Brave Enough

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Authors: M. Leighton


Brave Enough
is M. Leighton at her finest. She truly shines with this book that is EVERYTHING you want in a perfect romance. Steam, panting, heart palpitations . . . Tag will make you swoon. And just when you're on the edge of your seat, Leighton ties it up in a shiny, beautiful bow. Get this book. Right now. You can thank me later.”

—Courtney Cole,
New York Times
bestselling author of the Nocte trilogy

PRAISE FOR THE NOVELS OF M. LEIGHTON

“Incredible tension, hot chemistry, and . . . intrigue.”

—
New York Times
bestselling author Samantha Young

“Freakin' hot!”

—Nette's Bookshelf

“M. Leighton has done it again—she's written the perfect, sexy love story!”

—
New York Times
bestselling author Courtney Cole

“Seriously scandalicious.”

—Scandalicious Book Reviews

“Scorching hot . . . insanely intense . . . and it is shocking. Shocking!”

—The Bookish Babe

“Brilliant.”

—The Book Goddess

“Leighton never gives the reader a chance to catch their breath . . . Yes, there is sex, OMG tongue-hanging-out-of-mouth, scorching sex.”

—Literati Literature Lovers

“Steamy, sexy, and super hot! M. Leighton completely and absolutely knocked [it] out of the park.”

—The Bookish Brunette

“I devoured it, and I'm pretty sure you will too.”

—For Love and Books

“Prepare yourself to be blown away.”

—My Keeper Shelf

“Engaging and charismatic.”

—
Kirkus Reviews

“This story is hot enough to start a forest fire . . . Swoon-worthy.”

—
RT Book Reviews

“This book is worth every second I spent reading it. Ms. Leighton is a phenomenal writer and I cannot give her enough praise.”

—Bookish Temptations

“You will laugh, swoon, and even shed a few tears. M. Leighton knows how to write an amazing story.”

—Between the Page Reviews

“One of the best books I've read this year.”

—The Book Vixen

Berkley Titles by M. Leighton

The Wild Ones Novels

THE WILD ONES

SOME LIKE IT WILD

THERE'S WILD, THEN THERE'S YOU

The Bad Boys Novels

DOWN TO YOU

UP TO ME

EVERYTHING FOR US

The Tall, Dark, and Dangerous Novels

STRONG ENOUGH

TOUGH ENOUGH

BRAVE
ENOUGH

An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014

This book is an original publication of the Berkley Publishing Group.

Copyright © 2016 by M. Leighton.

Excerpt from
Strong Enough
by M. Leighton copyright © 2015 by M. Leighton.

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

BERKLEY® and the “B” design are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

For more information, visit
penguin.com
.

eBook ISBN: 9780698187627

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Leighton, M., author.

Title: Brave enough / M. Leighton.

Description: Berkley trade paperback edition. | New York : Berkley Books, 2016. | Series: Tall, dark, and dangerous ; 3

Identifiers: LCCN 2015043701 | ISBN 9780425279489 (paperback)

Subjects: | BISAC: FICTION / Romance / Contemporary. | FICTION / Contemporary Women. | FICTION / Romance / General. | GSAFD: Romantic suspense fiction. | Erotic fiction.

Classification: LCC PS3612.E3588 B73 2016 | DDC 813/.6—dc23

LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015043701

PUBLISHING HISTORY

Berkley trade paperback edition / April 2016

Cover art: “Couple” by Deborah Kolb / Imagebrief.

Cover design by Lesley Worrell.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

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For my wonderful readers who are brave even when you think no one is watching. You inspire me.

For my incredible husband who makes me want to be brave even when I'm not sure I can. You ground me.

For my God who gives me the strength to be brave even when I feel like I can't breathe. You hold me.

And for everyone who thinks they can't be brave today . . . You
can!

ONE

Weatherly

I'm surprised that I know the way back to Chiara. It's been years since I've visited our family vineyard in the outskirts of a small Georgia town called Enchantment, but I find that I know the turns even before the navigation tells me which way to go. When I was growing up, it was one of my favorite places in the world. Winding roads, lush green hills and purple-gray mountains rising up in the background—it's like the best of every world, all in one spot.

Already I feel a little less claustrophobic just leaving Atlanta behind. Don't get me wrong. I love that city, but with my father and his old cronies bearing down on me, I had to get away. I can't very well come up with a plan to save myself if they're occupying all my time and hovering around every corner.

The lightly scented breeze whips through my hair like a lover's fingers as I slow my convertible to make the last turn. I barely
creep along the serpentine road, taking my time to enjoy the sun filtering through the trees and the broken glimpses of row after row of grapevines. Being here feels like coming home. It always did.

Throughout my entire childhood, we would come here for two weeks every summer just before harvest. Dad would catch up on the vineyard business for the first couple of days, but then he'd relax with Mom and me. We ate meals together, we swam together, we played board games at night together. We acted like a normal family and I loved it. There were no pretenses to keep up, no important people to entertain, no pressures from the outside world. Just us in a mountain hideaway, protected by rows and rows of grapes.

Even now, I feel the stresses of my life draining away as I drink in the sweet scent of the air. It's as familiar as the bustle of city life, but as removed from it as east is from west. Although I haven't been here since before I went to college, time is already melting away as though I visited just last week. Here at the vineyard, little changes.

As I drive past the rows, a flash catches my eye. I slow to a stop and focus on a broad, sweaty back as a man drives wooden supports into the ground in front of a downed vine. I let my gaze travel over him. He must be new because I don't recognize the physique. And I think I'd remember if there had
ever
been a man built like this on Chiara grounds.

His shoulders are easily double the width of mine and he's probably almost a foot taller, just guessing. And I'm not short at five foot seven. As I start to pull away, I let my eyes linger on his impossibly narrow waist and hips, and the world-class ass that fills out the black denim.

I'd love to see if the face goes with the body. I'm very curious
about him now, and about what the heck he's doing here. Maybe I'll run into him later. If I'm lucky.

I came back to Chiara looking for some peace and quiet, some time to find a way out. I would not be
at all
opposed to a handsome distraction, though. It's been too long since I've been able to want somebody just because I want them and not because of how they may or may not fit into my life. Maybe it's high time to go with my instincts. To go with someone who might be all wrong for me. To go with the passion. To throw caution to the wind.

As my dark, loosely curled hair flutters around my face, my optimism climbs with my speed. Maybe, just maybe, this little vacation will get a
whole lot
more interesting. It would be nice to get lost in something not planned and not political. Something real, something innocent to the ways of the world.

Is that too much to ask?

For my life, probably. But that doesn't mean I can't hope for it. Or try to have it. At least for a little while. A few weeks maybe.

When I pull up to the top of the circular drive, I shut off the engine and grab my smallest bag from the backseat. It has all I'll need right now—my toiletries and a change of clothes. I want to get the grime of the road off me before I unpack and get settled.

I glance at the ivy-covered stone front of the main house, a smile tugging at my lips. So many good memories here.

The front door is unlocked when I climb the wide front steps and test the knob. Maybe Stella is cleaning today. Although I didn't tell anyone I was coming (mainly because I didn't want my father to find me right away), she keeps the house ready at all times. That must be what she's doing.

“Hello?” I call when I step into the grand foyer with its Brazilian cherry floors, vaulted ceiling and antique chandelier. My voice echoes around me, but otherwise I hear no sign of life.

I set my bag at the foot of the winding staircase and head off past the formal dining room to the kitchen at the back of the house. “Hello? Stella?” I call again. No answer.

With a shrug, I make my way back to my belongings and carry them up the stairs to the room I've always stayed in. It's just one of the guest rooms, but it has a charming window seat that I used to curl up in a lot as a little girl. In my head, that made it mine, so that's how I've always thought of this particular room—as mine.

I set my bag on the thick, beige duvet that covers the bed and begin taking out what few things I'll need. As of today, gone are the “presentable” clothes. These are the days of spaghetti straps and sarongs, flip-flops and loose hair.

After I stow my bag in the closet, I eye the steam shower longingly, but as soon as my gaze falls on the oversized claw-foot tub, the shower is forgotten. A nice relaxing soak to soothe my stiff, road-weary muscles sounds like heaven.

I cut on the spigot and test the temperature with the backs of my fingers until it's a little warmer than what's comfortable, and then I start stripping. I grab two towels, a washcloth, my phone and my organic soap and set them on the chair that sits near the head of the tub. Then I climb in.

Air hisses through my teeth as the hot water stings my legs and then my belly. I let my skin adjust to the heat before I reach for my phone and turn on some music. I wet my washcloth, drape it over
my eyes and then slide down in the tub. Within two minutes, I'm already feeling boneless.

I soak for a good thirty minutes before pulling the plug and draining half of the tepid water so that I can refill it with hot. I grab my soap and roll the silky bar in my hands, working up a rich lather to spread over my arms. The scent of almond and coconut permeate the air and I can all but feel it sinking into my skin.

I lather my hands again and set my fingers to my chin and neck, working toward my chest. I close my eyes, the image of the vineyard guy popping unbidden into my head.

I wonder what he might look like. What color eyes would go with a body like that? Something exotic, maybe. Something piercing. Something that would say he wants me without ever having to open his mouth.

My breathing picks up as my fantasy takes off in an unexpected direction. I massage the scented soap into the soft mounds of my breasts, dragging a fingertip around each nipple over and over, imagining what it might feel like to have the calloused touch of a manual laborer there.

“My birthday isn't for another week,” a deep voice purrs, jarring me from my thoughts.

With a gasp, I sit up in the tub, covering myself the best that I can. I forget all about propriety, however, when I see the tall, insanely gorgeous man standing in the bathroom doorway.

Black hair, cut in a style just long enough to make him look rakish.

Gray eyes that are almost silver they're so light.

Olive skin that matches the sweaty back I saw less than an hour ago.

It's the man from the vineyard. His build and his coloring are unmistakable. As are the black jeans that he's wearing. He fills them out as perfectly from the front as he did from the back, only this side includes a thick, tantalizing bulge behind his zipper placket.

Holy. Shit.

“P-pardon?” I stammer, my brain a jumbled mess. Between the little fantasy I was indulging in, him catching me off guard this way and his incredible good looks, I think I might've forgotten my name, much less that I should be prudishly insulted right now.

Only I'm not.

I'm intrigued instead. Especially when he grins.

If smoke could smile, this is what it would look like. Dark, mysterious. Sexy as hell.

Holy mother! What is a guy who looks like
this
doing working in a vineyard?

“My birthday,” he repeats in a perfectly modulated, cultured voice that sounds like chocolate and cinnamon. Deep. Spicy. Delicious. “Isn't that what this is about?”

“Ummm, no. I don't know anything about your birthday.”

“Damn. I was gonna thank the hell out of somebody.” His eyes rake my naked upper body and chills break out across my chest, reminding me that it's probably extremely inappropriate for me to be carrying on a conversation with a perfect stranger when I'm in the tub.

But other than propriety, which I'm evidently not
too
concerned about right now, I can't think of one good reason to ask him to leave. Not one.

“I'm Weatherly O'Neal. My family owns this vineyard. Who are you?”

One black-as-night brow shoots up. “I'm Tag. My family
works
this vineyard.”

Every cheesy book and movie about a rich woman and the cabana boy (chauffer, gardener, handyman and a whole slew of other clichés) scampers through my head. Now I understand. Now I understand how it happens. Now I understand the draw. It doesn't matter that our stations in life are worlds apart. It doesn't matter that my father would have a conniption. It doesn't matter that it could never work out. All my body and my mind are thinking is that the way he's looking at me sets my blood on fire.

And I love it.

“Well,
Tag
,” I say, enunciating the name that somehow suits him perfectly, “I guess I'll be seeing you around, then.”

He's still smiling. I don't think he's stopped since he showed up in the doorway. “I look forward to it. Very. Much.”

With that, he skims me once more with his smoky-silver eyes and then turns, very slowly, to leave.

When I hear the door to my bedroom click shut, the door I forgot to close, I rest back against the cool ceramic and exhale. I smile, too, as I think to myself,
Yep. This little getaway is going to be just what I needed.

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