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Authors: Natalie J. Damschroder

BOOK: Sophie's Playboy
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"For me?" Astounded, Sophie looked over her shoulder.

John was watching through the hall window. He turned and ran when she caught him. Sophie realized for the first time that what she was wearing was much more like what the teenage girls wore than what she usually had on.

"I didn't pay much attention when I got dressed this morning," she admitted.

"Someone else noticed, too." Melina nodded in Parker's direction as he entered the booth and sat down. Sophie was 165

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floored when she realized his goofy behavior off and on all day was because of her.

He glanced at her chest when he put his own headphones on. Her nipples tightened beneath the soft cotton ... of her shirt! She wasn't wearing a bra!

She fought the impulse to cover herself. Becoming self-conscious now would look stupid. Besides, if Parker was drooling over her, he'd be easier to seduce. Not that she'd planned to blatantly seduce him. She'd planned to work him into a relationship of some sort. The dinner tomorrow night would help, which was why she'd argued about it. She didn't want her ... activities to be obvious.

"Five seconds," Melina warned.

Sophie focused on the pages of notes in front of her and tried to ignore her nipples, which were still quite prominent under the worn snugness of her shirt.

"Good afternoon, and welcome to Rant and Rave! The talk show that lets you get it off your chest." Her voice stuck on the last word and she gently cleared it. Melina laughed safely on her side of the glass. "Today's Rant topic is stereotypes.

Why are they bad? What don't you like about them? Why do they fit, despite all our attempts to eliminate them?"

She paused for two seconds to transition. "Take Parker, here. He's rich. Pots of money. Cute, too, as you can tell if you've seen the bus posters. And he used to spend all his time at the country club. He's smart, so that defies the rich playboy stereotype, but he drives a Porsche. I mean, how cliché is that?"

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Parker rose to the scripted challenge. "I'm not a cliché, Sophie. I don't
only
drive a Porsche."

"No, you're right. You drive the
new
symbol of your great wealth and testosterone—a massive SUV."

"They're safer in the snow."

"Worthless on the ice."

"Better than my Porsche."

Sophie couldn't help it. She snorted a laugh. "Okay, enough, Parker. Let's see what our callers have to say.

Melina?"

"Seth is on line one."

"Hi, Seth! What do you have to say about stereotypes?"

"If rich guys drive sports cars and big luxury SUVs, it's because women love them."

Sophie quirked an eyebrow at Parker and checked that off her list. Sometimes their callers were so predictable.

Seth continued. "The faster the sports car, the bigger the SUV, the more you chicks want the guy who drives them."

Some bitterness was starting to seep into his voice. Sophie guessed he wasn't one of the "blessed" ones.

"But, Seth, don't you think what's inside the car is more important? Wouldn't women be more able to get past the trappings if men didn't toss them all up there in front of us?"

Now he sounded sheepish. "Well, you know, all guys want from chicks is sex."

"Ah-ha!" Sophie raised her pen in the air. "Another stereotype!"

That sparked a flurry of calls from men defending themselves against the onslaught of women with yet another 167

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illustration of how men were pigs. Parker took the women's sides, Sophie the men's, to keep the conversation from getting stale. Even when they deftly moved on to other subjects, sex turned out to be the popular topic.

Which didn't help Sophie one bit. She'd started the show thinking of her nipples, and blushed at least a dozen times during their broadcast when someone said something that made her picture Parker in a compromising situation. That SUV—and its big cargo area—was becoming more and more attractive.

Sheesh.
She
was becoming a stereotype.

Sophie was relieved when they broke at the end of the Rant period. Surely they'd find something other than sex to discuss during the Rave.

She stood to go refill her water bottle and felt Parker's gaze on her the whole length of the hall. When she finished at the cooler and turned, he abruptly straightened and pretended to be looking at his notes.

Sophie removed her satisfied smile when she sashayed back into the studio. "Ready for anti-stereotype?"

"I guess." He looked glum. "At the moment I can't think of any."

Sophie sighed in pretend annoyance. "I'll start, then.

Again. With the middle child thing."

"Yeah, that'll work."

Sophie paused and looked at Parker over the console. "Is something wrong?"

"No."

"Then snap out of it!"

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Melina gave the one-minute warning. Sophie decided to go for broke. No need to wait until tomorrow to implement her plans.
Carpe diem
! Also, she thought,
carpe
lust! "Do you want to come over after the show?"

His head snapped up. "Come over?"

Melina signaled thirty seconds.

"I've got leftover pizza."

A longing look came over Parker's face before he schooled his expression. "Sure."

"Great." She nodded at Melina, sat, and went to work.

* * * *

The only problem, Sophie thought two hours later, was what happened next?

Parker followed her home and into the condo. They were spared awkwardness by Hippo, who barreled out of his cage and skidded into Parker's feet. He panted and pranced, gazing adoringly up at Parker.

"He slobbers over everyone like that," Sophie complained, watching Parker stroke the little dog. His hands made the miniature dachshund look even tinier. "Everyone except me."

Parker smiled but didn't say anything.

"Come on. I'll get you something to drink." Sophie left the foyer and led him to the kitchen, where she pulled two bottles of beer from the refrigerator and handed one to Parker.

"Interesting." He examined the label while she let the dog out the back door. She paid her neighbor to let him out a couple of times a day, but he was always in a hurry when she got home.

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"Why?" Sophie went back to the fridge and removed the container of leftover pizza before shutting the door.

Parker twisted the top off his bottle and took a swallow.

"You have my favorite beer, that's all. Can I help?"

"No, thanks." Sophie tried to bustle about preparing the pizza, but putting it on a plate and starting the microwave didn't last long. She let the dog back in and poured some food into his dish, then leaned against the counter and sipped her own beer. Parker, who now sat at the table, eyed her over his bottle. Sophie flushed from head to toe. Her nipples once again peaked and rasped against her shirt. She fought the urge to rub them and turned gratefully when the microwave beeped.

"Careful, it's hot." She placed the plate on the table and collected two more plates, some napkins, and a knife, then sat across from Parker.

She scolded herself for feeling so nervous. It wasn't like she had never had a relationship—or affair—with a guy before. So she'd never done the chasing. It was no big deal.

She tried to think of something to talk about. "How's Trina?"

"Not too bad. Still in preschool."

"That's good. Diane holding up okay?"

"Still strong." He frowned and swallowed. "She's going to fall apart when it's all over, though. I wish she had someone to help her through that."

Sophie's throat swelled against the words, but she said them anyway. "You could help her through that."

Parker tilted his head at her questioningly. "I can be a friend, but not like she needs."

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"Oh." She pulled a red pepper off her pizza slice and dropped it down to Hippo. The dog snapped it up, then trotted to his water dish and began slurping. "Too serious?"

"What do you mean?"

"Well, it wouldn't exactly be fun, would it? It would be demanding and emotional." God, she sounded spiteful. What was wrong with her? "That's just not the kind of relationship you usually engage in."

Parker felt the familiar fear tickling his spine. He wiped his hands on a napkin and tried to figure out how to change the subject. "I don't date women for the type of relationship we're likely to have."

"Sure." Sophie gave that snort she was so good at, and even though Parker knew he was lying, he was annoyed.

"I don't. I date women who appeal to me and see where it takes us."

"Somehow, it seems to take them down the aisle with someone else." She raised an eyebrow. "How do you manage that, anyway?"

"Manage what?"

"Your matchmaking record is impeccable."

More fear. Sophie knew him too well. He was in a danger zone.

So he tried to be casual. "I guess they just happen to meet the right guy. I obviously wasn't it."

Sophie cut the last piece of pizza down the middle and handed half to him. "So, how many women have you dated who married the next guy you introduced them to?"

"I have no idea."

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"I bet."

"Tell me about your family."

Sophie laughed. "Okay, I'll let you off the hook." They finished eating in silence, then she stood and piled the plates.

"Coffee?"

He shook his head. Sophie dumped the plates in the sink and suggested watching a movie in the living room. Parker didn't really want to go home yet, and he preferred to avoid further intimate discussions, so he nodded.

He settled near the center of the sofa and watched Sophie dig in the bottom of her entertainment center. She dipped her head to reach into the back and her delectable rear rose.

Parker grimaced and adjusted himself before she turned her head.

"
Die Hard
?"

He choked before his brain really registered what she said and she apparently took that as a no.

"I've got
The Mummy
on DVD. You into supernatural incarnations?"

It was on the tip of his tongue to say he was into whatever she wanted him to be into, but just in time he swallowed the juvenile innuendo. "That's fine," he managed to rasp. Sophie looked at him funny, but he figured this was just the beginning.

He was right. He'd never have figured Sophie Macgregor for an action buff, but once they started the movie, she was engrossed.

Parker hadn't seen the movie before and he couldn't seem to get a hold of the plot. He kept watching Sophie. Sophie 172

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licking butter off her fingers from the popcorn she'd made.

Sophie cringing sweetly when some guy got hung. Sophie letting out a yelp when the mummy thing suddenly burst into life.

Unfortunately, Sophie wasn't a clinging female type.

Parker kept trying to put his arm around her or comfort her when she got scared. Except she kept moving around, clearly excited by weird fights with black-robed figures and, of course, mummies. And she didn't get scared. She got excited.

He couldn't even manage to get their fingers to meet in the damn popcorn bowl. At least Hippo had settled on his lap, making his ... situation less obvious.

By the time the movie was over, Parker felt like
he'd
played Mick O'Donnell, or whatever the guy's name was. He was plain worn out.

Most of him was, anyway. Sophie jumped off the couch, and his body reacted quite energetically to the bounce beneath her sexy shirt. She snapped off the TV and turned to face him.

"Watdja think?"

Parker stood slowly and Sophie's eyes widened. Her face softened, her mouth slackening just the littlest bit. He stopped when he was two inches from her.

"I think I'm wondering what I'm doing here."

"I'd say watching a movie," Sophie replied, her voice turning husky. "But I don't think that's what you meant."

Parker's hand lifted and skimmed Sophie's shoulder. She shivered and he closed his eyes, suddenly dead certain that 173

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being here was a big mistake, and that he was about to make a bigger one.

Without opening his eyes he lowered his head. If his lips met the top of her head, he'd know they were safe. Tomorrow Sophie would show up at the station in her usual decent clothing and Parker could go back to being ruled by his brain.

He felt hot breath and knew that wasn't what was going to happen. He paused.

"Sophie."

"What?"

"If I kiss you, everything changes."

Her arm dislodged his hand from her shoulder as she lifted it to wrap around his neck. Still, she didn't move closer.

Parker let his hand settle on her hip and inhaled deeply.

Sophie's pheromones must have been turned on high, because her scent threatened to flip his switch to primitive.

"I know it does, Parker."

She still didn't move, and he didn't know if she wanted it to change or not.

He was getting a crick in his neck.

He let his eyes open a slit. Sophie's hair was tousled and cascading over her shoulders. Her eyes were half-lidded and full of invitation. There was no reservation in her gaze, only patience.

Parker groaned. He'd lost.

* * * *

Wow
.

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Sophie couldn't get a more coherent thought than that.

She'd thought the kiss at the gazebo yesterday was good.

She'd never tasted lips so firm, yet so velvety. Lips that made
her
lips believe his lips were the only ones for them.

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