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The Twin Switch
Caught in a double bind
of family loyalty and desire.
She must save her brother’s wedding…
without falling for a forbidden stranger!
Layla Gillen needs to focus! But while tracking down her brother’s runaway bride-to-be, she gets sidetracked herself, falling into bed with hotel mogul Max Kendrick. Too bad his twin is the one who seduced the bride-to-be! Now Layla must choose between betraying her brother and pursuing forbidden passion. And Max can be very persuasive…
New York Times Bestselling Author Barbara Dunlop
New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author BARBARA DUNLOP has written more than forty novels for Mills & Boon, including the acclaimed Chicago Sons series for Mills & Boon Desire. Her sexy, lighthearted stories regularly hit bestseller lists. Barbara is a three-time finalist for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA® Award.
Also by Barbara Dunlop
Sex, Lies and the CEO
Seduced by the CEO
A Bargain with the Boss
His Stolen Bride
From Temptation to Twins
Twelve Nights of Temptation His
Temptation, Her Secret
Discover more at millsandboon.co.uk
The Twin Switch
Barbara Dunlop
www.millsandboon.co.uk
ISBN: 978-0-008-90410-4
THE TWIN SWITCH
© 2020 Barbara Dunlop
Published in Great Britain 2019
by Mills & Boon, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF
All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This edition is published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, locations and incidents are purely fictional and bear no relationship to any real life individuals, living or dead, or to any actual places, business establishments, locations, events or incidents. Any resemblance is entirely coincidental.
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For Susie Ross:
Thanks for the inspiration!
Contents
Cover
Back Cover Text
About the Author
Booklist
Title Page
Copyright
Note to Readers
Dedication
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
About the Publisher
One
If I could choose my own sister, it would be Brooklyn.
She made me laugh.
Better still, she made me think. And when things went bad, which they often did, she’d lie down beside me on my blue silk comforter and listen for hours. She knew when the fix was ice cream and when it was tequila.
She was smart, too. She got straight A’s right from elementary school.
Me, I was more of a B-plus person. But I was a pretty good listener. And I could twist a mean French braid, which Brooklyn liked.
She had long blond hair and beautiful blue eyes. She tanned, too. We both tanned.
Since we were little kids, we’d spent our summers at the beach on Lake Washington. First it was the swings and the jungle gym. A little older, we’d race to the floater in the middle of the swimming area, dive off, then dry on our towels in the sun. Older still, we hung out at the snack bar, batting our lashes at cute boys and getting them to buy us milkshakes.
I didn’t get to choose my own sister. But it was happening, anyway.
In just two weeks, Brooklyn was marrying my big brother, James.
“I can see the Golden Gate Bridge,” Sophie Crush said from the front seat of the cab.
I was in the middle of the back seat squished between Brooklyn and Nat Remington. That’s what happened when you insisted on taking a hybrid from the airport.
“Do you think we’ll have views from our rooms?” Nat asked.
“I want a view of the spa,” Brooklyn said. “From inside the spa, I mean.”
“You heard the bride,” I said.
I flexed my shoulders in anticipation of a deep stone massage. I’d had one once before. It had been a little slice of Heaven that I was dying to repeat.
“Pedicures,” Sophie said.
“Facials,” Nat said.
“I want to sit in the sauna,” Brooklyn said.
“I feel my pores opening up already,” I said.
The sauna sounded like a great idea. So did a facial. I was the maid of honor, and I was determined to look my best.
Unlike some brides—more selfish brides—Brooklyn had chosen gorgeous bridesmaid dresses. They were airy and knee length with strapless sweetheart necklines and fitted bodices of azure-blue chiffon that faded to pale sky at the hemline.
My auburn hair was tricky but, happily, the colors worked. Because for a single twenty-six-year-old, a wedding was a really good place to meet new guys.
I was at a disadvantage this time since half the guests would be my own relatives. Plus I’d met nearly all of Brooklyn’s friends and family over the years. Still, she might have an undiscovered hot second cousin or two in the right age range. A woman could never discount an opportunity.
The cab pulled to a halt beside a rotating glass door and miles of windows that looked into the lobby. Stylized gold lettering spelled out The Archway Hotel and Spa on a marble pillar.
Three men in crisp steel-gray short-sleeved jackets simultaneously opened our doors.
“Welcome to the Archway,” one of them said to Brooklyn, his gaze lingering on her sea-breeze eyes before moving past her to me.
His smile was friendly. He was cute, but I wasn’t about to get interested.
Not that I have anything against valets. He could be putting himself through grad school for all I knew. Or maybe he liked living near the beach and having flexible hours.
Brooklyn moved past him, and he held out his hand to me.
I took it.
It was strong, slightly calloused, definitely tanned. Maybe he was a surfer.
I’m not a snob about professions. I’m a high school math teacher, and that isn’t the most prestigious job. I’m open to meeting people from all walks of life.
He did have really gorgeous hazel eyes, and a strong chin, and a bright white smile.
I came to my feet and he let go of my hand, taking a step back.
“We’ll take care of the bags,” he said, his gaze holding mine a little longer than normal.
It took me a second to realize he was waiting for a tip.
I almost laughed at myself. He wasn’t flirting with me—at least not with any romantic intent. He did this with everyone who arrived at the hotel. It was probably how he paid for his surfboard.
I rustled through my purse for a five and handed it over.
It was a splurging kind of a weekend, I reminded myself. You only got the perfect sister-in-law once in your life.
Two bellhops wheeled our luggage into the lobby and we followed.
“We could go see some male exotic dancers,” Nat said.
Brooklyn winced. “Pass.”
I smiled. I knew Nat was joking. If Sophie had suggested it, I might have taken her seriously.
“Don’t be too hasty,” Sophie said. “After all, what do you think James is doing with the guys right now?”
“You think James is watching male exotic dancers?” Brooklyn asked as we made our way past the fountain to the check-in desk.
“Female,” Sophie said.
There was no lineup. In fact, there were three attendants available. Nice.
Brooklyn swung her tote bag onto her shoulder. “The guys are watching a doubleheader.”
“Afterward,” Sophie said.
I couldn’t imagine James going to a strip show. He was absolutely not the type.
But Brooklyn got a funny expression on her face, like she thought maybe it was a possibility, even though the idea was ridiculous.
“Are you checking in today?” the woman behind the counter asked us in a chipper voice that said she was delighted to be here to help us.
“We’re the Christie party,” Nat answered, deftly pulling a copy of the reservation from her bag.
Hanging back, I spoke to Brooklyn in an undertone. “You’re not worried about James, are you?”
Brooklyn frowned and gave a noncommittal shrug. Then she moved toward the counter, digging into her bag. “Do you need my credit card?”
“I just need one for check-in,” the woman said. “When you check out, you can split the charges if you like.”
I repositioned myself so that I was beside Brooklyn.
“He’s not going to see a stripper,” I whispered, wondering how she could possibly be worried about James’s behavior.
James, with a master’s degree in economics, who’d landed a job at one of the most conservative consulting firms in Seattle, who only spoke in complete sentences and who guarded his social media accounts as if he had the nuclear launch codes, would not be hanging out at a strip club.
I couldn’t imagine him risking someone snapping his picture in a strip club—even if he did want to see naked women. Which he did not, because there wasn’t a woman in the country more beautiful than Brooklyn.
Brooklyn was a fashion buyer for a chain of Seattle boutiques. But she could have been a movie star or a supermodel. There was nowhere for James to go but down in the looks department.
“What’s wrong?” I asked her.
She turned her head and smiled. “What could possibly be wrong?”
There was something in her eyes. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it.
“Did James do something?” I asked her.
“No.”
“Are you mad at him?”
“No.”
“Then what…?”
“Nothing.” Brooklyn smiled again. “He’s perfect. James is perfect. And I’m going to book a spa appointment.” She reached for the brochure on the countertop.
“I can help with that,” the check-in woman said as she handed Nat’s credit card back to her.
“Something with aromatherapy,” Brooklyn said.
I wasn’t one hundred percent convinced by Brooklyn’s nonchalance, but I thought about hot stones pressed slowly across my oiled back and decided anything else could wait.
Massaged and steamed and showered and dressed, I spotted Sophie sitting at the bar in the lounge. A jazz trio was playing in the corner while candles flickered on the mottled glass tables. The chairs were white leather, and a glass mosaic decorated the wall behind the bar.
I was wearing three-inch heels with my silver cocktail dress, so I was happy to rest my feet by perching next to Sophie.
“What are you drinking?” I asked.
“Vodka martini.”
The bartender arrived, another cute guy. “Can I get you something?”
His smile was friendly, definitely flirtatious. And he was classically handsome, probably thirty or so, with intelligent gray eyes.
I certainly had nothing against bartenders, except when you met them at their work. There they flirted with everybody. Like the valets out front, their shift was made or broken by their tips.
“I’ll take one of those,” I said, pointing to Sophie’s glass.
I smiled at him, but made it brief. I didn’t want to spend the evening chatting with the bartender. I wanted to spend it with my girlfriends.
Across the lounge, a very handsome profile came into my view, distracting me.
Okay, this guy wasn’t a bartender, or a valet, or a public school teacher of any kind—that was for sure.
His perfectly cut suit was draped over a perfectly sculpted body. His haircut was shaggy-neat, that kind where you paid the earth to look like you’d rolled out of bed and had every hair fall naturally into place.
Even as I mentally mocked the style, I liked it.
He turned, and I caught his handsome face full-on. He could have just walked off a magazine cover. He should have walked off a magazine cover with that chiseled chin and those startlingly bright blue eyes.
He caught me staring, but he didn’t smile. I felt heat hit my cheeks, anyway.
And then it was over. He turned and kept walking like our eyes meeting had never happened. And maybe it hadn’t. Maybe he hadn’t been staring at me at all. Maybe it was just the fevered musing that took flight in my head when I saw a good-looking guy lately.
I’d read a statistic last month that said sixty-seven percent of women met their husbands before they graduated from college. So I was already in the bottom thirty-three percent.
When you added that to the twenty-one percent of women who never married at all, my odds looked grim. I had a twelve percent chance of meeting Mr. Right.
Don’t get me started on the fifty percent divorce rate because that left me at six percent. And six percent was truly demoralizing.
“Earth to Layla,” Sophie said.
I gave myself a mental shake. This was a girlfriends’ weekend.
“Did Brooklyn come down already?” I asked, focusing on the here and now.
Brooklyn and I were sharing a room, while Sophie and Nat were staying together one floor up. We had ended up with a view of the bridge, while they looked into the building next door. We’d offered to trade, but nobody seemed to care about the view.
The rooms had enormous soaker tubs, steam showers and beds that felt like you were floating on a cloud. Nothing else much mattered.
“I haven’t seen her yet,” Sophie said.
I glanced around but didn’t see her, either. “I have eight pillows,” I said to Sophie.
“You counted?”
“I counted.”
“Did you take the square root?” she asked, grinning as she bit the olive off her blue plastic skewer.
“If I include the gold throw pillow, the square root is three. I considered applying the quadratic formula, but—”
“Layla.” It was Brooklyn’s happy voice in my ear and I felt her arm go around my shoulders. “I thought you’d never get out of the shower.”
“It’s a great shower.” There was something sensual and indulgent about endless hot water.
“What are you drinking?” Brooklyn sounded overly cheerful.
“Vodka martini,” Sophie said. “You?”
“I had a Sunburst Bramble across the lobby there. I wouldn’t recommend it.”
She wore a short, mauve halter dress with a full skirt that swirled around her toned thighs. Her ankle-high gladiator heels were mottled purple and silver. As always, she looked trendy and stylish.
The bartender seemed to magically appear. “The Sunburst Bramble wasn’t to your taste?” he asked Brooklyn, obviously having overheard her comment. “Would you like me to replace it with something else?”
“Would you?” Brooklyn responded. “That’s so sweet of you.”
He slid a slim, leather-bound cocktail menu in front of her.
“Why don’t you pick,” she said, sliding it back with a swish of her shoulder-length blond hair. “Something sweeter, maybe with strawberries or a little Irish Mist?”
I did a mental eye roll. This was the Brooklyn who’d gotten us free milkshakes at the beach all summer long. Only that Brooklyn hadn’t been engaged to be married.
“How many drinks have you had?” I asked her, wondering if she’d hit the minibar while I was in the shower.
“Just the one. But I’m about to have another.”
I told myself to quit worrying. She was in a good mood, and that was great. This was her weekend, after all. I didn’t know why I was borrowing trouble.
The bartender brought me my drink.
“I’m off to the ladies’,” Brooklyn said. “When my drink comes save it for me.”
I turned my head to call after her. “Will do.”
I saw three different men follow Brooklyn’s progress as she walked to the lobby. It was always that way with her. I wasn’t sure she even noticed anymore.
“I think Nat really wants to see exotic dancers,” Sophie said to me.
I refocused my attention on Sophie. “No way.”
Nat was the most straitlaced of the four of us. She was James, only in female form. She was literally a librarian.
“I think she might be ready to burst out of that shell.”
“That would be entertaining,” I said, thinking it really would.
Nat’s long-term boyfriend had split with her a few months back. I knew she hadn’t dated anyone since. I also knew Henry had been hard on her self-esteem.
Sure, Nat wore glasses. But they were cute glasses, and she had the sweetest spray of freckles across her cheeks. Her brown hair might not be the most exotic of shades, and she wasn’t glam like Brooklyn, but she had the most beautiful smile that lit up her pale blue eyes.
“She’s chatting up a guy right now.” Sophie inclined her head.
I turned to surreptitiously follow Sophie’s gaze.
Sure enough, Nat was at a corner table, head leaned in talking to a guy in a nicely cut suit jacket and an open-collared white shirt. He looked urbane attractive, but more fine-featured than appealed to me. But then I wasn’t Nat.
Something banged above us.
I reflexively ducked as my adrenaline surged.
The room suddenly turned black, garnering audible gasps and a few high-pitched shrieks from the crowd.
It went quiet.
“Whoa.” I blinked to focus.
“What was that?” Sophie asked into the darkness.
“Something broke.”
“It sure did.”
My eyes adjusted, and I could see the candles now, little dots of light on the tables illuminating the faces closest to them. They reflected off the windows. Beyond, across the bay, I could see the lights of ships and sailboats in the distance.
“Nothing but a power failure, folks.” It was the bartender’s hearty voice. “It happens sometimes. Please sit tight and enjoy the ambience. I’m sure the lights will come back on soon.”
“At least we’re not waiting on our drinks,” Sophie said, lifting her glass to take another sip.
“I wonder if Brooklyn will be able to find us.” I looked around, but I couldn’t see much of anything beyond the candlelight.
“Hey, guys.” Nat appeared and hopped up on the stool next to Sophie.
“What happened to your man?” Sophie asked.
“When the lights went out, he squealed like a little girl.”
“That’s disappointing,” I said.
Sometimes I wondered if there were any good men left in the world. I had a list of qualities. I mean, it wasn’t a long list, mostly to do with integrity and temperament. But squealing like a little girl was definitely not on it.
“So not the type to rescue you from a bear,” Sophie said to Nat. She sounded disappointed.
There was laughter in Nat’s voice. “Who needs rescuing from a bear?”
“I might go camping,” Sophie said.
“You?” Nat asked.
Five-star restaurant manager, downtown high-rise-dwelling Sophie was definitely not the outdoor type.
“Well, maybe you,” Sophie said.
Nat had been known to spend time outside—at least in her rooftop garden.
“Then that’s definitely not my guy.” Nat took a two-second gaze back over her shoulder.
I realized then, that after a mere five minutes I’d wondered if Nat’s guy would be the guy. It could have been a really romantic story—Nat meeting the love of her life while spending a girls’ weekend in San Francisco celebrating Brooklyn’s wedding.
We were all single. Well, Brooklyn wouldn’t be single for long. But Sophie, Nat and me hadn’t had a lot of luck meeting men.
Good guys were hard to find. I could list the flaws in each of my dates from the past six months: too loud, too nerdy, too intellectual, too moody.
I knew how it sounded. And I realized perfectly well what I was doing with that list. If I focused on the guys, I didn’t have to explore the possibility that it was me—which, of course, deep down, I knew it was.
I’d love to live in denial. And I would if I could figure out a way that I didn’t know denial was denial.
So far, I hadn’t been able to make that work.
“Where’s Brooklyn?” Nat asked.
“Ladies’ room,” I said.
Sophie craned her neck to gaze across the dim room. “She should be back by now. I hope she’s not stuck in an elevator.”
“I’m going to go look for her.” I slid off my bar stool.
“You’ll get lost, too,” Nat said. “Or you’ll trip and break your ankle.”
I remembered my black-and-gold sling-back stilettos. They were stylish, but not the most stable footwear in my closet. Nat made a good point.
Instead, I retrieved my phone from my purse and shot Brooklyn a text.
I climbed back up and took a sip of my drink.
We all stared at my phone for a few minutes, but Brooklyn didn’t text back.
“Stuck on an elevator,” Nat said in conclusion.
“Or in an ambulance,” Sophie said. “I bet she was rushing to get back to us in the dark, and it all went bad.”
“Don’t even joke about that,” I said. “There are five hundred people coming to her wedding.”
“And it’s a long way up the aisle at St. Fidelis’s,” Nat said. “What if she broke her leg?”
“She didn’t break her leg,” I said and then realized I was tempting fate. “I mean, I hope she didn’t break her leg.”
Brooklyn with a broken leg would be an unmitigated disaster.
It was thirty minutes before the lights came on. When they did, conversation around us spiked for a moment, and there was a smattering of applause.
The bartender went back to work, and the waitresses began circulating around the room. Brooklyn still hadn’t returned from the ladies’ room, and I looked at the lobby entrance, trying to spot her.