Stripping the
Billionaire (Heirs of Damon #4)
Noelle Adams
Release Date: 9/9/2014
Synopsis:
For the last
eight months, Mandy has lived across the hall from a
caveman.
He won’t trim his beard, he mostly talks in grunts, and he’ll
hardly emerge from his cave of an apartment. Ben might be a grumpy mess, but
she kind of likes him anyway. She’s not attracted to him, of course. Not at
all. Those stray feelings are merely a fluke. She’s looking for a man who has
it all together, and Ben isn’t even close.
Benjamin Damon is heir to a
billion-dollar corporate empire, but he has put his family and that whole lifestyle
behind him. No one knows who he is now—not even his pretty princess of a
neighbor who refuses to leave him alone.
When she ropes him into taking her with
him to work on his mother’s historic Savannah home, he knows it’s a mistake.
Mandy represents the world he’s tried so hard to escape, and he can’t let one
woman strip him of the new man he’s tried to become. The more he’s with her,
though, the more he wants her. Despite his best efforts, he’s falling for her
hard—and dreading the day she finds out all of his lies.
Pick up a copy for only 0.99 for a limited time:
Get to Know Noelle Adams:
How did you come up with the idea for this
story?
I’ve had the idea for this book for three years now, since I
plotted out the entire Heirs of Damon series all at once. I can’t exactly
remember how I came up with the idea, except I know I wanted the contrast
between Ben, with his full beard and grumpy attitude, and Mandy, with her
perfect appearance and cheerful disposition.
Where do you find your
inspiration?
I most often get inspired by random things in my life. For
instance, I was inspired for one scene in Stripping the Billionaire when I was
sitting in church and thinking that Benjamin’s mother would definitely go to
church. I’m also often inspired by other stories (books, television, movies,
etc.). It’s usually one little thing that ends up launching the story. For
instance, I got the idea for A Negotiated Marriage after watching a scene in a
TV show that had a woman rushing around, late for work and wearing very high
heels. The show had nothing to do with a marriage-of-convenience, but for some
reason, that scene inspired me for Molly. It’s usually a little, random thing,
and then the story grows out of it.
Is there anything you find particularly
challenging in your writing?
There’s a frustration I often feel when I have so many stories
I want to tell but not enough time in which to write them. That sometimes make
me feel very anxious—like I’ll never catch up to my inspiration—which distracts
me from writing at all. I will also often get inspired for future stories when
I’m in the middle of writing a current one. That makes me want to jump around
and makes it hard to focus on a current project.
About Noelle Adams
Noelle handwrote her first romance novel in a spiral-bound
notebook when she was twelve, and she hasn't stopped writing since. She has
lived in eight different states and currently resides in Virginia, where she
teaches English, reads any book she can get her hands on, and offers tribute to
a very spoiled cocker spaniel.
She loves travel, art, history, and ice cream. After
spending far too many years of her life in graduate school, she has decided to
reorient her priorities and focus on writing contemporary romances.
Excerpt:
“Oh, no,” he said, starting to his feet. “You’re not
touching my beard.”
“But you’ll look so much better if you’ll let me neaten it
up a bit.”
“I’m not trying to look good.”
She rolled her eyes but didn’t look surprised. “Anyway, I
wasn’t thinking about your beard. Right now, I’m after the back of your neck.”
“What’s wrong with the back of my neck?”
“It’s a mess. When was the last time you got your hair cut?”
“I don’t know. I don’t fuss around with things like that.”
“Well, it bugs me, so sit still.”
He stiffened and watched her suspiciously as she walked
around behind him.
“I’m not going to touch your big, ugly beard. I promise.”
He rolled his eyes but didn’t object when she started to run
the trimmer along the back of his neck.
“Are you sure you want to do this at the dining room table?”
“Better here than on one of my rugs.”
He felt uncomfortable as she worked on him, conscious of her
body behind him. When he felt the trimmer come toward his jaw, he muttered,
“Don’t get carried away.”
“Relax.” She turned the trimmer off and leaned over to blow
the hair off his neck.
The sensation made Ben tense up.
He gave himself a firm mental lecture. He was not—not—going
to get turned on by Mandy. He’d done really well about resisting that
particular temptation over the last several months, and he wasn’t going to give
into it this evening.
“Oh, Ben, you’re a mess,” she murmured. She ran her fingers
through his hair, rubbing his scalp in a way that felt incredibly good. “You’re
not going to get any action if you’re such a gorilla.”
“I’ll have you know I get plenty of action, and so far I’ve
had no complaints.”
He actually didn’t have much a social life, but that was by
choice and not because he was incapable of picking up a woman.
He did wish, however, that Mandy hadn’t brought up the idea
of sex.
“Yeah, but it might give a woman pause. I mean, how many are
going to want to get a kiss from a gorilla?” She moved around to the side of
his chair and peered at him. He was pretty sure she was assessing how much
damage she was capable of doing to his beard, but her neckline was directly at
his eye-level, and the wide neck of her sweater was slipping off one of her
shoulders.
He stared at the graceful line from her neck to her
shoulder—smooth skin, deep curve, faint shadow—and then he swallowed as her
beautiful hair slipped over her shoulder to fall forward as she leaned toward
him to ruffle his hair.
He managed to say, “Kissing me is not like kissing a
gorilla.”
“Okay. If you say so. Please can I give you just a little
trim?” she asked. She was giving him a beseeching look, with a back-note of
teasing in her expression.
“No.”
He didn’t actually care if his hair was trimmed, only he
thought it was wiser for her not to be standing so close to him for so long.
His body was starting to react to the slipping of her neckline, the flash of
full cleavage, and the smell of her drifting over toward him as she moved.
“It will look so much better? I bet you’d even be
good-looking if we can just get rid of some of this hair.”
“Being good-looking is very far down on my priority list.”
She laughed and started to massage his scalp again, moving
her hands down toward his neck. It felt so good as her fingers pressed hard
that he heard himself make a soft moan.
“You’re all tense,” she said, kneading his neck. “A massage
now and then would be good for you. So would a haircut.”
He raised his hands to hold onto the table so he didn’t do
something incredibly stupid like turning around and grabbing her. She was just
being friendly. Neighborly. She was on this search for family-feelings, and
right now she was focusing them on him.
But she wasn’t attracted to him—she’d told him over and over
again that he wasn’t good-looking the way he was. And sex was the last thing on
her mind right now.
Besides, he couldn’t offer her anything more than sex, and
she deserved so much more.
So he gripped the table as she moved down to his shoulders.
His breathing was getting ragged as his muscles started to soften.
And other things started to harden.
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