Read Love at First Sight Online
Authors: B.J. Daniels
Courteous, courageous and commanding—these heroes lay it all on the line for the people they love in more than fifty stories about loyalty, bravery and romance. Don’t miss a single one!
AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2010
A Vow to Love
by Sherryl Woods
Serious Risks
by Rachel Lee
Who Do You Lov
e? by Maggie Shayne and Marilyn Pappano
Dear Maggie
by Brenda Novak
A Randall Returns
by Judy Christenberry
Informed Risk
by Robyn Carr
Five-Alarm Affair
by Marie Ferrarella
AVAILABLE MARCH 2010
The Man from Texas
by Rebecca York
Mistaken Identity
by Merline Lovelace
Bad Moon Rising
by Kathleen Eagle
Moriah’s Mutiny
by Elizabeth Bevarly
Have Gown, Need Groom
by Rita Herron
Heart of the Tiger
by Lindsay McKenna
AVAILABLE APRIL 2010
Landry’s Law
by Kelsey Roberts
Love at First Sight
by B.J. Daniels
The Sheriff of Shelter Valley
by Tara Taylor Quinn
A Match for Celia
by Gina Wilkins
That’s Our Baby!
by Pamela Browning
Baby, Our Baby!
by Patricia Thayer
AVAILABLE MAY 2010
Special Assignment: Baby
by Debra Webb
My Baby, My Love
by Dani Sinclair
The Sheriff’s Proposal
by Karen Rose Smith
The Marriage Conspiracy
by Christine Rimmer
The Woman for Dusty Conrad
by Tori Carrington
The White Night
by Stella Bagwell
Code Name: Prince
by Valerie Parv
AVAILABLE JUNE 2010
Same Place, Same Time
by C.J. Carmichael
One Last Chance
by Justine Davis
By Leaps and Bounds
by Jacqueline Diamond
Too Many Brothers
by Roz Denny Fox
Secretly Married
by Allison Leigh
Strangers When We Meet
by Rebecca Winters
AVAILABLE JULY 2010
Babe in the Woods
by Caroline Burnes
Serving Up Trouble
by Jill Shalvis
Deputy Daddy
by Carla Cassidy
The Major and the Librarian
by Nikki Benjamin
A Family Man
by Mindy Neff
The President’s Daughter
by Annette Broadrick
Return to Tomorrow
by Marisa Carroll
AVAILABLE AUGUST 2010
Remember My Touch
by Gayle Wilson
Return of the Lawman
by Lisa Childs
If You Don’t Know by Now
by Teresa Southwick
Surprise Inheritance
by Charlotte Douglas
Snowbound Bride
by Cathy Gillen Thacker
The Good Daughter
by Jean Brashear
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 2010
The Hero’s Son
by Amanda Stevens
Secret Witness
by Jessica Andersen
On Pins and Needles
by Victoria Pade
Daddy in Dress Blues
by Cathie Linz
AKA: Marriage
by Jule McBride
Pregnant and Protected
by Lilian Darcy
wrote her first book after a career as an award-winning newspaper journalist and author of thirty-seven published short stories. That first book,
Odd Man Out,
received a four-and-a-half star review from
RT Book Reviews
and went on to be nominated for Best Intrigue for that year. Since then she has won numerous awards including a career achievement award for romantic suspense and numerous nominations and awards for best book.
B.J. lives in Montana with her husband, Parker, and two springer spaniels, Spot and Jem. When she isn’t writing, she snowboards, camps, boats and plays tennis. B.J. is a member of Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, International Thriller Writers, Kiss of Death and Romance Writers of America.
To contact her, write to B.J. Daniels, P.O. Box 1173, Malta, MT 59538, or check out her Web page at www.bjdaniels.com.
This book is dedicated to my mother, Marcy Jane Johnson, who taught me to cook and then passed on a legacy of wonderful recipes that she collected throughout her lifetime.
Bon appétit!
Saturday night, March 18
Just when Karen Sutton thought her evening couldn’t get any worse, her blind date spilled a full glass of Beaujolais on her best dress. Who was she kidding? Her
only
dress. After five years running her father’s business, her wardrobe was more Carhartt than Cartier.
“Oh, I’m so sorry,” Howie cried, sounding a little too much like Heloise as he began to explain how to get red wine out of velvet, as well as four other dress fabrics. Something told her he’d done this before. “Here, let me get a waiter—”
She grimaced as Howie called to a man dressed in black, mistaking him for a waiter. The man fortunately pretended not to hear and kept walking.
“Really, it isn’t necessary,” she repeated to her date
and excused herself, less concerned about Howie’s clumsiness and the dress than taking advantage of the opportunity to escape—even if only long enough to drown her dress in cold water, if not herself.
“This is your
own
fault,” she muttered as she hurried off in search of the restroom. She’d been caught off guard by her sweet grandmotherly neighbor, Mrs. Talley Iverson, and while sampling warm chocolate-chip cookies fresh from the elderly woman’s oven, had somehow agreed to have dinner with a visiting grandnephew.
How could Karen have forgotten how much she hated dating? Probably because it’d been a while. Not that there weren’t plenty of men in her life. Builders, bricklayers, carpenters, plumbers, electricians. She even went out for a drink or dinner sometimes with them. At least with those men, she had something in common. And she didn’t have to wear a dress.
Howie Iverson, on the other hand, owned a floral shop in eastern Montana and knew the Latin names of all the species. Karen’s experience with floral arrangements was limited to other people’s weddings and funerals. Did real men still send women flowers? Not the men she knew.
Except for Howie Iverson. She swore an oath never to date any more of Talley Iverson’s relatives, no matter how sweet the woman or how scrumptious her cookies.
As Karen turned down what had to be her fifth long hallway, she realized she hadn’t been paying attention and was now lost.
Lost in the Hotel Carlton. Great. The wonderfully rustic old resort hotel on the edge of Missoula, Mon
tana, was enormous and half-empty since it was off season. As she tried to backtrack in the maze of hallways, feeling like the little kid in
The Shining,
she heard voices. Hopefully someone knew the way back to the restaurant.
She turned a corner, now obviously in a far wing, and spotted a man wearing a baseball cap knocking at one of the rooms down the hall. She started to call to him, but just then, the door opened and a woman appeared.
Liz?
The man said something Karen couldn’t hear. Liz’s hand came up as if to slap him but he caught her wrist and pushed her back into the room. Just before he disappeared, he turned his head in Karen’s direction. Their eyes met for only an instant. The hotel-room door slammed.
Shaken, Karen turned and rushed back the way she’d come, feeling like a voyeur. Liz hadn’t seen her, Karen was sure of that. But the man—he’d looked right at her and seemed surprised.
Was he Liz’s secret lover, the one Karen had only heard about that morning? She cringed recalling what she’d just witnessed—and almost collided with a woman coming around the corner.
“Excuse me,” Karen said, as the woman, neither acknowledging the collision or the apology, hurried away. Karen looked after her. Wasn’t that the newest member of her mother’s bridge club?
“There you are!”
Karen jumped, startled as she came face-to-face with her date.
“I was afraid you were lost,” Howie said. “Oh, look
at your dress! You really should have gotten cold water on that right away. It’s going to be difficult to get that spot out now.”
She looked down at the huge red stain and was startled to see how much it resembled blood against the pale blue of the velvet. No wonder the man with Liz had looked so surprised.
But it didn’t explain the way he’d reacted to Liz. Or her to him. Not that it was any of Karen’s business, she reminded herself. Until this morning, she hadn’t even seen Liz since high school. Almost sixteen years.
That’s why she’d been so surprised when she’d run into her on the street in Missoula and Liz had insisted they talk over a latte at the corner coffee shop. Karen became even more uncomfortable when her former classmate, who had nervously kept watching the door, confessed that she’d done something she probably shouldn’t have, then blurted out that she’d been seeing a mystery man, someone she’d met through the personals column in the newspaper.
“I really should get home and soak this dress, don’t you think?” Karen said to her neighbor’s grandnephew and her very-last-ever blind date.
She couldn’t wait to get out of the dress and end the date, and not in that order. Nor did she want to think about Liz and the man in the hotel hallway. Liz was a grown woman. She knew what she was doing.
But even as Karen said it, she feared Liz had gotten in over her head. She kept remembering the way the two had reacted to each other in the hallway. That was one romance headed south.
Twenty minutes later, Karen was trying to grace
fully close her apartment door on Howie Iverson and the entire evening, when she was literally saved by the bell.
The phone rang. “Thank you again, but it isn’t necessary,” she said politely to Howie’s offer to have her dress cleaned. Hurriedly she shut the door, bolted it and ran to answer the phone.
“Hello?” She could hear breathing. “Hello?”
The line clicked.
Karen stared at the receiver.
Had it been Liz? Maybe.
Or a crazed serial killer checking to see if she was home alone? Probably.
Or a wrong number, she thought, trying to corral her imagination and shake off the ominous feeling she’d had since opening the door to find Howie peeking through a bouquet of the strangest-looking flowers she’d ever seen.
But as she started to hang up the phone, she knew it wasn’t the date—as awkward as it’d been—that had her so jumpy.
On impulse she hit star 69. The phone number the automated voice repeated didn’t sound familiar. A wrong number, just like she’d thought. The line began to ring.
Hang up! You’re going to look like a fool!
“Good evening, Hotel Carlton.”
Her pulse pounded at her temples. Had Liz called her? “Yes. Could you please ring Liz Jones’s room?”
“One moment, please.”
It suddenly struck Karen that Liz wouldn’t have registered in her own name. Actually, she probably wouldn’t have registered at all. While Karen didn’t know much about clandestine affairs, she thought the
male lover acquired the room, and probably under some assumed name like Smith.
So why was she still waiting on the line when she knew the clerk would come back any minute to say there was no Liz Jones registered?
The extension began to ring. Liz
had
registered—and under her own name? Well, it
was
a new decade for women.
Someone picked up after the first ring but said nothing.
Karen swallowed. “Liz?”
No answer. Just soft breathing.
What was she doing?
Karen quickly hung up and stood staring at the phone. Who’d answered? More important, who’d called her from the hotel in the first place? She blinked. The answering-machine light blinked back at her, bright red.
Quickly she rewound the tape, surprised to find herself trembling. Jeez, she felt like a kid who’d been caught playing phone games.
“I saw what you did. I know who you are.” I’m an idiot. Come and get me.
Except she hadn’t seen anything and knew even less.
Not true.
She’d seen Liz with a man. The lover who’d insisted his identity be kept secret? And now Karen had not only seen him—he’d seen
her!
She jumped as the answering machine clicked on and Liz’s distraught voice filled the room. “Karen? Please pick up. I really need to talk to you. I found out who he is. You know, the man I told you about. I found out
everything.
This is so freaky.” Pause. “All right, I guess you’re not home. I need to talk to him first, anyway. You know, give the bastard a chance to…explain, huh?” She
sounded close to tears and getting more angry by the moment. “I can tell you one thing. I’m not going to let him get away with this. He’s going to pay.” A knock sounded in the background. “That’s him now.”
The line disconnected, the silence too loud, too final in the suddenly morguelike room.
Liz
had
called. Karen checked the time on the answering machine: 7:48. That would have been just after Howie spilled her wine all over her dress while explaining greenhouse flower pollination. And just before—
Her pulse roared in her ears. My God, Liz had been on the phone calling her at the same time Karen had rounded the corner in the hotel and seen the man knocking at Liz’s door!
Karen felt a shiver. Had that been Liz who’d called a few minutes ago? Then why hadn’t she said something? And who’d answered the phone in Liz’s room when Karen had called? The secret lover?
This is none of your business.
Except that Liz had involved her in it by confessing it all to her. Now Karen felt as if she’d just sat through an unsettling movie, only to have the projector break down before the end. She needed an ending. Preferably a happy one.
“Maybe I should call Liz’s hotel room again,” she said to the silence, worried that neither of them was going to get a happy ending.
Get a life, Sutton. And get out of this dress!