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“I was waiting for you to come out so that I could take a quick shower.” She lowered her arms and stood provocatively in front of him. “I hope you don’t mind.”

He tried to avert his gaze, but she made it extremely difficult. She picked up her clothes from a nearby chair and catwalked toward him.

“Feeling better?” she asked. Her eyes moved slowly over him, then returned to his face.

He could feel the heat radiating off her. “Yeah.

Much.”

She reached out to touch his bare shoulder. He turned his head in her direction and before he could react she kissed him, her full chest flush against his arm. Her soft moan was like a song in his ears. She pressed her body against his and he felt the quick tightening in his groin. Her arm snaked around his neck and with her free hand she tugged at the towel wrapped around his waist.

“Touch me,” she whispered against his lips.

About the Author

DONNA HILL

began writing novels in 1990. Since that time she has had more than forty titles published, including full-length novels and novellas. Two of her novels and one novella were adapted for television. She has won numerous awards for her body of work. She is also the editor of five novels, two of which were nominated for awards. She easily moves from romance to erotica, horror, comedy and women’s fiction. She was the first recipient of the RT Book Reviews Trailblazer Award, won an RT Book Reviews Career Achievement Award and currently teaches writing at the Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center.

Donna lives in Brooklyn with her family. Visit her website

at www.donnahill.com.

Books by Donna Hill

Kimani Romance

Love Becomes Her

If I Were Your Woman After Dark Sex and Lies Seduction and Lies Temptation and Lies Longing and Lies Private Lessons Spend My Life with You Secret Attraction

SECRET

Attraction

DONNA

HILL


www.millsandboon.co.uk

MILLS & BOON

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Dear Reader,

It is a blessing in life when you get to do what you love. Trust me, I am blessed! I have been given the opportunity to bring stories, issues and people to life that hopefully make you laugh, cry, shout, think, hug someone and seek out your significant other! And nothing tops creating a group of characters that you cannot wait to share with readers. That’s what happened with the Lawsons of Louisiana.

Can you believe that in the twenty years of my writing career this is the first time I’ve actually developed a family? The first book, Spend My Life with You, introduced the Lawson clan and showcased the eldest daughter, Lee Ann. Now you will meet Desiree Lawson, one of the Lawson twins. Her twin sister, Dominique, has gotten Desiree into a hot mess, to say the least, and it just may cost her the one man she cares about—übersexy restaurateur Spence Hampton. Against a backdrop of politics, fast cars, sexy men, ex-girlfriends and dangerous suitors, Secret Attraction has something for everyone.

And, yes, the dashing, sexy bachelor brother Rafe Lawson is still hot and single. Rafe was introduced in Heart’s Reward. So expect to hear his story soon!

I do hope you enjoy Secret Attraction. I love to hear from readers and I welcome your comments about the Lawsons of Louisiana. Who do you want to see featured next? Who is your favorite character? Let me know at dhassistant@gmail.com.

Until next time,

Donna

Chapter 1

The near-deafening roar of the red Ferrari’s engine vaulted through her veins. Her limbs vibrated as the low-riding race car hurtled forward. Concentration and survivor’s instinct took over as images left, right and center flew by too quickly for recognition. The speedometer teetered at 159 mph. Oh, God. The car held the ground on two wheels, barely missing the guardrail as it made the long turn and pointed straight ahead.

A plume of smoke burst on her right as motion met the inanimate concrete wall. Almost there. Her heart thundered in her ears. Almost. Red and white flashed in front of her. One hundred … ninety … seventy-five … fifty … thirty … twenty …

Within seconds she was surrounded. The door was yanked open and the smell of burnt rubber, exhaust fumes and gasoline swirled in the air.

She pulled off her helmet and a head full of wild spiral curls sprung out around her face like a dark auburn halo. Her five-foot-five inch frame was dwarfed by the towering, bulky pit crew. The throb of the engine still pumped through her veins. She stood on wobbly legs.

“Great job, D.J.,” Mike, the pit boss, said, clapping her on the shoulders. “Took that turn like a pro. See you in two weeks?”

“As always,” she said, pride and adrenaline lifting the corners of her full mouth. She made her way off the track, toward the locker room, while the team pushed the car away.

The locker room was no more than a testosterone-drenched boys’ clubhouse, complete with backslapping, ribald jokes, cussing, beer guzzling and plenty of naked behinds. They’d grudgingly made room for her when she started racing about two years earlier, and once they witnessed her skill behind the wheel and her resolve to be respected in the locker room, she became one of the boys. Although there wasn’t a man among them that wouldn’t give his left nut for five minutes of her time off of the track.

To them she was just D.J., the pint-size race car dynamo that could beat some of the best of them on a bad day. Back home in Baton Rouge, she was Desiree Janel Lawson, twin sister to Dominique, younger sister to Rafe and Lee Ann, older sister to Justin and daughter of Senator Branford Lawson. In the cacophony of those larger-than-life personalities in the Lawson home, Desiree felt lost, a shadow. But here on the track she had found her footing, which wasn’t one of a political celebrity, “the daughter of,” “the twin sister to”—here she was a person with her own identity.

Weekend racing had become her secret passion over the years. She had always had a love for fast cars and would spend hours as a teenager watching the Indy 500 or the NASCAR races on television. She’d confessed to her twin sister, Dominique, that one day she would get behind the wheel of one of those babies, which Dominique had summarily dismissed as being ridiculous, dangerous and out of the question. What man in his right mind would want a woman who always smelled of fumes and gasoline? Not to mention that their father would be apoplectic and the press would have a field day.

So Desiree kept her dream to herself and began taking lessons in New Orleans, away from prying eyes. She could never come out publicly, she mused as she stripped out of her gear and got into the shower, but she could still enjoy her passion. The idea that it was her very own secret made what she did, twice a month, that much more exciting. The only one who knew about her “getaway Saturdays” was her best friend, Patrice Lamont, who was waiting in the lounge.

“You do realize I now have a heart condition because of you,” Patrice said as the two walked through the building and out into the parking lot.

Desiree laughed. “I’m sure you’ll be fine after lunch.”

“Humph. So you say.”

They’d driven down in Desiree’s very conservative black Volvo, a far cry from the lightning-fast Ferrari. Desiree’s door locks chirped and they got in. She pushed the key into the ignition. “Where do you want to go for lunch?”

“How about Emeril’s place in the Warehouse District?”

“Sure. We haven’t been there in a while.”

Desiree zipped the car out of the space.

“And, uh, try to keep the speed under seventy.”

“Maybe.”

Patrice sat back and held on—just in case.

Of course they arrived at Emeril’s New Orleans in record time. Patrice barely had enough time to get her story out about the latest scandal on Capitol Hill in D.C. before they were being escorted to their table.

“This is not a good time to be under an ethics investigation in the middle of an election year,” Patrice was saying as they sat down.

“No time is ever good. My biggest issue is that the Democratic Party, whenever they come into full power, winds up getting beat up on every issue by the Republicans. And instead of taking a stand, they collapse. They need to learn to fight below the belt, too.” Desiree fanned open her menu.

Patrice shook her head. “I have to agree. We need some backbone.”

“My two favorite guests.”

Desiree and Patrice looked up into the ruggedly handsome face of Paul, the general manager.

He leaned down and kissed each of their cheeks. “How are you ladies today? It’s been a while.”

“Just fine, Paul,” Desiree said. “I’ve been salivating thinking about the andouille and chicken jambalaya.”

“I will oversee it myself.” He turned his Mediterranean blue eyes on Patrice. “And what about you, Ms. Patrice?”

“I think I’ll have the Creole fried chicken.”

“Excellent choice. But, of course, whatever you choose at Emeril’s is excellent. I’ll put your orders in myself and send your waiter to get your drinks. Enjoy your meal.”

“Hmm, if he wasn’t gay, I would eat him up,” Patrice said under her breath as she watched him walk away.

Desiree snickered. “I know you would. But what else is new?”

“Oh, don’t go hating. Just because I have a lusty appetite for men …” She took a sip of her water, then took a lemon wedge from the china bowl on the table and squeezed it into the water.

Desiree looked at her from beneath her lashes and bit back a smile. Lusty was putting it mildly. Patrice had more men and more dates than she could keep up with. What she needed was a personal assistant to help her keep it all straight. There were times, though, that she envied Patrice and her cavalier attitude about men and sex, and her sister Dominique, as well. Certainly, she’d dated off and on, nothing really serious. Most of the men she met really wanted to get close to her sister Dominique or sought entrée into the political life dominated by her powerful father. So she tended to keep her love life, such as it was, to a minimum. But if she was truly honest with herself, the real reason was her attraction from afar to Spence Hampton. She’d spent too many nights wishing that it was her in the passenger seat of his car or that she was the recipient of his dimpled smile and hungry stares. They’d known each other since their late teens, when Dominique brought him to the house for one of the family’s massive Independence Day barbecues. She thought her heart would stop and she had to concentrate on not staring at him. But Spence was her sister’s friend, always had been, and that was a line that she didn’t cross.

“You haven’t heard a word I’ve said. What are you thinking about?”

Desiree blinked. How long had she been daydreaming? She gave a light toss of her head. “Sorry. Just the race.” She focused on Patrice. “So … what were you saying?”

Patrice pursed her lips, feigning annoyance. “I was telling you we should double-date next weekend.”

“Why?”

“Because you need to get out and I want to make sure that you do. Jay has a really cute friend.”

Desiree propped her elbow on the table and rested her head in her palm. “And who is Jay, may I ask?”

Patrice frowned. “Didn’t I tell you about Jay?”

“Uh, no.”

“Oh.” She waved her hand dismissively. “I met him at the Laundromat.”

“What? Why were you in the Laundromat? You have a washer and dryer in your town house.”

“And your point is?” Patrice picked up her glass of lemon-flavored water. “You can always tell who a man lives with by his laundry.”

“Oh, right. What was I thinking.” She shook her head as the waiter approached and placed their entrées in front of them.

“Can I get you ladies anything else?”

Patrice glanced up and ran her cinnamon-tinted eyes up and down his lean body, zeroed in on his name tag, then back up to his face. She ran the tip of her tongue across her bottom lip. “What would you suggest, Felix?” she asked, clearly not interested in anything on the menu.

Desiree had a mind to kick her under the table but watching Patrice in action was always fascinating.

A slow, lazy smile eased across his wide mouth. His lids lowered just a fraction over his dark eyes. “I’m sure I can find something that would interest you. A light wine or something a little stronger? And, of course, there is dessert,” he added with only the slightest hint of his South American accent.

Patrice drew in a breath. “Yes, I think I’d be interested in dessert.”

He turned to Desiree. “And you, ma’am?”

“I’m fine, thank you.”

He gave a short nod to both women. “I’ll bring the dessert menu.”

Patrice returned her attention to her meal.

“How do you do that?”

Patrice glanced across the table. “Do what?”

“That! That thing you do with every man you meet.”

Patrice frowned slightly. “You mean, let them know that they are totally male and I notice it?”

“Is that what you call it?” Desiree took a forkful of food.

Patrice shrugged her right shoulder. “I like men. Plain and simple. All kinds of men. Testing my attraction to them is exciting. It doesn’t mean anything. It’s just harmless flirting. You should try it. Let yourself go. It’s very liberating.”

Desiree swallowed slowly. “I don’t want to flirt and tease and play games.” She put down her fork. “I want something real and someone who is real with me. Is that so wrong?”

“Desi, you’re much too serious. I have to tell you, if I wasn’t your best friend and didn’t know that you were this crazy, secret race car driver, I would think that you were really an uptight, reserved, conservative chick. But I know that you’re not, sweetie. The thing is, it doesn’t matter what I think. You have to be who you are.” She raised her glass to her lips. “But you could always put a little more dip in those hips,” she added with a wink and a smile.

Desiree thought about their conversation, one that they’d had on several occasions in the past, as she prepared for work at the city council. She’d always tossed off Patrice’s commentaries about her lack of sustained or even intermittent relationships as Patrice’s way of validating her own lifestyle. But the more she considered it, the more she had to admit that Patrice was probably more right than wrong. Although she’d never told anyone about her thing for Spence, not even Patrice, maybe it was long past time to forget him once and for all. So that she could actually find someone that could light that same spark in her the way Spence did whenever she saw him.

Maybe.

Chapter 2

“Got a delivery, boss,” Jacques, the day manager, said, poking his head into the busy kitchen. All hands were busy preparing for the weekend rush.

Spence glanced over his left shoulder, not missing a beat while whisking his famed cream sauce to simply smooth perfection. “Have Michelle take a look. It should be the new glassware that I ordered.”

“Will do.” The door swung closed behind him.

Spence dipped a spoon into the sauce and took a small taste. His dark chocolate eyes momentarily closed in instant euphoria. “Peter,” he called out with a lift of his cleft chin, peering across the rows of stainless-steel preparation tables, simmering pots and sizzling skillets. “Take over from here.” He wiped his hands on his pristine white apron and began his preinspection of the menu.

As owner and executive chef of Bottoms Up, one of Baton Rouge’s swankiest supper clubs, he was ultimately responsible for each and every thing that happened in his establishment, from the decor to the dessert. His goal was to make each experience for his guests an unforgettable one. Bottoms Up, since its opening five years earlier, had consistently been listed as a must-see destination in restaurant and entertainment magazines. For weekend seating, reservations often had to be made weeks in advance, and when major performers appeared, which was often, the club was packed from front to back.

Spence’s skills in the kitchen were so renowned that he had been offered his own cooking show on more than one occasion and had done a stint on Beyond Top Chefs as one of the celebrated judges.

Much of his notoriety he could attribute to his longtime relationship with Dominique Lawson, who made certain that all her well-connected friends and her father’s associates made it a point of wining and dining at Bottoms Up.

They’d been close for years, and when he’d grown tired of working for someone else and decided to pursue his dream of opening his own supper club, Dominique was behind him, pushing him along on those days when he didn’t think it would work out. She’d even gone so far as to cosign the bank loan, and tossed in some extra cash to cover a few unexpected expenses which he’d since repaid. Even though she insisted that she didn’t want it, Spence refused to be in debt to anyone, even to Dominique, who although was wealthy had her own money management issues due to impulsive spending.

Tonight’s special was seared sea bass, hence the special sauce. He’d been offered money more times than he could count in exchange for sharing the ingredients with the world. He always teased the interviewers, saying that the secret was in the whisk.

He lifted pot covers, checked the refrigerators and pantries. Satisfied that his staff had everything under control, he went up front. Less than three hours remained before the dinner crowd would begin to arrive, and with Harry Connick, Jr., as the guest performer he would not leave anything to chance.

Michelle was just signing off on the shipment when Spence walked into the main dining room. She was giving instructions to one of the staff about the glassware.

Michelle Davis was a transplant from New York who had attended college in Louisiana and had never gone back home. They’d met while he was head chef at what was now his competitor’s restaurant. She was the general manager. After a few drinks and a long night they fell into an on-again, off-again relationship, no strings, no commitment. An agreement that suited them both very well.

When Spence opened Bottoms Up, Michelle asked to work for him, and together they turned it into a showplace. Michelle’s eye for layout and detail, along with her impeccable management skills, allowed Spence to breathe easy. Their sporadic relationship came to a mutual end when Michelle came to work at Bottoms Up.

Michelle tucked the inventory sheet into a folder on her clipboard just as Spence approached.

“Everything in order?”

She pressed the clipboard to her chest. Her brandy-toned eyes sparkled with excitement behind her designer frames. “The glasses are more exquisite than when we first picked them out.”

“You mean when you picked them out.”

Her sandy-brown face heated from beneath, giving it a toasted glow. “It would have been a joint effort if you had come shopping.”

“You stick to shopping and running the club and I’ll stick to cooking.”

“Speaking of running the club.” She lowered the clipboard and tucked a stray lock of shimmering auburn hair behind her ears. “The phone has been ringing off the hook for tonight’s show. Nichole has had to turn folks down all morning. We may need to get extra security.”

Spence nodded. “You’re right. No sense in leaving things to chance. I’ll take care of it. Anything else?”

“I think that covers it for now.”

“Great. I’ll make those calls.”

“Oh, Spence …”

He stopped and turned. A thick, silky black brow rose in question.

“Is Dominique coming tonight?”

He caught the edge in her voice, but being a wise man, he chose to ignore it.

“If she does, she’ll take her usual table.”

She gave a short nod and went in search of the maître d’.

Spence walked away. He didn’t know what it was with women. They had this sixth sense or something. The thing between him and Michelle was long over, even if they often teased each other about “the times we had.” Yet anytime a woman came within sniffing distance of him, Michelle would get all … He didn’t even know what to call it. And Dominique was often the same but for different reasons. Her rationale for the arched brow and tight lips when he introduced one of his dates was that she was only trying to look out for him. “Women can be quite cunning,” she’d warn him, as if he didn’t know. The two of them in the same space was like watching two panthers scope each other out. It was all very sleek and polite but potentially dangerous.

What he did hope, barring everything else, was that Desiree would come along with her sister, if the unpredictable Dominique decided to show up.

It had been a while since he’d seen Desiree. The few times that he’d stopped by the Lawson mansion with Dominique, Desiree had been out, and it had been months since she’d come to Bottoms Up for dinner.

Even though there was no doubt that Dominique and Desiree were identical twins, they were as different as night and day. Dominique was the storm. Desiree was the calm that followed. Although he and Dominique were never a couple—although they’d come really close—he often wondered how things would be if he’d met Desiree first.

For the moment he didn’t have time to dwell on it. He had a big night ahead.

“How about I get you a date, Desi?” Dominique said as they sat on the pool deck, soaking in the last of the sun.

“I don’t want you to get me a date. How about that?”

Dominique twisted around in the chair to look at her sister. “Why not?”

Desiree lifted her sunglasses from the bridge of her pert nose and glared at her twin. “Because I don’t need you to get me a date. If I wanted one, I would have one,” she said, struggling to control her temper. Patrice, her sister … everywhere she looked someone was trying to hook her up with somebody, as if she was some sort of hopeless spinster. Their older sister, Lee Ann, used to be able to run interference, but since her marriage and relocation to Washington with her husband, Desiree had been left on her own to fight off the onslaught.

“Look, I just want you to be happy.”

“What makes you think I’m not happy?”

Dominique’s confusion drew her thin brows together. “How can you be? I mean … women have needs, too, Desi,” she said, lowering her voice as if someone else could hear.

The rims of Desiree’s ears burned. She turned away. Dominique always knew what buttons to push intentionally or otherwise. She could count on one hand and still not reach five, the number of men she’d had in her bed—or whose bed she had been in. Dominique, however, was another story. She was the female version of their very notorious playboy brother, Rafe. Dominique changed men and relationships like nail polish. They were varied and often.

Dominique reached out and placed her hand on Desiree’s arm. “I’m not saying that you’re not happy …. It’s just that I want you to have someone in your life … to look out for you, take you on great vacations, hot dates, massage your feet.” She grinned and so did Desiree.

“I want those things, too, Dom, when the time and the person are right. These two things haven’t lined up for me yet. But they will.” She hoped but didn’t say.

Dominique sighed. “Well, at least meet some of my friends.”

“I know all of your friends,” Desiree said drolly.

Dominique made a face, then suddenly brightened. “Hey, what about a dating service!”

Desiree held up her hand. “Oh, hell, no.”

“Why not? Cyberdating, speed dating and all those blind dates are the rage.” She leaned close. “I’ve done them all.”

Desiree’s eyes widened in surprise. “You’re kidding.”

Dominique shook her head. “Nope. And it’s a blast.” She reached for her frosted glass of mango juice and took a sip.

Desiree thought about it. Blind dates, speed dating, internet dating. What happened to dating the old-fashioned way? “Okay,” she finally said on a breath.

Dominique sat up. “Okay … like okay, you’ll do it?”

Desiree drew in a long breath. “Yes. But on one condition,” she quickly added.

“Sure. Anything.”

“Sixty days. That’s it. If I don’t find someone worthwhile in two months, then the deal is off and you will never utter another word to me about my love life again. Deal?”

Dominique pursed her lips in thought. Sixty days was not a lot of time. But if she couldn’t find the perfect hot body to warm her sister’s bed at night, then no one could.

“Deal.” She lifted her glass.

Desiree touched her glass to Dominique’s. “Deal. Sixty days and not a minute more.”

“Fine. But I think this calls for a celebration.”

“What kind of celebration?”

“Harry Connick, Jr., is at Spence’s place tonight. Let’s go.”

Desiree’s heart knocked at the sound of his name. “The place will be packed. We’ll never get a seat.”

“I always get a seat.” She winked. “Don’t even worry about it. So come on. Let’s celebrate this new venture.”

If she decided to go, she’d have a chance to see Spence. Not that it mattered. Spence had women all over him. Not only was he eye candy, but he was also charming and funny, talented and wealthy. She’d often wondered if Spence and Dominique had ever … If so, it was none of her business. “Sure. I don’t have plans and I love Harry.”

“Great.” Dominique popped up. “I’ll call Spence and tell him to hold my table. Show starts at ten!” She sauntered off toward the house.

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