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!

4.4 Stars For KND Brand New Romance of The Week: Edenmary Black’s Sanctum Angels Shadow Havens Book 1

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, Sanctum Angels Shadow Havens Book 1, so please check it out!

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

Warning: The following work contains descriptive material and scenes of explicit sexual encounters between consenting male and female adults. It is intended for adult readers only.

When Priana Grey walks into a bank, she isn’t expecting to be taken hostage by a violent thief; nor, is she expecting Detective Joe Cafaris to offer his life for hers. The stepdaughter of fallen angels of the Sanctum, she has concealed her true nature to move among humans for years, but Joe’s courage astounds her. Although she knows that falling in love with a human is a disaster, she just can’t ignore what she feels.

Joe is a tough loner, cool in the most dangerous situations, but he’s not ready for the scorching desire he feels for Priana. He has a million logical reasons to walk away, but his heart wants something else.

Priana’s stepbrother, Keirc, warns that she’ll find only misery with Joe, yet he guards a perilous secret of his own. His lover, Iridea, is the daughter of Sebastien Galaurus, a ruthless vampire who leads the Demesne, a powerful supernatural haven quite unlike the Sanctum.

When a stunning crisis forces Priana into the heart of the Demesne, a maelstrom explodes in the shadow of supernatural havens on the brink of war, where fallen angels, vampires, weres and daemons call the shots and humans are viewed as critically frail – a place where men and supernaturals can die.

(This is a sponsored post.)

Jan Moran’s Epic Romance SCENT OF TRIUMPH is Featured in Today’s Free Excerpt

Last week we announced that Jan Moran’s Epic Romance SCENT OF TRIUMPH 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 Scent of Triumph, you’re in for a real treat:

Scent of Triumph

by Jan Moran

4.8 stars – 29 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Paris-born Danielle Bretancourt von Hoffman is a modern young woman with a natural gift. In the language of perfumery, she is a Nose, with the rare ability to recognize thousands of essences by memory.

The year is 1939, and on the day that England declares war on Germany, Danielle and her family are caught in the midst of a raging disaster sweeping across Europe.

Her life takes a tragic turn when her husband and their only son are stranded behind enemy lines. Summoning her courage, she spies for the French resistance, but is forced to flee Europe with fragments of her family. Destitute, she mines her talents to create a magnificent perfume that captures the hearts of Hollywood stars, then gambles to win wealth and success as a couturier. Her intelligence and flair attracts the adoration of Jonathan Newell-Grey, head of England’s top shipping conglomerate, and Cameron Murphy, Hollywood’s most charismatic star.

Danielle charts her course through devastating wartime losses and revenge; lustful lovers and loveless marriages; and valiant struggles to reunite her family. Set between privileged lifestyles and gritty realities, here is one woman’s story of courage, spirit, and resilience.

Reviews

“SCENT OF TRIUMPH [is a] World War II epic.” – Los Angeles Times

“SCENT OF TRIUMPH offers action, suspense and romance as it follows its intrepid heroine through the turbulent years of World War II, from the depths of tragedy to the heights of success. Fragrance lovers will enjoy the skillful way in which scent is woven into the story…and how the heroine’s experiences are filtered through her highly refined sense of smell.” – Nancy Arnott, A&E Television Networks

“Filled with love, loss, struggle, triumph. Moran writes in such a way that you will feel as if you were transported back to the era. Her characters are well developed. Very unique, an enjoyable read.”  – Rebecca’s Reads Review

“Jan Moran is the new queen of the epic romance.” – USA Today Bestselling Author Rebecca Forster, Author of Expert Witness

“I absolutely loved this story!”  – Carrie, a reader from Goodreads

“SCENT OF TRIUMPH is a rich tapestry that weaves fragrance into an already compelling story of love and perseverance during WWII. Jan’s skillful writing, combined with her wealth of olfactory knowledge, makes this a great read for all, but especially the perfume enthusiast.”  – Karen Adams, Sniffapalooza

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

Part I – Europe

September 3, 1939

 

1

 

 

Danielle Bretancourt von Hoffman braced herself against the gleaming mahogany-paneled stateroom wall, striving for balance as she flung open a brass porthole.  A damp kelp-scented wind whistled through the cabin, assaulting her nose with its raw intensity.

She kept her eyes focused on the horizon as the Newell-Grey Explorer slanted upward, slicing through the peak of a cresting wave.  The sleek new 80,000 ton super liner creaked and pitched as it heaved through the turbulent grey waters of the icy Atlantic on its voyage from New York to England.  Silently, Danielle urged it onward, anxious to return home.

A veil of salty spray prickled Danielle’s fevered brow, and her usually sturdy stomach churned in rhythm with the sea.  Was it morning sickness, or the ravaging motion of the sea?  Probably both, she thought, her hand cradling her gently curved abdomen.  She gnawed her lip, the metallic taste of blood spreading on her tongue, thinking about the last few days.

Dabbing her mouth with the back of her hand, she blinked against the stiff breeze, her mind reeling.  Had it been just two days since she’d heard the devastating news that Nazi forces had invaded Poland?

A staccato knock burst against the stateroom door.  Gingerly crossing the room, Danielle opened the door and caught her breath at the sight of Jonathan Newell-Grey, vice president and heir apparent to the British shipping line that bore his name.  His tie hung from his collar, and his sleeves were rolled up, exposing muscular forearms taut from years of sailing.  A rumpled wool jacket hung over one shoulder.  Though they hadn’t been friends long, she was truly glad to see him.

“Is your husband in?”  His hoarse voice held the wind of the sea.

“Max will be back soon.  Any news?”

“None.”  He pushed a hand through his unruly chestnut hair.  “The captain has called a meeting at fifteen hundred hours for all passengers traveling on Polish and German passports.”

“But I hold a French passport.”

“You’ll still need to attend, Danielle.”

“Of course, but—” As another sharp pitch jerked through the ship, Jon caught her by the shoulders and kept her from falling.

“Steady now, lass,” he said, a small smile playing on his lips.

Feeling a little embarrassed, Danielle touched the wall for support.  Suddenly, she recalled the strange sense of foreboding she’d had upon waking.  She was blessed—or cursed—with an unusually keen prescience.  Frowning, she asked, “Jon, can the ship withstand this storm?”

“Sure, she’s a fine, seaworthy vessel, one of the finest in the world.  This weather’s no match for her.”  He stared past her out the porthole, his deep blue eyes riveted on the ocean’s white-capped expanse.  Dark, heavily laden clouds crossed the sun, casting angled shadows across his face.  He turned back to her, his jaw set.  “Might even be rougher seas ahead, but we’ll make England by morning.”

Danielle nodded, but still, she knew.  Oh yes, she knew.  Acid churned in her stomach; something seemed terribly wrong.  Her intuition came in quiet flashes of pure knowledge.  She couldn’t force it, couldn’t direct it, and knew better than to discuss it with anyone, especially her husband.  She was only twenty-four; Max was older, wiser, and told her that her insights were simply rubbish.

Jon touched her arm in a small, sympathetic movement.  “What a sorry predicament you’re in.  Anything I can do to help?”

“Not unless you can perform a miracle.”  Jon’s rough fingers felt warm against her skin, and an ill-timed memory from a few days ago shot through her mind.  On Max’s encouragement, they’d shared a dance while Max spoke to the captain at length after dinner, and Danielle remembered Jon’s soft breath, his musky skin, his hair curling just above his collar.  He’d been interested in all she had to say, from her little boy to her work at Parfums Bretancourt, her family’s perfumery in France.

Danielle forced the memory from her mind, took a step back out of modesty.  “I had a bad feeling about this trip from the beginning,” she started.  She caught sight of herself in the mirror, her thick auburn hair in disarray, her lip rouge smeared against her pale cheek.  She drew her fingers across her cheek, straightened her shoulders, and went on.  “We’d planned to take care of our business in New York, then return to Poland to close the chateau.  After that, we were to join Max’s mother, Sofia, and our little Nicky in Paris, for a brief visit with my family before returning to America.”

“Why didn’t you bring Nicky with you?”

“I wanted to, but he’s so young that Max thought he’d be better off in Paris with my family.”  Why, oh why, had she agreed to leave Nicky?  Max had made it sound so sensible.  Wincing with remorse, she fought the panic that rose in her throat.  “But now Sofia’s terribly ill, her last cable said that she and Nicky haven’t even left for Paris.”

Jon wiped a smudge from her cheek and said quietly, “Danielle, they’ve got to get to Paris as quickly as possible.”

Mon Dieu! she thought.  They hadn’t realized Sofia was so ill.  ‘It’s just a cold,’ her mother-in-law had told them as they left.  What if Sofia isn’t well enough to travel?

The ship pitched, sending the porthole door banging against the paneled wall.  Shifting easily with the vessel’s sharp motions, Jon caught it, secured the latch, then turned back to Danielle.  “Max told me he thinks he has your immigration to the States sorted out.”

“That’s right, a senator from New York helped us secure a financial partner.  Max plans to reestablish our crystal manufacturing facility there by the end of the year, but now, the workers he’d like to bring—”  Her voice hitched as she thought of what their friends and family faced.

“You’ve done the best you could, Danielle.”  But even as he spoke, his gaze trailed back to the sea, his eyes narrowed against the sun’s thinning rays, scanning the surface.

She matched his gaze.  “Anything unusual out there?”

“Could be German U-Boats.  Unterseeboots.  The most treacherous of submarines.  Bloody hell, they are.”  He moved toward her, and leaning closer he lifted a strand of hair, damp with sea mist, from her forehead.  “If I don’t see Max, you’ll tell him about the meeting?”

“We’ll be there.”  She caught a whiff of his salt air-tinged skin, and as she did, a vivid sensory image flashed across her mind.  A leather accord, patchouli, a heart of rose melding with the natural scent of his skin, warm, intriguing…then she recognized it—Spanish Leather.  But the way he wore it was incredible.  She was drawn in, but quickly retreated half a step.

His expression softened and he let her hair fall from his fingers.  “Don’t worry, Danielle.  The Newell-Greys always look after their passengers.”  He left, closing the door behind him.

She touched a finger to her lips.  Jon’s casual way with her sometimes made her uncomfortable.  Fortunately, Max was too much the German aristocrat to make a fuss over nothing.  And it was nothing, she told herself with a firm shake of her head.  She loved her husband.  But that scent…her mind whirred.  Fresh, spicy, woody…she could recreate sea freshness and blend with patchouli.

Abruptly, the ship lurched.  Cutlery clattered across a rimmed burl wood table, her books tumbled against a wall.  She braced herself through the crashing swell, one hand on the doorjamb, another shielding her stomach.  She pushed all thoughts of her work from her mind, there were so many more urgent matters at hand.  Her son, their family, their home.

When the ship leveled, she spied on the floor a navy blue cap she’d knitted for Nicky.  He’d dropped it at the train station, and she’d forgotten to give it to Sofia.  She pressed the cap to her cheek, drinking in the little boy smell that still clung to the woolen fibers.  Redolent of milk and grass and straw and chocolates, it also called to mind sweet perspiration droplets glistening on his flushed cheeks.  They often played tag in the garden, laughing and frolicking amidst thicketed ruins on their sprawling property.  Oh, my poor, precious Nicky.  Her stomach lurched at the memories.

She picked up her purse to put his cap inside, then paused to look at the photo of Nicky she carried.  His eyes crinkled with laughter, he’d posed with his favorite stuffed toy, Mr. Minkey, a red-striped monkey with black button eyes she’d sewn for him.  At four years of age, Nicky was an adorable bundle of blond-headed energy.  A streak of fear sliced through her.  She stuffed the cap into her purse and snapped it shut.

The door opened and Max strode in, his proud face ashen.

Danielle turned.  “Jon just left.  There’s a meeting—”

“I know, he is behind me,” he said, clipping the words in his formal, German-accented English.  He smacked his onyx pipe against his hand, releasing the sweet smoky scent of vanilla tobacco.

Jon appeared at the door.  “Shall we go?”

The muscles in Max’s jaw tightened.  He slipped his pipe into the pocket of his tailored wool jacket.  “I need a drink first.  You, Jon?”

“Not now.”

Max pushed past Danielle to the liquor cabinet.  As he did, he brushed against her vanity and sent her red leather traveling case crashing to the floor, bottles bursting from within, smashing against one another.

“Max, my perfumes!”  Danielle gathered the hem of her silk dress, and sank to her knees.  The intoxicating aromas of jasmine, rose, orange blossom, bergamot, berries, vanilla, cedar, and sandalwood surged in the air, jumbling and exploding in her senses like brilliant fireworks.  She sighed in exasperation.  She knew Max hadn’t meant to destroy her precious potions, but she wished he’d been more careful.  Now there was nothing she could do but pick up the pieces.  With two fingers, she fished a crystal shard and a carnelian cap from the jagged mess.  “Max, would you hand me the wastebasket?”

Instead, he turned away and reached for the vodka.  “Leave it, Danielle.  The cabin boy will see to it.”

Jon crossed the stateroom and knelt beside her.  “Are these your creations?”

“Yes, I blended the perfumes at my family’s laboratory in Grasse.  The case was Max’s wedding gift to me.”

Max poured a shot of vodka.  “Get up, Danielle.  And for God’s sake, open the porthole.  That stench will kill us.”

Anger burned in her cheeks, but she said nothing.  She angled her face from Jon and continued picking up slippery shards, though she was glad for his help.

Jon rested a callused hand on hers, sending a shiver through her.  “These are beautiful works of art, Danielle.  Max told me you were once regarded as the child prodigy of perfumery.”  He took a sharp piece from her.  “Don’t hurt yourself, I’ll send someone to clean this up while you’re gone.”

She caught his eye and mouthed a silent thank-you, then rose and opened the porthole.  A gust caught her long hair and slapped it across her face, stinging her flushed cheeks.  Staring at the ocean, a sudden thought gripped her, and she spun around.  “Jon said there might be U-Boats out there.”

Max paused with his glass in mid-air.  “Impossible.”

“Anything is possible.”  Jon brushed broken crystal into the wastebasket and straightened.

Danielle arched an eyebrow.  “Is that why we’re zigzagging?”

Jon shot a look at Max.  “Smart one, your wife.  I’ll grant you that, Danielle, but it’s just a safety measure.  U-Boats aren’t a threat to passenger liners.”

Pressure built in her head.  “Like the Lusitania?”

“That was a long time ago,” Jon said.  “A disaster like that couldn’t happen today.”

“And why not?”

“There are measures to ensure against such errors,” Jon replied.  “In times of war, every captain checks Lloyd’s Register to compare ships.  It’s obvious that this is a passenger ship, not an armed destroyer.  It’s virtually impossible to make such a mistake.”

Her mind whirred.  “But you said anything is possible.”

“Today, there are rules of war,” Jon said.  “An initial shot across the bow must be fired in warning.”

Max tossed the vodka down his throat and gave a wry grin.  “Is that why you have been holding court in the stern, Jon?”

“I confess, you’re on to me, old boy.  But seriously, we’d have time to signal to a Nazi vessel that we’re not armed.”

Nazis.  A horrible thought gripped Danielle.  Her pulse thundered in her ears.  “Max, you know what the Nazis are doing to Jews in Germany.”

“The Polish army is not yet defeated, my dear.”

Nausea swelled within her.  “How can you be so calm?  My mother is Jewish and that makes Nicky one-quarter Jewish.  You know the German law, you know what the Nazis could do to him.”

“He is just a child.”  Max looked weary.  “You were raised in your father’s faith, you are Catholic.  Nicky was also baptized.  How would the Nazis find out anything different?”

But she knew they had ways.  And for the hundredth time, the same thought haunted her.  Oh, why did I leave Nicky?  And how is poor Sofia?

Max glanced at Jon.  “We should go now.”  Max walked to the door.  Without turning he paused, his voice thick.  “I am sorry for your perfumes, Danielle.  I am sorry for everything.”

She caught her breath.  Max seldom offered an apology.  To him, it was a sign of defeat.  A feeling of dread spread through her.

Jon opened the door, held it.  She snatched her purse and followed Max through the door way.

Other passengers jostled past in the crowded corridor and Danielle could smell fear rising in the air like a heat wave.  “Rotten Krauts,” they heard someone say.  She saw Max stiffen.

When they came to the open air promenade deck, Danielle glanced out over the stormy sea, but she could see little in the murky mist.

Jon followed her gaze.  “We’ve got a heavy fog rolling in.”

The moist air held the scented promise of rain.  “It’s so dim,” she said.  “Jon, why aren’t the running lights on?”

“We’re blacked out for security reasons.”

They arrived at the first class lounge where tense passengers crowded shoulder to shoulder.  Jon excused himself to take his place at the front as the owner representative.  A hush spread when the grim-faced captain approached the podium.

“Thank you for your attention,” the captain began.  “Two days ago, Hitler’s Nazi Germany violated a European peace agreement.  Now, through the miracle of wireless, we have a reply from the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.”

He nodded to a crew member.  The loud speakers crackled to life and a nervous murmur rippled across the room.

England was on the airwaves.

The radio announcer was speaking about Poland.  “Blitzkrieg,” he called the German attack.

“Lightening war,” Max said sadly.

“Oh, no.”  Danielle clutched her pearls, squeezed her eyes against hot tears and turned her face against Max’s chest.

Max slid a finger under her chin and lifted her face.  “It’s my fault, I should have already relocated our family.”

The radio crackled again.  “And now, Prime Minister Chamberlain.”

This morning the British Ambassador in Berlin handed the German government a final note stating that, unless we heard from them by eleven o’clock that they were prepared at once to withdraw their troops from Poland, a state of war would exist between us.

Chamberlain’s voice sounded burdened, yet resolute.  “I have to tell you now that no such undertaking has been received, and that consequently, this country is at war with Germany.”

A collective gasp filled the room, and Danielle felt her stomach churn as the broadcast continued.

At its end, the captain stepped aside and Jon took his place at the podium.  “Tomorrow, when we arrive, all German and Polish passengers will be required to remain in England.”  Jon’s voice boomed over the murmuring tide.  “Newell-Grey agents will be available to assist and accommodate you.  We shall keep you informed as we receive additional information.”

Danielle pressed a hand to her mouth.  Who knew it would come to this?  A sudden clamminess overtook her, and now her nausea returned with unbridled force.  She bolted through the crowd for the outer deck.  She reached the railing, leaned over, gulped for air.  The wind whipped her yellow scarf from her neck.

Max followed, and Jon rushed after them.  They stood gazing through the shifting fog into the bleak waters below.  Max draped an arm across her shoulders and looked across at Jon.  “Her sickness is much worse with this pregnancy.”

“It’s okay, old girl, give it up,” Jon was saying, his eyes fixed on the ocean, when he suddenly stopped.  His face froze.

A sleek, narrow wake rippled the surface.

“What the—” began Max.

“Get down,” Jon bellowed.  He leapt across them, his powerful body crashing them to the deck.

In the next instant, a violent impact shot them across the deck.  An explosion ripped into the bowels of the great ship.  Screams pierced the haze, and the ship’s massive framework buckled with a deafening roar.

“Torpedoes,” Jon shouted.  He crushed his hand over Danielle’s head and cursed under his breath.  “Stay down.”

An icy burst enveloped them like a sheet and soaked them to the flesh.  Danielle gasped in terror.

Another explosion rocked the ship.  Wood and metal twisted with a grating screech as the ship listed to the starboard side, rolling like a wounded whale.  The ship’s structure groaned and folded under her own weight, frigid salt water poured into her open wounds.

Jon struggled to his feet.  “Take my hand, Danielle, we must reach the lifeboats.  This way, Max.”  Jon dragged Danielle behind him.  “Nazi bastards.  This is preposterous, just like the Lusitania.”  Suddenly he stopped, and pulled his shoulders back.  He turned to face the dazed crowd behind him.

“Attention.”  Jon’s voice rang with urgent authority.  “We must proceed quickly and calmly to the lifeboats.”

Amidst the chaos, people turned to follow.

Danielle reached for Jon’s hand again, stumbling on something in her haste.  Mon Dieu, that smell!  She put her other hand to her nose, caught her breath, wiped stinging water from her eyes and blinked.  A woman she’d met just yesterday lay bloodied at her feet.  She smothered a scream, then reached down to help the woman.

Jon caught her arm.  “Don’t, it’s no use, Danielle.  She’s gone.”

“No, she can’t be,” Danielle cried.  She’d never seen a dead person before.  Except for the blood soaking the deck beneath her, the woman appeared merely unconscious.  Then she saw that the back of the woman’s skull was gone and she started to retch.

Jon shoved his handkerchief into her hand to wipe her mouth.  “Keep going!”

Soon they came upon a lifeboat that dangled above them like a toy.

“Max, give us a hand, we haven’t much time.”

Water poured over the rail and mixed with the dead woman’s blood, sloshing across the deck and staining it a deep crimson.  All around them people slid across the tilting deck, screaming in hysteria.  Danielle lost her balance, along with one leather pump that tumbled into the pandemonium.  She kicked off her other shoe and clung to the railing.

Jon and Max began to toss life vests from the boat into the crowd.

Danielle’s heart raced at the sight of the life vests.  “Are we…are we going to sink?”

Jon’s jaw twitched.  “Just put on one of these.”

“But I can’t swim.”

“You won’t have to if you’re wearing this.”

Despite her panic, Danielle fumbled with the strings on the vest.  Jon and Max worked feverishly to free the lifeboats.  Within moments, several crew members arrived and began to herd women and children into the boats.

Max checked her knotted vest and kissed Danielle while the first boat was lowered.  “You go now.  I’ll see you soon.”

Jon motioned to her.  “Get in,” he roared.

She glanced at the lifeboat and terror gripped her chest.  She’d never liked small crafts, had nearly drowned off one when she was a child.  “Max, I can’t.”

“I’ll be right behind you, my love.”  Max pressed her close and kissed her again.

Jon grabbed her arm.  “Danielle, people are waiting.”

“No, Jon, I–I can’t get into that boat.  I’ll stay with Max.”

“Bloody hell, you will.”  Jon’s eyes flamed with urgency, startling her.  “For God’s sake, woman, get your wits about you.  What happened to your famous French courage?”

Max threw Jon a wary glance, then nodded to her.  “You must go now.”

Indignant, Danielle jerked her arm from Jon.  “I’ll show you courage.”  She stepped into the boat, barefoot, still clutching her purse.

Just then, a man with a sobbing toddler rushed toward them.  “Please, will someone take my boy?”

Danielle thought of her own little boy, shot a glare at Jon.  “I will.”  She reached for the frightened child.

“His name is Joshua.  You will take care of my boy?”

“I give you my word.”  She prayed someone would do the same for her Nicky, if need be.  She hugged the sniveling child, sweet with a milky smell, to her breast.  Joshua was the same size as Nicky and it was all she could do to keep from sobbing his name.

Jon gave the signal and the lifeboat plunged into the choppy water, jarring her to the bone.

Her teeth chattering, Danielle looked back at the great ship.  She was taking on water fast.  All around them lifeboats crashed into the sea amidst the most heart-wrenching wails she’d ever heard.

She strained to see through the fog and the frantic crowd, but couldn’t spot Max or Jon.  The Newell-Grey Explorer, the fine ship that bore Jon’s family name was giving way, slipping to her death.  For a moment, the ship heaved against the crushing weight of her watery grave, the thundering din of her imminent demise deafening.

Danielle’s eyes were glued to the horrific scene.  Suddenly, she remembered something Jon had once told her and she thought, I will not die like this.  She turned to the young crew member with them.  “When a ship goes down, the force can suck others down with it.  We’ve got to get out of here!”

He seemed dazed with shock and made no reply.

Frustrated, she turned to the elderly woman next to her.  “Here, take little Joshua, hold him tightly.”

Another woman let out a cry.  “But what will we do?”

“We’ve got to row,” Danielle shouted.  “Who’ll help me?”  She had watched her brother Jean-Claude row often enough.  Surely I can manage this, she thought desperately.

A stout Irish woman spoke up.  “I’ll be helping you, that I will, dearie.  I might be third class, but I be a first class rower.”

“Good.”  Danielle’s resolve hardened and she moved into position.  She tucked her soggy silk dress between her legs, its dye trailing green across the white deck, and grabbed an oar.  The smell of musty wet wood assaulted her senses.

“Together, now stroke, and—no, wait.”  When she lifted her arms to row, the life vest bunched up around her neck, inhibiting her movement.  She glanced at little Joshua and realized he had no life vest. She tore the vest strings open, shrugged out of it, and gave it to the elderly woman.  “Put it on him.”

“All right, now stroke,” the Irish woman called.  “Steady, and stroke, and stroke.”

Danielle pulled hard against the oars, struggling for rhythm, though splinters dug into her hands and her thin sleeves ripped from the strain.

They were some distance out when she looked up.  The immense ship, the jewel of the fleet, gave one last, mournful wail.  Within seconds, the proud, gleaming ship conceded defeat; she disappeared into the Atlantic blackness, leaving only a burgeoning swell of water and a spiral of smoke in her wake.

Where’s Max?  And Jon?  Did they make it off the ship?  Danielle felt like her heart was being ripped out of her chest. She couldn’t watch anymore, she turned her back to the ship, suddenly numb to the cold.

And there, in the distance, she saw it.  A strange vessel was breaking the surface.  As it crested, she saw on its side in block print the letter “U” and a series of numbers.  A U-Boat.  Treacherous, Jon had said.  And deadly.

Danielle narrowed her eyes.  So, this is the enemy, this is who holds Poland—and my family—captive.

A scorching rage seized her heart and sent her trembling to the boat’s edge, her hands fisted white.  Look at them, surveying their handiwork, the bastards!  Steadying herself on the bow, she cried in a hoarse voice into the gathering nightfall, “Someday, there will be a day of reckoning for this.  C’est la guerre.  And I’ll never, never surrender.”

“You tell ‘em, dearie,” yelled the Irish woman. As Danielle and the other lifeboat occupants stared at the U-Boat, a mighty force began to gather below them.  Silent as a thief, a swift undersea current drew water from beneath the bobbing craft.

Danielle sensed an eerie calm.

She turned and gasped.

A wall of water, born of the wake of the Newell-Grey Explorer, rose high behind them.

The wave crashed down, flipping the lifeboat like a leaf.  Grappling for a handhold, she screamed, then plunged into the swirling current.  As the lifeboat completed its airborne arch, she saw an oar hurtling toward her.  She tried to twist away, but the crack stunned her to her core.

Her moans for help were muffled as she sank into the frigid, murky depth.  Dazed, she flailed about, desperate to swim the short distance to the surface, but her disjointed efforts only sucked her farther into the unrelenting sea.  At last, she felt nothing but the icy claws of the Atlantic as her breath gave way and she slipped into darkness.

Continued….

Click here to download the entire book: Jan Moran’s SCENT OF TRIUMPH >>>

28 Straight Rave Reviews for KND Brand New Romance of The Week & Sponsor of Free Romance Titles: Jan Moran’s Epic Romance SCENT OF TRIUMPH

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, Scent of Triumph, so please check it out!

Scent of Triumph

by Jan Moran

4.9 stars – 28 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Paris-born Danielle Bretancourt von Hoffman is a modern young woman with a natural gift. In the language of perfumery, she is a Nose, with the rare ability to recognize thousands of essences by memory.

The year is 1939, and on the day that England declares war on Germany, Danielle and her family are caught in the midst of a raging disaster sweeping across Europe.

Her life takes a tragic turn when her husband and their only son are stranded behind enemy lines. Summoning her courage, she spies for the French resistance, but is forced to flee Europe with fragments of her family. Destitute, she mines her talents to create a magnificent perfume that captures the hearts of Hollywood stars, then gambles to win wealth and success as a couturier. Her intelligence and flair attracts the adoration of Jonathan Newell-Grey, head of England’s top shipping conglomerate, and Cameron Murphy, Hollywood’s most charismatic star.

Danielle charts her course through devastating wartime losses and revenge; lustful lovers and loveless marriages; and valiant struggles to reunite her family. Set between privileged lifestyles and gritty realities, here is one woman’s story of courage, spirit, and resilience.

Reviews

“SCENT OF TRIUMPH [is a] World War II epic.” – Los Angeles Times

“SCENT OF TRIUMPH offers action, suspense and romance as it follows its intrepid heroine through the turbulent years of World War II, from the depths of tragedy to the heights of success. Fragrance lovers will enjoy the skillful way in which scent is woven into the story…and how the heroine’s experiences are filtered through her highly refined sense of smell.” – Nancy Arnott, A&E Television Networks

“Filled with love, loss, struggle, triumph. Moran writes in such a way that you will feel as if you were transported back to the era. Her characters are well developed. Very unique, an enjoyable read.”  – Rebecca’s Reads Review

“Jan Moran is the new queen of the epic romance.” – USA Today Bestselling Author Rebecca Forster, Author of Expert Witness

“I absolutely loved this story!”  – Carrie, a reader from Goodreads

“SCENT OF TRIUMPH is a rich tapestry that weaves fragrance into an already compelling story of love and perseverance during WWII. Jan’s skillful writing, combined with her wealth of olfactory knowledge, makes this a great read for all, but especially the perfume enthusiast.”  – Karen Adams, Sniffapalooza

About The Author
Jan Moran is a writer and entrepreneur living in San Diego, California.  She is the author of the new Scent of Triumph, a historical novel, and Fabulous Fragrances I and II, which earned spots on the Rizzoli Bookstore bestseller list.

As a fragrance expert, she has been featured in numerous publications and on television and radio, including CNN, Elle, Women’s Wear Daily, Allure, and O Magazine. As an editor and writer, she has covered fragrance, beauty, and spa travel. She has spoken before Fashion Group International, The Fragrance Foundation, and The American Society of Perfumers. She is the founder and creator of Scentsa, a touch-screen software program for retailers such as Sephora, and brands. Her proprietary Scentsa® Content Program is a database of beauty descriptions and articles licensed to retailers in several languages.

Visit www.janmoran.com or connect with Jan on Twitter @janmoran.

(This is a sponsored post.)

Enjoy This Free Romance Excerpt From Christopher Meeks’ Love At Absolute Zero – Now Just 99 Cents

Last week we announced that Christopher Meeks’ Love At Absolute Zero 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 Love At Absolute Zero, you’re in for a real treat:

Love at Absolute Zero

by Christopher Meeks

4.2 stars – 32 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Love At Absolute Zero is a comic romance about Gunnar Gunderson, a 32-year-old star physicist at the University of Wisconsin who’s determined to meet his soul mate within three days using the Scientific Method. Channeling his inner salmon for speed dating, he accidentally steps on the toes of a visiting Danish schoolteacher—who turns his life upside down.

Reviews

  • “A deeply resonant read that manages to be funny without sacrificing its gravity. Highly recommended!” –Heather Figearo, Raging Bibliomania
  • “Thermodynamics are nothing; it’s that love thing that is so frustratingly hard to figure out. ‘Love at Absolute Zero’ is an excellent read that is very much worth considering, highly recommended!” –Midwest Book Review
  • “It is a given, now, that Christopher Meeks is a master craftsman as a writer…. [The novel] is a gift–and one of the many that continue to emerge from the pen and mind and brilliant trait for finding the humor in life that makes him so genuinely fine a writer.” –Grady Harp, Amazon Top-Ten Reviewer
  • “It is impossible not to like Gunnar Gunderson. As he progresses from one disaster or near miss to the next, one views him with a mixture of compassion and laughter, but he is such a good-hearted young man that it is impossible not to root for him.” –Sam Sattler, Book Chase, who placed it in Top Ten Best Fiction 2011
  • “As engaging as it is amusing, ‘Love at Absolute Zero’ is, ultimately, a heartfelt study of the tension between the head and heart, science and emotion, calculation and chance.” –Marc Schuster, Small Press Reviews
  • “The author hit a home run. It’s a very good story, very well told.” –Jim Chambers, Red Adept Reviews – Selected in Top Three Romances 2011 by Red Adept Reviews

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

The following excerpt starts five chapters in. Our hero is Gunnar Gunderson, 32, who just received tenure in physics at the University of Wisconsin. He and his two partners are in a race with MIT into research into what happens to atoms at the coldest possible temperature, known as Absolute Zero. However, after his surprise tenure, he can’t think clearly, and he realizes that he thought he’d be married when he got tenure. He and his lab partners figure they can put their heads together and find him his soul mate in three days using the Scientific Method. After all, science has never let them down. After they researched what women want in a mate, Gunnar is about to apply his new knowledge (and new braces) at a speed-dating event known as ScurryDate. He just needs to do two more things to prepare: lose the glasses by having laser surgery and then a haircut.

Chapter Six

“The net force on a body is equal to the sum of the forces impressed upon it.” –Superposition principle of forces

 

In the morning, Gunnar awoke to the loud chirping of a bird. He saw a blue jay on a branch outside his bedroom window. It looked so regal. How fun it must be to be a bird. The number of dreams Gunnar had had over the years of flying like a bird made him wonder if birds were the ideal creature. He smiled. Hey, today was ScurryDate day. He’d be as sure as that bird.

The blue jay sang and seemed to strut on the branch. It must have been a love song because he could see another bird swoop in. The other bird’s wingspan, though, was huge, and before Gunnar could realize what was happening, the other bird, an owl, snatched the blue jay in its talons, and the blue jay, flit, was gone with barely a wiggle and no more song. Gunnar launched out of bed and flung open his window, and shouted “Hey!” He knew it was no use. The blue jay would be eaten, no doubt. It was an owl-eat-blue-jay world.

In the kitchen, Gunnar munched on Wheat Chex, which he thought of as Man Chow. The bird snatching was just not a great thing to wake up to. He realized he was really nervous about his next appointment. After all, one’s eyes were everything. The doctor had told him of the risks, such as the loss of the corneal flap after surgery, an incision too deep or shallow that caused acuity problems, and of course there was infection, but Gunnar told himself the negatives seemed small considering the doctor’s record. He decided things would go well. After all, he was a candidate.

Less than ninety minutes later as Gunnar sat in Dr. Wise’s waiting room, a tall, grim-eyed nurse came out with a pill for him, an oral medication to relax him. She also gave him a form to sign that explained that because he was over thirty years old, the surgery couldn’t give him both good distance vision and good near vision. He would need to use reading glasses. He had to write the sentence, “I will need reading glasses,” and sign.

I hope the drug’s effective,” said Gunnar, “because my every nerve is buzzing. The enormity of this is now getting to me.”

The nurse gave him a double dose. It did the job. The nurse also gave him surgical covers to go over his shoes and his head. This made Gunnar think he was a sausage—the ends were capped, but what about the middle? Apparently the middle was fine. The nurse led him to the surgery room and had him sit on the operating table.

Lie down,” she said, “and center your head into the indentation.” She could have said, “Open the window and jump out,” and he may have, he felt so good.

Gunnar smiled when Dr. Wise entered the room in green surgical attire, pulling a green mask over his face and mustache. He covered Gunnar’s eyebrows with a special tape. Dr. Wise then attached a speculum to Gunnar’s right eye.

Gunnar couldn’t blink. A film came to mind, A Clockwork Orange. Alex had had the same device attached to both eyes, and Alex was forced to watch violence and porn after imbibing a drug to make him nauseated. Alex then associated sex and violence with a sickening feeling. Gunnar, however, was feeling so good from the relaxant, perhaps a little porn wouldn’t be bad.

The doctor spoke as he worked. “I’m now using an excimer laser to ablate part of the corneal stroma.”

Stroma?”

Connective tissue.”

The doctor asked him to stare into the red laser light. One eye at a time, the procedure was soon over.

Look at me,” said the doctor. “How do you see?”

Everything was blurry and too bright, and his eyes were watering excessively. “Yes, fine,” said Gunnar.

The doctor laughed. “I know it’s blurry and bright, so you need to wear these for the next four hours.” He handed Gunnar a pair of thick black-framed sunglasses that Gunnar guessed were cheap knockoffs of Ray-Bans. He put them on and immediately felt better. The doctor also gave him a bag with three different types of eyedrops: a steroid, an antibiotic, and a “tube of tears.”

Use the tears as much as you want,” said the doctor.

Why use the tears if my eyes are watering?”

The artificial tears are for when they don’t water. The best thing to do is just go home and sleep. In the morning, you’ll be fine. Over the next three days, your focus will improve. The eye is an amazing organ, the most resilient part of your body.”

What do you mean in the morning? I have a date tonight.”

You might not be feeling up for it,” he said.

I have to feel up for it.”

Your date might be a little blurry—and you may have watery eyes or dry eyes. It’s best you just rest.”

No rest for the datable.”

Call me if you have any problems. My card has my pager number.”

Good to know,” said Gunnar.

I’ll check you in three months, and we may do a little post-operative enhancement if you’re not at 20/20. And you may need reading glasses.” He turned to his nurse who was just reentering the room. “Is Dr. Gunderson’s ride here yet?”

No one yet,” she said.

I drove here,” said Gunnar.

You were told you needed a ride. It was in the paperwork. You can’t drive,” said Dr. Wise. “You can’t see well.”

I knew you were just being conservative. I figured I could always call a cab if it were too bad.”

We don’t allow that,” said the nurse. “You can’t see, and we’ve had cab drivers take advantage of that. You can’t count your money, for one. You need a ride. I thought you understood.” She seemed strident. Was she the one with the philandering husband? “You need a friend or relative. I’ll call for you,” said the nurse.

But my mother’s all the way in Fond du Lac.”

You’ll have to wait now, won’t you? Give me the number.”

Gunnar did. He felt so relaxed, he fell asleep. Next thing he knew, he was being shaken awake. When he opened his eyes, he had to blink several times because everything was so blurry. His mother stood before him, but for some reason, she was so much younger, as when he was a boy. Was he hallucinating?

Gunnar, get up,” she said. He recognized the voice as from his sister, Patty, who had come instead. He cringed. His sister was going through a divorce, and he didn’t want to hear about it.

He leaned forward, trying to get up. “I thought the nurse called Mom.”

She did, but her car’s in the shop. And— What the hell did you do to your teeth? Are you seventeen?”

No, I just— You know.” Gunnar could feel his eyes watering excessively, and when they were closed, they felt so much better. He kept them closed.

Aren’t you ten years too early for a mid-life crisis?” his sister said, pulling him up.

She led him like a blind person. In the hallway, when she let go momentarily, he walked right into the elevator door and banged his head. “Hey!” he said.

What? You can’t even see the doors are closed?” she said.

I can’t see. Don’t you get it?”

Don’t be such a wimp. As Vince Lombardi said, will is character in action.”

What’s that have to do with anything?”

You thought you could drive after an eye operation? Jesus.”

Why’re you so critical?”

I’m not critical, god damn it. You just look silly.”

When they stumbled out front, Gunnar experimented by opening his eyes again. It was still painful, but there, parked in two spaces at the curb, was the Bookmobile. He could tell by its hulk. Patty was a librarian in Fond du Lac and drove the bookmobile. He guessed her husband Brad got to keep their one car.

His eyes watered anew, and he slammed them shut, saying, “You’re driving me home in this?”

What, is it too embarrassing? If you want to be embarrassed, just look in the mirror.”

How am I going to get my car back?” he now realized.

Well, Mr. Einstein, you should have listened to the nurse. I know she told you—”

Okay, okay.”

Since I drove all this way, you’re buying me lunch, buddy. An expensive one.”

That’s fine.”

A seafood place. Lobster.”

Alright.”

Really?… How about a new outfit, I could use a new outfit.”

Whatever.”

God, this is great,” said Patty. “I should visit you more often.”

You think I could get a haircut first? I’m on my mission.”

Mission for what?”

I’m speed-dating tonight.”

His sister, of course, laughed, but she said, “I’m not taking you to your usual Supercuts. This calls for a salon.”

Be nice to me.”

You’re going to be better than Brad Pitt.”

ChapterSeven

The great tragedy of Science: the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact.” English biologistThomas H. Huxley

Because Ursula had loved ScurryDate, the idea of it for Gunnar loomed like a giant Exxon sign for a car running on empty. He took a cab to the event with hope. He needed a cab because his eyes were still blurry, and they’d get watery for no reason whatsoever. Still, he didn’t think it’d get in his way because it was lessening and people may not even notice.

As he’d learned from the ScurryDate website, the evening would be “eight dates, eight minutes each.” Groups would be set up within a limited age range, in his case, people twenty-five to thirty-five, and the evening’s meeting would be limited to an equal number of men and women, between twenty and one hundred people. The website explained the meetings typically took place in a banquet room of a pub or restaurant, and before the evening started, a computer would randomly select eight dates for everyone. Each participant would be given eight table numbers in a certain order, and when you would show up at each table at a specific time, so would your new date.

Each pair would have eight minutes to converse, asking questions of each other to find out if they were compatible. You were not to ask people for contact information or for a future date. Everyone’s nametags would only give a first name and a registration number.

At the end of the evening, back home, Gunnar was to go online and stipulate which people he’d like to ask for a real date. If the other people asked for him, too, then it was a match. Only then would he be given their e-mail addresses and phone numbers to contact them.

Good luck to you, my good friend,” said his Pakistani cab driver when Gunnar was let off at the Great Dane Pub and Brewing Company, the site of that night’s event. Gunnar had explained the whole speed-dating phenomenon to his driver, and the driver was a great listener, asking him such questions as what would be his ideal woman and where did he want to get married. He hadn’t thought about “where” ever. He’d grown up a Unitarian, but hadn’t been in years—which is okay with Unitarians. He’d like to get married by the corn field by his house, if his neighbor who owned it would let him. There was something majestic about a corn field.

He gave his driver a twenty percent tip, and then Gunnar scooted out from the back seat and stood in front of the three-story brick building where the dating would take place. He felt anxious in his brown loafers, khaki pants, and a blue dress shirt so new, the creases from the packaging were still in it. The sandblasted brick, newly painted trim, and the elegant bay windows of the old building were a contrast to the other nearby drab buildings in this oldest part of town. Perhaps this building’s resurgence was a beacon of good luck. Tonight was the night.

Because he was early, maybe he’d start with a drink. He knocked on the nearest car’s hood for luck. Everything was on his side. Even the ibuprofen he’d taken for the pain in his jaw had helped.

Near the restaurant’s entrance, a sign said the building had originally been the Fess Hotel, built in 1858. He felt the ghosts of the long-ago hotel welcome him. Inside, he went up to the young hostess in a sleeveless summery dress. Her exposed tan shoulders held the white straps of her bra. When she looked up, she smiled and said, “One for dinner?”

Oh, no, I’m here for—” He rechecked his watch. “I’m very early, and perhaps I should—”

You’re waiting for someone? Would you like a table or would you prefer to wait right here—or in the bar, if you have identification.” She smiled brightly, trying to be helpful.

An I.D. to prove my age?” said Gunnar, thrown off. “I’m thirty-five. I’m a professor.”

If you say so.”

Or do you mean a nametag? Aren’t I supposed to get a nametag?”

The woman looked puzzled, so Gunnar added, “For the event—is that what you meant?”

There’s an event? Another ScurryDate? No one tells me these things.” Now the hostess looked annoyed as if she was always the last to know. “One sec, let me find out more from the manager.” She took off before he could say anything. Was he at the wrong place? The wrong time? He grabbed the printout he made of the event from his back pocket. No, it all checked out. A minute later, the hostess walked back with a svelte woman who wore white flared pants and a silky blouse the color of a calla lily. Very sexy. And he gasped when he saw her face and long dark blond hair that spilled just beyond her shoulders. “Ursula!”

Ursula paused, looking as if she should know him. But from where?

It’s me, Gunnar. We met the other night in Fond du Lac. What’re you doing down here?”

Gunderson?” said Ursula, now smiling. “Didn’t you have different hair?”

He touched his newly blond hair. “My sister insisted I go to a salon. And they made it this way. A long story.”

It’s … well, it makes you look young—but still handsome. And your teeth—I didn’t notice the braces the other night.

Oh, yes, those are new, too.”

Wow.”

You really liked ScurryDate you said, so … you know.”

You’re here for ScurryDate?” She seemed surprised.

Yes.” In that instant, he realized she might be there for ScurryDate, too. “Maybe the computer will put us both together. Then again if—”

I’m the manager here.” The hostess, standing next to her, smiled and returned to her podium.

You never told me you were in this business,” said Gunnar.

You never asked,” replied Ursula.

Don’t you live in Fond du Lac?”

Not for years,” she said.

Oh.”

We’ve hosted ScurryDate for months now—which is how I tried it. I think you’ll have a good time.”

Ah,” he said. His heart fell. She was still dating that guy? The world absolutely sucked at times–to paraphrase how his students would explain it. And now his vision went blurry.

Your mom told me about your research.”

His eyes started watering. “My mother?” He didn’t remember telling his mother he was looking for a wife in three days.

Your research into absolute zero.” Ursula laughed and touched him on the shoulder. “That sounds odd, doesn’t it, like it’s absolutely nothing you research. But it’s not, of course.”

His eyes were watering so much, but he loved that she’d touched him so casually as if they’d been long-time friends. He could feel a drop fall on his cheek. He wiped his eyes with one of his blue short sleeves.

Are you okay?” said Ursula. “Did I say something wrong? I didn’t mean to insult what you do.”

I had eye surgery this morning. That LASIK thing. This is one of those side effects I’m learning about.” He laughed. “I just wanted to make a good impression tonight—find someone as great as you did.”

You never know,” she said.

I’m only sorry you’re not in the event tonight. I really like you.” There, he said it. Maybe it was from the rush of seeing her, but it was also the truth.

I like you, too.”

She seemed to gaze at him wistfully—or was she admiring him? He couldn’t see that well. “Once I stop leaking, I’ll be okay,” he said. “Glad I didn’t have urinary tract surgery today.”

Or was that the wrong thing to say?

You’re funny.” She was laughing. He smiled.

Thanks,” he said.

Funny how things work out,” she said. “I’m sure you’ll find someone as great for you as Jim is for me.”

Why oh why did she have to be taken already? “Nice meeting you again, Ursula.”

You, too, Gunnar.”

He watched her walk off, appreciating her form once more and thinking he should have been more alert in high school. Was it that he’d missed the opportunity then, or had it not really been there? Ever.

So do you want to wait here or at the bar?” the young hostess asked him. “The ScurryDate E.O. should be here any minute.”

E.O.?”

Event organizer. She’ll bring you downstairs, get you your tag and all.”

Thanks,” said Gunnar. He didn’t feel like a drink anymore. He sat and waited.

* * *

Later, he walked down the stairs with the E.O., a slightly chubby woman named Judy who wore tiny high heels and a midriff-baring blouse that gave a clear view of her love handles pouring over either side of her jeans.

What the online description doesn’t explain,” said Judy, “is that our computers take into account the thirty-two dimensions of our personalities—which is four more than E-Harmony promises.”

Dimensions?”

Such as curiosity, spiritualism, romance, sexual passion.”

I don’t remember anyone testing my sexual passion,” said Gunnar.

It’s all in the questions. Very scientific.”

That’s my approach, too.”

It’s a much better approach than meeting potential mates in the wild.”

They stepped down into what appeared to be a bat cave: stone floors and walls with subdued lighting. While upstairs had high ceilings and tall windows, downstairs had a low wood-planked ceiling and short windows. The bar featured a blackboard with the chalked-in offerings of the brewed ales and lagers, including Peck’s Pilsner, Crop Circle Wheat, and Old Glory American Pale Ale. The event itself would be in an adjoining room. A set of windows looked out onto an ivy-covered patio filled with people sitting in wrought iron furniture.

Has the event started already? I didn’t see where—”

Those are mere diners,” said Judy as if to dine outside was like being a serf in feudal Europe. “Our event will be in a room over this way.” She pointed and they walked toward it, the room for royalty. “It’ll be starting in about ten minutes,” she said, “but I’m going to give everyone until 6:20 to mingle.”

He looked at his watch. It was 5:50. There were three men and two women in the room when they walked in. “Am I supposed to mingle now?” he whispered to Judy.

Sure. Absolutely. Enjoy yourself. I have a few setup things to do.”

He nodded to the women first, both in dresses, then the guys next, in shorts and sandals with socks, and he stood there, his head still bobbing as he tried to relax and appear genetically attractive.

Judy came back by and handed him his nametag and a printed card of his order of tables. He’d start with table eight. All the tables were small and white-cloth covered, with burning candles and placards giving the table’s number. Gunnar found the table, right near number seven. Number eight. That’s where he’d sit. Right there.

People started drifting in, getting their nametags from Judy, who had made a space for herself at the bar whose counter was painted black. The women, he soon noted, mostly came in with low-cut blouses. Cleavage. Cleavage was good. Most of the new men wore pressed pants and polo shirts. Some of the men swayed. Gunnar tried walking that way to the appetizer table. Most of the men had tan arms with bulging muscles. Apparently these guys didn’t read much. They wasted their time in a gym—or maybe they were roofers. Did women really want roofers?

At the appetizer table he grabbed a small paper plate and a plastic fork and looked over the offerings, which would give him something to do for another few minutes. The steam table offered finger foods: cocktail wieners, chicken strips, fried zucchini, egg rolls. To another side was cold food: mini-cheese logs, celery sticks, carrots, and long, curled shrimp. Shrimp didn’t agree with him, so he went for the vegetables and tortilla strips, giving himself a huge dollop of dip. The dip was amazing: a spicy red thick substance with threads of spinach and chunks of whitefish. He could taste horseradish.

But what did it do to his breath? He was a dragon mouth now. At such a social event, why would why would they make such a sauce? His instant thought was mint gum, but he didn’t have any. Then he spotted the parsley garnish on the edge of the fruit plate. Parsley with its chlorophyll was a natural breath cleanser.

He grabbed a sprig and chewed. He liked it. He took two bigger sprigs and chewed them up and swished.

Another guy, clearly closer to twenty-five than thirty-five, approached the steam table.

Shrimp. Wow,” said the man.

I wish I could eat shrimp,” said Gunnar. “I’m allergic.”

Gunnar could see the man’s name tag: Steve 908. The young man read Gunnar’s.

So you were over in Iraq or something?” Steve pronounced the country’s name “eye-rack,” as did most Midwesterners.

No,” said Gunnar. “Why?”

You’re a gunner, ain’t ya?”

This isn’t my job—or the spelling for the job. It’s my name.”

Steve 908 smiled and nodded. “Gunnar.”

Heck of a mess, though, that Iraq,” said Gunnar.

Nice tits on that girl, eh?” said Steve.

Gunnar looked up to see at the bar a very blond young woman in white jeans and a low-cut purple tank top as tight as the skin on a plum.

I happen to know she’s a physics professor specializing in high-density quark matter under stress,” Gunnar said.

Steve 908 looked baffled.

Gunnar scooped into the dip and ate generously.

Oh, I get it. You’re joking!” Steve laughed, then added, “I’d like to get a hold of her high-density quark matter.”

Gunnar nodded. “Maybe irradiate her with a stream of high-energy neutrons.” He smiled wide. He could be a guy’s guy.

What happened to your teeth, man?” said Steve, grimacing.

This?” he said, pointing. “Braces.”

It looks like your mouth’s rotting.”

What?” Gunnar opened his mouth again for Steve, who scrunched his face, grossed out. Running his tongue over his teeth, Gunnar felt nothing. “Thanks. I’ll check it out.” He quickly found a restroom, and as he headed for it, an alluring woman in a yellow patterned dress exited the women’s bathroom, drink in hand. She smiled at Gunnar and raised her glass. He nodded and smiled. She grimaced.

He hurried into the men’s room and gazed into the mirror. His braces were covered in green dark dots of parsley and threads of spinach from the dip as if he hadn’t brushed in months.

He rinsed his mouth over and over, swishing as hard as he could. Most of it came out, and he was able to pull other bits out with his fingers. Soon his silver braces appeared again. The sink was now full of green bits, and he took handfuls of water to wash them down.

He returned to the main room. Steve now stood at the bar, and the bartender in a Hawaiian shirt said to Steve, “What’ll you have?” The bartender was tall and square-jawed like a movie star. He probably had no problems getting dates. Perhaps to the bartender, every guy there was a loser.

A large Foster’s malt liquor,” said Steve.

We don’t have that here,” said the bartender. “We’re a microbrewery. Here’s our list.” He pointed to the blackboard.

I’ll have the Landmark Lite,” said Steve.

Gunnar returned to the steam table. After all, his mission was to chat with women, but the fact was he’d never been good at party situations. Was he supposed to go up to someone who looked interesting and say something? Probably.

The blond woman in purple came over to the steam table. Gunnar could see he’d selected the right spot. She glanced cursorily at the food, then slowly looked up at Gunnar and smiled. Her tag, above her right breast but not covering it, said “Chantel 880.” He smiled back.

Her smile disappeared and she returned quickly to the food. He knew he didn’t still have green in his teeth. “How about that mess we have in Iraq?” he said using a small cracker to slide into the dip.

I’m sorry, what did you say?” She moved closer to hear.

He spoke directly into one ear. “Iraq,” he said.

She looked immediately down into her breasts and then glared up at him. “My so-called ‘rack’ is just fine.” She grabbed some carrots and celery sticks and marched directly for the bar.

He hoped the night would go better than this.

At 6:15, the room started to get crowded. A sea of heads bobbed above bright and beautiful clothing. One head rose above everyone else’s, a great-looking woman with long, dark hair. She could be Rodin’s exquisite sculpture of a walking man, only narrower and female. Was she a basketball player?

Judy the E.O. rattled a dinner bell. “Ten minutes until we start. If you haven’t picked up your nametag yet, come over here please. I’m Judy, the organizer for this evening, and I’ll help you. Everyone else, keep mingling. Remember if someone appeals to you, use your notepad and pencil to write down their registration number. You can select people who aren’t assigned to you. Also enjoy our food and the bar.”

Gunnar could see a young woman in a red dress had a man on either side of her talking, and she was laughing. One man stared down at her breasts while the other was checking out her rear.

At last, the dinner bell rang again. When the chatter diminished, Judy said, “All right. Everyone go to your assigned seat. You have thirty seconds before the eight minutes begins. After four dates, we’ll take a fifteen-minute break when you can get more food and drinks.”

Everyone scurried.

Gunnar was the first at table eight. Soon the very tall woman—taller than Gunnar—sat down, and even then he was looking up at her. Her nametag said “Marshelle 702.” Gunnar reached across the table to shake her hand. “Gunnar,” he said.

Mar-Shell” she said. “Like Michelle, but with a mar.”

Nice to meet you, Marshelle.”

Do you like tall women?” she said.

Oh, do we start already?”

I was just wondering if you liked tall women.”

Sure, tall women, short women, skinny women, fat women—well, not actually fat women.”

So you have a thing against fat women?” said Marshelle, starting to take notes.

Oh, no,” he said, seeing she had missed the humor. “I have nothing against them. I meant I’m unlikely, given probabilities and all, that a fat woman and I would become, you know, ensconced and intertwined.”

Ensconced and intertwined?”

The numbers aren’t there.”

What numbers?”

I’m talking statistics.”

Like bust-size and waist-size? We’re all parts to you?”

What?”

Do you know it’s unnatural for women to be waifs? Do you know how much bulimia is a problem with young women today? I mean, my God.” Marshelle looked upset. “Look at the magazines in the grocery store checkout line to see what women are supposed to be in this society. Short skinny waifs with big boobs.”

But I like tall women,” he said, trying to correct.

And you like statistics. What are mine, right? I’m a 36A bra size, thirty-two-inch waist—thin enough for you? And six-feet, six inches tall. Too much for you?”

You’re attractive,” he said.

Should I get some pliers so I can extract more compliments?”

No, you’re beautiful!”

She glanced at her notes. “Question one: Let’s say we’re on a desert isle and it’s only us but we don’t know each other. I have something you want. We’ll call it breadfruit. Then we go on a date and—“

On a desert island?”

She looked at him hard. “Yes,” she said.

And am I hungry?”

You tell me.”

I’m sorry,” he said. “I’m confused. Breadfruit? Are we in Tahiti?”

If her brown eyes were photon torpedo tubes, he’d be stardust. She barked, “What are you, fifteen? You’re supposed to be at least twenty-five.”

I’m thirty-five.”

Right, and I’ve got a dick.”

What did I say wrong?”

I’m afraid you won’t make my list,” she said, and she stood and moved off. He felt deflated. Gunnar glanced at his watch. He had five more minutes to himself. Although his stomach now churned, he zipped back to the buffet table and ate bread, safe white bread.

At the sound of the next bell came Judy’s voice, electrodes to his nerves. “Make sure again to write down people’s registration number. You’ll need the right numbers for going online, remember. You have forty seconds to get to the next table.”

Gunnar sped toward his next assignment. On the way, there was another familiar face—Svetlana from his physics class. Why would she be there? She didn’t see him, which was good because he didn’t want to be seen by her—embarrassing. She was too busy introducing herself to Steve 908.

At his table, Chantel 880 was already sitting. She grimaced as he approached. “I don’t think we’re going to have much to talk about,” she said.

He sat down, saying, “I think you misunderstood me. I was talking about the war in Iraq—not about ‘a rack,’ but ‘eye-rack.’”

Chantel laughed in surprise. “That’s different. I’m sorry,” she said. “Let’s start over. I’m Chantel.”

Gunnar,” he said. They shook.

That’s an unusual name,” she said. “Or is it a nickname from Iraq?”

No, I didn’t go there, I— It’s just my name. Swedish. Gunnar Gunderson.”

You’re not supposed to give last names.”

I’m sorry. Gunnar 1002.”

I really wonder if they’ve had over a thousand Gunnars here. This place must be really popular,” she said.

He smiled. She now stared at his mouth. He should have splurged on the ceramic braces—less noticeable. “Should I begin?” he asked.

I thought we’re already talking.”

Gunnar pulled out a list of typed questions from his pocket. “In the morning, do you like to make the bed right away?”

Really? We had sex already and you want to know if I’ll make the bed?”

You misunderstand.”

Your questions are like this?”

I’m sorry. How about….” He thought quickly. “If I were a one-armed librarian—”

You’re kind of morbid, aren’t you? You first talk about war, now dismemberment. Did your father beat you or something? People who were beaten as kids go on to beat their own family.”

No, I had a great father. He died when I was a teenager.”

A lot of death around you, I see. So, my turn for a question,” she said, looking him straight in the eyes. “I can be direct, too. Why did you leave your last girlfriend?”

His heart sank as he thought about Allison, who’d at least understood him. “She left me, actually.”

That’s because men are passive aggressive,” said Chantel. “Did you know that seventy percent of all divorce petitions are by women? Guys drive their women away.”

Is that true?”

Yeah, men are cheating jerks, for one. Did you cheat on her?”

No, no. I— She— I mean, I—”

Get your story straight.”

Allison was a veterinary student. I was going for a Ph.D. in physics. We had no money and little time. I had to work in the lab often and late.”

Uh, huh. I heard that workin’ late thing before.”

No. She fell for someone else at vet school. She moved with him to Seattle. I’m a professor now. A physics professor.”

She paused, nodding her head. “Like I’m supposed to be impressed. I heard how professors do it with their students. You like to teach them physics, do you?”

Not the way you’re implying.”

I’d put out for A’s, I can tell you that, and that was just high school.”

When the bell rang, neither he nor Chantel wrote the other’s registration numbers down. What criteria, what analysis of dimensions, did the ScurryDate computers use to find his dates so far?

At his third table, a petite woman dressed demurely in what looked to be a long Amish dress was already sitting. She immediately stood when Gunnar approached. They shook hands formally.

Becky 142,” she said.

Gunnar 1002.”

She held onto his hand and pulled it to her nose, sniffing. “Interesting. You don’t smell musky but rather like candy.”

Licorice,” he said.

So you’re edible?” She looked excited, which made him yank back his hand.

I don’t know how to answer that,” he said.

She pulled out a piece of paper with what he assumed were questions. “May I begin?” she asked. “Or would you like to? Let’s have three questions each.”

Ladies first,” he said.

She smiled softly and began. “First, let’s say we’re on a remote island in the Pacific and—”

Another island?”

Is that your first question?”

I’m sorry,” said Gunnar. “I don’t know about remote islands. This is my first time.”

A newbie. Delightful. So you don’t like the question?”

No, go ahead. It was rude of me.”

Becky gazed at him even more softly. He must have said something right.

She said, “So we’re on this island—in separate huts, of course—and if you could put any kind of sheet on your bed, would it be flannel, satin—or nothing at all?”

He was confused. “So we’re on a desert isle but we have huts with really nice sheets?” She nodded. “I’ve never felt satin sheets before. I don’t even know where to buy them.”

Victoria’s Secret. You’d love satin. Okay, now let’s say we go swimming on this island, and you can have me in any swimsuit you want. In women’s swimwear, do you prefer a) a tankini, b) a bikini, or c) one-piece suits like the miracle bra tortoise one-piece with a keyhole back?”

Tankini?”

That’s your second question. It’s a tank top with a bikini bottom.”

You work at Victoria’s Secret?”

Yes, sales. That’s your third question, though.”

I’m sorry.”

So would you like me in a swimsuit?”

Was Becky offering? Everything was going too fast. “I— I don’t swim often. The lakes are usually too cold for me.”

Tell you the truth,” she said, “I’ve got long nipples, and they always stick out when I hit those cold lakes.”

He blinked. He was trying to reconcile the way she looked with what she was saying.

Last question before your turn,” she said. “On a first date, what animal are you like the most? Turtle, kitten, tiger, or octopus?”

A kitten is on the desert isle?”

She laughed. “I think you’re a turtle.”

I’m a physicist!”

I’m a tigress,” she said, making her hands into claws, barring her teeth and moving her tongue up and down.

He must have grimaced because she said, “Never mind. You’re not right for me. Forget it.” She threw her questions down and looked at her watch. They sat in silence until the bell rang.

Now Gunnar was feeling that he was definitely in the wrong place. In fact, he was feeling a little nauseated, and his stomach seemed to be swirling. He moved to the next table but considered just leaving. He reminded himself that he had just a little more than a day remaining.

Professor?” said Svetlana, sitting. “Wonderful.” Her tag said, “Natasha 309.” She had a martini glass in her hand with a pink beverage—a cosmopolitan, he knew. His mother loved them.

That’s not your name,” he said.

Are you sure?” she said, laughing.

What are you doing here?” he said.

I’m twenty-six and need a green card. Time to marry, no?”

Surely you have a student visa.”

Then let’s call it love.”

I don’t understand. Did you follow me here?”

She laughed grandly. “I think it’s a joke, frankly, this ScurryDating, but my girlfriend wanted to come, so I’m Natas

Now Just 99 Cents! Christopher Meeks’ Award-Winning Comedic Romp Love At Absolute Zero is Now on Sale During It’s Reign As KND Brand New Romance of The Week & Sponsor of Romance Freebies!

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, Love at Absolute Zero, so please check it out!

Love at Absolute Zero

by Christopher Meeks

4.1 stars – 31 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Love At Absolute Zero is a comic romance about Gunnar Gunderson, a 32-year-old star physicist at the University of Wisconsin who’s determined to meet his soul mate within three days using the Scientific Method. Channeling his inner salmon for speed dating, he accidentally steps on the toes of a visiting Danish schoolteacher—who turns his life upside down.

Reviews

  • “A deeply resonant read that manages to be funny without sacrificing its gravity. Highly recommended!” –Heather Figearo, Raging Bibliomania
  • “Thermodynamics are nothing; it’s that love thing that is so frustratingly hard to figure out. ‘Love at Absolute Zero’ is an excellent read that is very much worth considering, highly recommended!” –Midwest Book Review
  • “It is a given, now, that Christopher Meeks is a master craftsman as a writer…. [The novel] is a gift–and one of the many that continue to emerge from the pen and mind and brilliant trait for finding the humor in life that makes him so genuinely fine a writer.” –Grady Harp, Amazon Top-Ten Reviewer
  • “It is impossible not to like Gunnar Gunderson. As he progresses from one disaster or near miss to the next, one views him with a mixture of compassion and laughter, but he is such a good-hearted young man that it is impossible not to root for him.” –Sam Sattler, Book Chase, who placed it in Top Ten Best Fiction 2011
  • “As engaging as it is amusing, ‘Love at Absolute Zero’ is, ultimately, a heartfelt study of the tension between the head and heart, science and emotion, calculation and chance.” –Marc Schuster, Small Press Reviews
  • “The author hit a home run. It’s a very good story, very well told.” –Jim Chambers, Red Adept Reviews – Selected in Top Three Romances 2011 by Red Adept Reviews
From The Author

Be truthful and follow your vision is what I learned in doing this. I went through five drafts over five years, and it still wasn’t right–close, but not it; I could feel that. I let the book sit a year and tried once again, working with a great editor who sensed my vision.

It was published in September 2011, and at the end of the year, it earned Top Ten Best Fiction 2011 from Book Chase. It won a 2011 Noble (not Nobel) Award at MyShelf.com; it was selected Top Three Best Romance 2011 at Red Adept Reviews, and it was a Book of the Year Finalist at ForeWord Reviews. It’s not your usual romance, but it’s a lively love story where physics swirls into it.

My writing fits into its own niche. I’m thankful for those who discover my work and enjoy it.
Christopher Meeks

About The Author

Christopher Meeks was born in Minnesota, earned degrees from the University of Denver and USC, and has lived in Los Angeles since 1977. He’s taught English at Santa Monica College, and creative writing at CalArts, UCLA Extension, Art Center College of Design, and USC. His fiction has appeared often in Rosebud magazine as well as other literary journals, and his books have won several awards. His short works have been collected into two volumes, “The Middle-Aged Man and the Sea” and “Months and Seasons,” the latter which appeared on the long list for the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award. He’s had three plays produced, and “Who Lives?: A Drama” is published. His focus is now on longer fiction. His first novel is “The Brightest Moon of the Century,” and his second, “Love At Absolute Zero.”

(This is a sponsored post.)

Rachael Wade’s Love and Relativity is Featured in Today’s Romance of The Week FREE Excerpt – 12/12 Rave Reviews

Last week we announced that Rachael Wade’s Love and Relativity 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 Love and Relativity, you’re in for a real treat:

Love and Relativity

by Rachael Wade

4.9 stars – 12 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

From the author of the Amazon Bestselling Contemporary Romance, Preservation.This is a stand-alone title but coordinates with The Preservation Series:

Preservation, Book One
Reservation, Book Two (Coming 2013)
Book Three (TBA)

Love, life, and happily ever after? It’s all relative.Marine biology student Emma Pierce lives in paradise—geographically speaking, anyway. Stranded on Sanibel Island, Florida, she works at a nursing home by day and spends her nights dodging the island’s infamous bad boy, Jackson Taylor, at her favorite karaoke bar. Trying to heal from the loss of her sister and a failed relationship she rerouted her life for, she’s ready to graduate and finally leave Florida behind.When a run-in with Jackson and his rowdy crew goes sour at the bar one night, sparks fly and irreversible damage is done. It’s no secret that Jackson loves to get underneath her skin, but this time he’s gone too far. Now all he wants is to earn her forgiveness before she’s gone for good, but their ideas of closure—and the future—are enough to keep them worlds apart.

 

One Reviewer Notes

 

“…I loved the way this was written. Great chemistry between Jackson and Emma, I loved Carter and Whitney, I hated Jeff and stupid Chris. They all felt real to me. Amazing character development. There’s some humor thrown in there, too. And the obligatory graphic sex scenes that I just have to mention because one – they were hot, and two – people like to know about this before they read things.” – Amazon Reviewer, 5 Stars

 

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

The muggy evening heat engulfed me when I stepped outside of the classroom, causing my glasses to fog up the instant I hit the campus pavement. Pulling them from my face, I tossed them into my book bag. I didn’t need them for anything other than reading, but every now and then, I toted them around in public. They made me feel like a different person, an alternate me—the one who would’ve been clear across the country right now, finishing up college in Washington, with my ex high school sweetheart by my side. Only that would require an alternate him as well, because the real him decided he didn’t want to leave Florida after all, and that sleeping with some freshman he met at a beach party was a wake-up call that he didn’t love me as much as he thought he did.

It was a miracle I didn’t hinder his ability to have babies the night he told me the news.

That was a year ago, and now I was back at Edison State College for round two, beginning my sophomore year. Chris, the ex-boyfriend, and I had taken some time off after high school and made a pact to spend our freshman year here together in Florida, at Edison, to knock out some general education classes before transferring to the Northwest to finish our degrees. I was preparing for a Bachelor of Science in Biology with a Marine Biology concentration, and he had his sights set on psychology.

The original plan was cool with me. The Southwest Florida lifestyle had suited me well since I was born. I loved the sunshine, the tropical humidity, the weekends at the beach and afternoons by the pool, and the year-round flip-flop and tank top wardrobe requirements. It also gave me time to save some money. When Chris ditched me for the freshman and my sister passed away shortly after, all of that changed.

Now I craved cloudy days, hated the unbearable heat, and found myself interested in wearing more than shorts and a bathing suit all the time. Not a day went by when I didn’t imagine what it would be like out West with Chris, or where Jen would be right now if she were still here, which lives she’d touch and the amount of light she’d shine. I might’ve given up the dreams to leave this place a year ago, but my desire for them wasn’t dead, just dormant.

And Jen’s absence never let me forget it.

Hopping in my car, I pulled out of the campus parking lot and made my way toward Sanibel Island, where I lived and worked. Driving inland to Fort Myers to go to school a few days a week was no biggie. In fact, it was a relief. I liked getting off the island, and it gave me a chance to think. I seemed to emerge from my car after every ride with a little more clarity, which was something I ached for lately. You think when someone you love passes away, everything becomes clearer, that your priorities and perspectives align in a way they’ve never aligned before because of the sobriety of it all.

But it doesn’t.

Those revelations just become skewed and distorted until you’re forced to rewrite them entirely. You can’t walk straight on a new path when you have too much luggage on your back. You just keep swerving, trying to find a way to accommodate the weight, but it’s all dead and you know it’s going to take you down. The only answer is to re-route.

I pulled up to Pete’s Tavern at 9:30 p.m. on the dot, relieved to see Whitney already waiting for me when I walked in the door. There she sat, propped in our favorite spot at the bar, with her petite frame swallowed up by the wide high-back bar stool, and her dark, onyx hair piled high up on her head in her signature messy bun. The seafood joint felt more like New England than Southwest Florida, but it was cozy and offered the best drinks and coconut shrimp in town, not to mention the best karaoke selection.

Jimmy Buffet was singing about it being 5 o’clock somewhere, and the Friday night regulars were just getting started. There were only two kinds of music that made it onto the radio here: Jimmy Buffet’s greatest hits, and country. We might have been in the tropical Sunshine State, but we were also in the South. And that meant a lot of country. And whiskey. And pick-up trucks, muddin’, and crazy-ass Southern boys who loved to raise hell. While most of the region was a melting pot like the rest of the state, that didn’t stop Fort Myers from carrying its own particular brand of backwoods Southern flair.

Whitney swung around to meet me with a smile when she heard Pete whistle at me from behind the bar. His voice boomed across the restaurant, prompting head turns and a whole lot of hooting and hollering. “Well I’ll be damned, kids. Our favorite lush is in the house. Come on in, darlin’, I know you missed me, now. It’s been over a week!”

“Hey, Pete.” I grinned up at him while I took my seat, tossing my book bag near my feet. “Yeah, just been busy with the new semester.”

“Soooo….how was class, chick?” Whitney asked.

“Okay,” I said, pulling the clip from my hair to let my wavy, chestnut-brown hair down. Pete was already busying himself behind the bar, working on my usual. “How was work?”

Eh, same old, same old. Snotty bitches turning their noses up at me because they have money and they know I don’t.” Whitney worked as a maid at one of the most uppity resorts on Sanibel Island. Most of the time, the guests were seniors: mostly sweet, occasionally grumpy, or something in between. But the recently renovated, urban chic atmosphere attracted all sorts of locals and tourists now, including younger people with daddy’s money and yachts waiting at the dock. Whitney worked hard for her money, working another waitressing job on the side to make ends meet, and I was damn proud of her for doing all that, plus taking classes. Friday night was the one night a week we both shared off, and Pete’s was our watering hole of choice.

If our Friday nights were ever taken away from us, I was sure I’d lose my sanity.

“Did you fluff their pillows to their liking?” I batted my eyelashes and gave her my most sarcastic eye roll.

“Girl, some days, I’d like to take those pillows and tell them to stuff ‘em where the sun don’t—”

“Here ya go, darlin’.” Pete slid me my drink. “Shrimp’s comin’ right up.”

“Thanks.”

“So,” she gave me that devious look I knew so well, “I’ve decided to take a weekend trip to Orlando. You game?”

“Nah, not this time, Whit. I requested this weekend off for a reason—because I need a break from running around…and to deal with…ya know. The new class and work schedule is already wearing me out. I’m staying home. It’s going to be me, my Kindle, and the beach.”

“I need a break, too, chick. I rarely get a weekend off. But I can catch some sun, sand, and read a good book in Orlando, and so can you. And there will be guys. Lots and lots of guys. I’m driving. Come onnnn, Em! You shouldn’t be home alone this weekend.”

Her expression turned earnest and I raced to deflect the direction she was headed with that piece of conversation. “Somebody’s on the rebound.” I snickered, raising my eyebrows.

“I am not on the rebound, thank you very much.” Whitney had recently gone batshit crazy after breaking up with Adam, her boyfriend of two years, morphing into a serial dater. She’d go on one date with someone and be out the door before he even picked up the check. No matter what, no one would ever compare to Adam. Whitney was like me in that way. We’d both been hopeless romantics since kindergarten, believing in soul mates and the ability to be perfectly content in a committed relationship.  Still, we never felt the need to have men in our lives to make us happy. Both Adam and Chris—before they were assholes—knew this about us and were pretty supportive of our independence.

I grew up seeing a partner as an equal, someone who made you a better person and encouraged your individual growth, not a lesser or a better who dictated your every move. I had my mom to thank for that. She’d been happily married to my dad for 30 years until he randomly died one day from a heart problem. They were positively my role models in the romance department, and although my hope for a healthy, genuine relationship had been mired by a new, less-than-optimistic outlook on love, deep down, I knew not all guys sucked. Only the high school sweethearts with football player abs, massive egos, and pearly white smiles—the ones who walked straight out of Abercrombie catalogues, like Chris Williams—did.  Damn him, damn him, damn him.

I repeated this mantra at least three times a day.

“Whit, you’ve been on the rebound for six months,” I said. “You’ve left a trail of broken hearts from here to Mexico, and it’s not getting any better.”

“Excuse me, miss I-don’t-date-at-all-and-I’m-22-years-old.” She gave me her own signature eye roll and popped a cherry in her mouth. “I’m just trying to keep my options open. It’s not my fault they follow me around with puppy dog eyes and then cry a river when I don’t agree to a second date.”

Pete returned with my shrimp basket and I dug in, savoring the coconut flavor and exotic spices as they melted on my tongue. “Mmmmm.” I sighed contently and glanced over my shoulder when I heard the front door open and the familiar laughter roll into the restaurant. “Hey, I date. Just…not very often. Well, you could always opt for more temporary solutions, since you don’t seem to be interested in anything serious.” Nudging her in the ribs, I waited for her to pivot around and follow my gaze.

She eyed the group of guys who’d walked in and made a gagging sound. “Please, Em. Jackson Taylor and his dimwit assclowns? I don’t think so.”

“What?” I feigned innocence. “They’re hot and they’re with different chicks every week. I’m sure they’d be happy to oblige to your serial dating ways.”

“Ugh. Emma, sometimes I wonder if you even know me at all. Would you look at them? Strutting in here like they own the place. Ppffftt.”

“Brace yourselves, ladies,” Pete’s voice made us snap our heads back around. “Looks like trouble’s making its weekly rounds.”

Hearing the laughter grow louder, I glanced over my shoulder again and sighed. Yup. Once again, Jackson Taylor and his army of mischief-makers were on their way over to Whitney and me to commence their Friday-night ritual: harassing us until we agreed to dance and sing karaoke with them.

There was a generally amicable understanding between all of us: They were allowed to entertain themselves with the idea that they actually caused us to swoon and grow weak in the knees, as long as they didn’t interfere with our girl time when we told them to screw off. Most of the time, they abided by that rule. By the sounds of them tonight, though, something told me they were all about interfering.

“And how are my favorite angels tonight?” Jackson’s voice called out in a sing-song tone  behind us, meeting me with that mega-watt grin of his and that wild, mussed-up dark brown hair that made him look like he’d just had hot elevator sex. “Emma, looking stunning as usual.” His blue eyes raked down my body, then back up. He leaned in, aligning his eye level with mine.

I crossed my legs and straightened my back, deadpanning him. “Ah, Jackson, you’re looking simply divine yourself, as usual.”

“That’s because the heavens opened up and out I fell, just for you.” He winked, swiping the olive from my glass to toss it in his mouth.

“Hey! I was going to eat that.”

“No you weren’t. You never eat the olive.”

“Tonight I was.”

“I call bullshit.” He chomped down playfully before unleashing that smug grin again, flicking his gaze down to my lips, making me squirm in my seat.

There was no denying it, as much as I hated to admit the fact: Jackson was one fine sight. His thick, wild brown hair was so dark it was almost black, and his strong jaw, plump lips, and piercing blue eyes turned heads wherever he went. He always seemed to have a visible shadow of stubble, as if he were deliberately late for a shave.

But what really sealed the deal was his infectious, carefree attitude. His middle name should have been ‘mischief,’ and miraculously, this somehow added to his appeal. He was a legend on the island. Throughout high school, I’d heard he’d made the newspaper numerous times for being involved in all sorts of fights and property damage, and for purposely chasing Ms. Stein’s cat up a tree. It took them two days to actually get the poor thing down, and when asked why he did such a juvenile, stupid thing, he just shrugged and said, ‘boredom makes you do stupid things.’

Well, yeah. Apparently.

Still, he somehow managed to keep every girl on the island wrapped around his little finger. Didn’t matter the age or walk of life—they all melted around him. The sweet 65-year-old Ms. Stein forgave him for the cat incident almost instantly, citing something about Jesus and his disciples’ penchant for forgiveness, and every time he broke some poor girl’s heart, she would take him back anyway the minute he flashed her a smile. That smile lit up a room. Always wide, always perfect, always accenting his plump lips. Jackson Taylor was the whole tempting, sexy, albeit frustrating package: playful, charming, and rebellious. All together, it made for one delicious dish.

I was reminded of this every time he did this I-know-you-want-me thing he was doing right now, leaning into me over the bar. Even as Ruben and Jeff, his wingmen, gravitated straight to Whitney to launch off into their joke-cracking ritual to vie for her attention, I was reminded of it when I met his crystal blue eyes, unable to focus on anything else around me except those mesmerizing pupils.

He leaned in closer and placed two hands on each side of me, resting them on the bar, his black Egyptian ankh tattoo peeking out from below his shirt sleeve when it rode up against his tan, firm arm. I backed up slightly, savoring a whiff of his typical sunscreen and cologne scent.

“Oh, Jackson,” Whitney chimed in, swatting Jeff and Ruben away, “go drool over the other regulars tonight, will you? Or haven’t you figured out by now that she’s immune to your charm?”

“Ha.” His eyes lowered to my lips once more before returning to meet my poker-face gaze. “She’s not immune. Just hasn’t figured out how great of a catch I am yet.” Pushing off the bar, he gave me my personal space back, and a small part of me—one I instantly resented—was bummed by the fact. Jackson had made his intentions clear—he’d wanted me—for three years now, since I started coming in to Pete’s. But I’d also made mine clear. Not only did I have no desire to be just another notch on his bedpost, I also had history with him now. Anything more than our sort-of friendship would only complicate things. “I see how it is. You girls just aren’t in the dancing mood tonight. Damn shame, because I’ve been working on my lawnmower move, and you’re totally going to miss out on witnessing that level of brilliance.”

“What a tragedy.” I shrugged with a faux pout, turning to Whitney.

“We can see it perfectly fine from across the room,” she said sweetly.

“Fine. But I have a Grammy-worthy performance for you ladies about an hour from now, and I refuse to let you miss that one.” Jackson’s favorite karaoke song to sing was “Santeria” by Sublime. I had to hand it to the man, he nailed it every time, tipsy and all.

I grinned and shook my head, swiveling around in my stool to pick at my shrimp. “Oh, we look forward to it, Celine Dion.”

“Michelle and Kayla are on their way, man,” Jeff’s deep voice butted in. He started texting at Jackson’s side, giving Ruben and Whitney free range to chat. No matter what Whitney said, I knew she had this weird thing with Ruben. He was tall, built, and Latino—very much her type—and as obnoxious as he was around his friends, his persistence was starting to grow on her. When the two of them talked, they tended to disappear underneath this bubble and the whole world just dropped away around them.

It was kind of like with me and Jackson, although any prolonged time I spent with him made me want to strangle him, and vice versa. Saying we were polar opposites was putting it mildly. His persistence was irritating, but over the past few years, a strange sort of comfort evolved from it, so every now and then, I cut the guy a break.

Hence the agreements to engage in mortifying karaoke performances with him.

“Tell them to bring their friend Kelly,” Jackson said to Jeff, his voice low while he peered down at the text message.

“Yeah, she was hot, man. Didn’t she say she’s coming tomorrow?”

“I sure as hell hope so.”

Taking a healthy bite of my shrimp, I waved to Pete for another drink and tried to tune out of their conversation. I so didn’t want to hear about their shenanigans with Michelle and Kayla tonight. They were nice girls, but completely naive to the guys’ antics, and it was painful to watch.

Jackson cleared his throat and tugged a lock of my hair, wrapping it around his finger to get my attention. “So…‘Santeria’? After I play one game?” His arctic eyes snapped to mine and he dragged his feet closer, the tips of his shoes hitting my stool’s legs. Sun-kissed skin peeked through the holes of his worn-out, relaxed t-shirt, causing my eyes to wander down to his chest. He seemed to notice my ogling, a pleased grin playing across his lips. He always noticed.

“If you insist.”

“I insist.” Turning on his heel for the pool table, he started belting out “My Heart Will Go On,” and Jeff followed him, chiming in with the rest of the bar in booing his performance. Ruben joined them a second later, finally prying himself away from Whitney.

Picking up where we left off before Troubles ‘R Us made their appearance, Whitney and I rambled on about our day. Pete eventually shooed us away from the bar after one too many drinks, and before we knew it, the karaoke mic was calling. Jackson was waiting with that expectant smile of his, toying with the mic stand.

“It’s on like Donkey Kong, Em. Shit, can you stand?”

“Very funnnny,” I giggled, grabbing the mic. “Um…I think so.

“No face planting allowed tonight, you got it? Now hold still.”

Each time Jackson belted the chorus, I laughed until my stomach hurt, saving me from actually having to sing much of the song. Every few seconds he’d reach out and steady me, taking swigs of his beer in between verses. I somehow stumbled through our performance with some of my dignity still intact, and then it was Whitney’s turn at the mic while the guys gathered around to play another round of pool. She started singing her own personal tribute to Adam, something about if he liked it, he shoulda’ put a ring on it.

“You get better every time we do that song!” I smiled wide at Jackson, leaning over the pool table. My head was starting to spin and I wanted to hug everyone. Bad sign.

“You get worse every time we do that song.” He laughed, smiling back while he waited his turn to play, cue stick in hand. “I think it’s time you got some water.”

“Heyyyy now, I’m fine. Don’t start with me.”

“Emma, water. Now.” He pointed behind us to the bar.

I pushed away from the pool table and leaned back on the wall. “No. You can’t tell me what to do.”

“Oh, here we go.”

“Don’t ‘here we go’ me!”

He shook his head, rubbing his eyes with the heel of his hand. He twisted around and called out to Pete. “Hey, Pete! Two waters, por favor!”

“I cut her off half an hour ago, Jackson. Don’t go giving her any of your beer, now,” he hollered back. “I’ll call her a cab.”

“Yeah, don’t go giving me any of your beer, Mr. Elevator Sex,” I slurred, grabbing the Corona from his hand.

He dropped his cue stick and wrestled me for it, his grin reaching epic proportions. “What did you just call me?”

“Oh, don’t flatter yourselfff.”

“I knew you fantasized about me, baby, but damn. I didn’t picture you as an elevator sex kinda girl.”

He won the war for the beer and Pete delivered two waters, shooting me that take-it-easy look. “I don’t fantasize about you, Jackson. And that proves you know squat about me, ‘cause I’d love to have elevator sex.”

He choked, spewing his beer everywhere. “Is that an offer?”

“You’d be the last person I’d want it with.” I stuck out my tongue and sloppily cracked open one of the water bottles.

Please. Who would you want it with, Scott Morgan? The dick would be too worried about scuffing up his loafers. He’s so damn uptight.”

“What do you know about Scott? I’m not even interested in him. And he does not wear loafers!”

“He seems to think you still are. Just last weekend Ruben and I were at Kayla’s party and he was going on and on about how you won’t stop calling him.”

“And you bought that?” I got close to him—too close—to look him in the eye. “I went out with the guy twice.”

He tilted the water bottle back toward my lips, encouraging me to keep drinking. “What did you see in him, anyway?”

“I don’t know.” I shrugged, glancing around for Whitney. Some unfamiliar redhead was at the mic now and she was nowhere to be found. The bar noise was growing louder, and the room started going blurry each time I moved. It was time to go. “We had a lot in common.”

“Like what, ironing socks? Discussing your favorite cleaning products? Come on, Em.”

“I’d rather be a neat freak than be a slob. You’re so messy.” I slapped my hand on his chest and he caught it, holding it in place, resting his free hand on the corner of my hip to steady me.

“Right now, you’re the messy one.”

“I’m going home.” I tried pulling my hand from his chest but he wouldn’t budge, his eyes scanning my face.

“You love my mess.”

“No, your mess gives me a headache. You know what else does? Chris. He’d never have elevator sex with me. He barely wanted to touch me. That’s when I knew…” The image of him and the ditzy freshman came to mind, and I was ready to hurl. “I gotta go, Jack.” I covered my mouth and clutched my torso. “I’m soooo tired and I think I’m gonna be sick. Have you seen Whit?” I tried pulling free again and this time, I succeeded, but I wasn’t cut free from his grasp for long. I lost my balance and gripped the pool table. Jackson’s arms shot out to catch me.

“Shit, Emma, you shouldn’t have drunk so much. You know how you get with liquor.”

“Leave me alone.” I shrugged him off, looking around again for Whitney. “Isss not your job to take care of me.”

“Just let me help you find Whit so you can catch a cab together, come on.” He gestured to his pool buddies that he was ditching and took me by the hand, leading me toward the door. “There’s a good possibility she’s outside.”

“Huh?” I bumped into his shoulder as he guided me. “Why?”

“Because Ruben’s outside. I saw him sneak out a few minutes ago.” Opening the door, we stepped out onto the porch to find Ruben and Whitney sitting on the hood of her car, making out. “What’d I tell ya?”

Whitney came up for air. “Emmm!” She slid off the hood of the car and straightened out her skirt, dashing over to meet me. “I don’t want to go home yet. I’m having soooo much fun.”

“I can see that.”

“Jackson? Take her home? Pretty please with sugar on top?” Whitney begging. Now that was a sight. “You know it’s the anniversary of her—”

Yes, Whitney, I’m well aware.” His hand tightened around mine. “But no can do. Pete called her a cab; she’ll be fine.” He let go of my hand and eyed a black SUV as it rolled into the parking lot. A cab pulled in behind it and my shoulders sagged in relief. All I had to do was make it home and into bed, and this night wouldn’t come for another year.

Kayla and Michelle emerged from the black SUV, squealing with laughter, and Whitney quickly changed her tune. “Never mind, Em, I’ll go home with you.”

“What?” Ruben perked up, at her side in an instant. “Wait, Whit, let’s go back inside and hang out—”

“See you fools later,” she said, linking arms with me and pulling me toward the cab. Kayla and Michelle’s laughter grew louder as they approached the front porch, latching on to Jackson and Ruben to drag them up the porch steps. They were gorgeous and all decked out as usual, with their perfectly bronzed skin, big boobs, and stilettos. I couldn’t help but look down at my simple jean skirt and heels and feel plain in comparison.

“Wait a minute.” Jackson darted back down the porch steps and trotted around the front of the cab to the driver window, towing Kayla with him. She just laughed and started texting in her other hand, barely sparing the driver a glance. Pulling out his wallet, Jackson paid the driver and leaned into him, his voice hushed. Whitney and I slid into the backseat. I might have been smashed, but I could make out what he was saying.

“Please don’t take Prescott Lane. Take Palermo to Fourth and then turn on Olympia.”

I leaned back and let myself sink into the smelly leather seat, taking a deep breath as I did. My gaze caught Jackson’s through the driver’s window before we pulled away, and those harrowing words passed between us.

I’ve got you.

Thank you.

 Continued….

Click here to download the entire book: Love and Relativity >>>

A New Contemporary Romance From The Author of The Amazon Bestselling Romance, Preservation: Rachael Wade’s Love and Relativity 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, Love and Relativity, so please check it out!

Love and Relativity

by Rachael Wade

4.9 stars – 8 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

From the author of the Amazon Bestselling Contemporary Romance, Preservation.This is a stand-alone title but coordinates with The Preservation Series:

Preservation, Book One
Reservation, Book Two (Coming 2013)
Book Three (TBA)

Love, life, and happily ever after? It’s all relative.Marine biology student Emma Pierce lives in paradise—geographically speaking, anyway. Stranded on Sanibel Island, Florida, she works at a nursing home by day and spends her nights dodging the island’s infamous bad boy, Jackson Taylor, at her favorite karaoke bar. Trying to heal from the loss of her sister and a failed relationship she rerouted her life for, she’s ready to graduate and finally leave Florida behind.When a run-in with Jackson and his rowdy crew goes sour at the bar one night, sparks fly and irreversible damage is done. It’s no secret that Jackson loves to get underneath her skin, but this time he’s gone too far. Now all he wants is to earn her forgiveness before she’s gone for good, but their ideas of closure—and the future—are enough to keep them worlds apart.

One Reviewer Notes

“…I loved the way this was written. Great chemistry between Jackson and Emma, I loved Carter and Whitney, I hated Jeff and stupid Chris. They all felt real to me. Amazing character development. There’s some humor thrown in there, too. And the obligatory graphic sex scenes that I just have to mention because one – they were hot, and two – people like to know about this before they read things.” – Amazon Reviewer, 5 Stars

About The Author

Rachael Wade is the Amazon #1 bestselling author of the paranormal romance series, The Resistance Trilogy, and the contemporary romance, Preservation. When she’s not writing, she’s busy learning French, watching too many movies, and learning how to protect wildlife and stop animal cruelty. Visit her at www.RachaelWade.com and www.LightsOnOutreach.com, or come chat with her on Twitter via @RachaelWade.

(This is a sponsored post.)