Passion, Vows & Babies: Feed Your Soul (Kindle Worlds Novella)

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Passion, Vows & Babies: Feed Your Soul (Kindle Worlds Novella) Page 1

by Rochelle Paige




  Text copyright ©2017 by the Author.

  This work was made possible by a special license through the Kindle Worlds publishing program and has not necessarily been reviewed by Rochelle Paige Popovic and Elle Christensen. All characters, scenes, events, plots and related elements appearing in the original Passion, Vows & Babies remain the exclusive copyrighted and/or trademarked property of Rochelle Paige Popovic and Elle Christensen, or their affiliates or licensors.

  For more information on Kindle Worlds: http://www.amazon.com/kindleworlds

  Feed Your Soul

  A Body & Soul and Yeah, Baby Crossover

  Rochelle Paige

  Contents

  Dear Readers,

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Epilogue

  Passion, Vows & Babies

  Also by Rochelle Paige

  About the Author

  Dear Readers,

  Welcome to the Passion, Vows & Babies Kindle World! In this combination of my Passion & Vows and Yeah, Baby series, we’ll bring you new books by some truly amazing authors. From sexy stories of married couples fighting against outside forces to keep their happily ever after, to unexpected pregnancies that lead to forever afters… the Passion, Vows & Babies world is full of over the top alphas, sassy heroines, insta-love, wedding bells, and growing families. Although the wide cast of characters in both series have managed to find love, there’s plenty more out there who could use Passion, Vows & Babies in their lives—like the couple in this story!

  If you’re familiar with the Yeah, Baby and Sex & Vows series, you’ll see a familiar face (or more) in this story. I am so excited this author agreed to bring their storytelling talent to the Passion, Vows & Babies Kindle World! However, please keep in mind that this book is entirely the work of the author, and I didn’t have any part in the process of writing this book.

  For more about the world, stop by the Passion, Vows & Babies website:

  http://www.fionadavenport.com/kindle-worlds/.

  Happy reading!

  Fiona Davenport (Elle Christensen & Rochelle Paige)

  1

  Arabella

  I moaned in relief as I kicked off my stiletto heels the minute my hotel suite door shut behind me. When I’d signed on to be a judge for the reality television cooking show that had jump-started my career when I’d won it less than two years ago, I’d been excited about the opportunity to work with the other judges. Owen Walker, especially. The celebrity chef had amazing skills in the kitchen, and he wasn’t too bad to look at either. But today’s taping had been insane. Jude, the producer, had been fired yesterday, and everything took longer as his replacement took over.

  All in all, I couldn’t complain too much about the firing since Jude was a slimy flirt who gave me the creeps. And that was before I’d known that he was sleeping with one of the contestants. She’d been kicked off the show for breach of contract, at Owen’s insistence since apparently sleeping with the producer hadn’t been enough for her. She’d also been trying to land Owen in her bed, and she’d been horrible to his new fiancée.

  The whole thing was a mess, and it had taken a lot of the excitement out of the project for me. Luckily, we were more than halfway done with taping, and I had a month-long break in my schedule once I was finished. I wasn’t quite sure what I was going to do with all that free time, but it didn’t make me look forward to it any less. Odds were good that I’d pop over to London to see my little sister for part of it. Almost as though she heard my thoughts from across the world, Celina’s face popped up on my cell phone’s screen alerting me to her incoming call.

  “Are you spying on me again?” I teased as I answered.

  “Maybe,” she laughed. “Why? Did I call right when you were going to call me again?”

  “No, but I was thinking about you.”

  “Good thoughts, I hope.”

  “Absolutely! I was thinking about—” I trailed off at the sound of three hard knocks on the door. “Hold on a second.”

  I padded across the room and pulled the door open, surprised to find a guy who looked familiar standing there. He was holding a big, brown paper bag with a white slip of paper stapled to it. The scent of Chinese food wafted up, and my stomach growled in response. My voice dripped with disappointment as I said, “Sorry, I think you’ve got the wrong room. I didn’t order dinner.”

  He looked down at the receipt and back up at me. “Room 2039? Arabella Green?”

  I took a small step backwards, a little freaked out. “Yes?” I answered cautiously.

  “Then this is yours.” He thrust the bag at me, and I latched on to prevent it from crashing to the floor.

  “But I didn’t—”

  “It’s already paid for,” he tossed over his shoulder as he turned and moved quickly down the hallway.

  “Arabella!” My sister screeched through the phone that was now pressed against the brown bag.

  Grumbling to myself, I toed the door closed as I lifted the phone back to my ear. “I’m here.”

  “What happened?”

  “Food delivery.” Dropping down on the couch in the sitting room, I tore open the bag and found egg rolls, crab rangoon, pork fried rice, and chicken with snow pea pods inside. It was exactly what I would have ordered for myself, which made it even stranger. “Any chance you ordered it for me?”

  “No,” she drawled. “Why?”

  “Because I’m staring at all my favorite Chinese dishes, and I haven’t ordered dinner yet.”

  There was a moment of startled silence over the line. “That’s super weird, Arabella.”

  “Tell me something I don’t already know, Miss Obvious,” I joked. I was trying to make light of the situation, but Celina was like a dog with a bone once her mind was set on something. She just wouldn’t let go.

  “Is it a restaurant you’ve ordered from before?”

  I yanked the receipt off the bag, recognizing the name of the at the top of it. “My second night here.”

  “Was it the same delivery guy?”

  I thought about it and realized that was why he’d looked familiar. “Now that you mention it...I think it was.”

  “Same order, too?”

  “Yeah,” I confirmed.

  My little sister had one heck of an imagination, along with a tendency to worry. “Well, that’s good, I guess. At least you know the food wasn’t delivered by some stalker who tampered with it first.”

  “I agree that it’s weird, but there’s no need to jump to the conclusion that I’ve got a stalker or anything like that. It was probably just a computer glitch, and the restaurant accidentally duplicated my order from last time.” The handwritten order slip that had been underneath the receipt, and was still stapled to the bag, caught my attention. “Or maybe not.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “It looks like someone had to have called the order in.” Glancing at the receipt again, I noticed something I’d missed earlier. “Or walked in to place the order since it was paid for in cash.”

  “So what you’re telling me is that someone you don’t know, walked into the restaurant you ate at your second night in town, and ordered you the same stuff?” She’d started off whispering but was yelling by the time she was done.

  “Yup,” I agreed before I opened the package with the crab rangoons and took a big bite out of one of them.

  “Forget super weird. That’s fla
t-out creepy.”

  “Mmhmm,” I mumbled.

  “Tell me you aren’t eating it!”

  “Umm.”

  “Arabella!”

  I reached down for an egg roll. “What? You even said it; the delivery guy was the same one as before so the food couldn’t have been tampered with. It’s not like I’m going to let a delicious dinner go to waste while I’m starving.”

  “Stop thinking with your stomach and use your brain,” she scolded.

  “I’m a pastry chef, Celina. My stomach and brain are connected.”

  “Fine,” she huffed. “But after you die from poisoning because you wouldn’t listen to me, don’t expect me to come all the way to California to claim your body.”

  “Exaggerate much?”

  “As long as you can tell me nothing else weird has happened since you’ve been there, I’ll let it drop.”

  “Of course nothing—crap.”

  “That’s what I thought. Hindsight is twenty-twenty.” I rolled my eyes as she repeated one of our mother’s favorite sayings. “Now that you’re actually paying attention; what else happened?”

  “I’ve gotten a couple of gifts delivered to set. They didn’t have notes attached, so I assumed they were from the network. But now that I think about it, there was other stuff from them. A welcome basket that first day. Nothing tailored specifically for me, though. And the other gifts definitely were selected with me in mind. Both were my favorites—a box of chocolates and a bouquet of flowers.”

  “Champagne truffles from Pierre Marcolini and hydrangeas?”

  “Yes.” I dropped the egg roll back into the package, my stomach twisting.

  “You need to talk to the network. Ask them for additional security. Or just leave the show. After what you told me happened yesterday with the producer, there’s got to be a way out of your contract.”

  I leaned back against the cushions and squeezed my eyes shut. “That’s not an option, Celina. If I bail on the show at the last minute, I’ll burn all my bridges in the television industry.”

  “And that would mean giving up your dream of getting a show of your own,” she sighed.

  “Exactly.”

  “Then you’ll just have to get some security.”

  “It’s not that simple. The network isn’t going to want to spend the extra money without a solid reason to do so,” I explained.

  “If they won’t do anything about it, then I’ll call Carissa. Vaughn’s got to know someone who can help.”

  Celina and Carissa had gone to boarding school together for years, so I knew her well. But I’d only met her husband Vaughn once when they were in London for their wedding about two years ago. I’d flown out and made their cake, but I’d had to deliver it the morning before the ceremony because I’d needed to be in LA the next day to appear as a contestant on the show I’d gone on to win. “Don’t bother him with this. He barely knows me.”

  “Too late. I just texted Carissa, and I already have little bubbles showing me she’s typing her response.”

  “Celina,” I groaned.

  “She said that she’d get Vaughn on it right away, and she’ll make sure he has someone at your hotel by tomorrow morning. What time do you need to head to the studio?”

  I banged the back of my head against the cushions before I answered. Resistance was futile when Celina was like this. “Seven.”

  “Don’t leave until he gets there.”

  I wouldn’t. Not because I didn’t want to. I did. But I knew I’d never hear the end of it from my sister if the muscle Vaughn sent to help me had to track me down. I sometimes wondered if she forgot that I was the older sister, not her.

  2

  Gaige

  I dug my cell phone out of my pocket as I deboarded the plane. I’d planned to check for messages and emails as I walked through the airport, but the phone started ringing before it was even in my hand. Glancing at the screen, I chuckled to myself. It was almost as though my best friend had a tracker on me and knew it was the perfect time to call.

  “I need your help.” It wasn’t unusual for Vaughn to skip over the hellos and get straight to the point. He’d been like that ever since we met during boot camp in the Army. You never had to doubt where you stood with him, and it was one of the reasons our friendship was so solid. That and all of the years I’d spent at his side on missions. The bond between a sniper and his flanker tended to be tight, and we were no exception. Considering the number of kills I’d helped Vaughn make, it was no wonder.

  “What do you need?” It went without saying that I’d help, regardless of his answer.

  “I need you to fly out to LA. Tonight if possible. First thing tomorrow morning at the latest. I can charter a plane for you if it comes down to it.”

  “I like a nice charter as much as the next guy—”

  “More,” he corrected.

  “That’s fair,” I chuckled, thinking about the first time I’d flown anything other than commercial. Vaughn and I had only been a year post-separation from the Army. We’d been on our way home from our fifth operation for a private contractor. We’d been successful in a difficult mission, and our employer was thrilled with the payday we’d netted them and hired the jet to give us a taste of what we could have by working with them more in the future. We’d enjoyed the fuck out of the flight; eating good food and polishing off a bottle of expensive whiskey. But it hadn’t changed our minds. We didn’t take any more assignments with the company and set up shop on our own. It paid off in a big way, and now we could both afford our own private planes if we wanted them. “But a plane won’t be needed since I’m within easy driving distance.”

  “You aren’t in Atlanta?” Since I’d just had dinner with him and his family two nights ago, his surprised tone was understandable.

  “Nah, I landed in Vegas about thirty minutes ago.”

  “Something for Brecken?” he guessed incorrectly, mentioning the man whose team had saved my ass on a mission to Somalia that had gone FUBAR. He’d gotten out of the military, too, and we’d both worked with him in the private sector. It’d become less frequent for Vaughn since he’d met Carissa, though.

  “This trip is for pleasure, not business.”

  “Shit, man. Sorry,” he groaned. “I hate to ruin your vacation when it’s been too fucking long since you’ve taken a trip just for fun. Hell, the last one barely even counted since you could only spare forty-eight hours in London for my wedding.”

  Little did he know that if I’d gone with my instincts, I wouldn’t have been there at all. A few minutes after I’d landed, I’d bumped into a blonde who was hurrying towards her gate. I’d seen plenty of attractive women in my life, but I’d never had such a strong reaction to one before. The feel of her hands on my chest as she steadied herself had my cock pressing against my zipper. My heart raced when startled green eyes met mine. She apologized and said something about rushing so she didn’t miss her plane. I wanted to convince her to stay, but my words froze in my throat. And then she was gone. The opportunity missed. Thinking about it made my voice rough as I joked with Vaughn. “What did you want me to do? Stay for the honeymoon? I saw you both at breakfast the morning after the ceremony. It didn’t look like you needed any help with your—”

  “Shut the fuck up,” he growled.

  I laughed as I walked past the car rental counter. Using the same company when I traveled had its perks, including the fact that I didn’t have to check in with anyone. I glanced at the electronic screen directly behind the counter, located my name and the parking spot number where my rental car was waiting for me, and headed out the door. “Sorry, man. It’s too much damn fun to rile you up. All those years, nothing ever made you lose your cool, but one little mention of anything related to Carissa and you’re guaranteed to go off.”

  “Just you wait until your day comes. Then we’ll see who laughs.”

  If he’d said something like that to me a few years ago, it would have pissed me off. Back then, I had no intentio
n of ever settling down. But after seeing the life that Vaughn was building with Carissa, I’d started to wonder if there was a chance for me to find that same kind of happiness. If there was someone out there who could look past the killer the Army had turned me into, the way Carissa had with Vaughn. My mind drifted back to my mystery blonde again, and I kicked myself for not getting my hands on the airport security tapes to find her back then. “If that day ever comes, laugh all you want. I’ll be too happy to give a damn.”

  “Fuck yeah, you will.”

  “Enough of this sentimental crap,” I rumbled as I opened the driver’s side door to the rental car after locating it in the lot. The contract and keys were in it, and I tossed my bag into the passenger’s seat. “What’s going on in LA?”

  While Vaughn gave me the limited intel he had on the situation, I drove to the exit booth and flashed them my driver’s license. The gate opened, and I was off—just not in the direction I’d originally planned on going. Instead of heading towards the strip, I hopped on the highway that would take me south into California.

  “Arabella Green? The woman who made the cake for your wedding?” I hadn’t gotten the chance to tell her how fucking delicious it was since she’d had to leave London before I’d arrived.

  “Yup,” Vaughn chuckled. “Maybe you’ll get lucky, and she’ll have time to bake while you’re helping her. With that sweet tooth of yours and her skills in the kitchen, this might be the best assignment you’ve ever taken.”

  Remembering that chocolate cake with raspberry filling, my mouth watered. “Payment in trade works for me if everything she bakes is even half as good as that cake was.” It went without saying that since this was a favor for Vaughn, I wasn’t going to accept money for helping Arabella. But dessert? I wouldn’t turn that down if it was offered to me.

 

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