The Dating Resolution. Hannah Bernard
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“I never knew I had a weakness for blondes,” Jordan mused.
Hailey didn’t even manage to draw a breath of relief before his hand dived deeper into her hair, cupping the back of her head, his thumb stroking her scalp. Goose bumps streaked down her back and up again, making her breath catch as she met his eyes. “But maybe I don’t,” he continued. “Maybe it’s just you.”
“This is not a good idea,” she stammered. “Definitely, absolutely, positively not. In fact, it’s a bad idea. A rotten idea.”
“It’s the best idea I’ve had all year.”
“You know there’s no point. It can’t go anywhere. Too complicated…”
“We’re not getting married,” Jordan murmured. Oh, Lord. He was kissing her jaw, close to her ear, his bristly cheek rubbing hers, and her goose bumps got goose bumps. “We’re just going to kiss.”
Hannah Bernard always knew what she wanted to be when she grew up—a psychologist. After spending an eternity in university, studying towards that goal, she took one look at her hard-earned diploma and thought: Nah. I’d rather be a writer. She has no kids to brag about, no pets to complain about, and only one husband, who any day now will break down and agree to adopt a kitten.
Books by Hannah Bernard
HARLEQUIN ROMANCE®
3762—BABY CHASE
3774—THEIR ACCIDENTAL BABY
3792—MISSION: MARRIAGE
3814—THE HONEYMOON PROPOSAL
The Dating Resolution
Hannah Bernard
MILLS & BOON
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CONTENTS
PROLOGUE
BREATHING in the familiar scent of chalk, Hailey squirmed into the small seat behind the dwarfish desk and faced her friend from the perspective of a nine-year-old. “I’d like to make a statement,” she announced.
“I’m holding my breath,” Ellen managed to say around the pen between her teeth. She pulled a thermos out of her briefcase and filled the yellow plastic cup. “Why can’t thermoses ever keep coffee warm more than a couple of hours?” she complained with a grimace after spitting out the pen and taking a sip. “Someone should do something about that.”
“This is an important announcement. Put down your coffee and pay attention.”
“Sounds serious. Is it about your New Year’s resolutions?”
“Of course. What else would it be this time of year?”
Ellen made a show of pushing her coffee away and leaning back in her seat. “Well, let me hear it.”
Hailey sat up straight, preparing for her dramatic declaration. “No more men!” she called out, emphasizing it with a sweeping hand gesture.
“Uh-huh,” Ellen said, returning her attention to the pile of paper in front of her. “Right. And you’re going cold turkey on chocolate too, aren’t you?”
“Well—”
“…and doing daily sit-ups?”
“Well—”
“And getting up earlier on weekends?”
Hailey frowned. This was the annoying thing about friends. They knew you too well. “This time, I mean it. Seriously. And for more than two weeks.”
“I see. Why? Must be pretty urgent since you invaded my classroom to tell me.”
Hailey glanced around the third grade classroom, empty of children, but not of children’s presence. Classrooms never were. “At least I waited until the kids were gone. Although,” she added darkly, “if someone had told me the truth about men at an early age, I could have joined a convent straight out of high school and saved myself a lot of misery.”
“You mean you hadn’t already figured boys out by third grade?”
“Nope, stars in my eyes until I was nineteen or so. I guess I was a late developer. Hence all the scars on my heart.”
“Aw, Hailey.” Ellen made a sympathetic sound, but her pen did not pause on the paper she was scribbling on. “Why are you