Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

See why Kirkus calls it “a fast-paced, energetic romance with a little sass.”
Dogs Aren’t Men By Billi Tiner- 375 Rave Reviews & Now $1.99

Like A Little Romance?
Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Billi Tiner’s Dogs Aren’t Men, so please check it out!

Dogs Aren’t Men

by Billi Tiner

Dogs Aren
4.5 stars – 419 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

On Sale! Kindle Countdown Deal!

A contemporary romance.

Rebecca Miller is a gifted veterinarian with an extraordinary understanding of animal behavior. She is leading a fulfilling life as the owner and operator of the Animal Friends Veterinary Clinic. Ever since her 30th birthday, her mother has made it her mission to help Rebecca find a man, get married, and give her grandchildren. But Rebecca doesn’t see the need for a man in her life. She has her dog, Captain, and that’s all the companionship she needs. However, her world changes the day she literally runs into Derrick Peterson, a gorgeously handsome ER doctor.

Derrick’s experiences with women have taught him that they are vain, silly, and untrustworthy. He keeps his relationships with them brief and superficial. However, he finds himself being irresistibly drawn to Rebecca. She’s smart, witty, compassionate, and very different from the women he usually encounters. Will Rebecca be the one to break down the wall he’s spent a lifetime building around his heart?

Reviews

“Harlequin-romance tradition meets contemporary intrigue in a heartwarming novel that brings out the best in both genres. Dogs Aren’t Men blends humor and tenderness with a skillful literary hand.”- Foreword Clarion Reviews

“A quality entry in the romance genre…readers will appreciate the book’s steady pace, well-constructed story, and genial style.”- Publisher’s Weekly

“A fast-paced, energetic romance with a little sass.”-Kirkus Review

Click Here to Visit Billi Tiner’s Amazon Author Page

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Free Romance Excerpt Featuring The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave By Tristan Wood

Last week we announced that Tristan Wood’s The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave, you’re in for a real treat:

The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave
5.0 stars – 10 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Kindle Countdown Deal! Everyday Price: $3.99
Dave is fourteen when his uncle teaches him how to pick up girls.
Izzy reads tarot cards.
Dave becomes a romantic lothario.
Izzy never stops being a skeptical clairvoyant.
He tries to find himself in a life of debauchery, drugs, and alcohol.
She’s lost in a world of secrets, unspeakable ghosts, and intuitive knowledge.
He’s looking for the other half of his heart.
She’s the piece of his soul he didn’t know he was missing.
The first time they meet, Izzy reads Dave his fortune and he tries his luck with her.
They part thinking they will never see each other again.
Until six months later, when chance brings them together on the other side of the world.
Then everything changes…

*  *  *

Free and Bargain Quality eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

*  *  *

  And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free romance excerpt:

Prologue

The first time Dave and I met, we had a spread of tarot cards between us. If I were to say that everything changed from that moment on, I would be lying, because it took us six months and the other side of the world for that to happen.

One thing you need to know, though, is that Dave and I were never lovers—and we never, ever were meant to be.

We were soul mates of another kind.

 

Part 1

Becoming Dave

 

Chapter 1

The Poes

The thing about families is that you rarely get to choose them since you tend to be born into one and be a part of it. The family, on the other hand, tends to choose you and become a part of you, whether or not you grow to like it or will yourself to want.

The Poes weren’t much different. They too chose you, but you were either a Poe or you weren’t. You could never become one.

Dave was a Poe.

He was the middle child of an upper-middle-class couple who got married because they mistook shared interests for love and ended up divorced after Dave’s father’s more-than-expected midlife crisis. As a result, Dave grew up in that misplaced piece of attention that is reserved for middle children, wedged between a gifted older brother who inhabited a world of his own and a gay younger brother who strangely fulfilled his mother’s need for a daughter. Dave’s upbringing, however, was never one of neglect or lack of love.

Dave’s mother was an eccentric woman who breezed through life with no sense of guilt or awkwardness, purposely oblivious to anything that would pose as a hindrance to her perception of the world. Or so she seemed, I mean, as I came to realize during the years that I had the pleasure of knowing her.

She was, in fact, a very singular woman. She would constantly project an image of herself that would make everyone around her think that she was futile and fragile, vain even, and that she was unavailable to see beyond the obvious, that she was incapable of any deeper perception other than what was unequivocally laid down for her. And this would lead everyone through a presumptuous path of disdain toward her capacities, making others feel safe and unaware of her every conquest of their concealed thoughts and secrets … until it was too late. They finally realized that sometimes they had been utterly exposed to her and that, at some strange level, she owned a fragment of them. It was bewildering; I can tell you from experience.

Dave’s mother took upon educating her three sons with the same resolve that she put on making a shopping list or choosing new curtains for the living room. To her, there were no middle terms, only will, so whether curtains or her sons’ education, everything mattered. She loved her sons more than anything in her life. There was no doubt that she was to every one of them the self-image of kindness and fragility and their imprinted ideal of what a woman should be. And there lay a part of the problem, as I came to realize, since she was one of a kind. She was a single soul that no one could have ever matched or tried to measure up to, because no one can take the place of a perfect mother who gives you the world as you know it and makes you believe that it is yours to take.

Dave always spoke of his mother with that almost worshipful tone that parents use to speak of their children, which made me wonder if he had ever suspected that sometimes she could see right through him.

He told me stories of his childhood, such as when his mother nurtured his younger brother’s homosexuality by dressing the three boys in her clothes and highest heels so that they would know how difficult it was to be anything different than what they were expected to be. Or how she would take them to every museum and library to appease Dave’s older brother’s need of knowledge. And how she would let Dave have an entire chocolate cake for dinner when she forgot to pick him up from school. Or even how, to Dave’s father discontent, she would call their school and tell their teachers that they all had gotten the flu so they wouldn’t be attending classes that day, and then she would take them on a trip somewhere or invent a game that would last all day.

She really was one of a kind, but never a Poe.

Despite Dave’s mother’s strong will to give the children everything she thought made a good home and a sense of world—her world—the boys were often wrapped in the whirlwind of events that was their parents’ marriage.

From a very young age, Dave and his brothers were accustomed to seeing their father ignore their mother’s tantrums when she demanded from him the love that he never felt for her. She was, Dave told me, quite dramatic on her quest, but she would always succumb to a bouquet of flowers or a box of chocolates presented by her husband. Then the late hours at the office and his constant absence would be forgotten, because his romantic gestures numbed the certainty of her unrequited love.

Despite all, Dave’s father was not an absent parent. Well, he was, but not in the literal sense of the word. Notwithstanding Dave’s mother complaints, his father spent a lot of his free time with his sons, and he was considerate enough to engage with them in activities that they all appreciated, such as sports and going to the cinema or a concert.

He just didn’t truly mean it, and he’d do it out of obligation rather than out of love or will. He loved his sons because they were his, but for nothing else. And that was why he knew that if he could go back in time, he would not have gotten married or had them. In the course of time, all his sons, and Dave in particular, began to feel the burden of their father’s regretful love on their shoulders.

Fortunately, the lack of understanding wherewith God blesses the innocent allowed Dave and his brothers to ignore this painful truth about their father most of the time while they were growing up. Sadly for his father, and for Dave himself, Dave matured faster than the usual boy and became aware of his father’s regrets far too young. That, along with Dave’s perception of his father’s lack of love for his mother, made Dave’s relationship with his father a tough one, where forgiveness was never an option.

However, not even that prevented him from being a Poe.

Dave was born on one of those cold days of February, looking like a ball of fat littered with hair. He was, as his grandmother put it, “no angel to see.” Eventually, he grew up to become a squab brown-haired boy with crooked teeth and a mischievous smile that accompanied him through life.

He did have the “bad boy” thing going for him, but he was not what you would call a beautiful child. In fact, the first time I saw Dave’s yellowish old childhood pictures, I recall thinking him rather tubby, and I could not hold back the surprise that hit me when I realized how distant from those images he had grown. Years later, while looking back at those pictures, I was even more surprised when I learned that Dave’s first sexual experience had occurred at the innocent age of six. Not that his looks at the time had anything to do with it, but then again, I was always the one to make the weirdest synapses.

Dave was already in first grade, he told me, when his mother started attending some ceramic classes every other afternoon and left him to the cares of an older cousin when he wasn’t at school. His brothers were saved by the piano lessons that Dave himself refused to attend. The older cousin, who was facing extreme hormonal puberty at the young age of twelve, was very keen about playing house in a literal sense. Dave told me, with that crooked smile of his plastered all over his face, that she said she was going to teach him how to “be a good daddy.” Then, in a childish way, she would let her wild pubescent imagination take the lead and perform her very own impersonation of the birds and the bees. No flowers were involved, though according to Dave, his “love stick” took part in it. Dave and I would never refer to his penis in any other way than that, since that was the bashful—and very much mocked by me—term that Dave used the first time he recounted one of his sexual adventures to me. So we kind of decided that we would stick to it. Pun intended.

“Dave, did you just tell me that you were abused? Have you ever told this to anyone else?” I asked, half-amused and half-astonished, for I knew that my friend wasn’t revealing a dark secret; he was bragging.

“What? Abused? No!” Dave barked, as if such a thought had never crossed his mind before.

“Then what do you call that? Lovemaking at the age of six?” I teased, unsuccessfully trying to keep my curiosity at bay. “Which of your cousins was it? Was it that one that seems to have something dark going on?”

“What? No! And it wasn’t like that. I didn’t feel abused. I kind of liked it at the time, you know? I didn’t like all of it. Some parts I recall being uncomfortable … and kind of stupid, when I think of it. Two brats in a situation like that … You can picture the whole mess, can’t you, Izzy?” Dave wrinkled his nose at me.

“And you never told anyone this?” I asked, raising a doubtful brow at him.

“Of course I did! I told my friends. I was the first one of the group to get laid!” he replied proudly.

“I don’t think that that counts as getting laid. And you told me that you lost your virginity when you were fifteen, at the city park …”

“At six o’clock in the morning, on the thirteenth of June, on the bench farthest from the kiosk that sold ice cream,” he said, cutting me off.

“Sooo?” I urged him.

“So I lost my virginity at fifteen. That’s it. At six, I just got laid,” Dave said this matter-of-factly.

“That is not getting laid!” I almost shouted, eyeing him sternly and crossing my arms as if preparing to charge.

“Well, technically, it was. It just doesn’t count as losing my virginity, because I didn’t come,” he said dismissively.

“If we’re going down that road, I can come up with some seriously twisted logic and tell you that you technically lost your virginity to your right hand … Wait, you’re not left-handed on those matters, are you?”

“Hmm … Just when I pretend that someone else is doing it to me.” He let a faint smirk escape from his lips.

“Does that really work? Honestly, does that happen or is it just some sort of manly joke?” I asked, truly interested as to the outcome of that.

“Izzy, you’ll just have to find out that one for yourself,” he said with a wink and a stupid smile plastered all over his face.

Despite this or due to this incident, as I referred to it (and honestly, I was never really able to make up my mind on the subject), I never doubted that Dave grew carefree and rather happy within his abnormally large and hormonal family.

Dave’s family was far from being limited to his parents and his two brothers. In fact, Dave’s family was almost a community by itself, with an uncountable number of cousins, several crazy uncles and aunts, and, go figure, very conservative grandparents.

From what I learned myself and from what Dave told me himself, his family could not be described as less than, for lack of a better word, eclectic. Many of his relatives seemed to have come out of a novel. From a maiden aunt of seventy who kept a wedding dress in the closet and wore it on her birthday every year, to an uncle who farted in public and excused himself by saying that he had to give the farts away since nobody was willing to buy them, Dave had all sorts of uncommon relatives. As a result, his sense of family bonds and boundaries was completely misfit or, in some situations, inexistent. This made his ability to restrain himself from hooking up with a cousin—voluntarily, I mean—until he was twelve, the age when puberty struck him hard, a most impressive feat.

In fact, as Dave used to put it, he didn’t pass by puberty; puberty moved in with him. And it was not the unruly growth of facial hair, the pimples, or the voice changes. It was actually a bad case of sexual urges and untamable hormones, with all the implications that that had among Dave’s family.

Dave’s sexual education, if you could call it that, was initiated by one of his great-uncles who, noticing Dave’s unequivocal stares at all passing pairs of breasts, decided to take upon himself Dave’s tutoring on the birds and the bees. Unfortunately, Dave’s great-uncle was not very literate when it came to birds and bees, since he had been breeding cows for most of his life, so he had to adapt a bit.

“Dave, come here. It is time for us to have a men’s conversation.”

Dave froze when he heard his great-uncle’s serious voice calling him to what he would recall as one of the most awkward sex talks of his life.

“You know, Dave, you are becoming a young man. I see that you are starting to notice women.” There was a long pause that allowed Dave to feel overwhelmed with the fear of anticipation over what was about to come next. “Have you seen a woman yet, Dave?” And as Dave stood there staring, not knowing what he was expected to answer, his great-uncle kept on going. “I mean, do you know what a woman is?” he asked, letting Dave know that things just weren’t getting any easier.

“I guess,” Dave decided to say, as he would say anything that would stop the course of wherever that conversation was heading for.

“You know, Dave, women are like flowers,” Dave’s great-uncle said, probably sensing that his lack of knowledge on flowers might compromise the intents of the analogy he was trying to pull off to explain to his grandnephew the mysteries of womanhood. “I know that things are changing in you now, and that you are noticing women and that makes you feel … things that you didn’t feel before, and that make you want to do things or think things …” As the old man fumbled, panic must have been obvious in Dave’s eyes, because his great-uncle decided to go for a not-so-straightforward approach.

“Bulls know when cows are ready, Dave. Have you seen the bull near the cow when it’s mating time? The bull goes to the cow and releases his seed in her …” While saying this, Dave’s great-uncle made sure his message was coming through by mimicking the act and passing one of his arms through an imaginary channel and opening his hand while saying the word “releases.”

Dave remained mute and silently prayed to all saints he’d heard of that all the awkwardness of the moment washed away. But it didn’t, because his great-uncle kept on going.

“I was young too, you know? And I remember when I was your age and when I started noticing women. I remember seeing your great-aunt for the first time … Ah, the things we did when nobody was watching us! Back in those days, we didn’t have the freedom you young boys have nowadays. We had to be creative. And we weren’t less naughty because of that.” At this point, Dave was certain that his great-uncle had lost his focus somewhere, but the old man was nowhere near stopping.

“A man has his needs, Dave, and you must always show women who is in charge. Women like men who take the lead and know how to boss them around. One day you will have to say to your wife to iron your shirt, to prepare your dinner, or to lie down in bed and fool around with you. It’s a man’s prerogative, Dave. A man’s prerogative!” As he emphasized this, Dave looked for an escape out of this talk of shame.

Eventually, one of his cousins saved Dave, but the conversation would be engraved in his memory for as long as he lived—first as an embarrassing moment and afterward, when maturity overcame puberty, as a good story. And what’s the purpose of a good story if you can’t share it with anyone?

As Dave told me once, despite the uselessness of his great-uncle’s awkward conversation, most of his insights on women came from his family. Not that he realized it at the time, but his family behavior ended up being an inexhaustible source of knowledge in that aspect, and it was the catalyst to many of Dave’s destructive behaviors as well.

By the age of ten, Dave knew for sure that at least three of his uncles had extramarital affairs, one of which was with one of his elder cousins. He also knew that his grandparents from his father’s side did not sleep together and that one of his single aunts liked to kiss women. He just wasn’t aware of the meaning of it all at the time.

Dave’s grandparents from his father’s side started to sleep in separate rooms when Dave’s grandmother was confronted with the strange devotion of Dave’s grandfather for her younger sister. This happened way before Dave was born, so when he was growing up, he didn’t find it odd that his grandparents inhabited different rooms in their house. In fact, for a long time, he took for granted that elder people lived like that, and since his grandparents from his mother’s side had passed away before he was born, he couldn’t quite compare situations. He was an adult already when we gained full knowledge of the strange love triangle that was his grandparents’ life story.

Dave’s grandfather was a young lawyer when he saw Dave’s grandmother for the first time. He was at the churchyard with some friends when Dave’s grandmother was closing a window at her father’s house, just across from the church, and for a brief moment, their eyes met. Many things were said about the women of that house, kept under lock and key by their father, but he had never laid eyes on one of them before. When he did, it took him just one single look, that one glimpse that fate allowed him to have, to have her grave face and the abandonment in her eyes carved in his soul forever. His life therefore irreparably changed. He thought he was in love, maybe because there was something noble and detached about her that made her seem almost ethereal.

Three days later, he was knocking on her door and requesting her father’s permission to court her. Fortune, or the lack of it, made her father like him and agree with the courting. After all, she was his eldest and the only one the old man had intended to marry. He had other plans for the other daughters. This was how Dave’s grandfather started attending the house to visit his bride, and he soon realized that his infatuation was all but love. Love, and lust in particular, came after, when he met his fifteen-year-old soon-to-be sister-in-law, only to learn that he could never have her. That was not his father-in-law’s plan for her, nor was Dave’s grandfather in a position to exchange brides honestly. So Dave’s grandfather did the only thing a man in his situation could do: he married the available sister, hoping to come closer to the unavailable one under the sacred protection of holy matrimony.

Family bonds proved to be tight, and eventually, upon his father-in-law’s death, Dave’s grandfather took under his and his wife’s care and roof his beloved single sister-in-law. As a sign of gratitude, she cared for her nephews and nieces, helped with the house, kept her sister company, and loved her brother-in-law whenever chance gave them the opportunity. This arrangement lasted years and was only broken when an unfortunate lapse from Dave’s grandmother occurred and she inadvertently caught them in what could be called a compromising position. She didn’t mean to, and mostly she didn’t want or intend to catch them. She’d always known it, she’d complied with it, and she did whatever she could and was in her power to ignore it. However, once faced with the facts, Dave’s grandmother couldn’t keep up with the pretense, nor could she fail to react as she was expected to. So she did the only thing that seemed fitting and moved her husband’s things to another room, this way silently ending their marriage but keeping up the appearances.

No one asked questions since no answers were supposed to be delivered, and no one really had doubts regarding the doings, so things happened as if actually programmed and order was not disturbed. In the silence of her room, Dave’s grandmother grieved her nights of solitude, though. It was not the loss of her marriage or of her love that upset her. Truly, she had never loved her husband or cared that he had made her sister his mistress. She missed his warmth in bed at night and the assurance of his company to fight the demons and ghosts that tormented her during the night.

You see, Dave’s grandmother was one of those singular creatures that lived between two worlds, bridging them and listening to the solicitations of the dead. Unfortunately, and since she refused to nurse their requests or address their existence, the dead refused to make her nights peaceful. Dave’s grandfather’s skepticism seemed to calm Dave’s grandmother’s misery, and for that she missed him. He, regretfully, only missed the “ifs” that life hadn’t allowed him, and for that he blamed her. He blamed her for being the eldest, for her father’s despotic behaviors, and for her superior attitude that misled his feelings. Mostly, he blamed her for never letting him be able to love her.

As I came to realize over time, mistaking love with other things, or the inability to perceive love itself, was very common among the men of Dave’s family, and rather than a flaw in character, it was regarded as a character’s feature.

Dave shared the feature.

Chapter 2

The Art of War

Dave’s adolescence could be called a typical one. It summed up to the inevitable family awareness, seasoned with that pinch of teenage drama contemplating sex, drugs, and rock and roll. To this added a fruitless quest regarding the meaning of life around the age of eighteen, when, for all purposes, Dave was already supposed to be an adult.

By the age of fourteen, Dave’s concerns were undeniably girls, pot, and hearing the latest musical hits. But contrary to most teenage boys, sexuality was not a discovery to Dave. It came along with being a Poe. Sex and sexuality were a constant presence in Dave’s family. Either subtly or more overtly, they were there. It was almost as if every family member, family story, attitude, or event had a connection, no matter how apparently small, to sex or sexuality.

Dave had a bachelor uncle, his father’s younger brother, who was a charmer by flaw and a womanizer by virtue, as strange as it might sound. You should be advised, though, that neither Dave, who grew up knowing him, nor I, who grew by knowing him, were ever able to provide an unbiased opinion on the man. To me, he was a poet, but you must understand that to Dave he was a hero.

The man was the personification of charm. He walked, talked, and breathed charm. He was a devastatingly handsome man, but that was just a small detail, because he was so much more. Everything about him was charming. Everything he said or did was charming. It was inebriating.

After he introduced me to his uncle, Dave mocked me for weeks because I made a fool of myself cracking stupid jokes and laughing nervously. I even found myself giggling, which is actually one of my least favorite words in English; therefore, I avoid promoting such action in order to prevent the use of the word. But to my utter embarrassment, I giggled, because I had never seen such a fine specimen of Man. That’s right, capitalized—for he was the personification of manliness. Hell, he was every woman’s wet dream and more. It was so extreme that Dave and I just accepted as an irrefutable truth that he would be able to charm away the devil himself. Therefore, in its extreme, Dave’s uncle’s charms became a flaw and a hazard to women, for he loved them. All of them and everything about them, and, as the charmer he was, he could not help himself around them.

In his defense, I must say that he did not use or abuse women’s trust in him. He misled no one. He made no promises, nor fed any hopes. Moreover, in his peculiar way of loving, he truly loved every single woman with whom he got involved. He loved them because he meant to. He was in it heart and soul—every time. So it could last a day or it could last a year, but whoever she was, during that time, she had him all, no restraints, no restrictions, no reserves, and above all, no regrets.

When it ended, because it always ended, he just walked away. No explanations given, no excuses made, and no forgiveness asked.

Even the more desperate or heartbroken would not get more than an “I don’t love you anymore.” They never heard that he was sorry. He was never sorry, and neither should they be. He had no regrets. They eventually nurtured a few. He essentially couldn’t force himself to apologize for his feelings, or lack of them, since it was not up to him to control them. He knew every time that he would stop loving them eventually. Because he knew that, along with no restraints and no regrets also came no forever. Even so, he hoped every time to find his. And it was that hope that washed away any guilt, for he could not be blamed for stopping loving them when he believed, with all his strength, that the love that he’d found would last him a lifetime, even when he knew deep down that it wouldn’t.

As odd as it may sound, one thing that I came to respect about him was that though he didn’t need to be, he was a womanizer. Woman fell at his feet, but he felt compelled to chase them and pursue them, because he was, after all, a gentleman. Any other man in his position would have just taken the easy path and taken advantage of what life had so generously offered him. But not him. He wanted to earn it, because he wanted it to be real. You see, he was a romantic, as was Dave.

I always believed that that was why Dave was his favorite nephew. Somehow, despite all their differences, he saw himself in him. He had a lightness about him that Dave would never be able to sustain, but each shared, in his own particular way, the secret belief that he was meant for a love bigger than life. Or so he hoped.

Click here to download the entire book: Tristan Wood’s The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave>>>

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Don’t miss today’s 75% price cut that just may make you feel like you’ve discovered the next John Green!
The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave By Tristan Wood – Now 99 Cents

Like A Little Romance?
Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Tristan Wood’s The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave, so please check it out!

The Wanton Life of My Friend Dave
5.0 stars – 10 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Kindle Countdown Deal! Everyday Price: $3.99

Dave is fourteen when his uncle teaches him how to pick up girls.
Izzy reads tarot cards.
Dave becomes a romantic lothario.
Izzy never stops being a skeptical clairvoyant.
He tries to find himself in a life of debauchery, drugs, and alcohol.
She’s lost in a world of secrets, unspeakable ghosts, and intuitive knowledge.
He’s looking for the other half of his heart.
She’s the piece of his soul he didn’t know he was missing.
The first time they meet, Izzy reads Dave his fortune and he tries his luck with her.
They part thinking they will never see each other again.
Until six months later, when chance brings them together on the other side of the world.
Then everything changes…

Reviews

“… Wood cleverly introduces a completely new form of romance; one that was never realized in a traditional sense, but one that defines what the hopeless romantic in each of us desires. To be understood, to be loved, and to be enough for the person we want so much to satisfy.” – Indie Reader

“THE WANTON LIFE OF MY FRIEND DAVE offers a strangely satisfying experience for the romance fan. It successfully illustrates this phenomenon that sometimes those that seem the most connected aren’t always meant to be together.” – Indie Reader
About The Author

Tristan Wood is the pen name of a compulsive writer. The Wanton Life of my Friend Dave is Tristan Wood’s debut novel, who lives on the other side of the world with the love of a lifetime and a struggling corn palm tree.

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Lunch Time Reading! Free Romance Excerpt Featuring Flesh & Bone By Lee Strauss – 4.9 Stars!

Last week we announced that Lee Strauss’s Flesh & Bone is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded Flesh & Bone, you’re in for a real treat:

Flesh & Bone – a contemporary romance: The Minstrel Series #2

by Lee Strauss

Flesh & Bone  - a contemporary romance: The Minstrel Series #2
4.9 stars – 15 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday Price: $2.99
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

#1 Sun & Moon is FREE!

ROMANCE. REGRET. MUSIC. FORGIVENESS. HOT EUROPEAN ROCK STAR

She can’t remember. He can’t forget.

Eva Baumann is invisible. Sebastian Weiss is famous. In a perfect world Eva would be fearless and Sebastian would be guiltless.
It’s not a perfect world.

Singer songwriter Eva Baumann has a celebrity crush on Sebastian Weiss. He’s perfect to love because there was no way they could ever be a thing. She’s a nobody. He’s a heartthrob. Hiding an infatuation is easy for her because, since her accident, hiding is what she did best.

Sebastian Weiss’s band climbed the charts, seemingly overnight, and he’s finally living the dream. All he has to do is write enough songs to produce a second album. The bad news is he hasn’t written a new song in over a year.

Sebastian stumbles into the Blue Note Pub in time to hear Eva Baumann perform a hauntingly beautiful song. Could this girl be the answer to defeating his writer’s block?

Eva and Sebastian begin a complicated writing relationship that leads to more. But Sebastian has a secret that will devastate them both.

**Includes MP3 links to four original songs produced by Norm Strauss and performed by Canadian music artists Trisha Robins and Bryan Steeksma.

The Minstrel Series is a collection of contemporary romance novels set in the singer/songwriter world. The books are companion novels, with shared settings and characters, but each is a complete stand-alone story with a HEA (happily ever after) and no cliffhangers!

The Minstrel Series books can be read in any order, but are best enjoyed in sequence. #1 Sun & Moon (Katja and Micah), #2 Flesh & Bone (Eva and Sebastian), #3 Heart & Soul (Gabriele and Callum) – coming soon!

*  *  *

Free and Bargain Quality eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

*  *  *

  And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free romance excerpt:

The Scars They See

Eva

 

Gabriele had dared her to do this. “Just walk in, sign your name, and play a song for heaven’s sake.” It was easy for her to say. Eva Baumann’s sister didn’t understand what it was like to be afraid. What it was like to be invisible. Gabriele oozed confidence, tall and lithe like a runway model, lighting up every room she entered. She was pretty, talented, smart.

And not handicapped.

Eva eyed the graffiti-marred entrance of the Blue Note Pub and watched as other musicians and-patrons strolled into the darkened room. Music pumping from the sound system escaped into the narrow corridor of four-story stone buildings every time the heavy wooden door opened and closed. Eva carefully set down her guitar case and rested her hand over her chest willing her heartbeat to slow. The muscle pulsed erratically, and her stomach wanted to dry heave.

Eva gripped her cane with white knuckles. She’d learned to master the uneven sidewalks with careful steps, but the cobblestones were still a nemesis, especially in colder months like March. The rubber knob on the tip of her cane had to center on a stone, otherwise she could lose her balance and fall. It was necessary to wait for a break in traffic or to continue to the corner for a walk light before daring to cross the street.

She took a deep breath. She could do this. This was just an irrational fear—not real. Nothing bad would happen to her in that room. It was filled with people who loved music as much as she did. It was loud and crowded and dark, and no one would expect her to talk. When they called her name, she’d focus on the small stage, blocking out everyone in the room out until she safely stepped up. Then she’d just close her eyes and pretend she was at the street church playing to the people who came for the soup they provided.

She could do this.

A cold wind blew hair across Eva’s face and she snapped to attention just as the little green man flashed on to indicate it was safe to walk. She lumbered across with a guitar in her left hand and her cane in her right. The weight of her instrument pulled her shoulders forward, her back arching slightly under her winter jacket. She caught her reflection in a store window and frowned. She looked like a crazy, old lady, not a nineteen-year-old girl.

Eva tucked her cane under her left armpit and reached for the door. It swung open sharply, a patron had exited at the same moment, and she was shoved against the wall, nearly losing her balance.

“Excuse me,” the guy said. He held the door open, waiting for her to go in. She wanted to turn around and head straight home, but the guy’s eyes stayed on her, waiting. The cold air whooshed inside.

It would be impolite not to pass through. “Thank you,” she said softly. She leaned on her cane and entered. She’d been to the Blue Note before. Gabriele and her British boyfriend Lennon Smith had dragged her out one night, so she knew what to expect. There was a bar to the right and table seating to the left. A poster on the wall read: “If you want to chat with your pals while the band is playing, take your conversation outside.” The air smelled of beer and cigarette smoke clinging to damp wool jackets. At the back of the midsized room was a small stage lit by two lights hanging from the ceiling.

Her stomach churned, and once again she questioned herself. Why had she come? What did she have to prove? Why did she care so much what Gabriele thought? She stared back at the door.

“Hello, ma Cherie. Would you like to sign your name?”

The gruff yet friendly voice stopped Eva before she could leave. She knew the manager, Herr Maurice Leduc, by reputation, but had never spoken to him before. “I don’t know,” she answered.

“Well—” His eyes darted to the guitar in her hand. “I just thought since you lugged that thing in with you.” He pushed the sign-up sheet closer.

Eva didn’t have the heart to deny the man. She took the pen and scribbled her name.

“Wonderful,” Herr Leduc said with a sincere grin that filled a round face. “I look forward to hearing you play…” he glanced down at his sheet, “Eva Baumann.”

The room consisted of a lot of wood. Tables, chairs, benches and floors—all darkly stained, old wood. Even the ceiling had rough, open wood beams. Eva claimed a nearby empty chair and breathed in and out, long and slow. She was here. She’d done it. Wait until she told Gabriele. Wouldn’t she be surprised?

A server arrived, and Eva ordered a cola. The other people who shared the long table gave her sideways glances at her childish drink and cheered each other as they lifted their beer glasses.

Herr Leduc walked on stage and welcomed everyone. He called the first act, a girl with long, golden hair, he introduced as Katja Stoltz.

Eva listened intently impressed with the girl’s talent and the way she took over the stage like she owned it. That was what Eva needed to do. Own it.

The girl finished her song, and after much-deserved applause, she joined her friends at a table across the room. A guy in his early twenties with a peacock tattoo along one arm stood to give Katja Stoltz a hug. He had messy, dark brown hair and bristles on his face, like he hadn’t shaven in a few days. He laughed and high-fived her before sitting and draping the peacock around a thin girl with spiky hair.

A shiver ran up Eva’s back. She recognized that guy. Last summer, when she was playing guitar for the homeless, many of them had raised their hands to God in praise. The outside metal blinds had been raised, they always were when the church was open, and a group of guys had stopped to watch from across the street. They began to laugh and then threw their arms in the air, mocking the people worshiping inside.

That was the first time Eva had seen that peacock tattoo, and she’d never forget the laughing face of the handsome boy who went with it.

Her short-lived confidence shriveled at the thought of being the guy’s next target. Oh, why did she come? She’d leave right now if she thought she could do it without making a scene. The room had filled, and there was no way she could slip out unnoticed with her guitar and her cane.

She sipped her cola and kept her eyes focused on each act as it was called. Every time Herr Leduc stepped to the mic to call a name, Eva’s heart filled with nervous dread and emptied with a flush of relief when she didn’t hear hers.

“Sebastian Weiss,” Herr Leduc said.

The guy with the peacock tattoo hooted, shifted out from behind his table and grabbed his guitar.

So that was his name.

He hopped onto the stage and strapped on a guitar with an over-confidence Eva envied. She wanted him to be terrible so that she could add self-delusion to his other obvious traits of conceit and insensitivity, but unfortunately he wasn’t. His voice was smooth and strong, and he had great range.

She also happened to notice the flex in his biceps that poked out of the short sleeves of his dark T-shirt and how his jeans fit nicely on slender hips.

He finished his song and fisted the air like he just won a boxing match. The audience went crazy. Eva couldn’t help but join in the applause. Something about Sebastian was electric. His aura and competence, his popularity—she couldn’t peel her eyes off him. His arm returned to its position around the girl beside him who hadn’t smiled once. Such a contrast to Sebastian who couldn’t stop smiling. He seemed quite taken by the pixie girl and kissed her excitedly on the cheek.

“Eva Baumann.”

What? Eva had been so busy watching the table of cool people, she hadn’t been paying attention.

Herr Leduc’s accented German bellowed again. “Eva Baumann.”

Eva’s heart stopped. Then raced. Her hands broke out into a sweat, and she blinked back the tears welling up behind her eyes, which were opened far too wide. Her head prickled hotly, and she swallowed hard. She could sense the attention of the room, necks craning, everyone searching, waiting for the next act to stand.

Herr Leduc stared at her, and all she could do was shake her head. He gave her a gracious nod and called the next name.

A girl with short, dark hair bounced out of her seat, and within seconds Eva was forgotten. She took advantage of the swirl of commotion that occurred between acts, grabbing her guitar and cane, and limped to the entrance.

It was a terrible mistake to come, she thought as she hobbled down the crusty street. She kept her head bowed low against the cold, and gripped her guitar case and her cane. If she’d had a third hand, she’d swipe at the bitter tear that slid down her cheek.

 

One Year Later

 

Sebastian Weiss wrapped the oversized pillow around his ears in a vain effort to block out the pounding on his locked hotel room door. His head throbbed and his mouth felt like sandpaper. He released a slow, low groan. “Go away!”

“Sebastian!” Karl called from the hallway. “The bus is waiting. Get your ass in gear!”

Sebastian tossed the silky pillow across the room and worked the sleep out of his eyes. The bright light that seeped in from the crack in the curtains was like a torch to his eyeballs. He blindly grasped for the hotel phone on the nightstand and somehow managed to punch the numbers for room service.

“Orange juice and coffee. A whole carton of juice and a full carafe of coffee.” He’d learned he had to be specific. The first time they’d arrived with a tiny glass and cup of each, and he had to suffer needlessly for another twenty minutes before the service returned with what he needed.

He popped a couple pills and downed them with the stale water in a glass by the phone. He gave them two minutes to kick in then stumbled to the shower. The coffee and orange juice would be waiting in the hall when he was finished.

He dug the last clean T-shirt out of his suitcase and pulled on the jeans he’d worn for the last two days. His room service order waited for him in the hall, and he pushed it inside. He downed the juice in several gulps, breaking once or twice to breathe. This was followed by a swig of coffee; he poured the rest into his travel mug.

At this point in his routine, Sebastian started to feel normal again. Like a computer reboot. He’d come alive on the bus, and by the time they hit the next city, he would be high again—on adrenaline and other things—ramping up for their next concert.

Dirk, their manager, was in the lobby checking out the band when Sebastian arrived. He raised a brow over black plastic-rimmed glasses. “Just in time,” he said. “The others are already on the bus.”

Sebastian pushed his sunglasses on his face. The brightness of the sun streaming through the windows shot pain to the back of his head. He winced as he exited the hotel and quickly handed his bags over to Florian, the bus driver.

“Next stop, Hamburg!” Florian shouted, and Sebastian winced again as the driver’s booming voice made his head feel like someone was trying to rip it off. He climbed on board and took a seat near the front. Karl spotted him and moved up to the empty seat behind him.

“Three more dates, Sebastian, and this tour’s over. Time flies.”

Sebastian nodded. “I still can’t believe we’re actually doing this.” Touring with his band, Hollow Fellows, had been a dream for so long that he’d lost heart in the pursuit. Funny how things tended to take off once you’d given up the chase.

Karl raked a hand through long, stringy hair. “The gig in Hamburg is being televised! A year ago, I never would’ve imagined this could happen. But here we are, on our own tour bus, giggin’ in front of the cameras. On freakin’ TV!” He patted Sebastian on the shoulder. “We’re doing it, Seb. We’re actually doing it!”

Hollow Fellows’ hit song, “What Drives Me,” had catapulted up the German radio charts over the past half year surprising everyone. It was the song he’d co-written with Katja Stoltz-Sturm. That was a lucky impromptu decision on his part, agreeing to do the songwriting session with Katja. Both of them were unknowns then. Sebastian rubbed his eyes and sighed. He hadn’t written a song since.

Maybe when the tour ended, and he saw Yvonne again… maybe she’d inspire him.

A nagging truth stirred his gut. He wanted to blame life on the road and the alcohol and the ongoing fight he and Yvonne seemed to be engaged in for his writer’s block. But he knew the truth.

He chugged back a sip of coffee and shook his head forcing himself to push those old, black memories away. Nothing good could come from dredging that up.

Nothing good.

 

 

A Shadow and an Echo

 

Eva ran a finger along a thick, pink scar that zipped up her right leg from just above her knee to the top of her thigh. Normally, she never paid it any attention. It was just a part of who she was, who she had been for the last five years. But now, as she got ready for bed, she stood in front of the mirror and examined it.

It was ugly.

She stopped asking God why this had happened to her long ago. There was no satisfying answer. No answer at all, actually.

The bedroom door flew open and Eva quickly tugged her nightdress down as Gabriele breezed into the room they shared. Gabriele kept promising to move out, but she still hadn’t. She had to finish her studies at the university first. Eva felt guilty for wishing her sister gone.

Instead of her usual nightshirt, Gabriele stepped into a tiny little blue and white dress.

“Where are you going?” Eva asked as she watched Gabriele struggle with the zipper at the back.

“Can you get this?”

Eva stood and waited for Gabriele to scoot over to her. It was just faster that way, and Gabriele was always in a hurry. It was a habit they’d formed since the accident. Gabriele always came to Eva.

“Lennon’s taking me out for a late dinner. It’s our one year anniversary!”

“Already?” Or should she say, Is that all? Lennon had been hanging around so much the last few months, he’d become part of the furnishings.

“Yes, and we’re going to a really fancy place in the Altstadt.” Gabriele floated to the spot in front of the mirror Eva had just vacated and applied hair product to her short bleach-blond hair. Her natural color was the same as Eva’s, an ordinary brown, and up until a year ago, just before Lennon, Eva recalled, she wore it long, too.

Gabriele started in on her makeup attacking green eyes (another trait she shared with Eva) with several layers of mascara, and then her full lips with a tube of red. She smacked them together and said with a little squeal, “I think he wants to talk about marriage.”

“What? Really?” Yay! Gabriele just got that much closer to leaving home. “That’s terrific!”

“Yeah, I’m really nervous.” Gabriele selected a pair of white, patent leather stilettos and slipped them on. She spread her arms wide and faced Eva. “What do you think?”

“You’re beautiful.” It was the truth. Gabriele had a tall, waif-like, fashion model look and the exuberance to go with it. Eva could barely believe they were sisters. Nobody could, really. Apart from their identical green eyes, they were nothing alike.

Eva put on her robe, collected her cane and followed Gabriele out into the living room where their parents joined in with her sister’s excitement.

“You look wonderful,” their mama said.

Papa sat on the chair facing the TV, and his eyes narrowed as he stared at Gabriele. “Isn’t that dress a little short?”

Gabriele laughed. “Oh, Papa. You’re so old-fashioned.” She bent down and kissed him on the cheek, and Papa’s faux frown broke into a smile.

The door ringer buzzed, and Gabriele danced over to let Lennon in. They could hear his footsteps as he made his way to the second floor. He barely had a chance to tap on the door of the flat when Gabriele flung it open.

Lennon wore fashionable jeans and a form-fitting button-down shirt. He wore his dark hair combed back behind his ears, and he had a slight shadow on his chin. He was average height standing eye to eye with Gabriele when she wore high heels. Eva always considered Lennon to be handsome, the only kind of guy that would fit beside her sister, but tonight he was really handsome. And he’d brought her flowers.

Gabriele accepted them, and then they spent long moments taking each other in, their eyes bright with affection. Eva couldn’t keep from staring. What must it be like to be in love like that?

“Wow.” Lennon shook his head subtly like he couldn’t believe his good fortune. “You look gorgeous.”

Gabriele blushed and giggled. Papa cleared his throat.

“Herr Baumann,” Lennon said, looking up. “Good evening. And to you, too, Frau Baumann.”

They engaged in polite banter while Gabriele put her flowers in a vase. Then the pretty couple left, and it was like a vacuum had sucked the sunshine out of the room.

“So, Eva,” Papa finally said. “You can do the music for the lunch service on Sunday?”

Eva sighed. “I always do it. Why can’t Gabriele?” Her sister was also an accomplished guitar player and a great singer. Unfortunately. For a while, Eva thought she might have one thing that set her apart from the sister who had everything, but soon after Eva started playing the guitar seriously, Gabriele decided she would, too, and quickly demonstrated that they had both inherited musical genes from their mother’s side.

“Ah, Schatz,” Papa started. “You know Gabriele.”

That was all he said. Gabriele had made it clear that, though she respected their parents’ call into the ministry, she had no interest in the street church. Mama could play the keyboard and sing like an angel, but she spent her time overseeing the kitchen, so the task of providing music had landed on Eva. There were others who could do it, and sometimes Eva asked for help, but the truth was, she didn’t really mind. It just bothered her that Gabriele had so much, and yet so little was required of her.

“Okay, I’ll do it.”

Papa grunted as he lifted himself from his chair. “I’m going to review my sermon notes,” he said as he left for his office. Mama had already retreated to her room where she liked to spend the evenings reading. Eva turned on the TV, flipped through the channels, then yelped.

Sebastian Weiss was on TV! She pulled her robe tighter and leaned forward. He was with his band, Hollow Fellows, playing live in Hamburg.

Eva’s heart rattled in her chest as the camera zoomed in on Sebastian’s face. His eyes were closed and he belted out the words with such emotion and intensity. Then he opened them and stared into the camera. It was like his warm hazel eyes were looking right at her!

She couldn’t believe she’d once sat in the same room as him. A year ago at the Blue Note before he was famous. She’d been fascinated with him ever since, nursing a schoolgirl-type crush that only she and God knew about, and she had followed his rise to stardom with dedication.

He lived here, in the Neustadt area of Dresden. They were practically neighbors! It’d become a habit for her to stay alert to a possible Sebastian Weiss sighting when he was off tour. She hadn’t seen him since that fateful open mic night, though she had spotted the girl he was with once. Eva wondered if they were still together.

Not that it mattered. In real life Eva didn’t exist. She was a shadow. An echo.

But in her dreams she was… well, she was Gabriele. And Lennon was Sebastian Weiss.

 

 

Falling Too Deeply

 

The Hamburg gig was a hit, and Hollow Fellows’ first televised concert sent the station’s ratings soaring. They partied long into the night afterward, celebrating. Sebastian indulged in one too many beers, but he stayed clear of the women. This was one of the many things he and Yvonne argued over. She was convinced his fame would go to his head and he’d cheat on her. Successful guys were renowned for justifying themselves, rationalizing their behavior—rules didn’t apply to them. That was what Yvonne believed, but Sebastian didn’t think she was being fair.

He didn’t know how to reassure her except to do exactly what he promised and keep clear of the girls. It was a tough job these days. Groupies, usually young, pretty girls, were coming out of the woodwork. Fortunately, the other guys in the band pulled up the slack. Karl, and their drummer Markus had a pretty girl on each arm all night.

Now, after allowing for a late sleep in, they gathered for brunch in the hotel restaurant. They had to request a private room at the back because of those very groupies. There was a collection of them waiting in the hotel lobby ready to pounce.

Sebastian sat across from Karl who sat beside Markus and Dirk. Florian held his grey head in two hands and moaned.

“One too many last night?” Sebastian chided.

“I didn’t drink anything,” Florian replied with a dry voice. “Didn’t feel good yesterday either.”

“You don’t look that good,” Karl added. “A little green around the gills.”

“Guys, I don’t think I can drive, and I can’t eat.” Florian stood to leave, holding an arm around his belly. “I gotta get back to my room.”

“Ah man,” Markus said. “Do you think he has the flu?”

Karl grunted. “He better not get the rest of us sick.”

Dirk had ordered for the band earlier and a small buffet of breakfast and lunch food was wheeled in. Buns, croissants, a collection of meats and cheeses, toast, cereal, fruit and yogurt along with coffee and a selection of juices.

Now that Sebastian’s hangover had ebbed a little, his appetite kicked in and he filled his plate.

“Someone else has to drive the bus now,” Dirk said after a few bites. “Any takers?”

Karl shook his head. “Not me. I plan on sleeping all the way back to Dresden.”

“Sebastian?” Dirk asked.

Sebastian pushed back a wave of panic, plastered a phony smile on his face and shook his head. “I would, but I don’t drive.”

Dirk scoffed. “You don’t drive? You mean you didn’t get your license?”

Sebastian shrugged. “Never got around to it.”

That wasn’t true. His parents had coughed up the money to pay for the expensive lessons, and he had a barely pubescent photo on a German license to prove it.

“Fine,” Dirk said. He turned to Markus. “I guess that means you and I have to do it. I’ll do the first half.”

They finished eating, leaving a big mess in their wake, and snuck out the back way to the lobby to escape the groupies who had yet to leave. This was part of Sebastian’s new life he didn’t like. He missed being able to walk about freely without photographers snapping photos and girls throwing themselves at him. It was worse when they were on tour. He worried about going home and hoped that the Neustadt hadn’t changed as much as he had.

Their covert maneuver didn’t work this time. The elevator was in the process of slowly returning from the top floor, and they had to wait precious minutes for it to arrive at ground level. Before the doors opened, one of the groupies spotted them. A chorus of calls followed.

“Sebastian!”

“Karl, Markus!”

“Hollow Fellows!”

Before the guys could escape, one of the girls jumped Sebastian and kissed him on the mouth. A flash from a camera blinded him. He knew he’d just gotten photographed in a compromising position and could only hope that Yvonne wouldn’t see it. He pushed the girl off him as gently and forcibly as he could. It was bad press to be rude to fans.

He autographed a handful of CDs and one bare, feminine shoulder before the elevator doors opened and Dirk dragged him inside.

Karl laughed out loud. “I love being famous!” Sebastian high-fived him and smiled back. His best friend was having the time of his life. Sebastian just wished he could say the same thing.

He slept on the bus with just a few interruptions when the bus stopped for petrol and bathroom breaks. He found sleeping on the bus easier than sleeping alone in a dark, quiet room. The rumble lulled him to sleep and there was just enough light and motion to keep him from falling too deeply. It was in deep sleep that the bad dreams came.

Sebastian worried about Yvonne. Though she was cute, she wasn’t sweet by nature. He didn’t mind that. He was just grateful that she had stood by him through all the crap he went through at home when his parents disowned him for pursuing his foolish dream. She was there for him when they weren’t. She was his first real girlfriend and he loved her.

He wasn’t so sure she loved him in return. Not really. Lately, she’d grown distant, her demeanor cooler than usual.

They often argued, bickered really, not bonafide fighting. It was their way of communicating. Right? They’d fight and then have great make-up sex. He could do this thing as long as she supported him. He’d bring her on the next tour. He’d sleep better if she were by his side.

Sebastian had wanted to bring her this time, but the guys had insisted—no girlfriends. But, he was the leader of this band, right? He would put his foot down next time. Yvonne would be with him snuggling through the long hours on the road. Then fame wouldn’t be so bad. The unwanted attention from groupies would wane if they saw he already had a girl on his arm.

It would be okay so long as Yvonne would agree to come. She was fuming mad when he told her she couldn’t come on this one. It would be just like her to refuse his offer when he invited her next time. Dig her heels in stubbornly. She was like that. Spiteful, sometimes. He’d have to woo her over again, but he was a pro at that.

It was dark when they pulled into Dresden. Sebastian texted Yvonne. Home in fifteen. Meet me at my place?

She was there when the bus dropped him off in front of his building, and he breathed out in relief. The worries he’d had concerning her were unmerited. He dropped his guitar case and suitcase by his feet and swooped her up, twirling her in a circle.

“Oh, I missed you, babe!”

She smiled a rare smile. “Missed you too, Basti.”

He kissed her lips, and pressed her thin, little body against his. He was home, and she was here.

Everything would be fine.

 

 

Scars that Define

 

Summer was Eva’s favorite season. Not just because it was warm and sunny most of the time, which of course she did like, but because it was safe. Or at least, safer. The walkways and cobblestone streets were dry and easy to grip with the rubber end of her cane. She left the house in the winter only when necessary because of the ice and snow, so summer was a time of freedom for Eva as well. She moved slowly, but she was mobile and she often visited Luther Square to sit on the wooden benches and stare up at the Gothic steeple of the ancient church.

Or, if she felt braver and stronger, she’d walk to the end of Alaunestrasse toward the park on the other side of Bischofsweg. Crossing the street there was hazardous and she had to walk an extra couple blocks to get to the crosswalk with stoplights, but it was worth it. Especially on a warm, floral-scented day like today.

The park was full of people: families with young children playing on the playground, teens and young adults gathering in groups to smoke and drink beer and colas and laugh, cyclists cutting through them on the bike paths.

Eva wistfully watched one girl pass by on her bike. That used to be her, always on her bike, loving how the wind blew her hair and how her lungs expanded taking in the fresh air. How her leg muscles burned in a way that made her feel strong and athletic.

But that was before.

Eva spotted Gabriele and Lennon, the happy soon-to-be-married couple sitting on a blanket with a few of their friends and she watched them from a distance. Gabriele sat cross-legged with her guitar propped over her knees and began to play. Soon a crowd gathered to listen. She feigned embarrassment and put the guitar back in its case.

It was a typical Gabriele move. She was a big tease, and she basked in the praise that followed her “retirement” until she reluctantly agreed to play again. Eva found herself drawing nearer. Despite her desire to avoid being entranced by her sister’s charisma, she couldn’t help getting caught in her snare. There was something about Gabriele that was magnetic, irresistible.

Lennon watched her with unabashed admiration as she played. He practically threw himself at her when she finished her next song, kissing her in a way that made Eva blush. Gabriele’s laughter rang out as she managed to dislodge herself, and in that moment she spotted Eva staring from outside the circle.

“Eva,” she called and lifted the guitar. “Your turn!” She turned to her friends. “My sister is really talented. The true star of the family.”

She gushed and waved Eva over. Eva was stunned. Had her sister been drinking? Eva couldn’t play in front of these people. She’d melt into a smelly puddle under their watchful, judgmental eyes. She couldn’t compete with her sister and Gabriele knew this. She just wanted to reaffirm that she was the better, prettier, more talented sister.

Why did Gabriele have to continually embarrass her like this? Eva spun on her heels and limped away. Gabriele had just ruined another perfect day.

“Eva!” Her sister chased after her and grabbed hold of Eva’s elbow forcing her to stop. “What’s the matter with you?”

Eva glared at her. “You know I can’t do that.”

“Do what? Play in front of people? You do it all the time at the kitchen.”

“That’s different.”

“How so?”

“They don’t care if you’re good. Most of them can’t even tell if you’re good. It’s…”

“Safe?” Gabriele challenged.

“Yeah. It’s safe. Is there something wrong with that?”

“Eva, I know the accident changed things for you. It changed you. But you can’t let your scars define you. You still have to live.”

Eva blinked back tears and shook her head. “You just don’t know what it’s like.”

“Not personally, no. But I live it every day through you.” Her voice softened, “I just want you to be happy. I want you to be fearless, again.”

Eva forced a smile. She’d forgive her sister. That was a given. She could never stay angry with Gabriele. “Thanks. I have to go now.”

She heard Gabriele huff out her frustration behind her as she turned back to her friends.

I want you to be fearless again.

Eva would like that, too. She just didn’t see how that was possible.

Click here to download the entire book: Lee Strauss’s Flesh & Bone>>>

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

67% flash price cut! Flesh & Bone By Lee Strauss
#2 in The Minstrel Series – 4.9 stars on 15 reviews!
99 cents!

Like A Little Romance?
Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Lee Strauss’s Flesh & Bone, so please check it out!

Flesh & Bone – a contemporary romance: The Minstrel Series #2

by Lee Strauss

Flesh & Bone  - a contemporary romance: The Minstrel Series #2
4.9 stars – 15 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday Price: $2.99
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

#1 Sun & Moon is FREE!

ROMANCE. REGRET. MUSIC. FORGIVENESS. HOT EUROPEAN ROCK STAR

She can’t remember. He can’t forget.

Eva Baumann is invisible. Sebastian Weiss is famous. In a perfect world Eva would be fearless and Sebastian would be guiltless.
It’s not a perfect world.

Singer songwriter Eva Baumann has a celebrity crush on Sebastian Weiss. He’s perfect to love because there was no way they could ever be a thing. She’s a nobody. He’s a heartthrob. Hiding an infatuation is easy for her because, since her accident, hiding is what she did best.

Sebastian Weiss’s band climbed the charts, seemingly overnight, and he’s finally living the dream. All he has to do is write enough songs to produce a second album. The bad news is he hasn’t written a new song in over a year.

Sebastian stumbles into the Blue Note Pub in time to hear Eva Baumann perform a hauntingly beautiful song. Could this girl be the answer to defeating his writer’s block?

Eva and Sebastian begin a complicated writing relationship that leads to more. But Sebastian has a secret that will devastate them both.

**Includes MP3 links to four original songs produced by Norm Strauss and performed by Canadian music artists Trisha Robins and Bryan Steeksma.

The Minstrel Series is a collection of contemporary romance novels set in the singer/songwriter world. The books are companion novels, with shared settings and characters, but each is a complete stand-alone story with a HEA (happily ever after) and no cliffhangers!

The Minstrel Series books can be read in any order, but are best enjoyed in sequence. #1 Sun & Moon (Katja and Micah), #2 Flesh & Bone (Eva and Sebastian), #3 Heart & Soul (Gabriele and Callum) – coming soon!

Reviews

“The story was simply fabulous and I smiled most of the way through… a fairy tale romance of sorts…. 5 Adoring Stars!” Mandy Anderson

“I’ve always loved the idea of joining the arts and creating new combinations of expression. I love the idea of music and literature (especially in a book about a musician!)” Denise Jaden

“I fell in love with Sebastian, and could totally understand Eva’s crush on him. Eva was an incredible main character, too. I loved how her bravery and innocence completely shook Sebastian’s world.” Ana Lu

About The Author

Hey!
I’m author LEE STRAUSS.

I write mixed genre ROMANCE, most recently, The Minstrel Series.

I also write fun, lower Young Adult (teen) fiction to do with whimsical things like time-travel, fairies and merfolk (with a nice helping of romance!) as ELLE Strauss.

There’s always a TIME for romance!!

I love to connect with my fans. I’m on facebook (author pages for both Lee and Elle) and twitter: @leestraussbooks.

For information on new releases sign up for my newsletter! www.leestraussbooks.com

Other trivia about me: I’m a married mother of four; I sometimes live in Canada and sometimes Germany; I’m fond of dark chocolate, and soy lattes; I like yoga, cycling and hiking in good weather.

contact: leestraussbooks@gmail.com

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Free Excerpt!
Julia is a book-loving publisher’s assistant. Jack is a famous British rock star. “Opposites attract” is an understatement.
Come Dancing by Leslie Wells

Last week we announced that Leslie Wells’s Come Dancing is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded Come Dancing, you’re in for a real treat:

Come Dancing

by Leslie Wells

Come Dancing
4.5 stars – 59 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Julia is a book-loving publisher’s assistant. Jack is a famous British rock star.
“Opposites attract” is an understatement.
It’s 1981. Twenty-four-year-old Julia Nash has recently arrived in Manhattan, where she works as a publisher’s assistant. She dreams of becoming an editor with her own stable of bestselling authors—but it is hard to get promoted in the recession-clobbered book biz.
Julia blows off steam by going dancing downtown with her best friend, Vicky. One night, a hot British guitarist invites them into his VIP section. Despite an entourage of models and groupies, Jack chooses Julia as his girl for the evening—and when Jack Kipling picks you, you go with it. The trouble is … he’s never met a girl like her before. And she resists being just one in a long line.
Jack exposes her to new experiences, from exclusive nightclubs in SoHo to the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood; from mind-bending recording sessions to wild backstage parties. Yet Julia is afraid to fall for him. Past relationships have left her fragile; one more betrayal just might break her.
As she fends off her grabby boss and tries to move up the corporate ladder, Julia’s torrid relationship with Jack takes her to heights she’s never known—and plunges her into depths she’s never imagined.
With a fascinating inside look at publishing, this entertaining story of a bookish young woman’s adventures with a rock superstar is witty, moving, and toe-curlingly steamy.

*  *  *

Free and Bargain Quality eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

*  *  *

  And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free romance excerpt:

Chapter 1

One Way or Another

 

 

“Are you ever getting out of there?” my friend Vicky complained.

I crooked the receiver in my shoulder, scrabbling papers together. “I’m heading out now. Harvey dumped a bunch of stuff on me right before he took off.” My boss, the publisher, liked to clear his desk at the end of the week—which meant I got to stay late every Friday night.

“About time. I’ll see you at your place in an hour.”

“We’re going to stick together tonight, right? Avoid the meat market?” I loved dancing off my pent-up energy from long hours sitting at my desk. Vicky saw it more as a smorgasbord of men, served up buffet-style.

“Depends what’s on the menu. See you in a few.”

The minute she hung up, my line rang again. “Is this Julia?” a familiar voice screeched.

“Hi, Louise. How’s it going in Seattle?” Our high-strung author was on a twelve-city tour for her new thriller, and the campaign had been plagued with problems. A celebrated Texas crime reporter, she had braved drug dealers’ bullets but couldn’t cope with delayed flights and lumpy hotel pillows. Harvey had stopped taking her calls a week ago, and ever since she’d been haranguing me.

“The escort hasn’t shown up yet. Why can’t these people be prompt?” Louise fretted.

I held back from pointing out that it was over three hours until her event. “Let me see if anyone’s left in publicity; maybe they can locate her.”

I scurried around the corner to the desolate PR department. The lights in Erin’s cubicle were still on, which gave me hope. A few doors down, I found her on her knees in front of the copy machine. Erin looked up at me and smiled. “Got it!” she exclaimed, extracting an inky wad.

“Could you come and deal with Louise? She’s all pumped up for her signing, but the escort has gone awol.” I rolled my eyes.

“God forbid she should ask the front desk to call her a cab,” Erin grumbled as she followed me down the hall. “She’s stared down gun-toting Mafiosi, but on the road she turns into a quivering mass of jelly.”

“Typical of her,” I said. Most of our authors were great, but a few were real doozies. “Do you want to come out with me and Vicky later? We’re going to hit the Palladium around eleven.”

“I have to finish a press release for that astrology guide. Another glam night in the big city.”

“Okay, be that way. Call me if you change your mind.” I ducked into my office and switched Louise over to Erin, covered my typewriter, then crammed my weekend reading into my backpack.

I sprinted down the deserted hall past shelves overflowing with manuscripts, a few framed awards gathering dust. Our titles ranged from literary to pure fluff; with the economy still in the pits, we were hawking anything from pop psychology to diet fads. This had been a shock when I’d arrived as a starry-eyed editorial assistant after a brief stint in grad school, thinking I’d be spending my weekends holed up with hot talent from The New Yorker. But now I was seasoned enough to plow through the B-list celebrity memoirs and breastfeeding manuals, while relishing any good novels that came my way.

I caught the elevator with a jittery messenger who bounced his bike tire, making the floor shimmy. I waved to the security guard and headed down lower Park Avenue in the balmy air. Usually I walked home to save money on subway tokens; I figured I had time tonight since my best friend was probably still primping.

Vicky had left the company a few months ago to join the publicity department of a larger midtown publisher. I missed her at the office, and I was also envious of her escape from assistantdom. But we still got together on weekends, and now I couldn’t wait to go to our favorite club. We liked the Palladium for its edgy mix of punks, rockers, and regular people like us.

I wove through some guys hissing “Sens, sensimilla!” in Washington Square and stopped at a street vendor selling earrings. A pair with long strands of beads and feathers caught my eye. I fingered them for a minute, calculating. Seven bucks for drinks; three for a cab home tonight … Reluctantly I put them back.

Halfway down MacDougal, I came to a screeching halt. An absolutely perfect small table was sitting right in the middle of the sidewalk. I stepped close for a better look. Gold leaf curlicues adorned its surface, and ornate lion heads were carved into its corners. I gave it a shake to see if the legs were loose, but it didn’t even wobble. I couldn’t believe someone had thrown out something this nice—it wasn’t even large garbage night! At last I could get rid of the stacked milk crates I ate on.

Now I just had to get it home. My place on Broome Street was eight blocks away, and the table was about three feet square. Maybe if I swung my backpack around to the front and hoisted the table on my back …

As I stood there considering, a guy in a dirty tee-shirt approached, holding a can of beer. “You need some help with that?” he asked, swaying a little.

“I think I can get it. Thanks anyway.”

The man leaned against the brick wall of the apartment building to watch. Turning around, I backed up to the table. I tried to reach behind and grasp its sides, but I couldn’t bend back far enough—why I’d always stunk at the limbo-la. Maybe if I bent lower … I crouched down, the backpack wedged against my belly like an unwanted pregnancy, and strained to get a grip on its legs.

Suddenly a woman ran screeching out of the building. “Stop that! What are you doing with my table?”

I stared at her. “This is yours? I thought somebody was throwing it away.”

“Are you kidding? This is an antique! You couldn’t have thought it was being thrown out.” The woman glared at me, hand on her hip.

Oh my god, how embarrassing. “I didn’t realize—I mean, it was sitting here all by itself with no note on it or anything. I thought it was meant for the garbage.”

“The garbage!” the woman shrieked. “I paid six hundred dollars for that! I was waiting for my husband to bring it upstairs! You should keep your paws off things that aren’t yours,” she huffed as she flounced back inside.

The man in the tee-shirt smiled and took a gulp of beer. “Baby, you just took a bite of the B-i-i-i-g Apple.”

“Actually, I think it just bit me.”

 

Chapter 2

Brass in Pocket

 

 

My cheeks burning, I continued across Houston toward my loft. I had rented it a year ago from the building’s owner, an old Italian man that I paid in cash. $330 a month wasn’t bad, now that SoHo no longer consisted of vacant warehouses. Some art galleries and clothing shops had sprouted up recently, along with a few sushi bars and espresso cafes. It seemed safer to walk the streets at night, but I hoped Mr. Iaccone wouldn’t catch on and raise the rent.

Cutting over on Prince, I averted my eyes from a diner where I’d spent many Sunday mornings with my ex-boyfriend, Arthur Klein. It was awful to break up with someone who lived nearby; there were constant reminders unless you detoured around entire blocks. An NYU professor recently separated from his wife, Art’s sandy brown curls and racquetball-toned body were admired by all the female English Lit majors. I felt unbelievably lucky when he asked me to have coffee one afternoon after class. From our first conversation about Virginia Woolf, I was head over heels. Ten months later, he told me he was going back to his wife.

For weeks I was a total wreck, sniffling in token lines and sobbing through double features. Then, thinking something purely physical might cheer me up, I brought a guy named Eric home with me from a party. But when he stumbled out the next morning and never called, I felt even more miserable.

Every time I experienced the sting of rejection, it dredged up feelings about my father. We had been so close when I was growing up—or so I’d thought. Dad was an inspector in a factory in our small Pennsylvania town. When he got home from his shift, he’d roll up his sleeves, crack open a beer and turn on the rabbit-eared radio in our linoleum kitchen. If a good dance tune came on, he’d scoop me up in his wiry arms and swing me around, dipping me dramatically and making me giggle as I gazed into his boyishly grinning face.

Sometimes after he’d had a big argument with my mother, he would play the mournful country music he loved—Hank Williams, Patsy Cline—on the little plastic record player he’d given me. He also loved the blues, and by the time I was six, I could distinguish the way Albert King strummed his guitar, from T-Bone Walker or John Lee Hooker.

Things started to fall apart when I was eight, after my mother, Dorothea—“Dot” to her friends—began moonlighting as a cocktail waitress on weekends. I liked having Dad all to myself; he let me stay up past my bedtime, dancing to Motown 45s. My mother would come in much later than one a.m., when the bar stopped serving. She claimed to be helping the owner close out the register, but my father suspected otherwise. The next morning, their shouting made me retreat to my room with a pile of library books.

Eventually she quit that job, but the damage was done. Then, the September when I was fourteen, he discovered that she was having an affair with her manager at the hardware store. When Dot and I came back from running errands the following Saturday, his side of their closet was empty. My mother shut the closet door, lit a cigarette, got out her checkbook and sat staring dry-eyed at it on the kitchen table. I went to my room and lay shaking on the bed, terrified of what would happen to us. My father simply vanished into thin air that day, leaving Dot with the bills, and me feeling abandoned.

I came out of my memory-induced daze just in time to avoid stepping on a broken crack vial lying on the sidewalk. My mind skittered back to the present. I wondered whether Art ever thought about me, now that he was reunited with his wife. I had gone out with one or two guys in the past eight months, but nothing much had come of it. After my lousy one-night stand, I’d decided that I should sleep with someone only if there was the possibility of a relationship. Which meant I’d had a long dry spell, with no relief in sight.

In the summer heat, the city smelled like a rotting overripe fruit. I turned onto Broome, glad to see that Vicky wasn’t cooling her heels on the sidewalk. After climbing three flights and unlocking the double deadbolts, I pushed up my screenless windows to catch a breeze. I removed the scarf covering a wooden crate of my favorite albums, chose a B.B. King and lowered the needle.

Hmm, what to wear … I held a cold beer against my cheek and stared at the things hanging from nails in the wall, since my loft didn’t come with a closet.

The selection was sparse, to put it mildly. I’d snagged my second-hand leather skirt for eight bucks because the lining was torn. Maybe it’ll hold up for one more night’s dancing … I grabbed my stapler and fixed the trailing hemline. From my three-legged dresser—a legit curbside salvage—I drew a ripped top from Screaming Mimi’s and black elbow-length gloves that I’d cut the fingers out of. The finishing touch was ten rubber bracelets on each arm.

Now for a few safety pins to add a punk edge. I attached a couple to my sleeve. Nice one, Julia. Looks like a failed home ec project, I thought, unclipping them. No matter how hard I tried to seem “downtown”, I felt like I still looked fresh-off-the-farm. I ran a brush through my chestnut layers and licked my finger to smooth an eyebrow. Sometimes people commented on the blue of my eyes, but I usually pictured myself in the Coke-bottle lenses I’d worn until college, when I finally got contacts.

“That’s as good as it’s gonna get,” I told the girl frowning at me in the mirror. I gave up and went to put on another record.

A familiar voice was calling from the street. “Get your Post here! Hot off the press: Julia Nash Leaves Office before Midnight—Publishing Industry Collapses in Ruins.”

I leaned out the window to see Vicky grinning up at me. Her cropped blond hair and pert nose made her look like a mischievous pixie. “Just a sec.” I got my key and threw it down to her, stuffing it inside a sock so it was easier to catch. She unlocked the door and stomped up the stairs in a flirty short skirt and heels; she could afford better clothes since her new company paid well.

“Nice hem job there.” Her green eyes danced as she gave me the once-over. She plopped down on the couch and I handed her a beer. “Could we listen to something a little less dour? Sheesh. You and your blues.”

“Sure, if you insist. Too bad you don’t appreciate the higher art forms.” I removed Howlin’ Wolf and put on The Pretenders, whipping my hips to the pounding bass.

“Is this the haircut album?” Vicky asked with a smirk. The other weekend before we went out, I’d propped the record cover against my mirror and tried to trim my hair like Chrissie Hynde’s.

“Those of us who are still assistants can’t afford salons. I thought I did a pretty good job; maybe if this publishing thing doesn’t work out, I’ll try beauty school.”

“Lucky thing it wasn’t Bow Wow Wow you were in the mood for that day.”

“Yeah, a huge purple mohawk would go over really well at the office.” I sat at the other end of the couch. “How are things with Emily?” Her new boss was demanding, but at least she was fair.

“She liked the press release I wrote today. It’s for a pop psych book on how to keep a man interested. I can condense the whole thing into two words: Act uninterested. Speaking of work, is the old letch still trying to get into your pants?” Although he was married, Harvey had a sleazy history of putting the moves on junior women.

“He keeps asking me out for a drink. That measly five-hundred-dollar raise isn’t going to get him over. Not that I’d go out with him for a million.” So far I’d been able to fend Harvey off, but it made working for him a real drag.

Vicky propped her skinny legs on a wooden crate. “We have to find you a new job. I asked Emily to let me know if she heard of any openings, if the hiring freeze ever gets lifted. Wouldn’t it be great to work together again?”

“Yes, I miss being able to grab lunch anytime. At least your career is launched; I’m just treading water. If I don’t make editor at some point… I have this nightmare I’ll still be typing Harvey’s letters when I’m thirty, in a moth-eaten cardigan with specs hanging from a chain around my neck.”

Vicky laughed. “Try not to obsess over it. You’ve only been there a little over a year.”

Which was about how long she’d been there when Emily rescued her. I went to grab another beer and cranked up “Stop Your Sobbing,” snarling the words along with Chrissie.

“Did that guy from the party ever call you?” Vicky asked.

“Nope. By the time I got back from the bathroom, a redhead in fishnets had him cornered.”

“You have to be more assertive. You let other girls move in who aren’t nearly as hot as you are.” She took a sip of beer and continued. “You can’t just sit back and let the guy do all the work. You aren’t in Pikesville, Pa. anymore.” Vicky often had advice about my love life, or lack thereof. From what she’d told me about growing up on Long Island, she hadn’t gone two weeks without a date since she was fourteen.

“Message of Love” came on, and Vicky hopped up to dance. I joined her, pogoing to the beat. She raised her arms and did an exaggerated grind against my hip.

“We should moonlight as erotic dancers,” I said, laughing and pushing her away. “Then I could afford a decent haircut.”

“If we made those moves at the Palladium, we’d have every dude in the place salivating.”

I collapsed on my sagging couch. “I don’t think I want them salivating on me.”

“Why not? You’d have the pick of the litter.” Vicky flopped down beside me.

I peeled the label off my sweating bottle and smoothed it on my thigh. “All I want is one good guy who’ll appreciate what I have to offer. Once I figure out what that is.”

“I don’t get why you’re so particular. Sometimes it’s nice just to have a warm body next to you. Wards off the lonelies on a Saturday night.” She downed the last drop of beer.

“You have a point. But it would be good if it could be a little more meaningful.”

“It is meaningful. It means you got boinked.”

I laughed. “I’ll keep that in mind, Victoria.”

At eleven, we walked the twenty blocks north to the Palladium. The club had a cavernous ballroom on the main floor and an upstairs VIP lounge for private parties. The line to get in snaked around the block.

Vicky went right up front, ignoring glares from some overdressed women and their dates. “Hi Barry,” she said to the bouncer.

“Vicky. And Julia.” Barry grinned and moved aside. “Come on in, girls.”

“Hey, we’ve been here half an hour!” a guy in a suit complained.

“Go back to Wall Street,” Vicky muttered as I followed her through the entrance.

We shoved our way into the crowd, the music so loud it was useless to try to talk. I could feel the bass throbbing in my throat. The concrete floor was already sticky with spilt beer, the smell of sweat mingling with the cloying scent of clove cigarettes. We found a spot next to a man with a chain running from nostril to ear, his blond foot-high spikes glowing in the black lights. Vicky blissfully swayed her slim hips, and I shut my eyes and lost myself in the rhythm.

The video guy came around, aiming his shoulder-mounted camera at us. We kept dancing normally in the spotlight’s glare, unlike a lot of people who put on a show for him. It was distracting because our images were projected larger-than-life against the huge back wall, so everyone could see. Finally he moved on to some girls in tight rubber dresses who shook their booties at the camera.

As a Clash tune played I noticed a man standing near me, holding a drink. He touched my arm and started to say something, seeming to point at the ceiling.

“What?” I shouted.

“A friend of mine wants to meet you gals. We’re up there,” he said with some kind of Southern accent.

I wondered why this guy had to run interference, but Vicky was interested. “What’s going on in the lounge?” she asked.

“Just a little party.” He grinned and took a sip of his drink.

Vicky smiled her assent, and he started toward the stairs.

“I heard some rock and rollers might be here tonight; there’s a private party or something,” Vicky said as we followed him, weaving through slam-dancing bodies.

I wasn’t dressed to impress in my ragged leather skirt, but at least we might score a free drink. We went up to the dark lounge where a bouncer was sitting on a stool with a checklist. I wondered why they needed a door-minder, but once we got inside, the crowd was pretty upscale. Slick-looking SoHo types struck blasé poses, while the women circulating the room looked like models.

The Southerner turned to us, and the light from the window overlooking the dance floor shone on his face. “Name your poison. I’m Sammy, by the way.”

With a shock it hit me who he was; I hadn’t recognized him in the dark, with his soul patch and shorter hair. All of a sudden I was really nervous. I’d been a huge fan of the British group Four to the Floor since I was a teenager, like everyone else I knew. Vicky, as usual, kept her cool. “Good to meet you; I’m Vicky. I’ll have a tequila sunrise. Julia?”

“Vodka and tonic, please.”

“One party water and a Ta-kill-ya, comin’ right up.” Sammy went over to the bar, tended by a girl in a black leather bikini.

“Can you believe it? That’s Sammy Parnell,” Vicky said. “I wonder if the others are here.” She scanned the crowd. “Who do you think his friend is? He said someone wanted to meet us.”

“No telling. I can’t believe it’s him either.” Whoever this friend was, he was probably interested in Vicky. She tended to attract across-the-room attention with her waifish blonde hair and endless legs. I hoped I had enough for a cab ride if she wound up going home with him; I had planned on splitting the fare.

Sammy returned with our drinks. “My buddy Jack’s over there. Why don’t you go say hello?” He jerked his head toward a dark corner where some women were standing before a low sofa. Could he mean Jack Kipling, the guitarist of the group? The vivacious clump of girls directed their enthusiasm toward whoever was sitting on the couch.

“Why don’t you introduce us?” Vicky said, smiling her Cheshire-cat smile that slanted her green eyes.

“Tell you what, I’ll just let him know you’re here.” Sammy went over and squeezed in between two twiggy blondes. A dark head of hair was briefly visible when the women parted. I glanced away, not wanting to seem star-struck, but Vicky continued to gaze in their direction.

“Oh my god! He’s looking our way now.”

“Stop staring. They must get that all the time.” I sipped my drink, which had twice the usual amount of vodka in it.

Sammy sauntered back. “Jack said to come say hi.”

Vicky had experience dealing with celebrities in her publicist role; I couldn’t imagine what I’d say to someone that famous. Nor was I in the mood to kiss up to some arrogant, obnoxious rock star who expected women to roll over and beg—even if I was a huge fan. “Go ahead. Maybe you can get an autograph.”

Vicky followed him to the sofa and exchanged a few words with Jack, who was still seated and mostly blocked from view. Then she laughed with Sammy for a few minutes and scribbled on a piece of paper. I polished off my drink as she came over smiling.

“Well, that was a thrill. Now I can tell my grandchildren that I met Jack Kipling. And Sammy Parnell. I gave Sammy my number.”

“Maybe they’ll both call you. Can we go downstairs and dance some more?” I didn’t want to blow her chances with Jack if he got unglued from his groupies, but I felt out of place in this fancy crowd.

“Let’s stay a few more minutes. Aren’t you going to say hi to Jack?” she asked, combing her fingers through her hair. “Is my lipstick smeared?”

“Lick your front tooth. There, it’s gone.”

“Listen, Jules, I think it’s you he wants to meet.”

I laughed. “Sure. He probably came here tonight hoping to run into me. I’m near the top of his list, just below Starlet Number One and Starlet Number Two.”

“I’m not kidding. He asked me where my friend was.”

I tried to take another sip of vodka before remembering it was all gone. So maybe it wasn’t Vicky that Jack had singled out when the video guy threw our images on the wall. He was standing now; I could just make out his bored expression as he faced his entourage. A girl grasped his arm, clinging tightly until he detached himself.

“Sammy’s coming back,” Vicky said. “Look who’s with him.”

My pulse bolted; Jack was heading our way. Wild dark hair shot up in all directions, an earring glinting through the tangle. His long legs were encased in skintight jeans, frayed at the cuffs over python boots. He had a few days’ stubble and dark circles under his eyes, as if he hadn’t slept recently. When he stood next to me, I almost passed out. Even this disheveled, he was as rakishly good-looking as on his album covers.

“You made me lose my spot on the couch,” Jack said, his Cockney accent stronger than I would have expected.

“I’m sure they’ll let you have it back.” I forced myself to tear my eyes away from him. Projected on the outer wall, two girls in death-mask makeup were thrashing about.

“D’you come here often?” Jack said, moving closer.

I tried to remember to breathe. “Fairly often. The music’s more danceable than some other places.”

“I noticed you dancing down there.” He gestured at the main floor with his drink. “Verrry nice.”

My cheeks flushed. “I was just trying to avoid a head-on with those slam-dancers.”

Jack laughed. “Why don’t we give you girls a ride home? I’m ready to split.”

I was so surprised, I didn’t know what to say.

“Jack’s car is right outside,” Sammy added.

“Fantastic,” Vicky said.

My heart pounded as we followed them to the stairs, Jack putting on sunglasses before he hit the first floor. The men hurried out to the street where a big black car was waiting at the curb. The driver opened the back door and Jack dove in, followed by Sammy. Vicky slipped inside and I got in by the window. The interior smelled of new leather, and had drink holders with various bottles and little lights along the sides. I think I’m in someone else’s movie, I told myself.

The driver turned to look at us through the open partition.

“Where to?” Sammy asked.

“If you could drop us at Mott and Hester, that would be great.” I’d walk the few blocks home from Vicky’s.

“Mott and Hester, Rick.”

The driver maneuvered expertly through swerving cabs as we flew downtown.

“Do you two go dancin’ a lot?” Sammy drawled.

I glanced over; Jack was leaning forward, looking at me. I felt my face get hot.

Vicky smiled. “When I manage to drag Julia away from work.”

“Where do you do your woork?” Jack asked, drawing out the word.

“She’s an editor at a publishing house,” Vicky said.

“An assistant editor. Vicky’s in publishing too,” I added.

“Publicity. Not the brainy stuff,” Vicky said.

“So you’re a brainy gal,” Jack said to me.

“Only on days that end in ‘y’.” I managed to smile at him despite my butterflies. The driver stopped at Mott and I got out. The door on the other side opened and Jack emerged, trailed by Sammy.

“Thanks so much for the ride.” I waited for Vicky on the sidewalk.

“Hold on a tick,” Jack said in a low voice. He ambled over to me, stepping into the light from a storefront. His shirt was untucked and unbuttoned halfway to his waist, revealing a thin chain with a slash of lightning dangling from it. He ran his hand through his hair, making it stick out even more. “Why don’t I see you home? Make sure you get in safely.” He cocked his eyebrow and gave me a wolfish grin.

“Um, that’s okay. I’ll be fine.” I was way too nervous to bring Jack Kipling home with me, no matter how sexy he was.

Jack’s face took on a puzzled look. “But … “

If I waited any longer, I’d be tempted to take him up on it. “Thanks again!” I said brightly. I grabbed Vicky’s arm and drew her along, leaving them staring after us.

“Are you insane?” she asked as we rounded the corner. “You could be ripping off his clothes as we speak. And Sammy and I could be getting to know each other. In the Biblical sense.”

“If we’d gone for the wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am, do you think we’d have ever heard from them again?” I said as she groped in a pocket for her key. “We’d be just another notch on their guitar necks. Plus I haven’t shaved my legs in over a week.”

“So what? I hope you haven’t blown it.” She pushed the door open. “Talk to you tomorrow.”

I hurried down the block, swerving to avoid a man rummaging through a tipped-over garbage can. How bizarre to go out for a typical Friday night, and then meet not one but two members of the Floor. The four of them—Patrick, lead singer and bass player; Jack, guitarist and back-up vocals; Mark on drums; and Sammy, the lone American of the group, on keyboard—had started in Britain, and then exploded in the States. I’d pored over their album liner notes so many times, I knew them by heart. And it was amazing to have met Jack, who’d always been my favorite.

But that was in terms of their music. I’d read about the band’s excesses, particularly Jack’s; he was the epitome of the bad boy rock and roller. Even though at this very minute I could have been wrapping my fingers in that wild mane of hair, I knew I would have felt awful the morning after. Aside from my fling with Eric, I’d seen my mother mope around lots of times after sleeping with a guy and then never hearing from him again. Let’s just say I’d learned from her example.

Maybe I’m not really missing Art after all this time, I thought as I clumped upstairs. I was probably just lonesome from the solitary weekends spent editing. But I wasn’t about to have a one-night stand with a rock star, no matter how much I liked his music. That would be the dumbest thing I could do.

Click here to download the entire book: Leslie Wells’s Come Dancing>>>

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Julia is a book-loving publisher’s assistant. Jack is a famous British rock star. “Opposites attract” is an understatement.
Come Dancing by Leslie Wells, 4.5 stars – $0.99

Like A Little Romance?
Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Leslie Wells’s Come Dancing, so please check it out!

Come Dancing

by Leslie Wells

Come Dancing
4.5 stars – 56 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Julia is a book-loving publisher’s assistant. Jack is a famous British rock star.
“Opposites attract” is an understatement.

It’s 1981. Twenty-four-year-old Julia Nash has recently arrived in Manhattan, where she works as a publisher’s assistant. She dreams of becoming an editor with her own stable of bestselling authors—but it is hard to get promoted in the recession-clobbered book biz.
Julia blows off steam by going dancing downtown with her best friend, Vicky. One night, a hot British guitarist invites them into his VIP section. Despite an entourage of models and groupies, Jack chooses Julia as his girl for the evening—and when Jack Kipling picks you, you go with it. The trouble is … he’s never met a girl like her before. And she resists being just one in a long line.
Jack exposes her to new experiences, from exclusive nightclubs in SoHo to the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood; from mind-bending recording sessions to wild backstage parties. Yet Julia is afraid to fall for him. Past relationships have left her fragile; one more betrayal just might break her.
As she fends off her grabby boss and tries to move up the corporate ladder, Julia’s torrid relationship with Jack takes her to heights she’s never known—and plunges her into depths she’s never imagined.
With a fascinating inside look at publishing, this entertaining story of a bookish young woman’s adventures with a rock superstar is witty, moving, and toe-curlingly steamy.

Reviews

“I loved this story and could not put it down. … Hot, sexy and combustible!” —Blushing Divas Book Reviews

“Come Dancing is brimming with both humor and heart.” —Flashlight Commentary Book Blog

“Leslie Wells brings to life all the eclectic, edgy style of New York City at the dawn of the 1980s as she spins a story of spine-tingling romance and the complex issues that can threaten a relationship. Through her effervescent writing style she catapults the reader into a world of excess and indulgence, while delving into some honest and heartfelt struggles along the way. … Come Dancing is a love story with lots of heart and plenty of heat.” —Literary Inklings Book Reviews

About The Author

Leslie Wells left her small Southern town in 1979 for graduate school in Manhattan, after which she got her first job in book publishing. She has edited forty-eight New York Times bestsellers in her over thirty-year career, including thirteen number one New York Times bestsellers. Leslie has worked with numerous internationally known authors, musicians, actors, actresses, television and radio personalities, athletes, and coaches. She lives on Long Island, New York.

Visit Leslie at www.lesliewellsbooks.com.

*  *  *

Need More Romance in Your Life? We Got Your Fix ;)

Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small