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The Marrying Kind
The Marrying Kind
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The Marrying Kind

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The Marrying Kind
Judy Christenberry

Mills & Boon Silhouette
I'll Never Marry!From the moment Jonathan Davis rang Diane Black's doorbell, mistaking her for his blind date, she knew the sexy developer couldn't be more different from her. He squired around gorgeous, flirty, dim-witted Dallas socialites, not modest investment bankers like her. Still, the man made her heart flutter under her pin-striped suit as it hadn't in years.John was many things–a millionaire, a player, a catch. But he'd never be a husband. For him, "marriage" equaled "mistake." Diane might be the quintessential forever kind of woman, but he was confident he could avoid that trap. That is, until he kissed her.And then, of course, there was the matter of the baby….

“Why are you flirting with me?”

John lowered his head. “I’ll admit, at first it was because you rejected me.”

She rolled her eyes. “I suppose it was the shock of that happening.”

He looked up and laughed. “But then it was because you didn’t expect compliments or gifts from me.”

“And that was odd?”

“The women I know would sell their souls to snag a rich man. They’re the kind my father usually marries. But they’re not going to get me!”

So he was not the marrying kind. Still… “But I’m not exactly the type of woman to turn heads.”

“You are to me. Since I’ve met you, you occupy my mind most of the time.”

Diane tugged on her suit lapels. “You’re flirting again, Mr. Davis. It’s not appropriate at a business lunch. Don’t you respect me?”

“Absolutely.” He leaned in close and whispered on a husky breath, “But I also want to sleep with you.”

Dear Reader,

Long ago, when I was young (ha!) I began my career by writing Regencies. I enjoyed writing heroines who looked for love in life, rather than position, fortune and fame. The Marrying Kind is like a Regency in that my characters are not looking for marriage. Or at least they think they aren’t! This attractive, successful and cynical man is about to meet his match in an independent and wary woman.

I really enjoyed writing these two characters. They are a little different from what I usually write, but a little change is good, isn’t it? However, you may notice that I can’t seem to stop bringing people together in a type of family.

I think we all try to create a family around us, whether by blood or circumstances. This is the second book of my DALLAS DUETS series, which takes place in a fourplex on Yellow Rose Lane. We’ve got one more story to tell, Mommy for a Minute, which will be out in August. I hope you’ll look for that story, too! Dallas is a very nice place to visit.

If you have comments or questions, you can visit me at my Web site, www.judychristenberry.com.

Happy reading!

The Marrying Kind

Judy Christenberry

www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Judy Christenberry has been writing romances for over fifteen years because she loves happy endings as much as her readers do. A former French teacher, Judy now devotes herself to writing full-time. She hopes readers have as much fun with her stories as she does. She spends her spare time reading, watching her favorite sports teams and keeping track of her two daughters. Judy lives in Texas.

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

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter One

“Dad, I don’t need another woman pawing over me. I’ve got enough women already trying to figure out how to get me to marry them.”

“Son, this one is different. Her mother promised me—”

“Come on, Dad, you know women. They’ll promise you their souls if it’ll get them your charge cards.”

“John, I’m only asking for one evening. She’s a good-looking blonde. Surely you can spare one night. For me.”

John stared at his father. He loved him, even if he didn’t agree with his choices, especially about women.

But what the hell. He could endure one evening with another money-hungry female. He’d done it often enough. He’d sit through one gourmet dinner while she ordered the most expensive meal and prattled inanely for two hours. Then he’d take her home and he’d be finished.

“Okay, Dad, I’ll take her out once. If I don’t like her, that’s it, okay?”

“Thank you, John.” His father handed him a piece of paper. “Here’s the address. She lives in a fourplex on Yellow Rose Lane.”

DIANE BLACK MOVED ABOUT the downstairs apartment in the fourplex on Yellow Rose Lane, watering the various plants.

“Oh, you poor dear. You’ve suffered a lot, haven’t you? I’m so sorry I didn’t get to you yesterday.”

There’d been too much work to do. She’d left the bank about nine, even later than usual, working up a proposal for a potential client she’d been pursuing for weeks. A few hours on her laptop catching up on investments were followed by some light reading in bed—a trade magazine of financial projections. She’d fallen asleep with the magazine on her chest, never thinking of the plants she’d been asked to tend.

She poured water into the dry soil of one dieffenbachia. “Here’s a little extra for you,” she crooned. She pinched off a dead leaf or two before moving on to the next plant, talking to it as much as she had the last one.

She was usually quiet, but she blossomed when she talked to the plants. She had a large collection in her own apartment and had promised her friend and neighbor, Jennifer, to take care of her plants, too, while she was on her honeymoon.

When a knock sounded on the front door, Diane wondered who could be calling on the absent newlyweds and their children.

Should she answer it?

Another knock, this one more forceful, decided her.

She hurried to the door. Swinging it open, she stared at the six-foot-two, dark-haired hunk in front of her. “Hello?”

“I’m glad you finally answered. I was beginning to think you weren’t home.”

“I—”

“No, don’t say it. Look, I promised my dad, as you promised your mother. So let’s just get this evening over with so we can face them and tell them we’ve done as they asked. That’s what we need to do.”

“We do?” Diane blinked several times. She knew she was tired, but what he was saying didn’t make sense.

The man reached forward and took her arm. “Come on. I’ve got a reservation at a nearby restaurant. It won’t take that long. If we don’t like each other, we can cut it short and still have done what we promised.”

She pulled away from his hold. What was wrong with this guy, acting like an arrogant oaf? “You can’t just—”

“Sure I can. I’m paying. Get your purse and let’s go.”

Of all the pompous, demanding egos! Just who did this guy think he was?

Then it hit her.

Could it be…?

Before she married Nick, Jennifer had told Diane that her mother was trying to set her up with a man of her so-called class. Meaning a rich guy. Could this be the man? In his designer suit, which fit him like a glove, he shouted money. He seemed just like someone Jennifer’s mom would approve of.

“Excuse me,” Diane said, “but there’s obviously been a—”

“No time for that now,” he said, reaching behind her to the hall stand and grabbing her purse. “We’ve got a table waiting.”

“But—”

He put up a hand to halt her objection, and Diane saw red. No man was going to get away with treating her like this. She’d teach him a lesson.

She’d go along with him—and then zap him with the truth.

Smiling sweetly, she said, “I’ll drive my own car and follow you.”

“I don’t see the need—” Then, as if the light dawned, he continued, “Oh, you’re being cautious. In that case, fine. I’ll go slow so you can follow.”

He strode out the door, cradling her elbow the whole way. Did he think she couldn’t walk on her own, or was he afraid she’d balk again?

As she drove behind him to the restaurant, Diane couldn’t help but laugh when she envisioned one-upping the pompous rich guy. She knew it was rather evil, and totally out of character for her, but she couldn’t resist the temptation to take this man down a peg. All her life she’d despised how a certain class of men treated women. And she should know; she was in the male-dominated banking industry.

As soon as she parked beside his Mercedes, he was at her door to open it, leaning down with his hand extended.

This had gone far enough, she thought. “We need to talk before we go in.”

He led her out of the car. “Not here. It’s too hot. We’ll talk at our table.” And he swept her into the four-star Dallas restaurant.

The maître d’ obviously recognized him on sight. He was one up on her, Diane joked to herself. He led them to a private candlelit table and held out her chair.

With a sigh, she sat down. This little game had gone far enough, she decided. Her “date”—whoever he was—was going to be irate when she told him who she was.

“Now can we talk?” she asked, when the maître d’ turned away.

But then the sommelier stepped up to the table, rattling off their specialty wines, aged to perfection.

“I don’t drink,” she told him when he’d finished his prepared speech.

Her dinner companion seemed surprised, then regrouped. “In that case, we’ll both have iced tea.” The sommelier went away, dejected.

“I need to tell you something,” she blurted, before anyone else interrupted them.

Her companion waved her off. “Nonsense. What we need to do is decide what we’ll eat for dinner. There’s plenty of time to talk after we order.”

But her selection wasn’t met with approval. When the waiter came, her companion smoothly overrode her decision and instead doubled his own three-course dinner.

“Very well, sir.” The waiter nodded and quietly slipped away.

Her “date” clasped his well-manicured hands in front of him and speared her with a direct gaze. “Now, what was it that you couldn’t wait to tell me, Jennifer?”

“I’m not Jennifer.”

His eyes—blue like the deepest ocean—widened. Then he cleared his throat. “Then who are you?”

She lowered her own eyes, suddenly feeling a bit guilty. “I’m Diane Black, Jennifer’s neighbor.”

He unclasped his hands and lay them flat on the table. She looked up and saw the muscles bunch along his jaw as he clenched his teeth. “Don’t you think you should have told me that before?”

Was he not there before, when she’d tried five or six times? “If you’ll recall, you weren’t exactly interested in letting me speak.”

He didn’t reply.

“Next time, maybe you’ll let a woman get a word in every now and then.” She grabbed her purse and stood up, ready to make a discreet exit.