Heated

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Authors: Niobia Bryant

BOOK: Heated
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Reviews for Previous Niobia Simone Bryant Books:

“It’s very rare that a new author writes such a great book that’s such a keeper…”

Romance in Color, 4 stars

“Niobia Bryant is off to a good start… a very strong three heart read… added to my Emerging Author’s list”

Gwenn Osborne, Romance Reader, 3 of 4 hearts

“A well-crafted story with engaging secondary characters.”

Affaire de Coeur, 4½ stars,—ADMISSION OF LOVE

“… this sneaky little romance heats up gradually, then sizzles until done…”

Doubleday’s Black Expression Book Club Review—THREE TIMES A LADY

“… a refreshing read with wonderful characters and a “true family”. A wonderful TOP PICK for the month of June!”

Romantic Times, 4½ stars, TOP PICK—THREE TIMES A LADY


Heavenly Match
is a wonderfully romantic story with an air of mystery and suspense that draws the reader in, encouraging them to put aside everything and everyone until they have read the book in its entirety.”

RAWSistaz Review, 4 stars

“‘Sexy as sin’ describes this provocative novel to a T.”

Romantic Times Magazine, 4½ stars, TOP PICK—CAN’T GET NEXT TO YOU

“This is a great story. There is humor, sensuality, and just great chemistry between the two main characters…. So check out this funny and sexy romance story because Niobia Bryant has written a gem.”

Imani Book Club, 4 out of 5—CAN’T GET NEXT TO YOU

“Run to the bookstore and pick up this delightful read. This reunion story is touching, warm, sensuous, and at times, sad. But just try to put Bryant’s book down.”

Romantic Times Magazine, 4½ stars, TOP PICK—Let’s Do it Again

OTHER BOOKS BY NIOBIA BRYANT

 

Admission of Love
*

Three Times a Lady

Heavenly Match
*

Can’t Get Next to You
**

Let’s Do it Again
**

Count on This
**

Heated

 

ANTHOLOGIES

 

“You Never Know”/
Could It Be?

Heated

Niobia Bryant

Kensington Publishing Corp.

http://www.kensingtonbooks.com

For the one who keeps me heated:
Tony Holmes

Acknowledgments

To my family and friends, thanks for any and all support and love you have given me over the years.

To my editor, Karen Thomas, and her assistant, Nicole Bruce, thanks for all the hard work you put into this project.

To my agent, Claudia, thanks for being one of the best at doing what you do.

To my sistah in the word and fellow Sagittarian, Adrianne Byrd, thank you for all the industry info and for being someone I can always be “real” with.

To the wonderful network of African-American bookstores and book clubs, thank you for keeping me and so many other African-American writers going with your invaluable support.

To my readers, whom I cherish, thank you for wanting to experience each and every one of my books. You all are the reason I nearly
live
in my office—smile.

To the wonderful members of my book club, Niobia Bryant News, thank you for making me strive to make sure each project is better than the last.

 

Love 2 Live & Live 2 Love,

 

N.

Prologue

Holtsville, SC

Careful not to alert anyone to his presence, he moved in the darkness across the wild and grassy field with speed. He was nervous that he would be caught before his mission was complete. Like thunder and drums all rolled into one, his heart pounded in his chest. Sweat dampened his shirt, making it cling to his shoulders and back.

A sudden noise echoed from the surrounding darkness. He caught his breath and held it as nerves caused his bladder to fill. He quickly dropped down, pressing his stomach and knees to the cool earth surrounded by weeds and grass that was nearly three to four feet tall.

Holding his breath… he waited. Listening. Scared of being caught.

He heard nothing but the normal night sounds of the country: owls hooting, frogs singing their tunes, crickets busy scratching their legs.

Warily, he rose and moved ahead.

When the barn—already worn and torn from age and shameful neglect—came into view, he paused. For a second he looked up at the massive structure framed by the full moonlight.

It was almost majestic.

Swallowing any regret, he dashed inside.

He emerged moments later and ran as quickly as he could away from it. His feet thudded against the earth, his chest heaved with pain from his exertion.

He dared turning around only when he was cloaked by the trees—trees that welcomed and hid him.

The flames engulfing the barn were reflected in his ebony eyes.

1

Atlanta, Georgia

“Say cheese, Dr. King.”

Bianca smiled as instructed, posing with her glass star-shaped Woman of the Year award from
Modern Women
magazine held in front of her. She tried not to grimace as the flash went off several times in rapid succession.

“Absolutely beautiful, Bianca.”

Her smile stiffened. She knew without shifting her eyes from the camera that it was Armand Toussaint.

“Thanks, Dr. King and congrats again,” the male photographer said, moving back into the Imperial Ballroom of the Marriott Marquis Hotel to take further photos of the social event.

Bianca took a deep breath as she slid her circle-shaped beaded purse under her arm. She had just stepped into the hall outside the ballroom for a small reprieve from the room of people there to honor her with yet another accomplishment in her career as an equine veterinarian.

She considered Armand’s appearance an intrusion.

“Hello, Armand,” she said, not even sounding like she
meant it.


Une belle femme ne doit pas être seule
,” he said, his French accent very heavy as he told her she was too beautiful to be alone.

Armand had lived around the world and spoke seven languages, but when he was really trying to put his mack down he always reverted to French—a language he knew Bianca spoke fluently.

Bianca sighed. “I thank you for the compliment on my beauty, but I also thank you for respecting my desire to be alone,” she countered with ease. She knew it would take more bluntness to send the amorous admirer truly on his way.

It’s not like he wasn’t appealing to the eye—the man was tall and gorgeous like a young Sidney Poitier—and Bianca even found his conversation quite amusing—when he wasn’t trying to seduce her out of her La Perla panties… and there was a certain allure to a tall man with skin like dark chocolate with a French accent. The man was just insufferable because he was aware of his attributes and he couldn’t fathom that there was a woman in existence who didn’t want him.

Bianca certainly didn’t.

She usually ran into Armand at the many charity and social events they attended in Atlanta. They both served on several of the same boards, advisory councils, and minority organizations. On every occasion—whether with a date or not—Armand let Bianca know that he had a personal cure for her “supposed” loneliness blues.

Was Bianca lonely?

She fixed her hazel eyes on the rogue and saw his eyes shift to her left. Bianca turned to see what drew his attention and her eyes fell on a curvaceous woman in a strapless dress that defied gravity. She turned her gaze
back to him and he smiled at her in a charming—and apologetic—fashion.

Not
that
lonely.

She firmly believed his penis had more miles on it than two hundred laps around the Indianapolis Speedway. Even though he loved to tell Bianca that he was quite skilled in making a woman come at least ten times in one session of lovemaking, Bianca was more than willing to pass.

“No one should be alone on such a beautiful night as tonight,
mon doux
,” he said in a husky voice, stepping closer to her.

Bianca stepped back. “I’m sure you’ll find…
something
to get into,” she told him wryly.

“Bianca—”

Her cell phone rang from inside her purse. “Excuse me, Armand,” she told him, pulling it out to answer. “Dr. King speaking.”

“This is Travis out at the Clover Ranch.”

“Yes, hello Travis.”

“We got a mare about to foal. We’ve been monitoring her and she was doing good with the rolling to position the foal, but for the last five minute she’s actin’ awful funny for normal foaling, you know?”

Bianca nodded. “Has her water broke?”

“No, ma’am.”

“I’m about twenty good minutes from the ranch, but I’m on my way.”

“Thank God,” Travis sighed.

Bianca bit back a smile before she ended the call.

Armand came to stand beside her, lightly touching her bare elbow. “Everything okay, Bianca?”

“I have to go. Please make my apologies to everyone.”

“But—”

“Goodbye, Armand.”

Bianca flew out of the ballroom, not even waiting for the elevator as she took to the grand staircase. She was quite a site with her shoulder-length pressed hair flying behind her and the slinky skirt of her mocha sequined Roberto Cavali dress in her hands as she hitched it up around her knees to run straight down the center of the staircase.

Very Scarlet O’Hara–like.

She wasn’t aware or caring of the dramatic sight she made, though. She just wanted to get to the ranch and it was a good fifteen miles just outside of Atlanta in Sandy Springs.

Thank God I keep a change of clothes in my trunk.

She was soon accepting the keys to her silver convertible Volvo C70. She lowered the automatic roof as she sped away from the hotel.

 

“Home sweet home.”

The sun was just beginning to rise when Bianca dragged herself into the foyer of her elegant three thousand square foot home in an affluent gated community in a suburb of Atlanta. She flung her dress over the banister and carried her award into her study. She came to a stop before her massive cherry desk and took in the full wall of shelves behind it. Every accomplishment of her adult life was chronicled. There were more awards and accolades than she could count. She didn’t even know if she could make room for her latest achievement.

Reflective, she walked to the far end of the study and slowly began to review all of the statues in various shapes, sizes, and materials. Some meant more to her than others, and those she touched briefly with a hint of
a smile.

For anyone on the outside looking in at her life it was seemingly ideal.

She started her own veterinary practice at twenty-seven from her savings. Just three short years later her workload nearly doubled and she brought on two additional vets. She was now thirty-two, and her equine clinic was one of the top such facilities in the Southeast.

Not bad for a little black girl from Holtsville, South Carolina.

Bianca came to a stop before the 8 X 11 photograph in the center of the wall of awards and certifications. It was a picture of a tall and distinguished man standing beside a little girl and woman atop a horse. They were all smiling and obviously happy.

My eighth birthday
, Bianca thought.

Her parents had just surprised her with her very first pony, Star. Even though she had had plenty access to ponies living on a successful horse ranch Star had been special because it was hers alone.

The photo was one of the few that she treasured.

A reminder of better times.

The little girl in that picture didn’t have a clue that her mother would die seven years later and her stable world would never be the same again.

Bianca set her award on the shelf with the photo as her eyes fell on the handsome man. Her father. Her Daddy. Once her hero.

She hadn’t seen him or the ranch in fifteen years.

When her mother died Bianca thought her world would end. Her one saving grace had been her close relationship with her father. She knew they would help each other through the loss.

But that hadn’t happened.

Her father shut down completely. He isolated himself in his bedroom for days at a time, only to emerge reeking of alcohol. The ranch felt his neglect, right along with Bianca. That hurt.

It was far too much weight for a fifteen year old to bear. Between going to school—and maintaining her grades—and trying to take over running the farm, she would sometimes wake up and find her father sprawled out by the door drunk as a skunk.

She barely had time to grieve her mother’s passing because she began cleaning up her father’s messes. She became really good at it. She became just as good at hiding her anger and disappointment.

Until the day her father brought home Trishon Haddock—a woman twenty years his junior—and proclaimed that at forty he was getting married.

That’s when Bianca—soft, agreeable, and passive—welcomed that part of her personality that let her hit the roof. It hadn’t been little Bianca struggling to make sense of her world. She was seventeen-year-old Bianca, senior in high school, and running a horse ranch—and she was
pissed
.

Even though she told her father that he was being a fool for marrying a woman with the reputation around town of a harlot; even though she told him he was disrespecting her and her Mama by bringing another woman into their house; even though she refused to be nice as he requested… she never once told him that it hurt her that he made time in his life for a wife when he hadn’t made time for his daughter.

That
she held on to, protected, shielded.

As she stood at her second-story bedroom window and looked down at the wedding she refused to attend, Bianca made the decision to leave her father in the chaos
he
created. Bianca rescinded her decision to attend a local university. The further she got away, the better.

She left for college in Georgia that summer and hadn’t been back since.

Bianca turned away from the photo, but her memories—very painful recollections—remained. Her relationship with her father was barely visible. They spoke on the phone sporadically and went through motions.

Pathetic as hell,
she thought.

Releasing a heavy breath, Bianca strolled out of the study and headed toward the rear of the house to her kitchen. She was ready to fall into her bed and sleep away the hours, but she had appointments at the clinic, so rest would have to wait.

Bianca hoped some of her “kick-ass” iced coffee would get her going again.

Soon the slow drip-drip of the coffee maker seemed to be the only sound in the house. Most considered that quiet to be peaceful, restful, and precious. To Bianca it was the sound of living alone, which she refused to equate to being lonely. Sometimes, however, she thought that the sound of children laughing and a husband showering to prepare for his workday would be… peaceful, restful, and precious.

With her last date being more than two months ago perhaps the line between alone and lonely was thinning to the width of a strand of hair.

“Maybe I need a dog,” she muttered, pouring a large cup of coffee that she sweetened and lightened considerably before pouring it over a tall cup of crushed ice.

Bianca took a deep sip. “Liquid crack,” she sighed.

She was strolling out of the kitchen when there was a knock at her kitchen door. She smiled at the sight of her nearest neighbor and friend, Mimi Cooley, peering
through the glass of the door.

“Let me in, Sweetie, before people think I’m a Peeping Tom, okay,” Mimi said in that odd voice of hers that was a blend of nasal whining and Southern belle haughtiness.

Mimi was an ex–child star of the popular Seventies sitcom,
Just the Two of Us.
At thirteen, the show was canceled and, unfortunately, her acting career ended. Her family moved from Hollywood back to Atlanta and tried to give Mimi as normal a life as possible.

But normalcy and Mimi didn’t go in the same sentence.

She married the first of her seven husbands at eighteen—men who were wealthy and a tad bit older than Mimi. At fifty she now lived off syndication from the show and the hundreds of television commercials she did during her childhood career. She never got used to the idea of a nine to five job, and spent her days shopping and drinking Long Island iced teas—without showing one indication of being drunk or even tipsy.

Regardless of the time of day, Mimi was always dressed to the nines: heels and skirts, slacks and spectator pumps, and not a pair of jeans to be seen. Her make-up was always in place, and her hair was perfectly coiffed—and religiously died jet black—like she was the second coming of Diahann Carroll’s character on
Dynasty
.

Mimi was one of a kind, and Bianca loved the diva to death.

“Hi, Mimi.”

She breezed in with a cloud of Chanel No. 5 and turquoise silk. “I thought I was going to have to retire and collect Social Security before you let me in, darling.”

“How can I help you, Mimi…
dah-ling
?”

“Well, a shot of brandy wouldn’t hurt a bit, Sweetie,” Mimi said, moving across the kitchen to set her purse on
the center island.

“For 8
A
.
M
. coffee sounds like a better bet,” Bianca countered.

“Some barkeep you make. All that advice without the actual, huh, what… liquor, that’s right, Sweetie.”

“Nothing but coffee ’round here,” Bianca said, taking a deep sip of her iced brew. “Want a cup?”

Mimi rolled her elaborately made-up eyes—she was so dramatic. “Sweetie, I’d rather be buried in a Wal-Mart, okay,” she said with a shiver.

Bianca doubted Mimi had even seen the inside of a Wal-Mart, or even knew where to find one. She frowned as she watched Mimi open her purse and extract a silver monogrammed flask.

“Bianca, a lady is always, huh, what… prepared, that’s right,” she said, before taking a small swig. “Now, I usually have the cul de sac all to myself this time of day. Whatcha doing home, Sweetie?”

“A mare foaled last night.”

Mimi wiped the corners of her mouth with her index finger and politely placed the flask back in her purse. “Honey, I’m waiting for the English translation, okay, right.”

Bianca smiled as she folded her arms over her chest and leaned back against the marble counter. “I delivered a horse’s baby,” she explained patiently, ready for the drama. Mimi didn’t fail her one bit.

She made a comical face of pain as she pressed her knees together.

Mimi didn’t have any children. Bianca didn’t know if it was by choice or not.

Deciding to egg her on Bianca said, “Pulling the foal out with chains by its legs wasn’t the hard part—”

Mimi shivered and crossed her slender legs.

“Now sticking my arm inside the horse’s vagina to turn the foal—”

Mimi pretended to gag. “T.M.I., Doc. T… M… I.”

Bianca flung her head back and laughed, unable to stop the hoglike snort that always came with her laughter. T.M.I. was Mimi’s acronym, for “too much information.”

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