Playing For Keeps (Emerald Lake Billionaires 2) (32 page)

Read Playing For Keeps (Emerald Lake Billionaires 2) Online

Authors: Leeanna Morgan

Tags: #Contemporary, #Romance, #Fiction, #Forever Love, #Christian, #Inspirational, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Hearts Desire, #Military, #Clean & Wholesome, #Series, #Emerald Lake, #Billionaires, #Happy Endings, #Country Music, #Stardom, #Ex-Wife, #Montana, #Media Frenzy, #Science, #Secrets, #Career, #Western, #Small Town, #Billionaire

BOOK: Playing For Keeps (Emerald Lake Billionaires 2)
5.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Ryan gently touched the side of her face. “Is that a yes or a maybe?”

“It could be more. It’s my turn to show you something.” Ryan looked confused as she led him inside. She stopped in front of the table where she’d left the box. “I brought you a present.”

Ryan looked at the white box, then back at Sophie. “It’s not my birthday.”

A nervous smile worked its way across her face. “It could be better than a birthday present.”

Ryan pulled the box closer.

Sophie bit her bottom lip. “It’s sort of fragile. You might want to leave the box on the table while you open it.”

He undid the first flap. “You didn’t need to bring me anything. I…” He froze as he looked at the top of the cake. In bright red frosting, Sophie had carefully written the words,
Will You Marry Me?

She crossed her fingers and hoped he liked it. “I love you, too. I can’t imagine not being part of your life.” Her eyes filled with tears as Ryan wrapped his arms around her. He pulled her close and Sophie knew that all of the worry and planning about her future had been worth it.

This was where she needed to be, where she wanted to be, every day of her life.

“What are we going to do with each other?”

Sophie smiled into his chest. “We could get married and live happily ever after in Bozeman?”

“What about your job?”

“I went to Montana State University today. I’ve been offered a job in the microbiology faculty. I can start as soon as my contract with the pharmaceutical company has finished.”

Ryan leaned back. “You’d do that for me?”

“I’d do it for us.”

The grin on Ryan’s face was so big that Sophie felt the last of her worries melt away.

“You’ve made me the happiest man on earth. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”

“Are you saying you’ll marry me?”

Ryan’s grin got wider. “I guess I am. And just to set the record straight, will you marry me, too?”

“I guess I will,” Sophie said with an answering smile. “Did I tell you I have a sweet tooth?”

“You want to eat cake?”

Sophie wrapped her arms around Ryan’s shoulders. “I want to kiss you first, then eat cake.”

“We must be a match made in heaven. I want to kiss you, too.”

And when they were ready to eat their cake, Sophie knew he was right. Heaven didn’t get much sweeter than being in Ryan’s arms.

 

 

 

THE END

 

Thank you for reading
Playing for Keeps.
I hope you enjoyed it! If you did…

 

  1. Help other people find this book by
    writing a review
    .
  2. Sign up for m
    y
    new releases e-mail
    , s
    o you can find out about the next book as soon as it’s available.
  3. Come like my
    Facebook
    p
    age.
  4. Visit my website:
    leeannamorgan.com

 

Keep reading for a preview of
Crazy Love
,
Holly and Daniel’s story, the third book in the
Emerald Lake Billionaires
series!

 

CRAZY LOVE

 

EMERALD LAKE BILLIONAIRES, BOOK THREE

 

Three billionaires, an emerald lake, and a lifetime's worth of happy endings.

 

 

 

 

Daniel Sullivan stared at his best friend. “I’m not doing it.”

Blake crossed his arms in front of his chest. “I’m not asking you to marry my sister. I want you to be on my trial team. Think of it as market research.”

“Reviewing a dating app is not market research. I don’t have time to visit my own family let alone have a girlfriend.”

“That’s my point. You’re the best person to trial Crazy Love. If the coding works on you, it will work on anyone.”

Daniel didn’t know whether to be flattered or insulted. “Just because my business develops apps, it doesn’t mean I want to spend my time testing yours.”

Blake pushed his cup of coffee out of the way and leaned forward. “What are you more worried about? That it will work or it won’t?”

He looked around the busy café. Bozeman wasn’t the place most people would expect to see two billionaires having coffee. After half a dozen phone calls, Blake had given up using the telephone to convince him to be on his trial team.

Daniel thought he’d given up entirely until a helicopter had landed in his front yard at eight-thirty this morning.

“I don’t want a girlfriend. Whether it works or not isn’t relevant.”

“You could be missing out on meeting the love of your life.”

“The love of my life wouldn’t go online looking for me.”

Blake grinned. “You work with digital simulations, computer algorithms, and programming applications every day. Don’t you think it’s a little shortsighted to discount a woman because she uses technology to find her perfect match?”

“It’s not the same thing.”

“Yes, it is. Your company creates apps that make it easy for people to integrate technology into their lives. What’s so different about what you’re doing and the Crazy Love app?”

Daniel snorted. “My apps save people’s lives. Rating the quality of someone’s drinking water or comparing their heart rate, temperature, and blood pressure against predetermined safe zones is not the same as a dating game.”

Blake’s smile dimmed. “It’s not a dating game. We’re talking about one of the most basic human needs. Everyone wants to love and be loved. My app makes it easier to find someone who will make you happy.”

“I’m happy already.”

“Working eighteen hours a day might have been exciting when we were in our twenties, but it’s not when you’re nearly thirty-five. You’ve bought a home in the middle of nowhere, you don’t date, you don’t even have a cat to come home to. If you’re not worried about yourself, you should be.”

“Emerald Lake isn’t the middle of nowhere. It’s forty minutes from downtown Bozeman and we’re connected to the rest of the world by an international airport. It’s a great place to live.”

“I read the publicity on my way here,” Blake said dryly. “If you thought it was hard finding a girlfriend in New York, it will be worse here.”

“So what’s your excuse?”

“What for?”

“Not having a girlfriend? If New York is the dating capital of the world, why are you sitting here with me talking about your app? You should put yourself on the trial.”

“I developed the program. It would be a conflict of interest if I were one of the participants.”

Daniel sat back in his chair. “It looks to me as though the pot’s calling the kettle black. Unless you’re hiding a superwoman in New York, you haven’t been on a date in months, either. And last time I checked there were no furry paw prints on your Porsche.”

Blake’s eyes turned a frosty shade of gray. “I’m thinking about getting a dog.”

“In New York?”

“There’s no law that says I can’t.”

“You should move out here.”

Blake laughed. “Not likely. I’ll leave cowboyland to you.”

The conversation around them dipped to a whisper.

Daniel looked at the tables either side of them. “I’d keep your voice down if I were you. Those cowboys’ wives and girlfriends have us surrounded. I don’t like your chances of getting out of here alive if you make fun of their men.”

Blake’s gaze shot to the table closest to them. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to offend you.”

The woman sitting at the table scowled. “My gran used to say that the measure of a man is in the words he uses. If you’ll excuse me, I have work that needs doing.”

Her soft Irish accent took the sting out of her words, but not the meaning.

Daniel watched the tall brunette leave the café. “I think you’re right,” he said half-seriously. “Bozeman might not be the best place for you.”

“No kidding,” Blake muttered. The café door closed and he turned back to Daniel. “If you won’t help me because I’m your friend, I’ll have to play hardball. Sam told me you’re working on an app that keeps track of how much aid is going to Third World countries.”

Daniel frowned. “Sam talks too much.” Sam was a good friend, business mentor, and closer to him than his father, but some things were confidential. “What else did he tell you?”

“That it identifies whether aid is reaching the people who need it. He also said the United Nations don’t want to trial the app. I can help.”

“How?”

Blake leaned forward. “The Red Cross team leader in the Sudan owes me a favor. One word from me and they’ll trial the app across all of their field operations. I’ll provide a team to compare the trial results to the way they distribute supplies at the moment. Within four months you’ll have the data you need to present a case to the United Nations.”

Daniel’s eyes narrowed. “I’ve been working with the Red Cross for the last three months. They’re not interested.”

Blake’s mouth turned up at the corners. “You know what they say. It’s not what you know, but who you know. If you networked with the right people you might have found your own way out of the mess you’re in.”

“It’s not a mess.”

“That’s not what I heard.”

Daniel forced himself not to react to Blake’s words. He’d sunk a lot of money into taking the app from complex coding theory to an application that could be used in the field. So far the app had been trialed with an American medical logistics company and a large online clothing retailer. Neither company had been delivering food, shelter or clean drinking water, but it wasn’t the product that he was interested in. It was the efficiency of the app.

“Why do I feel like I’m being blackmailed?”

“Because you are.” Blake looked around the café. “This might be quaint, but it’s not exactly a thriving metropolis. You’re hiding here and it’s not healthy.”

Daniel picked up his fork and ate a piece of rhubarb crumble pie. While he ate, he gazed at his best friend. “There’s no rush hour traffic and I’m not surrounded by thick smog. Who wouldn’t want to live here?”

“Everyone I know except you.”

“That’s because they don’t know what they’re missing. Something else is going on. The last time you needed my help was when we were in college. What’s wrong?”

Blake looked down at his coffee and frowned. “My reputation is on the line. The Crazy Love app is different from anything I’ve done before. You know how apps work. You know the structure and the algorithms behind the human interface. You’re the best person for the job.”

Daniel nodded. He didn’t want anything to do with Blake’s app, but he did want to get his own product in front of the United Nations. “I’ll make you a deal. I’ll go on your trial and meet the woman I’m matched with. But I’m not promising to go out with her more than once. If the app has a flaw, I’ll work on it from here.”

Blake sighed. “What if it takes more than one date to work out if she’s perfect for you?”

“It won’t.”

“Four dates and I’ll call my friend in Sudan this afternoon.”

Daniel narrowed his eyes. “Three dates and I’ll fill out the application form now.”

Blake dropped a business card on the table between them. “Here’s the link. While you’re signing your life away, I’ll call Sudan. It’s great doing business with you.”

Daniel wasn’t sure he could say the same.

 

***

Holly Miller walked into Angel Wings Café and waved at some people she knew. When she’d first returned home after eight years away from Bozeman, she’d felt like a stranger. It had taken a while to make new friends and catch up with people she used to know, but she was finally beginning to feel like part of the community.

She headed toward the back of the café and waved at a petite brunette.

Mia smiled. “Your hot chocolate arrived a few minutes ago.”

“You must have read my mind.” She pulled out a chair. “How does the catalog for the charity art auction look?”

Mia slid a copy across the table. “Tell me what you think. It still needs a few changes, but we’re almost there.”

Other books

Vertical Run by Joseph Garber
Evening Gentleman by AnDerecco
Rand Unwrapped by Frank Catalano
Bound to Blackwood by Sharon Lipman
A God Against the Gods by Allen Drury
5 Onslaught by Jeremy Robinson