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Available 4.15.24


Night Fever

Night Fever, December 2005
by Diana Palmer

HQN
Featuring: Rourke Kilpatrick; Rebecca Cullen
384 pages
ISBN: 0373770758
Hardcover (reprint)
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"True love doesn't come easily..."

Fresh Fiction Review

Night Fever
Diana Palmer

Reviewed by Sandi Shilhanek
Posted January 16, 2006

Romance Contemporary

Diana Palmer is a prolific writer who has had a long and illustrious career. Luckily for readers of a younger generation she is still writing new books, and her treasured older books are being reissued.

NIGHT FEVER is one such book. The reissued book is a hardcover which collectors will enjoy proudly displaying on their bookshelves. For those readers who are newly discovering the author a hardcover might not be worth the expense for a book that was previously released.

NIGHT FEVER is the story of Rebecca Cullen better known as Becky. She is the sole support for a family of four which includes herself, an elderly grandfather who is too ill to tend the family farm any longer, a belligerent teen aged brother, Clay who wants the finer things in life, but doesn't understand how hard they are to attain legally, and finally an elementary school aged brother Mack who is trying to understand how relationships both in families, and personal work.

Life is not easy for Becky. She wants to keep her family together as they mean everything to her, but in order to do this she must also work a full time job that takes her away from the farm. With her grandfather aging, her brother Clay experimenting with the seedier side of life, and Mack still to young to pull much weight around the farm Becky often feels overwhelmed, and while she won't totally admit it under appreciated.

When Clay's indiscretions land him in juvenile hall Becky is forced to confront the arrogant man she has met in the elevator at the office on numerous occasions. This man is Rourke Kilpatrick, the County District Attorney. He's dead set that he's going to do his best to break up the drug ring running rampant on his territory, and it doesn't matter whose heart he stomps on to do it.

Like any good romance the attraction between Becky and Rourke is well written, and readers can feel both the love blooming, and the diffrerence of opinion brewing between the two. Ms. Palmer has not allowed love to come to Becky and Rourke without an immense amount of suffering. As with most of her heroines Becky is young and a virgin, and innocent in the ways of the sexual world. Rourke is of course older, and had been a playboy, and finds Becky and her innocence irresistible.

Life in the Cullen household is full of one twist or turn after the other. As each curve comes it also throws another strike against the blooming relationship between Rourke and Becky. However love and faith in one another perseveres and the Cullen family comes out stronger for their suffering. The relationship between Becky and Rourke is also strengthened for what they have endured to be together.

NIGHT FEVER does have a dated feel to it, but as I said earlier I believe long time fans would like to have a nice hardcover for their collections, and newer fans will be glad for a story that they might have missed in their search of friend's bookshelves.

Learn more about Night Fever

SUMMARY

SHE HAD NEVER LONGED FOR LOVE LIKE THIS...

Rebecca Cullen didn't want to fall in love with Rourke Kilpatrick. At 24, she was saddled with the job of raising her teen brothers, tending their Georgia farm, and earning a living-responsibilities that all but choked her hopes for a personal life. Then Becky's brother was arrested on drug charges, and she had to see the district attorney.

D.A. Rourke Kilpatrick was notorious for his hard line against drugs. His good looks struck Rebecca as forcefully as his misbegotten blind justice. But to her surprise, he telephoned her, showed sympathy, and seemed to want to get to know her. Then, one night, his lips touched hers, and all she wanted was to feel his strong body against her—forever. But was the man she fell in love with just using her to investigate a crime? And could she really trust a man who had the power to destroy her—and break her heart?

Excerpt

1990. The elevator was crowded. Rebecca Cullen was trying to balance three cups in a box without spilling coffee all over the floor. Maybe if she learned to do this really well, she thought, she could join a circus and go on stage with her performance. The lids on the Styrofoam cups weren't secure — as usual. The man who worked the counter at the small drugstore downstairs didn't look twice at women like Rebecca, and who cared if coffee spilled all over a thin, nondescript woman in an out-of-style gray suit?

He probably figured her for Ms. Businesswoman, she thought — some rabid man-hater with a string of degrees after her name and a career in place of a husband and kids. Wouldn't he be shocked to see her at home on Granddad's farm, in cutoff jeans and a tank top in supper, which this wasn't, with her mass of gold-streaked light brown hair down to her waist, and barefoot? This suit was pure camouflage.

Becky was a country girl, and the sole support of her retired grandfather and her two younger brothers. Their mother had died when she was sixteen and their father only stopped in to visit when he was broke and needed money. He'd moved to Alabama a couple of years back and none of them had heard from him since. Becky didn't care if she never did again. She had a good job. In fact, the law firm's recent relocation to Curry Station worked to her favor because her office in the industrial complex right outside Atlanta was now only a short drive from Granddad's farm where they all lived. It was just like coming home, because her people had lived in Curry County for more than a hundred years.

She didn't have a complaint about her job, except that she wished her bosses would remember to buy a new coffee urn before much longer. This several-times-daily trip down to the drugstore snack counter was getting to be a grind. There were three other secretaries, a receptionist, and two paralegals in the office, but they had seniority. Becky got to do the mule work. She grimaced as she headed for the elevator, hoping she wouldn't run into her nemesis on the way up to the sixth floor.

Her hazel eyes scanned the area quickly. She relaxed as soon as she was able to conclude that the towering figure was not waiting around the elevators. It wasn't bad enough that he had a stare like black ice, or that he seemed to hate women in general and her in particular. But he also smoked those god-awful thin black cigars. In an elevator, they were pure hell. She wished somebody would tell him that there was a city ordinance against smoking in crowded public places. She meant to, but there always seemed to be a crowd around, and for all Becky's toughness of spirit, she was shy in crowds. But one day it would be just her and that man, and she'd tell him how she felt about his extremely smelly cigars.

Her mind drifted as she waited for the slow-moving elevator to descend. She had worse problems than the cigar man, she reminded herself. Granddad was still recovering from the heart attack two months ago that had brought his career as a farmer to an abrupt halt. Now Becky was feeling the increased burden keenly. Unless she could learn to run the tractor and grow crops, in addition to working as a legal secretary six days a week, Granddad's truck farm was destined to be a total loss. Her oldest brother, Clay, was a senior in high school, constantly in trouble these days, and no help at all around the house. Mack was in the fifth grade and failing math. He was a willing helper, but too small to do much. Becky herself was twenty-four, and she'd never had a social life at all. She'd just barely finished school when her mom had died and her father had taken off for parts unknown.

Becky allowed her thoughts to drift for a moment, wondering what her life could have been like. There might have been parties and nice clothes and men to take her on dates. She smiled at the thought of not having people depend on her.

"Excuse me," a woman with an attaché case muttered, almost upending the coffee all over Becky.

She came out of her daydream in time to pile aboard the elevator, already crowded from its trip to the garage in the basement. She managed to wedge in between a woman who reeked of perfume and two men who were arguing, loudly, the benefits of two rival computers. It was a blinding relief when they, and almost everyone else, including the abundantly fragrant lady, got off on the third and fourth floors.

"Oh, God, I hate computers," Becky sighed out loud as the elevator slowly began climbing to the sixth floor.

"So do I," came a gruff, disgruntled voice from behind her. She almost upset the coffee as she turned to see who had spoken. She had thought she was alone in the elevator. How she could have missed the man was the real question. She was only slightly above average height, but he had to be at least six foot two. It wasn't just the height, though — it was the man's build. He was muscular, with a physique that would have done a professional athlete proud. He had lean, beautiful, dark hands and big feet, and when he didn't smell of cigar smoke, he wore the sexiest cologne Becky had ever smelled. But his masculine beauty ended at his face. She couldn't remember ever having seen such a rough-looking man.

His face was all sharp angles and fierceness. He had thick black eyebrows and deep-set, narrow black eyes with a peculiar piercing quality. His nose was straight and elegant. He had a cleft chin — not terribly cleft, but noticeable. His face was kind of long and lean, with high cheekbones, and he had the kind of dark complexion that was natural and didn't come from sitting in the sun. His mouth was wide and well-formed. She'd never seen it smile. He was in his midthirties, but there were some hard lines in that dark face, and he had a coldness of manner that chilled her. His very best quality was his voice. It was deep and clear and very resonant — the kind of voice that could caress or cut, depending on his mood — and it projected easily.

He was well-dressed, in an obviously expensive dark gray pin-striped suit, with a white cotton shirt and silk paisley tie beneath it. And she thought she had avoided him, for once. Maybe it was her karma.

"Oh. It's you again," she said with resignation. She pushed the jolted Styrofoam coffee cups back into place. "Do you by any chance own the elevator?" she asked. "I mean, every time I get on it, here you are, scowling and muttering. Don't you ever smile?"

"When I find something to smile about, you'll be the first to see it," he said, bending his dark head to light a pungent cigar. He had the thickest, blackest, straightest hair she'd ever seen. He looked rather Italian, except for his high cheekbones, and the shape of his face.

"I hate cigar smoke," she said, to break the silence.

"Then stop breathing until the doors open," he replied carelessly.

"You are the rudest man I've ever met!" she exclaimed, turning back, infuriated, to watch the floors light up on the elevator panel.

"You haven't met me," he pointed out.

"Oh, lucky, lucky me," she said.

There was a muffled sound from behind her. "Do you work in this building?"

"I don't really work for a living." She glanced at him over her shoulder with a venomous smile. "I'm the kept woman of one of the attorneys at Malcolm, Randers, Tyler, and Hague."

His dark eyes slid down her trim figure, in its extremely conventional suit, to her small-heeled shoes, then back up again to her face, which had not a trace of makeup on it today. She had nice hazel eyes that matched her tawny hair, high cheekbones, a full mouth, and a straight nose, but her face was rather quiet. He guessed that she could look more attractive when she made the effort.

"He must have failing vision," he said finally.

Becky's eyes sparkled and narrowed as she got a firm grip on the cup holder and her own temper. Oh, the joy of dousing him with steaming black coffee, even if she had asked for it. But that might have unfortunate consequences. She needed her job, and he might know her bosses.

"He is not blind," she made a half turn toward him and replied haughtily. "I make up for my lack of looks with a fantastic bedroom technique. First I smother him in honey," she whispered conspiratorially, leaning forward, "and then I bring in specially trained ants..."

He lifted the cigar to his mouth and took a draw from it, blowing out a thick cloud of smoke. "I hope you take his clothes off first," he said. "Honey is hard to get out of fabric. This is my floor."

She stepped back to let him off, glaring at him. This wasn't their first encounter. He'd been making terrible remarks and scoring off her since the first day she'd been in the building, and she was heartily sick of him — whoever he was.

"Have a nice day," she drawled sweetly.

He didn't even turn. "I was, until you came along."

"Why don't you take your cigar and stick it up your...?!" After the doors closed off her last word, the car carried her unwillingly up to the fourteenth floor, where a man and woman were waiting to go down.

She noticed the floor number with a sigh. He was ruining her life. Why did he have to work in this building, when there was all of Atlanta for him to get lost in?

The elevator descended, and this time it opened on the sixth floor. Still fuming, she went into her bosses' lavish office, glancing as she walked at Maggie and Jessica, the other two secretaries, hard at work on opposite sides of the office. Becky had a cubbyhole adjacent to Bob Malcolm's. He was the junior partner, and her main boss.

Without knocking, she entered the big office to find Bob and two of his junior colleagues, Harley and Jarard, impatiently waiting for their coffee while Bob talked irritably on the phone.

"Just put it down anywhere, Becky, and thank you," he said brusquely, with his hand over the receiver. He glanced at one of his colleagues. "Kilpatrick just walked in the door. How's that for timing?"

Becky passed the cups of coffee quietly and received mumbled thank-yous from Harley and Jarard. Bob began to speak into the telephone again.

"Listen, Kilpatrick, all I want is a conference. I've got some new evidence I want you to see." Her boss banged his fist on the desk and his swarthy face reddened."Dammit,man,do you have to be so inflexible?!"He sighed angrily,"All right,all right. I'll be up in five minutes."He slammed the receiver down."My God, I'm praying he won't run for reelection," he said heavily.

"This is only the second week I've had to deal with him, and I'm already sweating blood! Give me Dan Wade any day!"

Dan Wade was the Atlanta judicial circuit's D.A. Becky knew he was a nice man. But here in Curry County, the district attorney was Rourke Kilpatrick. Perhaps, she thought optimistically, her employer had just gotten off on the wrong foot with Kilpatrick. He was probably every bit as nice as Dan Wade when you got to know him.

She started to point this out to Mr. Malcolm when Harley broke in. "Can you blame him?" Harley asked. "He's had more death threats in the past month over this drug war than any president. He's a hard man, and he won't back down. I've had a couple of cases down here before, and I know Kilpatrick's reputation. He can't be bought. He's a law-and-order man from the feet up."

Bob sat back in his plush leather chair."I get cold chills remembering how Kilpatrick once eviscerated a witness of mine on the stand. She actually had to be tranquilized after she testified."

"Is Mr. Kilpatrick really that bad?" Becky asked with soft curiosity.


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