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This is the 5th installment of Cami’s First Kiss. For the first 4 excerpts, click Cami’s Page OR Free Reads above.
Swallowing a sigh, I tripped my way back around to Lisbeth, pushing through the circle of men to the epicenter of beauty.
I reached between the remaining men between me and the bar. “Lis. We’re leaving.”
Grabbing my hand she brought me through the crowd to her side. “Gentlemen, this is my friend Jenna. She’s a world famous writer.”
The men all made the polite-humor-the-friend noises, their eyes never straying from Lisbeth.
I leaned in, desperate to get her out of there and trade her for my notebook. Mocking Guy was hot, funny (at my expense) and intelligent. She wouldn’t mind meeting him. I mean, who would?
“Lisbeth, seriously. We have to go. That guy took my notebook and he’ll give it back if we go hang out with him and his friend.” I struggled not to roll my eyes. “He wants to meet you. He committed theft to do it.”
Lisbeth had a serious bad boy addiction and the idea of someone stealing to meet her had her eyes lighting up like a night game at Fenway. My stomach turned over. She was going to like him. She’d seen me talking to him and was already running her flirt-calculations behind those lit up eyes.
Lisbeth nudged bald-bouncer guy on the way out and we slipped past the line.
“So?” She pulled out a tiny mirror and did a quadrant by quadrant check of her hair and make-up.
“So what?” I watched the door to make sure he hadn’t convinced me to leave, and then left me trapped outside without my notebook. I glanced at Lisbeth.
He’d show.
“So, this guy. He’s obviously hot.” Lisbeth grinned. “I noticed him sliding glances over the bar at me. Hopefully he’s worth more than just getting your notebook back. I’d hate for you to go home without your security blanket.”
Sometimes I hated her. It was bad enough she got the guy without even talking to him, but referring to the handy-dandy as a security blanket – well, that was about the end of the night for me.
Sucking in a breath, I did the dance. The one we did every time we went out. Only, I didn’t typically feel nauseous as I did it.
“Well, you can see he’s hot. He seems smart. He has a sense of humor if you count laughing at me.” I ran through our conversation. “Strong. He picked me up with one arm around my waist. Arrogant. He kept thinking if he said something, it must be so. Like buying me a drink and calling me Sunshine like I’m five or something.”
“What does he do?” she asked, shrugging her shoulders so the sackcloth-dress casually fell off one. Dear God, how did she do that?
“For work?” Or for fun. Because that would apparently be torture me. “I don’t know.”
“Does he live in town?”
Had we discussed that? “I’m not sure where he lives.”
“Well, what’s his name at least?”
My gaze flashed back to the door, hoping he’d just walk out and answer the questions for himself. “Mocking Guy. But you can call him Mock.”
Lisbeth raised her eyes and studied me. Her words came out slowly, as if she were talking to a very small child. “You don’t know his name? You dragged me out here to meet a guy and you don’t know all the important stuff?”
“I told you, he’s smart, funny and relatively nice.”
“Jenna,” she sighed my name. “You know better than that. You’ve never let a guy through without checking his stats for me.”
And there it was, laid out in vivid HD. The basis of our friendship. I was her gatekeeper. If Mr. Guy hadn’t had my notebook, I would have walked away right then.
Lucky for me, Mocking Guy and Adonis chose that moment to exit the bar or I may have said something to kill my chance for handy-dandy retrieval. Even with them nearing I was weighing the odds of being able to recreate the plot points I’d outlined that I’d recorded in the notebook.
Mr. Guy’s gaze flowed over Lisbeth. I imagined him taking in every inch of well-honed girliness only emphasized by my plain waitress-looking self. His gaze turned my direction. His lips did that right-sided, quirky smirk thing and my stomach dropped like coming over the top of a roller coaster.
This guy was too hot, too interested in Lisbeth and too likely to laugh at me but here I was blushing and on the verge of stuttering. I was even stupider than I thought.
So, I’d do the introductions, get them all hooked up, get my notebook and take off. If I ignored Lisbeth’s calls for three, maybe four, days she’d have moved on to the next post-Jeremy guy and I’d be rethinking my life, my friends and the universe.
Mr. Guy’s smirk morphed into that full-ray smile as he turned back to Lisbeth and stuck his hand out.
“Ladies.” Mr. Guy nodded one of those if this were two-hundred years ago it would have been a bow nods. “I’m Ben. This,” he tipped his head to signify Adonis. “Is Dane.”
Dane took my hand, shaking it lightly in an offhanded way. “And you are?”
The man was gorgeous. Like blindingly, stunningly, overwhelmingly gorgeous. The entire group was in the majors and I was in however many A’s signified ‘can’t catch the ball.’
Lisbeth held her hand out in that half-turned way that left a person wondering if she expected him to shake it or kiss it. Ben went one better. He took her hand, sparking that smile again, and tucked it in the crook of his elbow.
Lisbeth looked from Ben – the guy who stole to meet her – to Dane – the guy who made George Clooney look dowdy. Before Dane could move away, she wrapped her other hand around his polo-clad bicep. Nudging each away from the club, not to mention me, she asked oh-so-innocently, “So, where’s this fun place we’re going?”
Ben’s head angled toward her, his profile lit by the neon bar lights behind us. His expression wasn’t quite as innocent. “You’ll just have to wait and see, won’t you?”
With a tug, he pulled the little party down the street in front of me, my notebook sticking out of his pocket. Glancing over his shoulder, he winked at me.
The only thought that flashed through my mind was, I could seriously learn to hate this man.
Two blocks from the bar, Ben stopped and slid Lisbeth’s reluctant hand off his arm. Leaning around her, he jerked his head at Dane, indicating the CVS we’d stopped in front of.
Lisbeth gave them her best pout as the two men asked us to wait outside and strode into the drugstore. Once the doors fell shut behind them, she turned a smirk toward me.
“He’s a little too sure of himself, don’t you think?” She pulled out the little mirror and reapplied her lipstick.
I wonder who was the too-sure person, as I watched her primp for a man she’d just met. Of course, she’d never been wrong before.
“What happened to wanting a guy to want you for more than your body?” I asked.
“Of course he does. I mean, he couldn’t want me dressed like this?” She waved at the dress again.
“Lis, you haven’t even talked to him. He saw you surrounded by all your admirers and that’s that.”
Lisbeth tucked her mirror back in her purse. “Just because you don’t have men wanting you from across a crowded room, doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen to the rest of us.”
Ok, so now it wasn’t just her, it was all womenkind I was less attractive than. Lovely.
The guys came through the automatic doors and Ben’s eyes narrowed. Did he catch the way Lisbeth’s eyes grew round and sultry instead of narrow as they swung from me to him? He shook the bag in his hand and lead us away. I couldn’t help the little, internal grin I got from his not offering Lisbeth his arm again.
The music drifting from open club doorways faded as we crossed the street toward the college area. At a dark corner, Ben stopped and faced us.
Giving the CVS bag in his hand a little shake, he said, “We’re there.”
Lisbeth’s nose squished up before she caught herself. “We’re where exactly?”
“Disco Ball Bowling Alley.”
Pushing open the dark brown door, Ben grinned as the music rushed out over us.
“This is the something fun?” Lisbeth asked.
“This is the something more than fun.”
Lisbeth peeked through the door, her hand wrapping around Ben’s bicep as she leaned past him. After a moment, she pulled back and cocked an over-arched eyebrow at him.
Seeing she wasn’t moving, I took the lead and marched past him through the graffiti covered door. Inside, colors flashed by me off the disco balls scattered about the room, the music rivaled a dance club.
“I’m not going in there,” Lisbeth shouted through the door at us. “If you think I’m sticking my bare feet in used, public shoes, you’re not exactly more than a pretty face.”
“I’d never expect you to. These made me think of you.” Ben dug around in the CVS bag. With a ridiculously over showy sweep of his arm, he brought out a little pair of black socks with hearts on them and handed them to her. “And these made me think of you.”
The next pair pulled out were Peanut M&M yellow.
“No.” I shook my head. “Why does she get little hearts and I get blind-the-crowd yellow?”
“What’d you think you were going to get, Sunshine?”
“A headache.” I snatched the socks and marched to the counter hoping everyone was following me.
“Eight,” I said to the teenager behind the counter before I had a chance to change my mind. Reaching in my wristlet, I pulled out the money that should have been paying my cab fare away from this mess.
A large hand covered mine before the bills cleared the leather.
“There’s four of us. One lane.” Ben handed the kid some cash and scooted my shoes toward me. “Go warm up, Sunshine. I don’t want any excuses about how badly you’re going to lose.”
Lose! He’d already stolen my notebook and used me to pick-up my friend, there was no way I was letting him beat me at bowling.
I mean, how hard could it be?
I glanced at the little desks in front of each alley. All you have to do is roll a ball and knock down sticks. I could knock down stuff without trying. Heck, I’d taken out that bar stool like it was a straw hut and I was the Big Bad Wolf.
Klutziness was finally going to be my friend. Roar.
Links to other Excerpt Monday writers
Note: I have not personally screened these excerpts. Please heed the ratings and be aware that the links may contain material that is not typical of my site.
AJ O’Donovan, Poetry (PG13)
Stephanie Draven, Paranormal Romance (PG 13)
Heather S.Ingemar, Dark Fantasy/Poetry (PG13)
Babette James, Fantasy Romance (PG 13)
Cynthia Justlin, Romantic Suspense (PG 13)
Kaige, Historical Romance (PG 13)
Julia Knight, Fantasy Romance (PG13)
Ansha Kotyk, Middle Grade Adventure (PG13)
Adelle Laudan, Contemporary Romance (PG 13)
Jeannie Lin, Historical Romance (PG 13)
RF Long, YA Paranormal (PG13)
Caitlynn Lowe, Epic Fantasy (PG13)
Shawntelle Madison, Paranormal Romance (PG 13)
Crista McHugh, Contemporary Erotic Romance (PG 13)
Bria Quinlan, Rom Com (PG)
Leigh Royals, Historical Romance (PG 13)
Megan S., Paranormal (PG13)
Dara Sorensen, Historical Paranormal (PG 13)
Bethanne Strasser, Historical Romance (PG13)


Cute, cute, cute!!!!
Cami’s going to get the hot guy…woo hoo…..
I wish EM came around more often so I could read more of this.
I’m really hating Lisbeth on Jenna’s behalf. And Mocking Guy has got to be the coolest. Frustratingly cool, IYKWIM.
Is it September yet? I want more…. *grin*
I want more too! And I’m also not a fan of Lisbeth
She definitely has more patience with her than I would!
I love everything about this story.
Thanks ladies….but don’t we all have a Lisbeth somewhere in our lives. I do! She’s kind of a combination of a couple people and also stuff Jenna lets me know.
So glad you’re enjoying the read!
LOL Well that was an unexpected twist. What fun!
Oh yes…unfortunately, Lisbeth’s are all too easily found. But of course, I guess that’s part of why she’s sooo frustrating.
Lots of wit in this, too. I especially loved the line, “The entire group was in the majors and I was in however many A’s signified ‘can’t catch the ball.’”
Lisbeth is not a friend – FRIENENEMY!!! I mean heck the only reason she wore that sack was to prove just how good looking she was no matter what. Oooh! I so hope Jenna gets Ben! I can’t wait for September! This is my favorite!
I hate to be the broken record, but yeah, Lisbeth is so not cool. I had friends like her–and I use the term lightly. Jenna should just ditch them all!
Very nice, Bria!
I friggin’ love this novel. You need to post every week, Bria. Seriously.
Bria… I know I’ve mentioned this before but do you seriously know how much I’m really enjoying this story? Like… sit down and want to read the whole thing in one sitting liking. Like, why the heck is it not published liking… Seriously. The humour… the characterization… awesomeness dipped in more awesomeness.