Desperately Seeking Fireman

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Authors: Jennifer Bernard

BOOK: Desperately Seeking Fireman
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Desperately Seeking Fireman

A B
ACHELOR
F
IREMEN
N
OVELLA

JENNIFER BERNARD

 

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

An Excerpt from
Four Weddings and a Fireman

Prologue

Chapter One

About the Author

Also by Jennifer Bernard

An Excerpt from
Once Upon a Highland Summer
by Lecia Cornwall

An Excerpt from
Hard Target
by Kay Thomas

An Excerpt from
The Wedding Date
by Cara Connelly

An Excerpt from
Torn
by Monica Murphy

An Excerpt from
The Cupcake Diaries: Spoonful of Christmas
by Darlene Panzera

An Excerpt from
Rodeo Queen
by T. J. Kline

Copyright

About the Publisher

 

Chapter One

Wayside Chapel, San Gabriel, California

T
HE GROOM’S SIDE
of the aisle was packed with an astonishingly high number of gorgeous men. Nita Moreno, standing near Melissa McGuire, soon to be Brody, surveyed the pews with widening eyes. There was enough testosterone in the building to fuel a small nation’s army—enough handsome, manly faces to fill an issue of
Playgirl
and enough brawny muscles to—

Oops. Busted. From across the aisle, two steps behind Captain Brody, a pair of amused, tiger-striped eyes met hers. An unusual mixture of gold and green, surrounded by thick black eyelashes, they would have made their owner look feminine if he weren’t one solid hunk of hard-packed male. A smile twitched at the corner of his mouth. Even in this context, the so-called Bachelor Firemen crowding the wedding of their revered fire captain, he stood out. First there was that breath-taking physique. Then there was his face, a study in contrasts. His features were so strong they almost qualified as harsh. Firm jaw, uncompromising cheekbones. A man’s man, until one looked into those golden eyes, or noticed that he possessed the most beautiful mouth Nita had ever seen on a man.

She narrowed her own eyes and met him look for look. Hey, she wasn’t checking out the available men. She had one of her own. Very deliberately, she let her gaze roam to the bride’s side of the aisle and settle on Bradford Maddox IV. Hedge fund operator, family scion, possessor of a killer business instinct and only a slightly receding hairline, he was hers, and she could still scarcely believe it. Maybe soon she and Bradford would be making their way down an aisle like this. Out of unconscious nervous habit, she clamped down on the inside of her cheek with her teeth. She loved Bradford, and knew he felt the same. He must.

Bradford, who seemed lost in thought, startled when he realized she was looking adoringly at him. He gave her a faint smile, then pressed his finger to his ear. Lovely. He wasn’t lost in thought, he was listening to his Bluetooth. She sighed, telling herself to let it go. It came with the territory when you dated a hotshot financier. Of course he couldn’t focus his
entire
attention on the wedding of two people he didn’t even know.

The right side of her body felt suddenly warm, and she realized the man across the aisle was still watching her, as if she fascinated him.

Really?
She
fascinated
him
? That seemed unlikely. She raised a questioning eyebrow at him. He smiled, the expression transforming his face from the inside out. Goodness, the man was gorgeous, in a totally different way from Bradford. Dark instead of blond, tough instead of charming, virile and primitive—the kind of man who would toss you over his shoulder and have his way with you.

He jerked his chin at her, as if signaling her to meet him in the chancel.

She frowned at him, scolding.
Excuse me?
How inappropriate.

He did it again, more urgently this time.

What did the man want? She lifted her hands, palms up, in a frustrated question, as he mouthed something to her.

“Bouquet.”

Aw, crap
. She swiveled toward Melissa, who had twisted in her direction, unholy mirth lighting up her forest-green eyes. The ivory antique lace adorning her bodice quivered as she held in her laughter.

The first glitch, after Nita had worked so hard to plan her friend’s wedding to perfection.

Digging deep for solemn dignity, Nita stepped forward and received the bride’s bouquet so that Melissa could marry her fire captain. She stepped back into position, fixing her gaze on the delicate ruffles of the white peonies, their petals as fine as living parchment, their fresh scent soothing the edge from her embarrassment. Gnawing at the inside of her cheek helped too.

As soon as the reception started, she was going to throttle that man, whoever he was. In the meantime, there was a little thing called a wedding underway.

“I will,” said Captain Brody, slipping a simple gold ring on Melissa’s finger and radiating a passionate devotion that made tears spring to Nita’s eyes.

“And will you, Melissa Eleanor McGuire, take this man to have and to hold, to care for and to cherish, for the rest of your days?”

“I will.”

The deep joy in her friend’s voice propelled one of those tears down Nita’s cheek. It landed on a peony petal, where it left a translucent smudge.

She blinked madly, refusing to draw any more attention away from Melissa. If someone was going to cry, it ought to be the bride, not the bridesmaid. Or maybe it ought to be the man across the aisle. Daring to raise her eyes again, she saw that he was once again staring directly at her. This time he didn’t look so much amused as . . . well, enchanted. Intrigued.
Attracted
. A bolt of heat traveled from the crown of her head all the way to the soles of her feet.

For a crazy moment, she wondered if she’d been struck by lightning for ogling a man during her dearest friend’s wedding.

San Gabriel Inn—private dining room

M
AKE THAT, OGLING
a
married
man during her friend’s wedding. A married man with a bubbly, blond wife and a willowy teenage daughter. The three of them sat at a round table across the room. His arm was slung across the back of his wife’s chair as she chatted with the woman next to her, who Nita recognized as Sabina Jones, one of San Gabriel’s female firefighters. The man himself was laughing with his daughter, whose dark hair was fastened at her neck with a flower-clip. The deep rumble of his laugh made its way across the room to her, even through the animated chatter of wedding guests.

Altogether, they made a perfect picture of a happy family. They made her teeth ache. Or maybe some other part of her body ached; she didn’t care to investigate.

Standing at the bar as Bradford continued the phone conversation he’d begun during the ceremony, Nita pressed his arm against her side, as if to remind herself of her good fortune. Bradford—he hated being called Brad—had chosen
her
. A supporter of her boss Senator Stryker, he was perfect for her in every way. Both driven and hard-working, they had similar goals. Both wanted to be the best at what they did. Both wanted to make their mark on the world. They understood each other and respected each other. She was lucky, lucky, lucky. And she loved him.

An image of Melissa’s peonies fluttered through her mind. Funny how flowers didn’t have to work so hard to be perfect. They just
were
. Imagine if flowers had to put in late nights to get ahead. Imagine if flowers had to worry about appropriate hairstyles and trends in business attire. The whimsical thought made her smile.

“A glass of champagne for your thoughts,” said a deep voice in her ear. She swung around, somehow knowing instantly to whom the voice belonged. For safety, she kept her hand nestled snugly in the crook of Bradford’s arm.

Wise move. As she met the man’s tiger eyes, awareness flashed across her every nerve ending.

“No, thank you. I’m with someone,” she said, which immediately sounded not only like a non sequitur, but completely obvious since she was smushed up against Bradford.

“Does he know that?” The man’s raised eyebrow indicated the phone conversation in which Bradford was still immersed.

“Of course he knows. He’s a very busy, important man, that’s all. He’s working on a million-dollar deal. Billion-dollar, I mean.”

“You’re sure it isn’t a kajillion dollar deal?” Again, with that amusement. He was
teasing
her. Which was really only one step removed from flirting if you thought about it. How dare he flirt with her while his bubbly, pretty wife was sitting right over there?

Nita decided to go on the offensive. “Beautiful wedding, wasn’t it? Wedding vows are so important, don’t you think?”

His face immediately went shuttered, as if all the light had been snuffed out. “I do,” he murmured. “You have no idea how much.” He turned away from her and signaled to the bartender, while she turned that cryptic statement over in her mind.

He ordered a Dos Equis and a glass of sparkling wine, then launched into a conversation with the bartender about the baseball playoffs. On her other side, Bradford was saying something about “debt burden” and “leverage.” Neither conversation held a candle to the speculation cartwheeling through her brain. When the baseball conversation paused so the bartender could do his job, she tapped the man on the arm. God, it was like a rock. Barely any give at all beneath her fingertips.

“Excuse me, but I was wondering what you meant by that,” she asked when he turned back to her.

“You ever been married?”

“No. Not yet,” she added defensively. Ask her again in six months, and she hoped to have a different answer.

“Then you wouldn’t understand.” With that dismissive remark, he collected his drinks, left an oversized tip on the bar—Bradford would be shocked—and wound his way through the crowd to his table. She felt annoyed with herself for assuming the man had been flirting with her simply because she found him so attractive.

“How irritating,” she said to no one in particular. Except that Melissa had materialized at her side.

“No one’s allowed to be irritated at my wedding,” she told Nita.

“Sorry. Maybe you shouldn’t have invited
him
.” She gestured toward the broad, receding back of the mystery man. “Whoever he is.”

“That’s Jeb Stone, captain of the C shift.”

“I don’t know what that means, but I take it he, too, is a San Gabriel firefighter?” Melissa had been Nita’s closest friend in Los Angeles before moving home to San Gabriel, meeting Captain Harry Brody and falling head over heels in love. Melissa was a TV news producer; Nita, as State Senator Stryker’s press secretary, had fed her plenty of scoops over the years.

“Yes, he’s a captain just like Brody.” Melissa’s face lit with tenderness as she said her new husband’s name. “Brody’s favorite captain, but don’t tell anyone else that.”

“I thought they were all supposed to be
Bachelor
Firemen. Isn’t he married?” Okay, so some part of her was hoping against hope that he wasn’t married, that he was attending the wedding with his sister or the station receptionist who needed a date.

“The stories are exaggerated. Some of them are married. Jeb is, Double D is,” she indicated a big-bellied man towing his wife to the dance floor, “but most are not. Vader’s single.” She pointed to a younger guy with a world-class body-builder physique then continued on a dizzyingly fast tour of the men present. “Stud,” an eager, brown-haired cutie, “Psycho,” electric blue eyes and edgy bad-boy vibe, “Hoagie,” handsome heartbreaker-type, “and that’s just the A shift. B and C are another story. I don’t know them as well. But I think the ratio of single to married is pretty consistent.”

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