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  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Acknowledgments

  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

  Epilogue

  High Octane: Ignited

  Rachel Cross and Ashlinn Craven

  Avon, Massachusetts

  Copyright © 2014 by Rachel Cross and Ashlinn Craven.

  All rights reserved.

  This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher; exceptions are made for brief excerpts used in published reviews.

  Published by

  Crimson Romance

  an imprint of F+W Media, Inc.

  10151 Carver Road, Suite 200

  Blue Ash, OH 45242. U.S.A.

  www.crimsonromance.com

  ISBN 10: 1-4405-8185-1

  ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-8185-4

  eISBN 10: 1-4405-8186-X

  eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-8186-1

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, corporations, institutions, organizations, events, or locales in this novel are either the product of the author's imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character to actual persons (living or dead) is entirely coincidental.

  Cover art © iStockphoto.com/Georgijevic and 123RF/Yuriy Panyukov and 123RF/David Manno

  Acknowledgments

  We’d like to thank Deserè, Chris, and Kimberly. And, as always, our wonderful editor, Julie Sturgeon.

  Chapter 1

  He’d been catching flashes of her smooth, tanned skin all night. In a conservative sea of blacks and taupes, her dress with its low-scooped back shone vibrant as a peacock’s tail. But that wasn’t what caught his eye. There were plenty of beautiful women at the Le Meridien hotel. What caught his attention was the way she carried herself; she didn’t glide about like a model, or vamp about like an actress. Instead her posture was ramrod straight—Queen’s Guard style.

  He leaned against the wall, nursing his drink and watching, as she approached the bar. She gave the bartender a smile, revealing the kind of perfectly straight, perfectly white teeth that indicated extensive orthodontia or good genes—in this crowd either was likely. He studied her lips as she mouthed her order, his gaze dropping to her fingers drumming impatiently on the mahogany bar.

  A man at least twenty-five years her senior, vaguely familiar, with thick salt-and-pepper hair, sidled up and stood close enough to indicate familiarity. He laid a hand on hers, preventing her from taking the drink from the counter. Her expression darkened, her mouth twisted, and she said something—something cutting judging by the pained look that crossed his face.

  She strode away, leaving the older gent gazing after her with longing. Ronan suppressed a shudder. May-December relationships still made him queasy, maybe because he was the product of one. He gave his collar a tug—he loathed these things. He’d been to sponsor events like this his entire career and it never—

  “Incredible job in Budapest, Mr. Hawes. The way you managed the pits was inspired. This is Pantech-Windsor’s year!”

  Ronan pasted on his professional smile and turned to greet the speaker. “Cheers, mate.” Some tire corporation chap if he wasn’t mistaken. American. They were crawling all over Formula 1 these days, thanks to Supernova Energy Drink. They’d money to burn. Supernova had brilliant engineers and brought new sponsors and fans into the mix. In fact, they had everything but a sane driver. Maddux, their lead driver, had more luck than a man deserved and occasional flashes of brilliance, but no sense of self-preservation whatsoever. Ronan shook the American’s hand, received a clap on the back in return, and continued moving through the crowd.

  Speaking of the maverick Texan devil, Maddux Bates made eye contact across the room, sending him a sly grin, Vivienne on his arm. Ronan froze. He nodded back, teeth clenched, and headed in search of the peacock with the military bearing. He’d do anything to avoid contact with Vivienne McCloud. The woman who had gone straight from his bed to Maddux’s two races into the season, spawning such inspired tabloid headlines as “Hey You Get Off My McCloud” and “Bates Outrates Hawes.”

  Teal dress was alone on the edge of the room, studying an abstract modern painting on the wall. The older man was nowhere in sight. Ronan took a sip of his Pellegrino and wandered over.

  She turned her head, her gaze sharp, assessing every inch.

  He stared down into her heart-shaped face. Her nose was a smidgen too tip-tilted, her mouth a shade too wide, but her eyes were clear and intelligent. The dress highlighted their not-quite-green-not-quite-blue color perfectly.

  “Thoughts?” he said, indicating the painting with his drink.

  She blinked at him and turned around to resume her study of it. “I’m no expert where modern art is concerned, but it looks like it might be upside down.” Her husky American-accented voice sent a surge of testosterone down his spine.

  He extended his hand. “Ronan Hawes.” He waited for the spark of delayed recognition, a comment about his season. Nothing. Then again, this Brussels event didn’t house a strictly F1 crowd.

  She assessed him coolly for a half a second too long, and then extended her own for a brief, firm clasp. “Cassidy Miller.” She swept a lock of wavy, dark brown hair out of her face. Only ice remained in the glass she held.

  “Can I get you a drink?”

  “Yes, thanks. Double bourbon on the rocks.” She turned back to the painting.

  “Right. Double bourbon it is then.” American whisky was almost as revolting as their beer.

  On his approach back, he noticed that her gaze went beyond the painting and her jaw was set, the soft curve of her mouth a rigid line.

  She started when he reappeared at her side.

  He handed her the bourbon.

  “Thanks.” Her expression smoothed back into bland. “In town for the race?”

  “Yes, you?”

  “Mmm hmm.”

  “Are you a fan?”

  “Of Formula 1? Not so much. But I love NASCAR.”

  He pressed his lips together. Americans and their precious NASCAR. “Oh?”

  “I’m with someone who loves Formula One.” Her lips quirked. “So I deal.”

  “If you enjoy racing, you’ll enjoy F1.”

  She tilted her head, eyes wide. “You think?” She shook her head. “Formula One is so much more about the car than the driver.”

  “Interesting opinion, but there’s the catch—the cars don’t drive themselves.”

  “Don’t they? With all that technology, isn’t F1 less … I mean, aren’t the NASCAR races more of a test of the driver’s capability?”

  His lips curved in an insincere smile, and despite his attraction to this woman, despite Vivienne across the room, he was tempted to walk away. It had been ages since he’d had to explain his sport to a novice. He’d more trouble with people toadying up to him than with them denigrating the sport. “You shouldn’t even mention NASCAR in the same breath as F1. Those guys wish they had our cars.”

  Her wide-eyed gaze was steady on his. “Oh?”

  “Formula cars are the fastest circuit
racing cars on the planet. We can max them out at 350 kilometers per hour.”

  Her brows lifted.

  “That’s 220 miles per hour to you,” he said. “To reach that speed you need perfection—aerodynamics, suspension, tire design, all of it.”

  “So it is the car?”

  Was she having him on? No, she seemed merely curious.

  “It’s everything. The team, the technology, the engineering, the driver. All of it packed up and shipped out after every race to the next Grand Prix, racing on different circuits, on city streets—it’s a global sport, not just for you Americans.”

  “Well, maybe if you came to the United States ...”

  He smiled and raised his glass. “Ah but we do. Texas built us a brand new circuit in Austin. We’ll be there in November.”

  “Texas?” She pretended to shudder. “You race in Monaco. Why not the streets of New York or San Francisco?”

  “San Francisco?” A laugh escaped him as he pictured his car on one of those hills. He stepped back, readying his departure with a polite smile.

  She stayed him, laying a small, fine-boned hand on his forearm. He studied it—no rings or bracelets, her fingernails clipped short and without varnish, rather like her method of chatting up. His gaze rose.

  She was grinning at him. He’d been baited.

  She drained her drink, threaded her arm through his, and stole his line. “Want to get out of here, Mr. Hawes?”

  Chapter 2

  Cass examined him. Hot and polite—and intense. His steady look promised something, retribution for her teasing perhaps.

  He was tall for a racecar driver, six feet at least. His lean, muscular body was impeccably attired in some designer tux—tailored for him no doubt, as expected of the top British Formula One racer. These guys had it all: fame, fortune, females in spades. And every last one of them was a junkie who got off on adrenaline and speed. This guy had the blond, rugged good looks that had made him a star—no airbrushing required. In fact, he looked better in real life than in the papers. No wonder he’d been voted F1’s hottest driver by Geargals magazine for the last three years. According to the article, his looks, not to mention racing skills, were attracting women to the sport in droves.

  He’d just looked so bored—bored and smug, and she’d wanted to have a little fun. She deserved a little fun.

  No, I don’t. I don’t deserve to be standing here, for my heart to continue beating.

  She squelched those thoughts. He’d do for tonight. “Let’s grab another drink for the road.”

  “Love to,” he responded, never breaking eye contact.

  “Terrific, meet me by that exit?” She turned on her heel and wobbled for a split second before she corrected. Hopefully he hadn’t noticed. With that double on top of the jet lag, on top of the drinks to keep her calm on the flight, it was no wonder she was a bit woozy. Not woozy enough though, not if she was still thinking about things back home.

  She wove her way carefully to the bar through the distinguished crowd—a mix of seasoned F1 internationals and local Flemings and Walloons—ordered another drink, and stopped next to her tuxedoed father, Anderson. The dapper sixty-year-old’s eyes warmed on seeing her, and he waved her into the group. She stood, pleasantly buzzed, smiling patiently through the introductions, making all the right sounds of pleasure, shaking hands with the elderly couple he was talking with. She threaded her arm through Anderson’s, flashed them a brilliant smile, and tugged him a few feet away.

  “I’m heading out,” she said, brushing a miniscule crumb from his lapel.

  He looked down, frowning. “Are you okay? I’m sorry if this was too much ... ”

  She met his gaze evenly. “I’m fine, and I’d be even better if you stopped asking me if I’m okay constantly. I’ll tell you if there’s a problem.” She took a sip of her drink.

  She turned her cheek for a kiss and gave him one last reassuring pat on the shoulder.

  “Do you have your key?”

  She let out a sigh but managed to stifle her impatient retort. She really should empathize with him more. They’d seen little of each other since her childhood. His overseas job had meant short, intense visits through her teens and early twenties. He didn’t know how to be around her either, so his default was to overdo the fatherly concern thing. She’d deal with it because tagging along with him was an escape from her life that she desperately needed.

  Ronan was boring holes into the exposed skin on her back from the doorway. Raising the clutch under her arm in answer, she stepped away from her father and headed toward the exit. She finished the rest of her drink and put the glass on a table near the door.

  “Ready?” she said, brightly.

  “I’m just across the street, at the Ritz Carlton.”

  “Me too.”

  His step faltered almost imperceptibly, but he continued on to the glass doors of the lobby. She couldn’t help but notice several pairs of eyes—mainly female—darting over to him and then swiveling back to her. Had she encroached on someone’s territory?

  She barely felt the chilly night air. The bourbon served double duty, insulating her from the cold and numbing her reservations. When was the last time she’d had a one-night stand? Couple of years. She’d had to tread carefully working in a male-dominated environment and living in a small town. The civilian helicopter world in the United States was small and renowned for gossip, and she’d be damned if she’d give them her sex life to talk about.

  Not that they weren’t talking about her now, right this minute, in their pilot Internet forums and at their bases, about what she’d done.

  Her heart rate soared, and her breaths became shorter.

  They crossed at the light, and he gave her a speculative look. “So you knew who I was?”

  “I made an intelligent guess.”

  “An intelligent woman? I like that.”

  “I’ve followed a bit of F1.” She glanced up to see if this had stroked his ego. It was too dark to tell. “I follow NASCAR on television, but my dad has been an F1 fan forever.”

  “And your ... ” he gestured back toward the party.

  Her brow wrinkled. “My ...?”

  “The older gentleman, is he a race fan?”

  She blinked. No way. Her lip tilted up in amusement. “Uh, yeah.” Who did he think the “older gentleman” was? A lover? And he assumed she’d leave her sugar daddy at a party to go sleep with a driver? Amazingly, Ronan seemed unfazed by the idea. Well, maybe a little fazed. There had been that slight misstep when she told him they shared the hotel. Her stomach churned, though from the bourbon or his outrageous ethics, she couldn’t be sure.

  Jet lag and alcohol might not have been the best pairing. It added up to a foggy sensation in the elevator on the way to his room. She’d used everything else to escape from her memories, so why not try sex?

  He slipped his card in the slot and pushed open the heavy door with one arm, indicating that she should precede him. She was so close, she got a whiff of whatever scent he was wearing.

  “God, you smell good,” she blurted out. The door clicked shut behind them. “What is that?”

  Expression sheepish, he admitted, “Calvin Klein, but I’m under contract with Burberry.”

  She smiled. “You unfaithful swine. What’s wrong with Burberry?”

  “Too ... British. Reminds me of Prince Charles. I have some bottles in the bathroom if you fancy it though.”

  “No,” she said, suddenly noticing the intensity of the inner gold ring of his irises. “You’ve met the prince?”

  “Several hang around the circuit, but I only got within sniffing distance of my own at a ceremony for an ex-teammate. I buggered off, though, before our aftershaves clashed.”

  Of course he was in that league. They all were. And what did she sound like? An enthralled schoolgirl.

  “I know.” He reached for her hand, teasing his thumb across her knuckles, making her breath catch. “This royal chitchat is putting you off, killing
the moment. Just tell me to shut up.”

  “No, no, it’s um—” She broke off as his hand slid up her arm, sending a delicious shiver to the back of her neck. She stepped back two paces. “Mind if I raid the minibar?”

  He looked surprised but recovered smoothly. “Nightcap? Pardon me for not offering. Through here.”

  He led her over to the bar area and extracted a bottle. “Bourbon, wasn’t it? On the rocks?”

  She shook her head. “Straight up is fine.” She didn’t need him to take a trip to the ice machine. Better to get her drink and get this over with. She studied him while he poured. He was exceedingly good-looking. Enviable bone structure, square jaw. And suave. Definitely suave. What had she expected? That he’d jump her like some hick? Even standing still, her head was swimming, and her stomach was vaguely nauseated. All those drinks on an empty stomach. She’d be comatose if she weren’t careful. As if on cue, the room spun. She reached out a hand and made her way unsteadily over to the loveseat.

  “All right there?” The tiniest frown appeared between his eyes, but his smile remained.

  “Fine. It’s the shoes, not used to heels,” she mumbled. Oh God. Had she just slurred?

  He carried the drink over and set it on the glass coffee table, out of reach. She leaned over to grab it, nearly pitching face first onto the table. Now he was staring at her, not amused in the slightest. “You sure you’re all right?”

  She waved a hand in his direction and picked up the drink, then stared into the glass as the nausea welled up. “Excuse me.” She dashed for the bathroom.

  • • •

  Well, how about that. She was plastered. Completely and utterly bolloxed. He could’ve sworn she was only a bit tipsy when they left the party. And now she was here in his room. For crying out loud, can’t I even get a quickie on the road anymore?

  He was out of practice. Leaving with this American woman had provided the perfect opportunity to illustrate to everyone, including Viv and that crowd, that he had moved on. Except now he had a drunken woman on his hands, probably throwing up all over his bathroom. So much for hooking up in haste. He flipped open his laptop—may as well answer a few emails. The shower went on. Good. Maybe that would sober her up.