A
Taste of Merlot
by
Heather Heyford
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
Raise
your glass and join Heather Heyford as she pours a second serving in
her series following these headstrong wine heiresses in their quest
to strike out on their own…
Merlot
St. Pierre is struggling to break free from her family name. Her
college classmates whisper behind her back that her passion for
jewelry design is little more than a hobby, since she’ll always
have her father’s fortune. But Meri is determined to prove them
wrong, and with the help of a handsome jewelry buyer, she just may
taste her first sip of success—as long as she can hide who she
really is…
Mark
Newman’s family owns a chain of high-end jewelry stores, and he’s
working hard to get out from under his aunt’s thumb and prove he
has a good eye and a head for business. He’s certain Meri’s
designs could be the next big thing, but he’ll have to convince her
that she can use her famous last name to her advantage. As their
business partnership takes root, an attraction begins to flourish—but
they’ll both find that love, like wine, takes time to perfect…
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT
Mark
scrutinized Merlot hard. Those ratty jeans and that bright floral
halter top were right out of the seventies. Only a model-shaped body
like that could make it work. Mark wondered where the tats were.
Because there would be tats. It was a given.
Unbuckling
the Philippe in a move that had become routine since the annulment,
he lifted his hips to access his front pocket, all the time keeping
his eye on her as she walked around to the truck’s jump seat. There
she pulled out a red plastic tackle box and a small artist’s
portfolio.
He
let her get a head start and then followed her into the restaurant,
watching the sway of her narrow hips. Just inside the entrance, he
held back while she lifted the flap of the portfolio and pulled out a
folder, laying it on the Formica tabletop.
Annnnnnd—go.
“Meri?”
Round
eyes that glittered like polished green glass in a perfectly oval
face looked up into his. She was clearly nervous.
Then
she smiled.
And
gorgeous.
Oh,
no. Criminally talented and a babe. He was nowhere near
ready for that. He’d vowed to steer clear of pretty
women—relationships, anyway—for one solid year, to focus on the
business. He still had four months to go.
Worse,
he could tell from the truck and her clothes that she wasn’t high
on the income ladder, either. And he was definitely not getting taken
by another bloodsucker, no matter how beautiful.
“I’m
Mark.”
With
her right hand she reached out to meet his, while her left bumped her
folder. It slid to the edge of the table, transparent sheets of
vellum slipping out, drifting about his feet like pale leaves onto
the crumby linoleum.
“Oops!”
She immediately lowered herself to the floor to retrieve them. Mark
bent to help her. Their heads were inches apart as they squatted,
reaching in all directions for what were clearly painstakingly drawn
renderings. He took advantage of their close proximity to watch her
as her eyes dipped to the floor, thick tawny lashes brushing lightly
freckled cheekbones. When she blew some dirt off one of her designs,
he caught a faint whiff of peppermint.
They
rose as one and she reorganized the papers, her stack of bracelets
tinkling with her movements.
Without
thinking, he reached for her wrist and raised it to inspect the
layers of silver, rose and yellow gold running halfway up to her
elbow. She stood rooted to the spot, allowing him to turn her pliant
limb over, exposing the paler, inner epidermis and the faint blue
veins traveling up through skeins of precious metals. When he found
the one he was seeking he ran a finger across its clasp.
“Beautiful,”
he breathed, barely glancing at the bracelet.
“Is
this what you’ve been looking for?”
His
eyes moved from her wrist up her arm and her swanlike neck to her
heart-wrenchingly naive expression. No way could he ever take
advantage of that face, even if he were the type of cutthroat buyer
who operated that way.
“This
is it.” At long last, his finger was on the Purchase Prize—his
quest for the past three months—only to discover that the jewelry
was eclipsed by its maker.
“I
made all of these too.” She slipped three or four off. “Here’s
how you can tell. See? I burnish set one-point-five-millimeter,
diamond-cut peridots on the inside of every piece.”
There
was a belief system that held that all gemstones had unique qualities
that were transferred to the wearer. But for them to work their
magic, the stones had to be touching the skin, where they were hidden
from public view. A secret indulgence, known only to the wearer.
“Why
peridot—other than the fact that they match your eyes?”
She
lowered her lids briefly, giving him another glance at her sweep of
lashes. When she looked up again, her expanded pupils all but
obscured her irises and her cheeks glowed a soft, contrasting cherry.
“Peridot
clears the heart. Helps connect us to our destinies and to an
understanding of the purpose of existence. It’s also said to
attract love.”
Their
eyes locked together, he gently lowered her arm. They were still
standing in the aisle next to their booth. The other diners were
beginning to stare.
Mark
tilted his head toward hers and whispered, “I think we’re causing
a ruckus.” He motioned toward her side of the table, and they slid
into the vinyl booth, facing each other.
They
each picked up a greasy, plastic-coated menu. “How did you find out
about my work?” Meri asked.
From
staring at the bracelet photo for the last three months, he already
knew Meri Peterson, in an abstract way. He had to keep reminding
himself that prior to yesterday, he hadn’t existed for her.
“I went to your college’s student show last spring.”
While
the waitress got them coffee, he went through the chain of events
leading up to his phone call—leaving out the part about the witchy
woman down the hall at the co-op.
“So,
you originally from the city, or here in Vallejo?” Casual as he
tried to appear on the outside, inside he was dying to know
everything about her, from the size of those sexy jeans she wore to
the brand of that minty toothpaste on her breath.
It
was a simple, run-of-the-mill question. So why’d she seem caught
off-guard? Her arms went straight as she clutched the sides of her
vinyl seat.
“Um,
I went to high school back east. Now I live a little north of here.”
The
woman was a basket of nerves. Talented as she was, she obviously
didn’t have any experience with selling her work. He had to think
of a way to make her relax.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR
Bio and Links:
Born in
the Northeast, Heather Heyford learned to walk and talk in Texas, and
then moved to England. (“Ya’ll want some scones?”) While in
Europe, Heather was forced by her cruel parents to spend Saturdays in
the leopard vinyl back seat of their Peugeot, motoring from one
medieval pile to the next for the lame purpose of ‘learning
something.’ What she soon learned was how to allay the boredom by
stashing a Cosmo under the seat. Now a recovering teacher, Heather
writes love stories, feeds hardboiled eggs to suburban foxes, and
makes art in the Mid-Atlantic. See more at HeatherHeyford.com, or
visit me on facebook, twitter, pinterest, and instagram.
Heather Heyford will be awarding one e-book copy of A Taste of Merlot to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
Thanks so much for having me! Writing about The Napa Wine Heiresses—the lives & loves of the daughters of Napa's most notorious vintner—is so much fun. Because as we all know, being rich and pretty is no guarantee of happily ever after...it takes finding that *special* one...get A Taste of Merlot in print or digital here: Amazon http://amzn.to/13A5eZx
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