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Today’s Kindle Daily Deal – Thursday, Nov. 24 – We’re Thankful for Two Great Reads at Great Prices! Save 89% on a Charlie Carillo’s funny, insightful novel that rewrites the books on father-and-son quality time, plus … the seedy underside of Paris: Fraud, squalor, prostitution, the illegal drug trade and characters that crackle with life in Collin Kelley’s first-class suspense novel REMAIN IN LIGHT (Today’s Sponsor)

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

Far beyond the light entertainment of Midnight in Paris, here’s a literary mystery that takes readers from America to London and into the dark underworld of the fabled City of Light….

by Collin Kelley
4.4 stars – 8 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Great as a standalone book, or even better as part two of a grander whole, this is the rare sequel that easily outperforms its predecessor in just about any way you can name, and it comes with a highly enthusiastic recommendation.  – Chicago Center for Literature and Photography

Collin Kelley ditches the guidebooks and takes us on a thrill ride tour through the seedy underside of Paris. Fraud, squalor, prostitution, the illegal drug trade and characters that crackle with life – it’s all here. Remain in Light is a first class suspense novel.  – Grant Jerkins, author of A Very Simple Crime and At The End of the Road

In 1968, Irène Laureux’s husband was murdered during the Paris student and worker riots. Thirty years later, she is still on the hunt for the man who knows how and why Jean-Louis died – his secret lover, Frederick Dubois.

Aiding in her search is American expat Martin Paige, a writer still reeling from a love affair gone wrong with a student, David McLaren. Martin meets a young poet, Christian, and the two fall in love, but their happiness is shaken when Martin’s friend, Diane Jacobs, arrives in Paris with news that David has gone missing.

Diane discovers that David’s disappearance is more than just a missing person case with connections to drugs, stolen identities, long-hidden government secrets and a shocking connection to Irène’s past. This literary mystery takes readers from America to London and into the dark underworld of the fabled City of Light.

Each day’s Kindle Daily Deal is sponsored by one paid title on Kindle Nation. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.

 

and now … Today’s Kindle Daily Deal!


Raising JakeKindle Daily Deal: Raising Jake

In Charlie Carillo’s funny, insightful novel, a divorced man gets to know his seventeen-year-old son in a tale that rewrites the book on quality time together.

Yesterday’s Price: $8.69
Today’s Discount: $7.70
Kindle Daily Deal Price: $0.99 (89% off)

Kindle Nation Daily Digest – Brief Tips, Freebies and Bargain Updates – Nov. 23, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving!

 

And if you’d like one more thing to be grateful for, there are still four days left to enter to win a Brand New KINDLE FIRE in our Week #7 Giveaway Sweepstakes, sponsored by Patricia Selbert, author of the 5-star coming-of-age novel The House of Six Doors http://bit.ly/rGoatZ


Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert

Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: Do you enjoy a timeless tale of young romance? Then you’ll love Elise Stephens’ Moonlight and Oranges – 4.9 stars after 14 rave reviews! – Just $2.99 on Kindle! http://bit.ly/tlV1ak


Kindle Nation Reader Alert

Kindle Nation Reader Alert: LOVE AT ABSOLUTE ZERO and more! The Engaging Fiction of Christopher Meeks http://bit.ly/sDCrYT

Today’s Kindle Daily Deal

 

Today’s Kindle Daily Deal – Wednesday, Nov. 23 – Two Great Reads, Just 99 Cents Each! Save 88% and meet “the perfect private eye” from the creator of Road to Perdition, plus … Love + Imaginary Man = Mayhem in Dara England’s LOVE BY THE BOOK (Today’s Sponsor) http://bit.ly/ut21cd

 

eBook of the Day
Good news for thousands of readers who have laughed and cried along with Diana Estill, and have also wondered “When is this woman going to write a novel?”

Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert: Diana Estill’s WHEN HORSES HAD WINGS is our eBook of the Day at just $2.99 with 4.7 Stars on 7 Reviews, and Here’s a Free Sample! http://bit.ly/DE-WINGS

 

Free App of the Day for the Kindle Fire

Cross Court Tennis is Amazon’s Free App of the Day, and you can play it on your Kindle Fire! http://amzn.to/svqJrP

KND Kindle Free Book Alert

 

KND Kindle Free Book Alert for Wednesday, November 23: OVER FIFTY (58) BRAND NEW FREEBIES in the last 24 hours added to Our 1,284 FREE TITLES Sorted by Category, Date Added, Bestselling or Review Rating! plus … Bjoern Joergensen’s SMALL MACHINES (Today’s Sponsor – $2.99) http://bit.ly/sYDNhV

Think ‘Douglas Adams meets Terry Pratchett meets Humphrey Bogart,’ with a bit of swearing thrown in for good measure. It’s not easy being a 20th century private eye in 23rd century London. Bjoern Joergensen’s SMALL MACHINES (Today’s Sponsor – $2.99) http://bit.ly/sYDNhV

Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert

Last Call: Gary Jonas’ QUICK SHOTS – “29 stories that will have you amazed, amused, scared, thrilled and entertained,” slashed 75% to just 99 cents for a limited time in conjunction with this Kindle Nation Daily post! http://bit.ly/sXBTeZ

“Whenever I doubt that I should be killing people, I take a job working with the public.”
(Ed. Note: That’s the first line of one of these stories. I don’t know about you, but the line I want to see next has only four words: Click Here to Buy. -S.W.)

Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert

Jack Harney’s Compelling Page-Turner THE MILLSTONE PROPHECY, 4.9 Stars on 19 Straight Rave Reviews and Just $2.99 on Kindle! – Bestselling author Mary Jane Clark says “It’s as if Jack Harney had a crystal ball!” http://bit.ly/tcO9Ts

 

Thriller of the Week

Today we offer a free excerpt from our Thriller of the Week, Bobbye Terry’s Nick of Time: http://bit.ly/u1TZZE

From the author of COMING TO CLIMAX, sheriff’s assistant Emily Franklin falls in love with newcomer Nick Troy and the two embark on a treacherous journey to discover who is hiding behind an evil web of crime. Amidst kidnappings, trafficking and murder, will the lovers’ happily ever after turn into a drearily dead down under?

The latest in Bobbye Terry’s Climax, VA Mystery Series NICK OF TIME

Be the first in your book group to discover
the author of the Briny Bay mysteries!

 

Romance of the Week

 

Romance fans: enjoy this free excerpt from our Romance of the Week, Adrienne Giordano’s Man Law: http://bit.ly/vGJqW8

A 5-Star “Best Pick” from Night Owl Reviews

Security Consultant Vic Andrews lives by his Man Laws:
* Never mess with your best friend’s sister
* Never get caught
* Never get attached
But he can’t deny his irresistible attraction to Gina Delgado….

 

 

Hope you’ve found at least one item of value here, and we’ll check in again tomorrow. Thanks, as always, for being part of Kindle Nation.

Steve Windwalker
Kindle Nation Daily

Kindle Nation Reader Alert: LOVE AT ABSOLUTE ZERO and more! The Engaging Fiction of Christopher Meeks

 

Red Adept Reviews says, “The author hit a home run. It’s a very good story, well told.”

by Christopher Meeks
4.1 stars – 21 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Love At Absolute Zero is about a physicist who tries to apply the tools of science to finding a soul mate. Specifically, when Gunnar Gunderson, a 32-year-old physicist at the University of Wisconsin, can only think of finding a wife, his research falters. To meet his soul mate within three days–all time he can carve out–he and his team are using the scientific method, to riotous results.

 

While “literary fiction” is a broad genre, Christopher Meeks has created his own niche, one that uses humor, depth, and romance. Amazon Top-Ten reviewer Grady Harp says Meeks is a “master craftsman” and “his stance in the echelon of new important American writers seems solidly secure.”

Just published, Love At Absolute Zero is about a physicist, 32-year-old Gunnar Gunderson, who tries to apply the tools of science to finding a soul mate—in three days. Chaos occurs. Diana Raabe of The Raabe Review says, “Gunnar Gunderson will pull at your heartstrings and make you laugh at the same time. I dare you not to cheer for him.”

 

 

“It is impossible not to like Gunnar Gunderson,” says Sam Sattler of Book Chase. “As he progresses from one disaster or near miss to the next, one views him with a mixture of compassion and laughter, but he is such a good-hearted young man that it is impossible not to root for him.”

The Brightest Moon of the Century follows Edward, a young Minnesotan, who is blessed with an abundance of “experience”—first when his mother dies and next when his father, an encyclopedia salesman, shoehorns Edward into a private boys school where he’s tortured and groomed.

 

Marc Schuster of Small Press Reviews said, “Meeks has come out with a stunning debut novel, and I have to say that I’ve gone from being an admirer of his work to a full-blown fan—bordering on, perhaps, groupie.”

 

Cherie Parker in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune says, “Minnesota native Christopher Meeks chronicles one man’s path to middle age and, in doing so, illustrates how choices and circumstances … have a way of irrevocably cementing a person’s future.”

 

SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS

Short fiction is where Meeks first appeared on the literary radar. Critic Grady Harp, who has reviewed all five of Meeks’ books in depth, cites that what Meeks does is that he has “the technical virtuosity of creating characters in a minimum of space and then unfold those characters in response to the movement of the landscape.” He says, “He is likely to continue on his climb to one of America’s more important writers this decade.” Try these:

The Middle-Aged Man and the Sea is a story collection about love, death, humor, and the glue called family. “So stunning…that I could not help but move on to the next story,” said Entertainment Weekly.

Months and Seasons was a finalist in the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award for best collection. “With this collection, Christopher Meeks proves there is an audience for short stories,” said Gary Roen of the Midwest Book Review.

(This is a sponsored post.)

Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: Jack Harney’s Compelling Page-Turner THE MILLSTONE PROPHECY, 4.9 Stars on 19 Straight Rave Reviews and Just $2.99 on Kindle! – Bestselling author Mary Jane Clark says “It’s as if Jack Harney had a crystal ball!”

“It’s as if Jack Harney had a crystal ball!”

New York Times bestselling suspense author Mary Jane Clark

 

The Millstone Prophecy

by Jack Harney
4.9 stars – 19 Reviews
Lending and Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Famed NYPD homicide detective, Dax McGowan, seeks to track down and kill the pedophile priest that caused his daughter to commit suicide. What starts out as an inner city foot race soon turns into an international manhunt leading to the Gates of Vatican City and beyond with startling results.

Lt. McGowan encounters obstacles at every turn. A politically weak response by the D.A.’s office, an intransigent and deceitful Catholic hierarchy, and a cast of highly trained assassins bent on killing Dax, conspire to thwart his every move. Why so much protection for this one, seemingly unimportant, hermit-like priest?

Further complications ensue as he encounters other players whose assistance he seeks to reach his prey. A female, child protecting, SVU detective is a constant reminder of what real duty means. A critically needed history expert predicts some surprising “penances” in store for the Catholic Magisterium. Most notably is Dax’s introduction to the leader of the world’s largest clergy sex abuse survivor’s network. A woman of intriguing secrets, she offers him a chance at love with unexpected limitations.

Author Jack Harney

A Note to Readers from the Author

While it was always my plan to be a writer, I had no idea my first foray would revolve around the subject of clergy sex abuse. However, viewing the Academy Award nominated documentary, ‘Deliver Us from Evil’ set me off on an almost obsessive mission to write, ‘The Millstone Prophecy’. It was my way of educating a larger audience to what was still happening to kids, while hopefully treating folks to what I believed was a good thriller of a story. I have to say, I’m extremely pleased that the many good reviews I’ve received tell me my readers experienced both an entertaining read and an absorbing of the facts.

The research and interviews I did for the book availed me of some inside information that was not only historic, but was woven into the pages of my work. Shortly after my book was released, on 9-13-2011, an official complaint was filed with the International Criminal Court at the Hague charging the Vatican and other named players of crimes against humanity. My friend and famed mystery writer, Mary Jane Clark, in support of my book, wrote on her Facebook page, “It’s as if Jack Harney had a crystal ball!” This sure said to me as a new author how critically important solid research really matters.

Jack Harney

An Excerpt from the Novel

Every few seconds, a muted “clear” could be heard as they checked out their assigned rooms. They finally stood together at the very back of the house in the kitchen.

…Dax had an excellent view of them. He was sitting stone cold still, curled up inside a dumbwaiter located in the kitchen and was peering at his wannabe assassins through the peek-a-boo slit of its door covering…their faces were covered by ashen colored masks shaped in the face of a wolf.

…He expected their next move would be to check the basement where he boarded the dumbwaiter.

…He could hear them now inches below him looking for any sign of his presence. He was struggling to breathe very shallowly. He wondered if his heart pounding in his ears was audible to his attackers. He knew the slightest sound would mean shots fired into the bottom of the platform draining his body of all its blood onto the basement floor. He concentrated on not blinking, concerned that the one additional sound, though minute, might make the difference and cause his discovery. He pictured the stoic and motionless stare of an extremely pensive Sherlock Holmes as his model of silence…

(This is a sponsored post.)

Enjoy This Free Excerpt From Our Romance of the Week Sponsor, Adrienne Giordano’s Man Law

Adrienne Giordano’s Man Law :

by Adrienne Giordano
4.6 stars – 14 Reviews
Here’s the set-up:
Security Consultant Vic Andrews lives by his Man Laws: Never mess with your best friend’s sister Never get caught Never get attached But he can’t deny his irresistible attraction to Gina Delgado, a young widow with three kids and plenty of strings attached. Even so, having a physical relationship doesn’t mean they’re “in a relationship.” Gina lost her husband to tragedy; she is not getting emotionally involved with another man in a dangerous profession. Sleeping with Vic is just stress relief. Until one of Vic’s assignments goes wrong and the target selects Gina and her kids for revenge. There’s nothing Vic won’t do to protect Gina and the children—the family he realizes, too late, he wants. He’ll accomplish his mission but will he have lost his only chance at true love?

The author hopes you will enjoy this free excerpt:


Chapter One
Man Law: Never mess with your best friend’s sister.

 

“Ah, shit.” Vic Andrews, butthead supreme, listened to the churn of the ocean’s waves. Or was it his life skittering off its axis?

Gina laughed that belly laugh of hers and he couldn’t help smiling. He extracted himself from her lush little body and rolled off. The St. Barth sand stuck to his back. Yep, they’d worked up a sweat. Salty sea air invaded his nostrils and he inhaled, letting the moisture flood his system.

Jesus Hotel Christ.

What had he been thinking? He’d been heading back to his room after closing down the resort’s bar and there she was, the girl-er, woman-of his dreams, crying on the beach. No condition for her to be in after witnessing her brother’s marriage to the love of his life.

Vic didn’t mention the fact it was 3:00 a.m. and she was alone on a secluded beach where any drunken asshole, like him, could have at her. Although technically he wasn’t drunk. Buzzed maybe. Big difference. Besides, they’d been at a wedding. Buzzed was allowed.

Gina moved and he finally turned toward her. “I’m-”

“No, absolutely not,” she said. She swiped at her curly mane of dark hair. Her face gave away nothing, but that meant squat. Gina knew how to hide bad moods.

The whoosh of the ocean lapping against the shore distracted him and he stared into the blackness.

“What did I say?” he asked.

“You were going to apologize. I don’t want to hear it.”

Apologize? Him? “I’m not sorry.” He touched her arm. “Are you?”

Please don’t say you’re sorry. Please.

That would be all he needed. He’d just freakin’ obliterated the sister rule Mike had invoked nearly a million-maybe two million-times. The sister rule was Man Law, and Man Laws were about the only rules Vic followed.

He only wanted to check on her, and before he knew it, voila, the clothes were off, the condom was on and they were humping like bunnies right there on the beach. At least no one saw them. All the well-meaning people were asleep.

Gina brushed sand from her legs and stood to straighten the sliplike dress he’d shoved up over her hips. The silky fabric glided over her curves, and the activity in Vic’s lower region made him groan. A thirty-five year-old mother of three, and she was killing him. He should be ashamed.

Screw that.

She was right there. Right there. And, because he’d probably never get the opportunity again, he should grab her and-

“I’m not sorry,” Gina said. “Not about the sex. I’m sorry about other things, but this, I loved.”

Vic retrieved his pants and stood. Gina and her honesty. Good or bad, she just put it out there and didn’t worry about the repercussions. He guessed it came from losing her husband at the age of thirty-one. She had nothing to lose.

“I need to go,” she said, watching him with her big brown eyes as the moonlight drenched her face. He put his shirt on. Did she have to look at him that way? Particularly when he wanted a replay.

“Aren’t the kids bunking with your folks?”

“They are, but you know how Matthew is. He might search for me.”

Fifteen-year-old Matt, her eldest son, took his job as man of the family seriously.

“Right. Okay.” Vic motioned toward the resort. “I’ll walk you.”

Gina held up a hand. “I’ll be fine.”

Nuh-uh. No way. “I am going to walk you. It’s late and you shouldn’t go by yourself.”

Hell, she shouldn’t have been out here alone in the first place, but he knew she’d tear him a few new ones if he said it.

She stood there, peering up at him and-God-she was fantastic. She had a classic oval face with high cheekbones and a nose he knew she hated. For over two years now he’d imagined running his finger over the little bump in it, but never dared. Every inch of her seemed perfectly imperfect.

Blown sister rule.

Gina shoved her fingers through her curls. “We screwed up. I can’t believe it. We’ve been so good.”

“We didn’t screw up. We had a simultaneous brain fart. Again.”

She laughed and shook her head.

“Anyway, walk me to the edge of the beach. You can see my room from there and can watch me go up.”

“Gina, what’s the big deal? Nobody will know we just-” he waved his hand, “-you know.”

“It’ll be better if you don’t walk me. With his mental radar, Michael is probably waiting by the door. On his damned wedding night. I swear he’s a freak. He should stay out of it.”

Oh, boy. She was getting fired up. Maintenance mode. His friend needed protection. They were both ex-special ops, but they didn’t stand a chance against all five foot three of Gina.

“Mike loves you. He’s trying to protect you.”

“From you? You’re his best friend.”

Vic ran his hands over her shoulders. “Yeah, but I’m not right for you.”

“The circumstances aren’t right. That’s true, but he doesn’t have to keep reminding me.”

“He does it to me too.”

They strolled to the edge of the beach, and he squeezed her hand. Don’t go. Just stay for a while. All he wanted was more time with her. Not a lot to ask.

On tiptoes, she brushed a kiss over his lips. A little hum escaped his throat. What the hell was that?

“I had a great time,” she said. “You were just what I needed.”

“I think a ‘but’ is coming.”

“We can’t do this again.”

Yep. Not good. “I know.”

She pulled her hand from his and hauled ass toward her room. Away from him.

He waited while she went up the stairs and she stopped in front of the window of the room next to hers. A minute later the door opened and Matt came out. He turned and, apparently using his Spidey sense, looked straight at Vic.

And we’re busted.

 

 

Chapter Two

 

Man Law: Never get caught.

 

Six Weeks Later

 

“You got me,” Vic said when Lynx picked up the phone.

Whose number had he just called? Knowing Lynx, he probably talked some unsuspecting blonde into letting him use her phone. His old army buddy now worked for the State Department and was completely paranoid about their calls being traced. When Lynx wanted to speak with Vic regarding sensitive matters, he sent a fax-a fax for God’s sake-from the FedEx store down the street from his D.C. office. Vic would call him back from a secure line-in this case a prepaid cell phone.

“You’re in a jackpot.”

Vic sat straighter in his desk chair. “Translate.” Lynx had a flair for drama, and being in a jackpot could mean a whole lot of bullshit things.

“The job you did for us last month.”

A car horn honked from Lynx’s end. He must be outdoors. “The Israel thing?”

“Yeah. The brother is pissed at you.”

“There’s a shocker. The sheikh should be pissed at someone.”

Namely Vic, who’d been hired by a secret U.S. government agency to take out the sheikh’s little brother, an Osama wannabe. Mike, the CEO of Taylor Security, liked to call them off-the-books jobs.

“No,” Lynx said. “He’s pissed at you. Your cover is blown.”

Vic’s shoulders went rock hard. He’d need a sledgehammer to get them loose again.

“What the fuck, Lynx?”

“Hey, I’m just giving you rumor mill here, but it’s coming from a good source. My contact at the agency accidentally let me find out. The sheikh threw money at someone who threw money at someone, and now he’s got your name.”

He shot out of his chair, every muscle in his body seizing. “Son of a bitch. Who gave me up? There can’t be six people who knew about that op.”

“Please. With the kind of money this guy can toss around, anyone can be bought.”

Vic grabbed a pencil from the desk, snapped it in half. “Did I get set up?”

“No. Someone got greedy.”

“My ass is in the wind?”

“Yeah. Watch your six. Gotta go.”

Vic punched the button to end the call. He’d wipe the phone clean and destroy it later. No harm in being careful. He stared out his corner office window. Just a businessman enjoying the June sun while the Chicago lunch-hour crowd swarmed the lakefront path. People everywhere.

Deep breath. Work the problem. When he’d taken the Israel job, the agency told him it was a solo mission. He’d sneak into the country as a tourist using a fake passport, and if he got into trouble, no one would pull him out.

He didn’t get into trouble.

He’d completed his mission.

For his country.

And now his cover was blown. Sure sounded like a setup.

The hammering in his ears started, and he stacked his hands on top of his head. This could be crap. Lynx said it was a rumor.

Vic hustled down the hall to Mike’s office and found him at his desk. Early in Vic’s army career, he and Mike were Rangers together and they had a history of saving each other’s asses.

“I got a problem,” Vic said as he stormed into the office and shut the door behind him. He took three deep breaths. Focus.

Mike snapped his head from his computer and stared. His dark eyes had an intensity that drove the ladies wild, but these days he was a one-woman man.

“You heard me right. I got a problem.”

Vic had maybe uttered those words three times in the fifteen years he’d known Mike. Each time, someone had been injured or dead. Mike leaned back in his swanky leather chair. Felix Unger’s contemporary twin could have decorated this place. Everything in chrome, with sharp angles and fancy art. One lone stack of paper sat neatly bundled to the left. Mike didn’t go for mess.

“What’s up?”

“Remember the job I did last month? Lynx just called. My cover is blown. The sheikh spent big bucks to find out who I was.”

Mike squinted. “Those fuckers gave you up?”

“One of them, yeah.”

“Do you know who?”

“Hell no. And it’s too damned bad, because I’d like to break his fucking knee caps.”

Pain shot through Vic’s jaw and he lightened up on the teeth grinding.

“Okay,” Mike said. “We can assume they’re gonna come after you.”

Vic stalked the office. Crap. Sweat beaded down the sides of his face and he swiped at it. He was losing it. Fear was not something he allowed himself, but this rattled him. When was the last time that happened? How about never? The last few months had been this way, though. Something gnawed at him, eating away his insides.

Five years with Delta Force ensured he could take care of this problem, but he didn’t want to do it in a city that had welcomed him when he left the military.

“We got a whole army of guys here ready to cowboy up,” Mike said. “We could even bring a few back from overseas.”

They had at least five hundred men in the Middle East protecting U.S. officials.

“Hell, I trained most of them and you want to put them on me? I can take care of myself.”

Fuckin’ A, bubba. Maybe Vic’s ego was getting in the way, but at thirty-six years old he’d had a whole career of spec ops training. Offering him protection came as an insult.

Mike shook his head. “Hey, asshole, did I say you couldn’t? All I’m saying is we put some muscle around you. Eyes in back of your head.”

Eyes in the back of his head. Mike had been his eyes for years now. Wasn’t he the one who’d given Vic a job when he needed one? Now they were partners. Mike handled high-end security, and Vic handled the civilian contractor assignments. The neutralizing-terrorists stuff.

“There’s no credible threat yet. I’m supposed to tie up man power for a maybe?”

Mike shrugged. “But you think it’s solid, or you wouldn’t have come in here.”

He had him there, and Vic scratched his head. The hammering in his ears went bye-bye, leaving behind the wilting end of the adrenaline rush.

“I brought a shit storm on us.”

Mike rolled his eyes. “Are we having a moment here or what? Don’t get ahead of yourself. Let’s see what happens. Meantime, put a team together and I’ll sign off.”

“We may not need them, but I’ll put something on paper.”

“Right. Let’s get someone to sweep your car and your apartment building. Just to be safe.”

Vic nodded. “Already on it.”

“Watch yourself,” Mike said.

This sucked. He should fight this alone, but knew if this guy came after him, he’d need a team. The gut shredding began. People, maybe his friends, were going to die.

And it would be his fault.

 

 

Gina had three checks for her brother to sign, one of which was for a company credit card maxed out by an overseas operative. Michael wouldn’t be happy.

A quick stop in the ladies’ room on the third floor allowed her to freshen up. She never knew when she’d run into Vic, but it always helped to be prepared. She fluffed her hair, checked her lipstick and gave herself a once-over in the full-length mirror. She wore the champagne pencil skirt and matching silk blouse her sister-in-law picked out. Not bad. Pretty darn good actually.

Roxann liked helping her choose age-appropriate clothes for the thirty-five-year-old she was, rather than the coed look she’d gotten used to. Gina liked her low-rise jeans and T-shirts, but maybe she was in a rut. A deep one. For four years now.

The romp on the beach with Vic made her realize she needed to make changes. To stop clinging to the person she’d been before Danny died. That person evaporated when a burning building collapsed on her husband and destroyed her world. Accepting the new normal hadn’t come easily, and she’d been fighting it by not altering the tangible things like wearing clothes Danny liked or hanging his uniform in the bedroom closet so she’d see it every day. Keeping things the same meant preserving some part of her cherished husband.

This included focusing on their children. On making them whole when half the parent base had disappeared. Putting their needs first and hers last. Wasn’t that what good mothers did? But somehow Gina the woman got lost, buried under the rubble of a burning building.

The time had come to dig out. Enter Roxann and her all-around good taste. Despite her penchant for classic clothes, Roxann could find things with a little funk to them. She made for a great sister-in-law, and Gina reminded Michael every day he’d better not blow it.

With a final flip of her hair, she left the ladies’ room and headed for Michael’s office. Vic stepped into the hallway, turned and smiled the slow wicked smile that always sent her heart into overdrive. Add the green eyes, the messy blond hair and the oh-so-sexy goatee, and a girl was done for.

“Hey, you,” he said. “What’s going on?”

Gina stopped a foot or two in front of him. Otherwise, she’d get whiplash trying to look up at all six foot five of him.

“I have checks for Michael to sign.”

He glanced toward Michael’s office, then back at her. Something was off. She searched his face, took in the rigid jaw, the crease between his brows and-bam-his eyes. Missing today was the twinkling mischief that promised a girl he’d put a smile on her face but wouldn’t relinquish his emotional armor while doing so.

“Are you okay?” she asked. “You seem distracted.”

He smiled the player smile this time. Like that would work on a woman raising three children. Puh-lease. Surely she’d lost her mind thinking he’d admit something to her. “Forget I said anything. If you need to talk, let me know.”

She stepped around him, but he reached for her and a zing shot through her arm. Damn. After that glorious night on the beach he couldn’t touch her without her body betraying her. Not that he’d touched her since then. On the contrary, he usually acted like she had a skin rash.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “You’re right. I am distracted. No big deal.”

“Fine. Just know my offer stands.” She held up the checks. “I need to get these to Michael.”

He pushed a curl from her cheek. What was with him today?

“Look at you.”

“What?”

Vic shrugged. “You look…different.”

Different? What the heck did that mean? “New outfit. Rox helped me with it.”

“Ah.”

Enough of this already. Because, really, she didn’t have time. She was getting nowhere with him when all she wanted was to get somewhere. And then he went and did it. He tilted his head and parted his lips just so slightly and a burst of heat exploded inside her. Suddenly, the hallway seemed tight. Closing in as his stare filled the space. At any second, it would occur to him that he should attempt to mask his feelings. The idiot hadn’t yet realized his ability to hide from her dissolved two years ago in her basement. That had been the first time she’d noticed the look and it still tortured her. Damn him for bringing it all back.

Her fingers twitched at the memory. Kneeling on top of the dryer battling the water that had shot from the pipe and doused her. And Vic staring at her in a way that made her miss having a man to curl up with.

“Holy shit,” he had said.

The words cut through the sound of gushing water and penetrated her focused struggle with the valve. “The handle is stuck.”

His gaze traveled along the ceiling, darting along the pipelines. Slow. Considering.

“Idiot,” she screamed, “the valve is here.”

He stepped around the large puddle forming on the cement floor and stormed to the back corner of the basement. “No kidding, but I’m not getting wet when I can cut the main supply.”

“The main supply?” What?

And suddenly, the river slowed to a trickle. She stared at the pipe, gave it a whack with the wrench. Bastard pipe.

For two years she’d been living as a single mom, dealing with appliances that failed, shoveling snow, getting the car serviced. Never mind raising three kids whose moods shifted like swings in the wind. She been doing it all, hadn’t she?

Without a man.

Until the flipping water valve got stuck. With Michael not around, she’d been forced to call Vic when all she wanted was to take a bat and smash that stupid valve to a million little bits. Just destroy that piece of crap. She pounded her fists on the washer because she didn’t need this evil, blasted, hateful valve making her feel like she needed a man.

Vic stood a few feet from her, hands on his hips. Did his lips quirk? She swore they did. No, sir.

She flicked the wrench at him. “Don’t you laugh. I’ll come down there and beat you to death. You will be bloody if you laugh at me.”

He remained silent. One of his better choices, because she was just mad enough to let him have it. She tossed the wrench down, pushed her saturated hair from her face. “I’m sorry I called you an idiot. That was mean.” She held her hands wide. “Look at me! I’m soaked.”

“Oh, I’m looking.”

The rumble in his tone drew her attention and she found him, head tilted, lips slightly parted, eyes focused on her…chest.

The one encased in a soaking-wet tank top.

A white one.

With a sheer lace bra underneath. Lovely. Her very own wet T-shirt contest. She gasped and spun away because…well…Vic. Never before had he done this, and heat poured into her cheeks.

Two years she’d been without a man’s hands on her. Two long years without passion. Without sex that left her loose limbed and quivering. And he had the nerve to look at her like he wanted nothing more than to put his hands on her.

Wait a second. Why not? She deserved attention. Didn’t she?

Besides, he had great hands. Big hands that let a girl know he’d take care of her.

And then she lost her mind.

She jumped off the dryer and charged him. He stepped back. “No you don’t, pal. You started this.”

Grabbing his shirt, she pulled him down and kissed him with the furious lust of a woman who hadn’t had a good screwing in twenty-four months.

He clenched her forearms. “Whoa, Gina.” Yet his mouth was still on hers.

She shoved him backward. “Problem?”

“Uh, no. Yes.”

Again with the tilted-head thing. “You’re doing it again. The look.”

“Hell yeah, because, holy shit, you’re gorgeous. Between the shirt and the wet curls, you’re like some kind of sea nymph. It’s making me crazy.”

“Okay, so we’re on the same page here. The house is empty. Just you and me. Two consenting adults sharing some good old-fashioned fun.”

“But.”

She ran her fingers under his shirt. “But nothing. Wow, you have amazing abs.”

He stepped back again. “Do you seriously want to do this? Because I’ve been hanging back. You green light me and we’re on.”

Hanging back? “You’ve been thinking about it? With me?”

“You just never noticed. You sure about this?”

“You bet I am.”

He shoved her against the washer, dropped his jeans and hoisted her up for what she hoped would be a good, hot romp.

He didn’t disappoint. On the contrary, he left her feeling just fine about the whole basement-flooding thing. Who knew that she and her brother’s closest friend could spark that kind of inferno?

Vic set her on the floor, pulled up his jeans, and Gina dug a dry shirt out of the dryer. Where her wet one had gone was a mystery.

The sound of footsteps above slammed into her. Michael and Matt yelled and she tracked their footsteps from the living room to the kitchen.

Vic stared at the ceiling. “Crap.”

At any second they’d be down the steps. She shoved her arms into the shirt. Matthew’s. Gah! No time to find her own.

She spun around to button her shorts just as Michael and Matt halted at the bottom of the stairs. She whipped back and faced the openmouthed shock on Michael’s face. His gaze moved from Gina, then to Vic, then ever so slowly to the floor.

Tank top found.

Uh-oh.

“Mattie,” Michael said, taking in Gina’s attire. “Go grab towels.”

“The hose blew,” Vic said.

It sure did. Gina twisted her lips to cage a laugh. How ridiculous could she be? Her brother and son almost caught her having sex and she was laughing? Horrible.

Michael eyeballed Vic. “Are you fucking kidding me? My sister? The widow? With kids?”

Uh-oh again.

He shifted to Gina. “And you? You have to be nuts.”

Don’t freak. “Michael, I got soaked. I had clothes in the dryer.” Stop. She shouldn’t have to explain herself. Not to her brother.

He held his hands palm out. “I walked in here, with your thirteen-year-old son, and it appears we interrupted something. At the very least, it was reckless.”

“Mike-”

“You shut up. I’m not talking to you now.” He put his head down, cracked his neck. “Whatever this is. It’s not good. For either of you. A man with a dangerous job and a vulnerable widow with three young kids… Gina, it’s emotional suicide.” He inched a step closer to Vic. “My goddamned sister? You’ll wreck her life.”

Gina huffed out a breath. “Knock it off. You don’t know a thing about what went on here. You’re completely out of line.”

He snorted. “Am I? Have I said anything that’s not true?”

No, he hadn’t said anything that wasn’t true. And now, Vic stood before her giving her the look that once again made her feel like the damned hallway had shrunk. After the basement incident Vic had kept those big hands of his, among other things, to himself. He’d been cordial. Disgustingly so. Like too much syrup on a stack of pancakes, and the sweetness made her ill. At times, she caught him staring and it infuriated her because they had never once discussed it. That was how it had been until Mike’s wedding and their second act of spontaneous passion.

Again, Vic went dark, keeping to himself, being sickly sweet. And now she was done.

She grabbed his arm, hauled him into his office and slammed the door. “Different. Could you have come up with a more generic word?”

He gawked. “What?”

“What does different mean?”

“Your clothes. They’re new, right? That’s what I meant.”

Of course. She’d given him the opening to talk about his feelings, to really go there and own up to his part in the off-the-charts sex, but nothing. Typical.

She propped a hip on the desk and sucked air through her nose. A burning sensation clawed from the pit of her stomach. “I’m in a rut. Trying to figure out who I am. All I am right now is Danny’s widow or the kids’ mom.”

Tears slid down her cheeks and she swiped at them. How could she be crying over something so minor? How did she get to this place and where had she lost herself?

“Please don’t cry. I hate that.”

He hated it? Please. “Here’s the thing, Vic. You’re back to being the guy who wants to run screaming from me and I hate that. We need to talk about what happened with us.”

He pinched his eyes shut, opened them again. “Why?”

This man was a major challenge. “Because I want to start dating again, have a man in my life, and there are times when you stare at me a certain way and it makes me think you could be that man. I need you to be honest with me.”

He pressed his fingers into his forehead. “About what? I’m not sure what you want me to say.”

“I want to know how you feel. I’ve been a widow for four years and in that time I’ve had sex three times. Two of those times were with you, and if it was a blip, a way to pass time, whatever, then fine. But I need to know so I can move on.”

“Who else did you have sex with?”

Was he insane? She’d just begged him to talk to her and he wanted to know who the other guy was. Crazy. “I’m not answering that. I don’t ask you about your affairs.”

He shrugged like she had a point.

“Wait, I will answer that. Why not? He’s an accountant that Martha fixed me up with last year. Nice guy.” She boosted herself off the desk and faced him. “No spark, though, not like on a beach in St. Barth or a flooded basement.”

Vic inched toward her, his eyes on her in that way that made her cheeks fire. This was it. Finally, he’d talk to her.

“You fucked an accountant?”

 

 

Chapter Three

 

Man Law: Always duck and cover and hold on to your ass with both hands.

 

Shit on a shingle. Did he really say that? He never could deal with women. Blame it on his mother, the heroin addict.

Gina’s eyes widened into big brown saucers. At any second, she’d go off on him. And then, oh baby, her eyes narrowed and she should have had smoke blowing out her nose. He was torn between wanting to jump out the window or tear her clothes off.

“That’s what you’re focusing on?” she yelled. “Who do you think you are asking me a question like that? Are you insane?”

That was it. He was insane. Had to be. He wanted this woman like he wanted his next breath. With that amazing rack and great ass, she had curves that sent his blood bulleting to the wrong places, and all he ever wanted was to touch her.

But it would never work. Not with his lifestyle. He could die at any time and she’d be alone. Again.

He stepped out of her reach. Just in case.

One fucker of a day so far.

“News flash, jackass,” she said. “I wouldn’t have fucked him, as you so eloquently put it, if you’d made yourself available.”

Hey, now. What’s that about? He’d have to play this cool. Contain the energy. Compartmentalize. He became a machine when it came to emotions, or lack thereof.

“It’s my fault you thrashed some nine to fiver?” So much for playing it cool, but, hell, how did he catch the blame for that one?

She poked her finger at him. “You don’t get to talk now.”

All righty, then. She was on a roll, and as pissed as he was, he’d let her get it out. She had one of those tempers that burned out quick.

“What do you expect from me, Vic? I can’t do casual sex, not the way I feel about you, and having a relationship? It’s a joke. Even if you were capable of commitment, which God knows you’re not.”

“I’m capable.”

She laughed, but it was sarcastic. “A relationship requires more than four weeks of dating, and from what I’ve seen, four weeks seems to be your limit.”

“Now you get to do commentary on my life?”

That made her step back. Gina, above all else, was a reasonable woman. Mostly. If he couldn’t comment on her life, why was it okay for her to comment on his?

She sighed and her shoulders slumped. “You’re right. It’s none of my business. Besides, what an awful thing to say.”

He scratched the back of his head. “You’re mad. It’s okay.”

“No one is entitled to be cruel to someone they care about.” She leaned back into the desk. “You terrify me. With your job, I shouldn’t let you into our lives. We’d get used to having you around and then one day, you don’t come back, and my kids have lost another man. Bottom line, when you’re ready to make changes and have a relationship with me, then you can ask about my social life. Until then, butt out.”

Mike tore through the door, eyes burning. Shit.

“What’s going on?”

“Nothing.” Gina said. “We’re talking.”

“Yeah, hello, half the floor can hear you talking about fucking some accountant.” He glared at Vic. “What the hell? This is an office. I warned you about this.”

He opened his mouth, but Mike had turned to Gina. “Whatever this is, take it outside my building.”

Gina’s shoulders flew back. “Michael!”

“No. I told you too. He’s not going to give up playing cowboy. You know it. You’ll give in, though, and when he comes home in a body bag, you’ll grieve all over again.” Michael shook his head. “I guess losing your first husband in a collapsed building wasn’t enough for you.”

Now he’d gone too far. Mike had an explosive temper and sometimes said dumbass things, which Vic could tolerate, but not this time. He put his hand on Mike’s chest. “You made your point. Shut up.”

Michael pushed him off. “You’re screwing up my sister’s life.”

“He is not,” Gina said in a loud voice.

Michael grunted, locked his lips together and stormed off.

Vic eased his head back and stared at the ceiling. Could it possibly still be the same day? “Not good.”

Gina put her hands over her eyes. Please don’t cry. Please. If she started to cry, he’d put a bullet in his head.

“Are you okay?”

Heading toward the door, she said, “No, I’m not. I’m seriously pissed at you.”

 

 

That evening Vic pushed through Mike and Roxann’s kitchen door just as she slid a tray of lasagna into the oven. The smell of cheese and garlic assaulted him and his stomach howled. Roxann ordered the food from a restaurant, because, even though she enjoyed hosting family get-togethers, everyone knew she couldn’t cook.

“Sit,” she said to him.

“Actually,” he said, holding up the empty bottle of wine, “your mom wants more of this red and there’s none out there.”

Roxann pointed to one of the chairs at the kitchen table.

He stayed standing. He knew Roxi well enough to know she had something on her mind, and it most likely involved the smackdown in his office, but he wouldn’t let himself get sucked into some lame-ass conversation about how he screwed up. “What do you need?”

“I need you to have a lobotomy.”

Oh, what the fuck? “I’m outta here.”

She beat him to the door. “No, you don’t. Have a seat.”

“Rox, it’s been a hellacious day. I’m not up for this.”

“You’re not going to let Gina go, are you?”

Vic analyzed her. What the hell kind of angle could she be playing?

“You obviously have feelings for her, or you wouldn’t have behaved so poorly today.”

He sat. “Did Mike tell you? Or Gina?”

“Gina.”

“Good. I’m not sure how much Mike knows-I’m assuming you know about what happened on the beach?”

Roxi nodded and he tried to ignore the burning in his cheeks. “Like I said, I don’t know how much Mike knows. Hopefully not a lot, and I need it to stay that way. He gets fucked-excuse my French-in the head about this subject.”

“Tell me about it. I live with him.”

With his elbows propped on the table, Vic lowered his head into his hands. “I’m tired.” His Southern drawl slipped and he smacked his lips together. He’d learned to hide the accent, but at times it made itself evident.

Roxi squeezed his wrist. “I know, but you have to fix this. I’ll deal with Michael. He was wrong to interfere. It’s not fair to Gina, though. Did you at least apologize?”

Vic eyed the door.

“You didn’t?” Roxann shook her head.

“Sort of.”

She put up her hands. “Did you say the words I’m sorry? Nothing else counts.”

He scrubbed his hands over his face. What. The. Fuck. “She’s got me all twisted up. I’m trying to do the right thing. Mike asked me to stay away, given the dangerous job and all, and I do care about Gina. I don’t want her to get hurt again.”

Roxann sighed.

He had to make her understand. “Rox, I love my job and I’m good at it. I can’t throw away years of training.”

“So, it’s the job or Gina? No happy medium?”

“No. I’m alone for a reason. I don’t have to worry about anyone but me.”

Good thing too, because right now, with this Sirhan crap, he only had himself to worry about.

“Why couldn’t you help run the business rather than going into the field?”

Vic scoffed. “You’re not listening. I want to be in the middle of it. I like it.”

Gina came through the door. And glared at Vic.

“Rox, I’m sorry,” she said. “Lily isn’t feeling well and we’re going to head home. Michael said he’d take us.”

Roxann puckered her lips. That couldn’t be good for him.

“Vic can take you.”

What the fuck? “Huh?”

“I need Michael to help me here. The boys can stay and have dinner. We’ll bring them later. You take care of Lily.”

The two of them stared at her, but Rox had that blonde girl smile going for her and Vic didn’t want to argue. Not in her own home. At least some of his aunt’s lessons had stuck.

“Sure,” he said.

“Great,” Gina said.

“Wonderful,” Roxann said.

 

 

Lily fell asleep in the car. Poor kid was dead on her feet. Vic pulled his Tahoe into the driveway behind Gina’s house and parked next to her mini SUV. The narrow alley had houses packed tight on both sides, and when a car went barreling through, Vic had the urge to holler at the driver to slow down. What if Lily had been playing in the driveway? Asshole.

The evening sun faded fast, but the temperature was hanging in there. He looked up at the sky-no clouds. Stars would abound. A good night for a sail.

“I’ll carry her in,” he said.

“It’s okay. I’ll wake her up. Roxann is waiting dinner for you.”

He snorted. “Roxann is not waiting and you know it.”

Nothing doin’ on that idea. She sent enough food with Gina to feed them for three days. No, Roxann pretty much beat him over the head with the idea he should not come back. She wanted him to square things with Gina. He wanted to square things with Gina. He couldn’t take her being pissed at him.

Vic opened the rear passenger door and scooped Lily up. The kid was a peanut. “We need to talk,” he said.

“Let me get her settled first.”

He cradled Lily in his arms and got a whiff of strawberries. Probably her shampoo. Lily was obsessed with strawberries. She ate them nonstop, wore them on her clothes, her barrettes, her socks. Whatever she could think of. Sweet kid. He kissed her on the forehead.

“She feels hot. Does she have a fever?”

“I think so. I’ll give her something.”

“Is she going to be okay?” Damn, he adored Lily.

“It’s probably the stomach flu.”

Vic went through the kitchen and dining room to the living room. Gina’s house had to be a hundred years old. One of those old brick deals that could withstand the worst hurricane-force winds. The carpet had a broken-in feel he liked. He hated houses resembling museums. He didn’t want to get screamed at when he accidentally dumped a beer.

He marched up the creaking steps into Lily’s room and deposited her on the bed. He glanced around the pretty room. A typical little girl space with dolls on the shelves and pink bed linens. One tall dresser, white with pink trim, and a framed picture of her dad on top sat along the far wall. Oh, and how could he have guessed? Strawberries on the wallpaper.

He snorted. “I’ll wait downstairs. We’ll talk when you’re done here.”

Talking. His favorite thing in the world. Kill me now.

 

Vic had set food and dishes on the table. Gina stood in the doorway of her little kitchen trying to remember the last time she’d found a meal ready for her. Danny had done it, but she couldn’t place when and the agony that came with being a widow shattered her rib cage. Losing the memory of those little moments destroyed her. How could she not remember the last time her husband, her high school sweetheart and a man she’d treasured, had prepared a meal? She’d taken too much for granted back then.

After Danny died, she repainted the kitchen a bright, sunny yellow. Mealtime had been family time and they’d spent countless hours huddled around the table, laughing, telling stories, hearing about everyone’s day. In the beginning, the memories were too painful and altering the kitchen seemed like a fresh start. She and the kids still did family time, but there was now a new cherry table for four to go with the updated wall color.

Vic stuck his head up from the refrigerator. “Salad dressing?”

“On the shelf. Toward the back. The kids can’t remember to put it on the door.” She looked at the table again. He’d even put her place setting in the spot she usually sat. “This is nice. Thank you.”

He cracked open the bottle of salad dressing. “I hope you don’t mind, but I’m eating too. I’m starved and it’ll probably take me the next hour to figure out how to convince you I’m sorry. I figure we can eat while I talk.”

She smiled at his logic. Nothing came between a man and a good meal. “You’re allowed to eat. Just because I’m mad at you doesn’t mean I never want to see you again.”

Scraping the chair back for her, Vic held out a hand and she sat down. At least they were being civil.

Gina began doling out food. “I’m confused about today. We seem to be stuck between friends and something more.”

This would be torture for Vic, but why should they beat around the bush? Sweat peppered his upper lip. Sweat? Over a conversation? This man was completely terrified of emotional upheaval.

“Here it is,” he said. “When you told me you’d been with someone else, it surprised me. I try not to think about you being on dates. I also don’t bring dates around when I know you’ll be there.”

The fork stopped midway to her mouth. “You do that?”

He huffed. “Can you give me some credit for being a decent guy? I don’t think it would be right to put some girl in front of you after what happened downstairs. And on the beach.”

“I wasn’t flaunting that I’d been with someone. At least, I didn’t set out to.”

He propped his elbows on the table. “I’m sorry for being shitty to you. Like every other time my emotions take over, I acted like an ass. I’m sorry.”

Gina took her half-eaten meal to the sink. She needed something to do. Were they really having this conversation? Would it get them anywhere? She stared out the kitchen window at the house on the other side of the alley. The Jeffersons lived there, and every time Danny would see them he’d sing the theme song from the old sitcom. She could still hear him. “Movin’ on up…” She laughed at the thought.

“You know, after Danny died, one of his firefighter friends brought me a letter he’d written.” She stopped. Swallowed hard. Let the chill running through her subside. “He must have sensed something might happen, because he wrote it a few months before he died.”

She turned toward the table.

Vic shifted in his chair. “You shouldn’t tell me this. It’s between you and Danny.”

“It’s okay. I need for you to understand.” She took the seat next to Vic. She’d never told anyone about the letter and felt a pang of something inside. Regret? Guilt for sharing Danny’s thoughts?

She shook it off. “He apologized for leaving me to raise three kids. He shared his hopes for the kids, things he wanted me to tell them, but the important thing was he asked me to give them a stable home. To make them as comfortable as I could without a dad.”

Gina stopped, cleared her clogging throat. She grabbed a napkin from the table, blew her nose.

“Please. Let’s not do this.”

Vic’s lips went white. Probably from the pressure of squeezing them shut. He had to learn to relax about this stuff. He was easygoing about everything else, but anything involving emotions seemed taboo with him.

“I need you to understand,” she said.

“It doesn’t matter.”

“Yes, it does. Suppose you and I decide we want to be a couple, and I start bringing you around. We have dinners together, go places with the kids. They’d get used to it. They love you anyway, so it would be easy for them.”

With a nod, he said, “It would be easy for me too.”

“I don’t know what your real job is. I think I make pretty accurate assumptions because I run the company checks. I see your expense reports. I know you’ve been in Afghanistan and Israel over the last two months. Those are dangerous places. If you become part of our lives and I have to sit home while you’re on a trip, I’ll go crazy. I would always wonder if you’re okay. Heck, I wonder a little bit now. If we were a couple, it would distract me from giving my kids what my husband asked. Part of having a stable environment is having a mother who is consistent with her emotions.”

Vic shrugged. “I get that. Believe me. It’s why I’m not married. It’s why I never let myself get close to thinking about it. I don’t want to check in. I need to stay focused and I can’t do that when I get emotional. You saw it today.”

The phone rang. Gina thought about ignoring it, but what if it was one of the boys? She grabbed the cordless from the base on the wall, checked the ID.

“It’s Michael’s number.” She clicked the talk button. “Hello? Hi, Rox. Lily’s fine. She’s sleeping. Vic and I are talking… Hmmm. Are you sure? No, I don’t mind.”

She hung up. Oh boy.

“What’s up?” he asked, putting his dirty dish in the sink.

“The boys are staying there tonight. They want to watch Friday the 13th on Michael’s new television.”

Vic laughed. “I don’t blame them. It’s a kick-ass TV.”

“Boys and their toys. Anyway, are we going anywhere with this conversation?”

Leaning against the counter, dressed in his faded jeans and his beat-up sandals, he finally relaxed.

“We probably understand each other better.”

Gina went to him but stayed back a foot. No sense getting too close and self-combusting. Whenever she entered his orbit, something in her brain went whacky and all she wanted was to cuddle up with him.

“We can’t continue to avoid each other,” she said. “If we’re not going to move forward, we should feel free to date other people. You’re at all of our family functions. Why should you feel like you can’t bring women around?”

“I don’t like that idea.”

Holding her hands palm up, Gina asked, “What are we going to do, spend the next ten years not bringing dates around? That’s not okay with me. I want to be able to have someone in my life again. I don’t need a man, but I’d like companionship. I’d like my kids to have a man around.”

And if Vic couldn’t be that man, she had to let him go. Disappointment crept into her heart. Maybe she wouldn’t get over lusting after him, but she’d live with it. She’d had practice.

Gina held his attention as he took a deep breath and shook his head. “It shouldn’t be this hard.”

For a thirty-six-year-old man who’d seen so much death, he was clueless. “When you care about someone, it should be hard. We can’t continue to do this. It’s not fair to either one of us. It doesn’t mean we can’t care about each other.”

God, this sucked. Her body went numb. They weren’t even a couple and it felt like a breakup. Or maybe a loss of hope. She had hope for her children, but when it came to her own life, she wasn’t sure anymore. She had to raise three kids. Her life had to wait.

Gina swiped at her eyes. And now she was crying. Fabulous.

Vic wrapped his arms around her and squeezed. “I can’t give you what you need. I want to. I really do, but I can’t find the compromise.”

Settling her head against his chest, she inhaled. Vic always had a clean, salty-air scent and it tore something inside of her loose. She ran her hands over his back, just for a second, to savor it. He stroked her hair and she glanced up at him, the silence in the room causing her lungs to strain. She should break the contact. Step back.

And then he kissed her.

Oh, no. No, no, no. Not doing this.

But his kiss was an unexpected gentle touch of his lips, so different from the night on the beach. Last time had been fast and searing. This kiss had her falling, falling, falling. Just enjoy it. Only for a few seconds. Then she’d push him away.

His goatee pricked her chin, but she didn’t want to stop. Ever. Not when her body craved his warmth. They connected on too many levels for it to end.

“We should stop, right?” Vic asked, kissing her again.

For a man who didn’t like to talk, why the hell was he talking?

“Probably,” she replied without removing her hands from his butt. How her hands got there, she had no idea.

Then he backed her into the counter and it was all over.


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Moonlight and Oranges

by Elise Stephens

 

Destined love … a secret dream journal … a psychic’s riddle…

 

by Elise Stephens
4.9 stars – 14 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

Here’s the set-up:
Lorona Connelly is ready for a change from her carefully planned, bookish life. When sparks fly at a costume party, she embraces a chance for romance with the handsome Kestrin Feather. However, she quickly realizes that even love and destiny may not be enough to overcome the reality of an overprotective mother-in-law and Kestrin’s long, tarnished history of relationships.
When Lorona’s curiosity leads her to Kestrin’s journal, doubt plagues them both with insecurities and threatens the relationship. Can true love overcome the odds, or was their whirlwind romance just a frivolous crush? Author Elise Stephens shares a journey of young love, fate, and wounded trust in the story of Lorona and Kestrin, a couple who must learn to overcome their fears to share a life together.

 

About the author:
Elise Stephens received the Eugene Van Buren Prize for Fiction from the University of Washington in 2007, where she also received her degree in Creative Writing.  Moonlight and Oranges is her first novel, and was a quarter-finalist for the 2011 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award.  She Lives in Seattle, Washington with her husband where they both enjoy swing dancing, eating tiramisu, and savoring the flavor of local live theater.  Her website is www.elisestephens.com.

(This is a sponsored post.)

KND Kindle Free Book Alert for Wednesday, November 23: OVER FIFTY (58) BRAND NEW FREEBIES in the last 24 hours added to Our 1,284 FREE TITLES Sorted by Category, Date Added, Bestselling or Review Rating! plus … Bjoern Joergensen’s SMALL MACHINES (Today’s Sponsor – $2.99)

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Think 'Douglas Adams meets Terry Pratchett meets Humphrey Bogart,' with a bit of swearing thrown in for good measure.

Small Machines

by Bjoern Joergensen
5.0 stars - 1 reviews
Supports Us with Commissions Earned
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here's the set-up:
It's not easy being a 20th century private eye in 23rd century London. Sebastian Poe realised this first hand long ago, but when you're obsessed with living in black and white, wearing a fedora and trenchcoat and doing your best to ignore all technological advances of the last two hundred years, trivial matters like profitability and personal hygiene go out the window. So when he gets a new client, who's rich, stunningly beautiful and needs his help finding the killers of her twice dead husband, he throws himself at the case with gusto and the assistance of his cybernetic dog Halfie and a group of mutants with powers of questionable usefulness.
One Reviewer Notes:
I really enjoyed this book...there are laugh-out-loud passages on almost every page - and contrary to other "humor" books it stays funny until the very end. The humor is distinctly dry and British but it definitely has broad appeal even for those of us that don't hail from that part of the world. The setting is futuristic and the author's clever observations on our current state of affairs lead to some truly hilarious predictions on how things are going to look 227 years from now where the may or may not be flying cars... Funniest book I have read in a long time!!
Kongrufus
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Small Machines
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From the Wall Street Journal bestselling author of 44 Chapters About 4 Men (inspiration for the Netflix original series Sex/Life) comes an immersive romantic suspense trilogy with a dark, dystopian twist.I swore I’d never step foot in this town again, but thirteen foster homes and a looming...
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Bad Boys Don't Die
By: BB Easton
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Before starting any work on identifying with Asperger's, it is very prescribed that you initially acquire the assent and counsel of a certified wellbeing, training or social consideration proficient. Should you utilize the data contained in this without first counseling a wellbeing, training or...
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"I'd rather be a savage with you...than be civilized on my own."Jameson Briggs grew up in a savage world.A survivor of the pandemic. An orphan at twelve. A brilliant poet, bullied for his words. A cutthroat pirate, ruthlessly hunted.But when a disastrous shipwreck leaves him stranded in a foreign...
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Away from Harm is the first book in an EMP survival series with realistic characters who are forced into an extraordinary situation. It's a story of survival, resilience and second chances.Emma: Emma knew that leaving her increasingly dangerous husband would be the hardest thing she's ever done....
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Diamond Grove has been owned by gangs since its conception,and out of the ashes of war, the Red Diamonds rose and claimed the crown of the city.We made our people prosper, we saved them.We may be a gang but we are also a family, and nobody f*cks with our family and gets away with it.My family has...
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Blood Rain (Red Diamonds Book 1)
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Cruel? Torturous? How else could I explain falling in love with Leo Williams.The guy I thought I knew, tore me to shreds, and left nothing but an empty soul behind.Just when it’s finally safe to breathe without a thought of him,Just when my life no longer revolves around him,He comes storming back...
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Infinity: A love story (Infinite Book 1)
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This text describes a collection of compact, efficient, and effective software scripts. These code tools can be deployed in several forms, including C, VBA, and Python, to perform a variety of common computing tasks. This text differs from the classic text, Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific...
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The Best and Most Unique Ireland Travel Guide So, you’re planning to visit Ireland? Excellent decision, you’ll find us to be a warm and friendly people who’ll make you feel truly welcome. We don’t like to boast, but we really have it all: Ireland combines a strong and vibrant culture...
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The Best and Most Unique DublinTravel Guide Dublin is Ireland’s gleaming capital. A city so full of history, so rich in culture, it’s a magnet for tourists and visitors each year. Tourist flock here eager to try the infamous “Black Stuff,” to walk on Temple Bar’s cobbled streets, to get...
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The Best and Most Unique Washington D.C. Travel Guide Washington, D.C. is the capital of the United States of America with an incredible collection of free, public museums and many of the nation's most treasured monuments and memorials. The sights on the National Mall include Washington Monument...
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KND Kindle Free Book Alert for Wednesday, November 23: FORTY-FIVE (45) BRAND NEW FREEBIES in the last 24 hours added to Our 1,284 FREE TITLES Sorted by Category, Date Added, Bestselling or Review Rating! plus … Bjoern Joergensen’s SMALL MACHINES (Today’s Sponsor – $2.99)