Enter to Win a $10.00 Amazon eGift Card
CINDERELLA BUSTED
The Cinderella Romances #1
Petie McCarty
Released December 16th, 2015
Soul Mate Publishing
Cinderella's fairy tale moves to Jupiter Island, Florida where Lily Foster, owner of an eclectic landscape
nursery, is mistaken for a wealthy socialite by billionaire resort developer Rhett Buchanan. Overdue for a little romance in her life, Lily is anxious for one fabulous date with her handsome prince, so she cultivates her inadvertent masquerade.
nursery, is mistaken for a wealthy socialite by billionaire resort developer Rhett Buchanan. Overdue for a little romance in her life, Lily is anxious for one fabulous date with her handsome prince, so she cultivates her inadvertent masquerade.
Rhett Buchanan has become jaded with the Palm Beach social scene, dominated by scheming women desperate for more money -- his money. Rhett falls hard when he meets Lily Foster. She is a breath of fresh air after the smog of gold diggers constantly surrounding him.
For Rhett and Lily, it's love at first sight until her deception comes to light and pitches their relationship
into a disastrous tailspin. Well-meaning friends are determined to intercede and resort to inept high jinks to reunite the estranged couple while a wicked ex-girlfriend plays dirty to keep the couple apart.
into a disastrous tailspin. Well-meaning friends are determined to intercede and resort to inept high jinks to reunite the estranged couple while a wicked ex-girlfriend plays dirty to keep the couple apart.
The front door of the quaint,
shake-roofed office stood open when Rhett Buchanan drove into the
parking area. Like he had time for this foolishness. Whoever heard of
the CEO of a billion-dollar development firm approving a truckload of
trees, even if they were species no other nursery could grow?
He peered through the windshield at
the overhead sign. Evidently, a small-time nursery called Bloom &
Grow had heard of such nonsense. He tugged his tie loose and rolled
up the sleeves on his white dress shirt before angling out of his
black SUV. At least a nice breeze was whipping off the Intracoastal
Waterway.
Rhett had argued with Garrett over
lunch about doing this inspection alone. Apparently, this eccentric
nursery insisted on a final inspection conducted only by the actual
owner—no substitutes. Sounded more like an interview. He let out a
resigned sigh. Garrett Tucker made Rhett’s new resort developments
stand out like diamonds in the rough and accomplished the feat with
specialty landscape materials. The man had a gift, but only Garrett
could find an oddball place like this to buy trees.
“Better just to get this over
with,” he muttered and started up the stairs to the porch.
At the threshold, he froze. His gaze
slowly took in a pair of perfect slender legs, then inched up to a
spectacular yellow sundress with a cleavage that made his mouth
water.
Damn.
A flawless complexion,
shoulder-length blond hair, and delicate features finished the
marvelous package who appeared to be perusing some sort of plant
brochure. At that moment, Rhett wished he
owned this oddball nursery, so he could spend all day selling plants
to the beauty in the yellow sundress.
Wait a minute. Single women don’t
buy plants. Married women buy plants.
His eyes flashed to her left hand.
No ring. Hmm. Things just got
interesting.
He cleared his throat.
The beauty started and turned a pair
of sapphires the color of the Gulf Stream in his direction.
“Sorry,” he said, then smiled.
“I didn’t mean to startle you.”
The beauty smiled back—a dazzling
smile with perfect straight white teeth.
His mouth went dry. The woman was
drop-dead gorgeous.
“It’s okay,” she said softly.
“I was daydreaming and didn’t hear you come in.”
He nodded, started to reply, then
didn’t. He just wanted to stare a while longer. Quickly realizing
he’d look like an idiot if he did, he cleared his throat and began
again. “Sorry, I’m being rude. My name is Rhett Buchanan.”
She took the hand he extended. He
felt a spark, and her eyes widened almost imperceptibly. If he hadn’t
been staring at her eyes, he might have missed it. Had she felt the
spark, too?
“I’m Lily Foster.”
“I’m, uh, h-here to inspect some
plants. T-Trees actually. An order for BDC.”
Great.
He just stuttered like a bashful high-school boy. This from a man who
bought and sold corporations over lunch. What the hell was wrong with
him today?
“I see.” She stared for a long
moment, then glanced down.
Good Lord, was he still holding her
hand?
“Sorry.” He let her go.
She smiled again. “The sales
manager will be right back.”
“Are you here to inspect trees,
too?” At least he didn’t stutter this time. He was getting his
wind back.
“No, I’m here to look over the
new interiors line.” She held up the brochure.
He nodded. He wanted to keep her
talking. Her voice sounded sexy as hell.
“Do you spend a lot of time here?”
He glanced around the tidy office made cozy with a half-dozen plants
and palms of some sort.
“Not really.”
He nodded again. He was getting real
good at nodding. “Are you pretty good with landscaping?”
She eyed him warily. “Yeah?”
He dusted off what he hoped was his
most charming smile. “Maybe you could help me with my inspection.
It’s too many trees for me, and I could sure use some help.”
“Well, Tammy will be there to
answer any questions.”
“Tammy?”
“Tammy Waynette, the sales
manager.”
He narrowed his eyes. “You’re
kidding me, right?”
“About what?” The sapphires
looked wide and innocent.
“The name—Waynette.”
She laughed, a musical sound like
delicate wind chimes. “I’m not kidding. Tammy says her mother
loved the country western singer.”
He grinned back, couldn’t help
himself. “Poor girl.”
“I don’t think she minds.”
He nodded. Again. “Do you know if
she went to the laydown yard? My assistant said the trees would be
staged in the laydown yard. We could meet her there and get started.”
Her eyebrows rose to twin peaks.
“We?”
“Yeah, well, Tammy’s here to
sell trees, and I’m looking for an objective second opinion on what
I should keep or exchange. I could sure use your help since you’re
pretty good with landscaping and all.”
Not that he had any intention of
exchanging anything. He couldn’t tell a diseased tree from a
healthy one, but he’d look at every single tree if it meant
spending more time with Lily Foster.
She hesitated. “I suppose I could
tag along.”
“Great! Shall we go?”
Lily led Buchanan outside where they
grabbed the customer golf cart parked in front of the office. Rhett
climbed behind the wheel and headed for the center drive Lily
indicated. The man was tall; she guessed at least four inches over
six feet. Riding passenger gave her an excuse to stare at him and
wonder how she’d gotten so lucky. To actually be dressed up on the
day a gorgeous hunk came in to inspect trees? What were the odds? A
successful hunk, too, since he owned his own corporation, and Tammy
said the BDC order was a big one.
Rhett Buchanan certainly didn’t
fit her impression of a corporate CEO, powerfully built and handsome
enough she had gone completely tongue-tied back in the office. She
could get lost in those amazing green eyes. And that slow, sexy smile
he’d given her had made her toes curl.
Yikes!
“You’re smiling,” he said.
“What’s so funny?”
“Nothing. I’m just enjoying a
pretty day.”
She would do much better out here in
the nursery with plant material to talk about rather than forcing
conversation in the office. For the first time in her life, she
wished she had spent more time flirting with boys in high school like
all the other girls. Instead, she had studied her heart out to get
good grades and make Hank proud since she was all he had.
Buchanan pulled the cart up at the
laydown yard, but there was no sign of Tammy’s fiery-red curls
among the rows of trees. An errant customer had probably waylaid her
somewhere in the nursery.
Lily and Buchanan got out and ambled
over to the first row of trees, a dozen dwarf magnolias. The
containers were well-chosen, some of their best product. Hands on his
hips, he gazed at the trees and back at her, then raised his brows in
question.
“They’re perfectly matched,
disease-free,” she said.
“I thought so, too.” He winked.
She felt her neck flush, and her
gaze strayed to the dusting of dark hair on his tanned forearms.
“Where are you going to use all this stock?”
“A new condominium and shopping
district in Boca. These trees are for Phase I, and I suspect Garrett
will be ordering more.”
“Garrett?”
“He’s the vice-president of real
estate development for our company, BDC. He’s also a frustrated
landscape architect—that was his bachelor’s degree—but his
subsequent MBA pushed him up the corporate ladder.”
“You like him,” she said simply.
His gaze sharpened. “I do. How
did—”
“The sound of your voice when you
talk about him.”
“Wow, beautiful and perceptive.”
She felt her cheeks grow warm and
glanced away.
“Sorry,” he said softly, “I
didn’t mean to embarrass you.”
“You didn’t.”
A dark brow went up.
“Okay, maybe a little.”
Actually a whole lot. Rhett Buchanan
seemed so confident, so sure of himself. She was out of her league,
and she knew it, but she still wanted to play for just a little while
longer.
“Garrett and I were fraternity
brothers in college,” Rhett was saying. “Been together ever
since.”
“Ah, I see. So who likes the
plants, you or Garrett?”
“Mostly Garrett, but I do
appreciate their value. He’s convinced me that installing—and
more importantly, maintaining—specialty landscapes can double the
exterior value of architectural designs.”
“Good for him! He’s right.”
“Another plant lover,” he said,
grinning.
“Of course I am.”
“You’re gorgeous when you
smile,” he said suddenly.
Okay, that had nothing to do with
inspecting trees. Was Mr. Buchanan flirting with her? He’d
complimented her twice in five minutes. She jerked her gaze away. She
was heating up—all over.
“I’ve embarrassed you again.”
“You didn’t,” she assured him,
lying through her teeth. “You just took me by surprise is all.”
“I would think you hear that a
lot,” he said softly.
“Oh. No. I don’t.”
He stepped closer, and she feared
her cheeks and neck would turn bright pink. She quickly moved toward
the next row of trees. The first six containers were perfectly
manicured weeping mulberry trees. This Garrett guy sure knew his
plant material. She guessed he had selected their best specimens.
“What do you think?” she asked,
gesturing toward the mulberries and staring straight ahead. Safer
that way.
“Gorgeous, like I said.”
She glanced back.
He wasn’t looking at the
mulberries. He was staring at her.
Her cheeks just had to be pink. Lord knew they felt hot enough.
“You’re supposed to be
inspecting trees,” she scolded with a smile.
He laughed. “Oh yeah, that’s
right.”
By the time they made it through the
third row of containers populated with an assortment of Helliconia
and Callistemon,
she grew more comfortable and even tried flirting back. They laughed
and joked about the perfect places to plant the gnarly and
exceedingly crooked Corylus,
and Lily had the time of her life. Until the bottom dropped out about
halfway down the fourth row at the gray Bismarchia
palms.
“Do you buy a lot of plants here?”
Buchanan suddenly asked.
Her head snapped up from examining a
bent gray frond. She swallowed. “Buy?”
“You must be one of the nursery’s
best customers as well as you know the stock and know your way around
here.” He gave her that slow, sexy smile again. “Are you buying
landscaping for business or pleasure?”
Oh good grief! He thinks I’m a
customer.
Petie spent a large part of her career working as a biologist at Walt Disney World -- "The Most Magical Place on Earth" -- where she enjoyed working in the land of fairy tales by day and creating her own romantic fairy tales by night. She eventually said good-bye to her "day" job to write her stories full-time.
Petie shares her home on the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee with her horticulturist husband, a spoiled-rotten English Springer spaniel addicted to pimento-stuffed green olives, and a noisy Nanday conure named Sassy who made a cameo appearance in Angel to the Rescue.
Thank you very much for hosting my Book Blast with Tasty Book Tours! Have a magical week!
ReplyDelete