Seducing His Secret Wife--A brother's best friend romance
She was gone.
Like a figment of his imagination or the silky remnant of a dream. Justin knew she had been real. The ache of his body and the lingering scent of her, of them, of sex, lingered on his skin and on the tangle of sheets bunched around his waist.
He eased out of bed, grabbing his discarded pants and then slipping them on as he navigated the detritus of their amazing night together flung all over the space of the penthouse suite: empty glasses and bottles on the floor alongside the remnants of an early-morning room service order of celebratory steak and lobster.
And...her wedding veil.
It was one of those cheap ones sold by every wedding chapel on the strip. When she’d slipped it on, the combination of sex-on-wheels and virginal sacrifice had decimated what had been left of his very iffy mind, and he’d marched down the aisle and said two words he’d never planned on saying in his life: I do.
He’d gone to Vegas for a poker game and married a complete stranger.
A stranger who had left in the middle of the night.
* * *
Seducing His Secret Wife by Robin Covington is part of the Redhawk Reunion series.
Dear Reader,
The Redhawk Reunion series continues with the exciting romance of Sarina Redhawk and Justin Ling!
I love a prickly, complicated heroine. Sarina Redhawk has a difficult past, a complicated present and an uncertain future. But she’s used to things not coming easily for her, and her relationship with Justin Ling is anything but easy. It’s hot, forbidden and a secret that has the potential to derail the next big deal for his company, Redhawk/Ling.
And it’s quite possibly the best thing that will ever happen to her.
Of course, she doesn’t know it and she’ll fight it every step of the way. And that is what made it so much fun to write. Pairing the serious, wounded Sarina with the push-the-envelope, take-all-the-chances Justin was an indulgence of my love of opposites-attract romance. And writing a secret Vegas wedding?
So. Much. Fun.
And this book continues the reunion of the Redhawk siblings. Two Cherokee brothers and a sister separated when they were children were just recently brought back together and are trying to figure out how to be a family again and reconnect with their culture and their community.
So, this book contains everything I love about Harlequin Desire romance: passion, glamour, emotional high stakes and family.
If you adore Sarina and Justin as much as I do, let me know on social media! I’d love to hear from you.
Xoxo,
Robin
Robin Covington
Seducing His Secret Wife
A USA TODAY and Wall Street Journal bestseller, Robin Covington loves to explore the theme of fooling around and falling in love in her books. A Native American author of color, Robin proudly writes diverse romance where everyone gets their happily-ever-after.
She is an unapologetic comic book geek and hoards red nail polish and stalks Chris Evans. She is thoroughly obsessed with her Corgi, Dixie Joan Wilder (yes—the Joan Wilder).
Drop her a line at robin@robincovingtonromance.com—she always writes back.
Find out everything about Robin at her website (robincovingtonromance.com), follow her on Instagram (robincovington), Twitter (@robincovington) and like (really, it’s love) her Facebook page.
From Harlequin Desire
Redhawk Reunion
Taking on the Billionaire
Seducing His Secret Wife
Visit her Author Profile page at Harlequin.com, or robincovingtonromance.com, for more titles.
You can also find Robin Covington on Facebook, along with other Harlequin Desire authors, at Facebook.com/harlequindesireauthors!
To Melissa Dark.
You were there at the beginning.
Ten years ago we started this dream together
and I know that I wouldn’t be here without you.
Thank you so much. Xoxo
Contents
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
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Epilogue
Excerpt from Twice the Temptation by Silver James
One
Las Vegas, Nevada
There wasn’t much in the world that could lure Justin Ling away from a poker table.
He loved the game. The strategy and the psychology and the emotion evoked with every hand that was dealt. It didn’t hurt that he’d won far more than he’d ever lost. But he didn’t need the money; he was a billionaire from the success of his company, Redhawk/Ling, so winning was a lucrative but empty victory. The upside was that he’d won enough to score invites to some of the largest private games and several of the popular public tournaments. Justin loved the game and when he earmarked weekends to devote to it there was almost nothing that was going to distract him from the cards in his hand.
That’s why he couldn’t explain why he was sitting down next to the sexy raven-haired beauty at the bar.
She was tall, slim and the kind of sexy that came from a confidence that ran deeper than the superficial trappings of a pair of high heels and makeup. This woman was the kind who made you work for it.
On a break from his current game, he’d seen her walk past the private rooms and head toward the lobby of the casino. And she’d seen him, too. It was a lightning strike of a moment when their eyes locked for several seconds, and the recognition of a reciprocal spark of sexual hunger was enough to find him cashing out and following her into this sad little bar.
“Can I buy you a drink?” He wasted no time getting to the point. Justin always went for what he wanted and this woman had captivated him.
She glanced over at him, giving him a thorough perusal from his toes to his four-hundred-dollar haircut. Her gaze lingered on his face and he thought he saw another flicker of interest in her espresso-colored eyes, but her expression gave nothing away before she turned to watch the football game on the TV at the back of the bar.
“I can buy my own drink.” She picked up one of the three shots in front of her and downed it in one quick swallow.
“I’m sure you can,” he answered, mirroring her position on his bar stool with his eyes mostly on the game. He eyed her in his peripheral vision, noting the way she tensed but also noting that she didn’t make a move to leave or to tell him to get lost. It gave him encouragement. “In fact, I think you should buy me a drink.”
A few beats of time passed, ratcheting his heart rate up a notch or two when the silence stretched out a little longer than comfortable. He wondered if he’d miscalculated the edge of challenge he’d glimpsed in the way she walked, the strength he’d seen flash in her eyes. If he’d been a betting man, and he was, he’d have all his money on her taking the bait.
And then she laughed.
It wasn’t a giggle or a belly laugh. Her lips curved in a sexy twist and the low, husky rumble in her chest made him immediately think of Kathleen Turner, the finest aged whiskey, and secrets
whispered in the dark and lost in the folds of tumbled sheets. He turned to face her, unable to resist the need to see her, to witness how the light played across her features and the glossy strands of her hair.
“Are you laughing at me?” he asked, feigning offense as he joined her in chuckling. “I could be offering to use my last twenty to buy you a beverage.”
She snorted then and threw in an eye roll for good measure before reaching out and tapping his watch. “This is a Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 40mm. You can afford to buy this bar, so I’m not worried about cleaning out your bank account with an on-tap special.”
Damn. His mystery lady had taken the bait, but the only one on the hook was him.
“How do you know so much about watches? Are you a jeweler?” Justin leaned on the bar to move in a little close and didn’t even try to keep the impressed tone out of his voice.
She waved a hand in dismissal. “Paul Newman had one just like that and he wore it when he raced cars. I don’t know jack about watches but I know cars.”
Okay. This woman just got better and better and he had no choice but to keep wading into the deep end even though it looked like she wasn’t going to throw him a life raft.
“I’m Justin—”
She shook her head. “I don’t do last names.”
Fine. If that was how she wanted it. It was how he usually liked it, too. He stuck his hand out.
“Okay, then. I’m just Justin.”
She eyed his hand for a minute, an eyebrow raised with a mocking skepticism that took him back to high school and his ill-fated attempts to get the attention of Brandilynn Post, the head cheerleader. Obviously a crash and burn he’d not forgotten, but there’d been a million head cheerleaders in his bed since then and he wasn’t scared off by a woman making him earn her attention. With all the women who normally threw themselves at him, this was an exciting change and one that had him hot and intrigued. He knew that if this night ended with her under him, she’d be magnificent.
“I’m Harley.” She grasped his hand but instead of lingering on the handshake her long fingers traced along his palm to blatantly examine his ring finger. Now it was his turn to raise his eyebrow in question. She released his hand and shrugged. “Just checking. I’m not into married guys.”
“You’re assuming that I’m into you.”
“We both know you are...” she said, taking a sip from her beer before giving him a lingering, hot look that had him shifting even closer. Close enough to feel the silk of her ink-black hair as it brushed against his face. Close enough to see a tiny scar that cut through the outer part of her perfectly arched left eyebrow. He took it as a good sign when she didn’t move away and knew it for a fact when she continued, “...and for the moment, you interest me.”
Bingo. Justin barely repressed the grin that plucked at the corners of his mouth. He shifted on his bar stool with a pool of fire settling in his groin and making him hard. But while she was currently into him, everything about Harley screamed that she was an untamed filly, ready to bolt at the whisper of anything she didn’t like. He wanted to lean over and kiss her but he glanced down at the bar in between them to resist the urge, deciding to circle back to the beginning of this adventure.
“Okay then, can I buy you a drink now?”
She picked up the second shot and drank it down. “I’ll buy. You need to catch up.”
She signaled to the bartender for three shots and motioned for them to be placed in front of him.
Justin picked up the first one, pausing before he put it to his lips. “Are we celebrating something?”
Harley cocked her head to the side, considering the question for a long moment before picking up her remaining shot and tapping it lightly against his own. “Freedom. New beginnings.”
“Whoever he is, he’s an idiot.” Because the man who’d let this woman slip through his fingers had to be the dumbest man on the planet. Well, the second dumbest... Justin wasn’t going to keep her, either. He wasn’t deluding himself that what was happening here was a love match or anything.
The vodka burned as it went down; it wasn’t as smooth as the brand he normally bought but any criticism disappeared with the chaser of the second shot. He shook his head a little, eyes watering as the alcohol took the first hit at his system and created a slow burn under his skin.
When his vision cleared, Harley was staring at him, her own gaze filled with a different kind of heat, a spark of something. She licked her lips, the universal symbol that she liked what she saw. He found himself back on familiar ground but he braced himself for the moment when she’d knock him off his feet. It wasn’t a position he was used to being in with women, but he enjoyed the push and pull with Harley. It was different...more alive and more real than the usual games he played before taking a woman to bed.
“So, who’s the guy?” Justin surprised himself with the question. What did he care about the dumb guy who’d let her go? He wasn’t interested in the past or the future, just the right now. And unless the loser who’d lost Harley was walking into the bar at this minute to get her back, he didn’t care.
But he didn’t take back the question, either. Justin wanted to know everything.
Harley cut him a sly look, clearly amused by his curiosity. “His name was Sam. He wanted a commitment that I wasn’t ready to make.”
Well, that sounded familiar.
“Not ready to commit to him? Or anyone?”
“I think that settling down with someone for the long term is extremely overrated.” Justin didn’t hide his surprise at her words and so she continued with a tease and tug at the lapel of his jacket. “Whoa. Did I just morph into your dream girl?” She slid her fingertips over his jacket, tugging him closer as she ticked off her list. “No commitments. Can hold her liquor. Likes cars.”
Justin grasped her hand and got even closer, murmuring against her ear. She shivered a little and he smiled at the reaction. “If you tell me that sex is your favorite indoor activity, I might just have to marry you.”
Harley froze for a moment and he felt the jump and stutter of her pulse under his lips. But in a flash she pushed him away and picked up her beer, taking a drink before leveling him with a glare that had more sizzle in it than censure.
“And you had to go and ruin it with the M word.” She gestured toward his last glass. “Take your penalty shot.”
He did as he was told, hooking his foot under the rung of her bar stool and easing her closer as he swallowed the liquid fire. “Is Harley your real name?”
She rested her right elbow on the bar, angling her body into the curve of his own. It was intimate, a mirror of his own posture, and he wondered if she knew she was doing it.
“It’s a nickname. I like to restore old cars and bikes. I ride a 1975 Harley.”
That was an answer he wasn’t expecting. “You’re a mechanic?”
“I’m between jobs right now. Taking some time to see this part of the world before I make any plans.” Her vague nonanswer was delivered with enough finality that he knew it was nonstarter. But she intrigued him and he wanted to know more about her, so he decided to change tack.
“What’s the last song you listened to on your phone?”
The change in topic threw her for a minute but she recovered quickly. “‘Jolene’ by Ray LaMontagne.”
“Nice. Moody and soulful but also very sexy. It suits you,” he commented, signaling for another round from the bartender after Harley gave a nod of agreement.
“Okay, now you. Last song,” she prompted, as they both tipped back a shot.
Justin hesitated, remembering what he’d been listening to when he’d pulled into valet parking. Oh hell. This is what he got for letting his nephew program playlists into his account. “‘Cool’ by the Jonas Brothers.”
“I don’t even want to know what that song says about you.” She grimaced and eased a s
hot glass closer to him. “I think you need to drink to make up for that terrible musical choice.”
He paid his penalty, wiping his mouth with comic exaggeration that made her laugh. Damn, but he loved that sound and it made him wonder how her husky tone would wrap around a moan of pleasure. Justin reached down and tangled his fingers with hers, giving them a squeeze of encouragement. “Your turn.”
Harley pondered a moment and then said, “Okay, beach or the mountains?”
“That’s easy. I’m a California boy. Beaches.” He held up his hand to stop her from answering and then reached out to skim the hair off her face and let the silky strands cool his skin, savoring the slow burn this woman stoked in him. “Let me guess for you.”
“Take your best shot.”
Justin’s fingertips lightly stroked the smooth golden line of her cheekbone and down along her jawline until his hand curled behind her neck and pulled her closer. Harley eased into him, one leg sliding in between his own and her hand resting on his thigh. She was close enough for him to count her long lashes and to feel the fluttering beat of her pulse point. To hear the catch of her breath and the stifled moan of her desire.
Or was that his own?
He leaned in close, his lips brushing against her ear and body pressed against the length of her. Somehow they had ended up in alignment, mirrors of each other except for the brushes of knees, hands and feet. He was hard, every part of him yearning, aching to strip her down and discover all of her secrets. Not just the curve of her body, not just the places that made her want and need—he wanted to know it all.
But he’d start with her in his bed. Under him. Around him.
“Mountains.”
“Lucky guess.”
Harley shifted, moving just enough to look him in the eye, her mouth only a moment of bravery away from his own. Her eyes were dark, pupils blown with her desire and burning into his with focus flecked with flickers of doubt. Justin wondered what side would win, knowing with every fiber of his being that this had to be her choice. It was her move to make and he was helpless to do anything but wait and see if she would fold or bet it all on one night.