The Blind Date Read online




  CONTENTS

  TITLE PAGE

  FREE BOOK OFFER

  BOOK DESCRIPTION

  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

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  EPILOGUE

  A NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR

  THE FIGHT

  THE RACE

  A SNEAK PEEK

  MORE BY ALICE WARD

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER

  The Blind Date

  FREE BOOK OFFER

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  BOOK DESCRIPTION

  Decadence. Sinful pleasure. It’s all I want. Until I see her.

  After taking over my family’s business, all I care about is the bottom line. Sure, we sell sugary, fat filled heart attack snacks by the trillions, but people love them. After all, that’s what life is about — pleasure.

  All I want is a night of pure sin with no sticky entanglements, so I hire an escort. But Juliana isn’t who I think she is. And vice versa.

  She’s not only my date, she’s my blonde, vegan, lethally sexy enemy.

  Now, I need to keep my hands off her. Stop thinking about her. Stop wanting her. But I can’t.

  Damn. How can a blind date go so wrong... and so deliciously right?

  *** This is a full length novel with a happily ever after, no cliffhanger, no cheating, and plenty of steam. For a limited time, this copy also includes two bonus books! ***

  CHAPTER ONE

  Juliana

  Some days, following my passion was easier than others.

  I loved the days when I was able to get a former couch potato to turn their life around and realize that healthy eating and moderate exercise wasn’t a death sentence. I relished whenever a client came in and told me that not only were the numbers on the scale down, but they had more energy than ever before or could finally walk up a flight of stairs or run a block without getting winded. It always brought a tear to my eye whenever I got an unexpected hug from someone who finally “got it” when it came to nutrition.

  Today was not one of those days.

  I sat on the overstuffed sofa in my office at the Healthy Steps Nutritional Center, part of the Children’s Hospital of New York. Across from me was my newest client, a sullen thirteen-year-old named Emily who’d just been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes.

  “I don’t know, Miss Hurley.” The girl’s voice was shaky, less than a whisper, and she hadn’t been able to make eye contact with me since I gave her the news that if she wanted to shake this diagnosis, she would need to change her relationship with food.

  “Call me Juliana,” I offered, trying to make her feel more at home. “Or Jule.”

  “Juliana.” She tested the name shyly. “I’m sorry, but I love to eat. I just can’t help it.”

  I didn’t let any discouragement show on my face. “What’s your favorite foods?”

  Her eyes flicked up to meet mine, but only for a moment before they fell to her twisting fingers again. “I’m not giving up my Heigh-di-Hos. I honestly don’t think it’s possible for me to have the willpower to do something like that. I love them too much.”

  Ugh, Heigh-di-Hos. Enough sugar and carbs to kill a week’s worth of dieting as well as rot every tooth in a person’s head. Plus, you could practically taste the chemicals in them. Not to mention that to some people, like Emily, they were as addictive as crack cocaine. Simply the worst, number one offender on the nutritionally empty Foods to Avoid list I’d just presented to her.

  Emily’s mother, Mrs. Aker, a skinny nightmare of bleached blonde perfection, crossed and uncrossed her legs. “Oh, yes, you are certainly going to give them up, young lady!” She huffed and leaned in my direction. “We told her that she can’t eat anything she pleases,” she whispered, as if her lowered voice couldn’t reach the girl sitting just inches away. She takes after his…” she snarled the word, “mother, if you know what I mean. They’re all big-boned, hefty people. They so much as look at a cake and they put on weight. I told her she might never have the metabolism of the rest of the family, and she needs to make accommodations. But does she? No, I can’t keep her hand out of the sweets drawer.”

  Why do you even have a sweets drawer?

  I inhaled a deep breath. “Have you tried keeping the temptation out of the house?”

  She looked at me as if I’d lost my mind. “I have two other children. None of us has a weight problem. Why should all of us suffer because one person does?”

  I frowned as the girl, cheeks pinking, looked at her lap. Not at her lap, probably, but at her thighs, which were spreading out of the daisy duke short-shorts all the young girls were wearing. She winced and covered them with her hands.

  I knew that dangerous, self-loathing look very well because I’d been there, sitting with that same posture, and what I’d thought then was far more dangerous than thinking about Heigh-di-Hos. I wish I had a knife… I’d cut all the fat right off me.

  “Emily,” I said gently, reaching over to touch her hand. “What about other activities to fill your time, instead of eating? Are you active?”

  She shook her head. “I used to dance, but not anymore.”

  Mrs. Aker sighed and whispered, “All the girls make fun of her.”

  I looked down at my clipboard. Emily Aker, seventh grade. Just turned thirteen. Five-one, one-hundred and eighty-nine pounds. She’d been steadily putting on weight since she was nine years old, and after ruling out all kinds of disorders, her doctors had finally diagnosed her with type 2 diabetes.

  As a chunky teen who loved nothing more than filling my stomach with Heigh-di-Hos and Twinkle Toes and all kinds of packaged deliciousness, I’d been there.

  “Girls can be cruel at that age,” I acknowledged, tapping my pen on the hard surface of the clipboard. I looked directly at her mother. “Or any age, for that matter.”

  Mrs. Aker didn’t even blink. It was because she didn’t see herself as being critical, I knew. I’d seen it before. Heard it before. They just offered “tough love” or “constructive criticism.” They refused to acknowledge that their verbal wounds were painful.

  “But there’s nothing saying you can’t find another activity you like. Something solitary, even. Swimming. Jogging. Even just walking around the neighborhood. Any activity is a step in the right direction.” I grinned and waited until the girl looked up and met my eye. “You can even dance in your bedroom until you’re more comfortable dancing publicly. It’s your choice how you move as long as you move, sweetheart.”

  The girl nodded, and a hint of a smile dawned on her pretty face. She was actually quite beautiful with pale, luminous skin, jet-black hair, and warm brown eyes. “I like to swim, and we have
a pool. I just don’t like the way I look in a bathing suit.”

  My heart ached at her fragile words.

  Mrs. Aker just threw up her hands, apparently fed up with the conversation and the struggle. “It’s impossible to get her to go shopping with me.”

  I wonder why, I thought bitterly as Mrs. Aker lifted a lock of the girl’s pretty dark hair.

  She dropped it and made a tut-tut noise with her tongue. “Oh, Emily. You’d be so pretty if you were thin.”

  My nostrils flared. “She’s pretty now.”

  For one tiny second, Mrs. Aker looked ashamed, but that softer emotion fled, replaced by a hard mask. She could dole out criticism but certainly couldn’t take it.

  I wasn’t a mother so I couldn’t profess to know what it was like. I was sure it was hard. But sometimes, I wanted to smack sense into the mothers who came in here with their kids.

  Loosening my grip on the ink pen before it snapped in my hands, I addressed Emily again. “Who says you have to wear a traditional swimsuit in your own pool? Have you seen the cute boardshorts that are all the rage?”

  Emily’s eyes widened, and another smile played on her lips. “Yeah, they’re pretty cool.”

  I nodded. “Yes, they are. Maybe you can wear those to swim in?”

  She flicked a glance at her mother. “Yeah. That sounds good.”

  Mrs. Aker nodded. “That’ll be fine for home, but she’ll want to wear something more traditional for our vacation.” Mrs. Aker gave me a look that she probably thought was compassionate but was as condescending as any mean girl in Emily’s school. “She’s getting to that age where she’s beginning to be interested in boys. And I know she’s only setting herself up for heartbreak.”

  Emily’s eyes drifted to her thighs again, and she sucked in her cheeks, the tip of her nose growing pink.

  I stared at the mother for a solid five seconds before turning my attention back to the young girl. “It’s about finding confidence in yourself, Emily,” I said gently. “Don’t do it for a boy, or for your mother, or for anyone else, or it won’t last. Do it for you. It’s a lifestyle change. And I promise you, it’s not as terrible as it seems.”

  Emily lifted her head and studied me, doubt clear in her dark eyes.

  I gave her a gentle smile. “Believe me, I know. I used to be unhealthily overweight too, until I discovered that eating well can not only taste good, it can be very satisfying.”

  Mrs. Aker stared at me, eyes narrowed. “You were fat?”

  People didn’t believe it, considering that I was now a petite size two. In addition to working out, I followed a strict vegan diet. It wasn’t for everyone, but I couldn’t recommend it enough.

  “I was clinically obese, yes,” I corrected, giving her a pointed look. “From the time I was very small through most of high school. No one supported me or told me that eating right could not only be easy, the food could taste really good.” I turned back to Emily, softening my voice. “I’m strictly vegan, but I have plans based on what fits you best. I’ll give you tips on ways to make healthy foods taste really good.” I winked at her. “Even good for that sweet tooth of yours. And you’ll find they’re simple to make, and they’ll give you so much more energy.”

  Emily wrinkled her nose. “Are you sure?”

  “I promise! You’ll be running circles around your mom,” I said with a laugh, tapping her knee. I pulled out a laminated counter card with the food requirements on it and pointed all the particulars out to her. “Why don’t you give it a try. I’ll give you a bunch of recipe ideas to get you started. And I guarantee if you start with it, it’ll make you feel like a new person.”

  She still looked doubtful, but when she looked up at me again, a tiny gleam of hope was shining in her eyes. “Okay, I guess.”

  I pointed to a small section in the corner of the card. “With this plan, you can eat a dessert once a day. Even Heigh-di-Hos, if that’s what you want. Just one though. The key is moderation, not deprivation.” I grinned at her as she nodded. “See? Not that bad.”

  “Just one?” Emily asked, her voice small.

  “Yes. And I want you to really enjoy that one. Take a small bite and chew it at least ten times. Taste the flavor, savor it. Then take another, chew ten times. Make it last instead of scarfing it down.”

  This got Emily’s interest. “Why ten times?”

  “Well, it’s ten times for soft food and up to thirty times for dense food like steak. The key is really breaking that food down so your stomach doesn’t have to do so much work and it can pass through your system more quickly. Plus, eating slowly lets your stomach ‘talk’ to your brain and let it know that it’s full. When you eat quickly, that communication doesn’t happen until you’re stuffed and miserable.”

  Emily nodded. “That makes sense.”

  Mrs. Aker took the card, as well as the other information I offered, and slipped it into her expensive handbag. “Well, I suppose we’ll give it a try,” she said, glowering at her daughter. “At this point, we’re at the end of our ropes.”

  I gritted my teeth as I showed them to the door. “It would be wonderful if the entire family offered positive support to Emily as she adjusts to her new plan. And I still recommend that you remove the sweets from the house entirely,” I suggested gently. “I know this is Emily’s fight, but you know what they say about a shared burden.”

  She exhaled a long-suffering breath. “I suppose.”

  I wanted to strangle the woman. “Remember, thin doesn’t equal healthy. One in four skinny people are metabolically fat, which is just as unhealthy as being obese. Just because you and your children have a more robust metabolism than Emily doesn’t mean that the chemical laden foods you’re feeding them meet their nutritional requirements.”

  Mrs. Aker looked like I punched her in the face before nodding and stepping through the door. I got the feeling it was in one ear, out the other, but I’d work on her attitude as I worked with her daughter long term.

  When I waved goodbye to Emily, she seemed down again. Well, no wonder. A mother like that probably wasn’t doing her any favors, kicking her while she was down. My parents, who were both workaholics and never around when I needed them, hadn’t been much better. All I wanted to do was pull Emily into my arms and give her a great big hug.

  When they were gone, I brewed myself a cup of apple-cinnamon tea before pulling out my laptop. I sat back on the sofa, opening a document for my latest project — a proposal to the Manhattan legislators, urging them to get their act together when it came to school lunches.

  There was an open forum on school lunches coming up at the Children’s Hospital, and my supervisor had granted me a fifteen-minute window to present there. A thousand people who had a hand in providing lunches to the city’s schools would be there to debate the issue. It was an honor because all of the other presenters on our side of the issue were physicians or PhDs, but I’d been so passionate when I talked to him that he agreed I should be on the lineup.

  I was nervous about the presentation, but the thought of what was going on in our city schools was the real reason I stayed up nights. A good percentage of children in the city relied on school lunches and breakfasts for their nutrition, and if we kept forcing crap down their throats, I’d see more and more kids like Emily coming through my door. And the ones who couldn’t afford my services? They’d graduate from school nutritionally deprived.

  My fingers raced over the keyboard as I jabbed in a few sentences, feeling my outrage growing as I thought back to Emily. So many kids these days were suffering, and it broke my heart because I knew it would only lead to depression, body-image disorders, and low self-esteem. We, as adults, didn’t make it easy to be healthy. No, all we ever did was throw shit like high fructose corn syrup and simple carbohydrates down their throats. We favored quick, easy, and cheap instead of fresh, wholesome, and good-for-you.

  When I finished the letter to my district’s senator, I read it over and smiled. It was impassioned and intellig
ent without being too preachy, at least I hoped that was how it came across. Now, I just needed to finish the proposal and practice my fifteen-minute speech that I’d deliver at the open forum.

  Growing up, I’d always been the shy wallflower, like Emily, the girl who didn’t want to attract attention. These days, I wanted to ruffle feathers. Well, certain people’s feathers. I wanted to call attention to a cause, not myself.

  I sat back, rubbing my neck. All that passion had produced massive tension in my neck and back.

  Nothing that couldn’t be solved by a quick jaunt on the ellipticals. I texted Leah, my best friend. Want to hit the gym in twenty?

  Hell yes, Leah texted back, almost immediately.

  Leah could always be counted on to accompany me to the gym. She was almost as big of a health freak as I was, though she was the type who was so effortlessly thin I should’ve hated her. She also worked at Children’s Hospital, but in the physical therapy department in the east wing. We met in college and had been friends ever since. I rarely ever went to the gym without her, because it was so convenient, right next-door, a five-minute walk for each of us.

  I found her in the locker room, already suited up in her tank top and workout capris. “How was your day?”

  “Stellar,” I said, rolling my eyes and rubbing my temples as I kicked out of my heels.

  “That good?” She grabbed a bottle of water from the bench and took a sip, a smile playing at her lips.

  “Sometimes I think parents want their children to fail,” I said with a sigh, unbuttoning my blouse and wiggling out of my skirt. “It feels like all I ever see are parents who are putting unrealistic expectations on their kids, wanting them to be models of perfection to compensate for the shortcomings in their own lives. It’s depressing.”

  Leah leaned against a bank of lockers and coiled her long, curly mane of blonde hair up into a bun at the nape of her neck. “That sucks. I don’t know how you do it, Jule. Seriously.”

  “Yeah. I mean, take this one girl. She’s not making bad eating choices on her own. Someone stocked the pantry full of Heigh-di-Hos.” I shook my head as I slipped into my workout clothes, then tied on my sneakers. “Maybe if her mom took the time to be a parent to her child and stopped undermining her, this wouldn’t have happened. And yet she puts all the blame on the kid. I feel sad for that young girl.”