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Ellie
Cahill
Releasing
on February 9, 2016
Loveswept
“Ellie
Cahill is definitely one to watch
!” raves bestselling author Cora Carmack,
and this steamy, upbeat modern romance about connecting in all the best ways
proves it once again.
Clementine Daly knows she’s the black sheep. Her wealthy,
powerful family has watched her very closely since she almost got caught in an
embarrassing scandal a few years ago. So when Clementine’s sent on a mission to
live up to the Daly name, politely declining isn’t an option. Of course, the
last thing she does before boarding the plane is to grab a stranger’s phone by
mistake—leaving the hunky journalist with her phone. Soon his sexy voice is on the
line, but he doesn’t know her real name, or her famous pedigree—which is just
the way Clementine likes it.
Despite all the hassles, Justin Mueller is intrigued to
realize that the beautiful brown-eyed girl he met at the airport is suddenly at
his fingertips. They agree to exchange phones when they’re both back in town,
but after a week of flirty texts and wonderfully intimate conversations, Justin
doesn’t want to let her go. The only problem? It turns out that Clemetine has
been lying to him about, well, everything. Except for the one thing two people
can’t fake, the only thing that matters: The heat between them is for real.
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Excerpt:
Excerpt:
“What
the hell?”
Honor
looked over. “What’s wrong?”
“My
phone is going completely nuts. It sent me a whole bunch of text
messages from myself. Look at this.” Was it possible to get a virus
or a worm on a phone? And when had it happened? I held it out.
Honor
squinted at it, then looked up at me, eyes going wide. “Oh shit.”
“What?”
“That’s
not your phone.”
“What!”
I pulled the screen back to look at it myself.
Below
my number the content of the messages was only partially visible, but
it wasn’t hard to figure out.
+1
(847) 555-2015
YOU
HAVE MY PHONE! PLEASE COME BACK TO . . .
+1
(847) 555-2015
WHO
IS THIS? I HAVE YOUR PHONE . . .
Oh.
Fuck.
I
thumbed the lock open and had to search frantically for the messages
app. It wasn’t where I kept mine on the screen. When I found it, it
had the number 15
in
a little red circle. The phone app showed another red circle, this
one with the number 6.
Oh
double fuck.
I
said it out loud. “This is definitely not my phone.”
“I
already said that. So whose is it?”
I
scrolled through the increasingly frantic messages from my number.
Whoever had my phone didn’t give a name.
I
tapped into the phone app and selected my number. Tension drew me up
high in my seat, stomach flopping like a fish, and all traces of
drowsiness gone.
Ring.
No
no no no no no no, this could not be happening to me.
Ring.
Honor
must have grabbed the wrong phone at the airport!
Ring.
Who
the hell had my phone?
Ring.
God,
it could have been anywhere. It could have been on its way to
Katmandu by now!
The
sound of my own voice startled me. “Hi, you’ve reached
Clementine. Please leave a message.”
As
the automated voice gave me my options at the end, I realized I had
no idea what to say. But it was too late to think about that now.
Beep.
“Um,
hi. I’m the person who has your phone. I am so sorry. I don’t
know how this happened, um . . . I’m, um . . . please call me so we
can figure out what to do.”
When
I disconnected, I shot Honor a look of death. “You took the wrong
phone!”
“It
was the only one there!” he protested.
“Obviously
not.” My hands curled tight around the strange phone as I fought
the urge to punch him in the shoulder.
“I
swear to god, Clementine, it was the only one there. You left it
plugged in; I grabbed it, end of story.”
“Then
how did this happen?”
“How
should I know?”
Serena
the flight attendant appeared in the aisle looking concerned. “Is
everything all right here?”
“Fine,”
Honor snapped.
“Don’t
be a dick. It’s not her fault.”
“Well,
it’s not my fault,” he said.
“Well,
it sure as hell isn’t mine!” I said through gritted teeth then
looked at Serena. Time to channel my grandmother. I gave her my best
Miriam Schulman-Daly patrician smile. “Everything’s fine. Just a
little problem with my phone. Thank you.”
The
pilot hit the brakes as we arrived at our gate and the plane filled
with the metallic chatter of seatbelts releasing. Serena hurried back
to the head of the plane and Honor got up quickly, like he was
determined to be the first one off. I guessed he was avoiding talking
about this any longer on the plane.
Probably
for the best. Because I was going to kill him after all.
He
seemed determined to stay ahead of me the whole time, using his
longer legs to eat up the terminal all the way to the escalators to
baggage claim. I was out of breath by the time I got on behind him,
but that wasn’t going to stop me. Oh no. The longer I had to think
about this, the madder I was getting. I poked my brother in the back
of his head.
“I
swear to god, Honor, if we weren’t surrounded by witnesses—”
He
turned, looking sullen. “It’s possible there were two phones
plugged into the outlet, okay?”
“Uh,
ya think?”
Just
then the phone started vibrating in my hand.
It
was a call, and it was coming from my phone.
“Oh
god, it’s him—her—whoever.” I didn’t even know since I
hadn’t listened to the no doubt angry voicemails. The texts had
been enough.
Ring.
Was
I about to get screamed at?
Ri—
“Answer
it!” Honor exploded.
I
swiped the phone to life. “H-hello?”
“Hello?”
A masculine voice replied and I practically jumped out of my skin.
There
was a fifty-fifty chance it would be a man answering, genius.
“H-hi,”
I stammered. “I’m the idiot who took your phone.” Probably best
to approach this humbly.
He
sighed, making static in my ear. “Hi there. Thank you for calling.”
“I’m
very sorry,” I said.
“Yeah,
me, too.” He sounded resigned. “What are we going to do?”
“Um
. . .” I had no idea. What were the options, even? Probably the
easiest thing to do would be for me to get a new phone, disable mine
remotely, and import my number to the new phone, but that would leave
this stranger with a dead phone and I’d still have his. Now
theoretically, he could do the same but that presumed he could get a
new phone where he was. And that he had the cash to do it.
“I
could FedEx it to you, I guess,” I offered. My heart quailed at the
thought of trusting my precious phone to any kind of delivery
service.
“Meanwhile
we’re both phoneless while they’re in transit.”
“Right.”
I followed Honor to the baggage claim area on autopilot. All my
concentration was on the phone.
“And
that assumes that they don’t lose our packages.”
“Yeah,”
I said, sounding much cooler than I felt. “Not my favorite option .
. .”
“Mine
either . . .” the voice said softly. “The thought of never seeing
my phone again hurts in a way that I’m a little embarrassed to
admit.”
I
laughed, glad to hear I wasn’t alone. Though probably for way
different reasons. “Okay, so what then?”
“Where
do you live?”
“Chicago.
But I’m in California until Friday.”
“You’re
from Chicago?” he asked. “So am I. But I’m in Florida until
Friday, too.”
“So,
do we wait until we’re both back and trade?”
He
made a soft whimpering sound. “I guess we have to.”
“I
promise you I’ll guard it with my life until I get back,” I said.
“I’ll
take good care of yours, too.”
Ellie Cahill is a
freelance writer and also writes books
for
young adults under the name Liz Czukas. She lives outside Milwaukee,
Wisconsin,
with
her husband, son, and the world’s loudest
cat.
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