Undressed

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by Kimberly Derting




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Description

  Praise for Kimberly Derting

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Exclusive Sneak Peek from UNBOUND

  Acknowledgements

  Also by Kimberly Derting

  About the Author

  Can two people whose dreams have been cast aside find a new passion...together?

  No one ever expected straight-A student Lauren Taylor to make waves. But that was the old Lauren, before she went to college and became an online stripper to make ends meet. Now, Lauren is on the run with a secret and a bag of cash, fleeing landlocked Arizona for the beaches of California.

  Will Gabaldon was one of the hottest surfers on the circuit, but fate had something else in mind. When a surfing accident shattered his budding career, Will was forced into a life of tending bar and doing odd jobs just to survive.

  A swim instructor with secrets like Will is the last thing Lauren wants. A distraction like Lauren is the last thing Will needs.

  But soon, both discover there’s one thing more dangerous than the wave that ended Will's career: Love.

  “Falling in love has never felt so good. With the warmth of the sun, and the sand between your toes, Derting takes you on the summer you always imagined with Undressed.”

  —Heidi McLaughlin, NY Times bestselling author of Forever My Girl (Soon to be a major motion picture)

  “A strong debut from a promising author.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “If you're in the mood for some psychological thrillers, evil masterminds, strong heroines and hot heroes, then I'd definitely pick up the Body Finder series.”

  —USA Today

  “…fast-paced and engrossing.”

  —VOYA

  “As always, this author writes a gripping tale...With another sequel set up, this intriguing series continues to provide great entertainment for suspense fans.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “a refreshing take on paranormal romance...”

  —Romantic Times

  “More great suspense from a prolific new writer with a vibrant imagination.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “This creative mystery has it all...the heart of a romance novel wrapped up in pages that almost crackle with the electricity of suspense.”

  —Justine Magazine

  “The explicit and unsettlingly candid tone of the killer reminds one of Robert Cormier's Tenderness (Delacorte, 1997), while several twists and turns keep the pages flipping. Older readers will quickly find themselves pulled into Derting's neighborhood.”

  —VOYA

  “You'll be drawn in by the love story-and kept up all night by the suspense.”

  —Claudia Gray,

  New York Times bestselling author of Stargazer

  “Fans will be delighted to return to Derting's fantastical and amazing world, filled with spunky, brave and lovable characters.”

  —Romantic Times

  All rights reserved. This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  UNDRESSED. Copyright © 2017 by Kimberly Derting. Excerpt from UNBOUND copyright © 2017 by Kimberly Derting. All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, photocopying, mechanical, or otherwise—without prior permission of the publisher and author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in articles or reviews. For information, address Andrea Brown Literary Agency, Inc. at 1076 Eagle Drive, Salinas, CA 93905.

  “Undressed,” originally published as Unfiltered & Undressed by TES © 2014.

  Formatting and interior design by NovelNinjuts.com

  Cover design by Bilan Inc.

  www.KimberlyDerting.com

  For CJ—

  I’m grateful I was able to start this journey

  with you by my side.

  LAUREN

  “Fuck. Me.” I looked back and forth between the printout in my hand and the broken-down shack in front of me. It most definitely wasn’t the “quaint beachside bungalow” listed in the online ad. But I’d already signed the papers, sight unseen.

  Great. I’d just dropped ten thousand bucks on a three-month lease for a piece-of-shit shack, crowded in a row with a bunch of other piece-of-shit shacks.

  And was that seriously tinfoil covering the windows? Not cool.

  “Technically, you mean ‘fuck us,’” Emerson piped in a little too enthusiastically. I loved my best friend, especially her willingness to ditch her family for the summer and spend her entire break with me before returning to the real world, but right now her enthusiasm was making my head pound. “And there are worse things than being fucked, not that you’d know anything about that. Besides, I like it. With a little work, it’ll be adorbs.”

  “Okay, one, there’s nothing adorbs about it. It probably isn’t even up to code.” I eyed the window AC unit balanced precariously on a slanted two-by-four. “And two,” I complained. “Look around you, Em.” This was so not the California of my dreams—the one I’d been imagining since I was a little girl watching reruns of Baywatch. “The ad promised beachfront. As in, we would be stepping off our doorstep onto the sand. Do you see any beach?”

  Emerson squinted, straining her eyes dramatically to see across the single-lane blacktop where the sun was just starting to set. She shielded her eyes with her hand and then squealed, “There! If you look in just the right place, in between those houses over there, you can see it!” She clapped her hands together and bounced up and down, thrilled for a quasi-glimpse of an almost-strip of the shore.

  I tried to tell myself I should let some of Em’s positivity rub off on me. It shouldn’t matter where I’d be sleeping for the summer. All that mattered was that we’d finally left dry and dusty Arizona in the rearview mirror. I’d dreamed of this moment practically every single day of my childhood, when I’d submerged myself in the bubble bath, pretending I knew how to swim. Pretending I wasn’t afraid to learn how.

  Now I could finally put those fears behind me.

  “Come on,” Emerson gushed, digging through the jumble of bags crammed in the trunk and hauling out a couple of suitcases. “Let’s put on something slutty so we can scope out the local action.”

  “Don’t you ever think of anyth
ing else?” I bent over and lifted the corner of the doormat, searching for the key the property manager told me would be waiting for us.

  “Um, no.” Em sounded baffled. “Why? Do you?”

  I laughed while I checked under the other side of the mat. Sure, I thought about guys plenty, but nowhere near as often as Emerson McLean did. Maybe I was just too jaded now, knowing how many men spent too much time—and too much money—watching a stranger undress on the Internet, instead of at home with their wives.

  Not that I was complaining. Those men, with their seemingly endless pockets, were the reason Em and I were here in the first place.

  I wasn’t necessarily proud of the things I’d done, but I wasn’t exactly ashamed either. The worst part was that it was sometimes hard to separate the real me from my online persona. Sometimes it would be nice to be an ordinary girl with ordinary baggage, like Em.

  Emerson was the only person in the world who not only knew the things I’d done to make money—a secret she swore she’d take to her grave. But who also knew my other secret . . . one she considered a million times more scandalous.

  Confession: I, Lauren Taylor, still carried my V card.

  A fact Emerson intended to tease me mercilessly about until I “remedied” it. Because in Em’s eyes, that’s what virginity was: A disease in need of curing.

  To be honest, I wasn’t entirely sure she was wrong. On my birthday this year, I’d made a pact this would be the year. I was twenty-two, after all. I’d made it through high school and all four years of college without being swept off my feet. I was starting to think my soul mate wasn’t out there. Or worse, if he was out there, he was already attached to someone else and spending all his free time surfing the Internet for porn.

  Yeah, I was definitely jaded.

  So, soul mate or not, it was time. This was the year I would find a guy—he didn’t have to be Prince Charming, he pretty much only had to have his own place and decent breath. I was determined to get it over with. To stop holding onto my virginity like it was some prize.

  It wasn’t. At some point everyone had it, and everyone—or almost everyone, anyway—gave it up.

  It wasn’t like I’d never come close. I’d made out with some minty-breathed potentials. In the end, though, I’d always found some reason to back out before we sealed the deal—bad timing, no chemistry, or just plain not in the mood.

  If I didn’t have Emerson cheering me on, I might die a virgin. But she wasn’t the giving-up type.

  Before I got the chance to answer her about going out, there was a deep throat-clearing sound—a definite signal if I’d ever heard one. It came from somewhere to our right and I shot upright just as the distinctly male voice informed us, “Don’t mean to interrupt, ladies, but the keys aren’t there. Billy picked ’em up this afternoon.”

  Spinning to face our new mystery guest, and meaning to argue that this Billy—whoever he was—had no business taking something that didn’t belong to him, I froze.

  Any protests about Billy’s thieving ways evaporated on my lips. My eyes suddenly had a mind of their own, and even as I told myself to act like a grown-up, I caught my eyes raking the newcomer from head to freaking toe.

  California just got a whole lot more interesting.

  The guy in question didn’t seem to mind. He leaned casually inside the door frame of the house right next door to the one we were supposed to be renting—a house that appeared only shades more livable than our own, and I wondered if this was our new neighbor.

  His swim trunks rested just the right amount of low over his waistline, and revealed what could only be described as the most chiseled set of abs known to man. And seriously, I was comparing them to great works of art, like the statue of David by Michelangelo, which had literally been chiseled from stone. From the bronze of this guy’s skin I was convinced he’d never heard the word sunscreen—not that I was complaining, since his too-deep tan flawlessly emphasized those sculpted abs of his.

  “He’s just holdin’ onto them for you, nothing sketchy or anything. He’s harmless, really. Just doin’ his job,” Chiseled Abs informed us, looking from me to Em.

  Clearly this guy’s presence had turned my brain to mush, because suddenly I had no clue what—or who, rather—he was talking about. I turned to Emerson for help, but she was too busy undressing him with her eyes to even notice I was still standing there.

  I was on my own.

  “Who?” I managed, unable to stop staring, even though my brain was screaming that I was being . . . I don’t know, weird.

  “Billy.” Chiseled Abs’s brow dipped ever so slightly in an amused expression, and I got the feeling we weren’t the first girls to lose our shit over him. “You can call the landlord and ask, if you want. He asked Billy to pick up the keys when you were late.”

  “Late,” I repeated distractedly. And then reality came crashing back and I realized what he was saying. He was right. I had told the landlord we would be there by five, but thanks to Em and her raisin-sized bladder, we’d had to stop at just about every rest stop along the way, and now it was well past seven. “Great, so now what?”

  “It’s all good,” Chiseled Abs assured, offering us a wink. “Like I said, Billy’s got ’em.” A grin slipped over his lips then, all slow and lazy-like but perfectly timed and utterly intentional, and I knew—I knew, in that very instant—that Billy might be harmless, but there was nothing harmless about this guy.

  Charming, yes. And fuckable, for sure—Emerson would probably bag him by the end of the summer. But guys like Chiseled Abs, who oozed sex and confidence, and who knew the effect they had on women, were rarely harmless.

  I wasn’t like Em, who liked to twist guys around her little finger just because she could, and then toss them aside to move onto her next conquest. When I did find someone, he would definitely be a gentleman. Someone who read books and opened doors. Someone who said please and thank you, and remembered birthdays, anniversaries, and sent texts “just because.”

  Someone who didn’t walk around half-naked. Definitely someone who didn’t spend thousands of dollars watching girls take off their clothes online. And someone who was totally and completely and truly harmless.

  “Yeah?” I told Chiseled Abs, suddenly wishing I could slip inside the skin of my online persona, because whenever I was playing the part of Lola Bang—because, yes, I’d really called myself that!—I always felt a million times more badass than when I was just plain old Lauren Taylor. “Can you please let Harmless Billy know we’re here now, and we’d really like to get our car unpacked so we can call it a night?”

  Chiseled Abs’s grin grew wider as he crossed his arms over the muscled planes of his exquisitely carved chest. And even though guys like him, the ones who thought way too highly of themselves, had never been my type, my stomach flipped just a little. I suddenly wondered if this was the real reason my parents had tried to talk me out of California my entire life. I wondered if my mom had never actually been afraid I would drown or be swept away by a riptide if I learned how to swim. But rather that she’d somehow known that if I ever did make my way to California, I’d discover the truth—that the boys were made differently here. They were carved from stone, and when they smiled at you they could set your panties on fire.

  Frankly, if all the boys were like Chiseled Abs here, I would definitely need to invest in some new underwear.

  “I have an even better idea,” he announced, his voice a husky enticement. He ran a hand over his muscular chest, and even though the gesture appeared absent-minded I wondered if it wasn’t calculated. “How ’bout you ladies come with me to The Dunes, and I’ll buy you both a burger and a beer? Consider it a welcome-to-the-neighborhood thing.” He sauntered toward us in a way that made it clear he probably didn’t get shot down all that often.

  Emerson clapped her hands again, “Ooh, I love that idea!” she exclaimed.

  I looked at the suitcase at my feet, hedging. “I don’t know . . . I really need to unload some of
my stuff . . .”

  “They got great microbrews,” he threw in, selling the place and his charm as he wiggled his brows. “And an awesome view . . .” and suddenly, I was seeing past the ridiculously hot veneer to the cheesy pick-up artist beyond. Maybe Michelangelo’s David was more like a velvet painting of Elvis after all. “Besides,” he added. “Billy’s tending bar tonight. We can get your keys while we’re there.”

  And that was it. I was going to The Dunes whether I liked it or not.

  Because clearly Chiseled Abs had worked his magic on Em too.

  I was pretty sure there was a five-alarm blaze in her pants.

  LAUREN

  “I’ll take one of each, please!” Emerson enthused, squeezing my arm as her gaze swept up and down each of the guys standing in the crowd around the busy beachside bar. “Thankyouandamen,” she gushed all in one word.

  Chiseled Abs, who it turned out had a real name he expected us to use—Lucas Harper—left us alone so we could claim a table while he went to grab some menus. He’d also chosen to put on a shirt, which Emerson considered a “serious buzz kill,” although clearly, she was finding new ways to console herself.

  “Lo,” she enthused, calling me by my nickname and elbowing me to make sure I was paying attention. “Check out that one.” She wiggled her manicured nails in the direction of a hot surfer-looking guy who looked suspiciously like every other hot surfer-looking guy in the packed place.

  He lifted his eyebrows at her, letting her know he’d noticed her too.

  I slapped Emerson’s hand down. “Don’t encourage them. This place is a serious meat market.”

  “I know,” she babbled. “Isn’t it great?”

  Yeah . . . great. Except this wasn’t how I’d imagined my first night in California. I’d pictured Em and me on the beach with beers in our hands as we watched the sun go down.

 

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