Jacquie D’Alessandro
Just Trust Me…
The second book in the Adrenaline Rush series, 2006
This book is dedicated with love and gratitude to the
wonderful, supportive people of PBE who came to my
Melbourne book signing and made me feel so special.
Thank you to Cheryl Heuer, Mary King, Sue Moody,
Nancy Barry, Alice Dunne and Kay and Jim Johnson
for giving me such a wonderful day.
And to my editor, Brenda Chin, whose zest for
adventure inspired this story.
And as always, to my wonderful husband, Joe,
who makes every day a Big Adventure,
and my beautiful son, Christopher,
aka Big Adventure Junior.
Prologue
KAYLA WATSON hurried through the Miami airport, cursing the high heels that prevented her from breaking into a dead run. Of course her gate was at the very end of this seemingly endless concourse. Damn it, if she missed her flight-
She cut off the thought, refusing to consider the havoc that would wreak with her already insane schedule. Her cell phone rang and she shot it an impatient glance, grimacing when the name
“How’d the photo shoot go?” Nelson asked without preamble.
“Fine,” she answered, forcing a cheery note into her voice as she wove through the crowd. “The photos will be fabulous. Perfect for the new ad campaign.” Right. Just don’t ask how much finessing and cajoling and feather- smoothing it took to make certain of that.
“Good. No problem with Alicia?”
The mere mention of the petulant model’s name made Kayla’s eye twitch. Alicia possessed a million-dollar face-and a diva streak the size of North America. She showed up late for her bookings, and was difficult when she finally did arrive. Which was why the photo session had run late. Which is why sweat now oozed down Kayla’s spine as she hurried to make her flight.
“Everything with Alicia worked out perfectly,” she told Nelson in a soothing voice.
“Excellent. You sound out of breath.”
“The shoot ran a bit long and I’m dashing to make my flight. I’ll see you at the office tomorrow.”
She’d no sooner disconnected than the loudspeaker warned, “Final boarding call for flight 254 to New York.”
Many gates and travelers still stood between her and her flight. Too many. Reaching down, she yanked off her heels and ran. When she arrived at the gate five minutes later, barefoot, sweating, breathless, the gate agent said, “I’m sorry, you missed the flight. But I’ll be happy to re-book you on the next one. It departs in two hours.”
Swallowing her frustration, Kayla thanked the woman, then, with her new boarding pass in hand, she flopped into the nearest seat, her mind spinning with the various appointments she’d need to reschedule courtesy of this delay-when all she really wanted to do was take some aspirin for her pounding stress headache and go to sleep.
With a sigh, she reached down to slip her shoes back on, and her gaze fell on an issue of
A short, humorless sound escaped her. Between her job, helping to plan her older sister’s wedding, dealing with the drama that was her younger sister’s life, her matchmaking mother and what seemed to be a never-ending string of miserable dates,
She glanced around at the nearby travelers. Most seemed to be business people, talking on cell phones, tapping on laptops, all engrossed in their own little world, oblivious to everything and everyone around them, frowning, looking stressed. Is this what she’d become? Unfortunately, it seemed so.
With a sigh, she picked up the magazine and settled back to read the article. By the time she’d finished, Kayla felt emotionally drained, yet at the same time elated, renewed and filled with purpose. The article’s dead-on descriptions of the discontent and frustrations she’d been experiencing both personally and professionally made it seem as if the words were written expressly for her.
Yes, she was stressed. Yes, she lacked balance in her life. And according to the article, if she didn’t shake things up, step out her comfort zone, things would only get worse. No change, no gain.
Her gaze settled on the handwritten testimonial scribbled in ink at the end of the article, obviously by the magazine’s previous owner: “This changed my life. I hope it does the same for you.”
Kayla closed the magazine and held it against her chest.
She hoped so, too. Because she badly needed a change.
1
“YOU WANT ME to go
After uttering those questions, Kayla stared at Nelson. Until thirty seconds ago, she’d thought her boss was a rational human being. Clearly, however, the man was insane.
Nelson stared right back at her over the tops of his bifocals. “To Peru. To spy. On Brett Thornton.”
“I flunked Spying 101,” she said with a breezy laugh. “So clearly I’m not the best choice.”
“You