A
Wilde Night
by
Savannah Young
Genre:
Contemporary Romance
Release
Date: August 27th, 2014
Hosted
by: Book Enthusiast Promotions (http://bookenthusiastpromotions.com)
She's an award-winning winning actress
and he's an average guy just trying to get by...
Fresh out of police officer training,
newbie cop, Hunter Wilde, takes an off-duty gig working special events at the
Tawnee Mountain Resort to earn a little extra cash to supplement his public
servant's salary.
Katie Lawrence is Hollywood's hottest
sweetheart. With her second Oscar win before the age of twenty-five she's all
Tinseltown is talking about.
When Katie attends a wedding at the
Tawnee Mountain Resort with the notorious bad-boy Olympic gold snowboarder,
Devon Black, he's more interested in bedding the bridesmaids than he is in
being with Katie.
So Katie tries to find solace in the
personal security guard assigned to her by the resort...the reluctant Hunter
Wilde. He's not impressed with Katie's stardom and he definitely doesn't want
to get involved with a drama queen...but Katie manages to steal his heart when
he least expects it.
“What’s
going on over there?” I point to a dark-haired girl being mobbed by a small
crowd. They’re shoving pieces of paper and pens at her.
Autographs,
maybe?
Teko
laughs. “What are you blind? That’s Katie Lawrence.”
Am
I supposed to know who Katie Lawrence is?
“So?”
Teko’s
eyes narrow with suspicion. “She’s America’s Sweet-heart. Don’t tell me you’ve
never seen Sky Blues?”
“Okay,
I won’t tell you I’ve never seen it,” I fire back.
“Or
Chasing Summer?”
“I
won’t tell you I haven’t seen that either.”
“Dude,
have you been living under a rock? They’re Academy Award winning movies. She’s
won two Oscars. Just won best-supporting actress and she was only in the movie
like fifteen minutes. Her character died of a drug overdose. It was epic.”
Now
I’m the one who’s eying Teko. “And how do you know about these movies? They
sound like chick flicks.”
“My
girl likes movies. I like to make out in the back of the theater. It’s a
win-win deal.”
I
watch as Katie Lawrence greets all of her adoring fans. And they are all
adoring her. They’re practically falling over each other just to get her to
glance in their direction. It actually makes me kind of sick.
It’s
not that Katie Lawrence isn’t attractive. She’s cute. But not the kind of girl
I’d put on a pedestal or anything. If she wasn’t a big star, and she walked
into Haymakers, my family’s bar, on a Friday night, she probably wouldn’t be
one of the first girls to get picked up. Don’t get me wrong, she’d be in the
top five or six, but she’s definitely not top-spot hot. Katie Lawrence is not
drop-dead Sports Illustrated Cover Girl gorgeous. She looks more like the
girl-next-door.
Not
that the girl who lived next door to us all of our lives, Harley Davis, isn’t
Sports Illustrated Cover Girl gorgeous. She most definitely is. But she’s also
in love with my oldest brother, so that means she’s off-limits.
I
can tell by looking at Katie that she thinks pretty highly of herself. It’s her
demeanor, and the way she carries herself. The girl is starting to believe her
own publicity.
“Why
do you think the resort hired so many of us this week-end?” Teko asks.
Tawnee
Mountain Resort has been in business less than a year and it’s already garnered
quit a reputation as a hot spot for all the rich and famous from New York.
Lucky for me and my buddy, Teko, they like to hire off-duty cops to work
security for special events.
I
shrug. “I heard there’s some kind of big wedding going on.”
Teko
gives me a look like I’m stupid. “Devon Black’s twin brother is getting
married. I know you know who Devon Black is.”
“He’s
that snowboarder,” I reply off-handedly.
“He’s
a four-time Olympic gold medal winner. His twin brother was set to compete
against him this past winter, but he injured his knee in the finals. Talk about
sibling rivalry.”
Sibling
rivalry is something I know a lot about. With three older brothers, it wasn’t
something I could easily escape.
“Katie
Lawrence is dating Devon Black,” Teko adds, as if I should care about either of
these people. “It’s an on-again, off-again saga with those two.”
My
gaze narrows. “And just how do you know so much about Katie Lawrence and Devon
Black’s romantic life?”
He
shrugs. “My girl has a bunch of those celebrity magazines lying all over the
apartment.”
“And
you just happened to open them up and read them,” I tease.
“I
may take them with me into the bathroom when I’ve got a few minutes to kill.”
I
shake my head in disbelief. Teko is a six-foot five-inch brick house. He’s part
Polynesian, part African American and all muscle. He’s not the kind of guy
you’d expect to be reading some girlie celebrity rag.
As
Katie Lawrence and her entourage pass by us, I can’t help but notice her sexy
little body. She’s wearing a skirt so short and tight it should be illegal. And
she’s got on a little crop top that shows off the smallest bit of her milky
white midsection.
Maybe
she’s a little hotter than I initially gave her credit for.
When
I feel my dick twitch in response I remind myself that I’m a cop working
security and she’s apparently some superstar.
But
that’s just it. When you take away all of the hubbub surrounding her, she
doesn’t seem like a movie star to me. She seems more like a slightly sexed up
version of the girls I went to high school with.
As
I watch her walk by, she actually glances in my direction. Our eyes meet for
just a second, but it’s just long enough for me to see right inside her. And
when I do, I actually see her gasp. It’s almost as if no one has ever looked
that deeply at her and it surprises her. I seem to have made her so
uncomfortable, she quickly turns away.
But
I know she’ll look back again. I’m willing to bet a week’s salary on it, and
for a rookie cop, that’s some hard-earned money. When someone takes your breath
away, you can’t help but look back again. It’s a necessity.
Bingo.
Just
as I predicted she sneaks another quick glance back at me before she turns the
corner. She’s got such a sad expression on her face. It’s almost like she’s
living a life that’s not of her own making. Like part of her would rather be in
old jeans and a sweatshirt than the designer clothes she’s wearing. It tugs on
my heartstrings a bit. Then I remind myself that she’s a superstar, and
certainly doesn’t need someone like me to feel sorry for her.
***
“You’ve
got bodyguard duty,” Mr. Wilson, the head of security, says to me.
The
guy is a real piece of work. He’s an older guy, probably in his mid-fifties,
and I swear he dyes his hair because it’s just too black for a guy his age.
He’s always chomping on gum like a teen-age girl. And he’s slick. If he wasn’t
the head of security at a posh resort, he’d probably be a used car salesman.
“I
wasn’t hired for personal security,” I protest. “General guard duty.”
In
my mind I was hired to stand around and look intimidating, something I’ve been
working hard to perfect. I’ve almost got it down to an exact science. I cross
my arms over my chest while giving a cold, uncompromising stare. Between that
pose and my uniform, I can usually make some of the biggest, baddest-looking
dudes tremble in a matter of seconds. At least my police training was good for
something.
Getting
anywhere close to that actress sounds like too much work. Actresses are too
high maintenance for a country boy like me.
I
point over to two other rookie cops also moonlighting as security guards at
Tawnee Mountain. We all attended the police academy together.
“Why
don’t you get Paulson and Rodriguez to do it?” I suggest.
Wilson
snaps his gum in my face then shakes his head. “No, I want you to do it.”
I
want to ask why me, but I can tell by
the look on Mr. Wilson’s face that it’s pointless to protest. He’s already got
his mind made up. He’s got a team of a dozen security guards, and for some
reason he picked me to babysit the drama queen.
“Anyone
ever told you that you kind of look like Opie?”
I
shake my head. “Who’s Opie?”
He
chomps down on his gum a few times before he responds. “Opie. You know. The kid
from The Andy Griffith Show. Ron
Howard’s character.”
“You
mean the director?” Teko pipes in.
More
gum chewing. “Yeah, he’s a director now but he was an actor first. When he was
young. He had a real sweet look to him. Kind of innocent. Like you.” Wilson
points a finger in my direction. “You’re a sweet looking kid. That’s why you
need to do it.”
I
heave a sigh. The last thing you want to be called when you’re a new cop is
sweet looking. Doesn’t exactly fit the persona. I’ve worked really hard to gain
body mass and I’m now all muscle. But there’s nothing I can do about having a
sweet looking face apparently.
Mr.
Wilson is eyeing me like I’ve got the plague or something. “What have you got
against Katie Lawrence? She’s America’s Sweetheart.”
“Nothing,”
I grunt.
He’s
still eyeing me like he doesn’t believe me. “She’s a sweet kid.”
“I’m
sure she is,” I say half-heartedly. I still want nothing to do with being her
personal security guard. I’d rather be in the background where I feel
comfortable.
“I
think you’ll like her when you get to know her.”
I
don’t know how to make it any more obvious that I don’t want to get to know
her. I could care less about her being America’s Sweetheart. And I definitely
don’t care about her movies. I’d rather watch paint dry then watch any movie
with the words Academy Award winner on
it. If I have to watch a movie, which I rarely do, it better have car chases,
explosions and guns—and lots of them.
Mr.
Wilson crosses his fat arms over his protruding belly. It’s a good thing the
guy carries a gun and a Taser because he’d never be able to take anyone down
without a weapon. “Tell me why you don’t like Katie Lawrence.”
Why
does everyone love this girl so much? It’s like a national crime that I don’t
adore her. I shrug. “I don’t even know her.”
He’s
still eyeing me suspiciously.
“All
right.” I heave a sigh. “She seems very high maintenance. I don’t want to deal
with it. Happy?”
Mr.
Wilson actually laughs at me. Should I be insulted?
“Every
female on the planet is high maintenance, Kid. Get used to it.”
Before
I can say another word he turns and walks away.
Romance novelist Savannah Young grew up
in rural northwest New Jersey in a place very similar to the fictional Old
Town, which is featured in her books. When she's not at her computer creating
spicy stories, Savannah is traveling to exotic locales or spending time with
her husband and their bloodhounds. Savannah also writes under the pen names
Dakota Madison, Sierra Avalon and Ren Monterrey.
Wild Riders (Old Town Country Romance Book 1)
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The Wilde One (Old Town Country Romance Book 2)
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A Wilde Night (Old Town Country Romance Book 3)
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Wilde Times (Old Town Country Romance Book 4)
Amazon US: http://amzn.to/1uC43ny
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