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!

3 Great Novellas in One 5-Star Bundle! USA TODAY Bestseller Kathryn Shay’s Chasing the Fire (Backdraft, Fully Involved, Flashover) is KND Brand New Romance of The Week

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, Kathryn Shay’s Chasing the Fire (Backdraft, Fully Involved, Flashover) (Hidden Cove Series), so please check it out!

4.7 stars – 6 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of Chasing the Fire (Backdraft, Fully Involved, Flashover) (Hidden Cove Series)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

USA Today bestselling author Kathryn Shay continues her beloved Hidden Cove series with CHASING THE FIRE, three unforgettable novellas about firefighters.

Backdraft: Firefighter Riley Gallagher must come to terms with his disgraced father before he can be happy with the love of his life. But has he already missed the chance to claim a future with Firefighter Jane Phillips?

Fully Involved: Lisa Beth Duncan, firefighter and paramedic, swore she’d never allow her ex-husband into her heart again. But when he moves to Hidden Cove and pursues her, she finds herself breaking her own rules.

Flashover: Captain Nick Evans believes he committed the worst of crimes, even if it was to protect his little sister. He’s not ready for a relationship with Stacey Sterling, a firefighter’s widow who’s determined to help him heal.

Praise for Kathryn Shay’s firefighter books:

“Shay’s powerful characters and emotional topics strike a chord with her readers and have earned her a well-deserved place among the top romance authors.” –Waldenbooks Romantic Reader

“Powerful and compelling… reinforces Shay’s well-earned reputation as a first rate storyteller.” –Booklist

“Kathryn Shay loves firefighters, and if you didn’t love them before, you’ll love them after reading some of her books featuring firefighting heroes and heroines.” –Judith Arnold, USA Today bestselling author

 

About The Author

 

A USA TODAY bestseller, Kathryn Shay has been a lifelong writer and teacher. She has self-published 12 original romance titles, 36 print books with the Berkley Publishing Group and Harlequin Enterprises and 1 mainstream women’s fiction with Bold Strokes Books. She has won five RT Book Reviews awards, four Golden Quills, four Holt Medallions, the Bookseller’s Best Award, Foreword Magazine’s Book of the Year and several “Starred Reviews.” Her novels have been serialized in COSMOPOLITAN magazine and featured in USA TODAY, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL and PEOPLE magazine. There are over five million copies of her books in print, along with hundreds of thousands downloaded online. She lives in upstate New York with her husband and children.

*  *  *

Never miss another great sale again – Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Free Excerpt From KND Romance of The Week: 52 Straight Rave Reviews For Shannon Mayer’s High Risk Love

Last week we announced that Shannon Mayer’s High Risk Love 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 High Risk Love, you’re in for a real treat:

4.7 stars – 52 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Photographs.
Images. Snapshots in time.
This is how I experience my life. I’ve hidden behind my camera and viewed the world through the lens. I watch other people live their lives. I’ve given up on my dreams, and sheltered my heart from love; because both have given me nothing but pain. Even thinking about opening myself up, sends my fears into overdrive. It’s better to be safe, than to take a risk and have your life shattered into pieces alongside your heart. This is what I believed.Dangerous.

Risks. Fear Nothing.

I live for the rush of adrenaline I get when I work my stunts. Nothing else matters but the feel of my heart pounding when I challenge the line between life and death. Women are nothing more than a distraction; they use me for my connections, as I use them to escape the pain of my past before moving on to my next adrenaline fix. My life is consumed with excitement, danger and risks–it’s all I needed.

Denials.

Fear. The complete wrong time.

Jasmin and Jet will face off over photos, stunts and the truth hidden in their hearts. The last person Jasmin wants to be with is a man who takes life for granted. Jet wants to give his heart to no one; especially one who might not understand the secrets that haunt him. Despite their protests, Jasmin’s and Jet’s lives tangle; the threads of love and fear bind them. Between their passions and their pasts, they fight to hang onto each other . . . but will the stakes be too high when faced with the ultimate sacrifice?

This is a 75,000+ word novel.

** 18+ for adult situations, sexual situations and language.

*  *  *

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 excerpt:

Excerpt of “High Risk Love”

 

Jet

 

I sat in my hotel room, on the edge of my bed, buck naked and still too hot to sleep. The breeze blew in through the sliding glass door that led out onto the questionably safe balcony, but the night air did nothing to cool my skin.

Blame it on the heat or blame it on the small room and heavy blankets.

It wasn’t the nightmare, the memories I relived in my sleep. No, that was not why sweat slid down my spine, trickled down my chest and off my arms. I stood up, walked to the open door and looked out. The gulf was visible and the breeze off the ocean was good, headed straight in my direction.

Wide awake now, I let out a slow breath, bowed my chin to my chest and rubbed the back of my neck. Scars and secrets; I couldn’t escape either one.

Think about something else. Anything else.

“Jasmin.” I whispered her name. The scent of her lingered with me, a mixture of floral and earthy scents that had buried themselves in my brain. I thought back to the feeling of her hand in mine. Her small fingers in mine, curling up around my own, skin so soft—how many girls had I touched in my lifetime? I’d done far more than just held their hands and felt . . . nothing. Yet a simple touch and I’d immediately wanted more. Placing one hand on the edge of the doorway, I continued to stare out at the ocean as I thought about Jasmin, wondered if she was asleep now, or maybe she was awake like I was. Better yet, maybe she was thinking about me. I grinned, and then thought about that sweet Spitfire lying in bed, thinking about me, touching herself.

I let out a groan of torment as images assaulted me, like a movie I couldn’t, didn’t want to stop. Her hair would be spread out on a pillow, and she’d whisper my name as her fingers circled her moist wet center. Her other hand would find a nipple begging for attention, tugging on it lightly, she’d moan, her fingers speeding up as she stroked herself, faster, more frantic now. Her green eyes would dilate with lust, her body arching into her hand as the orgasm started to spin her out of control.

“Fuck,” I whispered, feeling out of control myself, my hand moving in a rhythm that wouldn’t take me long imagining her delicious tight—

The knock on the door snapped me out of my fantasy. “Who is it?” I barked, walking stiffly to the edge of the bed, scooping up my shorts and sliding them on though they were tented to the extreme.

“It’s Hugh.”

Grumbling, I stomped over to the door and snapped it open, glaring. “What now?”

Hugh smiled at me. “Got a girl in there to go with that raging hard on?”

I glared at him, frustration mounting. “No. Thanks for asking. What the hell do you want in the middle of the god damn night? Surely not a booty call?”

Hugh batted his eyes and softened his voice into a high-pitched lisping falsetto. “For you maybe . . . stud muffin.”

He snapped a fist out and punched my shoulder. “Duty calls. Rodney decided at the last minute to do your scene at night. Thinks it’ll look better with the explosion.”

I banged my head into the door frame. “Seriously?”

“Hey, it’s not like you’re leaving an unlucky lady behind.”

I took a swing at him that he dodged easily, again laughing at me. “Come on, man. Get your clothes on and cover your raging dick. Nobody wants to see that. Well, maybe Elise does.”

With a flick of my wrist, I slammed the door in his face, smothering his continued laughter.

“Stupid Rodney Asher and his stupid ideas.” I turned on the overhead light and yanked on my clothes one piece at a time, every brush against my erection bringing it hard and ready with the merest hint of attention. Yeah, this was going to go just fucking dandy.

Grumbling all the way to the movie set, I thought about Jasmin as I walked. I’d promised her I wouldn’t seduce her, and if her job was on the line then it was a valid point. But how the hell was I going to be around her when the mere thought of her made me literally want to take matters into my own hands?

And while I thought I’d seen desire in her eyes, she’d made it clear she didn’t want me. Who could blame her really? A smart girl like that, what the hell would she want with a stuntman? What did I have to offer a girl like her anyway? If she wasn’t trying to make it on the big screen, there was nothing I could give. I wasn’t naïve enough to think I could protect her—after all, I hadn’t even been able to protect myself and Jasper. And I couldn’t even offer her the things a girl like her deserved; my time was barely my own the way I flew from set to set. What kind of life was that?

Nothing. Which was better anyway.

Right.

With my mood souring, my libido disappeared. Jasmin didn’t want me no matter how badly I wanted to see and feel her sweat soaked skin beneath me.

This was going to be a bitching tough week.

 

* * * * *

 

Rodney kept us shooting until well past sun up, no matter that we’d pointed out it was no longer dark, hence the excuse that he wanted the explosion more visible against the night sky was a moot point. He waved us off.

I leaned back in the folding chair I’d plunked myself into, sunglasses on, ball cap twisted backwards as I tried to snag a few zzz’s.

A kid approached me, pimple-faced and wearing big thick horn-rimmed glasses. He held a camera up. “Mind if I take a few shots? It’s for my school newspaper.”

“Knock yourself out,” I said. The whir and click of the camera brought me upright, reminding me of a promise I’d made. I scrambled for my cell phone. 9:55.

“Shit.” I stood and waved at Hugh. “Be right back!”

Sprinting off the set and down the street, I dodged people and cars alike. I said I’d be there to escort her at ten, damn it. Breathing hard, I pushed myself faster, no longer tired from the long night of shooting. Across the street from Jasmin’s hotel I paused to catch my breath, hands on my knees. She was standing out front . . . waiting for me?

A smile crept over my lips as the wind caught the edge of her pale yellow sundress, swirling it around her lean thighs. She was wearing shades, flip flops, but no hat, and her camera was clutched in her hand, the strap wrapped around her wrist.

I drank her in, the sight of her giving me a not unpleasant shiver that ran the length of my body.

Checking the street, I crossed, catching her attention about halfway to her. She saw me and her face lit up, like . . . I meant something to her. My feet stopped where they were and I bathed in her smile, feeling it curve around me, warmer than the sun on my skin. God, how long had it been since a woman actually cared about me, didn’t want to use me for their own ends?

Fuck, what the hell was wrong with me? She was a photographer; she needed me to get her job done. This was a bad idea.

The blare of a truck’s horn snapped me out of my whatever-the-hell-I was-feeling and I dodged the pissed off driver with about half an inch to spare. I jogged the rest of the way across. Jasmin was pale when I reached her, almost green there was so little color in her face.

“Hey, you okay?”

“He almost hit you.” She clutched her camera, knuckles white.

“Yeah, but almost doesn’t count,” I answered, offering her my hand. She shook her head.

I fought the disappointment that coursed through me. You knew this going in today. She’s not for you. Not this girl. Get the fuck over it.

Jasmin walked beside me. “Are you feeling alright?”

I blinked, brought out of my thoughts. “Yeah, why?”

“You’re all sweaty. Like you’ve been running,” she said, arching an eyebrow at me. “Did you forget about me and have to run all the way?”

I splayed a hand against my chest and opened my eyes, wide and innocent like. “Me? Jet Sterling forget something as important as you? Never. I was . . . .” Crap, what was I doing then?

Her eyebrows seemed to arch even higher. “You were . . . .”

Think fast man. “A bee.”

“A bee?”

“Yes, there was this bee, actually, a whole hive of them. You know, the killer bees? Well, I stumbled across a nest—”

“Here? At your movie set?” Her lips seemed to be quivering, and suddenly I felt the absolute need to make her smile. To hear her laugh again. Even at the expense of my own pride and ego.

“Well, no, not at the movie set. On the way to get you, this huge hive of bees attacked an old Mexican woman. She looked like a ninja swatting at them left,” I jabbed with my left, “right,” I crouched and threw an uppercut into the air.

Laughter spilled out of her. “And you had to help her?”

“Carried her on my back, all the way to her home, with the bees chasing us, of course. She gave me a tortilla in thanks.” I smiled, pleased with myself.

Jasmin chuckled. “You’re a terrible liar, you know that?”

“Actually, you’re the first person who’s ever said that. Ever.” God, how I wanted to grab her, pull her into my arms and kiss her until . . . until what? What was this damn fascination I had with the green-eyed beauty? There were more women out there than I could count, and any one of them would be happy to spend a night or two in my bed. But this one, I wanted her and she didn’t want me. Was that the draw? Had it been so long since I’d actually been denied that it was turning me on?

“I was thinking, if you don’t mind, we could do some pictures down at the beach,” she said, pointing to the path that would take us to the closest public beach. “If you’re okay with stripping down to your swim trunks, and maybe getting your jeans wet.”

“I’ll strip down to less than that for you,” I said, enjoying the blush that spread across her cheeks. Stilling the urge to trace the blush with my fingers, I gave her a wide grin. “But only if you want.”

She held up her hands. “I think we can pass on the full striptease. Save it for someone else, someone who wants it.”

Ouch. I must have made a face because she touched me on the arm, her eyes crinkling up with concern. “I didn’t mean it like that. I mean, there have got to be lots of girls that would want you to strip for them.” Her eyes widened, the color increasing in her cheeks “I mean . . . .”

Oh God, I was enjoying this. I just stared at her, let her dig the hole deeper. “You probably look great no matter what . . . .” She finally gave up, and just when it was about to get interesting. Damn.

She cleared her throat, then pointed at the set as we passed by. “Do you need to get your swim trunks, or let them know that you’re going to be a while?” Her words were rushed, as if that would hide her previous stuttering mess. Which I found charming. Charming?

“Jazzy, you know you are incredibly cute when you’re flustered,” I said, regretting the words even as I said them. How many times was I going to have to remind myself that she wasn’t for me? Damn it.

But she smiled, and then tears came to her eyes, confusing the hell out of me.

“Thanks.” Her pace picked up and I was left standing there, staring at the swaying back end of her again. I was more confused than ever. She called over her shoulder. “I’ll be setting up on the beach, you come when you’re ready.”

What had happened there? Why had she looked ready to cry? Crap, I did not need another emotionally unstable woman chasing me around. No more playing. Jasmin was off limits.

I jogged onto the set, checked in with Rodney, nodded at the pimple-faced teenager who held up his camera. “Catch me later, kid. I’ve got a date with a pretty lady.”

He frowned as I snatched a pair of swim trunks from the costume gals who tittered over my choice.

“Don’t you want to take the Speedo?”

Laughing, feeling the weight of the mask I had to wear even for them, I wagged a finger. “Nah, if I want to show that much skin I might as well just go in the buff. If I do, I’ll send someone to fetch you all, so you can watch.”

Leaving the giggling women behind, assured that my charm did work on some portion of the female population at least, I made my way to the beach. Standing on the edge where the brilliant white sand met the concrete path, I searched for my Spitfire. The thought rolled around in my head and it took me a moment to clue in to the words.

My Spitfire. Damn, I had to stop thinking about her. Period, end of story. No Jasmin for Jet.

Shit, maybe I was sick or something. Maybe I’d picked up a bug, eaten something off. The water, maybe that was it, I had been drinking the water, didn’t everyone say not to drink the water in Mexico? Yeah, that had to be it.

The wind blew straight off the ocean, bringing me a wash of salty air, hot sand and coconut sunscreen. But I couldn’t see Jasmin anywhere. Stepping off the path, I headed straight for the water, then stood with my head leaned back and considered shouting for her. A pale flash of yellow caught my eye at the far end of the beach.

There she was, squatting low, camera up as she took pictures of the local kids playing in the surf. They dodged and darted in front of her and she followed them, the camera a part of her.

Walking slowly, the sand pulling at my feet, I wove between the few blankets and towels on the beach until I stood a few feet behind her. She was laughing, her voice pairing with the kids squeals and swiftly chattered Spanish. Like music, it mesmerized me, and I stood there for a long time, just watching her, feeling like I was privy to something special.

To someone special.

I closed my eyes. Good God, I must have picked up something for me to be waxing poetic about a girl I barely knew, had only just met.

“Jet?”

My eyes flew open and I smiled without thinking. “Waiting on you, Spitfire. You done playing?”

A soft smile curved one side of her full lips and my mind wandered once more into dangerous territory.

There was only one thing to do. With a rush, I scooped her up onto my shoulder and gave her a spin, much to the delighted kids who were now screaming encouragement.

“What are you doing, are you crazy?” She said, grasping my shoulders.

“That’s what the doctor says.”

She punched my arm, not hard, but I fell to the ground, pulling her on top of me, then I held up my hands. “Oh, God, I think you bruised me.” I looked up at her with one eye. “Kiss it better?”

Her response was to pull the camera out and start taking pictures, effectively blocking my attempt at charming her. Which was for the best anyway. She was right to push me away; something about her was too much, too intense. Not right for me. Though the flicker of desire in those green depths teased at me, and the feeling of her body quivering against mine in that split second before she scrambled away was almost enough to change my mind.

She was most definitely too good for me, without a doubt. I could acknowledge that, but with every moment I spent with her I became more and more convinced she wasn’t as immune to my charms as I’d thought. But that’s all it was, flirting, my usual, nothing more. This was fun, light.

Harmless.

I smiled, giving her a wink and the color rose up on her cheeks. Nope, there was no turning back, no way I’d quit flirting with her now, if nothing more than to see her squirm.

I wasn’t going to ease up.

Not for one second.

 

 

 

Jasmin

Once I had my camera up, I was safe, the lens blocking me from the way Jet’s eyes made me feel. The way his everything made me feel. Like I was losing a battle I didn’t even know I was fighting, a battle I didn’t even want to be in. His body had curved around mine in that moment he’d pulled me down on top of him, our skin touching here and there, his muscles moving against me; I shivered again. That wasn’t the worst of it though.

Jazzy. He’d used my nickname that in the past only Ryan had ever really used. It stung, a sharp barb of remembering what I’d lost. Yet at the same time it seemed to fit, a soft warmth over a deep hurt. How could I be so split, so divided over one man? This was surreal. It had to be Jet’s constant charm and flirting, I just wasn’t used to it. He would ‘break me in’ so to speak, get me used to the kind of men I would be dealing with from now on.

Gorgeous, sexy, dangerous men.

Maybe Kevin was right; maybe this was going to be too much for me. I squashed the traitorous, wimpy thoughts. No, that wasn’t me. I could do this with one hand tied behind my back.

Or your hands tied to a bed post?

I grit my teeth and directed Jet while continuing to take pictures. I had him lay down on his back, shirt off, arms behind his head. Sculpted pecs, abs and arms beckoned me to slide my fingers along their edges, to see if they were truly as defined as they looked. There were several scars across his ribs, faint, but they had obviously been deep when they’d happened judging from the thick white scar tissue. The edge of a tattoo peered at me from just under his belt, running along his pelvic bone by the angle of it. I couldn’t tell what it was, and damned if I didn’t suddenly, desperately want to know. His right nipple was pierced, a silver ring through it that caught the light here and there, winking at me, taunting me it seemed.

“That hurt?” I asked, motioning toward it.

Grinning, he nodded. “Only for a second; was worth it, especially seeing as the prettiest girls always notice it first.”

Caught in his gaze, my face heated as I thought about all the ways to explore his last words. The breeze tickled along my skin, whispering up my thighs under my sundress and suddenly the desire for Jet’s hands to replace the breeze gripped me.

I had to stop this, like now.

“Close your eyes,” I said and he did as he was told. I got several very good shots of him before he couldn’t seem to stand it any longer, opened one eye and smiled up at me. That smile was deadly, the pull of it seemed to start in my very core, dragging me toward him. He was far too dangerous. It would be so easy to let him touch me, help me ignore my life for a while. But that wasn’t fair, not to him or me. I wouldn’t use him as a balm to my grief and loneliness. I couldn’t seem to stop taking him in though, and not just because I was taking pictures of him. Every part of him was like a wicked bundle of temptation from the angle of his jaw, to his broad sun-kissed shoulders, lean hips and those eyes . . . those eyes would be the death of me. I just knew it.

Once we got the pictures done I could go, back home, back to my life, and forget about this stuntman with the teasing devil in his golden eyes. I had to, there was no other option.

It didn’t take long before we got into a steady rhythm of me directing and him listening. Jet was photogenic, but even with that we weren’t getting the pictures I wanted. There was no feeling to them, no emotion. Gorgeous as he was, something was missing. It was like he was hiding behind the smiles and the laughter; who he was really wasn’t coming through.

Sweat dripped down off my cheeks and chin in an extremely unladylike manner, the sun beating down on me. I’d brought sunscreen with me but it was confiscated at the airport and now I was suffering the consequence. Damn security processes, what did they think I was going to do with sunscreen? With my last $20 gone to bribe the security guard, I didn’t have the money to replace it.

“Why are you frowning?” Jet asked, lifting his eyebrows at me.

“Forgot my sunscreen,” I answered, pointing at the water, an idea and picture already formed in my head. “Time to get your jeans wet.”

Oh, maybe that wasn’t something the men would want to see, but I had a feeling I was going to bring scores of women to the magazine with Jet’s pictures. This should keep Kevin happy too. New subscribers had to be a good thing, right?

He sauntered down to the water, took two strides and dove in under the waves. Standing back up, the water sparkled as it flicked off him. He splashed at me and I stepped away, covering the camera.

“Hey, none of that or you’ll be buying me a new camera,” I said.

Laughing, he crooked his finger at me. “This is way too nice to be in here alone, you should come in with me.”

“Can’t.” I held the camera up, pointing at it with my other hand.

Picture after picture I took, feeling the need to get just the right shot. The perfect shot. The one that would clinch my job for me. It was eluding me though, just out of reach. Finally, I called it.

“That’s good for today, though I’m not quite ready to call this done.”

Jet stepped out of the water, shaking his head, his hair going every which way.

“Are you two wrapping things up? I thought we could all go for lunch together.”

I turned to see Hugh strolling toward us, an easy, open smile on his lips. Women’s heads turned as he passed and I could see the attraction to the tall, dark, and handsome man—I just didn’t feel it myself.

“I don’t know if I want to share you just yet,” Jet whispered into my ear, his sudden closeness and the coolness of his ocean-soaked skin against my sun-baked back made me jump. That was surely why I jumped. It had nothing at all to do with the shock of lust coiling through me, urging my hips backwards to bump into him.

“Yeah, lunch would be good, but I’ll have to pass,” I managed, stepping deliberately away from him. I didn’t want to tell them I couldn’t afford to go out. Even with the small advance Kevin had given me, I wasn’t sure what was okay for me to spend it on and what wasn’t. I was pretty sure sunscreen was out, but even using the money to eat out made me nervous.

“Ah, come on, I’ll even pay,” Jet offered almost as though he knew what I’d been thinking.

I took a moment, and then gave a nod. “All right, then I can get some dirt on you from your friend here, as after the bee story this morning I think it would be best if I have some outside information on you.”

Hugh frowned. “Bee story?”

Jet laughed and snatched my camera, despite my protests, and handed it to Hugh. “I’ll tell you all about it at lunch. Hold this would you?”

“Hey, you can’t have my camera!” I yelped, struggling to get at it, a fear that Hugh would drop it tangling the breath in my throat. I had no way to replace it if he so much as bumped it and the thing turned off or worse, wouldn’t turn back on. “Seriously, give it back!”

I wasn’t ready for what happened next, surprised at how fast Jet could move. With an easy scoop, he had me over his shoulder.

“No, I don’t want to get wet, I want my camera back!” I smacked his butt, my hand stinging on the wet jeans and hard muscle.

“Oh, baby, you know I like it rough.” He laughed, swatting my backside in response, but made sure to give me a squeeze too, his fingers kneading the curve of my ass.

I screeched a denial, both of his treatment of me and the hot burst of anger that shot through me as he threw me into the water. Closing my eyes and mouth, the salt water sluiced over me, soothing my scorched skin. He was right, this felt amazing on my overheated body and I floated under the waves for a moment before pushing to the surface.

The water was waist height when I stood up, and I smoothed my hair back, plucking at my sundress, still pissed off even thought the water felt good. “Seriously? You couldn’t take no for an answer?”

He splashed me. “Not lately.”

I glared at him. “Well, maybe you should try it on for size. Not everyone is here just for your pleasure.”

He didn’t seem perturbed by my attitude at all. In fact, he continued to smile. “Are you sure about that?”

 Click here to download the entire book: Shannon Mayer’s High Risk Love>>>

With 51 Straight Rave Reviews at Just 99 Cents, Where’s The Risk? Shannon Mayer’s HIGH RISK LOVE is KND Brand New Romance of The Week

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, Shannon Mayer’s High Risk Love , so please check it out!

4.7 stars – 51 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Photographs.
Images. Snapshots in time.
This is how I experience my life. I’ve hidden behind my camera and viewed the world through the lens. I watch other people live their lives. I’ve given up on my dreams, and sheltered my heart from love; because both have given me nothing but pain. Even thinking about opening myself up, sends my fears into overdrive. It’s better to be safe, than to take a risk and have your life shattered into pieces alongside your heart. This is what I believed.Dangerous.

Risks. Fear Nothing.

I live for the rush of adrenaline I get when I work my stunts. Nothing else matters but the feel of my heart pounding when I challenge the line between life and death. Women are nothing more than a distraction; they use me for my connections, as I use them to escape the pain of my past before moving on to my next adrenaline fix. My life is consumed with excitement, danger and risks–it’s all I needed.

Denials.

Fear. The complete wrong time.

Jasmin and Jet will face off over photos, stunts and the truth hidden in their hearts. The last person Jasmin wants to be with is a man who takes life for granted. Jet wants to give his heart to no one; especially one who might not understand the secrets that haunt him. Despite their protests, Jasmin’s and Jet’s lives tangle; the threads of love and fear bind them. Between their passions and their pasts, they fight to hang onto each other . . . but will the stakes be too high when faced with the ultimate sacrifice?

This is a 75,000+ word novel.

** 18+ for adult situations, sexual situations and language.
Reviews

“I cried, I laughed, I swooned for Jet ( and yeah Hugh & Jasper), I loved every single line, paragraph and scene of this book.” – Sonia Costa “@SBookLover”

“How does one describe magic? Because when Shannon Mayer puts words to paper, that’s exactly what happens.” – KeeKee Biney

“This story holds a record for me, it had me in tears at 2%. Never in all the years that I’ve been reading has that happened.” – Liezel77

“Mayer has succeeded in delivering a well-rounded, captivating contemporary romance. She has given us characters that we can get behind with a story that has enough uniqueness that it doesn’t get lost in the ever-growing sea New Adult books.” – Jill

*  *  *

Never miss another great sale again – Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Free Excerpt From KND Romance of The Week: KISS ME IN PARIS By Kimberly Kinrade & Dmytry Karpov – 67 Rave Reviews!

Last week we announced that Kiss Me in Paris 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 Kiss Me in Paris, you’re in for a real treat:

Kiss Me in Paris

by Karpov Kinrade, Kimberly Kinrade, Dmytry Karpov

4.6 stars – 71 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

No one knows my secret. Ever since high school, ever since I started living in fear, no one has known the true me. But then I met him, and I couldn’t hide anymore.

He became my hero, saving me from the villain of my past. He became my friend, his smile a blanket of warmth. And he scared me. Because he, this beautiful man, he might become more. Then he’d see the real me, and I couldn’t let that happen.

My name is Winter, and what I desire most I can’t have.

Flashes of the night I was drugged rush back to me. His strong arms carrying me through the streets of Paris. The feel of his heart beating as my head rested against his chest. The soft press of his lips against my forehead when he thought I was asleep.

Oh shit. I’m falling for the cowboy. Cade.

But we can’t be anything more. He has his own secrets. His own darkness he keeps hidden, like the letter he keeps with him everywhere he goes.

The letter he refuses to open.

*  *  *

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 excerpt:

LESLIE STICKS HER head out of the pickup truck, and her long hair catches the wind, flying out behind her like a blond wave. “Yeehaw!”

She hollers like a cowboy in an old western, and I wonder yet again what I’m doing on this date.

Ducking her head back into the truck, Leslie stretches across the seat, placing her head in my lap. “Cade, I’m bored. Let’s do something fun. How about the lake? Some skinny dippin’?” She traces her finger up my thigh, her touch light through the denim of my jeans. “Maybe distract you from whatever has you lookin’ so serious?”

Ah yes, that’s why I’m on this date. It’s supposed to be a distraction, but nothing seems to pull me from my own melancholy thoughts, not even a beautiful, if somewhat vacuous, girl.

“Sure, we can do that. I just have to go home and feed my brother first.” I turn right on the dirt road, dust catching on the tires. We’re already on my family’s property, horses and cows grazing in wide fields, the Texas sun baking the land with all the heat of the mid-afternoon summer day, but we still have a ways to go to reach the ranch house.

“I didn’t know you have a baby brother. But can’t someone else do that? Like your mom or something?”

“I promised to do it today. It shouldn’t take long.” I pull up to my house, a sprawling ranch-style home with strong horizontal lines, low walls and wide front and rear porches. The roof is galvanized metal, and limestone in the walls gives it a rugged look.

“Nice house, though I expected something bigger given the Savage name and reputation,” Leslie says. “Like, one of those Beverly Hills mansions you see on television.”

“My dad doesn’t like to flaunt our wealth. He thinks we should live modestly, not extravagantly.” Still, there’s an elegant simplicity to the architecture of our home that I admire. It’s not flashy, but it’s high quality and well-designed using local natural resources.

The heat, a living thing you can almost see, beats down on us as we walk to the front door. Trickles of sweat leak down Leslie’s long neck, strands of her hair sticking to her body.

Cold air assaults us as we enter the house, attacking the heat and chilling our skin. Leslie shivers in her tank top and cut off jean shorts. I take off my Stetson, a rule my mother enforces religiously, and place it on the hat rack by the door. With a callused hand I push my hair out of my face and lead the way to the family room where the television fills the house with sounds of cartoons. Next to the couch, slumped in his wheel chair, sits a 16-year-old boy with the mind of a 2-year-old.

I pat his hand and smile. “Hey, Stevie, how’s it going today?”

My brother’s eyes follow me, half his mouth curving into the semblance of a smile as he croaks out a noise that I recognize as his greeting for me. His eyes shift to Leslie, and she shuffles from one foot to the other while twirling a piece of her hair and avoiding eye contact.

“Stevie, this is Leslie, my friend. Leslie, this is my brother, Stevie.”

She looks up, smiles a fraction, and looks back down again. “Nice to meet ya.”

Stevie grunts again and Leslie jerks, as if startled. I shouldn’t have brought her here, shouldn’t even be with her right now.

A big black woman walks into the living room from the kitchen and stops, fists on her ample hips as she eyes me. “Cade Savage, you know you shouldn’t be bringing nobody here. Your daddy don’t like nobody seeing him.”

“Martha, we’re not hurting him,” I say. “I’m on a date, but I promised Stevie I’d have lunch with him today. What’s it going to hurt?”

She sighs, but I know she’ll give in. She always does. “Fine. Whatever. Just don’t be crying to me when your daddy gets in his temper, ya hear?”

“I hear.” I lean in to kiss her on the cheek. “You’re a peach, Martha.”

She swats me away. “You charmer, you know that don’t work on me.” But she smiles as she leaves the room.

“How’s he doing today?” I follow her into the kitchen to prepare Stevie’s lunch.

Leslie scrambles after me, clinging to my hand as if something might attack her at any moment.

I extricate myself from her grip and assemble my brother’s lunch and supplements.

“He be doing okay, same as always,” Martha says. “He misses you, though. Don’t know how he’s going to react when you’re not around anymore.” Her tone is kind, but her words still sting.

I grab Stevie’s meal and join him in the living room, moving his chair to face me as I feed him. It’s a messy process. More food smears his face and falls on to the napkin around his neck than actually gets into his mouth, but I persist until he’s eaten most of it.

With a wet cloth, I wipe his face clean, taking care to get it all without pressing too hard. “How’s that? You feel good?”

He nods his head a fraction, eyes speaking more than his body can. I might be imagining it, but for an instant, I think I see a spark of something in his eyes, the boy he was before.

I ruffle his brown hair, the same color as mine, and take his dish into the kitchen to wash.

Martha snatches it from my hand. “I’ll finish up.”

“You’re not the maid, you know. I can wash it myself.”

She scoffs at me. “Hush now, boy. I may be Stevie’s nurse, but you don’t think that involves washing a dish now and again? Now you get on with your date. That girl in there don’t look like she can handle much more of this.”

“It’s my fault. I didn’t tell her about Stevie before we came.”

She pats my cheek and I head out, calling goodbye to my brother as we leave, my heart heavy each time I think about all the ways my family has changed, all the things we’ve lost in the last few years.

“I’m sorry about your brother,” Leslie says, startling me from my thoughts. “What happened to him?”

“An accident. But I don’t want to talk about him. Let’s go have some fun.” I don’t feel the words I’m saying, but I’m hoping the whole ‘fake it ’til you make it’ philosophy applies to moments like these.

Leslie turns up the radio, flipping through modern rock, Christian and classical until she lands on a country music station, and starts singing along.

The sun sets, casting long shadows over the hot land, lighting up the sky with oranges and pinks and yellows.

Setting suns always seem sad, beautiful but tragic in their way. It’s another goodbye, a farewell to a day that can never be relived, never be recaptured. It’s gone forever, lost in imperfect memories of what might have been.

 

Stars burn bright in the sky, the full moon reflected in the lake as Leslie splashes through moonbeams while chattering about her summer plans. Her words dissolve around me as I gaze at the sky, body resting against a small patch of grass near the lake.

I don’t notice when she stops talking, but it’s impossible not to notice when she walks out of the lake, nude body dripping with water, long wet hair falling down her back. My body reacts as any man would, but my mind is still distracted by the future—and the past.

She dries herself off, throws the towel on the ground next to me and lays down, her long leg draping over mine as she presses her breasts against me. “You’re overdressed for this event.” She pulls up my cotton t-shirt and slides her cool hand under it, then leans in to kiss me. Her mouth tastes like lake water and bubblegum. I respond as expected, kissing her back, but she pulls away. “What’s up? You don’t seem into this at all.”

“Nothing. I’m fine.” I reach for her, initiating another kiss, which is preferable to talking, but she slips out of my hands.

“I can tell there’s something. Is it your brother?”

Ignoring her question, I pose one of my own. “Do you ever wish you could just do what you want?”

“Don’t you do what you want?” she asks. “I mean, you’re Cade Savage. Millionaire.”

“My dad’s the millionaire. I don’t get my inheritance for another five years.”

She rolls her eyes. “You know what I mean. You can have anything.” With a slender finger, she twirls a piece of my hair. “And anyone.”

My lips curl up in a smirk. It figures that everyone thinks my life is perfect, why wouldn’t they? They only see the whitewashed facade that is my life, not the stench of death that lives in my home, corrupting everything and everyone. “Hypothetically, if you had what I have, the money, the car, the great family with the family business…. Everything. Would you give it all up for something you really wanted to do?”

She frowns, her full lips turning down into a pout. “Would I lose all the money?”

“In this hypothetical situation, yes.”

“Depends. What do I want to do?”

My mind spins, landing on the center of my childhood fantasies. “Something you’ve dreamed about doing your whole life.”

“Like being a Disney Princess?”

I shrug. “Sure.”

“But that’s impossible.”

My eyes wander back to her, leaving the stars in the sky to their own dreams. “But if it wasn’t? If you could really be a Disney Princess?”

“If it wasn’t, then… ” She thinks about it and smiles. “I’d be a Princess.”

“You wouldn’t miss all that money? How about your family?”

“Oh, I’d miss them all right, but I’d be happy. Truly happy.” She flops onto her back, staring up at the sky, perhaps dreaming of being a princess. “How many people can say that?”

I nod, smiling. “Not many.”

“Not many.” She takes a sip of the wine cooler by her side. “Besides, as a Princess I’d better have some fucking money.”

I chuckle and lay back down, staring back up at the stars.

One star breaks off from the others, shooting across the sky, a bright light trailing behind it, and I finally understand why people wish on dying stars.

Because something always has to die for life to give birth to a new dream.

 

 

Like sweet tea, watermelon and hayrides, Sunday morning church is a staple in Texas. Sitting in our family pew, eyes glazed over as I stare at the Bible and hymnal stuck into the back of the pew in front of me, Pastor Mackay finishes his sermon on the importance of family.

“Gawd,” he says God like there’s an ‘aw’ in there, “wants to share His love with us through our families, through you. If we really want to experience the love of Gawd, and if we want those we love to experience it, we will love each other the way Gawd, through Christ, loves us. Selflessly, sacrificially, and devoutly. Families give us strength to stand up against Satan and his temptations. We must embrace family, stay strong together, and fight against the darkness that so often prevails in our world. Let us pray.”

The closing prayer seems to drone on for hours, as the pastor stretches his final moments to reach us with his words. When he finally closes with an “Amen,” we stand and sing a hymn and then file out of our pews to greet each other, talk about the week, the weather, the kids, the next social event—business as usual.

Pastor Mackay clasps my hands as we leave. “Best of luck to you, Cade. We’re all mighty proud of you.”

I nod and duck out, resigned to wait in the dry heat for my parents to finish socializing. It’s a long-standing tradition that we drive to church together each week. My mom thinks this will bind us to each other in some spiritual way, allowing us to overcome our differences. So far it hasn’t worked.

While I wait, I study the architecture of the church. The Gothic-styled windows never get old, neither do the bright paintings that cover almost every surface. They transport me back to the 19th century, and I imagine a simple life of tending cattle, of coming home to a warm meal and loving family.

The building is the only reason I still agree to attend church with my family each week. That and we have enough strife amongst us; I’m loath to add more.

On the drive home my dad breaks the awkward silence by talking about the sermon. “Family gives strength,” he says, quoting the pastor. “I like that. I really like that.” He turns to Mom. “What do you think, dear?”

She pats his hand. “I thought it was good. Families should support each other.”

“Right, but they have to be together to do that,” he says. “That’s the other part I liked. Families must stay together, must hold each other close. That’s an important part. I don’t think a lot of people think about that.”

My mom pulls back her hand, fussing with her purse. “I think it was more metaphorical, dear.”

“What was metaphorical about that?” He slaps the steering wheel. “Family gives strength. Family has to stay together. Nothing metaphorical about that.”

Mom just shakes her head.

I shift in the backseat, stretching my long legs to the side to keep them from cramping, my Stetson boots pressing up against the other door. “If family gives one strength, shouldn’t family help each other achieve one’s goals?”

Dad nods. “Absolutely. Family goals.”

I clench and unclench my fist. “I don’t remember the pastor saying that.”

“Strength means working together on things, achieving things together. That’s how we keep Satan out of our lives.”

My lips curl up. “Guess it was metaphorical after all.”

Dad grunts. “There’s nothing metaphorical about the commands God has given us in regards to our family. For example, Colossians 3:20 says ‘Children, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord.’ Ephesians 6:1 says the same thing, and goes further, saying to ‘Honor your father and mother that it may go well with you and that you may live long in the land.’ God knew what he was doing, putting parents at the head of the family. Putting fathers at the head of the family.”

“I think you’re forgetting the rest of that verse, Dad. ‘Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger.’ You might want to work on that one.”

Ignoring me, he continues. “Proverbs 1:8 commands sons to ‘Hear your father’s instruction, and forsake not your mother’s teaching.’ God clearly wants children to obey their parents, to follow in their steps, to honor their will.”

Dad pulls up to our house, and I’m ready to jump out the moment he puts the brakes on. “This is all well and good,” I say, “and we could do this all day. But there’s one thing you’re forgetting, Dad.”

He turns to look at me, his face hard and uncompromising. “What’s that?”

“I’m not a child anymore. I’m a man. And the Bible is also pretty clear that a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife; and they shall become one flesh. That families are for raising children to send them out into the world.”

His eyes narrow, lines forming around them. “As long as you live in my house, and rely on my money to support you, you will follow my rules.”

“In five years, I’ll have my inheritance from Grandpa, whether you like it or not.”

“And what are you going to do for those five years?”

I sigh, pulling my hat lower to cover my scowl. “Does it matter? Is it worth it to you, Dad? Breaking our relationship?”

He unbuckles. “We’re family. Our relationships don’t get broken.”

“Really? Let’s count the successful relationships you’ve had with your children.” I hold up two fists. “Look at that, 0 for 3, Dad, 0 for 3.” I pull myself out of the car and slam the door before he can reply. Anger sets my heart pounding, my fists desperate to punch something. As my family settles into the house, I saddle Biscuit, my horse, and let out my aggression as we race through the fields, leaping over fences until we’re clear to run free.

 

We use our formal dining room on Sundays, as if God cares where we eat dinner.

My mom brings out the salad and sweet tea, and my dad serves up the barbecued ribs and corn on the cob. Stevie is wheeled up to his customary spot at the table, though he does little but stare at us as we eat in awkward silence.

“Son, please say grace before we begin,” my father commands.

I pull my cloth napkin off my lap and toss it to the table by my plate. “I’d rather not.”

Unwilling, or maybe unable, to let it go, my dad continues to probe. “Come on Cade, there has to be something you’re grateful for. Just say grace.”

Mom, ever the peacekeeper, sides with Dad. “Go on honey, just say grace.”

Stevie’s eyes flicker back and forth, the side of his face that still works drooping into a frown.

I reach for his hand and my mother’s, and we form a lopsided circle around the table. As I open my mouth to speak, the grandfather clock in the living room chimes seven times, and we all sit through it, waiting for the silence to resume. At the last chime, I clear my throat and begin. “Thank you, God, for the wonderful food before us. Thank you for my dear brother and mother. And thank you for my father, who supports me in everything.”

I glance up at him and see him grimace at my words. Filling my voice with false sincerity, I continue. “Thank you for my father, who has always told me to follow my dreams. Thank you for my father, who offered to pay for my tuition, who supports my career choice, and who’s never made fun of me for doing what I love. Thank you—“

Dad’s voice barks out in anger. “That’s enough, that—“

I shout over him, raising my voice to be heard for once in my life. “Thank you for my father, who gave me a pat on the back when I was accepted into one of the best universities in the world, who said, ‘Good job, Son. I’m proud of you. I’m proud of you!’”

I stop yelling, grief swelling up inside of me and breaking my words in half. “I’m proud of you.”

As the pain chokes me, my father’s face tightens in fury. “Cade, you will apologize right now and—“

Without an appetite, I stand and walk out of the house, silent and tired of fighting the same losing battle over and over.

 

The sun is setting, my favorite time of the day despite the melancholy it fills me with, or maybe because of it. I haven’t been back into the house, and my dad hasn’t come out to look for me, not that I expected him to. After fixing a shoe on Biscuit and brushing her down, I feed her apples from my hand and smile as her soft horse lips push against my skin. Rubbing her neck, I lean my head against hers. “Why can’t he just listen, for once? Why can’t he at least try to see things from my perspective?”

“Hey!”

I turn and find Leslie strolling up to the barn, her shorts so short that the inside pockets poke out from underneath. She pulls herself up the gate and swings her legs while sucking on a lollipop. “Rich boy still has to do the grunt work?”

Biscuit finishes the last apple, and I wipe my hand on my jeans and let her out to wander the field. “I prefer to take care of my horse myself. Most cowboys do. Plus, Dad likes to keep the business with family.”

She licks lasciviously at her candy. “What do you like?”

I join Leslie by the gate, tempted to speak but unsure of how much truth I want to reveal to a girl I hardly know. “I like architecture.”

“So, you like buildings?”

“Yeah. Buildings. Sounds lame, right?”

She shakes her head, flipping her long braid over her tan and exposed shoulder. “No. Not really. Remember, you’re talking to the girl who wants to be a Disney Princess.”

A smile creeps over my face as we watch the sun set together.

I feel her eyes turn toward me, lollipop forgotten. “You don’t belong here, you know.”

I look at her and wonder if she sees more of me than my parents do. “What do you mean?”

Her slim arm flings forward in a wide, sweeping gesture. “You’re always looking out at the horizon, dreaming of some far off place. Where you dreaming of?”

“The Eiffel Tower. The Pyramids. The Pantheon. I don’t know. Someplace where a man dared to build something his father couldn’t even imagine.”

Leslie nods as if it all makes perfect sense. “That’s where you belong.”

“Paris?”

“The future,” she says, offering me her lollipop. “The future’s built by dreamers like you.”

 

The world is still covered in the shadows of night when I wake and get ready for my trip. Even the rooster is still deep in slumber.

My bags have been packed for weeks, but I hadn’t made the decision to actually leave until my talk with Leslie. Funny how someone can cross into your life, like a human intersection, and make such profound observations about you.

I shuffle around in the dark, stacking my luggage by the front door as I wait for the airport shuttle to arrive. I sneak into Stevie’s bedroom and kiss his smooth forehead. “I’m going to miss you, little bro. Take care of Mom for me.” As an afterthought I add, “And Dad.”

Speak of the devil, Dad’s standing outside Stevie’s bedroom when I walk out. I stand as tall as him, our 6’5” frames nearly identical in height, muscle and build. Everyone has always told me that I’m a younger version of my father, and I wonder if I’ll be as hard and uncompromising as him when I get older. I hope not. “I’ve decided to go.”

He nods. “Okay. A summer in Paris. I can live with that.”

I think about the college acceptance letter in my suitcase. “It might be more than a summer, Dad.”

“More than a summer?” All kindness in his face vanishes. “Who’s going to help with the ranch for more than a summer? Who’s going to take care of your brother for more than a summer?”

My stomach tightens. “He’s—“

Dad raises a fist. “He’s what? What is he?” He steps closer to me, face inches from mine.

I force the words out of my mouth. “He’s not my responsibility.”

Dad stumbles back, as if in shock. “He’s not your responsibility? He’s not your responsibility? We’re family. We’re supposed to help each other.”

“Then help me.” The words come out before I can stop them and the moment I speak, I wish I could take them back.

Dad moves aside, leaving enough space in the hall for me to walk by.  “You know, I just realized, you’re not my responsibility, either. So, just go. Go. You want to go. Go. You’re an adult, as you’re so apt to point out. You make your own decisions. So go.”

Acid fills my gut. I don’t know when I’ll see him or Mom again and I don’t want to leave things like this. “Dad, I—“

His fist slams against the cherry wood hall console table. “Get out of my house!”

I shove past him and rush down the stairs with a brief nod to my mother who stands by their bedroom door in her robe, eyes spilling over with tears.

“You are not my responsibility,” my dad reiterates as the front door closes behind me.

The shuttle arrives and a short man with a Hitler mustache loads my luggage into the van as my parents open the door to stand on the front porch with me.

Seeing the driver, my dad plasters a fake smile onto his face, and holds out his hand for a firm—too firm—handshake. “Come back after the summer, son.” He leans in and lowers his voice. “Otherwise, good luck in your new life.”

 

 

WINTER DEVEAUX

CHAPTER 2

 

 

 

 

THE FATE OF my career—of my entire future—is in the hands of this balding man sitting in front of me. My advisor, Mr. Posthumus, fidgets with his glasses and taps his red pen against my marked up manuscript, complete with his coffee cup stains. “Winter, why did you choose to write a romance novel?” He spits out the last words like they leave a bad taste in his mouth.

I want to grab my novel from him and clutch it to my chest. Sweat and blood and tears have gone into that pile of papers he’s treating like a coaster. Instead, I paste on a smile. “I love romance novels. My kindle’s full of romance novels. They say write what you read, right?” I take a sip of water and set the bottle on the table. I should pour it on his favorite book.

“They also say write what you know.”

People love that saying. My dad said the same thing to me years ago. So I asked him for bookshelves and books on all sorts of things: geography, history, mystery. He built me bookshelves until my room had no more bare walls, and he bought me a book about a princess who sleeps for years and wakes with a kiss. “You scare me, child” he’d said. “Read a kid book once in a while.” So I did, and it was the most romantic story. And I knew what I would write.

Lacing my fingers together, I return my attention to Mr. Posthumus. “Right. That’s why I read so much.”

He sighs, and his large paunch pushes against the buttons of his tweed jacket in protest of its confinement. “When they say write what you know, they mean write what you know from personal experience.”

I frown. “They should really clarify that.”

He shrugs. “It’s pretty obvious.”

“Not really.”

“What do you know about romance, Winter?”

I sit up straight, flicking imaginary dust off my faded jeans. “Everything.”

Mr. Posthumus raises an eyebrow. “Cocky, aren’t we?”

“Realistic.”

He waves his hand, as if beckoning me to continue. “So you have a lot of experience?”

“Well, I know things.”

He adjusts his glasses again, leaving a thumbprint on the right lens. “What sort of things?”

I lean in and quiet my voice. “Remember chapter five? When they’re in the Jacuzzi and she does that thing?”

“Oh yeah.”

“And that other thing?”

“Oh yeah.”

I lean back and beam. “That’s what I know.” Sorry Dad. I didn’t read kid books for long.

“You mean you actually—”

“No.” My eyes widen. “That’d be crazy.” I was good girl, though, wasn’t I?

He puts his hand down on the table. “See, that’s my point. You’re not writing from personal experience.”

“You could tell by just reading my book?”

Now it’s his turn to beam. “I’m trained for that sort of thing. The romance…”

“What?”

“It’s a bit dry.”

Ick. “So I want it wet?”

“You want your readers—”

“Don’t even say it. Say… moist if you want, but don’t say wet.”

“You want your readers moist.”

I scrunch up my eyebrows. “That sounds so wrong.”

“Yet it’s right.”

I smile at him. It’s a trust me kind of smile. A you can tell me anything kind of smile. If I were in a cop show, I’d be the Good Cop criminals tell everything because of my smile. “But that scene, in the bathroom, didn’t it, you know….”

“What?”

“Well, you know…”

“Didn’t it what?”

“Didn’t it turn you on?”

He blushes. “Well, that was a good scene.”

I wiggle my eyebrows. “You like that one?”

“That thing she did. That was quite a thing. I didn’t know you could even—no. That’s not the point.”

That thing she did. A book on acrobatics gave me the idea. I fold my arms. “What is the point?”

He cleans his glasses, smearing his greasy thumb spot over the glass. “You haven’t dated in while.”

“How do you know?”

“The romance—”

“It’s a bit dry.”

He nods. “Not even realistic, really.”

“Thanks. I really needed that clarification.”

“You really did. You need to get out there and get—”

I throw my hand up like a stop sign. “Please. Don’t say laid. Say happy time, if you must. But don’t say laid.”

“I was going to say dating.”

My hands fall to my lap. “Continue.”

“You need to get dating. And then you need happy time.”

I smack my head. “Kill me, please.”

“They fire us for that sort of thing.”

“Darn.”

He clenches his jaw. “I know. Sometimes I just want to… never mind. Let’s continue.”

“Dating isn’t for me.” Maybe it was for that little girl, her head in a book all night, dreaming of Prince Charming. But not for me.

He twirls his pen—the red pen of doom—around in circles. “I suppose you could skip straight to—”

“That’s not for me either.”

He starts laughing. “And you want to write romance novels?”

“Yes.”

He keeps laughing. “Sorry.”

I start to stand. “Should I go?”

“No. I’ll be serious with you. Writing romance isn’t your thing.”

I roll my eyes. “Jeez, sir, why didn’t you tell me earlier?”

“I’m telling you now. Unless you’re willing to have happy time, you can’t write romance.”

“You’re just full of useful ideas.”

He rubs his chin, eyebrows furrowed. “There is one other thing you can try, though.”

“Don’t say sleep with a teacher.”

“No. Cut out the romance stuff. Make your book literary fiction.”

“I don’t read literary fiction.” My dad bought me one of those, but it was too slow to start and the characters talked of boring things. I read more in high school. I had to. But most literary novels are sad. No one saves the princess. No one falls in love. Or if they do, they die. Or their child dies. Or everyone dies.

“Well, you won’t get far with genre fiction here.” Mr. Posthumus pushes my manuscript away, his lip curled in disdain. “Our program at Sarah Lawrence is designed more for serious writers of literature. Why spend your parents’ good money on such an expensive education just to write romance novels?”

My dad asked me the same thing. When I showed him my college application, he asked, “You have books on everything, don’t you? College is for math or science or languages. You’re good at languages.” My mom always checked my language homework and nothing else. Until she didn’t have to check it at all.

Mr. Posthumus nods. “Besides, you’d do well in Modern Languages and Literature.”

I remember how I forced my dad to sign the application, refused to change it, and I push the manuscript back at my advisor. “I’ll do well in Creative Writing.”

“Who’s the expert here?” He wears a cocky grin. And I imagine him as a young boy, reading kid books about spies.

“Come on? Have you never considered writing genre fiction?”

He leans far back in his chair, staring at the ceiling, and I see an old man once again, holding a book some old literary committee gave an award. He smacks his lips. “Utilitarianism, Winter. It means—”

“The greatest happiness for the greatest number of people is what matters.” I glare at him and imagine the many words I could use to demonstrate my vocabulary. Few of them are nice.

“Literary fiction is the greatest,” he says.

Many have tried to prove so. Many have failed. “But more people read genre.”

He shrugs and gets a far away look. “I’m good at literary.”

The window is dim. The sun has set. “I need to go.”

He holds up a slip of paper. “Here’s a form to transfer majors.”

“Where’s the form to transfer advisors?”

“Winter, I’m trying to help you.”

“Then give me my evaluation.”

My advisor nods, pulls out a folder, and hands it to me, along with the battered copy of my manuscript. I hold both, staring at my name on the manila folder. Winter Deveaux, Freshman.

His chair squeaks as he shifts his ample bottom and pushes back from his desk. “Are you going to read it now?”

“Do I have to?”

“Not really. Have fun in Paris. Maybe you’ll meet someone.”

I stand up, grab my water bottle, and slide the evaluation into my backpack. “I’ll be too busy writing.”

He meets my eyes, and for a moment, he looks like my dad. “I hope you know what you’re doing, Winter. Few writers succeed.”

I chuckle. “People keep telling me that.”

“Because it’s true.”

 

Butterflies dance in my belly as we stand in the line to check my luggage. JFK International Airport looks like an alien spacecraft from the outside, but the inside is like its own mini-world, with stores and cafes and people from all over the world hurrying off to their next adventure. I’ve only ever been to an airport to see my sisters and cousin off, never as a traveler myself. Each time I came, I’d stare at the flickering and ever-changing screen of flights and imagine picking one at random and flying somewhere new.

Airports hold their own kind of magic. They are gateways to other worlds, in the most real sense. An airport is a portal, taking you from one life to another. When you fly, you’re suspended in time and place, not existing anywhere fully until you land. My hands tremble in excitement as I take my ticket, my gate number circled in a bold yellow highlighter, and leave the counter to say goodbye to my family.

They’re waiting by the bathrooms, and I pull my carry-on suitcase behind me to join them, holding up my boarding pass for them to see. My face splits into such a wide smile I’m sure I look a bit insane. “It’s real. I’m about to leave for Paris! C’est très excitant!”

My sister, Autumn, hugs me first, squeezing me tight. Her green eyes glow with excitement. “I know you’re going to have an amazing time.” She pulls back and brushes a stray lock of black hair from my face. “I might see you while you’re there. We have a big Egyptian exhibit about to go on tour and The Louvre is one of our tour stops.”

I squeal and hug her again. “That would be so awesome. I can’t wait.”

Daring, my cousin who’s more like a sister, is next, a small package in her hand. “I have a going away present for you.”

I open the silver box and smile, pulling out the charm necklace. It’s just like hers, the one I’ve admired for years, with a tiny Eiffel Tower, a silver envelope, a foreign coin and beads. The only thing it’s missing is the key.

As if reading my mind, she pulls hers out of her shirt and holds it up. “My key was my mother’s, before she died. I didn’t put one on yours because you need to find your own. One that means something special to you, that reminds you who you really are.”

I nod and slip it over my head, then hug her. “This is the best gift. Thank you.”

She smiles and tweaks my nose, something she hasn’t done since we were kids. “I have a feeling this summer’s going to change your life.”

My mom kisses my cheek, tears in her eyes. “We’re going to miss you. Write us, call us and be careful.”

Autumn and Mom stand together, their auburn hair and green eyes twins of each other.

I’m more like my father with the pale skin and ice blue eyes. His are watery as he takes me into one of his trademark bear hugs. “Be good, kid. And have fun.” He shoves a stack of cash into my hand, and it’s not American bills but Euros, which look like Monopoly money to me. I raise my eyebrow.

He smiles. “I have my ways. Figured you should have some cash, in addition to your debit card, just in case. Don’t lose it.”

I shove the wad into my purse. “Thanks, Dad. I really appreciate it.”

Another round of hugs, with my own tears spilling over as my heart wars within itself, torn between excitement and sadness, and I’m in the customs line waiting to be interrogated. Irrational fears overtake me, my imagination plagued with absurd scenarios where I’m arrested for suspicion of being a terrorist or accused of smuggling drugs. The scenes unfold in my mind, complete with dialogue, until my body reacts viscerally to this made-up tragedy. By the time it’s my turn to show my passport, I’m convinced my guilt will show on me like a tattoo on my face.

The man behind the counter, without a hint of a smile, asks me for my passport. With sweaty palms, I hand it to him, counting to ten in my mind and trying to calm my heart rate lest he hears its frantic beating.

“Where do you live?” He looks up as he asks this, holding my passport to compare to my face.

My passport picture is horrible. I was sick that day and looked jaundiced. Will he think it’s not me? That it’s fake? And what does he mean by where do I live? Like my home address or city, county, state? Country? Though I’d think country would be obvious by my passport. I don’t really want this creepy dude knowing my home address, so I start with the broadest classification I can get away with. “I live in the United States.” My voice shakes when I say this, and his eyes narrow in.

“Full address, ma’am.” His hand slips under the counter, and I wonder if he’s hitting a silent buzzer to notify security that he has a potential criminal on his hands.

“3211 Primrose Avenue, Bronxville, New York.” My mouth is dry, my tongue feels swollen to twice its size.

“Where are you going?”

I show him my ticket. “Paris, France. I’m studying at the Sorbonne.”

“What is the purpose of your travels?”

Didn’t I already answer this part? “To study,” I say slowly, in case he’s having a hard time understanding. “At the Sorbonne.”

“When do you plan on returning?”

Well, now, that’s a much trickier question. “It depends. I’m going to be there at least the summer, but if things go well, I could be there the whole year.”

Placing my paperwork on the counter, I point to my student visa and acceptance letter. “See?”

He proceeds to ask me a series of questions about my luggage. If I’m taking any perishables with me? Is this a huge criminal problem, I wonder? Is the smuggling of a pineapple really an international emergency? Once I answer everything to his satisfaction, he hands me my passport back and I exhale in relief.

He points to another line. “You may go.”

He didn’t stamp my passport. It’s a silly thing, maybe, but that stamp is symbolic of my journey and I really want it, but don’t want to draw more attention to myself. I hesitate, pivoting back and forth on my feet in indecision.

“Ma’am, please move along.”

Summoning my boldness, I place the passport on the counter. “Would you mind stamping this? It’s sentimental.”

He rolls his eyes, but stamps it as asked, and I nearly skip off to the next line, relieved that the worst of my first airport experience is over.

Daring helped me pack, so I don’t break a sweat at this next part, and already have my shoes, belt and jacket off, laptop pulled out, and my travel size toothpaste and hair products in their baggies and sitting on the top of my luggage by the time it’s my turn to place my belongings on the belt for it to be scanned in the X-ray machine. No buzzers go off as I walk through the metal detector, which, since I’m practically naked now, is not a big surprise, but my bag doesn’t pop out the other side like everyone else’s.

In fact, they stop the belt and pull my bag, like it might be a bomb or something.

Luggage backs up, causing one bag to fall off the machine. Angry travelers glare at me, as if I’ve made it my mission in life to make them late. Only one person doesn’t make me feel like a total jerk. He looks like a cowboy with his wide-brimmed brown leather hat, pointy boots and belt buckle. I suck in a breath when we make eye contact, his blue eyes two shades darker than mine. This is the kind of man writers dedicate romance novels to. Broad chested with ropes of muscles under his shirt, strength earned from real work not a gym, skin sun-kissed and glowing. He smiles at me and my knees go weak.

Le sigh.

Feeling the heat rush to my face, I nod my head in my most regal fashion and turn away as the scrawny 20-something guy working behind the x-ray machine asks me to follow him so he can inspect my bag.

He steps to the side and opens my red carry-on, shuffling through my iPad, a change of clothes and other staples I was told to always carry with me in case my luggage was ever lost. There are perks to being one of the youngest in a family of world travelers.

My jaw drops when he pulls out a gallon sized plastic baggie and dumps the contents—items I’ve never seen before in my life—onto the counter. Holding up a pair of red G-String panties with a matching bra, if that slip of silk can be called a bra, and a handful of—oh my God—condoms?

He smirks at me and reads aloud the note that’s in the baggie. “Winter, Have some fun this summer. Here’s a starter sex kit to help you out. All my love, your favorite cousin, Daring.”

I want to die.

I want the floor to open up and swallow me, or lightning to strike me dead.

I want them to arrest me, just so I can get away from the dozens of eyes taking in my humiliation.

I fight the urge to tell them I have a bomb, or maybe that I am the bomb. Or to tell them I’m a drug mule. Anything to divert attention from the most embarrassing moment of my entire life.

And then I remember the hot cowboy.

Who’s standing behind me.

Who heard and saw everything.

My cheeks, I can already feel, are a flaming red. I probably look like my head is about to explode. I wish it would, so I won’t have to live in this moment any longer.

An older woman, probably the supervisor, grabs the note and the panties from the jerk staring at me. “I think you’ve sufficiently searched this bag.” She nods sympathetically at me and shoves Daring’s gift back under my clothes, zipping my suitcase shut. “Sorry for the inconvenience, ma’am. You can take your belongings and head to your gate now.”

I grab everything, slipping back into my shoes as I half-run, half-trip away, my jacket and belt dangling from my arm. I don’t look back to see if the hot cowboy is watching the most ungraceful escape ever made by a girl. I just can’t deal with him.

This is worse than the time I bought my first box of tampons and found that the checkout clerk was the sexy upperclassman I’d had a crush on since I was in middle school.

Worse than when I threw up in public at a football game.

Worse than anything I can even imagine.

My only consolation is that I’ll never see any of those people again. This is one of the biggest airports in the country, and they will be scattered all over the world within a few hours. I’ll live down my humiliation in the privacy of my memories.

I dash into the nearest bathroom and hide in an empty stall, waiting for the horror to die down. I can’t believe Daring put these things in my suitcase. No wonder she was so anxious to help me pack. Through the years she’s played pranks on me. Sharing a room with her has always been an adventure, but this tops the cake.

Once my heart rate returns to normal, I spend the next twenty minutes looking for my gate and debating whether or not I’m going to call my cousin and chew her out, but I don’t have the energy for a fight. Better to just forget it and move on.

When I reach my gate, the first thing I see is Monsieur Bellugue, my French professor, holding a sign that says “Summer in France Program”. A group of college-age students huddles around him, and I join the mill. Only two of us are from Sarah Lawrence, the rest have flown in from other participating universities. It’s an elite program, and I’m still in awe that I got in.

The second thing I see is the sexy cowboy.

Standing with my group.

Looking right at me.

Oh dear God in heaven, why won’t you let me die?

 Click here to download the entire book: Kiss Me in Paris>>>

“My name is Winter, and what I desire most I can’t have.” Price Cut Overnight to $0.99 For KND Brand New Romance of The Week! KISS ME IN PARIS By Kimberly Kinrade & Dmytry Karpov

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, Kiss Me in Paris , so please check it out!

Kiss Me in Paris

by Karpov Kinrade, Kimberly Kinrade, Dmytry Karpov

4.6 stars – 66 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

No one knows my secret. Ever since high school, ever since I started living in fear, no one has known the true me. But then I met him, and I couldn’t hide anymore.

He became my hero, saving me from the villain of my past. He became my friend, his smile a blanket of warmth. And he scared me. Because he, this beautiful man, he might become more. Then he’d see the real me, and I couldn’t let that happen.

My name is Winter, and what I desire most I can’t have.

Flashes of the night I was drugged rush back to me. His strong arms carrying me through the streets of Paris. The feel of his heart beating as my head rested against his chest. The soft press of his lips against my forehead when he thought I was asleep.

Oh shit. I’m falling for the cowboy. Cade.

But we can’t be anything more. He has his own secrets. His own darkness he keeps hidden, like the letter he keeps with him everywhere he goes.

The letter he refuses to open.

***

New Adult Contemporary Romance – 87, 000 words – Standalone in the Kiss Me series.

Travel the world with the Deveaux’s as they find love, and trouble, in all the right places.

 

Reviews

“From start to finish I couldn’t help but laugh, cry, cheer…” –Dalene Kolb

“This book made me run through a gambit of emotions from being happy and laughing my butt off to being angry and upset with the characters to feeling incredible sadness and loss.” –Sharon Hughes

*  *  *

Never miss another great sale again – Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

Free Excerpt From KND Romance of The Week: J. L. Spohr’s Historical Romance Heirs & Spares … 49/51 Rave Reviews!

Last week we announced that J. L. Spohr’s Heirs & Spares 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 Heirs & Spares, you’re in for a real treat:

4.6 stars – 51 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

It’s 1569. Elizabeth I sits on the English throne, the Reformation inflames the Continent, and whispers of war abound.

But in Troixden, just north of France, the Lady Annelore isn’t interested in politics. Times are hard, taxes are high, and the people in her duchy need her help just to survive. Her widowed father is a good man easily distracted by horses, and her newly knighted childhood friend…well, he has plans of his own.

Then Annelore receives a call she can’t ignore.

When Troixden’s sadistic king died childless, his younger brother William returns from exile to find his beloved country on the brink of civil war. He’s in desperate need of the stability that comes with a bride and heirs. But Annelore, his chosen queen, won’t come quietly.

Now the future of Troixden lies in the hands of two people who never wanted the power they’ve received and never dreamed that from duty and honor they might find love and a path to peace.

Heirs & Spares is one part history, two parts palace plotting, and a whole lot of juicy romantic intrigue. Break out the spiced wine and sink in to this rousing read.

*  *  *

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 excerpt:

CHAPTER 1

Milady

In the far-flung duchy of Beaubourg, where the Truss Mountain foothills tumble soft and green to the sea, Annelore, biting her cheek in concentration, tended to the blacksmith’s broken leg. He was splayed atop the table in his rank kitchen, struggling in vain not to whimper.

She massaged his lower thigh to relax the knee, then pounced, pinning his leg down with a strength that belied her small frame.

“You’ve got to keep the leg straight, Charity,” Annelore said. “Like this.”

Charity screwed up her fresh, freckled face, tried to help, then backed up to the wash basin. Mary, Annelore’s maid, took over.

The smith bit down hard on a leather strap.

“Ungh…”

Annelore wrung out a rag and moved to the top of his head, stroking back his hair.

“One more adjustment and we’re done.” She smiled at him, took out the strap, and wiped it on her silk skirts. He took it back to his mouth, steadying his breath.

Mary, face stern, sleeves up to elbows, apron covered in salve and blood, stood at the ready by his foot. Annelore returned to his leg. They needed to realign the bone, drain the pus, and pray to God the infection did not spread.

Annelore laid her torso on his thigh as Mary grabbed hold of his foot and calf. Charity backed further away, knocking over dirty dishes with a clang. Anna and Mary exchanged a nod.

“One,” Mary said. “Two. Threeee—”

The blacksmith’s howl rang in the rafters.

###

 

Annelore retreated to her gardens as soon as she and Mary were back at Castle Beaubourg. She squatted in the dirt, plunged her grimy, bloody hands into the cool earth, and began lifting the last of the sage into a raised bed.

Plants died, of course, but at least they didn’t grip her hands and beg her to save them when she knew there was nothing more to be done. Plants didn’t have to bury their children. Plants merely drooped or refused to thrive, silently bearing their grievances only to sprout anew the next year. The blacksmith’s leg would not be so resilient.

“Don’t be taking it out on the herbs.” Mary had come up behind her.

Annelore sat back on her haunches and saw she was practically choking the stalk.

“Owk—” She plunked it in the ground.

“Annelore!” The duke leaned out the kitchen window, calling into the sunny June day. “Annnaaaaa!”

She brushed a tendril of brown hair off her cheek, leaving a smudge of earth in its place.

“What is it, Papa?” Even from that distance she saw the delight in his face.

“Anna! Bryan is here—you must come to see. I’m in fits at the very sight of him! Dust yourself off, my dear, make haste.”

She grabbed a basket full of pruned peppermint and fennel and came into the kitchen, Mary following.

“Papa,” she said, a hand on her hip, “certainly he has seen me in much worse.” And she him. She had first met Bryan when they were children, he peeing pictures in the snow.

“Have you forgot what this week is, my dear?” Her father ruffled her hair. “Or do you forget your oldest and dearest friend unless he’s right in front of your nose?”

Anna clapped her hands. She thought her mood could not be lifted, but this—how could she have forgotten?

“And here I have nothing to give him but peppermint!”

“I daresay your smile will be sufficient.”

She tore through the castle, tossing her filthy apron on the Great Hall table as she flew past. She washed her hands as best she could, pinched extra color into her cheeks, then hurried into the stable yard to find Bryan mounted on his steed.

She stopped short. He wore full chain-mail regalia—he was positively glowing.

“Bryan!” she called. “Or do I say Sir Bryan now?”

He dismounted, fell into a bow, and doffed his helmet, revealing all that golden hair.

“My lady,” he said.

Laughing, she ran to him.

“Our very own knight, newly minted!”

He lifted her up and swung her around, laughing himself.

“Yes, my dear, ’tis true.”

“Well done.” She paused a moment when he set her down, hands on his cheeks, taking him in. He released her and she took his arm.

“And what of court? What of the new king? Even more wicked than his brother? What wore the ladies? What did they serve you?”

“Questions, questions—you’re worse than my mother,” he said. “But let’s walk and I’ll tell you all there is to tell, starting with silk—the ladies wear burgundy silk.”

“Owk, and here I am in blue damask.”

“Even in a woolen tunic you would shine like a princess amongst all of those painted peacocks.”

She blushed, looked down at her hands, and picked at sediment under the stubbed nails.

“Court has no use for Beaubourg and I have no use for it,” she said as they set off toward their favorite spot, the willow tree by the stream at the far end of the east meadow.

“Oh, I think we’d make a fine pair there. Don’t you? The Knight of Beaubourg and his lady love?”

“Court just seems such a whole other world,” she said. “’Tis almost as if you’ve traveled home from the Far East.” They reached the willow. “And I suppose the ladies were no less exotic…”

Bryan reached for her but lost his footing and the two of them tumbled down to the soft moss below in peals of pleasure.

Anna lay on her back, pulling at the new summer grass. Bryan propped himself up on an elbow as best he could, shining suitor at her side. The sun dappled their faces, a soft breeze lifting the willow branches like a swishing skirt over their heads. He picked up a lock of her chestnut hair and wrapped it around his finger.

“May I be lashed severely if I thought even one held a candle to you, my love.” He gave her hair a kiss. She made a face.

“I see they haven’t spared your education in the art of courtly love.”

He laughed, then gave a drawn-out sigh and threw himself, clanking, on to his back.

“You vex me, Anna. One day I think you love me, the next you don’t. One day we’re to marry and care for your father in his old age, the next you shall never marry and I’ll be cast out to haunt the lands sad and alone.”

“Well, then, shall we find out today’s answer?” She picked a clover daisy, smiled, and began to pluck its petals. “I love you, I love you not, I love you, I love you not—”

Bryan grabbed the flower, tossed it aside, and seized both her hands in his.

“Annelore, hear me.”

She cocked an eyebrow.

“Now don’t tease,” he said. “Being knighted—it’s made me take a firmer look at the future. Even the king is casting about for a wife. I too want my future to be secure, to be settled. You know I’ve planned for us…” He looked into her dark eyes and swallowed. “You’ll be twenty-one by month’s end, well past time to marry—”

“And my father will finally relent to any suitors I may have, yes, I know.” She kissed him gently on the hand. Bryan scowled and pulled away.

“Bryan, you know you’re the nearest and dearest person in the world to me, forsaking Father and Mary. Be of good cheer. Why would he refuse you?” She picked up his fallen right hand, intertwining their fingers.

“But you’ll tell him, won’t you?” He smiled. “That it’s what we both want? We can start our own little family soon—the girls will look like you and the boys like me, and—”

“And any second now you’ll be naming our grandchildren.” She patted his hand and smiled at his frown. “Come now, tell me more of court.”

Relenting his talk of love, he told her of the grandeur of Palace Havenside, its courtiers and feasts, becoming even more animated when he talked of the king.

“I met him once, when I was a child,” Anna said. “He was kind to me then but he’s sure to be a brute now. Just like the rest of his family, God rest their souls—if he must.”

“He’s no brute, Anna. He—”

“What?” She could feel her cheeks turn hot. “I for one have had enough of his family. Beaubourg’s wool market sold more than ever, but we saw no profit—though I’m sure the crown did. Not to mention the—”

“Anna, I tell you, this King William…” He paused. “There’s something in his countenance—something in his manner of being, in the set of his jaw… I can’t describe it.” He looked up, as if the right words might be found in the wind. “I would follow the man wherever ordered, even straight down the road to hell.”

“I see the drink at court is quite strong.”

“Don’t.” He scowled, then lay back and sighed. “Speaking of hell, this waiting for us to wed grinds my soul.”

“Tush, tush. I say again, Sir Bryan,” she gave him a dazzling smile she knew would appease him, “you must wait till my father is at his leisure—”

He interrupted her with a kiss full on the lips. She broke away and stood up, dusting off her skirts.

“I must bid you adieu for a time,” she said, “but come sup with us—we are to fete you properly.”

“Mother won’t have it.” He gave her a half smile. “She’s impatient to hear more of court and the goings on.”

She started to back away from him up the hill.

“For heaven’s sake bring her along, and your brothers and Charity too. That’s an official order from the House of Carver and the Duke of Beaubourg.”

With that, she turned heel and ran back home. When she reached the castle’s outer gate, she looked back at their tree and saw him still sitting beneath it, plucking a clover daisy, sun splattering his armor with shocks of light.

Sweet boy.

###

 

“He can’t be serious.” A blond curl escaped Lady Margaux’s headdress and quivered with the ire of its mistress.

Robert, Duke of Norwick, seated behind his desk piled high with papers, arched a black brow and considered her.

“Dear sis, while the king isn’t thrilled, he has steeled himself to his duty.” He signed a contract with a flourish, blew off the blotting dust, and gave the parchment to his secretary, whom he dismissed with a flick. Robert made his way to the front of his desk and perched on the edge.

“We need an heir—one of Troixden blood, not of some foreign country that will pitch us into war with the Empire or the French.”

“Save your lecture for council! How dare you recall me to court for this? Even your wife hinted that I—”

Robert glared at her. She waited for his entourage to exit, smiling sweetly at the bows they gave her as they left. With the close of the door she was at him again.

“How dare my own brother go along in recommending His Majesty look outside court for such a match? Have you no heed for your family?”

Robert was up and twisting her arm before she could move. She yelped.

“Keep your voice down!” he whispered. “You come here screaming like a banshee about succession when King James’s grave is barely cold, William one month on the throne, and I next in line?”

He thrust her toward the window, where she tripped onto the waiting settee, her skirt a wine-red cloud swelling about her.

“Don’t pretend you have no interest in the throne,” she said. “Friend or no, you want your boys in our fair cousin Will’s place.”

Robert turned to the girl he had once adored, the girl he had played knight and princess with, rescuing her from dragons and stern tutors. Now she sat there, a shrill annoyance, twitching her nose like a rodent. Perhaps not a rodent—her nose was too lovely for that, even he could admit.

“And how does your becoming queen get me or mine any closer to the throne? My sons would be well behind any brats you’d bear—”

“Perhaps I wouldn’t have any brats.” She crossed her arms and frowned out the windows at an early summer gloom.

“The king will have children—it’s the entire point of the marriage. And with one as virile as His Majesty, he’ll be fathering children like Abraham.”

“There are ways women know to keep children from coming.”

Robert walked over to the settee and frowned down at her.

“’Tis vile, what you speak of—and unholy.”

“Then what if the king should pass before I conceive?”

Robert was upon her in a second. He jerked her off the settee and shoved her, shoulders first, into the stone wall.

“Listen to yourself! You come to my rooms in the middle of the day while the king’s away and speak of his death!”

She had the grace to flinch.

“Do you not think all eyes are upon me?” he said. “Do you think because he and I are old friends I’m immune to his vengeance?”

He held her a moment longer until her perfect face crumpled like a crushed flower, then dropped his hands and walked back to his desk.

“Guards!” he called.

Margaux stood where he left her, shriveled against the wall like a dead spider.

“Please show my sister the door,” he said when the guards came. “And my lady, I trust I won’t be hearing from you anytime soon.”

She straightened to her full height, regal as ever, gave Robert a small curtsy, and preceded the guards out, leaving him alone with his discomfited thoughts.

###

 

Anna returned to the castle to find her father doling out coins to a royal messenger at the foot of the Great Hall table. The little man doffed his feathered cap and left the duke holding a letter sealed in thick, red wax.

“Well, what news?”

“’Tis from the king,” he said.

“And why do you not open it?”

“You’d like me to read it?” He smiled.

Anna put her hands on her hips.

“If it’s not too much trouble.”

He turned it round and round, ever so slowly broke the great seal with a knobby finger, and began to read to himself.

“Out loud, Papa, out loud.”

The duke’s mouth curled into a smile.

“But of course, my lady—if you demand it.”

“Owk!” She stamped a foot, but couldn’t help her own grin.

He cleared his throat and began.

“From His Royal Highness, King William the Second of the Mighty Kingdom of Troixden, to His Grace the Honorable Duke Stephen of Beaubourg et cetera, et cetera…” He scanned the letter, lips twitching. “Ah! Here’s the meat: On a matter of both personal and national import, Our Royal Person shall arrive to Castle Beaubourg on the fifth of June, the year of Our Lord fifteen-hundred and sixty-nine. All persons of the House of Carver are obligated to attend…”

“June fifth? That’s the morrow!”

“The courier said there were some delays on the road…”

While the duke continued reading Anna hollered for Mary, who was peering over the ledge of the balcony above them, outside Anna’s chamber.

“I’ve already started on the beds,” Mary called down, “and I suppose we’ll be having to strangle the swans for feasting.”

“Surely not.” Anna looked over at her father. “We don’t want things too pleasant, lest His Majesty want Beaubourg for himself. For why else would he lower himself to come here? We’ve been disdained by court for years.”

The duke, still reading, pursed his lips and frowned.

“Papa?”

“We must ready the castle—no time to waste. You as well, my dear—and until the royal party leaves, there’ll be no more digging about like a mole!”

She was about to make a retort, but glanced at her hands and thought better of it.


 

 

 

CHAPTER 2

His Highness

 

The royal carriage was stuck—again—leaving the freshly crowned King William II and Daniel, Duke of Cecile, standing in the mud under a hastily erected canopy. It did not put the king in a courting frame of mind.

As William’s closest friend and advisor, Daniel was as new to Council Table as the king to his throne. It was against all tradition to name a novice to such high standing, an unpopular decision in any case thanks to Daniel’s being a bastard, in lineage if not in manner. But the king was happy to have his friend by his side again.

Except at the moment. At the moment, William could have wrung his neck. Although, to be fair, much of the king’s anger derived from endless talk about the inevitable royal marriage. Daniel had just told him, not for the first time, that a willing bride would not be hard to find.

“Can she not be comely as well as willing?” William said.

“I don’t see why not, Majesty.” Daniel said. “You’ve the face of a man who’s seen and loved the world, the smile of a contented soul, the wise blue eyes of your mother, may she rest in peace—”

William rolled his wise blue eyes.

“You sound like a courtier wanting another title.”

“I think you’ve done enough for me already.” Daniel looked at his feet and blushed. “Besides, you’ve not exactly had a hard road where women are concerned…”

Daniel kept talking, but William had heard it all before. With the effects of his family’s disastrous, bloody reigns still lingering and the heretical Germans hoping to take a bite out of his realm, the crown needed security. The country needed stability. William needed heirs and spares and he needed them soon.

“Negotiating with England for the hand of Elizabeth appeals more and more at the moment.” William looked at his men working valiantly and thus far fruitlessly to dislodge the carriage wheels from the thick mud.

Daniel smiled in his quiet way.

“Majesty, you’ve been out of the realm these fifteen years in lands hostile to the Holy Father. To marry a heretic—”

“I know, I know.” William watched his straining men, itching to put his own shoulder to the task. “We’ve been through the debate most heartily. Besides, she’s too old for our purposes—though not much older than my creaky self.”

He began creating little haphazard rivers and tributaries in the sludge with his foot. “But at least I’d be dry. And her wit would make me merry. And I daresay, if our past acquaintance is any indication, she wouldn’t find the idea abhorrent.”

Daniel watched the progress of William’s miniature riverbed for a minute, then frowned and looked up at him.

“You’re but thirty, sire. And since when has Your Majesty ever balked in the face of such exploits as—”

“It’s William when just the two of us.” He clapped his friend on the back. “Didn’t think I had to tell you that twice. And as for exploits, I’ve never had to tromp through fields, forests, and foulness in such absurd costume.” He held up his arms, showing his damp royal finery. “As king come a-courting, I cut a damned sorry sight.”

Daniel looked at William’s mournful expression and pouted his lips in consideration.

“Yes, friend,” William said, “I’ll give you all the gold in the realm if you can spin this yarn into something agreeable.”

Daniel swallowed a smile.

“We can head south, turn back to—”

Turn back?” William said. “As you say, our people already have a foul opinion of their sovereign. Shall they now find a little mud forces him to retreat on his tour?”

“They shan’t, Majes—William.”

“Then let’s review our route. Again.” William rubbed his large hands together as if to magic away the damp. “Why on earth we started by going north…”

“Seven duchies. Seven ladies. Seven chances to charm your people—”

“I’m sure the people of Hosmer were quite charmed as we sloshed through town in a hail of filth and rain, not even stopping for a royal wave.” William grimaced at the thought of what his brother had done to their land.

“Hosmer is not even the halfway point,” Daniel said, “and we’d already been delayed over four hours. We may have to skip Beaubourg entirely—”

William looked up at the canopy just as a large drop of rain hit him square on the nose. He swore.

“We’ll not skip it. Though the duke will have to wait.” He massaged his jaw, feeling its close-cropped stubble. “As will the rest.”

At the rate they were moving, the Duke of Beaubourg would have to wait quite a while.

###

 

That evening, Anna retired to her chamber. Mary was standing ready with a hot bath and Anna’s most luxurious gown hung to air.

“Oh Mary,” she said, stretching her arms to the air, “what a day, and what a morrow.”

To Anna, Mary was frozen in time, smelling of spice-bread and roses. As a child Anna had spent many a night nestled against Mary’s ample bosom as the nurse sang away the witches and goblins.

“What a day indeed, m’dear. Now off with your filthy clothes and into the tub.” Mary helped Anna out of her day dress and into the copper bath in front of the fire, then set to scrubbing Anna’s hair with a frenzy normally reserved for an outbreak of lice.

“Do you want me to go bald?” Anna said.

She turned to her nurse who, holding the ends of Anna’s dripping tresses in her knobby, calloused hands, continued unabated to thwack the dark locks into submission.

“Mary, do you think he means to take our lands?”

Mary stopped and looked square at Anna, opened her mouth, seemed to reconsider, then snapped it shut.

“I’ll be saying nothing about the whole matter—I’m just a servant here, after all.”

Everyone was so peculiar today. Even Anna’s brown cat Mae sulked under the bed, refusing to come out. Perhaps it was the approaching dark clouds from the sea harkening yet another storm that put them all to such brooding.

Anna resettled herself in the deep tub.

“Once he sees our natural splendors, how could he not want them for the crown?” she said. “And then what would happen to us all?” If she had to start wearing muslin again to keep food on the tables of her people, she would do it.

“Well, m’love, as I said, I’ll not say a thing about it.” Mary helped Anna out of the bath and into a towel, then her shift. “’Cepting I think he’s here for some other reason altogether.”

Anna, looking at her, saw tears starting in her eyes.

“Mary, whatever is the matter?” She thought of her father. Was he going to be called away? How could she manage running Beaubourg by herself?

“Tell me or I shan’t sleep a wink!”

Mary patted her head.

“’Tis nothing, dearie. The early summer winds are making me head fuzzy.” She

went about turning down the bed, Anna following right behind.

“Tell me or I’ll leave my candle burning all night and read the whole of St. Paul’s epistles. Aloud. In the Greek.”

“You wouldn’t do that to your old Mary, now would ye?” She wouldn’t meet Anna’s eyes.

“If it’s about Papa…”

“Don’t be playing on my old heart, dearie. I told you ’tis not my place. But I daresay you’ve nothing to badger me about.”

Anna sighed. She would not be getting more information from her unusually tight-lipped maid. Perhaps things would be clearer in the morning. She climbed into bed and opened her precious Bible.

While Protestantism was gaining purchase in other lands, the Pope still held sway in Troixden. And the gentry were expected to know their Scripture, if only to appear learned. If they had a Bible at all. Anna enjoyed the stories—they fed her sense of adventure and drama. She loved the wisdom and poetry, the epic tales. Every night she read until her candle burned out or her eyes fluttered to a close.

Mary, who slept in Anna’s chamber, patted her shoulder.

“Not too late, dearie. You’ll be needing your sleep.”

Anna arched a brow.

“For what, pray tell?”

Mary shook her head and Anna smiled through a yawn.

“I’m tired—and in Leviticus. I’ll soon be asleep.”

She watched Mary give her one last lingering look and wipe away another tear from a creased eye.

###

 

It was getting on eleven the following evening, and the entire House of Carver, from the lowest stable hand to the duke himself, stood at attention in Castle Beaubourg’s courtyard. The rain was misting, a fine drizzle that showed no sign of letting up.

Anna had been up and down and up and down what seemed like twenty times that day. No one dared touch the feast—now gone cold—and no one dared take a bit of leisure, lest His High and Mighty arrive without warning. They had been kept apprised of the king’s halting progress by a succession of messengers, all claiming His Majesty would arrive soon, the last one having left them a half-hour ago.

He’d been due early that afternoon.

Blast these royals! Anna shivered in her damp gown. Selfish, slow, full of their own airs. The butcher’s wife due with her babe any moment and Mary and I stuck here.

She heard the thick clomp of hooves fast approaching. No doubt another fleet of messengers. She’d go to bed after this final insult, king or no.

Just as she turned to go to her father to beg his permission, twelve horses tore into the yard, mud flying, whining and wet, their riders bedraggled in their court dress. A tall, cloaked man at the center dismounted in haste, barely waiting for his black beast to halt, the others scrambling after him.

“Your Grace,” the man said, striding to her father, not bothering to pull back his hood. His boots were covered with mud. How disrespectful of her father’s rank and wait! They were all alike, no matter what Bryan said.

“Please accept our most humble apologies for our tardiness,” the man said. “It seems the weather up north frowns upon our journey. And as you can tell from our state, we have been stuck a long while.”

Anna gasped as she realized who he was.

“Your Majesty,” her father said, taking the king’s proffered hand and kissing his ring. “’Tis a trifle to wait upon such an honor. Please, let us retire to dryness and warmth.”

The two men entered the castle followed by another four of the king’s party. Anna heard the king’s deep voice booming out.

“Our carriage shall be along at some point. Hopefully by the time of our needed departure.”

“Certainly, sire, my men shall attend to every need,” her father said. “They’ll soon be about seeing to your steed. A creature of rare beauty, I might add…”

The voices faded and Anna was finally able to enter the castle, where Mary caught hold of her arm.

“Owk, you look a fright.” She busied about Anna’s hair, which had frizzled in the damp.

“What does it matter? I shall retire and make my official appearance in the morning.” She was tired and didn’t care how the king would look upon such a breach. It served him right, keeping them waiting like this. Weather! What a paltry excuse.

“You’ll do no such thing, my dearie,” Mary said, moving to re-fluff Anna’s sleeves. “’Tis the king who’s here, not some horse trader.”

“And the king needs to learn his manners.”

“By flouting your own? Nay, Anna, you were raised better, if I say so meself.” Mary gave a final shake to Anna’s skirts. “Maybe with the light so dim he’ll not see dirt on the hem.”

Anna stood glowering as more laughter echoed in the hall.

“Out with you.” Mary gave her a little shove on the backside.

Anna walked the few steps to the archway leading to the sunken hall where the men had all sat down to eat, the king at the far end—in her father’s usual place—her father to the king’s right.

The hall was darker than normal, as if the gloom from outside had drifted in with the king’s party and hung over the table. She could barely make out the men’s faces closest to her, shadowed as they all were by this pall that even a surplus of candles could not pierce.

She stopped on the top stair, unsure whether to enter there or go around through the hallway to her father. The laughter was cresting and she noticed the king joining in. He glanced in her direction, stroking his cheek. His smile faded. Even at such a distance she could feel his eyes bore through her. Her heart sped like a sparrow under Mae’s paw.

Benches and chairs scraped the stone floor as the men rose to honor her entrance. The king remained seated, watching. She furrowed her brow at him and saw the flicker of a smile break. So she was entertaining, was she?

“Your Highness,” her father said, hurrying to her side, “may I present my daughter, the Lady Annelore Matilda of Beaubourg.”

Anna curtsied low, glad to avoid the king’s sharp eyes.

“Lady Annelore,” the king said, “we are pleased. And hope you accept our regrets for the lateness of the hour. Please, join us at table.”

At her table.

“Thank you, Majesty,” she said.

She rose and moved to the lone open seat at the far end of the table between two of the royal party, a thin blond man and an older one, heavy and balding. She sat without ceremony, took a long swig of wine and set her goblet down with too much force, hushing the conversation enough to attract Bryan’s attention. He gave her a sheepish look from across the table.

She picked up a fork and stabbed at a piece of cold venison. Meat secure, mouth open, and morsel halfway to its mark, she looked up to find the king still staring at her. She put her bite down slowly, her eyes following it to her plate.

Dammit. Stop looking at me with those blasted eyes!

“By all means, dear lady, eat,” he said. The men were silent, everyone now waiting for her next move.

“Begging your pardon, Majesty,” she said, eyes glued to her plate. “As we long awaited your party, I had not a moment to eat since noontime.” She knew it was rude, but it should stop his stares.

“Of course,” the king said. She thankfully felt his eyes leave her. “Your Grace, tell me more of your stables.”

This was the cue for the rest of the men to resume eating and talking. How skittish they all seemed, all save the two flanking her. The one to her left, the fat one, reached out and patted her forearm.

“Pay no heed, my lady,” he said. She glanced up to find hazel eyes dancing in the dim candlelight.

“I especially enjoy the plum sauce with the venison,” he said. “Finer plum sauce is not even found in Havenside I daresay.”

His smile was so sincere she couldn’t help smiling back.

“The Duke of Halforn at your service, my lady.” He made a little twirling salute with his hand. “And the gentleman to your right is Daniel, the Duke of Cecile.”

Daniel turned to her, nodded, smiled.

“My lady, it is indeed a pleasure. And His Grace is correct—the plum sauce surpasses that of even Rome.”

“Your Grace has been to Rome?”

His pale cheeks flushed. She had not been able to mask her eagerness.

“Yes, my lady, but I did not mean to boast, only to compliment the sauce.”

“But of course. I merely wish to—it’s just that… please, Your Grace, speak to me of your travels.”

Daniel acquiesced with almost enough details to satisfy her, the jolly Halforn interjecting his wit until the talk of travels finally subsided.

“So it’s true. Your Ladyship has a learned mind,” Halforn said through a mouthful of sweetbread. “If only my daughters would take a lesson from you, my dear.”

“What you have heard, Your Grace?” How could anyone outside of Beaubourg have heard anything about her, let alone the state of her mind? Ah, but of course: Bryan had just returned from court. Halforn laughed.

“Why, it’s our business to know of all the ladies of the land—”

“What His Grace means to say—” Daniel started, but the voice of the king rose above them.

“We are afraid there’s no remedy, Your Grace, as we are already so delayed. We really must away tomorrow morning. Please do not take it as any reflection on your hospitality.”

“Of course not, sire,” her father said. “I only wished you to have the time you needed, as the matter is of such import.”

“Worry not, Your Grace,” the king said. “Things shall present themselves much more clearly after a night’s rest. If her ladyship would be so inclined as to break fast with us, we do not believe our early departure will hamper things.”

“If that be the case, Highness,” Anna said, “I shall to bed now, if you please.”

The king raised his thick brows at her. Her father looked stunned.

“Please excuse my daughter, Highness,” he said. “She is used to less formality, as in usual circumstances only she and I are at table.”

“Think nothing of it, Your Grace,” the king said. “A lady who speaks her mind is one to be admired, is she not?”

Several at the table called out “Here, here!” and raised their glasses in a toast. To her or the king she could not tell.

She pushed herself away from the table.

“Then I shall—”

“You have our leave,” the king said, fixing her in mid-rise with that unnerving stare of his.

How dare he make her feel so small in her own home? But of course, that’s what kings did best.

“Majesty,” she said, dipping into the faintest of curtsies and meeting his gaze with the force of her own, “the distinct honor of your presence has been mine. Please continue to enjoy our hospitality as seems fitting to you.”

With that she turned from all those men with their disconcerted faces and left them to grovel before their tyrant of a king.

 Click here to download the entire book: J. L. Spohr’s Heirs & Spares>>>

KND Brand New Romance of The Week: 49/51 Rave Reviews! Historical Romance Fans Are Calling J.L. Spohr’s Heirs & Spares a “Delicious Read!” – Download Today For Just $3.99

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 by J. L. Spohr’s Heirs & Spares, so please check it out!

4.6 stars – 51 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

It’s 1569. Elizabeth I sits on the English throne, the Reformation inflames the Continent, and whispers of war abound.

But in Troixden, just north of France, the Lady Annelore isn’t interested in politics. Times are hard, taxes are high, and the people in her duchy need her help just to survive. Her widowed father is a good man easily distracted by horses, and her newly knighted childhood friend…well, he has plans of his own.

Then Annelore receives a call she can’t ignore.

When Troixden’s sadistic king died childless, his younger brother William returns from exile to find his beloved country on the brink of civil war. He’s in desperate need of the stability that comes with a bride and heirs. But Annelore, his chosen queen, won’t come quietly.

Now the future of Troixden lies in the hands of two people who never wanted the power they’ve received and never dreamed that from duty and honor they might find love and a path to peace.

Heirs & Spares is one part history, two parts palace plotting, and a whole lot of juicy romantic intrigue. Break out the spiced wine and sink in to this rousing read.

5-Star Amazon Reviews

“This is a wonderfully engaging story, full of drama, wit and mystery woven by a refreshing, new author. I highly recommend it!”

“I so enjoyed this book. The characters are wonderful. I got totally caught up in the story and now can’t wait for the next book!”

About The Author

J. L. Spohr is the author of Heirs & Spares (Plum Street Press) and several short stories. An incurable Anglophile/Europhile who has studied the trials and tribulations of royals since she watched Princess Diana take that long walk to the altar, she turned her attention to historical fiction and fictional monarchies after studying the Reformation in graduate school.

When not writing, Spohr produces and hosts a popular podcast called The Kindlings Muse (www.thekindlings.com) about ideas that matter in culture, including books, film, and music. She is an ordained minister and lives with her brood in Seattle. (author photo by John Keatley)

You can follow her at www.jlspohr.com, facebook.com/jlspohr or @jlspohr. Also, you can sign up for her newsletter at jlspohr.com where you can get all the latest news on events, contests, freebies and upcoming books.

*  *  *

Never miss another great sale again – Free and Bargain romance eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small