, Lukey,” Bree said, giving his butt a playful tap. “We all want to see you hand out roses to pretty, crazy women.”

“Wedding invitations, actually,” Simon said.

Everyone’s attention snapped to him. “Come again?”

“Well,” Simon explained, setting aside his gin and tonic to free his hands for their usual waving-while-explaining antics. “Our thought is that Jilted will be the same general premise as The Bachelor but kicked up a notch. Our bachelor will still be a bachelor, but instead of merely being single, he’s someone who’s gotten close to the altar but dodged it multiple times.”

Jordan quickly scanned the group, trying to figure out if anyone would take offense to bringing up Luke’s romantic history. Everyone seemed amused, as though his failed weddings were both old news and fair conversational game.

Even Luke didn’t look particularly bothered by the topic, although she supposed that could have just been self-protecting. But she couldn’t tell. She couldn’t get a read on the guy, which normally wouldn’t be a problem, except she needed to figure out his deal ASAP if she was going to convince him to be their guy.

“Okay, so what’s with the wedding invitations?” asked Hailey Withers, a sweet, curvy brunette with a big laugh. During introductions, it had come out that the very likable Hailey had graduated from high school with Luke and had known him basically forever. Hailey’s husband was every bit as friendly, also born-and-raised in Lucky Hollow, although he’d graduated a few years ahead of Hailey and Luke.

Simon was rubbing his hands together, preparing for showtime. “Well…”

Everyone leaned in, and Jordan good-naturedly rolled her eyes. Simon really had missed his calling. Forget the legal thing—he totally should have gotten a job in sales. Or the theater.

“It’ll go like this,” Simon said. “Our runaway groom will visit with all the ladies, looking for the love of his life. At the end of each episode, every woman is given a glass of champagne and an envelope.”

The group was enthralled. Jordan glanced at Luke to see if there was even a nugget of interest.

But once again she felt a surge of frustration, because his face and body language betrayed nothing. He must have felt her gaze, because he glanced over, only to look away again, as though completely indifferent to her presence.

“What’s in the envelopes?” Bree asked eagerly, sipping her wine.

“Well, if you’re not the one, you get a wedding invitation. To the groom’s future wedding. To another woman.”

“Burn,” Hailey said reverently.

Simon shot a finger pistol at her. “Right? That part was our girl Jordan’s idea.”

Everyone looked at her, and she gave a finger waggle of acknowledgment.

She thought she heard Luke snort.

“Okay, so you get a wedding invitation, you’re out,” said Tim Withers. “What do you get if you’re still a contestant?”

Hailey flicked her husband’s arm. “Look at you, being all interested.”

He draped an arm around her shoulders. “Just exploring my options for when I leave your sorry ass.”

“You love my ass.”

He kissed her temple. “Maybe. Still want to know what my options are.”

Simon grinned. “Well, Timmy my friend, if our groom decides you might be the love of his life and wants to get to know you better, you get an invitation to spend more time with him. A dinner date, champagne tasting, a walk on the beach—”

“I do love a nice beach,” Tim mused.

“Oh, Luke, you have to do this,” Bree said, linking her arm in his. “You’ll be the talk of the town.”

“The talk of the country, really,” Jordan said.

Luke cut her a look. “Fantastic. That’s always been a big goal of mine.”

“What’d I miss?” Ryan asked, coming back out with a plate of mushrooms.

Charlie Bander followed close behind. “Sorry I’m late, but I brought beer, so nobody gets to be mad. Did we convince Prince Charming to be a superstar yet?”

“He’s resisting,” Hailey said with a sigh.

“Really?” Luke asked. “You guys can’t be serious. It’s not just my life that would be cracked wide open. I’m guessing my entire past would be under scrutiny. Am I right?” he said, flicking a look between Jordan and Simon.

Simon subtly shifted into lawyer mode. It was why he was here, to explain exactly what was involved so there were no nasty surprises—or lawsuits—later.

“We tell the groom’s backstory, yes. The women whose hearts he broke.”

Someone snorted, but Jordan took over from Simon, her eyes on Luke. “Preferably interviews with the exes directly, if they’ll let us. From friends and family if the ladies aren’t inclined to talk to the camera.

“And then there’s the hometown episode,” Jordan continued, wanting to be completely transparent with these very kind people. “Near the end of the season, the final contestants would come home with Luke—or whomever—to his hometown, see where he’s from, where they’d be living after the wedding.”

“The wedding,” Charlie said with a laugh, flicking the cap off his bottle and clinking it against Luke’s beer. “One of your favorite hobbies, buddy! You hearing all this?”

“Yeah, I’m hearing it,” Luke said, tilting the bottle back and taking a sip. “And it’s like I told Ms. Carpenter here, there’s not a chance in hell I’ll go along with this circus.”

“Actually, you didn’t tell me that,” she said, leaning back on the railing and crossing her feet at the ankle as she studied him. “You ignored every single message.”

“Luke. That’s rude.” Hailey swatted his hand.

“So’s chasing down a man who doesn’t want to be found,” he muttered.

Jordan felt a surge of panic alongside her frustration. She’d known Luke would be a challenge, but she’d thought the expected enthusiasm from his friends would at least intrigue him.

Not so much, apparently.

She exchanged a quick glance with Simon before pushing upright again and taking a sip of wine. “Luke, can I speak with you a moment? Alone?”

“You’ve got five minutes,” Ryan called over his shoulder. “Then food’s up.”

“I only need two,” Jordan said.

“Sounds like what I’ve heard about Charlie in the bedroom,” Tim said, earning a good-natured middle finger from the red-haired firefighter.

Jordan ignored all this, her attention on Luke. She touched his arm. “Please. I’ve come a long way to talk to you.”

“That’s your problem,” he grumbled.

“Luke.” It was Hailey who spoke, saying his name both softly and with command, and Luke glared at his pretty brunette friend for several moments before swearing under his breath and jerking his head toward a swing set on the far side of the Hendersons’ yard. “Two minutes, City Girl.”

She followed him, wanting to retort that she hadn’t always been a city girl, but the way her stiletto sank into the damp grass weakened the sentiment. So Jordan said nothing, carefully tiptoeing her way across the lawn to where he stood, leaning against the pole of the swing set.

He took another swig of the beer before lowering his arm to his side, letting the bottle dangle loosely between long, strong fingers.

For a moment, Jordan felt blindsided by a pang of homesickness—a longing for a normal life where the men sipped beer from bottles, and women didn’t count carbs, and where comfortable cowboy boots were perfectly acceptable footwear for all occasions.

“Okay, here’s the thing,” Jordan said, taking a deep breath. “You don’t like me. You don’t like the idea of this show. I get that. But as tawdry as the whole thing sounds from your perspective, you have my word that the women will be handpicked to be potentially compatible with you.”

“Handpicked,” he said sarcastically, taking another drink of beer. “You don’t say. Handpicked by whom, you?”

The precise grammar caught her off guard, and she realized this was no country hick to be steamrolled with sweet talk. She quickly shifted her stance to her ace in the hole. Her boss had insisted it be a last resort only, a last-ditch effort to get their guy, but Jordan read people for a living, and her read on this guy told her there wasn’t a romantic bone in his body.

So she took the other tack.

“We’ll double the original offer.”

He didn’t even blink.

“Twice as much,” she said.

“Yes, I’m aware what ‘double’ means.”

“It’s a lot of money,” she said. “And like I said earlier, if money’s not important to you, just think what it could do for the town, should you decide to donate it.”

Luke took a sip of beer and said nothing.

Her eyes narrowed. “Do you even remember what the first offer was?”

“Didn’t forget, I just…never read it in the first place.”

She scowled. “I spent a lot of time on those emails.”

“Well, you wasted your time. I never made it past the second sentence.”

“But—”

Luke moved so quickly she gasped when he stepped toward her, crowding her space. Her surprise had her rocking backward, her spike heels sinking all the way into the grass and throwing her off-balance.

He reached out quickly, a palm against her back. His touch steadied her stumble even as it sent her heart racing.

“I’m only going to say this once more, City, so listen up,” Luke said in a low growl, his breath warm on her face. “I don’t care how much money’s on the table. I don’t care if your ‘handpicked’ women are all Victoria’s Secret models with degrees in neuroscience who run charities in their spare time. I’m not, nor will I ever be, interested in being a part of your show. So you can prance your high heels and your tight ass right back to New York City and leave me and my town in peace.”

He released her so quickly she nearly stumbled again, although she was pretty sure her unsteadiness had more to do with the thrum of her awareness of being so close to Luke than it did the stilettos.

Jordan should call a gracious defeat. She knew that. Knew that she could go back to the drawing board, find a contestant for Jilted who wasn’t so damn stubborn and resistant, and yet…

It was exactly that stubbornness, that pent-up resentment, that didn’t just make him the ideal candidate—it made him the only candidate, at least as far as Jordan was concerned. There was nothing more appealing than the idea of taming the man who couldn’t be tamed. The more forbidden fruit their contestant appeared, the more viewers would be salivating for him to fall in love.

This show might not have been Jordan’s idea. She could even admit to herself that it was ridiculous, but she also knew she could make it a hit, and the key was Luke Elliott.

The very stubborn reluctance that was a pain in her ass right now was exactly what would make the show work. It would make women fall in love with him—not only the twenty-five contestants but the millions of women who’d watch him from the comfort of their living rooms.

Luke Elliott’s gruff hesitation was the stuff of instant ratings successes.

And the moment when he fell in love on national television? The stuff of fairy tales.

“Hey, Country Boy,” she called after him.

He stopped and turned, his large frame illuminated by the twilight. She smiled, then grinned outright when she saw his eyes narrow.

“This city girl’s not going anywhere,” she said with a wink.

His eyes flicked over her, lingering on her stilettos. “Well, then. Best get yourself some better footwear. At least be comfortable while you waste your time.”

Luke turned away again, but Jordan didn’t follow, not right away. He was probably right. Proper shoes wouldn’t hurt, but it also wasn’t her biggest concern right now.

Step one? Find a place to stay. She had a month to land her guy before her boss started getting pissy, and she needed someplace to set up shop other than the tiny motel room.

Step two? Infiltrate every corner of Luke Elliott’s life. And then some.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Jenika Snow, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Bella Forrest, Eve Langlais, Sarah J. Stone, Zoey Parker, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Bring Your Heart (Golden Falls Fire Book 2) by Scarlett Andrews

Dragon Flight (Dragon Shifters of Haven Book 2) by Jillian Cooper

How the Light Gets In: The Cracks Duet Book Two by Cosway, L.H.

Seducing Danger by Kennedy Layne

It Was Love (Taboo Love Duet Book 1) by V Theia

Highlander Unchained by Monica McCarty

How to Lose a Bride in One Night by Sophie Jordan

Turning A Page: A Student Professor Romance by Hazel Keys

Unfriended: A Geek and Stud Romance (Love in New Highland Book 1) by Deana Farrady

Rough Ride: A Small Town Bad Boy Romance by Cass Kincaid

Don't Say Goodbye (Taphouse Blues Book 2) by Heather Lyn

Dallon by Matthews, Lissa

Elizabeth and the Magic of Dragons by Mason, Ava

Wicked Captor by Draven, Zoey

Glazov's Legacy (Born Bratva Book 2) by Steele, Suzanne

Bearthlete: Paranormal Bear Shifter Romance Standalone by Terry Bolryder

If I Fall (New Castle Book 2) by Lydia Michaels

Bishop (Skin Walkers Book 3) by Susan Bliler

(It Happened) One Friday by Lori L. Otto

Mountain Daddies Secret Virgin Girl: A Virgin's Secret Romance Between 2 Mountain Men by Sara Adams