"Being the wrong twin can land you in trouble - and romance!"
Reviewed by Clare O'Beara
Posted July 28, 2013
Romance | Romance Erotica Sensual
Derrick and Dylan have swapped places for a business
meeting. They're identical twins, and no-one will notice -
they hope. Derrick is in construction and Dylan's a doctor.
But it's just a project meeting, and Derrick needs the
personal time so Dylan unwisely agrees to impersonate his
brother. But Harper who works with Derrick does notice,
and he insists Dylan meet him over dinner later to explain
himself, in RAISING THE BAR.
Augusta, Georgia is respectable enough, but Harper
frequents a private club where anything goes, and the
sophisticated doctor is unsure of himself. Dylan doesn't
hide the fact that he's bisexual, unlike Derrick, and
Harper enjoys meeting a like-minded man. The part-owner of
the club, a choosy redhead named Freddie, works behind the
bar and notices the chemistry between the good-looking
guys. So next day when her brother tells her that he's seen
one of them with a girlfriend, she doesn't realise that
twins are involved, and just thinks Dylan is a skunk.
Marie Harte plays the twin card for amusement in her hot
story of a threesome, but she makes the serious point that
just because one twin is into an alternate lifestyle it
doesn't mean the other one is. Dylan, Harper and Freddie
find themselves compatible for a relationship, but
polyandry is not socially acceptable and such relationships
have to stay in the closet - however happy the
participants. A sub-plot involving Derrick and Dylan's
widowed mother starting a new relationship in her golden
years is good to round the brothers off as family members,
concerned for their parent and yet jealous of the space
their father had held.
Marie Harte has written several books including a
paranormal series, and RAISING THE BAR is an entertaining
short read about a committed trio, with some light bondage.
SUMMARY
One plus one plus one equals love. Dr. Dylan Warren is too old to be swapping places with his
twin brother, but to save a million-dollar deal, he’ll play
along. He never counted on a sexy, nosy male contractor
being able to tell the difference between them. In order to
protect his brother’s reputation, Dylan agrees to meet
Harper for dinner—at what turns out to be a high-class club
that caters to its patrons’ every need. Dylan has never made any bones about being bi, but he’s
never had two lovers at once. Suddenly, he’s in lust with
not only Harper but the hot female bartender intent on
serving them more than drinks. Between Freddy, a beautiful
woman who seems to know him better than he knows himself,
and Harper, a man who pushes his every boundary, Dylan finds
himself in that most uncomfortable of places—falling in love
without a safety net. Warning: Losing a bet may lead to sex clubs, threesomes, and
spankings. One sexy psychiatrist, one giant hunk of a
contractor, and one cute blond bartender combine in all
imaginable configurations…and then some.
ExcerptDylan Warren paced outside the government complex and
shivered in the cold December wind. Even in Augusta,
Georgia, winters could get a bit chilly.I can do this. It's nothing but a thing. No one has to
know. After taking a deep breath, he let it out and entered the
building, all the while cursing himself for letting Derrick
take advantage of his generosity. How could he have
forgotten for even a second that his twin was the Warren
brother who never lost a bet? Because of Derrick, the freakin' Bears—who couldn't
seem to win a game—and his own stupidity, Dylan found
himself doing something he hadn't done in twenty years.
God, I am too old for this crap. As he entered the
narrow corridor leading to professional suicide, he tugged
at the raggedy sweater that passed for Derrick's Sunday best
and swore again, clutching the handful of papers he'd
memorized last night. A gift for total recall was the only thing going in his
favor today. He had a meeting with his mother later that
he'd been dreading. As he waited in the quiet lobby of the
planner's office, he tried not to dwell on what might go
wrong with Derrick's stupid scheme. He had a hard enough
time living up to his mother's estimable reputation without
getting caught playing dress-up. Christ, if Dr. Barbara Ann
Warren got wind of this, he'd never hear the end of it. But
then, that might be preferable to hearing about— "Derrick Warren?" A prim older woman who looked like she
walked with a stick up her ass stood in the doorway to his
left and stared down her nose at him. The dreaded secretary,
Marly Bennett. Derrick had warned him that the woman ate
contractors like candy. "Yes, ma'am?" He gave her his best grin, and her frown
turned into a tight-lipped line. "Ms. Wielder will see you now." "Thank you." As he drew closer, he stopped and sniffed. "I
hope you don't think this too forward, but you smell
wonderful. You're wearing Vintage, aren't you?" She blinked at him. "Why yes, I am." The woman looked old
enough to be his grandmother, but the warm smile she gave
him told him she appreciated his noticing. At least the old
Warren charm hadn't disappeared along with his good sense. He entered the office and found the city planner, Natalie
Wielder, waiting impatiently at her desk. He stepped forward
and held out a hand. "Ms. Wielder." She shook it and gestured for him to sit. "Mr. Warren." She
blew out a breath. "Cut the crap, Derrick. You're late."
Apparently she and Derrick were on a first-name basis. One
more thing his idiot brother hadn't told him. He frowned. "I was told the appointment was for noon." "Try eleven forty-five. You're lucky you're good-looking or
Marly would have tossed you out on your ass. She has a thing
for younger men, you know," Natalie added with a smirk. Friggin' Derrick and his suck-ass ability to remember
details—like what time the meeting started.
"Sorry. I must have written it down wrong." "Whatever." Natalie waved aside his apology. "You know Harper." No, he didn't. Dylan forced himself to hold it together as
he glanced over his shoulder at the man leaning against the
wall, his thick forearms crossed over a broad chest. He had
sandy hair and dark brown eyes and was dressed in a flannel
shirt, jeans and work boots. A faint reference to Harper
somebody came to mind. Derrick had been bitching about
something...blah, blah, blah, and Harper fixed it. Dylan nodded to the man. "Harper." The guy had long
eyelashes, a tanned complexion and really large biceps. He
was handsome, ruggedly so. And not someone Derrick would
ever find sexually attractive. Dylan, on the other hand... "Derrick." Harper's eyes narrowed as he looked Dylan over,
but he said nothing more. "Give me the papers, Derrick. Derrick?" Natalie raised her
voice. Dylan turned away from Harper and his chocolaty brown eyes
and handed her the report he'd been carrying. "Sorry. Been a
long day." "And it's only noon," Natalie jeered. She studied the
notes, reading through Derrick's presentation, giving him a
moment to compose himself. A good thing, because Dylan found himself rattled. Derrick
had given him the bare bones about today's meeting. A
necessary evil to clinch the new city development deal.
Derrick had already been given the green light. He saw today
as a mere formality. Yet Dylan considered the meeting
anything but. Natalie Wielder treated him with barely concealed disdain.
He'd already been late. And holy shit, but this Harper guy
stunned him. Dylan had particular tastes in his sexual
partners. He was a professional, dated professionals, and
liked men and women equally. He cared less about pedigree
and looks than about a person's inner character, probably
because he'd grown up trying to figure out what made people
tick. But his reaction to Harper alarmed him, because he didn't
normally grow breathless around...well, anyone. He chalked
up his nerves to the threat of being exposed as a fraud and
did his best to focus. Natalie asked Dylan questions about the bid, and he answered
them easily enough. He concentrated on being Derrick, aware
his brother was counting on him. Sydney had finally put his
brother out of his misery and moved in with him, and Derrick
planned to capitalize on his good fortune with a weekend of
unbridled sex. The lucky bastard. If only the Bears had made that final field goal, Dylan
wouldn't have lost that stupid bet. Then Derrick
would have had to postpone his trip to Charleston.
Derrick would have answered all of Natalie's
questions. And Derrick wouldn't have to ignore an
unwelcome attraction to the tall, brooding Harper. Natalie asked Dylan a few more questions before turning her
attention to the hunky guy in flannel. She said his name twice, and Dylan belatedly realized Harper
had been watching him instead of paying attention to
her. Hell. Harper blinked. "Sorry, Nat. What's that?" She gave him an odd look. "You sure you got enough sleep
last night? You're as off as Derrick today." "Thanks a lot," Dylan muttered. Harper shook his head. "Just... Nothing." "Good. These figures are the same ones we discussed two
weeks ago, so I'm glad we're still tracking on budget. But
what about the additional buildings near the new civic
center? How are we on that project?" She included Dylan in
her question, and he didn't know what to say. Derrick hadn't
mentioned anything about some civic center buildings. What
the hell had happened to Answer questions from the
report, accept the job, and shake the barracuda's hand for
me. It's all just a lot of red tape. I've already got the
job? "Hmm, the civic center. Let me think." How to bluff his way
out of this one? Harper spoke. "I can't answer for Derrick, but I'd say we're
square. No issues on our initial groundwork for the new
government offices." Dylan coughed. "Yeah, what he said." That sounded like
something Derrick would say. Natalie nodded. "Okay. Then, Derrick? We're good. You've got
the project. I'll see you in two weeks for an update. Friday
at eleven forty-five." He smiled, relieved this farce was over. "Sure thing. Great.
Thanks." He stood to leave. "So has Sydney found me a house yet? I like her. I'm still
not sure how you ended up with her, though." Natalie gave
him a baleful once-over, and had Dylan not been playing a
part, he'd have enjoyed her seeming immunity to Derrick's
allure. "Sydney's great." She made his brother happy, and for that,
Dylan loved her. It didn't hurt that she also happened to be
as beautiful on the inside as she was on the outside. Yet
another great future sister-in-law to add to the family. "I
don't know about your house. She tells me to keep my big
nose out of her business." He'd overheard her tell Derrick
to butt out several times. No lie there. Natalie chuckled, and now that the stress of the meeting had
faded, Dylan could see the woman had nice eyes. She was a
little too businesslike for his taste, but he appreciated
her quick mind and wide smile. "I like your girlfriend. Tell her I'll call her soon." "I will." He turned, only to bump into Harper, and his
entire body locked up. "I'll walk you out," Harper said smoothly, his voice deeper
than Dylan's. Husky, sexy. And totally off limits for
heterosexual Derrick. Dylan took a step back and quirked a grin. "Sure thing, man.
See you, Natalie." Shit. He had to get away from this
place and back to his office to change. He checked his
watch. He had less than an hour before he had to meet his
mother. It wouldn't be good form to be late to lunch,
dressed in Derrick's attempt at business casual. Besides, he
needed to don some metaphorical armor—his business
dress and sports coat—because he had a bad feeling he
knew what she wanted to tell him. They left the office, and Dylan waved to Marly, who winked
back at him. He exited the building and had nearly reached his brother's
green SUV when Harper put a hand on his arm. "Yeah?" Dylan asked gruffly as he turned and nearly bumped
into Harper again. The man stood too close, caging Dylan
between the vehicle and his body. Harper smiled, and a sly expression passed over his face as
he gave Dylan a less-than-subtle once-over. "You must be
Dylan. Uncanny. You guys are identical." "Dude, I don't know what you're talking about." Dylan
snorted and ignored the sweat beading on his brow despite
the cold. Hell, he had a few patients who worked in the
mayor's office. If word of today got out, his reputation
would take a serious hit. Grown men didn't swap places with
their sex-obsessed twins. "Gotta go. I'll see you—" "Tell you what. Why don't we go back inside and ask Natalie
what she thinks? Maybe you could tell her all about
the faculties project we didn't get to in the meeting."
Harper folded his arms across his chest and waited. He
didn't look amused. "Oh, uh, that project." Dylan shrugged. "I agree with you.
We're on the same page, man. Don't sweat it." Harper raised a brow. "That's odd, because the faculties
project doesn't exist. I just made that up." "I knew that. I was messing with you." Dylan needed to
leave. Now. "You going to move or what, Harper?" "What's my last name?" "Dumbass?" Harper chuckled and stepped closer. They stood practically
on top of each other, and Dylan swallowed hard. "Yeah, and
there's that," Harper murmured with what sounded like
satisfaction. "What?" Harper licked his lips. "That. In all the time I've
known Derrick, he's never looked at my mouth like he wants
to kiss it."
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