romantic suspense ebook

Cabin Fever

by Felicity Heaton

Summary

A little excitement. That’s all Kate Hamilton wanted when she agreed to a girly break to her family’s cabin. Time away from work and her failed love-life lured her into saying yes to her friends. She was expecting sun, snow and ski. Absolutely no guys.

What she wasn’t expecting was her stepbrother and friends crashing her vacation, a badly sprained ankle, a blizzard, and being trapped on the mountain with one Jack Darcy.

Jack Darcy brings with him more excitement than Kate can handle. Tall, dark and devastatingly handsome, he’s impossible to resist and seems to be everything Kate has been searching for…until it turns out he isn’t all that he seems. In fact, nothing is.

Caught up in a dangerous game and unsure who to trust, captured by a man she once thought she knew, will Kate meet her end or will her knight in shining armour rescue her in time? Can Jack confront the terrible things in his past and let Kate in? Will he be able to complete his mission and save the girl he’s fallen in love with? Can Kate save him too?

Ebook: $4.99

» Buy Now At Alinar Publishing

FORMATS AVAILABLE: HTML, Adobe Acrobat (PDF)

» Buy Now At Fictionwise.com

FORMATS AVAILABLE: eReader (PDB), ePub (EPUB), Rocket/REB1100 (RB), Adobe Acrobat (PDF), Palm Doc (PDB), Microsoft Reader (LIT), Franklin eBookMan (FUB), hiebook (KML), Sony Reader (LRF), iSilo (PDB), Mobipocket (PRC), Kindle Compatible (MOBI), OEBFF Format (IMP)

Cabin Fever - Romantic Suspense Ebook

genre: romantic suspense

length: 72000 / novel

rating: sensual

publisher: Alinar Publishing

released: November 2007

» READ AN EXCERPT

WARNING

Some of the books on this site contain material of a sexual nature or graphic violence and are only suitable for adults. By reading the excerpt below you release me as the author of any responsibility.

Excerpt

Kate turned the page in her book and surreptitiously looked at Jack. He was trying to get the radio to work, but there was no sign of that happening any time soon. She watched him take the back cover off and roll the batteries.

He flicked the volume button so the radio was on, and then frowned when nothing happened.

He sighed, picked up his glass of wine and sipped it.

“Is it broken?” she said, trying not to panic about the fact that there was no way of contacting the rangers.

Not unless Jack went down to town alone, and she didn’t like the thought of that. She didn’t want to be stuck up here alone, and her stomach turned at the idea of him going out into the storm where he could so easily get himself hurt.

“No use I’m afraid. I think it’s had it.” He walked over to the table and placed it down.

She gave him a sympathetic smile when he turned back around and ran his fingers over his hair. There was such concern in his eyes, as though he thought she’d be angry with him for not being able to get the radio working. There was nothing he could do about it. It looked as though they were going to be up here a while, at least until the snow stopped falling and her ankle was better. Hopefully Connie had told the Rangers that they were stuck up here.

When he moved back to his seat, she began reading her book again. She sipped her wine, enjoying the way it warmed and relaxed her. It was so peaceful up here when she wasn’t thinking about the storm. The fire crackled and popped, and she looked at Jack. He was staring at the fire with a pensive frown, prodding it with the fire-iron.

He brought his wine to his lips again and emptied his glass. She watched him refill it and then held her glass out, clearing her throat to get his attention. He smiled at her and all the worry and heavy thoughts that had been in his eyes disappeared. Leaning towards him, she waited until he’d filled her glass to the brim and then gave him a smile.

They’d only had one glass each and she was beginning to feel a little tipsy.

She leaned back in her chair and curled up with her book, her eyes still fixed on Jack. He slouched into his armchair and looked straight at her with such intensity that her heart sped a little. What was he thinking when he looked at her like that? She’d give anything to know.

His gaze lowered to her lap and she realised he was staring at her book.

“How can you read that?” he said, a smile in his eyes that made him look as though he couldn’t quite bring himself to believe that anyone could read romance.

“It’s a perfectly good book.” She raised it and pretended to begin reading again.

“Can I see it?”

Her heart thumped against her chest. Was he serious? Did he honestly think she was going to hand over the book? The moment she did, he’d be teasing her all night about it. She clutched it to her chest when he leaned forwards, a sweet smile on his lips. He held his hand out.

She shook her head.

“If it’s a good story, then you won’t mind me seeing it,” he said, voice low and coaxing.

Damn. He had a point. She fidgeted for a moment, ignoring the way his fingers were motioning for her to hand it over.

“Okay, okay!” She flung the book at him. It hit him square in the chest and fell into his lap.

He picked it up and stared at the cover, sipping his wine again. She swallowed hard and then cringed when, to her horror, he slipped his fingers in midway through the book and opened it. His eyes scanned the page. Her cheeks blazed as she waited for the inevitable and took another gulp of wine.

He stopped, only his lips moving soundlessly as he read. She gritted her teeth and died a little inside when he grinned. She wanted to curl up into a ball and hide. She should’ve said the book was trashy and she didn’t care what he thought. She’d known that saying the book was good was only going to make him more interested in it.

He frowned, coughed and grinned again, looking as though he was on the verge of laughing.

“Her milky thighs trembling beneath the feather caress of his fingers. Her pert breasts heaved with excitement. He moved closer, his golden skin brushing delicately against her when he nestled between her thighs. She swept her thumbs over his pebbled nipples, eliciting a moan from him.”

She definitely wanted to die now. She was burning up as the blush covered all of her body.

He laughed.

She lunged forwards to grab the book but he held it out of reach above his head.

“Give it back. Please, Jack. Give it!”

He stood and handed it to her with a little smile.

“Are you really looking for a hero like this?” he said, sitting back down.

She stared at her knees and the book balanced on them.

“I’ll settle for just a hero, not necessarily one like this.”

Jack smiled. He’d probably taken his teasing a little too far but it had got him somewhere. Now he knew that she was single.

She placed the book down on the floor beside her and then shifted in the seat again. She tucked her feet in beside her and he noticed that she tried hard not to wince.

Her ankle was probably killing her after the attempted walk down the mountain. It was going to take a few days before it would be healed enough for her to walk for any extended amount of time on it. He glanced at the radio on the table. He needed to know that Nick was still down in town with Kate’s sister and friends.

“How about you?” she said, coming out of her shell again.

He frowned and then realised that she was asking him whether he was looking for a heroine like you got in books.

He took another mouthful of his wine and thought about what to say. He didn’t know whether he was or not. Looking straight at her, he studied her face as she sat patiently awaiting his answer. He was glad that she wasn’t pushing him to say something. He needed time to think. Before he’d come here and met her, he’d been happy with the single life. It had given him time to focus on his job and had made life a little more simple. Now, he wasn’t so sure. Did he want to be alone for the rest of his life?

Did he need love?

He swallowed and held in the sigh that wanted to escape him as he thought about it all.

“I’m too busy with work.” He dropped his gaze to his wine glass in an attempt to avoid the questioning look she was giving him.

“I used to be like that… busting my ass in a job that gave me little satisfaction. No one notices, you know? Now, since coming here, I’ve started wondering if I’ve taken the wrong road somewhere and got lost. This isn’t exactly the life I’d imagined. I’d always thought I’d find some guy and fall in love, and live happily ever after.” Her look was so serious that he didn’t know what to say in response to her outpouring. She bit her lip and shrugged, as though his attention was making her uncomfortable and she wanted to pretend she hadn’t just said what she had.

“Like in a book?” he said, a smile teasing his lips.

She laughed and her whole face lit up with it. “Yes… danger and intrigue, some dashing hero coming to my rescue, and a love that lasts forever. Man, I need to get a life, huh?”

“Sounds like you already are.” He took another sip of his wine and realised that his glass was almost empty and so was hers. “Shall I open the other one?”

She nodded and he stood, walking into the kitchen and routing out the other bottle of wine. He got the bottle opener and looked out of the window as he screwed it into the cork. There was no sign of the snow letting up. It couldn’t go on much longer though. Kate had mentioned that the rangers had said that the weather would be clear, which meant that they hadn’t seen this weather system coming. The metrology office would’ve easily detected any weather system of magnitude. He gave it another day before it blew itself out.

Pulling the cork out of the bottle, he discarded it on the side along with the corkscrew and went back into the living area of the cabin.

He noticed that Kate hadn’t dared pick up her book again. It still sat on the floor with the others. Was she really looking for a hero like she’d said she was? He ignored the part of him that asked whether he could be that hero. Things were complicated enough without him allowing his feelings to get involved. He was here to do a job, not fall in love.

She jumped when he took the now empty glass from her hand.

“I thought I’d told you to stop sneaking up on me?” she said.

He gave her an apologetic smile, filled up her glass and handed it back to her.

Settling back down in his chair opposite her, he tried to think of something else to say. She was smiling to herself and staring at the fire. He wondered what was going on in that head of hers. They hadn’t eaten much so he suspected that the wine was starting to take its toll on her. Maybe now would be a good time to get a few answers to questions that had been floating around his head since meeting her.

“So…” He waited until he had her attention. “Did you used to come up here often?”

She nodded. “All the time when dad was still around. After that, everything sort of fell apart. I barely see him now. We didn’t part on great terms, if you must know. The break up really tore my sisters apart and I was so angry with him… I’m sorry.”

“You sound like you hate him.”

“No,” she said, shaking her head with a horrified look in her eyes. “Maybe sometimes. I guess I’m still angry with him, and Nick reminds me of that bitch that I’m supposed to call my step-mom and it just makes this feeling worse. I guess I just wish that he and mom were still together.”

“It’s only natural. No one likes it when their world falls apart.” He managed to hold her gaze for a few seconds before he looked away, shifting his eyes to the fire. It was getting low again. He leaned across and placed a few more logs on, stoking it and waiting for the flames to rise again before he looked back at Kate.

She was still staring at him with questioning eyes, as though she was trying to figure out what he’d meant by his words. He didn’t know what he’d meant so there was no chance she’d figure it out. He was just bitter about how things had ended with his last relationship. He wished she’d stabbed him in the back for real.

“Have you been up here in many storms?” he said, hoping to divert her attention away from his last statement.

“A few times.” She sipped her wine and pulled a thoughtful face. “Once or twice it was worse than this, but I wasn’t alone then.”

“You’re not alone now,” he said.

She went quiet and gave him a look that clearly expressed that she didn’t need a reminder of that. The corners of her lips tugged into a smile and her eyes brightened, narrowing ever so slightly and making her beauty hit him like an avalanche.

He held her gaze, not letting himself look away this time. He knew what she was telling him, could read it in her eyes and her body language. If he had less control of himself, he’d be doing exactly what she was asking him to, but he couldn’t, no matter how much he wanted to.

Knocking back the rest of his wine, he used refilling his glass as an excuse to look away from her.

His eyes met hers again and suddenly it was impossible to ignore the signals she was sending his way.

Standing, he walked across to her and looked down, right into her eyes. He stared into them, not caring about the silence between them or how comfortable it felt. She swallowed when he leaned towards her and then looked disappointed when he took her glass and refilled it.

He couldn’t do this.

Not to himself.

Not to her.

* * * *

Kate stumbled when she bumped into the banister. Jack took hold of her shoulder to steady her. She giggled and mumbled something that he didn’t catch. He guided her towards the stairs and hoped she wasn’t going to do herself an injury getting up them. There was no way he could carry her. He was in a better condition than she was, but he wasn’t sober enough to be picking her up.

She giggled and leaned backwards, her back hitting his chest. He placed his hands against her shoulders and straightened her up again.

He’d cut her off and drank the remains of the wine when she’d started slurring. She was a serious lightweight and he was beginning to wish he’d noticed earlier how drunk she’d been getting.

He bit his lip and suppressed a groan when she bent over and began crawling up the stairs in front of him. Unable to bear watching her backside wiggling with each step she took, he grabbed her waist and pulled her back up onto her feet.

She leaned back against him, her body supple and warm beneath his fingers. His temperature soared and he blamed it on the alcohol, not the enticing feeling of her body so close to his. Her hair tickled his cheek as she leaned further back, her ear brushing against his jaw and her arms coming up. She reached over behind her and ran them through his hair.

What the hell was she trying to do to him?

Did she think that he had the self control of a saint?

He struggled to shut down all the emotions she was stirring in him and fought against the pleading words that his desire was whispering. He manoeuvred her up the stairs, her occasional giggle breaking the heavy silence. He looked down at her, raised his hands a touch until his fingers were brushing the underside of her breasts. She didn’t seem to notice. He told himself not to let her get to him. She was stone drunk and this was no time to shed what little chivalry he had left.

No matter how much he wanted to.

Silent thanks left his lips when they reached the top of the stairs and she leaned forwards, her body no longer pressed against his.

Focusing on his job, he shut out all his feelings and tried to get her to her door as quickly as possible.

She turned to face him on reaching it and for one heart stopping moment, he thought she was going to kill what little control he had over himself by asking him to come in.

She smiled lopsidedly at him.

“Get some rest,” he said and opened her door for her.

Not waiting to see if she was going in, he went straight to his door and swiftly walked into his room. He closed the door and swallowed hard, fighting his desire to go back out into the hall and kiss her.

He breathed a sigh of relief when her door closed.

Flicking the light on, he went over to his bag where it was sat at the end on the bed and emptied it out. Clothes but no gun. He sighed and rubbed his temples, his head splitting. He didn’t feel safe without a gun under his pillow and his hand resting on it all night.

He turned when a loud thud came from Kate’s room and barely managed to stop himself from going to check on her. It was bound to end in disaster if he did. By now, she probably would’ve wrestled most of her clothes off.

He groaned at the visual and the way his fingers echoed with how good it had felt to touch her.

Ebook: $4.99

» Buy Now At Alinar Publishing

FORMATS AVAILABLE: HTML, Adobe Acrobat (PDF)

» Buy Now At Fictionwise.com

FORMATS AVAILABLE: eReader (PDB), ePub (EPUB), Rocket/REB1100 (RB), Adobe Acrobat (PDF), Palm Doc (PDB), Microsoft Reader (LIT), Franklin eBookMan (FUB), hiebook (KML), Sony Reader (LRF), iSilo (PDB), Mobipocket (PRC), Kindle Compatible (MOBI), OEBFF Format (IMP)