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AddingHeat




  Adding Heat

  Cris Anson

  A story in the Cougar Challenge series.

  Encouraged by friends she met at RomantiCon, widowed landscape contractor Giselle Sheridan decides she’s finally ready to take the cougar challenge and explore sex with a younger man. Except she’s too busy during planting season to go on the prowl.

  CPA Conlan Trowbridge is battling the IRS deadline for his clients, but when Giselle saunters into his office with a tax question, all he can think of is sex. She’s all luscious curves and smoldering brown eyes, and he doesn’t care if she’s a dozen years older, she’s a wet dream come true.

  Oh yeah, they’re both ready for some hot and heavy sex—in the tub, parking lots, their offices—anywhere and everywhere. But Giselle is afraid her age will eventually bother Con, and her longtime foreman also has designs on her, in more ways than one. When Giselle faces some hard decisions, will she ultimately be able to keep the heat?

  An Ellora’s Cave Romantica Publication

  www.ellorascave.com

  Adding Heat

  ISBN 9781419930591

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  Adding Heat Copyright © 2010 Cris Anson

  Edited by Jillian Bell

  Cover art by Syneca

  Electronic book publication November 2010

  The terms Romantica® and Quickies® are registered trademarks of Ellora’s Cave Publishing.

  With the exception of quotes used in reviews, this book may not be reproduced or used in whole or in part by any means existing without written permission from the publisher, Ellora’s Cave Publishing, Inc.® 1056 Home Avenue, Akron OH 44310-3502.

  Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be scanned, uploaded or distributed via the Internet or any other means, electronic or print, without the publisher’s permission. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000. (http://www.fbi.gov/ipr/). Please purchase only authorized electronic or print editions and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted material. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locales is purely coincidental. The characters are productions of the author’s imagination and used fictitiously.

  Adding Heat

  Cris Anson

  Dedication

  To the Cougar Challenge authors, especially Ciana Stone, who invited me to join the group, and Desiree Holt, who helped me over some writing bumps. All the Cougar Challenge ladies rock! And so do your characters, as evidenced by their postings to the Tempt the Cougar blog.

  And to Josh, for the inspiration of licking barbecue sauce.

  Author Note

  You’ll find the women of the Cougar Challenge and the Tempt the Cougar blog at www.temptthecougar.blogspot.com.

  Trademarks Acknowledgment

  The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction:

  Brooks Brothers: Retail Brand Alliance, Inc.

  Cheshire Cat: Disney Enterprises, Inc.

  GQ: Advance Magazine Publishers Inc.

  Hustler: L.F.P., Inc.

  Marines: U.S. Marine Corps, a component of the U.S. Department of the Navy

  Mets: Sterling Mets, L.P.

  Peds: Neuville Industries, Inc.

  Phillies: The Phillies

  Popsicle: Lipton Investments, Inc.

  U.S. Post Office: United States Postal Service

  Michener Museum: James A. Michener Art Museum

  Chapter One

  Tempt the Cougar Blog

  From Giselle: Sure, I’d like to challenge myself to be a cougar. But damn, I’m torn. I have a dozen young men on payroll. It would feel like raiding a high-school basketball game when my boys were playing. I try to stay away from the jobs because I don’t want my foreman to think I’m second-guessing him, but I do so love to watch them wrestling balled and burlaped trees into holes they’ve been digging. Especially in mid-summer, when they take off their T-shirts because they’re so hot and sweaty, watching those muscles bunch and strain, well, it’s enough to make me want to go for it.

  I can just see the next ad I place in the paper: “Landscaper with twenty years’ experience looking for hard-bodied men not afraid to sweat or expend energy. Must be between 25 and 35.”

  But suppose I do find someone way younger? What would my employees think? That I’m robbing the cradle? That I’m fair game? Eeek! They’ll send the State Police after me.

  Giselle Sheridan took a deep breath and posted her note. She was now an official member of the cougar challenge, a group of women who’d met at an erotic romance conference and decided to spice up their lives by having affairs with younger men. But she would only access the blog on the laptop in her bedroom, not on the two computers in the office downstairs that the foreman had access to. It would be a disaster for any of her employees to see the horny side of her. As a woman who’d taken over running her husband’s landscape business, she had a whip-cracking rep to maintain.

  Felix wouldn’t have wanted her to be alone the rest of her life, but she just didn’t have the time to go cruising in bars. And lord knows, after nineteen years of marriage and four years of widowhood, she hadn’t a clue as to how the dating scene worked these days.

  With a small sigh, she scrolled down the Tempt the Cougar blog to ogle the photos her fellow cougars had posted, both of hunks they’d found on the net as well as their own younger men. One of these days she’d be posting her success too. That was a promise she’d made to herself.

  Before logging off to start her workday, she checked for responses. Her heart leaped. Here was encouragement. Here was reinforcement. Here was the kick in the butt she needed to go out and DO it.

  From Cam: Giselle, honey, it's not like you're breaking into people's houses and stealing their teenage boys! If they're twenty-five, they're legal. And hey, your employees are employees. They work, you pay, end of story. Don't live your life based on what other people might think. March to the beat of your own drummer - wait, let me rephrase - dance to the beat :) And if you find a hard-body who wants to do a horizontal mambo…well, shake it girl!!

  From Autumn: Remember what we talked about? Younger is better. Just look at Mitch and me and you’ll know what I mean. And don’t let your employees stop you from grabbing onto life. Hey, I wondered the same things about the hands at the ranch here, and you know what? They all ENVY Mitch and think I’m hot, hot, hot. So go for it, girl.

  From Elizabeth: You're talking yourself out of it before you even give it a chance! No "what if's" allowed! What you're looking for here is, "so be it."

  p.s. If you do place that ad, you might want to specify that you're a female landscaper.

  From Grace: Don't make the same mistake I almost made and let an opportunity slip by. Go for it!

  With a lighter heart, Giselle shut the computer and trotted downstairs and out the door to greet the day and the job. A few minutes later, in her well-worn jeans tucked inside calf-high workboots, she hoisted herself easily onto the back end of the stake-body truck, eyeballing the flora and equipment the team had loaded. “Did you get everything?”

  “Yep, don’t worry, Moms, I checked every shrub against the list as it was loaded.”

  Another quick scan and she jumped off to land lightly on the balls of her feet. She gave the laborer a playful whack on the shoulder with her clipboard. “I’m not your mom. Your mom doesn’t ogle all your muscles the way I do.”

  The two other young men chuck
led, posing and flexing their biceps in between last-minute checks of their tools.

  “You guys better get going. You’ve got a lot of planting to do today.” Larry Pulaski, Stonehedge Landscapes’ foreman, came up alongside her. Felix started the business shortly after they were married and Larry was his first employee. If it weren’t for him, she might not have been able to keep the business going after Felix died. She loved the man like a brother, but he sounded like a growly bear today.

  “Everybody got their water jugs? We don’t want any workers’ comp claims from fainting.” Giselle winked as she peered inside the driver’s window at the crew who had clambered inside. It was the last of the four jobs she was sending out today.

  “We’re good to go,” the driver responded.

  “Work safe and make us a profit.” She gave the door a slap of her palm and stood in the staging area, watching through the dust as the two-ton truck left the yard. One of these days she’d have to find the money to asphalt that long driveway.

  “You know, ’Zelle, you gotta be firmer with your employees. They need to respect you.”

  Giselle smiled at Larry’s protective attitude. “They respect their paychecks. And I think it makes for a smoother workday when everyone can banter and have fun while they work.”

  “Yeah, well, have you ever thought that one of them could sue you for sexual harassment?”

  Giselle stopped in the act of turning back toward the house and all the paperwork. “You’re kidding, right? I can’t believe any one of them would—”

  “Just don’t lead ’em on is all I’m saying.”

  “Larry, I’ve never had any intention—”

  “You’re no spring chicken, you know. You should act your age.”

  Giselle bit her tongue against a nasty retort. Larry and Felix had been in high school together, so she knew for a fact that he was around fifty, half a dozen years older than she was. Damn, but his attitude was reinforcing the call of her cougar group, if only to prove to Larry that she could still make it.

  “What you need is a man. Someone who’ll take care of you.”

  That stopped her short. She plunked her fisted hands on her hips. “Larry, take a look around the nursery, at the equipment. Remember all the jobs I designed and costed out and executed. I’ve kept this place running for four years.”

  “I didn’t mean you can’t handle the business, ’Zelle. I mean…” He wouldn’t meet her stern gaze. “I mean, don’t you ever hanker to have a man in your personal life? Someone who thinks the world of you? Someone who wants to take care of you?”

  Whoa. Where was this coming from? Giselle was stunned into speechlessness.

  He stepped closer, raising his arms to grasp her shoulders. In his dark brown eyes she saw something she’d never seen there before—yearning. “Let me show you what you’ve been missing.” He pulled her into a clumsy embrace and dipped his head.

  When his lips met hers, she dropped the clipboard and clutched at the beefy arms holding her immobile. No other part of their bodies touched, but suddenly an overwhelming desire swept through Giselle. She closed her eyes and, without considering the consequences, gave herself over to the feeling of a man’s kiss, a man’s touch. For the first time she realized how big Larry was, how male.

  The phone vibrating at her hip distracted her. And not a moment too soon. This new side of Larry—of herself—had shaken her to her core. Surely it was just the morning’s cougar blogs that had allowed her façade to slip and remind her of what it could be like to have a man in her life, in her bed again.

  With shaking fingers she whipped out the phone. “Stonehedge Landscapes, can we make your life greener?”

  “Oh, thank heaven I’ve got you.”

  “Aunt Esme, what’s up? You sound harried.”

  “I need you to drive me to the Senior Citizens’ Center right away.”

  Giselle tamped down her annoyance at her aunt’s peremptory tone. “Why? What’s happening?”

  “There’s this nice young man, the son of Maurice’s golf partner, he’s a CPA, you know, and he donates his time to help older folks get their income taxes done.”

  “That’s nice of him. And?”

  There was a dramatic pause. Aunt Esme liked to be dramatic. “Well, it is April eighth.”

  The light dawned. “Oh no, don’t tell me you’ve just started thinking about filing your tax return!”

  “Well, I used to use Con Senior, but he’s retired, and he used to call to remind me. I just found this notice in the pile of junk mail I finally got around to sorting that Con Junior—he’s single, by the way—does this free thingie on Thursdays in March and April, and I looked at the calendar and realized that this is the last Thursday before taxes are due. And I had to start withdrawing from my IRA last year and I’m not quite sure how to handle it, so…”

  Giselle sighed and turned toward the house for her car keys. “Okay, I’ll pick you up in ten minutes. Make sure you have all your paperwork. And be ready!”

  She disconnected, grateful for a reason to postpone the discussion she had to have with Larry, and soon. This time she couldn’t meet his eyes. How could she have allowed herself to mix business with pleasure? What would this do to their working relationship? She called over her shoulder as she strode to the house, forcing a lighthearted yet authoritative tone to her voice. “I don’t know how long I’ll be. Aunt Esme needs taxi service again. I’ll run the payroll after I get back. You’ll finish gathering the specs for the Gower job today, right?”

  “Yeah. But that old bat oughta program her phone to dial a cab company.”

  Secretly agreeing with him, she nonetheless felt compelled to come to her aunt’s defense. Esme was the last of her parents’ generation. “It’s been weeks since I’ve seen her. Maybe I’ll take her to lunch after.”

  Or maybe Junior would be interesting. Anything to get her mind off Larry’s kiss and her fervent response to it. She resolutely avoided looking at him as she drove away, leaving him standing in the dust.

  She racked her brain as she drove to Esme’s tidy Cape Cod on a quiet street a couple of miles from her own place. Yes, she thought she remembered meeting Uncle Maurice’s golf partner—Conlan, that was his name—at Maurice’s funeral. Nice-looking man, ramrod straight as though he’d been in the Navy, hazel eyes, nice smile. Maybe taking Aunt Esme to see Con Junior wouldn’t be a total chore.

  But just in case, she had the latest erotic romance by Desiree Holt in her satchel.

  * * * * *

  Conlan Trowbridge, Jr. almost dropped his pencil when he saw the woman who accompanied his father’s friend, Esme Archer, to his makeshift office in the Senior Citizens’ Center. Mesmerizing dark eyes shining with intelligent curiosity. Dark brown hair scraped back into a ponytail that couldn’t hold back a bunch of curlicues framing a perfectly oval face. Snug white T-shirt with grass-green lettering that he couldn’t quite make out under an unbuttoned aviator jacket in faded denim.

  And oh my, snug jeans outlining a pair of rounded hips and thighs he instantly wanted to press against. Catherine Zeta-Jones and Kim Kardashian in one glorious package, alive and voluptuous and striding no-nonsense up to his desk. It took all his willpower to focus on his manners and force his eyes to his appointment.

  “Mrs. Archer.” He finally got his legs to heave him upright. “So nice to see you again.”

  “You get better looking every day,” she said. “This here’s my niece. She was good enough to drive me here. I can’t legally drive, you know. I have a cataract in my left eye. But,” she said as she sat down regally in the chair next to his desk, “I can still see enough to know if you’re cheating me.”

  Con let out a bark of laughter. “I wouldn’t dare, Mrs. Archer. Maurice’s ghost would haunt me the rest of my life.”

  He couldn’t let this opportunity pass. Subtly drawing a fortifying dose of air into his lungs, he thrust his hand across the desk to the beauty who stood inspecting him as though she was the accounting bo
ard director and he’d just embezzled a trust fund. “Conlon Trowbridge. My friends call me Con.”

  As she accepted his handshake, her twinkling gaze grabbed his and wouldn’t let go. He noted tiny lines around her eyes when she gifted him with a smile that weakened his hard-won upright stance. “Giselle Sheridan. I’ll haunt you, too, if you cheat my Aunt Esme.”

  You could haunt me any time, he wanted to say. You will haunt me.

  “Um, I’ll just sit…” She looked around and he finally realized he was still gripping her hand. He let it go as if fire had shot into his palm.

  And maybe it had. He wanted to get to know Giselle Sheridan. Intimately. Thank God for Aunt Esme and her income taxes.

  * * * * *

  “Well, that about does it.”

  Giselle’s mind snapped back to the desk where Conlan Trowbridge was huddled with Aunt Esme. She’d been thinking he was maybe a hair older than her employees, so if he was over thirty, she wouldn’t be robbing the cradle, would she? And if she kept him apart from the business, none of her workers would know of her cougar-ness, right?

  She’d found a folding chair in the Activity Room and schlepped it back so she could wait in a corner while unobtrusively observing this paragon of volunteerism. She noticed the sprinkling of freckles across the bridge of his long, straight nose, just under eyes so blue it almost hurt to look at them. But it was the dimple in his left cheek when he smiled that most intrigued her.

  Underneath that starched blue shirt with its white collar unbuttoned and sleeves rolled up she could see ropy muscles. A lock of reddish-brown hair kept falling down over his right brow, and he’d absently shove it back while he was penciling in figures.