Review & Giveaway: The Wedding Band by Cara Connelly
THE WEDDING BAND by Cara Connelly
SYNOPSIS:
Fans of Rachel Gibson and Jennifer Ryan
can rejoice in Cara Connelly's Save the Date series.
It's the most secretive celebrity wedding of the year, and Christine Case is going to be there! No-nonsense journalist Christine Case still believes a newspaper should inform, not entertain. But when Chris's biggest story blows up in her face, she's out of a job unless she does the one thing she's sworn never to do—infiltrate a celebrity wedding and write an exposé on the happy couple. A-list heartthrob Dakota Rain loathes the press. So when he hosts his equally famous brother's wedding at his Beverly Hills estate, keeping the vultures at bay is Dakota's top priority—until he meets the sultry singer in the wedding band. Posing as a singer is no problem for Chris, but when Dakota talks her into a private-island getaway, the hot days—and sizzling nights—make it impossible to go on deceiving him. But what will happen when the media-hating movie star discovers the woman he's falling for is really an undercover reporter?
Goodreads
It's the most secretive celebrity wedding of the year, and Christine Case is going to be there! No-nonsense journalist Christine Case still believes a newspaper should inform, not entertain. But when Chris's biggest story blows up in her face, she's out of a job unless she does the one thing she's sworn never to do—infiltrate a celebrity wedding and write an exposé on the happy couple. A-list heartthrob Dakota Rain loathes the press. So when he hosts his equally famous brother's wedding at his Beverly Hills estate, keeping the vultures at bay is Dakota's top priority—until he meets the sultry singer in the wedding band. Posing as a singer is no problem for Chris, but when Dakota talks her into a private-island getaway, the hot days—and sizzling nights—make it impossible to go on deceiving him. But what will happen when the media-hating movie star discovers the woman he's falling for is really an undercover reporter?
Goodreads
Purchase Links
Excerpt
CHAPTER ONE
Dakota
Rain took a good hard look in the bathroom mirror and inventoried the
assets.
Piercing
blue eyes? Check.
Sexy
stubble? Check.
Sun-streaked
blond hair? Check.
Movie-star
smile?
Uh-oh.
In
the doorway, his assistant rolled her eyes and hit speed dial. “Emily
Fazzone here,” she said. “Mr. Rain needs to see Dr. Spade this
morning. Another cap.” She listened a moment, then snorted a laugh.
“You’re telling me. Might as well cap them all and be done with
it.”
In
the mirror Dakota gave her his hit man squint. “No extra caps.”
“Weenie,”
she said, pocketing her phone. “You don’t have time today,
anyway. Spade’s squeezing you in, as usual. Then you’re due at
the studio at eleven for the voice-over. It’ll be tight, so step on
it.”
Deliberately,
Dakota turned to his reflection again. Tilted his head. Pulled at his
cheeks like he was contemplating a shave.
Emily
did another eye roll. Muttering something that might have been either
“Get to work” or “What a jerk,” she disappeared into his
closet, emerging a minute later with jeans, T-shirt, and boxer
briefs. She stacked them on the granite vanity, then pulled out her
phone again and scrolled through the calendar.
“You’ve
got a twelve o’clock with Peter at his office about the Levi’s
endorsement, then a one-thirty fitting for your tux. Mercer’s
coming here at two-thirty to talk about security for the wedding . .
.”
Dakota
tuned her out. His schedule didn’t worry him. Emily would get him
where he needed to be. If he ran a little late and a few people had
to cool their heels, well, they were used to dealing with movie
stars. Hell, they’d be disappointed if he behaved like regular
folk.
Taking
his sweet time, he shucked yesterday’s briefs and meandered naked
to the shower without thinking twice. He knew Emily wouldn’t bat an
eye. After ten years nursing him through injuries and illness, puking
and pain, she’d seen all there was to see. Broad shoulders? Tight
buns? She was immune.
And
besides, she was gay.
Jacking
the water temp to scalding, he stuck his head under the spray,
wincing when it found the goose egg on the back of his skull. He
measured it with his fingers, two inches around.
The
same right hook that chipped his tooth had bounced his head off a
concrete wall.
Emily
rapped on the glass. He rubbed a clear spot in the steam and gave her
the hard eye for pestering him in the shower.
She
was immune to that too. “I asked you if we’re looking at a
lawsuit.”
“Damn
straight.” He was all indignation. “We’re suing The Combat
Zone. Tubby busted my tooth and gave me a concussion to boot.”
She
sighed. “I meant, are we
getting sued? Tubby’s a good bouncer. If he popped you, you gave
him a reason.”
Dakota
put a world of aggrievement into his Western drawl. “Why do you
always take everybody else’s side? You weren’t there. You don’t
know what happened.”
“Sure
I do. It’s October, isn’t it? The month you start howling at the
moon and throwing punches at bystanders. It’s an annual event. The
lawyers are on standby. I just want to know if I should call them.”
He
did the snarl that sent villains and virgins running for their mamas.
Emily folded her arms.
He
stuck his head out the door. “Feel that.” He pointed at the lump.
She
jabbed it.
“Ow!
Damn it, Em, you’re mean as a snake.” He shut off the water,
dripped his way across the bathroom, and twisted around in front of
the mirror, trying to see the back of his head.
“Was
Montana with you?”
“No.”
Little brother’s clubbing days were over. Montana spent his
evenings with his fiancée now.
“Witnesses?”
“Plenty.”
“Paparazzi?”
“Are
you kidding?” He was always tripping over those leeches. October
usually ended with one of them on the ground, Dakota punching the
snot out of him while the rest of the bloodsuckers streamed it live.
Em
dragged her phone out again. “Hi, Peter. Yeah, Dakota got into it
with Tubby last night. Just a broken tooth and a knot on his thick
skull. But the press was there, so expect pictures. Okay, later.”
Dakota
gave up on the lump. His hair was too thick.
And
too damn long, an inch past his chin for the Western he’d start
filming next month. Seemed like a lot of trouble for what amounted to
another shoot-’em-up just like the last one, and the one before
that. This time there’d be horses instead of hot rods, and six-guns
instead of Uzis. But no real surprises, just lots of dead bodies.
Em
handed him a towel. “Car?”
He
glanced out the window. No surprises there either. Another sunny day
in L.A. “Porsche. The black one.”
She
walked out of the bathroom, tapping her phone. “Tony, bring the
black Porsche around, will you? And drop the top.”
Goosing
the gas, Dakota squirted between a glossy Lexus and a pimped-out
Civic, then shot through a yellow light and squealed a hard right
into the In-N-Out Burger, braking at the drive-thru.
“Gimme
a three-by-three, fries, and a chocolate shake, will ya, darlin’?”
He glanced at Em. “The usual?”
She
nodded, phone to her ear.
“Throw
in a grilled cheese for the meat-hater. And an extra straw.” He
pulled forward behind a yellow Hummer.
Still
talking, Em opened her iPad, fiddled around, then held it up for him
to see. Pictures of his go-round with Tubby.
He
shrugged like it didn’t bother him, but it did. Oh, he didn’t
care if people knew he’d had his ass handed to him. That was
inevitable; nobody beat Tubby.
What
pissed him off were the damn paparazzi.
Everyone—Peter,
Em, even Montana—told him the media was a fact of celebrity life. A
necessary evil. And maybe that was true.
But
he’d never forgive them for Charlie. For driving a good man to
suicide, then tearing at his remains like the flesh-eating vultures
they were.
And
it wasn’t only the paparazzi who’d made money and careers off
Charlie’s life and death. “Legitimate” journalists waded in
too, exploiting his best friend’s disintegration, never letting
humanity get in the way of a good story.
The
day they spread Charlie’s corpse across the front page, Dakota
swore off “news” forever. No papers, no magazines, no CNN. Never
again in this life.
Pulling
up to the window, he set aside his resentment and laid a practiced
smile on the redhead inside. “Hey, Sandy-girl. What’s shakin’?”
“Hey,
Kota.” Her Jersey accent spread his nickname like butter. “I like
the hair.”
“You
can have it when I cut it off.” He tipped her fifty bucks and she
blew him a kiss.
Peeling
out of the lot, he handed off the bag to Em. She was still uh-huhing
into her phone, so he plucked it from her hand.
“Hey!
That was Peter.”
“We
just saw him twenty minutes ago.” He rattled the bag.
“Honest
to God.” She unwrapped his burger and spread a napkin on his lap.
Then she stuck both straws in the shake, took a long pull, and passed
it over, half turning in her seat to eyeball him. “So what happened
last night?”
He
sucked down two inches of shake, then tucked it between his thighs.
“Some asshole was hassling this girl. Feeling her up.”
Manhandling the poor kid. Pinning her to the wall and rubbing all
over her.
“Tell
me you didn’t hit him.”
“I
was about to.” And wouldn’t it have felt great to lay that pretty
boy out? “I pulled him off her. Then Tubby waded in and spoiled my
fun.”
“And
the October madness begins.” Em tipped back her head and stared up
at blue sky. “Why, oh why, couldn’t Montana get married in
September? Or November?”
“Why
does he have to get married at all?” It made no sense. Montana—or
Tana, as he was known to family, friends, and his legions of Twitter
followers—had the world by the balls. Women loved him. Hollywood
loved him. The critics loved him. He was the indie darling, offered
one challenging, nuanced role after another, while Kota got stuck
blowing up cities and machine-gunning armies single-handedly.
Sure,
Kota made bigger box office. But Tana had the talent in the family.
“Sasha’s
a great girl,” Em pointed out.
“Yeah,
she’s a peach. But peaches grow on trees in California. Why settle
for one when you can have the orchard?”
Em
punched his shoulder. “That’s for peaches everywhere, especially
California.”
Kota
grinned and passed her the shake. “Call Mercer, will you, and tell
him we’re running behind. I don’t want him getting pissed at us.”
“Pfft.
You never worry about anybody else’s feelings.”
“Because
they can’t kill us just by looking at us.”
“See?
You’re scared of him too.” She crossed her arms. “I wish you
hadn’t hired him.”
“So
you’ve said about a million times. But Tana put me in charge of
security, and Mercer’s the best.” His guys were ex-Rangers and
Navy SEALs. “He says he’ll keep the press out, and I believe
him.”
“Well
good luck with that. They always manage to sneak somebody inside.”
“Not
this time,” Kota vowed. A beach wedding might be a security
nightmare—not to mention just plain pointless, since everyone was
zipped into tents and couldn’t see the water anyway—but Mercer
had it covered. Airtight perimeter, no-fly zone. Saturday’s guests
and employees would be bussed in from a remote parking lot and wanded
before admittance. Anyone caught with a recording device would be
summarily executed—er, ejected.
Kota
gave a grim smile. “Believe me, Em, Mercer’s got it locked down.
Not a single, slimy, sleazy reporter is getting into that wedding.”
About the Author
Cara Connelly is
an award-winning author of contemporary romances. Her smart and sexy
stories have won high praise, earning Cara several awards, including
the Romance Writers of America's Golden Heart®, the Valley Forge
Romance Writers' Sheila, and the Music City Romance Writers' Melody
of Love. Cara, who lives in rural Upstate New York, works as an
appellate court attorney when she's not crafting steamy novels of
love and romance. - See more @
Stay connected with the author
Review
I'm a huge fan of Cara Connelly. I just love her books. I think it must be her characters, they always have so many issues that you can't help but be sucked into their worlds. Like her past books you'll find The Wedding Band to be well-written, with characters you won't be able to help liking even when your not sure you really do. The Wedding Band story line is a hot button topic. I have to tell you I didn't blame Dakota. I understood where he was coming from. Of course it wouldn't have been the same story if Christine hadn't sneaked into the wedding. Of course since you like Dakota so much (that might only have been me) you really want to dislike her for doing it. Not to worry, there is a good person under that reporter. So much happens within the pages of the book that you won't be able to put it down. Do yourself a favor and make sure to read it! I promise you won't be sorry! If you have read The Wedding Band I'd love to hear your thoughts. Happy reading!
Giveaway a Rafflecopter giveaway
Comments
Post a Comment