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© 2007, Peggy Hunter Reviews For BACHELOR FOR SALE Book 2: THE FOX AND THE HEIR by Peggy Hunter No reviews posted yet. Sample Chapter For BACHELOR FOR SALE Book 2: THE FOX AND THE HEIR by Peggy Hunter “Twenty-five thousand, two hundred dollars is the last bid!” David Strand, you are one fucking idiot! How the hell did you get into this mess? “Do I hear twenty-five three?” The bright lights focused on the stage in the Hotel Gregoire grand ballroom blinded David as he tried to gaze out over the crowd. He tried to get his mind around it. One minute he was fucking the incredibly sexy blonde from the Grand River Children’s Center and the next he was standing on the stage being auctioned off like a side of beef. “Twenty-five thousand, two hundred dollars going once.” Shit. The blond bitch wasn’t even all that good in the sack. What had possessed him to agree to being auctioned off at a four hundred dollar a plate benefit? Sure, it made for great publicity. David Strand, the most eligible bachelor in Toronto on the auction block to raise funds for charity. It made the headlines of every celebrity rag in the city. Unfortunately, it also dredged up old news…how he’d walked away from his family’s fortune shortly after his parents died in a car accident. “Twenty-five two hundred going twice!” Damn! If the auctioneer took any longer to make the sale final, David was going to kick his ever-loving ass. “Sold!” The crowd exploded into applause as David breathed a sigh of relief. Thank God! Now at least he could get the hell off the stage. Still, he couldn’t help but wonder who… “Congratulations to Jayne Foxton!” David moaned inwardly. Oh fuck! Not her. Anyone but her! * * * * Jayne smiled as she gazed at her boss across the massive oak desk. As Jacob Strand’s personal assistant for the past two years, she’d come to love the old codger, eccentric warts and all. Why he’d paid for her to attend the charity function in his place and given her carte blanche on what everyone knew would be a bidding war was anyone’s guess. But Jayne had enjoyed the experience.
For the first time in her life, she hobnobbed with the rich and famous
and was able to bid on a man who wouldn’t have given her a second
glance under normal circumstances. It was just too bad she couldn’t
walk up on the stage to enjoy the moment. Instead, she waited for the
people to applaud and made a quick exit, having done exactly as her
boss had requested. Still, Jayne had a sneaking suspicion Jacob had more in mind than being his usual unconventional self when he asked her to attend the bachelor auction. Somehow, Jacob expected buying his grandson at the auction would be the first step toward bringing him back into the family fold. She had to admit, it was the only reason she’d agreed to go to the auction in the first place. Jacob Strand, self-made billionaire, known and respected the world over for his investment savvy, had been estranged from his grandson for almost twenty years. The circumstances surrounding the estrangement were never discussed. All she knew was what the papers said in the society pages. His grandson walked away from the family business when he was eighteen, around the time his parents were killed in a car accident. Now that the old man was on the verge of turning eighty, she suspected he felt a need to bring his grandson back into his life. Hopefully, David would feel the same. Jayne pushed her glasses higher on her nose as she looked down at the clipboard on her lap. “You have a nine thirty appointment with Dresden Harcourt,” she said matter-of-factly. The old man snorted as he leaned back in his overstuffed chair and raised a cigar to his mouth. “Screw Harcourt,” he said as he lit a match and held it to the tip of his cigar. “We have more important matters to attend to.” Jayne curled a fist over her mouth and coughed lightly. The old man’s brows furrowed. He knew exactly what she was getting at. Smoke plumed over his head in a thick, grey cloud as he pulled the cigar from his mouth. “Don’t chastise me, girl,” he said with a wide grin on his craggy face. “I’m celebrating.” Jayne bowed her head and looked over the rim of her glasses. “I never said a word.” “You didn’t have to,” Jacob replied. “Just one glance of those pretty green eyes of yours says it all.” Jayne cleared her throat. “Well, you did say you’d stop smoking.” Jacob’s brilliant white dentures clenched the butt of the cigar as he grinned at his personal assistant. “And I said I’d only smoke when I had something to celebrate.” Jayne absently ran a hand over the front of her crisp white blouse as the other held the clipboard on her lap. “All right, sir,” she said respectfully. “Dare I ask what you’re celebrating?” Jacob pried the cigar out of his mouth
and offered a wide grin. “Your victory,” he replied. “Of course,” Jacob replied. “You purchased my grandson at the benefit last night. Now we’re ready to set the wheels in motion.” “We?” Jayne pulled her glasses off and placed them on the clipboard. “I’m sorry, sir,” she said. “I purchased David Strand on your behalf. I don’t see how this affects me.” Jacob grinned. “Then allow me to explain.” He winked just before he replaced the cigar in his mouth. “You are the winning bidder. That puts you squarely in Davey’s life. I expect you to bring my grandson back to take his rightful place at the helm of my empire.” If the situation hadn’t been so ludicrous, Jayne might have laughed. Instead she calmly placed her glasses back on her face and leveled her gaze on her boss. “Exactly how do you expect me to do that?” “With your feminine wiles, of course,” Jacob replied. This time Jayne did laugh. It was either that or cry. Judging by the look of determination on the old man’s face, she wasn’t going to escape the situation easily. |