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Reckless

Also by Nicole Edwards

The Alluring Indulgence Series

Kaleb

Zane

Travis

Holidays with the Walker Brothers

Ethan

Braydon

Sawyer

Brendon

The Club Destiny Series

Conviction

Temptation

Addicted

Seduction

Infatuation

Captivated

Devotion

Perception

Entrusted

Adored

The Dead Heat Ranch Series

Boots Optional

Betting on Grace

Overnight Love

The Devil’s Bend Series

Chasing Dreams

Vanishing Dreams

The Devil’s Playground Series

Without Regret

The Pier 70 Series

Reckless

The Sniper 1 Security Series

Wait for Morning

Never Say Never

The Southern Boy Mafia Series

Beautifully Brutal

Beautifully Loyal

Standalone Novels

A Million Tiny Pieces

Writing as Timberlyn Scott

Unhinged

Unraveling

Chaos

Reckless

Pier 70

Book 1

Nicole Edwards

Nicole Edwards Limited

PO Box 806

Hutto, Texas 78634

www.NicoleEdwardsLimited.com

www.slipublishing.com

Copyright © Nicole Edwards, 2015

All rights reserved.

This is a self-published title.

Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

Reckless– A Pier 70 Novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

Cover Image: © Igor Chaikovskiy | 123rf.com (front cover image - 7338452); © Jasminko Ibrakovic | 123rf.com (back cover image - 36000609)

Ebook Image: © magenta10 | 123rf.com (formatting image - 14284060)

Cover Design: © Nicole Edwards Limited

Editing: Blue Otter Editing www.BlueOtterEditing.com

ISBN (ebook): 978-1-939786-54-8

ISBN (print): 978-1-939786-53-1

Gay Romance

M/M interactions

Mature Audience

Table of Contents

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

Eleven

Twelve

Thirteen

Fourteen

Fifteen

Sixteen

Seventeen

Eighteen

Nineteen

Twenty

Twenty-One

Twenty-Two

Twenty-Three

Twenty-Four

Twenty-Five

Twenty-Six

Twenty-Seven

Twenty-Eight

Twenty-Nine

Thirty

Thirty-One

Thirty-Two

Thirty-Three

Thirty-Four

Thirty-Five

Thirty-Six

Thirty-Seven

Thirty-Eight

Epilogue

Prologue

Acknowledgments

One

“Damn it, Dare! Is it too fucking difficult to do what we ask?”

Cam Strickland choked out a laugh when he walked into the dark office of Pier 70 Marina shortly after six in the morning to find Roan grumbling to himself. Cam didn’t even need to look around because he already knew no one else was there.

Just Roan. And his pissy attitude. Happy Friday, y’all!

Smiling, Cam spared Roan a look. “Good mornin’ to you, too, sunshine. Talkin’ to yourself again?”

As though sensing he was overlooking her, Lulu—the two-year-old golden retriever who lived at the marina—came from behind the counter, tail wagging. “Mornin’ to you, too, Lu.” Cam dropped to his haunches to pet her while watching Roan.

Roan Gregory, Cam’s longtime friend and business partner, cast a sideways glance at Cam, one dark eyebrow cocking beneath the dark, shaggy bangs that covered his forehead before Roan returned his attention to the printer/copier (or office genius as Dare liked to refer to it) in front of him.

Looked like it was definitely going to be one of those days.

Cam gave Lulu one last pat, then got to his feet. Flipping on the lights and turning the sign around to show they were open, Cam watched while Roan took out his frustration on the fancy new machine that one of their other partners, Dare Davis—the man Roan was clearly irritated with—had insisted on purchasing last month.

“Dare’s not even here, so why’re you yellin’?”

“He should be here,” Roan muttered as he slammed the lid down and stabbed at one of the buttons repeatedly.

Well, the fancy machine had been new. At least until Roan had gotten hold of it.

Lulu barked once, clearly not happy with the loud noise. He felt her pain.

Cam didn’t try to hide his amusement with the situation, even pretended not to notice when Roan glowered at him, evidently not as entertained as Cam.

“So is it Dare or the printer you have a problem with?” Cam offered a smile, flashing all his teeth.

Roan faked a laugh, then rolled his eyes, eyebrows shooting downward. Too soon for jokes apparently. Still, Cam couldn’t help but laugh. He had to find entertainment somewhere. Might as well be here.

“Stupid printer,” Roan grumbled.

Cam was beginning to feel bad for that stupid printer, taking the brunt of Roan’s frustration and all.

Dare—always helpful, or so he claimed—had come up with the crazy suggestion for the ridiculously expensive machine after a huge falling-out with Roan on why they couldn’t just get rid of paper altogether.

“Who even uses paper anymore?” Dare had asked, dead serious.

Roan’s reply … well… “We do, dumb ass.”

Dare had even tossed out one of his statistics during his argument. Admittedly, Cam had been sort of impressed.

“Seriously, bro,” Dare had argued, “I saw a report. Somethin’ like eighty-four percent of businesses prefer Apple products. We don’t need paper and shit. Just get a coupla iPads like the rest of the technologically advanced civilization. Make people sign with their fingers… Easy peasy.”

Convincing Roan wasn’t easy peasy.

Dare wanted to save trees; Roan wanted simplicity. Cam, well, he didn’t give a fuck one way or the other.

Still, they’d ended up with the printer. Knowing Dare, he’d probably hoped Roan wouldn’t have wanted to spend that much money, but Roan had shown him.

Roan was nothing if not stubborn.

As was Dare.

When Roan stabbed the button again, Cam stopped walking, coming to a halt on the customer side of the long counter that split the marina office. While his flip-flops froze on the rough slate floor, his full attention was focused on his friend.

Just ask what his problem is.

Don’t have a death wish, Cam told the crazy voice in his head. Seriously. Cam saw what Roan was doing to that poor, unsuspecting printer.

It wasn’t like Roan to get quite so pissy first thing in the morning. By the end of the day, sure, Roan was known to be a little frazzled from time to time. Not this early, though.

Unlike the rest of them, Roan was a morning person. Usually. Cam, on the other hand, didn’t understand that concept whatsoever. Bright and chipper didn’t make an appearance this early in the day for Cam. Blurry-eyed, yes. Cheerful, no. Then again, no one else at the marina—other than possibly Dare—was a bowl of fucking sunshine, either, until they’d had a little caffeine in whatever form they opted to take it. Cam’s preference was coffee, and he could see the fresh pot sitting right there on the counter waiting for him.