Natalie's
tires squealed as she sped up and down the levels, finding every last
parking space was filled. She tried to call her assistant, but
should’ve known better than to hope for cell reception in the
garage. As she reversed the car in an anger-fueled three-point
turn, she heard a thump. Shit. Checking the
rearview mirror, she saw nothing -- no cars, no cement
columns. Whatever. She hoped Kari was able to
stall the parties on the video conference...
Suddenly,
the door behind her flung open and someone jumped in, rocking the
car. “Drive,” a deep voice ordered.
“Oh
my god. Just take the car.” She reached for the door
handle, thankful she could run straight to her office, now, and maybe
make it in time for the--
“I
don’t want the car. I want you to drive, lady!”
“I’m
late for a conference call!” Before she could push the door
open, something hard pressed against the back of her head. She
stiffened and slanted a glance toward the rearview mirror, but
couldn’t see him since he was directly behind her.
“You’re
gonna have to reschedule. Drive the fucking car.”
“Okay.
Okay. Where do you want to go?” Her voice shook with
panic. Dad’s gonna give me that
disappointed look. Can’t believe this shit. What are
the frigging odds?
“Just
get me out of here.”
Natalie
drove around and around the garage toward the exit, trying now and
then to see him in her mirrors. As they stopped for the
automatic gate to lift she made a move to open the door, but he
tapped her skull with what she presumed was a gun barrel. A
reminder, like she could ever forget it was there.
“Don’t
make me use this.”
“I’m
sorry.” Her voice shook a little. She hated that.
“Which way should I go?”
“Take
me to your house.”
“I
don’t have a house.”
He
made an exasperated sound. “I assume you’re not homeless.
Take me wherever the hell it is you live.”
She
drove a circuitous route through the slow-moving maze of Midtown,
inching the car down the one-way streets and multiple Peachtrees that
confounded even native Atlantans. For fuck’s sake,
there’s never a police car when you need one...
Her
phone rang, startling her.
Her
passenger barked “Don’t answer it!” a half-second too late.
“Sorry!
It’s a reflex.” She cringed, half-expecting to be
pistol-whipped.
Then
Kari’s voice came over the car speakers. “Jesus Christ,
Nat!”
“Yeah,
I’m having a really hard time parking--”
“Forget
it, we cancelled. Are you listening to the radio?”
“Uh,
no...”
“All
the traffic? It’s not an accident.” If she hadn’t
been in a life-or-death situation, Natalie would’ve noticed her
assistant’s oddly-excited tone. “They started shooting the
movie, and Sam Danmore disappeared! He’s like a fugitive or
something.”
“Hang
up,” Natalie’s passenger growled low from the back seat.
It
dawned on her now that his voice seemed familiar. She risked a
glance over her shoulder and holy shit. Holy.
Shit. Holy fucking shit. “Holy fucking shit.”
A
world-famous pair of sexy brown eyes glared, and she turned back
around just in time to avoid rear-ending a city bus.
“I
know, right?” Kari’s voice gushed. “They said he
raped a teenage girl in his trailer and ran off when she screamed.”
“My
god...” Natalie jerked the car to a rocking stop in a loading
zone, narrowly missing a few pedestrians.
“Again.
Can you believe that?”
“Kari,
I’ve gotta call you back.” She disconnected and sat
silently a moment, staring straight ahead. Her heart was
pounding harder than it did when her passenger first jumped in the
car. Without turning, she spoke in her coldest and most
professional voice (which barely shook at all). “Is it safe
to assume you have not been holding a real gun to my head?”
She
heard him sigh heavily. In her peripheral vision, she saw him
hold up a strong, tan hand and fold it into a finger-gun.
“That’s
a safe assumption, yes. And for the record, I didn’t do it.”
Of
course you didn’t. Now try to sell me Braves Stadium.
“In that case, would you care to explain why you’re-- uh, naked,
and in my car?” Her damn voice betrayed her that time.
“Let’s
talk about that when we get to your place.” The words were
steeped in his trademark sinful smile. The
narcissistic ass was trying to manipulate her.
She
wasn’t going to let him. “Never mind. Please just get
out.”
The
leather seat creaked as he leaned forward and his deep chuckle
tickled her ear. “Did you forget I’m naked?”
She
stiffened. “No. I didn’t.”
It
was a universally-accepted fact that Sam Danmore had a gorgeous
body. Natalie had once heard a talk show host joke that his
standard movie contract contained a wardrobe clause specifying his
refusal to wear shirts in more than three scenes.
He
didn’t budge. His hair brushed her cheek. It was soft
and smelled like fresh shampoo.
Keep
facing forward. Don’t move. Don’t talk.
And
for fuck’s sake, don’t look!
There
were plenty of people Natalie disliked. Sam Danmore was the
only one she could honestly say she hated.
Yeah,
silly girl? Then why has your mouth gone dry?
To
her relief he finally backed off, taking his scent with him.
“Sorry, sweetheart, I’m not gonna walk around downtown Atlanta in
the buff.”
The
BMW’s windows were tinted for privacy, so while many people rushed
past them along the busy sidewalk, no one had given her car a second
glance.
“Well,
I’m certainly not taking you to my home!” Ugh.
Could she sound more prim?
He
was quiet for a moment and she felt him studying her. “In
that case, I’m gonna open the door here, and get all these nice
people riled up until the news crews come and we’re all over the
internet. You seem like someone who’d be okay with that.”
She
reached for her phone. “I’m calling the police.”
The
smug bastard laughed at her. “Oh, so you want more media
attention? I must’ve misread you.”
Fuck!
He
was still laughing as Natalie threw the car in gear and floored the
gas to force her way back into traffic.
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