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Dancing with the Best Man
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Table of Contents
Excerpt
Praise for Robyn Rychards
Dancing with the Best Man
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
A word about the author…
Thank you for purchasing
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“Ai ai ai! Icy cold and uptight on the outside, but those green eyes tell a different story.”
With a gulp, she pulled the clip out of her hair, shook her head slightly and it tumbled down, falling to her waist. Could he discern the tumult inside her? Suddenly those green eyes couldn’t look anywhere but at him as he pushed himself away from the wall and came toward her. He entered her personal space and all she could do was watch him as he picked up a strand of her hair.
“Amazing,” he breathed as he rubbed the hair between his fingers. “If I hadn’t seen those roots up close and personal, I’d find it hard to believe this color was real. It actually glitters, even in this weak lighting. I’ve never seen anything like it.” His gaze roamed her face. “The pale eyebrows are a giveaway too. The only color to you are those pink lips, your green eyes, and the lovely rosy color you turn when you blush. Thank you for letting me see your hair in all its glory. Are you going to put it back up?”
“No.” She shoved the clip in her purse as she continued to watch him.
“Bueno,” he said softly with a little nod. He let go of her hair, but didn’t move away and the look in his eyes made her think of a drowning man desperately in need of a life preserver.
Praise for Robyn Rychards
Robyn has six books published.
~*~
DANCING WITH THE BEST MAN
won Chesapeake Bay Romance Writers
Rudy Award for 2016.
Dancing with
the Best Man
by
Robyn Rychards
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Dancing with the Best Man
COPYRIGHT © 2019 by Robyn Van Matre
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Contact Information: [email protected]
Cover Art by Diana Carlile
The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
PO Box 708
Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708
Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com
Publishing History
First Sweetheart Rose Edition, 2019
Print ISBN 978-1-5092-2532-3
Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-2533-0
Published in the United States of America
Dedication
For Kimberly Rowe.
Thanks for all your help, love and support
through the many drafts of not only this book
but all my others.
Acknowledgements
Special thanks to Joss Wood and Trish Wiley for your help and input on the story, to my beta readers, Telena Caldwell, Amanda Bagnall and Lori Merrill, and to Sherri Skanes for all things Hollywood and Los Angeles.
Chapter One
“Hold the elevator, por favor!”
A delicious-sounding male voice floated across the lobby as the elevator doors started to close, sending a completely unexpected—and unwanted—thrill down Jade Nichols’ spine.
She would’ve loved having the elevator to herself for the ride to the hotel’s restaurant on the thirty-fifth floor, and she barely suppressed a sarcastic ‘Ha!’ at herself. Riding an elevator alone in L.A. was a rarity. She jabbed the Door Open button as a man sprinted across the lobby and didn’t realize she’d been holding her breath until after he slipped inside.
He pushed his hair back off his forehead, that errant lock the only indication his effort to catch the elevator affected him. “Gracias.”
“No problem. Which floor?”
He glanced at her out of the corner of his eye but remained facing the doors. “Thirty-fifth. Gracias.”
Again she experienced that unwanted thrill at the sound of his deep, softly accented voice. No need to push a different button then. They were both headed to L.A. Prime for dinner. She waited a moment for him to move away from the doors, to claim his own space, and was surprised when he didn’t. It was a good-sized elevator, but still, it was an elevator. Space was at a premium, and he chose to stand right next to her?
Her space-bubble warning bells went off. She took a calming breath and got a whiff of spicy cologne mixed with a distinctively masculine scent. He smelled so damn good, it should be illegal. Or bottled for everyone to enjoy. It was compelling enough she almost stepped closer to breathe it in again. Instead she touched the silver, filigreed locket around her neck and moved to the back corner of the elevator. Hopefully, she prayed, returning to her personal space zone would aid in getting over this odd-for-her reaction to a close encounter with the male species.
As the awkward elevator silence continued, the electronic alerts that sounded as the car passed each floor couldn’t happen quickly enough. Why did the restaurant have to be at the top of the Bonaventure Hotel? She shifted her gaze from the increasing numerical display to the man’s rigid back. Expensive olive-green suit, over-long dark hair. Just as yummy as his scent and made her momentarily wish she’d taken a better look at the front of him when he dashed across the lobby.
Whoa…What was that about?
She didn’t check men out. In fact, she never gave them a second glance. Her instinctive reaction was usually the exact opposite. Which had her giving him another look. A curious one this time. What was it about him that caught her interest?
Unfortunately, it didn’t help her figure it out. It merely made her want to keep looking. Only this time it wasn’t to enjoy the view—it was because he stood, board-rigid, in front of the doors, both hands balled into fists. She felt a twinge of sympathy and suppressed the urge to open his fists and hold his hand. She shifted on her feet and scrunched her brow. Now was not the time to experience such an untoward reaction. Mentally shaking her head, she looked down at her feet. It was the stress of the evening ahead. It had to be. Even though it was an evening she should be looking forward to. Could they just get to the thirty-fifth floor already?
Her sister was getting married in a couple months and had chosen her as the maid of honor. Her soon-to-be brother-in-law, Beck, was treating them to dinner at this upscale restaurant so Jade and the best man could get to know each other. Beck was doing all this out of concern for her, so she could feel more at ease about her part in the event. He didn’t know anything about the true nature of her hang-ups—Jade made sure that was a secret Lexi never shared—but he knew taking part in the wedding ceremony was way out of her comfort zone.
Even without this little meet-and-greet session, Jade was determined her personal issues wouldn’t ruin the wedding in any way. She was thrilled Lexi was marrying such a wonderful man. What she needed to do was enjoy the vi
ew her current companion provided instead of thinking about the number of times the best man might invade her personal space during the wedding and all the rituals accompanying it. Or if he would do it during dinner tonight.
Stop!
She took a deep breath. Yum…And found herself enjoying the view of the other passenger before she realized it. So what? It was a perfectly normal thing to do. The suit fit him well, showing off shoulders that looked strong and capable of carrying any load. Her fingers tingled, and she clenched her fist. Did she ever want to run her fingers through his hair. Was it as soft as it looked? If nothing else, her companion was most definitely a good distraction.
The elevator coming to a shuddering, jarring halt between floors was not the kind of distraction she was looking for. She stumbled forward, he flew back, and they smacked into each other somewhere in the middle of the car. As she slammed against his hard, muscular frame, the air whooshed out of her lungs, and she nearly bit her tongue. Could banging into a wall have been any more painful?
The man swore under his breath in Spanish and spun so quickly he grabbed her by the arms before she ricocheted off him and hit the wall. Now she’d never know which was harder.
Completely muddled, she wasn’t sure which was worse: slamming into a solid wall of muscle; hands grabbing her; the totally unexpected, completely disconcerting thrill of being touched. In any event, her knee-jerk reaction pulled her violently out of his grasp. Retreating as far back as she could into her corner, her cheeks felt like they were on fire. Not exactly the reaction she wanted to have, nor an impression she wanted to give. To anyone.
Terrific. She was behaving like an idiot in front of…
And that was when she saw him.
Ho-lee cow. Alejandro Rivera.
Not that she knew the guy personally, but she knew of him. Devil of the Dance Floor. No wonder he’d reacted so quickly when he grabbed her.
“You are all right, señorita?”
Perfunctory concern, judging by the expression on his face and the lack of warmth in his voice. He’d displayed more emotion when he yelled across the lobby at her to hold the elevator.
She nodded, surprised she managed that much. Stuck in an elevator with Dance Celebrity’s superstar, Alejandro Rivera. What girl wouldn’t be thanking their lucky stars?
Me.
Squeezing her eyes shut for a moment, Jade made a grab for the locket around her neck. Why, tonight of all nights, did she have to forget her purse in the car? If she’d remembered to take it with her when they first arrived at the hotel, she’d be sitting next to her sister enjoying a cocktail right now, rather than trapped in an elevator with a man who not only appealed to her in a way she’d never experienced before but was a celebrity to boot.
Pressing herself against the wall, she let go of the locket and looked determinedly at her feet, silently begging the elevator to start moving. She needed a moment to gather herself, and it better be a quick moment or Alejandro Rivera would know there was something wrong with her.
It felt like his hands were still on her arms. And it wasn’t that yucky, get-your-hands-off-me-you-creep kind of feeling she usually got. The kind of feeling she’d endured too often. Her breath caught. Why didn’t she feel that kind of panic right now? She always avoided casual touching to ensure she stayed in the present. Even more mind-blowing, it was the absolute flip-side of her normal reaction. This was a tingly, make your stomach somersault, scorch your skin kind of feeling she wasn’t sure she wanted to experience.
Actually, part of her did want to feel it again, along with the rest of his perfectly sculpted physique. She forced herself not to think about that. It made those crazy sensations spread from her arms to other parts of her body.
She touched the locket again, resisting the urge to look at the picture of herself and Lexi inside. A quick peek at her companion turned into a gape of astonishment. With his forehead resting against the elevator doors, hands fisted at his sides, he was muttering in Spanish. After a few seconds of listening, and not feeling at all guilty for eavesdropping since she spoke Spanish, she realized he was praying. Desperately praying. The guy was hotter than all get out, and a dream to watch on television, but most definitely—strange.
Of course, with his reputation, bizarre behavior shouldn’t come as a surprise. It was common knowledge he expected perfection from his dance partners and used some unusual tactics to get it, pushing until they met his standards. Not that she had any problem whatsoever with high standards.
After a few minutes, like he was waiting for an answer to his prayer and didn’t receive one, he lifted his head and looked at the ceiling, took in a deep breath, then let it out slowly. Maybe it was some kind of Zen thing. Still, she needed to do something more than press herself into a corner and watch. She was trapped with him. It wasn’t like she hadn’t been around her share of freaks or more than her share of celebrity-types with major issues. She’d grown up in L.A. It was the up close and personal that was worrisome. If Jade was honest with herself, it was her desire to help him that bothered her most.
****
Alejandro Rivera swore violently to himself, then silently cursed the elevator, and the woman he was with. The last thing he needed right now was an audience. He drew deep within himself, tapping into every ounce of dance training he had to stop himself from banging his head on the door repeatedly. He wasn’t five years old. He could do this.
Get a grip. Find a distraction.
When she spoke, providing the distraction he was looking for, he turned around to face her. “It appears the elevator isn’t taking a momentary pause. We’re stuck.”
He nodded, and for the first time since he entered the elevator, actually looked at his companion. She felt guapa pressed up against him for those few moments when she stumbled into him. In fact, he’d be hard-pressed to remember the last time holding a woman felt so good. Therefore, her appearance came as a shock. He didn’t go for blondes. He didn’t go for tall and skinny. Dark, glamorous and curvy caught his attention every time. So what was it about her that made it difficult to look away? Certainly not the black dress that made him want to shudder. It looked like a sack hanging from her shoulders, and if he hadn’t recently felt her up close and personal, he’d think she had no curves at all. And her hair…
Pulled so tight against her scalp, it looked painful. Maybe it was the concern shining from her beautiful green eyes.
She cleared her throat. “Um, are you okay?”
Concern for his well-being was mirrored in her tone of voice. It made him wonder what his expression looked like. He bit back a sigh. Most likely it was his desperate attempt to stifle the panic. Had he prayed out loud? He needed to pull himself together. He didn’t want to scare the poor woman. Being trapped in an elevator was definitely doing a number on him. He was not okay, but come hell or high water, he would pretend he was. If only he could get enough air. Hell, it was becoming an effort to breathe. He nodded but had to swallow to ease his dry throat before he could speak. He smiled, both for her benefit and his.
“You mean, other than the fact we’re stuck in an elevator that isn’t moving?”
She let out a small laugh. “Yeah. Other than that. You had a weird look on your face, and your color doesn’t look too good. Maybe it’s just the bad lighting in here. For a minute there I thought you were going to pass out. Or throw up. Which would not be a good thing. Being stuck in an elevator is bad enough. The last thing we need is the smell of vomit.”
She bit her lip and looked at her feet. Maybe she’d recognized him and was feeling a little shy, or maybe embarrassed by what she’d just said? Regardless, he found it rather endearing.
“Oh hell, no. How humiliating would that be?” And how dangerously close he’d been to doing one or the other of those things. He chuckled so she would think he was joking, and she laughed along with him. He enjoyed the sound of it. It sent a little tingle through him which he enjoyed more than was probably good for him, though right now, it was
the lesser of two evils.
“So…Do you think we should call someone, or wait a bit to see if it starts moving again?”
He checked his pants pockets and the breast pocket on his suit jacket before he remembered he’d misplaced his phone. “Might as well get people working on it as soon as we can. If it starts moving while we’re calling, all the better. I don’t have my phone with me. Do you have one?”
“I do.”
She fumbled around in her purse for a moment before pulling it out triumphantly. His stomach sank when the look on her face turned to disappointment, but his lips twitched when she muttered a foul word. It seemed so at odds with her uptight, prim-and-proper appearance.
“You’d think I’d have learned by now to charge my phone before the battery runs out.”
He shrugged. “At least you have it with you, unlike me. I have no clue where mine is.”
“Well, it’s good to know I’m not the only one on the planet who doesn’t treat their phone like an appendage.”
She looked at him and let out another one of those laughs, and he had the same reaction as before. Which he completely forgot about when he looked in her eyes. They sparkled with laughter. Actually sparkled, and were the clearest, most beautiful jade green he’d ever seen. He couldn’t begin to count the number of women’s eyes he’d looked into in his life and never seen a pair the color of hers. It was an effort to make himself look at something else. Not that there was much of a choice right now. Which brought him right back to how confined they were. He tugged at his silk tie and unbuttoned the top button of his linen dress shirt.
“Good thing the elevator has an emergency phone then. We should use it.”
“Indeed we should. Do you mind doing it? I think a plea from a woman might make them work a little quicker. You could even tell them you’re stuck in here with a crazy man who’s going to lose it if he doesn’t get out soon.”
Her brows pulled together, and her eyes flew to his face. “So you were on the verge of passing out or getting sick. Are you claustrophobic?”