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Seduced by Sin
Seduced by Sin
Seduced by Sin
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Seduced by Sin

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When Caleb Smith saved Francesca Hamilton from a nasty situation with her father, she was beyond grateful. Sure, it landed her in Caleb's bed wearing his engagement ring, but neither of them took that seriously. It was a means to an end, and he was so sexy and exciting, she was enjoying the ride. It wasn’t Caleb's fault her feelings were changing, leaving her wishing things between them were real rather than pretend.

Caleb took the FBI’s assignment because he wanted to end the tyranny of a man who’d hurt the people he loved. Odds of success were slim and the danger high, but he knew the risks. Francesca didn't and was completely in the dark about her family’s "business." And the more time he spends with her, the harder he falls for the gorgeous blonde. But to finally get retribution, he'll have to destroy her world...

The An Unlikely Hero series is best enjoyed in order:
Reading order:
Book #1 - Betrayed by a Kiss
Book #2 - Tempted by a Touch
Book #3 – Seduced by Sin

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 20, 2017
ISBN9781633758889

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    Book preview

    Seduced by Sin - Kris Rafferty

    Table of Contents

    Dedication

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    Chapter Nine

    Chapter Ten

    Chapter Eleven

    Chapter Twelve

    Chapter Thirteen

    Chapter Fourteen

    Chapter Fifteen

    Chapter Sixteen

    Chapter Seventeen

    Chapter Eighteen

    Chapter Nineteen

    Chapter Twenty

    Chapter Twenty-One

    Chapter Twenty-Two

    Chapter Twenty-Three

    Acknowledgments

    About the Author

    Discover more Entangled Select Suspense titles…

    Blood Money

    Sinful Secrets

    Lost in Shadows

    Willing Target

    Discover the Unlikely Hero series…

    Betrayed by a Kiss

    Tempted by a Touch

    This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

    Copyright © 2017 by Kris Rafferty. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

    Entangled Publishing, LLC

    2614 South Timberline Road

    Suite 109

    Fort Collins, CO 80525

    Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

    Select Suspense is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

    Edited by Vanessa Mitchell

    Cover design by L.J. Anderson

    Cover art from Shutterstock

    ISBN 978-1-63375-888-9

    Manufactured in the United States of America

    First Edition March 2017

    Dedicated to Michael, Aengus, Fiona, and Declan…thank you for supporting my dream.

    Chapter One

    The party was a loud, glittery event worthy of international billionaire tycoon Jonathan Hamilton, and it took place in his hundred-year-old brick and granite mansion’s ballroom, smack dab in Boston’s Beacon Hill neighborhood. The ballroom’s floor was polished black marble, its coffered ceiling was painted plaster, recessed panels surrounded by dropped beams that created a grid pattern in the Greek and Roman fashion. Crystal chandeliers hung at every fourth beam, creating a soft lighting that was kind to grand dames and socialites alike. The waitstaff went about their business with ramrod straight backs, wearing black formalwear, bow ties, and white gloves. There were no paper plates, no red plastic cups so popular in dorm rooms, and backyard birthday parties. No, the china and flatware were the real deal…expensive, worthy of their surroundings, and more than just beautiful, they were heirloom quality. The party was a success, stunning and exciting, and if someone had lit fireworks in the huge ballroom, it would have been of the tasteful sort, and Caleb Smith wouldn’t have been surprised—but it wouldn’t have impressed him, either. None of this impressed him.

    She did, though. Across the crowded room of milling guests, Caleb couldn’t keep his eyes off her…the hostess, Francesca Hamilton. That she’d noticed and liked it tapped into a thrilling, primal possessiveness he couldn’t remember having felt before, and it unsettled him. Someone that kind and smart shouldn’t be allowed to be so sexy—it gave her an unfair advantage. Her tiny waist begged to be spanned by his hands, and damn…the strapless dress was supposed to cover her breasts, not threaten to expose them with every laugh or gesture.

    That thigh-high dress would haunt his dreams.

    Caleb leaned back against the mahogany bar’s counter, nursing his drink, hating how his tuxedo jacket restricted his movements. He hated wearing it…the suit, everything involved with the full regalia. His bow tie strangled, and his damn patent-leather shoes pinched though they’d been worn enough to be considered broken in.

    Bigger than most, Caleb was six feet three inches, two hundred pounds, and felt more comfortable in jeans, T-shirts, and biker boots, but he did what he must to achieve what he wanted. Today’s agenda required his tux, a shave, slicking back his shoulder-length hair, and downplaying that he was a dangerous fuck. With a jagged throat scar, ear to ear, it wasn’t as easy as it sounded.

    Francesca seemed to like the tux, if her lingering gaze was any indication. When her hot perusal settled somewhere in the vicinity of his cummerbund, it had the effect of a caress, stabbing his gut with a jolt of desire. Then she locked gazes with him, and the crowd seemed to fade away, and the distance between them became a challenge, rather than the foregone conclusion it should be…if she had an ounce of self-preservation.

    Tonight was the conclusion of a week of contract negotiations with her father. Caleb wanted Jonathan Hamilton’s cybersecurity contract, and he wanted Francesca pliable, willing to say yes when and if he found it necessary to ask a favor. Favors were Caleb’s specialty, and how he’d gotten far in his business. They required him to balance what he wanted with what someone else might want in return.

    Holding Francesca’s gaze, Caleb suppressed a smile as he sipped his bourbon. She was being remarkably up-front about what she wanted, and he felt like a heel for being so eager to comply.

    The man at her side touched Francesca’s arm to draw her attention away from Caleb. It startled her, making her breasts jiggle. Yes—he took a deep, calming breath—they jiggled, and her companion was eating up the sight. Damn, Caleb needed to focus, remember why he was here, and not walk over there to punch the dude in the face. So he surveyed the party, the guests, wondering how so many women could find unique dresses to wear, yet all the men wore the same tuxedo suits. Denoted a lack of imagination, he supposed, but considering he was wearing the same damn suit, he decided not to dwell.

    Her father, Hamilton, was somewhere in that crowd of two hundred loud, tittering guests. He was the host of this meet and greet. Francesca believed it to be a graduation party, in honor of her advanced degree in psychology. It wasn’t. It was the culmination of a weeklong interview of sorts her father was conducting. Normally, if a client suggested an interview, Caleb would tell them to pound sand, but this opportunity was Hamilton’s vast international empire, the CEO/president slot. It was no secret that the position would allow Caleb to branch out from his East Coast holdings and go global…so he’d be a fool not to consider it. However, the opportunity was too good to be true. There was a caveat. Francesca’s hand in marriage was tied to the position.

    A waitress stepped up to Francesca’s side and whispered something in her ear. Caleb watched as Francesca nodded, said something quickly and then rested her hand on the waitress’s arm, as if attempting to soothe her. The waitress’s smile seemed filled with gratitude, and then the woman hurried off.

    Caleb caught Francesca sneaking a look at him before she turned back to her companion, but not before she was forced to suppress a smile. She was such a flirt, and oh so very temping, he thought.

    It was a family business, so he understood the marriage angle. When Jonathan Hamilton discovered he was dying and needed a successor, it made sense for him to plan for his daughter’s future…his legacy. Being that powerful, that rich, that influential made you a target. It made Francesca a target. She’d already been kidnapped once as a child, and her subsequent rescue almost didn’t happen; it had been messy and infamous, and resulted in a remarkably high body count. She’d need protection for the rest of her life. To Hamilton, that translated to she needed a husband.

    Caleb spied her two regular bodyguards no less than twenty feet from her. Dressed in ill-fitting tuxedos, he supposed they were no more comfortable than he, but at least Caleb had the foresight to have his custom made. His tuxedo fit his large frame. They looked like hangers for reams of shiny black cloth. Eyes constantly scanning the room, countenances fierce and forbidding, they weren’t hired for their charm. Caleb knew them by reputation. They were without equal, and loyal, but when Hamilton died, the focus of every corporate player on the global scene would see Francesca as the opportunity she was. Her bodyguards wouldn’t be enough. Hamilton was right to worry, and right to preemptively dole out that opportunity to a successor of his choosing, tying the CEO/president position to the survival of his legacy.

    Caleb knew all this before he agreed to these interviews. But what did Francesca know? As far as Caleb could deduce, only that her father was dying. She’d chosen Harvard University in Cambridge to earn her PhD in psychology and work there as an adjunct professor, so she could be near her father in his final days. That alone told Caleb she was clueless to how his death would affect her. No way she was going to Harvard when Hamilton’s business empire hung in the balance. She was her father’s one vulnerability; Francesca Hamilton was in play until she married.

    So Hamilton’s plan to marry her off was practical. It would allow her to continue living her academic life, the life she’d chosen long ago, despite her father’s attempts to lure her into his company’s ranks. Marriage would solve all of Hamilton’s problems, too…the foreseeable ones, anyway. It was a good plan…if they were living in the 1800s.

    But it was the twenty-first century, for fuck’s sake. No matter the benevolent paternal intention, this was an arranged marriage. Women hated shit like that, which was probably why, as of yet, no one had broken the news to Francesca.

    Caleb sighed, leaning an elbow on the crowded bar. The guests closest to him scooted farther away, giving him startled glances, as if they expected him to shout boo or something. It wasn’t an unusual occurrence, but with the rich set, he found they didn’t try to hide their unease, as if it were his fault they were so nervous. So he ignored them, and tried to shrug off his own worries. She was so damn gorgeous, odds were he’d trip over his dick, and he felt bad for her, but he had a job to do even if she was poised to be married, and it couldn’t just be anyone. It had to be someone capable of managing an empire—and boom, double whammy—this future husband was here at the party and her father got to choose the lucky guy.

    Her future betrothed was milling among the guests in Hamilton’s ballroom, one of Boston’s movers and shakers, eating one of the delicate canapés, or drinking a trendy cocktail the waiters offered on silver platters. Or maybe the guy was calculating the value of an ostentatiously installed objet d’art Caleb kept hitting with his elbows, or tripping over with his size fourteen shoes.

    He didn’t know who Hamilton would choose to marry her off to, but it sure as shit wouldn’t be him, though her father was licking his chops at the idea of someone with Caleb’s business résumé, aka connections and bank account, topping his list of Francesca’s potential husbands.

    Fuck, no.

    Officially, Caleb was here only to land a contract, filling Hamilton’s cybersecurity needs. It’s what he’d devoted the last week to, negotiating, and he hoped to seal the deal tonight. So…the role of Francesca’s husband would not be awarded to Caleb.

    And a good thing, too, because Jonathan Hamilton was a sociopath.

    A murderer. The head of an empire of shell companies hiding a global extortion ring. And Caleb was sent here by the FBI to prove that. They had a source claiming Hamilton’s secrets were listed in an encrypted ledger, a ledger once thought to be a fairy tale. The Feds wanted Caleb to steal it. To do that, he’d need Francesca’s help, because she was Hamilton’s one vulnerability.

    Her father trusted her—not with the truth, or his secrets—but to always put him first, because she loved him. Francesca thought Hamilton was just another power-obsessed businessman. A dime a dozen in her circles. He’d ignored her for most of her life, so why would she think otherwise? It’s not as if Hamilton wore a club hat or pin stating he was a top-tier criminal mastermind. He and his daughter were little more than strangers, and as far as Caleb could see, she was innocent, and…too desirable for his comfort.

    Thinking about what he could do—what he wanted to do—to convince her to help was making him stupid. He needed her to trust him on some level, enough to ask questions for him, maybe turn a blind eye when necessary. The FBI concluded she was Caleb’s best option for insider information, and seduction would do it. She was an academic, they said, no boyfriend, so how hard could it be, they said… Shit. Caleb allowed his gaze to rake her from tip to toe, and his mouth watered. She had all the markings of a woman who could bring him to his knees. And he wasn’t a man given to kneeling.

    One of Francesca’s bodyguards glared at him, but Caleb didn’t take it personally. The man was just doing his job and Caleb’s reputation had preceded him. Working his way up from the bottom—the absolute bottom—meant he’d been around, seen things, met and worked with more than his fair share of good guys and bad. Caleb started as a homeless street rat, grifting, and clawed his way to being CEO/president of his own enterprise, a business built upon granting favors and what he liked to call creative problem-solving. With the help of the Feds, he’d become rich, powerful, and feared. So yeah, he’d made enemies, and yeah, he had a target on his back. Much like Francesca’s. Though hers was bright neon, and Caleb was in the know enough to hide his…mostly.

    One of Francesca’s adoring male guests stopped in passing, touched her shoulder and whispered something in her ear. It must have been funny, because she threw her head back, and laughed, and was still chuckling when the man had wandered off with a smile. She flipped a lock of her long, tawny curls over her shoulder.

    Shit. Caleb sighed, knowing he’d have to stick a pin in his bullshit angst about balancing the job and being a decent person, because he didn’t see how to do that with Francesca. Not and get what the Feds wanted. And his brooding and waffling about seducing her wasn’t helping anyone. It was only making it hard to enjoy himself. So he smiled, deciding to break with his better angels and enjoy the moment—good booze, a good-looking lady, a few fantasies, and rock-hard anticipation.

    Francesca addressed her companion, a pampered senator’s son, saying something or other. She was too far away for Caleb to read her lips, but when she gestured toward something over the guy’s shoulder, and the senator’s son left her side, Caleb saw his chance. She was alone. All he needed was an excuse to approach, so he kept his gaze on her, waiting for a signal. Anything. A whistle, a wave…a lick of her lips.

    She threw Caleb a smoldering, come-hither smile, and he thought: that’ll do.

    Placing his empty glass on the bar, he headed over, ignoring curious and hostile glances alike, noting no one had the guts to stop him once it was clear what he was about. Not even Francesca’s security guards, though they monitored his approach, and he was sure they were ready to pounce if he made a suspicious move. Their constant presence around Francesca was a problem he’d have to solve, but one problem at a time. The closer he drew to her, the clearer her hesitation became…she seemed to be second-guessing her decision to invite him over, which meant he still had work to do. Even after a week of chatting her up between meetings, comings and goings, she was still…hesitant.

    Up close, she was even more beautiful. The overhead chandelier bathed her delicate features in gold. Her skin shimmered with it, as did the inlays of gold thread in her black satin dress. Four-inch lamé heels brought them nearly eye to eye…and what eyes she had; green with flecks of gold. They were big, tilted up at the outer edge, boldly emphasized with black pencil, gold shadow and heavy mascara. She was stunning.

    Mr. Smith. Her smile was genuine, and revealed slightly crooked bottom teeth, as if she’d forgone a retainer despite parental harping. It suggested a rebelliousness she’d need to survive him.

    "Call me Caleb. France-sca." His voice broke on the last two syllables, creating a growl rather than a greeting. The result of a damaged throat, and his daily reminder of what had been done to him.

    The senator’s son had the bad taste to reappear with two drinks. Midtwenties, thinning blond hair, he wore his disdain like his suit. With entitlement. Throwing back his shoulders, he planted his feet in front of her, confronting Caleb and forcing her to step back to avoid a collision.

    Caleb, this is— Francesca stepped around the blond, smiling past her confusion. The rich suit puffed out his chest, like a dignitary awaiting his introduction.

    I know who he is. Caleb arched a brow. I do business with Junior’s father. Francesca’s confusion reminded him to keep his eyes on the prize and abandon his inclination to chastise an entitled pup.

    Nathan, Francesca said, Caleb Smith is a friend of my father’s.

    Nathan’s lips pulled back from his pearly whites into a sort of rictus. Your father is careful to vet his guest list. Surely there’s been a mistake.

    Francesca recoiled prettily. Nathan, be nice, or…or, I’ll have to ask you to leave.

    She was defending him. Caleb smiled. Wasn’t that sweet.

    He shouldn’t be here. You don’t know who he is, Francesca. I do.

    "I’m the guy who earned his place at the table," Caleb said. Other than a few failed businesses that had to be bailed out by his daddy, Nathan had yet to make his mark. And Nathan’s telling tales out of school meant Caleb needed to remind the senator, Nathan’s father, to keep his mouth shut in front of his son.

    Fuck you, Smith. Nathan blanched, embarrassed. Let’s go, Francesca.

    Nathan set the two untouched drinks on a passing waiter’s tray and grabbed her wrist, tugging. Francesca tugged back, outraged, yet her defense was hampered by her four-inch heels.

    Caleb stepped heavily on Nathan’s lead foot, causing him to lose his balance, arms windmilling to regain it. Caleb stepped between Nathan and Francesca, protecting her from junior’s clumsiness. She touched Caleb’s arm, tilted her chin up, and smiled with gratitude and amusement. He thought she was about to say something nice. Then Nathan grunted in rage and came at him, leaving Caleb only enough time to slap the punch aside and escort Francesca a few yards from the commotion.

    Nathan howled, cradling his hand against his chest. A glance told Caleb it was dislocated, not broken, and that Francesca’s amusement had morphed to horror. His seduction had turned into a shitshow.

    Quickly assessing his priorities, hoping to salvage the moment, Caleb waved the ever-watchful bodyguards forward, suggesting with a tilt of his head that they hustle Nathan Plimpton and his caterwauling from the room. Francesca’s guards exchanged glances as they hurried to the scene, and seemed to conclude Caleb’s plan acceptable, because they left with Nathan dangling between them, struggling, his feet dragging on the floor.

    Nathan wasn’t happy, but Caleb was. Two birds with one stone. Francesca’s companion and her security guards were now occupied elsewhere, and he was the only one left on the field.

    She acted as if nothing had transpired, but upon closer inspection, Caleb noticed her eyes were unfocused and she seemed to be listening to the room, gauging the level of disruption they’d created. After a moment of tense silence, she stepped closer and brought with her a waft of perfume—something complicated and expensive.

    My father noticed the commotion, she whispered.

    I’m sure he didn’t. Oh, yeah. Hamilton noticed.

    Hmm. She glanced at him, her lips pursed. You know what Freud says. He arched his brow, instantly reminded that she was a clinical psychologist. Who else would quote Freud?

    No. What does Freud have to say? Just hearing the words leave his lips forced Caleb to suppress a smile. He didn’t want to hurt her feelings, and he guessed a smile from him at this particular moment would do just that.

    ‘He that has eyes to see and ears to hear may convince himself that no mortal can keep a secret. If his lips are silent, he chatters with his fingertips; betrayal oozes out of him at every pore.’ Francesca nodded, biting her lip so hard he feared she’s bleed. My father notices everything…and he’s upset.

    Caleb suppressed a sigh. It was inevitable, of course. Nathan Plimpton had made a scene. But a glance told him the ailing patriarch was still conferring with his guests, mostly older Romeos eying Francesca like they were calculating their opening bids for the CEO/president slot. So Hamilton had noticed the commotion, but as yet had decided not to approach.

    Caleb donned a calming smile, hoping to ease her mind. Maybe if we stand real still, your father will find a shiny object to entertain him. He bit his lower lip, as if trying to suppress a smile. When she mirrored him and glanced at her father before quickly looking away, he pushed down his frustration because when he’d approached, she was looking for fun. Now, after Nathan Plimpton’s interference, she was worried about her father.

    Her father. Jonathan Hamilton.

    The man’s second-in-command, Brent Levine, stood at his right—an ex-SEAL turned bodyguard turned Hamilton underling. Harris Tate, additional security, stood to Hamilton’s left. Caleb called them Barbie and Ken, one blond, one brunette, but whichever pissed him off at the time was always Ken. No balls. Their dossiers listed more than their share of action, so ball-less or not, they were still dangerous. Also, sources said Levine, the dark-haired one, was Hamilton’s tentative first choice for CEO/president, and most likely would be Francesca’s groom-to-be.

    Father won’t like that you hurt Nathan. She seemed less upset than calculating, as if it were a problem she could solve. It amused him and made him want to tease her about it, but he didn’t want to risk misreading the moment, so he took two martinis off a passing waiter’s tray and handed her one. Francesca didn’t hesitate. She sipped and then grimaced. She waved a hand to someone behind Caleb. A waitress, dressed in black, stepped to her side. Jessica, tell the bar they’re still using too much vermouth. Jessica nodded and then hurried to comply. Better hope my father doesn’t find out.

    Caleb sipped his drink, thinking the balance of vermouth to gin

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