Just a Little Chase (A Dare Crossover #4) Read Online Carly Phillips

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Chick Lit, Contemporary, Erotic Tags Authors: Series: A Dare Crossover Series by Carly Phillips
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Total pages in book: 65
Estimated words: 58952 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 295(@200wpm)___ 236(@250wpm)___ 197(@300wpm)
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He immediately softened, his irritation melting away because he did understand that work was sometimes unpredictable and demanding, and mostly because Billie was his half-sister and he had a soft spot for her. She was one of the few people who could put a pin in his bluster and make him calm the fuck down.

Crazy, considering he’d only recently found out that she existed, and she’d only been in his life for a few years. He was a man who didn’t let people in. Didn’t let them get close or scale the emotional walls he’d erected as a young kid after his mother walked out on him and his father and never looked back. Yet this vivacious, free-spirited girl had knocked past his defenses and made a place for herself in his life as if she’d always belonged there.

She settled in across from him, out of breath from rushing. Her pretty face was flushed, and her unconventional pink highlighted hair was a bit tousled. But once she was settled in her seat, she flashed him one of those gregarious smiles of hers, the one that lit up her light blue eyes behind the black framed glasses she wore.

For a girl who’d been handed off to numerous foster homes growing up, her constant bright, upbeat attitude always amazed him.

They looked over the menu, and he didn’t miss the disappointment in the server’s eyes when she saw Billie there. There was a bit of confusion, too, because given his expensive suit, she’d probably been expecting a sophisticated woman to show up, instead of a young, quirky twenty-three-year-old with an eclectic fashion style that was as funky as her colored hair.

They placed their orders, and once the waitress delivered Billie’s soda and they were alone again, he addressed the reason why she’d been so late.

“What’s the big crisis at work?” he asked, always curious to hear about her job, which she loved. Future Fast Track, a nonprofit that was dedicated to helping foster kids as they aged out of the system, was near and dear to her heart, for good reason.

“The charity event is in two days, and one of the men in the bachelor auction came down with the latest flu virus and had to pull out,” she said, unwrapping her straw and sticking it into her drink. “Finding a replacement in such a short time is more difficult than we’d expected and we have to fill his slot.”

The fact that she was currently giving him those desperate, puppy dog eyes did not bode well for Chase, and a sense of dread filled his chest. She hadn’t actually asked him to step in for the sick bachelor, but he knew, without a doubt, that’s where this conversation was heading.

“There has to be some guy out there willing to step in,” he said, quickly trying to deflect by offering some helpful advice. “A friend of a friend who’s already part of the bachelor auction, or something.”

She shook her head woefully. “My boss and I have been on the phone all morning, and no luck. It’s totally stressing Aurora out, which is not good for a woman who is seven months pregnant.” Billie loved the woman she worked for, who’d also grown up in the foster care system and understood the challenges kids experienced there.

Chase frowned at his sister. Was she really using the sympathy card? Yes, yes she was, the minx. “Do not look at me like that,” he said, his voice a low, surly growl that didn’t faze her in the least.

“Like what?” Behind her glasses, she batted her lashes much too guilelessly.

She knew exactly what she was doing, and he refused to offer up his services for something so appalling as a bachelor auction. “I have no desire to be paraded around like a show pony.”

She laughed, the sound light and amused. “Give yourself some credit, Chase. You’re definitely a stallion, not a show pony. You have the looks, you’re an eligible bachelor, and as a corporate financier, you’re a great catch. Any woman who reads your impressive bio and sees your photo will be willing to shell out big bucks to spend a weekend with you.”

A fucking weekend entertaining a woman? He shuddered at the thought. Hell, he could barely tolerate a date for a few hours before he felt smothered and annoyed by her presence. “I’m not interested, Billie.” His tone was firm.

“Interested, no…” Her voice trailed off for a few seconds as she bit her bottom lip. “But what about doing it for the sake of charity?”

He barely caught his scowl before it formed. “I’ve already donated a substantial amount to Future Fast Track over the past few years.” And he’d done so willingly, and lovingly, because he understood how important the nonprofit was to her.

“I know, and you know I’m always grateful. But it’s not the same thing because it’s very behind the scenes and impersonal when you just hand over a check,” she stressed, not relenting one iota. “No one but the charity knows that you’re endorsing Future Fast Track. Being a part of the auction would show your support in a more visible way.”


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