The latest release from Samantha Young is officially live! If you're into fake dating, grumpy-sunshine, opposites attract, and only one bed stories, then I've got the romantic comedy for you. Be sure to check out The Love Plot today and read an entertaining excerpt from the book below.
Star Shine Meadows is all about freedom, thanks to the hippie parents who raised her. Juggling her jobs as a professional costume character actor and a line sitter, she believes in no expectations, no stressful ambitions, and no-strings-attached relationships. So when she meets a birthday girl’s grumpy uncle while working a princess party, she can’t help but needle him. She’ll never see him again, and honestly, he's pretty hot.
Rafe Whitman may be a veterinarian with a great bedside manner, but that doesn’t mean his patience extends to anyone with opposable thumbs. His family will not stop nagging him about finding “the one,” so when he runs into obnoxiously cheery Star again, he makes her an offer: He’ll pay her more than she would make doing her odd jobs if she’ll pretend to be his girlfriend at family gatherings. She can stop sitting in line waiting for someone else’s new phone, and he’ll get his family off his back.
When the tension between them heats to a breaking point, Star’s desire for "no strings" is tested against Rafe’s staunch stability. They say opposites attract, after all....
I was shocked to find Rafe striding determinedly in my
direction again. His broody face was more brooding than usual, so I braced
myself.
Rafe Whitman drew to a stop before me and blurted out,
“You’ll literally do anything for money?”
Anger flared in an instant from the tips of my toes to the
ends of my hair, so I didn’t hear the tone in which the
question was asked. I threw back my shoulders. Taller than average height at
five-seven, I was still a good seven or eight inches shorter than this arrogant
Manhattanite, but I was prepared to take him. Anyone who knew me knew I was a
patient, laid-back kind of person . . . but Rafferty Whitman had
crossed the line!
“What the hell does that mean?” I seethed. “Are you
suggesting I charge money for sex?”
Rafe’s blue eyes flashed with indignation. “No, I am not,”
he hissed at me, eyes darting around. “And lower your voice.”
“I will not lower my voice.” I crossed my arms over my
chest. “I like most people, but you sure do make it difficult, Whitman. It’s
like you get off on being as insulting as possible.”
He mirrored me, crossing his arms over his chest. “I’m not
insulting you. If you’d paid attention, you’d realize the question was not
meant to be untoward.”
“Untoward?” I grimaced. “What, are you from the nineteenth
century? Is that why you hate phones? Because if the technology is difficult
for you to grasp, I can teach you how to use a phone.” I was being a little
shit now, but he brought it out in a person.
Rafe sneered. “How much will that cost me?”
Argghhh! I narrowed my eyes but smiled. “Oh, for
you . . . twice as much as I’d charge anyone else.”
“I see. Well.” Rafe uncrossed his arms to reach into his
back pocket. He removed his wallet and then a business card from that. Holding
it out to me, he continued, “I guess you stand to make a lot of money for doing
very little. If you’re interested, call me.”
Flummoxed, I took the card. “Um . . . doing
what?”
But he was already walking away.
“Doing what, Whitman?” I yelled after him.
He didn’t answer, just casually strolled off. His suit
pants molded perfectly to his sculpted ass. So unfairly physically perfect.
“Are you going to call him?”
I looked up from the business card that read Whitman Veterinary Clinic, Dr. Rafferty Whitman.
His vet clinic was on the busy, tree-lined Columbus Avenue.
Nice location, Dr. Rafe.
There was his phone number right beneath the address.
Yvonne grinned at me, and I answered her question. “Nah.”
Her eyes bugged out of her head as her friends gaped at me
in shock. “Uh, Clark Kent just asked you to call him, Star. You don’t turn down
Clark Kent.”
“You do if he’s an asshole. Life lesson, girls: an
attractive face should not sway you if a pompous, arrogant, insulting,
offensive turd lurks behind it.”
Yvonne chuckled. “You did yell at him and try to embarrass
him with the peanut butter and jelly stuff. That’s not true, is it?”
I rolled my eyes. “No, it’s not true.” But she was right. I
had antagonized him.
“You should make it true. I’d roll in a bathtub of jelly
with that man.”
Slipping the card into my purse, I shrugged. “Impossible.
His ego would take up the whole tub. No room for jelly. Or me—I mean you.”
“You’re not the least bit curious to find out what he wants
to pay you to do?”
“Considering how that sounds, nope. Not at all. Ooh, look,
the line is moving. Yay.”
But as the girls turned to move with the line, I knew I was
lying.
I was so curious, my heart still raced from my encounter
with Rafe.