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Sleeping with Paris

Page 31

by Juliette Sobanet


  “I want to take you somewhere,” he said as he leaned across the table and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear.

  “Where?” I asked, knowing that I didn’t care where he was taking me. I would go anywhere with this man.

  “You’ll see.” He insisted on paying the bill, then took my hand as he led me through the winding cobblestone streets of Old Lyon. We arrived at the river, where the sun was just beginning to set. Luc stood behind me, and as the fiery orange sun disappeared behind the deep violet waters, he wrapped his arms around my waist and whispered in my ear, “Je t’aime, Charlotte.”

  I turned around, took his face in my hands and gazed into his warm chestnut eyes. “I love you too.”

  He gave me a flirty grin as he leaned down and gently placed his soft lips on mine. Then he whispered something else in my ear as his hands roamed over my body.

  “J’ai envie de toi.” I want you.

  It was as if he had just let a lion out of her cage. I was ravenous for his body. In true dying couple fashion, we couldn’t keep our hands off each other as we strolled back to his apartment a few blocks away and kissed each other on the couch as we waited for Adeline to come home.

  Not long after, we heard a teeny knock on the door.

  Luc ran to the door, swung it open, and there stood his little girl with her auburn hair pulled back into a pony-tail and her big green eyes looking up at her father like there was no one she loved more in the whole world. Luc thanked the other parent who’d dropped her off, then picked Adeline up and swung her around in his arms.

  “Papa,” she cried. “Tu m’as manqué.”

  “I missed you too,” he said as he set her down and led her over to me.

  “Adeline, this is Charlotte, the woman I’ve been telling you about.”

  As she batted her long eye lashes and swung her little pink purse from side to side, I knew that Luc wasn’t the only person I was falling in love with. I knelt down to greet her, feeling my heart bubble over with warmth as she leaned in and gave me two mini-bisous.

  “Bonjour, Charlotte,” she squeaked in the most adorable French accent I’d ever heard.

  “Bonjour, Adeline. You speak English?”

  “Yes, my daddy is teaching me.”

  I glanced up to find a big grin on Luc’s face. “I thought we might see you again, so I’ve been giving her a lesson every day.”

  I stood in the doorway of Adeline’s bedroom as I watched Luc read her a story, tuck her in, kiss her goodnight and then stroke her hair until she fell asleep. My heart was bursting with love for him. This is what he had been so intent on getting back, and it all made sense now.

  As Luc closed her door, he whispered, “You like my little girl?”

  “She’s just like her dad—adorable and impossible not to love.”

  With that, Luc picked me up and carried me into his bedroom, where, for the first time, we made love.

  Afterward, he fed me square after square of delectable, creamy milk chocolate in bed.

  And so, in a love-making and chocolate induced coma, we fell asleep in each other’s arms. As I was drifting off, I felt something that I had never truly felt in my life. Something that was way better than all of the sex and chocolate a girl could have.

  I was in love.

  The kind of love that consumed every cell in my body, every ounce of my soul.

  And the best part of all was that I knew in my heart that he loved me back.

  The End

  Read on for an excerpt from

  KISSED IN PARIS

  by

  Juliette Sobanet

  www.juliettesobanet.com

  One

  “You are in Paris, the City of Love. You must not be so controlled. Here, have another glass. I promise you, it will not hurt.”

  I jolted upright in bed, the man’s deep, seductive voice echoing through my mind.

  And just as quickly as I’d popped up, the pounding in my skull knocked me back down again. I groaned as I rolled to my side and squinted at the light pouring in through the wispy white drapes in the hotel room.

  Why did that voice seem so real? And why did I feel like I’d been run over by a train? And why couldn’t this lavish hotel have invested just a little extra money in black-out blinds for their guests?

  Squeezing my eyes closed once more, I willed the room to stop spinning around me. Did I drink last night at the hotel bar? All I remembered ordering was a sparkling water. Plus, I never drank when I was away from Paul. I never drank at all, actually. And I certainly wouldn’t have started while away on business in Paris, the night before I was set to fly home no less.

  I rubbed my throbbing forehead, and as my stomach cramped, I thought of Angela’s deathly contagious flu. Oh, God. I must’ve caught it. How would I fly home in this state? Please don’t let it be the flu. I can’t handle that right now. I have to be healthy this week. I’m getting married in—.

  “My name is Claude.”

  I jerked back up to a sitting position, my eyes now wide open, my breath caught somewhere between my seizing stomach and my spinning head.

  Why was that voice lodged in my head? And who was Claude?

  Jagged snippets of memories scissored their way through the cobwebs in my brain, refusing to form a cohesive picture.

  A crisp black suit. Deep indigo eyes. Chiseled cheek bones and slick black hair.

  “Let us have just one more drink in your room. I am having so much fun with you. I never want this night to end.”

  I could still hear his thick French accent ringing in my ears, feel his warm hand as it wrapped around mine and led me down the hallway of the fancy hotel.

  One last memory taunted me. I remembered tripping and ramming my shoulder into the doorway . . . as I’d let the suave French man into my hotel room.

  “Oh la la, ma chérie. You must be careful. We have a long night ahead of us, non?”

  “No,” I said out loud, shaking the images from my mind. “No,” I repeated. “It was all just a dream. A vivid, awful dream. Get it together, Chloe.”

  But when my right shoulder began throbbing, I peered down before I could stop myself and spotted a swirl of black and blue.

  Oh, God. What had I done?

  Slowly, I turned my head toward the other side of the bed, dreading what—or who—I might find.

  The sight of crumpled white bed linens coupled with a firm dent in the fluffy pillow confirmed my worst fear.

  I hadn’t slept alone.

  The intoxicating scent of aftershave emanated from the crisp white sheets, making my stomach lurch. I stumbled out of bed and nearly slipped on the creamy marble floor in the bathroom as I lunged for the sink, filled my hands with cold water, and splashed it over my steaming face to combat the nausea.

  And the guilt.

  How could I have brought that man into my hotel room? What had I done with him? And where in the hell was he now?

  I lifted my bloodshot eyes to the mirror and gasped when I spotted my black bra and underwear fitting snugly over my pale skin, no sign of the business suit I’d been wearing the day before.

  This time I lunged for the toilet.

  After confirming in the worst possible way that I most definitely drank more than one glass of red wine at the hotel bar last night, I wrapped my shivering body in a towel and forced myself back up to the sink to brush my teeth.

  I scrubbed my tongue, my gums and every crevice of my mouth until it was raw, hoping to rid myself of the guilt and the questions that threatened to swallow me whole.

  What had really happened last night? Why had I agreed to drink wine with some random French man at the bar? How could I have brought him up to my room? And worse, what had I done with him to end up in my underwear?

  Tossing my toothbrush back onto the bathroom counter, I ignored the pounding behind my eyes and tried to recall what exactly had happened the night before.

  When I couldn’t put another memory into clear focus, my thumb automatically reac
hed for my left ring finger to twist my engagement band around—a nervous habit I’d picked up ever since Paul had proposed last year.

  But the minute I felt bare skin where my ring normally would’ve been, the hairs on the back of my neck stood up.

  Where was my ring? I never took it off. Not even to shower.

  The fluffy bath towel slipped off my scantily-clad body as I raced out of the bathroom and over to the dresser, where I would’ve left my purse. But my sparkly ring wasn’t there. And neither was my purse.

  I tore apart the gorgeous hotel room, yanking the covers and the pillows off the bed, opening every drawer, every closet, peering in every crevice. But in the end, all I found were crystal chandeliers, empty glasses with remnants of red wine settling in the bottom, my tall black heels—one by the bathroom, one by the closet—and a slinky red dress that most definitely did not belong to me.

  No suitcase. No purse. No phone. No diamond ring.

  And no passport.

  It was gone. It was all gone.

  I sank onto the king-sized bed, the room now spinning even more fiercely than before, last night’s drinks threatening to make one more trip through my stomach, when another image flashed through my brain.

  Claude’s tall, dark-haired silhouette stood over the bed, his firm hand stroking my hair.

  “Yes, chérie, go to bed now. I will see you in the morning . . .”

  I’ll see you in the morning all right. After I’ve taken all of your possessions.

  I buried my head in my hands as panic seized my chest. What had I done? I had a flight to catch. And more importantly, my wedding to Paul was in six days. Six days. How was I going to get home without a passport? And how would I explain this to him? He wouldn’t even believe me. I was always under control. I didn’t drink. I worked to the point of exhaustion. And in the eight years we’d been together, I’d never even contemplated cheating on Paul.

  Plain and simple, Chloe Turner did not do things like this. Ever.

  A screeching sound made me jump from the bed.

  It was the hotel phone. Maybe someone had caught that lying, stealing French man on his way out the door.

  “Hello?”

  “Chloe, I’ve been trying to reach you on your cell, but it seems to be turned off. Are you okay?”

  I cringed as my breath once again failed me.

  “Hi, Paul. I . . . I’m fine. Everything’s fine.”

  About the Author

  Juliette Sobanet is a graduate of Georgetown University and New York University in France, and she has lived and studied in both Paris and Lyon. Currently, she is a French professor in the Washington, DC area where she lives with her wonderful husband and their two massive cats. Her second novel, Kissed in Paris, was released in February 2012. She is hard at work on her next novel, and she would love to hear from you. Please visit her website at www.juliettesobanet.com.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Excerpt from Kissed in Paris

  About the Author

 

 

 


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