"You
can always count on Erin Nicholas for fun, sexy contemporary romance."―Melissa Foster,
New York Times bestselling author
Crazy Rich Cajuns, an all-new sexy,
small town, opposites attract rom com from New
York Times bestselling author Erin Nicholas, is Available Now!
He
wears suits and ties. He’ll one day inherit a fortune. He has a law degree. He
shines his shoes, for God’s sake. What is she doing attracted to a guy like
him? But she is. She so is.
She
drives air boats on the bayou, drinks and cusses, and gives city boys in suits
a hard time just for fun. Why can’t he get her out of his mind? But he can’t.
He definitely can’t.
A
weekend trip to Savannah for a fancy-schmancy party with his highfalutin family
is the surefire way to prove that they have nothing in common but intense
chemistry. And to maybe scratch this I’ve-never-wanted-anyone-like-I-want-you
itch once or twice. Or five times.
But
it takes only about twenty-four hours for the bayou girl and the city boy to
figure out that they don’t really know much at all–about each other, or about
themselves. And figuring all of this out is going to be downright crazy.
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My
Best Friend’s Mardi Gras Wedding
Excerpt
“Good morning, Miss Landry.”
“I’ve been on hold for fifteen
freaking minutes, Mr. Baxter.”
Bennett grinned. She’d been on hold
for four minutes. He knew because he’d been watching the time on his phone. He
always kept her on hold for at least a couple. But he’d known to expect her to
be dramatic about it no matter how long it was. Kennedy Landry wasn’t really
the patiently-wait-on-hold type of woman. Kennedy Landry was, however, the type
of woman that made a man want to take what tiny semblance of control he could
find and grab onto it like it was a lifeboat in the midst of a hurricane.
Kennedy Landry was absolutely like a
hurricane, and she’d already pulled him under and drowned him in lust and
amusement and fascination and…
Shit, he was half in love with her,
and if the only way he had to remind her that she didn’t always have the upper hand in every single one of their
interactions was to make her wait on hold on the phone for a few minutes then
yeah, he’d do it.
“Well, I’ve been waiting for the
reports from last week since Monday,” he told her. “Seems waiting is something
we should both get used to.” It was Thursday. She always made him wait until
Friday for the reports she was supposed to send on Tuesday.
In part because that meant he’d call
her about those reports on Wednesday and they’d fight-flirt for a few minutes.
Something they both enjoyed far more than really made sense.
In part because her sending him the
reports was ridiculous. He didn’t really need them—he was just curious—and she
knew it.
She hated sending the reports, but
only because it meant that she was answering to him on some level. She didn’t
like that because she didn’t have him wrapped around her little finger like she
did every other man she dealt with on a regular basis.
Bennett had been very careful not to
let on just how tightly wrapped he already was.
“This call could be about an
emergency,” she said in a bored voice that indicated: one, it was not an
emergency, and two, she was trying really hard to sound bored and not like she
was gritting her teeth.
Bennett loved that he rubbed her the
wrong way. It only took about ten minutes around Kennedy to figure out that she
ran the show with the men in her life. The only daughter and granddaughter in a
family of outdoorsy, hardworking, loud-cussing, Louisiana born-and-bred men,
Kennedy not only kept up with them on the hardworking and cussing thing, but
she got away with murder. Her oldest brother, Sawyer, tried to make her toe the
line, but even he was a sap for his baby sister, and it was rare that Kennedy
didn’t get her way.
Bennett wasn’t a blue-collar Cajun
man.
Well, he was Cajun, on his mother’s
side. But she’d married into money—a lot of money—very much on purpose and had
long ago given up things like crawfish sucking and cursing in French. She had
married into a white-collar, British-descended family in Savannah, neck-deep in
politics and law and class and wealth and snobbery, while Kennedy had been
neck-deep in, well, the Louisiana bayou. And everything that went along with
that.
Bennett loved the bayou. And
everything that went along with that.
Especially the sassy, goth-dressing,
impossible-to-impress Cajun girl who thought that the fact he couldn’t fix a
transmission, butcher an alligator, or bait a hook was downright embarrassing.
“If it was an emergency, you would
have hung up and called back. Over and over again. Leaving progressively more
and more threatening messages about what you were going to do to me when you
did finally get a hold of me,” he told her, signing off on the bottom of the
letter he’d just finished and moving it to the side.
“I would never do that,” she said.
“No?” When she did finally send him reports, it was always in folders that were
named things like I’m Not Your Fucking
Secretary and If You Ask Me to Get
You Coffee It Will Definitely Have Turtle Shit in It.
“If I really needed your attention,
I’d start texting. Photos. Naked photos.”
His entire body reacted to that. He
cleared his throat. “I would definitely—”
“Of my grandfather.”
Bennett paused. Then groaned. He knew
her grandfather. Leo Landry was a great guy. Funny, down-to-earth, honest,
loyal. And someone that Bennett absolutely did not ever want to see naked.
Ever.
“You’re an evil woman.”
“Remember that.”
About Erin
Nicholas
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Erin Nicholas has been writing
romances almost as long as she’s been reading them. To date, she’s written over
thirty sexy, contemporary novels that have been described as “toe-curling,”
“enchanting,” “steamy,” and “fun.” She adores reluctant heroes, imperfect
heroines, and happily ever afters.
Erin lives in the Midwest,
where she enjoys spending time with her husband (who only wants to read the sex
scenes in her books), her kids (who will never read the sex scenes in her
books), and her family and friends (who claim to be “shocked” by the sex scenes
in her books).
Connect with Erin
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