Abby Gaines

That New York Minute


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       “You said you don’t do chicken soup. You didn’t say you don’t do kissing.”

      Rachel’s mouth was no longer quivering … her lips were full and nicely shaped and more tempting than he could believe.

      “I don’t do kissing, either,” she said firmly. “Not with you.”

      Too bad Garrett couldn’t get the idea out of his head.

      “I don’t think you should write off the possibility. I already like your legs.” It wasn’t her legs he was eyeing right now … he found the V of her yellow blouse. “Maybe I’d like the whole—”

      “Don’t you dare say hog,” Rachel warned.

      “Shebang,” he said, grinning.

      Dear Reader,

      Last year, I visited New York City. I’d forgotten how incredible it is, how its streets make you feel so alive. Yet despite being frenetic, it’s easy to get around, and friendly.

      New York is the setting for some great movies—An Affair to Remember, Sleepless in Seattle, Two WeeksNotice. The city has also inspired many books … including That New York Minute.

      In That New York Minute, Rachel Frye and Garrett Calder, rivals in a Manhattan advertising agency, are complete opposites—such fun for the writer, helping them find their way to each other!

      But they have one thing in common: each needs someone who’ll stick with them no matter what.

      My visit to NYC will stay in my heart forever … but not for the obvious reasons. You see, I’d planned to travel there with two of my best friends and fellow authors, Sandra Hyatt and Karina Bliss. We were particularly excited because Sandra was up for an award at the conference we would attend. But a volcanic ash cloud forced the cancellation of my friends’ flight; to our mutual devastation, they never made it to NYC.

      A few weeks later, Sandra died suddenly of a brain bleed. It was a terrible shock to her family and friends, and a reminder to us all to make time for those we cherish (as, indeed, Sandra always did). I will never get to visit the Big Apple with Sandra, but she will always be in my heart.

      You can read more about Sandra, and the Trust established to honor her memory, at www.sandrahyatt.com.

      I hope you enjoy That New York Minute. To share your thoughts, please e-mail [email protected]. To read an After-the-End scene, visit the For Readers page at www.abbygaines.com.

      Sincerely,

       Abby Gaines

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      ABBY GAINES writes contemporary romances for the Mills & Boon® Cherish line, and Regency romances for the Love Inspired Books Love Inspired Historical line. Those might sound like two completely different genres, but Abby likes to say she writes “stories that leave you smiling”—wherever and whenever they are set. Her Mills & Boon Cherish novel The Groom Came Back won the 2010 Readers Crown Award, and her novella One in a Million won the 2011 Readers Crown. That New York Minute is Abby Gaines’s eighteenth book for Mills & Boon.

      Abby loves cooking, reading, skiing and traveling … though not all at once! She lives with her husband and children—and a labradoodle and a cat—in a house with enough stairs to keep her semi-fit and a sun-filled office whose sea view provides inspiration for her writing. Visit her at www.abbygaines.com.

      That New York

      Minute

      Abby Gaines

       www.millsandboon.co.uk

      To the memory of

      Sandra Diane Hyde

      (1965–2011)

      As Sandra Hyatt, a wonderful writer of romance

      As a wife and mother, the heart of her family

      As a friend…irreplaceable

       CHAPTER ONE

       HE’S BREAKING UP WITH ME.

      Rachel Frye took a swig of champagne. No longer the appropriate drink for the occasion, but she needed something to do with her hands. Something other than clasping them together on the table while she begged Piers not to end it.

      Given they were sitting in one of Manhattan’s coolest bars, a little dignity was called for.

      “Don’t get me wrong, you’re really attractive and smart. I enjoy spending time with you.” Piers leaned forward with the earnestness that Rachel found ninety-nine percent charming and one percent temptation to tell an off-color joke. “But, you know … Oyster?” He pushed the silver plate they were sharing across the highly varnished table for two.

      “Thanks,” Rachel muttered, as her mind scrambled for compelling arguments as to why they shouldn’t break up just yet. She picked up one of the mollusks remaining from the dozen they’d ordered. She’d suggested Crush, a new champagne and oyster bar, for this date because she’d been considering sleeping with Piers tonight.

      Also because it was around the corner from her Madison Avenue office, but still. When a woman suggests to her boyfriend of three months that they start their evening at a place serving well-known aphrodisiacs, the last thing she expects is to get dumped.

      She’d unbuttoned two buttons of her blouse, for goodness’ sake!

      “It’s just, I get the feeling we’re not on the same page,” Piers said.

      Rachel realized too late that slurping an oyster from its shell wasn’t dignified. She swallowed hastily, the salty mass gliding past the lump in her throat.

      Was this about sex? Piers had wanted to sleep with her on the first date, something Rachel would never contemplate. Nor the second. Nor the third. Was it unreasonable to want to believe they might have a future together before she jumped into bed?

      “Actually, I think we have a lot in common,” she said, as she set the empty shell back on its bed of crushed ice. They were both hardworking, capable people. And Piers had the kind of family she’d like to have come from: his father was the second-generation owner of an upstate accounting firm, and his mother ruled the local bridge club with an iron, yet friendly, grip.

      “You glanced at your watch when I walked in tonight,” he said. It sounded like an accusation.

      “I … was checking the time,” she said uncertainly. She dabbed at a drop of oyster juice on her chin with her napkin.

      “Rachel, I was two minutes late. It’s not a crime.”

      “I never said it was. I never even thought it. That’s why you’re dumping me? Because I looked at my watch?” Ugh, she needed to rein in that shrillness.

      She turned away from Piers’s concerned gaze to take a deep breath.

      And encountered another gaze, this one altogether unsympathetic.

      Garrett Calder, her fellow creative director at Key Bowen Crane, New York’s largest independent advertising agency, was watching her from his black leather bar stool.

      Rachel had noticed him at