Книга - Interview with the Daredevil

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Interview with the Daredevil
Nicola Marsh


The man behind the headlines…After spending the last few years as the perfect political wife, Ava’s finally single and free to live her life as she chooses – away from the paparazzi… She starts her new life as a freelance writer with a massive scoop: an interview with extreme sports legend – and dreamboat! – Roman Gianakis…The immediate chemistry is all-consuming, but Roman lives his life firmly in the public eye. To match him, she’ll have to step up next to him. Till now she’s always wished she could hide in the wings – is she ready to embrace centre stage?












Praise for Nicola Marsh


‘Fresh, funny, flirty and feel-good—who can resist one

of Nicola Marsh’s delectable category romances? With a

fabulously fun heroine, a sexy hero and lashings of witty

dialogue, Overtime in the Boss’s Bed is another keeper from the stellar pen of Nicola Marsh!’ —www.PinkHeartSociety.com on Overtime in the Boss’s Bed

‘Nicola Marsh heats up your winter nights with this

blazingly sensual tale of lost love, second chances and

old secrets! In Marriage: For Business or Pleasure? Nicola Marsh blends hot sensuality with tender romance, witty humour and nail-biting drama, which will keep readers eagerly turning the pages of this spellbinding contemporary romance!’ —www.PinkHeartSociety.com on Marriage: For Business or Pleasure?

‘This lovers-reunited tale is awash in passion,

sensuality and plenty of sparks. The terrific characters

immediately capture your attention,

and from there the pages go flying by.’

—RT Book Reviews on

Marriage: For Business or Pleasure?

‘Sterling characters, an exotic setting and crackling

sexual tension make for a great read.’

—RT Book Reviews on

A Trip with the Tycoon




About the Author


About Nicola Marsh

NICOLA MARSH has always had a passion for writing and reading. As a youngster she devoured books when she should have been sleeping, and later kept a diary whose content could be an epic in itself! These days, when she’s not enjoying life with her husband and son in her home city of Melbourne, she’s at her computer, creating the romances she loves in her dream job.

Visit Nicola’s website at www.nicolamarsh.com for the latest news of her books.




Also by Nicola Marsh


Girl in a Vintage Dress

Deserted Island, Dreamy Ex!

Wild Nights with her Wicked Boss

Overtime in the Boss’s Bed

Three Times a Bridesmaid …

Marriage: For Business or Pleasure?

A Trip With the Tycoon

Two Weeks in the Magnate’s Bed

Did you know these are also available as eBooks?Visit www.millsandboon.co.uk


Interview with

the Daredevil



Nicola Marsh


















www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)


With thanks to the brilliant staff at Palazzo Versace,

who were smiling and enthusiastic and helpful

while I researched this book. I’ll be back!




CHAPTER ONE


AVA BECKETT sighed with pleasure as she slid into the warm water, lazily breast-stroking to the edge of the infinity pool where she propped on her forearms, staring out at the lights of Melbourne glittering twenty-seven floors below.

She’d stayed at luxurious hotels around the world but there was something decadently edgy and funky about Melbourne’s newest, the Crown Metropol.

Sighing at the self-indulgence of having the pool all to herself, she let go of the side and floated on her back, eyes closed.

How often had she done this? Done absolutely nothing? Try never. Being the prime minister’s daughter had been bad enough, being a diplomat’s wife harder. Every minute of every day scheduled to a second: what she wore, what she did, what she ate and when. Stifling. Suffocating. Strangling.

Opening her eyes, she focused on the water’s reflection shimmering across the roof, happy to do nothing but float. That or pinch herself to see if all this was real, for she still had a hard time believing she was free.

Finally.

Her relationship with Leon had lasted ten years, their lacklustre marriage two, yet the public fallout from their divorce over the last month had been what shattered her most. Every scandalous, invented word plastered across newspapers and magazines making her life hell.

So she’d escaped. Ditched Canberra for Melbourne, abbreviated her surname to Beck and checked into a new hotel in blessed anonymity.

She needed this break to recover from having her name vilified by muck-raking journalists hell-bent on selling copy rather than the truth, needed some private time to savour her freedom without looking over her shoulder for fear of a long-range lens intruding on a moment that could be misconstrued.

She’d been photographed swimming, grocery shopping and heading into a zumba class, three perfectly innocuous, everyday pastimes not allowed by recently divorced women apparently. They’d cast her as frivolous, callous, cold-blooded; and that had been the nice reporters.

She knew why they’d latched onto her after the divorce while leaving Leon unscathed, but it didn’t make it any easier. Shying away from answering questions, preferring to maintain a poised front and take a back seat to her famous father and extroverted husband over the years had been misconstrued as aloofness and arrogance whereas Leon’s easy smiles and garrulousness made him the media’s darling.

She’d been hounded and chased and bruised by the smear campaign over her divorce and she was done.

Time to take control of her life and moving to Melbourne ensured that; if she stayed under the radar.

A soft splash nearby created a gentle wave but the slight disturbance tossing her off kilter didn’t bother her. In fact, a tidal wave probably wouldn’t shake this surreal feeling of liberating independence.

Bumping against the side of the pool, she rolled over to swim a few laps and promptly crashed into someone, their heads colliding in a sickening clash.

Seeing stars, she submerged, grateful for a strong pair of hands around her waist hauling her upwards.

‘You okay?’

Mortified as she coughed and spluttered before finding her voice, she nodded, swiping hair out of her eyes.

‘Yeah, fine,’ she croaked at the same instant she caught sight of her rescuer—and promptly choked again.

Maybe she’d bumped her head too hard for she could’ve sworn her rescuer, the guy still holding her, was George Clooney.

‘Must have a hard head,’ he said, his lips curving into a devastating smile that had her chest constricting, making her breathless as she wondered whether she’d swallowed water.

That had to be the reason behind her breathlessness.

Flustered, she pointed to his head. ‘Could say the same about yours.’

‘Touché.’

His smile faded as concern darkened his brown eyes to ebony.

‘Are you really okay? I could ring for an ice pack? Or walk you back to your room?’

Incredulous, Ava shook her head, instantly regretting it as a sharp pain jabbed her skull where she’d connected with his.

‘Tell me this wasn’t some lame pickup.’

Confusion creased his brow and she breathed a sigh of relief before he laughed, a deep, full chuckle that rippled over her skin like warm treacle.

‘Let me assure you, I can think of smoother ways to ask a beautiful woman out than taking her to Casualty.’

‘The bump wasn’t that bad,’ she said, probing her skull and wincing when her fingertips brushed the lump, and he immediately reached up.

‘Let me.’

Amazingly, she did, stilling as he slid his fingers into her hair, savouring the electric thrill that shot through her at his gentleness.

She held her breath as his fingertips slid over the bump, considerate, exploring and as she lifted her gaze to meet his something inexplicable happened.

Her body buzzed to life.

In a big way.

Must’ve been some bump, she thought as she belatedly realised their intimate position: his hand spanning her waist, holding her close, his other sliding around the back of her head, cupping it, their bodies wet and slick and almost touching.

She hadn’t been this close to a guy in a long time and she almost squirmed like a puppy having its tummy rubbed.

‘Feels nasty. Maybe you should rest on one of the lounges for a while?’

She managed a mute nod, trying not to whimper with pleasure as his fingers slid out of her hair, brushing it back out of her face.

There was something sweetly sensual in the slow sweep of his hand as it smoothed her hair behind her ears, giving her an unimpeded view of a hard, tanned chest that must’ve seen dumb-bells on a daily basis.

By the smattering of dark hair he wasn’t one of those waxed gym junkies, and she immediately wondered why she’d noticed or cared.

‘Let me give you a hand.’

Annoyed she’d been blatantly staring, she raised her gaze to his and if he weren’t steadying her with one hand around her waist she would’ve gone under, for what she saw in those dark chocolate eyes wasn’t the concern of a stranger.

Uh-uh, what she saw in those mesmerising depths mirrored the same, irrational hunger making her want to do crazy things. Things like wrapping her legs around his waist, like sliding her hands all over that muscular chest, like encouraging him to hoist her onto the edge of the pool and kiss her senseless.

‘Come on.’ He cleared his throat but not before his huskiness told her he’d probably read every embarrassing thought she’d just had.

She’d been taught from a young age to shield her thoughts, to ensure her face gave away nothing. Her dad had drummed it home about the dangers of lurking paparazzi, of long-range scopes on high-tech cameras, so she’d spent her life hiding her feelings behind a carefully constructed mask of impassivity. A mask that had well and truly slipped in the joy of floating in this pool after her hellish month, and in the joy of fantasising after landing in this guy’s arms.

‘How’s your head?’

‘I’ll live.’ He winked as they reached the stairs and she could’ve sworn her heart tripped up the steps ahead of her. ‘Besides, if I suddenly go into cardiac arrest you can give me mouth-to-mouth.’

Not used to flirting but dying to get back in the game, she pretended to study his heart, which basically gave her another excuse to ogle that impressive chest.

Tapping her bottom lip, she pretended to ponder. ‘Isn’t mouth-to-mouth only given if you stop breathing?’

‘In that case, that happened about five minutes ago.’

She couldn’t help it; she blushed.

Marrying a family friend straight out of university hadn’t exactly endowed her with femme fatale skills. Her relationship with Leon had been comfortable and familiar, devoid of sparks or flirtation. She’d never learned how but she had a feeling if she hung around this pool much longer she’d be given a crash course by an expert.

‘I think I can take it from here.’

She took a step and stumbled, making a mockery of her attempt at asserted independence and only serving to have him touch her again when his arm shot out and locked around her waist.

‘Easy, you may have a slight concussion.’

There was nothing slight about it; it was the only explanation behind her letting him lead her to one of the double bed chaises and insisting she lie down—with him beside her.

Increasingly self-conscious of her wet high-cut navy one-piece and pebbling skin, she tried to sit up and reach for her robe but he was one step ahead of her.

‘Here.’

He held it up and as she slid her arms into the hotel’s thick, plush dove-grey robe she shivered, not from the cold but from the unexpected tenderness from a stranger as he belted it just right.

‘Better?’

She nodded, easing back onto the pillows at the insistence of his gentle hands.

‘You can go now.’

Her words sounded harsh, especially after how kind he’d been but she needed space, needed him to not lie next to her, needed him to be rude and obnoxious rather than easy-going and likeable.

For lying here next to a sexy, kind stranger beside a deserted infinity pool on the top floor of a chic hotel reeked of adventure and daring and romance, three things that couldn’t be more alien.

‘Wish I could, but I can’t.’

He rolled onto his side and propped on his elbow, looking like a poster boy for jump-starting women’s libidos: long, lean, tanned, muscular and dripping wet, with a pair of mid-thigh board shorts moulding to … She gulped and dragged her gaze upwards, meeting the twinkling in his eyes only marginally better.

‘It’s my duty to see you’re okay. Concussions are serious business.’ He tapped his head. ‘Trust me, I know, I’ve had enough of them.’

Intrigued, she wriggled into the pillows, sat up a little higher.

‘Occupational hazard?’

His mouth kicked into a wicked smile that made her belly flip.

‘You could say that.’

Well aware chatting would only encourage him to stay rather than leave she had a momentary battle with her inner well-trained marionette, the one that had told her to sit up straighter and keep her opinions to herself.

In the face of his devastating smile and those liquid chocolate eyes, the battle was over before it began.

‘What do you do?’

‘I’m in extreme sports.’

‘In?’

He laughed at her obvious confusion. ‘I’m CEO of the governing body for extreme sports worldwide. Heard of action sport? Adventure sport?’

Action? Adventure? Two things that couldn’t be further from the sedate, sheltered, proper life she’d led.

‘You mean stuff like bungee jumping?’

‘And the rest.’

His face lit up and she admired his enthusiasm for his work. She’d never had it, the boring number crunching at the merchant bank less than inspiring. Quitting her job not long after quitting her marriage had been another faux pas according to the vigilante press.

‘Tell me about your job.’

‘Sure you’re interested?’

She nodded, increasingly intrigued. Action, adventure, extreme, encapsulated a lifestyle she could only dream about. What would it be like to live life on the edge? To take risks? To never have to worry about what other people thought of you?

She’d never known but for this brief, surreal interlude with a guy she’d never see again she could live vicariously for a while.

‘Yeah, tell me about the dangerous speeds and hair-raising heights and stunts you do for a living.’

‘So you do know about extreme sports.’

Her hand wavered. ‘A little.’

When he raised an eyebrow, she shrugged. ‘I may have caught a few events in a competition on television last summer.’

‘Go on, admit it, you were dying to hang-glide and wake-board.’

His animation snatched her breath and she unconsciously leaned forward.

‘Considering I like both feet firmly on the ground, that would be a resounding no, but it was cool watching competitors battle environmental challenges while competing against each other.’

‘Wind, snow, water, mountains, you name it, we do it.’

‘So you’re basically an adrenalin junkie?’

She made it sound as though he killed cockroaches for a living but he didn’t mind, the crinkles at the corners of his eyes deepening; by the creases her rescuer spent a lot of time laughing.

‘You bet. Nothing like a shot of endorphins to get the blood pumping.’

He crooked a finger and she leaned closer. ‘Throw in a kick of dopamine and serotonin and you’re on a high almost as good as …’

His pupils widened as he trailed off, giving her fair indication what he’d been about to say.

The safe thing to do would be to change the subject. But she’d done safe her entire life and hadn’t it only been a day ago when she’d arrived in Melbourne that she’d vowed to loosen up? To start living a little?

Yeah, she’d had a gutful of safe.

‘As good as?’

She held her breath as a flicker of lust lit a spark to his eyes, a flash of caramel in all that gorgeous brown.

‘Sex.’

He didn’t blink, didn’t look away and she could’ve sworn the invisible thread binding them tugged.

The flirt’s response would be ‘that good, huh?’ but she’d used up her limited chutzpah supply in the last few seconds.

Besides, the thought of sex being anything other than routine and lacklustre was as foreign to her as this guy and his extreme sports.

‘What else do you do besides skydive and snowboard and cliff diving?’

He chuckled at her sidestep. ‘You really want to hear about nine air sports, eighteen land sports and fifteen water sports?’

‘Maybe not.’ Impressed by his mile-wide daredevil streak, she shook her head. ‘You seriously do all that stuff?’

‘Yeah, all that and more.’

He paused, his gaze momentarily flicking to her lips. ‘Much more.’

And just like that the thread binding them tugged harder, like an intangible, irresistible force dragging her towards him.

‘Are you impressed?’

‘I think you’re crazy,’ she blurted, wondering if she could’ve picked anyone more different to while away a few minutes.

‘So I’ve been told,’ he said, not in the least offended by her outburst. ‘What do you do for kicks?’

In that moment the drudgery of her life flashed before her eyes: being the daughter of the prime minister, the private school, the chauffeurs, the bodyguards, the etiquette and deportment lessons, the expected marriage, being a politician’s wife, the civilised divorce no matter what lies the press printed.

All of it, every constrained, uptight second of it rose up to suffocate her, as it had her entire life.

But she wouldn’t put up with it. Not any more. She needed to wipe those memories, needed to start creating new ones.

Starting now.

‘What do I do for kicks?’

Buoyed by his talk of adrenalin and a soul-deep craving to let loose, she lay her hands on his shoulders and tugged him towards her, murmuring, ‘This,’ a second before her lips touched his.




CHAPTER TWO


THE moment Ava’s lips touched the sexy stranger’s she deliberately blotted out every sane reason why she shouldn’t be doing this and simply allowed herself to feel.

His warmth was the first thing she noticed, the heat from his lips moulding hers, melting, mesmerising, as she moved her mouth experimentally against his.

In response his hand slid into her hair, cradling the back of her head but this time there was nothing remotely gentle or therapeutic in his touch.

Uh-uh, this time his fingers splayed and pulled her towards him while his skilled mouth coaxed hers into opening.

As his tongue touched hers starbursts exploded in her head as she belatedly wondered if she had sustained a concussion.

Surely that could be the only explanation for this dazed, stunned confusion clouding her usually immaculate rationale and making her want to kiss a guy she barely knew for ever.

Yeah, he was that good and when the pressure of his lips eased she wanted to scream ‘no-o-o!’

For this was when her reliable logic would kick in, the logic that had helped her breeze through tense seating arrangements at foreign embassies, the logic that had prompted her to give up her writing dream and undertake a sensible economics degree, the logic that had insisted marrying a family friend would be a solid basis for a sound marriage.

Screw logic.

‘Can I blame that on concussion?’

The lips she’d just ravaged kicked up at the corners. ‘That depends.’

‘On?’

‘How bad it is.’

With a fake wince, she pointed to her head and pretended to swoon. ‘It’s beyond bad.’

‘In that case, I insist I walk you to your room.’

His gaze dropped to her mouth for a moment. ‘Just in case you impulsively kiss every stranger you come into contact with.’

Just like that, her bubble of illusion popped. For that was what she’d done. Kissed a stranger, some random guy, she’d met in a hotel.

Sheesh. What had she been thinking? It was one thing to abandon boring logic, another to lose sight of the facts completely.

‘Hey, I was kidding.’

He touched her arm and a spark of something zapped her, reminding her of the reason she’d ignored logic in the first place.

‘Though introducing ourselves should take care of the stranger problem?’

He smiled and her chest constricted. Smooth, sweet-talking charmers shouldn’t have a lethal smile too.

‘Roman. Extreme sports fanatic.’

He held out his hand. ‘And part-time poolside paramedic.’

She laughed, the carefree cadence foreign to her ears. When was the last time she’d laughed, really laughed, just for the heck of it?

Not while living in Canberra under Daddy’s watchful eye while he’d stood at Australia’s helm, not during her sedate two-year marriage and certainly not during her divorce last month, a divorce that had been publicly scrutinised while her name had been dragged through the mud for no other reason than she was Ava Beckett, reported society royalty, who’d supposedly got what was coming to her.

It felt good, great in fact, and by those attractive crinkles at the corners of his eyes Roman had spent a hell of a lot more time than she had laughing.

She placed her hand in his. ‘Ava. Recent quitter of boring financier job. Clumsy oaf and danger to others poolside.’

His fingers closed over hers, his grip firm and solid, and another little shiver of awareness slithered through her.

‘Well, then, with your clumsiness and my paramedic skills, we’re a match made in heaven.’

He squeezed her hand and released it when she grimaced.

‘Tell me those lines don’t usually work for you.’

He leaned closer and she bit her lip at the sudden onslaught of masculinity temptingly within reach. ‘You tell me?’

Sotto voce, combined with a wink, had her laughing again.

‘So when you’re not rescuing clumsy damsels in distress and jumping off bridges with an elastic rope tied to your ankles, where do you live?’

For the first time since she’d met him a shadow shifted in the rich depths of his eyes before he blinked and the resident twinkle was back.

‘I’m based in London at the moment.’

She caught a hint of hesitancy, a slight stiffening in his shoulders before his smile caught her off guard again, dazzling in its sexiness.

‘Boring financier job, huh? Lucky you quit.’

‘Yeah, real lucky.’

She wanted to act blasé, as if she could walk out on a solid job and live a carefree life traipsing around the planet. Instead, she did what had been ingrained from a young age: told the truth.

‘Actually, I have no idea what I’m going to do next.’

‘Easy. What’s your dream job?’

His eyes crinkled in amusement, making her want to smile along with him. Nothing fazed him. Then again, the guy jumped off tall buildings for a living—losing a job would be small fry.

‘Dream job?’

She’d given up on dreams a long time ago, around the time her life fell under the control of others.

‘Yeah, what are you passionate about? Number crunching in another capacity?’

‘Hell no!’

He laughed at her vehemence. ‘If not numbers, maybe words? What about using your numbers experience and using words to get your expertise across, maybe something like statistics lecturer or maths teacher?’

‘Couldn’t think of anything worse.’

Standing up in a room full of strangers watching her every move? No way. Too reminiscent of her past.

He tapped his bottom lip, thinking, while she focused on that lip. ‘Words … hey, what about writing?’

Her heart skipped a beat at his suggestion. Writing had once been a dream, a dream ripped asunder by the practicalities and expectations of being the prime minister’s daughter. She hadn’t written a word since Year Twelve English Lit, had turned her back on scrawling in her daily journals around the same time.

Ironically, when she’d been the brunt of the media’s smear campaign recently she’d wish she could report the facts and not the drivel printed. It had sparked a vague idea about writing again, perhaps using her experience to freelance, to be an interviewer famed for her integrity rather than headline grabbing.

Maybe it’d be fun to try again, but could she make a living from it? And who would hire her, an ex-financier who’d been publicly flayed for no other crime than bearing the Beckett name?

‘Take here, for instance, you’d have loads to write about.’

He snapped his fingers. ‘Let’s see. Melbourne’s newest hip hotel has a resident poolside attendant that incapacitates guests then resuscitates them with a little mouth-to-mouth—’

‘I kissed you,’ she blurted, mortified when his gaze flicked to her lips before meeting hers again, filled with heat and longing that took her breath away.

‘Yes, you did, and I can’t tell you how impressed I am.’

Enjoying his lighthearted flirtation more than she could’ve imagined, she screwed up her eyes, pretending to think.

‘With my technique? My impulsiveness? My—’

‘All of it.’

This time his gaze started at her lips and swept over her and, while he couldn’t see much beneath the voluminous grey robe, the smoulder told her he remembered every curve.

‘You know I don’t usually go around kissing strangers, right?’

‘We’re not strangers any more.’

He caressed her cheek, his finger starting at her temple and slowly stroking downwards towards her jaw, lingering under her chin to tip it up and when she looked into his eyes her temperature spiked.

Raw passion, the type of passion she’d read about in romance novels she’d hidden beneath her mattress as a teenager, a passion she secretly craved yet had never experienced, a passion she didn’t believe in.

Until now.

For Roman didn’t have to touch her to make her weak-kneed and hot. He didn’t have to sweet-talk her or use lines or do anything other than look at her.

When those darker-than-chocolate eyes looked at her, really looked at her, every female cell in her body snapped to attention, a subliminal reaction she had no hope of controlling. Totally, irrationally crazy.

Increasingly flustered under his burning stare, she aimed for flippant.

‘You should be safe from my randomly-lip-locking-strangers affliction, now we’re properly introduced and all.’

‘Pity.’

His thumb brushed her lower lip before his hand dropped away along with her belly and she floundered for a safe change of topic. There were only so many flirty comments and loaded stares a novice could handle.

‘Are you here on business?’

‘Of sorts.’

‘Sounds cryptic.’

He shrugged, the action emphasising the tension in his shoulders. ‘Time for new challenges so here I am.’

‘Trying to find a higher mountain to jump off than the ones you’ve already conquered around the world?’

‘Something like that.’

His smile didn’t reach his eyes and she wondered why he was really here.

‘What about you?’

‘Me?’

‘Are you up for new challenges? The writing idea?’

He’d subtly moved the focus back onto her. Interesting, as most of the guys in the social circles she’d moved in loved to talk about themselves but Roman seemed strangely reticent to discuss anything beyond here and now.

‘Is it something you could go for?’

If he only knew. She’d loved writing as a kid, had penned her first full-blown dragon-and-princess fantasy at eight, had won a short story comp run by a Melbourne newspaper at eleven and got top marks in English every year at the private girls’ school she’d attended.

Then her father had been elected Prime Minister and a starry-eyed fifteen year old with dreams of being a journalist-cum-fiction-writer had been indoctrinated into the expectations of a PM’s daughter, sending her dreams along with the many vivid plots dancing in her mind straight down the toilet.

She’d followed a career path deemed more suitable, giving up her ‘impulsive, flaky writing’ to enter economics.

Oh, she’d done well, both at university and the merchant bank she’d worked for—not that she ever had an option for failure—but getting creative with figures wasn’t a patch on getting creative with words and as her resentment had steadily built so had her frustration.

It had spilled over into all areas of her life, including her marriage, and while Leon had been amicable to the split she couldn’t help but wonder if she’d been the major cause of the inevitable breakdown of their relationship.

‘Yeah, writing for a living would be great.’

‘What kind?’

‘Probably freelance for a start.’

Give her a chance to free the muse and get the words flowing again, then see if anyone would truly employ her with zilch experience in the field.

‘You should do it.’

Buoyed by his enthusiasm, she squared her shoulders. ‘Maybe I will.’

‘Good for you.’

He winked and her heart stuttered and stalled. ‘Go ahead, paint a picture in words for me.’

‘Now?’

‘Yeah, no time like the present to get you started on your new career path.’

He leaned closer and she sucked in a breath of heady male tinged with chlorine. ‘Describe your favourite holiday destination.’

‘Lizard Island,’ she blurted, needing to deflect those hypnotic dark eyes before she did something foolish, such as kiss him again. Though if her two-word answer was all she could come up with description-wise, she’d better ditch the writing idea now.

‘Whitsunday Islands?’

She nodded. ‘Not as well known as Hayman or Hamilton. Coastline’s more rugged, beaches more isolated. Off the beaten track.’

‘Unspoilt beauty can be more appealing than commercialised tourist traps.’

She silently chalked up another brownie point to him, in total agreement. She’d spent enough time traipsing around the world’s hot spots with Leon: from Monte Carlo to New York, London to Tokyo, playing a diplomat’s wife to perfection. Dining at Michelin-starred establishments, staying at exclusive spa resorts, mingling with the upper echelons of society, living the high life.

She would’ve rather camped in the Pyrenees and eaten hawker food and gone without pedicures than have her every move watched and scrutinised by people who almost wanted her to slip up so they could spread gossip or leak it to the press. Just as they had during her divorce.

She’d grown oblivious to the constant watching after a while, had pretended it hadn’t bothered her, but it had taken its toll.

She’d spent the bulk of her life under a microscope and the fact that she was here, staying in a funky hotel under a pseudonym, flirting with an adventurous guy so far removed from the men in her social circle, was so freaking fantastic she wanted to shout it to the world.

Or do something crazy, something impulsive, something so far removed from her past to render her a new woman.

Grabbing his hand before she had second thoughts, she looked him straight in the eye.

‘You know something? I’m pretty sure this concussion is worsening. Maybe you should walk me to my room after all?’

If he was surprised by her forwardness he didn’t show it. A consummate performer. Then again, a guy who looked like him probably had women throwing themselves at him every day of the week. What was one more?

‘Sure, no worries.’

He stood and held out a hand and as she stared at it she had a moment to change her mind.

Would she really go through with this? Invite a guy she barely knew back to her room? Have sex with him? Her first one-night stand?

‘I’ll just leave you at your door …’

His hand wavered but before he could lower it hers shot out and grabbed it as she surged to her feet, wobbly, off balance for a second before he steadied her.

She wanted to explain why she was doing this, wanted to give him a clue as to what this meant for her, but how to do it without sounding like a naïve moron?

‘Ava, don’t worry about it. If it’s easier I’ll leave you here—’

‘I’m a prime minister’s daughter and I’m four weeks out of a lacklustre marriage to a politician and I’ve spent my life doing the right thing and saying the right thing and I’m sick of it and I want a little adventure of my own and—’

‘Shh …’

He placed a finger against her lips and she exhaled, embarrassed by her blurted admission.

Taking a deep breath to quell her mortification, she risked a quick glance at his face. If she saw pity, she was out of here.

Instead, his understanding had her swaying unconsciously towards him, her body recognising on some subconscious level what her mind only just realised.

This guy was special.

‘You don’t owe me any explanations.’

He lowered his finger, traced a path along her jaw, under her ear, across her collarbone, lingering in the hollow there.

‘I think you’re amazing and if you want me to spend the night with you, the pleasure is all mine.’

Ava would’ve melted into a puddle of lust there and then if not for his strong arm sliding around her waist, supporting her as they strolled towards the lifts.

She didn’t speak. She couldn’t, not with her throat constricting and her diaphragm heaving and her pulse pounding so hard she could barely hear herself think.

When they reached the lifts he squeezed her gently and she automatically snuggled into his side.

‘You sure about this?’

She hadn’t been sure about taking an economics major, she hadn’t been sure about marrying Leon and she sure as hell wasn’t sure what she’d do next career-wise but if there was one thing she was sure of tonight this was it.

‘Does room 1620 answer your question?’

She held her breath as he guided her into the elevator, hit the sixteen button and brushed a soft kiss across her lips.

‘Perfectly,’ he said as they stood like silent sentinels, watching the panel counting down the numbers from twenty-seven to sixteen, and when the elevator pinged and the doors slid open on the sixteenth floor she could’ve sworn she experienced an adrenalin rush no jump off a bridge could ever hope to reproduce.




CHAPTER THREE


ROMAN had exactly sixty seconds to extricate himself from this situation and make a run for it.

How many times had he aborted a jump due to risky conditions? Or rescheduled a climb for another day due to changeable, unfavourable winds?

Too many to count and right now he had that same churning in his gut telling him something wasn’t right.

He knew what it was. Despite her forwardness Ava had vulnerable written all over her. And he’d had a gutful of susceptible females, considering the major reason he’d fled to Australia was to get as far away from one as possible.

Not entirely fair, as Ava had more strength in her little finger than Estelle had in her entire passive-aggressive body, but fresh from another emotionally draining bout with his moody mother left him with little impetus to fall headlong into another potentially fragile situation, even if it was for only a night.

Ava practically bounced along beside him as they traversed the long corridor to her room, oblivious to his dilemma.

For that was what he was facing: lose himself for a night in a wild, passionate encounter guaranteed to refresh or give the woman beside him another reason to doubt herself if he ditched her at her door.

She’d do it too, probably rehash their pool encounter at length and come to the erroneous conclusion that she’d said or done something wrong to drive him away.

He’d hate that, for he could see she’d already had the life squished out of her. Being a prime minister’s daughter would’ve been hell, not to mention a politician’s wife, and the fact she’d gathered enough courage to invite him back to her room for a one-night stand spoke volumes.

A month out of a divorce, she needed to test the freedom waters. It had nothing to do with getting laid and everything to do with asserting a femininity he’d hazard a guess had been battered.

He’d seen mates go through divorces and one word summed them up. Ugly. How much harder had it been for Ava, with the added pressure of her family name?

The right thing to do would be to walk her to her door, kiss her goodnight and wish her a happy life. The last thing she needed was a guy who made an art out of escapism, who’d outrun an Olympian at the first sign of anything deeper than casual.

And Ava needed deeper. She needed a good guy to nurse her through this tender period, a guy to build her confidence, a guy to be there for her.

He sure as hell wasn’t that guy.

He’d make sure she made it safely back to her room, try to assure her he’d had a fun evening and make a run for it.

Decision made, he risked a sideways glance at her, his gut instantly tightening and making a mockery of his resolution.

Water droplets clung to the strands of hair framing her glowing face, her skin still dewy and damp from their pool encounter. Her body was completely covered in the hotel’s voluminous robe but he could remember every intriguing detail: the nip of her waist, the flare of her hips, her smooth caramel-toned legs, her breasts … The tension within him coiled tighter, strangling his resolve to leave her and walk away. He knew what he had to do. Shame his libido wasn’t with the programme yet.

‘Almost there.’

A barely detectable tremor underscored her husky tone and in that second his intention to leave her alone took a serious hit.

Her susceptibility was the one thing driving him away yet that audible hint of vulnerability had him wanting to hold her close all night.

He wasn’t usually a sucker for a damsel in distress—discounting Estelle, who’d worked out he was an easy target for a single mother and who never let him forget that fact every day of his life.

Nope, he usually went for confident, showy women. Women proud of their assets, who knew how to use them. Women like him. Nothing wrong with grabbing the spotlight and staying there, something he’d perfected out of necessity.

So why was he so hung up over a naive divorcee primed to test her newfound independence?

‘Here we are.’

With her back to the door, she gazed at him with a gut-punching mix of wary optimism and expected rejection. The rejection hit him hardest, as if she’d expected him to walk away all along.

‘You sure—’

Her fingertips pressed against his lips, effectively silencing him, and when her hand trailed slowly downwards, her palm coming to rest over his heart, he knew he couldn’t do it.

Walking away would be like kicking a defenceless puppy. Not that he pitied her, far from it. He admired her pluck in a world that must be topsy-turvy for her right about now.

Women reeling from divorces might want to assert their independence but often didn’t follow through so the fact they’d got this far notched up his admiration further.

When her palm slid lower, lingered on his upper abs, her fingers tentatively exploring, he didn’t pity her or admire her, he just plain wanted her and taking a step closer, their bodies barely touching, he knew that whatever happened when they stepped through that door, he wanted to make this night memorable for her.

When Ava had headed for a late-night swim she hadn’t expected to bring back a visitor to her room so when she slid the key card into the slot and opened the door to her room, she baulked.

‘Problem?’

Yeah, there was a problem.

She’d never done this before.

Inviting a guy she’d just met back to her room for sex? So far out of the realms of reality to be ludicrous. Except for the fact she had an incredibly hot, amazingly gorgeous guy hovering behind her, waiting for them to take their flirtation all the way.

Was she nervous? Hell yeah, but anticipation far outweighed her nerves.

A moment ago, she’d thought Roman would kiss her goodnight and walk away. He’d had that look, the look of a guy wanting to do the right thing.

She never should’ve blurted that stuff about being recently divorced; for all she knew, this was a pity lay.

Would it matter? Considering how Roman had made her feel the last hour, probably not. She wanted to explore the attraction between them, wanted to see if the excitement making her nerves buzz and her muscles clench could carry over into the best sex of her life.

Staying in this hotel had been all about a fresh start and what better way to kick-start her new life than with an unforgettable night with a guy who made her insides quiver with a single look?

A delicious shiver ran through her as Roman nuzzled her ear, his arms sliding around her waist from behind, pulling her close to reveal evidence of how he could make all her problems vanish over the next few hours.

‘The place is a mess,’ she said, tilting her head back to look at him.

‘I’m not here to check out the place.’

His mouth crushed hers in a breath-stealing kiss to prove it and her last-minute doubts faded into oblivion.

When he finally gave her a chance to breathe again, she said, ‘Right, now we’ve cleared that up, come on in.’

Laughing, they tumbled through the door and as it slammed shut they reached for each other, oblivious to the mess, oblivious to everything but satisfying the hunger that had started with an unexpected kiss.

Ava wanted to tear off his robe, push him against the nearest wall and jump him.

She settled for tugging on his robe sash so hard he slammed against her and she staggered slightly, getting her wish reversed when her back hit the wall.

‘Uh … it’s been a while for me,’ she said, feeling the need to explain her desperate behaviour.

In response he captured her face between his hands and kissed her, long, hot, open-mouthed kisses that made further explanations unnecessary.

Her knees would’ve buckled if he hadn’t pressed his body to hers, holding her upright with every delicious, hard plane.

As his tongue danced with hers she strummed his shoulders, his back, revelling in the defined muscles, the lean sinews.

When her hands moved lower, exploring the contours of one very fine ass, he moaned, pressing his pelvis into hers, making her crumple just that little bit more.

‘You’re driving me wild,’ he murmured against the side of her mouth and she groped him, unable to keep the smug grin off her face.

She’d never driven any guy wild in her entire life and to think a guy like Roman, who’d probably had enough adrenalin rushes to keep him high for life, found her exciting enough to drive him wild … well, it was the best aphrodisiac ever.

‘You think this is funny?’

‘I think this is fantastic,’ she said, her fingertips toying with the waist of his wet board shorts.

The corner of his mouth kicked up along with an eyebrow.

‘Then why the grin?’

‘Because I’m happier than I’ve been in a while.’

The truth spilled out and as surprise lit his eyes she wished she could take it back.

This wasn’t the time for stark reality.

This was a time to forget the past; to live in the future.

Before he could ask any more questions or she could blurt out any more mood-killers, she wrapped a leg around him, surprised when he murmured, ‘Me too,’ in her ear.

Before she could ponder why a rich, gorgeous, adventurous guy like him would be anything other than happy he systematically ravaged her, starting at the top and working his way down.

He ripped off her robe and her nipples instantly hardened as he stared at her breasts through the wet Lycra.

Her simple navy one-piece was conservative by swimsuit standards these days but the way Roman devoured her with his eyes made her feel as if she wore the skimpiest, sexiest swimsuit ever.

Not that she was wearing it for long.

Hooking his thumbs under the straps, he peeled them down.

Slowly.

Revealing one breast first, then another, his hungry stare making her skin pebble.

She sucked in a breath as he continued stripping her, kneeling in front of her as he tugged the swimsuit lower … and lower … his breath fanning her belly.

Lower still and she stiffened as the swimsuit snagged on her butt. Using his hands, he slid them under the Lycra and eased it over and down her legs, baring her to him and she shivered, more from the intensity and hunger in his stare than the air-conditioned chill in the air.

‘Jeez,’ he murmured, his hands stroking her ankles, her calves, the backs of her knees, lingering on the insides of her thighs and gently nudging her apart.

She watched him, so turned on she couldn’t think, couldn’t breathe, for wanting him to touch the part of her throbbing for him.

Second after torturous second passed before his head eased forward and his mouth finally touched her where she yearned to be touched.

Her pelvis arched as his tongue flicked her, once, twice and she whimpered, the tension within her spiralling out of control too soon, too fast.

But she was powerless to stop it and as he spread her further, his tongue lapping at her, she came apart on a drawn-out scream.

Senseless, boneless, she would’ve slid down the wall if his strong hands hadn’t braced her waist and as he kissed his way upwards, his tongue tracing a slow, scorching path towards her breasts, her need for him increased.

‘That was … ooh …’

His mouth clamped around a nipple, sucking it while his hand kneaded her other breast, and the tension started again, coiling, tightening.

She wanted to say that was spectacular, sensational, stupendous, and a whole host of other totally inadequate adjectives. But he didn’t give her time to think.

Before shrugging off his robe he pulled his wallet out of the pocket, snaffled a foil packet, stripped off his board shorts as if it were the most natural thing in the world and made quick work of a condom.

While she struggled to breathe as she watched the entire time.

Time slowed as she watched him roll the condom over his arousal, thick and long, and she clenched her hands to stop from reaching out and finishing the job for him.

When she finally wrenched her gaze away, she sucked in a breath, for he was looking at her the same way: wide-eyed, dazed and ravenous.

Needing him inside her, now, she opened her arms to him and he didn’t need to be asked twice.

His hands splayed her waist as he hoisted her up and she wrapped her legs around him.

He nudged her entrance and she moaned as he slid in, inch by exquisite inch, until he filled her.

His mouth claimed hers as he started to move, gliding in and out, trying to keep it slow.

But she didn’t want slow. She wanted hard and fast. She wanted the type of sex she’d never had.

Her pelvis took on a life of its own as she bucked against him, urging him on and he obliged, pumping into her until she was mindless, clawing to the edge of another monumental orgasm before falling over the other side in a blaze of heat and glory.

He came a second later, thrusting up so high she almost passed out with pleasure and as they clung to each other, sweat-slicked skin gleaming in the lamplight, she couldn’t help but wish she’d been this adventurous a long time ago.




CHAPTER FOUR


AVA had no idea about morning-after etiquette. How could she, when the only guy she’d ever slept with had been Leon and they’d been dating for ever before they’d finally had sex?

There’d been no awkward mulling over what to say or when to leave or how to extricate herself gracefully from the situation then, for they’d practically been engaged anyway. They’d known each other so long, as family friends first, later as a couple, that sleeping together had been no big deal.

Unlike now.

Roman slid into his hotel bathrobe and belted it, looking as delectably sexy as he did without it.

His hair spiked every which way, he had some serious stubble going on and the faintest dark circles under his eyes indicating he hadn’t slept much.

Snap, neither had she.

She wasn’t complaining.

Trying not to cower under the sheets like the one-night-stand novice she was, she scooted up the bed, semi-sitting as he stalked towards her, aiming for post-coital cool when in fact she probably had bed hair and morning breath.

Sitting on the edge of the bed, he took hold of her hand and kissed the back of it, a grand romantic gesture that merely added to the surrealism of their encounter.

‘I have to go. Meeting.’

‘No worries, I’ve got stuff to do too.’

And if she didn’t get him out of here so she could shower and get her head screwed on right she’d make a mess of this.

Roman had been a lovely distraction, an incredible, mind-blowing distraction, but she needed to refocus on getting the rest of her life back on track and the faster they made a clean break, the better.

Gently extricating her hand out of his, she touched his cheek, the stubble rasping deliciously against her fingertips.

‘Last night was …’

What? The most exciting night of her life? The best sex she’d ever had? The most spontaneous, adventurous, outrageous thing she’d ever done?

She wanted to thank him, to explain what last night had meant to her—shedding her old life, welcoming her new—but one glance at his face and she knew she couldn’t say any of those things.

For Roman had reverted to the suave charmer she’d first met last night, the guy whose lips quirked as if he found everything amusing, the guy whose eyes crinkled in the corners from laughing a lot, the guy who lived life on the edge and wouldn’t understand how monumental last night had been to a staid, regular girl like her.

Smiling, he cradled her face in his hands. ‘I think this sums up what last night was.’

His kiss was slow, sensual and steeped in eroticism. A kiss to remind her of what they’d shared; a kiss to ensure she’d never forget.

When their lips eased apart all too soon her fingers convulsed against the sheets to stop from reaching out and hauling him back for more.

‘Thanks, Roman.’

The second the words popped out she felt stupid. Did you thank a guy for sex? For the hottest night of your life? She had no idea of rules in this situation and for a girl who’d followed protocols her entire life she didn’t like this floundering.

‘My pleasure.’

He touched her shoulder once before standing, the few centimetres separating them feeling like an ocean already.

Last night had been about sex.

Last night had been about sizzle.

Then why the crazy, irrational ache in her chest as she watched him stroll towards the door? For a moment she wanted to run after him, grab hold of that robe and rip it off as she had last night.

Biting her bottom lip to stop from saying anything else, she pasted a bright smile on her face as he stopped at the door and turned back.

‘If you have any free time, I’m staying another day.’

Unsure whether he wanted to see her again or was reverting to type with the flirtation, she managed a mute nod and some stupid half-salute as he let himself out.

The minute the door closed, she slumped down the bed and flung her forearm over her eyes.

Maybe that would block out the stupid voice in her head, the one that insisted she had the guts to discover his room number and ring him before he left.

Ludicrous, as one-night stands were just that: one night.

But in the time it took to reject the idea as ridiculous, frivolous and totally unreal, she had envisioned herself having dinner, a midnight swim and possibly a whole lot more with the guy who had rocked her world.

Roman glanced at his watch as he entered the Michelin-starred restaurant on the hotel’s ground floor. He was running late. Not that he cared. The cause of his tardiness had been worth it.

And how.

Even now, forty-five minutes later, he couldn’t get the last image of Ava out of his head. Tousled, wide-eyed, sated, sitting up in bed clutching a sheet to hide what he’d already seen and admired and tasted all night long.

She’d looked so vulnerable, the exact opposite of the wild, passionate woman she’d been in his arms, and it had taken every ounce of will power to walk away from her.

Though what would hanging around have achieved? They’d had a memorable one-night stand. They had separate lives to lead on different continents. They had nothing in common beyond what they’d shared last night.

So why that parting shot about how long he was staying here? The last thing he needed was a newly divorced woman finding her feet in singledom latching onto him.

He mentally winced at that poor judgement call. Nothing Ava had said or done implied she’d be latching onto anyone any time soon. In fact, from what she’d said, she’d spent her life under a microscope and was probably looking for a little freedom.

Being the prime minister’s daughter would’ve sucked. As for her marriage to a politician, he’d schmoozed with enough A-listers around the world to know how these things worked. Family expectations, moving in the right social circles, marrying a partner deemed suitable.

He’d bet his last grappling hook Ava had said all the right things and done all the right things from birth, had probably married some slick politician hand-picked by Daddy. Poor kid.

Then again, her inherent naivety had attracted him right from the beginning. She’d seemed oblivious to their physical proximity when he’d rescued her after their heads collided but he’d been all too aware of her slick body millimetres from his.

She’d been flustered; he’d been aroused.

Then he’d started flirting and while she’d reciprocated there’d been an innocence about her, an inexperience that didn’t gel with a divorcee. In his travels, how many times did he meet a woman who still blushed? Not often.

He dated extensively, from princesses to pop starlets, blondes, brunettes and every shade in between. Not that he was half the playboy the paparazzi made him out to be but he was a well-known, successful, single guy and that status came with perks. Plenty of perks.

So what was it about Ava that shook him up?

Once he’d left her room he should’ve forgotten about her, should’ve focused on this meeting. Instead, he wondered how soon he could wrap up business and maybe ring her, see if she was free for a quick catch-up before they both went their separate ways.

Rattled more than he cared to admit, he tugged on the ends of his shirt sleeves and adjusted his cufflinks, the same steadying ritual he went through before any jump. Though in his sporting career it was usually a buckle or safety knot he was adjusting.

Glancing around the restaurant, he spotted Rex Mayfair, an old friend of his mum’s, partially hidden by a screen and towering palm.

Rex had often stopped by their Chelsea apartment when he’d visited London and as a kid he’d wondered if Rex might in fact be his dad. Despite careful scrutiny, it didn’t look as if the old guy was anything more than a platonic friend of Estelle’s. Not that she’d tell him anyway. He’d given up asking about his paternity years ago.

‘Father unknown’ sucked on his birth certificate but not as much as having a mother who’d made him pay for being a burr in her side every day growing up.

Annoyed he’d let old bitterness creep into this otherwise sensational morning, he strode across the restaurant, ready to hear what Rex thought of his plan.

Rex caught sight of him first and stood, a welcoming smile accentuating the many creases lining his ruddy face.

‘Roman, my boy, good to see you.’

‘Likewise.’

As he neared the table and reached out to shake Rex’s hand a prickle of awareness raised his hackles and he glanced over his shoulder to find Ava sitting at the next table, partially hidden by a palm, poring over the morning newspaper’s employment section.

The smart thing to do would be to acknowledge her with a greeting then distance himself and catch up with Rex. Easy. Until he caught sight of her teeth worrying her lower lip and the frantic eye movements speed-reading the job ads.

She needed a break and as Rex pumped his hand an idea completely out of left-field smacked him upside the head.

‘Excuse me a moment.’

Rex raised an eyebrow as Roman squatted next to Ava’s chair.

‘We meet again.’

Her head snapped up, her blue eyes wide with panic until she registered who it was. ‘Hey there.’

They lapsed into an awkward silence and he stood, touching her lightly on the back. ‘If you’re free, I’d like you to meet someone.’

Confusion creased her brow but she wouldn’t refuse; etiquette training would be hard to shake.

‘Sure.’

She stood, her arm brushing his and he gritted his teeth against the urge to touch her.

He should’ve done the right thing and walked away last night but he hadn’t been able to conquer his insatiable hunger for her. Now he had a chance to make things right, to take her vulnerability and turn it into the confidence of a young woman revelling in a fresh start.

‘Rex, I’d like you to meet Ava, a friend of mine.’

She shot him a dubious look at his mention of friend, which he ignored and gestured to the seat between Rex and his.

‘Pleased to meet you, young lady.’

‘Likewise.’

Before Rex’s journalistic instincts kicked in and he prodded Ava for info on how they met, he angled his body towards her.

‘Rex is the chief editor of Globetrotter magazine.’

A spark lit her eyes, quickly replaced by suspicion. Clever girl—he knew she’d cotton on to the rationale behind this introduction.

‘Must be an interesting job.’

Oblivious to the simmering tension, Rex waxed lyrical about his work while Roman relaxed into his chair, very much aware of the freshly showered, floral-scented woman beside him.

How could he not be, when every cell in his body screamed for a repeat of what they’d done last night?

All night.

That scent … a rich, evocative blend … rose and lilacs she’d told him, a fragrance imprinted on his receptors, a fragrance to drive a man wild.

He straightened, needing to get to the crux of this meeting so he could flee before he did something crazy, such as drag her back to his room and throw away the key.

‘Rex, last time we spoke you mentioned expanding the layout for Globetrotter? Starting to incorporate human interest interviews, that kind of thing?’

Rex folded his hands and leaned on the table. ‘I know that’s why you’re here, trying to get that mug of yours into my magazine.’

Roman chuckled. ‘That too. Though maybe I can do you a favour in return?’

‘What’s that?’

‘Ava’s a writer. If you’re looking for new slots to fill, she’s your gal.’

Ava blanched and he rushed on. ‘You’ve got mainly freelancers on staff, right? She’d be a huge asset to the magazine.’

He could practically hear her teeth grinding behind the practised smile she gave Rex, while she reserved a death glare for him.

He grinned in response, draping an arm across the back of her chair and murmuring, ‘You can thank me later.’

She kicked him under the table.

‘Most of our freelancers are snowed under so I was looking at putting new people on …’ Rex narrowed his eyes, assessing. ‘You interested, Ava? You could do a piece for me, shoot it across, I’ll take a look and let you know if we have ongoing assignments for you? Sound doable?’

Ava’s fingers pleated the tablecloth while she nodded, her eyes sparkling with an enthusiasm that hit him like a wayward waterski to the chest.

‘Sounds great, thanks for the opportunity.’

Rex steepled his fingers, his shrewd gaze flicking between the two of them. ‘In fact, I think I can kill two birds with the proverbial stone. My buddy Roman here was trying to take advantage of our long-standing friendship and grab a profile spot in the revamped Globetrotter. Why don’t you do your piece on him? Kind of like an exposé on extreme sports, focusing on the personal angle.’

Ah … this just got better and better.

‘I’m game.’

This time he avoided her kick in time.

The epitome of a poised pro, Ava clasped her hands together and nodded. ‘Thanks, Rex, I’ll get straight on it.’

‘Better pack your bags, then.’

The heat from her narrowed eyes could’ve melted him. ‘Why’s that?’

‘Change of plans. I’m leaving for Surfers Paradise today.’

By the mutinous twist of her lips she didn’t want to fly to Queensland with him. Wait’til she heard about the private jet.

‘If it’s okay with you I’ll arrange another room at the hotel I’m staying at?’

Her wary gaze clashed with his and it sent an unexpected jolt through him, catapulting him straight back to last night and the same hesitancy she’d shown when their flirting hotted up.





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The man behind the headlines…After spending the last few years as the perfect political wife, Ava’s finally single and free to live her life as she chooses – away from the paparazzi… She starts her new life as a freelance writer with a massive scoop: an interview with extreme sports legend – and dreamboat! – Roman Gianakis…The immediate chemistry is all-consuming, but Roman lives his life firmly in the public eye. To match him, she’ll have to step up next to him. Till now she’s always wished she could hide in the wings – is she ready to embrace centre stage?

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