Title: The Joy of Comfort Eating
Author: Suzanne Jefferies
Series: Standalone
Genre: Chick Lit/Romance/Erotica
Publisher: Fire Quill Publishing
Release Date: Nov 17
Edition/Formats: eBook & Print
Blurb/Rating:
It’s the worst day of Charlie Everson’s life. Not only can she no longer fit into her clothes—disaster for any public relations director—but also her first love, the sexy super-successful Brian Tendai, is her new CEO, the last person she ever expected to run into. Seeing him again tumbles Charlie back into her past. There are still so many unanswered questions: he’s convinced she left him, she’s convinced he left her. Charlie minimizes the ‘ex’ factor. Tell that to her emotions that are running wild.
But Brian’s not there to rekindle their romance. He’s overseeing Queenswood Communications’ recent merger after a hostile takeover. Guess whose name is at the top of the list?
They agree to one night together, just the one, then it’s back to business as normal. Or is it?
The Joy of Comfort Eating is a contemporary romance novel set in cosmopolitan Johannesburg.
Charlie picked up her diary, and some cuttings that needed
photocopying before making her way to the office kitchen. Her third trip of the
morning. She intended to make a quick in and out.
Conversations about Pauline Black, her viper-bitch boss, the
lack of proper coffee, the surge for new business, Pauline Black—a popular
topic—and the crappy pay, did not interest Charlie today.
When she arrived at work, James had not been by to say
hello. Nothing. James had not called that morning. He hadn’t even tried to SMS.
Or email. And her attempts to curl her hair with a straightener had resulted in
an untimely kink. Her sweater cooked her. But, thankfully, it covered her
backside.
This denim skirt is a
definite mistake.
Kicking open the kitchen door, warped from Gauteng
thunderstorms, Charlie immediately felt the change in atmosphere.
My word, the
kitchen was...what was the word? Buzzing. That could only mean
one of two things. There was either food, but there had been no reminder for a
birthday tea on the notice board. Or, there was a new man, and Charlie could
probably guess who.
As she shifted over to the kettle, trying not to catch any
stray eyes, she listened.
“Did you see what he was wearing?” asked Busi.
“Those shoes, I know,” answered Sarah, the intern.
“Hand-crafted, fine leather.”
“No, not the shoes, that shirt. It was just so”—she
gesticulated with her hands—“so square-cut, so masculine, so…perfect.”
“He is gorgeous, isn’t he? Married, I suppose?”
“No ring.”
“Lots of married men don’t wear rings.”
Charlie heaped four tablespoons of hot chocolate into her
mug, adding a drop of milk before beating it into a thick paste.
“I’m sure he’s not married,” said Busi, “he doesn’t seem the
type.”
Charlie poured the steaming hot water over the paste,
watching the chocolate bubble over as it swam to the top of the mug.
“Isn’t he fucking gorgeous?” Charlie heard Shelley ask
behind her. “What do you think? Oh, Charlie, you’re getting hot chocolate all
over the floor.”
Charlie wiped the underside of her mug with the sleeve of
her sweater.
“I said to myself: Now, Shelley, calm down here. He is just
a man and all—”
“Who’re you talking about?” Charlie interrupted. As if she
didn’t know.
“The new CEO.” Shelley took her mug down from the shelf, its
porcelain finish had a slight crack in it.
Brian Tendai.
“Very, very edible,” said Sarah, nodding.
“I can hardly believe he’s the new CEO. We don’t often get
good-looking men in here.”
James. James is good
looking. Nice. Good looking. Pleasant. Sort of boyfriend. Maybe.
Charlie slid her finger around the rim of the mug to catch
the escaping chocolate rivulets. “Who’s that?” she asked, slurping, feeling the
warmth ooze through the ceramic of the mug. “Brian someone or other?”
“Pauline mentioned him yesterday. In the meeting? Remember?
They say he’s divorced, and has two houses on the coast of France,” Shelley
continued, smoothing her bob to the side, and wiping away any stray mascara
from under her eyes.
“Lucky him,” Charlie murmured. She thought about walking
past James’ office. Maybe send him a funny email? I know, I’ll send him a WhatsApp wink.
“He used to be a big CEO of an electronics company or some
such. Something about digital music, I think.” Busi continued applying a big
glob of lip gloss.
“Doesn’t look old enough,” Sarah responded.
“No, not of someone else’s company. His own company. Some Internet business, or something to that effect,”
added Busi. “Damn, I best get back to my desk. Don’t want Pauline in here.”
Charlie felt her shoulders start to relax.
Reality check. Must be a different Brian. Hers wouldn’t have
been caught dead as a CEO of a communications company. Not even a listed one.
Now, as a lead guitarist in a rock band, definitely. That’s all he’d talked
about. That and Arsenal winning the Premier League, which seemed unlikely at
the time with Man U sucking up everything in sight. Busi had mentioned music,
though.
“Why the hell’s he at Queenswood, then? I thought he was
here to chop out the dead wood, then move on to whatever venture comes up
next,” Charlie asked, watching Busi and Sarah’s departing backs.
“C’mon, Charlie, I doubt it’s that dramatic. But I intend to
find out. After all, I am one of the most, if not the most interesting women here,” Shelley retorted, barracuda smile
in place as she took her tea and slunk out of the kitchen.
Charlie wondered whether or not the new CEO was having an
affair with Pauline. Panic struck her. Was James having an affair with Pauline?
He spent a lot of time behind her enamel blue door. Did he pace the floor
concocting strategies? Or did he ravish her angular body on her slab of a desk?
Just send the WhatsApp, already!
Having hoovered up most of her hot chocolate, Charlie
thought about placing marshmallows between Tennis biscuits, then blowing them
up into sticky delight in the microwave.
She checked the biscuit barrel. No such luck. She checked
her watch. Too early for the door-to-door sandwich man.
“And this here is Charlotte.” She heard Shelley in the
corridor before she saw her, beaming from ear to ear. With her hand on his
sleeve, she announced, “Charlotte, this is our new CEO.”
Charlie nearly dropped her mug.
Ooooh. My. Brian.
Brian-Badass-Tendai.
There. In front of her.
Here!
She felt the flush from the top of her head to the soles of
her feet.
“Char-lie Ever-son,” he said, stretching her name out. “How
are you?”
“Good.” She wiped away the chocolate moustache, and then
flipped her hair.
There was absolute silence as she drank him in; tall—still
tall—deep brown eyes, broad shoulders. His hands.
Remember those hands, she
asked herself.
Suzanne Jefferies loves to write contemporary romance and paranormal fiction. She believes in happily-ever-afters, in fiction. As a member of ROSA (Romance Writers of South Africa), she knows that she’s not the only believer in romantic tension and emotional power smacks to keep the romance reader hooked. A movie fanatic, she spends most of her time writing scripts, fielding production for short films, and trying again. Working in communication, she has done more than her fair share of corporate and investor PR, and now lectures in between editorial jobs for big, glossy company magazines. The Joy of Comfort Eating is her first contemporary romance novel.
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