Title: Adam Bomb
Series: Moguls, Royals, and Rogues #1
Author: Kilby Blades
Publisher: Dreamspun Desires
Release Date: 1/21/20
Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 254
Genre: Romance, best friends to lovers, friends to lovers, billionaire
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Synopsis
Levi's best friend, Adam, has always
been larger than life: a smoking-hot billionaire hotelier with imposing charm.
When Manhattan stops being big enough for both of them—at least if Levi ever
wants to fall out of love with Adam—Levi accepts a job in in San Francisco.
But when Adam pulls an Adam—upending
Levi's calm new life with a plea to lend his photography talent to a worthy
cause—Levi is helpless to resist. Adam will be the first Fortune 100 CEO to
come out of the closet in grand fashion. He needs a trusted ally on his PR
team. And the job will only last three weeks.
Levi accepts on one hidden condition:
he’ll keep his new friends away from Adam, certain that if they get a whiff,
they'll fall under Adam’s spell. Bent on keeping his two lives separate, Levi
barely makes it through the first two weeks unscathed. Then, Adam drops another
bomb….
Excerpt
Three things happened to Levi every time
he saw Adam: anticipation prickled his neck, he quelled the impulse to wet his
lips, and his dick got a little hard. Then there was the tunnel vision
thing—the way that, when Adam walked into a room, noises dulled and periphery
faded for a pregnant moment and there was no one but the two of them.
They weren’t alone, of course. Adam was
never alone. Today, a gaggle of smartly dressed flight attendants flocked
around him.
“Fucking Adam,” Levi muttered. Even as
he shook his head, Levi’s lips curved into a smile. Adam didn’t notice him at
first. But that was the way it always was—Adam busy noticing whoever’s
pheromone he liked best, and bystanders busy noticing Adam.
Levi had forgotten how comical it could
be. Adam had that kind of charisma. When he walked into a room, records
scratched to astonished silence, and people stopped what they were doing to
look. Levi had seen babies stop crying to smile at him and fierce-looking dogs
leave their masters’ sides to be petted by this man. It wasn’t just Levi.
Everyone was attracted to Adam.
Recollection of what a nuisance Adam’s
ridiculous magic could be didn’t stop Levi’s grin from widening. The man was a
golden-eyed god. He had his Iranian-born parents to thank for regal bone
structure, pouty lips, and luminous, polished-bronze skin. Levi appreciated
Adam’s utter perfection as a specimen of the male ideal just as much as anyone
else. But unlike everyone else, Levi saw Adam for more than sex on legs. Levi
knew his heart. They’d known one another since they were boys.
“Come out with us tonight.” A flight
attendant in a dark pencil skirt suit smiled with suggestive lips painted in
the same shade of vermilion as the ascot around her neck.
“Sorry, babe… I got plans.” Adam said it
with a billion-dollar smile. She leaned in and gazed at him dreamily, as if
he’d just invited her to join him in a suite at the Kerr instead of turning her
down flat. Adam was the only person Levi knew who could hand someone a
steaming, stinking shit burger and have the person he served it to beg him for
more.
And just like that, Adam’s gaze slid
right to Levi—with precision—as if he’d known where Levi stood all along. Adam
kept walking, never missing a beat, disentangling both women from beneath his
arms.
“Sonofabitch,” Adam said, the corner of
one lip quirking into a smile and his eyes glowing soft embers as he looked at
Levi; it was a frat boy thing to say, but Adam was kind of a bro. Adam threw
his arms around Levi and they shared a bear of a long hug.
“I missed you, brother,” Adam murmured a
second before releasing his embrace and holding Levi by the shoulders, at arm’s
length. He said it with earnest intensity that got Levi every time.
“Ladies….” Adam let his eyes linger for
a final moment before shifting his gaze to the women who hung on his every
word. It bought Levi time to swallow the lump in his throat. “This is my best
friend, Lev.”
Apart from family, Adam was the only one
who shortened his nickname with correct pronunciation. Most people Americanized
it to sound like the jeans. Levi’s parents were Argentinian. Back in the
motherland, it had a short <em>e</em>.
“Lev can come out with us too….” This
from a different flight attendant. They had all stopped when Adam stopped,
including the ones who hadn’t been tucked under Adam’s arms. They all looked hopeful—even
the adoring pilot. If any one of them could’ve torn their gaze from Adam, Levi
could’ve shot a commiserating glance.
<em>Sorry, guy. He’s
taken.</em><em> And his partner’s completely gorgeous</em>,
the glance would’ve conveyed.
“I’ve been away for….” Adam looked at
his watch, then looked at Levi. “What is it now? Nine months?” It was cheesy as
hell, but Adam pulled it off. “Me and him have a lot of catching up to do.” He
turned to his entourage and gave a small bow. “It’s been lovely. I mean it.
Thanks.”
Levi didn’t miss the small folded paper
that Red Lips pressed into Adam’s hand before whispering something in his ear
and kissing his cheek, or the rueful, silent waves of the others. Levi watched
Adam as Adam watched Red Lips walk away. Adam slid his gaze back to Levi, who
was shaking his head again. If Levi had missed Adam’s incorrigible flirting,
Adam had missed Levi’s mock-disapproving looks. Levi stared at Adam and Adam at
him, each of their grins growing as the moments passed.
God, it’s great to see his face.
“You look good, man.” Adam clapped a
hand on Levi’s shoulder. “San Francisco’s treating you right.”
“I love it here,” Levi admitted. He’d
said as much the one time they’d seen each other in all that time. They’d met
for dinner one night, when they both happened to be in London for business.
Adam had asked Levi when he was moving back to New York. Levi had simply said
that the project that had lured him to San Francisco had been ongoing. He
hadn’t said that New York no longer felt like home, and he wouldn’t say—not
right now—that his project had been over for two months. That he planned to
sell his family house in Queens and stay in San Francisco.
But Adam’s project was over, and he was
moving back stateside. San Francisco was a four-day stop. After a long weekend
catching up, Adam would go back to headquarters in New York.
“You got luggage?” Levi asked. By then
they’d begun walking.
Adam held up a small duffel Levi hadn’t
noticed before. “If I need more clothes, I’ll stop by the hotel.”
Levi had forgotten how light Adam
traveled. Being heir to a hospitality empire meant that Adam had a closet and a
place to stay in every major city. It wasn’t until they started toward the
doors—until the gaggle of flight attendants had disappeared from view—that Levi
pulled out his phone.
“Lemme call an Uber,” Levi said. It was
a short ride into the city. Brutal during rush hour but not bad at one o’clock
on a Thursday afternoon.
“No need. The hotel sent a car.”
Adam lagged behind Levi, just by a step,
as air from outside blew in along with the whoosh of the sliding double doors.
He hovered his fisted hand over a trash can, and when he opened his fingers,
the pink folded phone number of the flight attendant fell to its demise.
Adam wouldn’t have actually hooked up
with the flight attendant—not as long as he was with Leila. But he might have
given her a call to find out where the party was. No. Adam wasn’t a cheater. He
was a party animal, an attention whore, and a flirt. And he didn’t spend much
time alone.
“So it’s true….” Levi smiled his most
nonchalant, most supportive-best-friend, and
utterly-unaffected-by-Adam’s-love-life smile, even though this was a moment he
had dreaded. “Your days of flight attendants are over. You popped the question.
Leila’s finally gonna make an
honest man out of you.”
Adam stopped outside, right on the other
side of the doors, where the air was cool and the wind was sharp, as it tended
to be on late spring afternoons this side of the bay. Levi needed him to say
it—to speak out loud the big news Adam had insisted he be there to deliver in
person, and ask the favor he wanted to ask face-to-face. It had to be that he
and Leila were engaged and that he wanted Levi to be his best man.
“Leila and I broke up.”
The tip of Adam’s nose had begun to
pink, and his cheeks were doing the same. Levi wished them back inside, wished
to divine whether Adam’s color owed to emotion or to the winter of San
Francisco spring wind.
“When?” Levi blurted inelegantly.
Adam scanned distractedly. If they
wanted to reach the limo line, they had to go to an outer curb across the
street. Adam started walking and Levi kept in step, barely heeding traffic to
study Adam’s face. On the crosswalk, Adam replied, “A couple months ago.”
Puzzlement pierced through Levi’s stark
relief. It was stupid, the way he was happier when Adam was single. Such news
delivered the same foolish rush of hope that swelled over Levi when one of his
celebrity crushes filed for divorce or came out. So what if Adam broke up with
his girlfriend or fine-ass Wentworth Miller came out of the closet? It didn’t
mean Levi had a chance.
The color on Adam’s cheeks as he spoke
his confession was definitely a blush of shame. What kind of best friend forgot
to mention for “a couple of months” that it was Splitsville between him and the
girl his father wanted him to marry?
“You wanted to tell me in person you
broke up with your girlfriend? That’s your big news?”
Adam had the decency to look chagrined.
“None of it has to do with her.”
“You’re being cryptic,” Levi pointed
out. “Adam. What the hell is going on?”
Levi’s heart raced faster than it had
when he’d merely believed his best friend, whom he’d nursed no small crush on
over the years, had taken himself permanently off the market. But Adam was
being weird—his Adam, the most shameless and least apologetic person Levi had
ever met. Had he screwed up in Tehran and put the company in jeopardy? Lost his
fortune? Committed a crime? And what was the favor? Did Adam need Levi to hide
him in Argentina with his grandparents, or to donate a kidney? Oh God. Was Adam
sick?
Adam looked over his shoulder, paranoid,
as if he would be recognized at any moment. He was far from famous, but he’d
had his share of press.
“Let’s talk about it in the limo,” Adam
whispered, splitting his attention between placating Levi and signaling to the
car bearing his hotel’s name. “It’s nothing bad. It’s just… not public yet.”
“What’s not public?” Levi pressed the
moment the limo stopped at the curb.
Adam threw him a pointed look and
sighed. “I’m coming out. Again.”
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