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Everything is perfect… until it’s not.
4.7 stars and FREE!
#3 in Christina George’s compulsive readable “Publicist” series: Climax

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And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Christina George’s Climax: The Publicist, Book Three:

Climax: The Publicist, Book Three

by Christina George

Climax: The Publicist, Book Three
4.7 stars – 54 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Brilliant, funny, sweet and heartbreaking. Climax is a great love story and a highly enjoyable read! George has really taken romance to a new level with this series. Her final book will give readers everything they crave and more! Cherry Adair, New York Times Bestselling Author

Kate Mitchell has never forgiven herself for breaking Nick Lavigne’s heart. Now he’s back and he’s moved on, and it’s affecting Kate’s life more than she’s willing to admit.

Kate Mitchell has everything. She’s the head of a crazy successful publishing house, engaged to the traffic-stopping sexy Mac Ellis and she’s about to sign one of the biggest authors of her career.

And that’s when everything falls apart. Everything is perfect…until it’s not.

In a city of 8 million people Kate manages to run into someone she never expected to see again.

Nick is handsome, impossibly kind, every girl’s dream, and Kate’s former fiancé. He’s also the brother of the rising star author she’s trying to sign. Now that Nick’s back in town and has moved on he insists he’s over Kate, but part of him still can’t get past how amazing they were, and his sister won’t let anyone forget how brutally it ended.

When Mac is dealt a life-changing blow, it forces Kate to question every single choice she’s made.

Follow Kate as she embarks on a journey of life and love, navigating through the decisions that will change it all forever.

5-star Amazon reviews

“Great book! Loved the twists and turns! So hard to decide between #teamnick and #teammac, but I definitely think Kate made the best choice.”

“I absolutely LOVE this book! The happiness, the sadness, the heartache, the hopefulness, the love, the passion, the depth of love that Kate has…”

Click here to visit Christina George’s Amazon author page

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Last Call! Don’t miss Back to You (Don’t Forget Me – The Saga Book 2) by Sia Wales before it leaves it’s reign as Romance of The Week!

Last call for KND free Romance excerpt:

Back to You (Don
5.0 stars – 1 Review
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The second chapter of the saga finally reveals the secrets and the mysteries that were barely hinted at in Don’t Forget Me, the introductory chapter. Desire mixes with a strong dose of suspense. The storyline, romantic and complex on one side, melts; and on the other thickens.
“I want to be the worst thing that, regardless, you would still find yourself choosing over and over, in spite of all the best you might have in life… This. This is enough, forever.”
Stella has put behind her the beginning of a difficult academic year, full of conflict and contradictory temptations. There is a new arrival in the Whitely house. Jeff, her father, has recently relocated to Medford––this time to stay. What better opportunity to organize a party? But nothing is as it seems; beginning with Tyler Bradford, his childhood friend, whose presence turns out to be much more than a banal coincidence. With Siberian origins, he seems to hide a great secret, one greater than himself. It is the second day from the start of term at the university, and when Stella finds Donn Brooks once again, her life takes a dangerous and unexpected turn. It’s more than she could have imagined, beginning with an encounter in the library basement. What began as an agreement will transform into something much greater than a pure and overwhelming desire.
In reality, Stella has no other options. However, she doesn’t seem to regret her choice. In the end, the decision is only hers. Donn will not force her into anything. She does it to save a life. She does it because life is all she has to offer in exchange for another. For Stella, only one thing is truly important––Jason Rees; but she will discover that being in love with a special vampire is extremely dangerous and requires sacrifices. Why, therefore, does Jason leave Stella once again in the arms of the dark and fascinating vampire who introduced her to the dark side?
Aware of his lack of indifference toward her, will Stella fall once again into the trap of the enigmatic hunter who hides behind the mask of the powerful businessman, Donn Brooks? Will her best friend Vuk be enough to help her forget the irresistible Donn? Forced to choose between love and friendship, Stella knows that her decision risks reigniting the millennial fight between vampires and wolves.
After all, for Stella and Vuk, to live apart is simply inconceivable. Only together will they be able to fight the pain and the guilt, face the truth, and experience the unexpected power of an unbreakable bond.
In the meantime, now that the Council, Donn’s family, is no longer after her, the rebels, the enemies of the Council, are closing in and ready to capture her. For Stella, the moment of truth has is increasingly near.
In a novel where every day is crucial, the time for decisions and renunciation has arrived. Constrained by the events to be hanging in the balance, will she be able to stay balanced on her own two feet?

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

1 A Special Occasion

 

I feel like I have slept for an eternity. My body is stiff, as if it has been sitting still all this time, and my confused thoughts drag through my mind slowly. A blinding ray of moonlight surrounds my body and brightens Medford, the cold and cloudy town in Massachusetts, which became my hometown four years ago. A tangled, multicolored web of bizarre dreams and nightmares weigh down on my head. Intense. Very intense.

Excruciating anxiety and fear permeate my typically frustrating nightmare in which I can’t run ahead fast enough.

The massive monster with blazing yellow eyes that I know so well makes the nightmare even more terrifying, and I know his name. Vuk Wolf. Terror and ecstasy combine to form an indescribable cocktail. And the faster I try to run, the clumsier I become.

Then the moment arrives. I feel him getting closer, but never seem to wake up in time. And when I forget just what I’m running from, I realize there’s nothing to run from, nothing to fear. That nothing exists beyond that dark, dreary forest. This is about the time when the screaming begins. My nights are crowded with nightmares, and the nightmare has always been the same these past few weeks. You’d think I would have anticipated it that after so many times, after the last full moon, and that I would be bored if not numb to it. I doubt that anyone else would be frightened by a nightmare like this––yet terror is not the most powerful emotion I feel in the nightmare, because I see the clear image of J., the angel, in clear view.

“Stella,” whispers the familiar voice.

But it is not J.’s voice I hear.

The vortex, more like the abyss I fell in, already submerges me in deep pain, so why not? I search the recesses of my memories. Not the real ones––that would be too painful––but the conjured-up ones, like Vuk’s voice, which I heard the night before and the night before that. I keep reliving them before falling asleep with tears rolling down my emotionless face.

It is difficult to leave that vision and awaken. It is a dream that cannot be buried in Jason’s gloomy and surreal crypt, which I refuse to visit because it would hurt too much. I force myself to leave the nightmare behind, and while I come about, the real world emerges.

I can’t remember what day of the week it is, but I’m pretty sure that I should be at school. After the road accident that no one talks about anymore, I took a break for a few days. Or maybe I should be at work? I take a deep breath and wonder how to face the day, the evening ahead, the next day, and the one after that.

“Stella,” the voice calls again. Something warm brushes my forehead gently. Life seems so gloomy that I could try to trick myself into pretending a little.

I turn to see who is joining my adventure, but there’s no need to see him to know whom it is. Vuk, my best friend. I’d recognize that voice from a million miles away, and it never fails to stir deep emotions inside me. He’s sitting on the floor at the end of the sofa with an arm perched on the armrest. He stares at me, immobile, just a few inches from my face.

The bright white moonbeams, the glimmer of a flawless, cloudless evening takes the place of my dream’s blindingly yellow eyes––the same eyes I now see probing my pale, ashen face. In those eyes I read the pages of a mysterious book that only I can decode.

He would look at me with those same eyes. His smile would be on those same lips, or nearly. He would keep being the person that knows me best, at least for as long as I’ve been here. This is what I read in his eyes at first glance. But I keep telling myself it’s just a dream. The gloomy glance betrays his deep sorrow.

It’s clear that beyond the impossible feelings he has for me, there is also a tie that binds us, one that runs deep and goes beyond our friendship, for which he would always come for me.

It was a mistake to let my imagination run wild. Well, maybe “let” is the wrong word. I forced it to run after my recurring nightmares, and I lost all control. I allowed myself to get carried away, yet it is still much better than the silent visit of a few nights ago. He was more cautious; he kept his distance, even if just by just a few steps.

I force myself to keep my eyes closed. The dream is extraordinarily lifelike. But I’m about to awaken, and I know that in a few seconds he will vanish, as he usually does. Sometimes I get lost in daydreams too. With a sigh of resignation, my eyes let the real world enter and dissolve the mirage. Vuk is still here; the sharp features of his perfect face just a few inches from mine.

It takes me no time to decide that, given I’ve already lost my mind, I will continue enjoying the illusion of a gentle Vuk for as long as I am able.

Vuk, with that breathtaking smile of his, puts an arm around my shoulder and looks at me intensely. His facial expression mesmerizes me. The bright emerald of his eyes lights up and begins to glow.

Rather than being frightened, I choose to stare at him awkwardly, as if I were expecting to be reproached.

I stretch out my other hand to touch him; he mirrors me as if he were my reflection. But where our fingers should meet, there is nothing but burning heat.

It’s real. Vuk is next to me, I can feel his embrace. His voice, the scent of his body, his face. It all feels so much closer than when he came to see me the other evening.

He’s always there, by my side. He seems intent on not leaving this time. His warm, perfect lips brush against my numb cheek.

“Happy anniversary, little girl,” he whispers, his usual crooked smile spread across his face. He nods his head to welcome me back into the world.

“What?” I ask, puzzled. My throat feels coarse. And that golden reflection of his eyes suddenly blinds me. I shield my eyes with my fists and wake up, startled, breathless, eyes wide open.

His hand brushes a lock of hair from my cheek.

“If it’s all the same to you, I’d rather see your face. You have no idea how much I’ve missed it. Did I frighten you?”

“Huh”? I sense an underlying unease in his voice. I open my eyes, barely breathing.

“Did I frighten you?” he repeats, and I notice the dark circles under his eyes that resemble burns. “But you know that I would never, ever hurt you.”

“Yes, Vuk, I know.”

My eyes wander away from his face and search my surroundings to make sure that I’m not still dreaming. I see the darkness outside the open window.

“Wow, that sure was sticky sweet.”

“Not really,” I whisper shyly.

I look at him again and feel my cheeks blushing along with the certainty that Vuk really is there, next to me. His eyes continue to glow in emerald green. This surprises me; usually the version of Vuk that appears in my dreams has jade eyes.

“Oh, shit.” My voice is still coarse from sleeping. His face looks even more anxious.

A shiver runs through my bones, from the ends of my hair to the tips of my toes and with a moan, I fall back against the headrest, pulling the duvet high over my head.

I knew this moment would come, it had been on the tip of my thoughts for a long while, constantly threatening to make an appearance. But I didn’t expect it to come so soon.

Without a sound, he slides onto the sofa next to me and lifts the cover to look at me.

“What’s wrong, Stella?”

I don’t think I can face him just yet, but he’s leaning over me, his face an inch away from mine. I try to control my breathing, to calm down, but I jump when I see the flash of jade in his eyes.

“You’re here. You’re … back.” I hadn’t really been following what he was saying. I hadn’t even realized we were talking and that he’d come in through the window. And I don’t understand to what he referred.

“Yes, I’m home.” Vuk’s smile is reserved. “I’ve come back to you.”

Reality suddenly becomes clear to me and it weighs down in my belly.

“Time goes by. Even when it seems impossible.” My eyes stare blankly, veiled by tears that are on the verge of flowing.

“Time might go by randomly, little girl, but it does go by. Even for you.” His fingers trace the outline of my face. “Maybe you should get some more sleep. You’re delirious.”

“I’m not tired anymore,” I yawn. “What time is it?”

“It’s already past nine in the evening. You’ve been sleeping for a couple of hours.”

I frown. It’s all been clear for days now. Vuk is my best friend, I would have loved him for a lifetime, but that would never have been enough for him. But I need Vuk, like a junkie needs her drug. For so long now, almost a year, he’s been my crutch and I’m into it deeper that I could ever have imagined possible. How I wished he were my brother, a blood brother, so that I could have a relationship with him that didn’t make me feel guilty.

Tears of anguish and frustration flow down my cheeks. When you love someone, you have a weapon of mass destruction in your hands. Anyone who is loved risks being crushed, as I was a year ago, and then again just a few days back.

“Stella.” Vuk turns the full force of his golden, fiery eyes onto me.

“What?”

“This is silly. Why are you crying?” He bends down to delicately embrace me. “Did I frighten you, really?”

“What are you doing here?” I wipe away the smudged mascara from my face.

“First tell me why you’re crying.”

“Because I’m pissed at you,” I retort angrily, crossing my arms protectively over the duvet.

His hands approach my face as he gazes into my eyes.

“I’m here for a very special occasion. If you remember a while back, you said I could stay at Jeff’s house whenever I wanted to.”

“Didn’t the way I avoided you at Jamie’s party send a clear enough message to you? It was my way of retracting that invitation!” I try to force a smile, but feel as if I am about to burst into tears.

“Listen, Stella, I’m sorry about the night of the full moon and everything that happened.”

“Why were you so angry at me?”

“I wasn’t angry at you.”

“Why did you attack me at the factory?”

“I’ve explained that a million times.”

“Just tell me the truth, I beg you.”

“I could just blame the animal that is in me, but the truth is that it was just the man I’ve become. I screwed up and I truly am sorry.”

“Thanks for being honest.” I lift my blank gaze from my hands and look at him, bewildered, but my eyes are still a blank.

“Look, I didn’t come here to talk about me.” Vuk lowers his gaze.

“What is it, then? I’m listening.” I sink further into Jeff’s sofa in the study next to my bedroom and stare lifelessly into space.

“You’re still upset, Stella.” I don’t understand what he means, but I feel like he’s pushing me and I make an effort to concentrate.

“I’m not upset.”

“Maybe that came out wrong. I just don’t want you to be sad anymore, Stella, that’s all I wanted to say.”

I look at him out of the corner of my eyes, and see him turning to look at me, worried.

“I’m just fine.”

He scrutinizes my stern expression and changes his strategy.

“I waited a while, I hoped you’d get better!” He punches the wall next to my head to get my attention. “Now you have to pull yourself together, Stella!”

He succeeds. We both know that my mood has not improved.

He stares at me in frustration, and I mull over the meaning of his words.

“Now I’m going to call Scott and ask him to send Jeff home,” he warns. I feel my world collapse. But my eyes light up with the first flame of life since who knows when.

“Maybe that would help you,” Vuk adds.

“Or maybe not.” My reply is sharp as I realize just where all this is leading. I’m not sure it will work, if I can’t be totally frank and willing to talk it over. Of course, I could just spout out the truth, if I wanted to spend the rest of my days in a padded cell.

“What did I do?” I ask, mystified.

“Nothing! That’s the problem!”

I act dumb, staring at the armrest of the sofa.

“What?” I repeat, distraught and confused. “I don’t get it, Vuk. Just what is the problem?”

“You never do anything, ever!”

“That’s not fair! Would you prefer me to get myself into trouble, as I usually do?” I try to inject as much energy into my voice as possible.

“Getting into trouble would be better than this.”

“Oh, yeah?” I object, challengingly. But my face gives away the weakness of my argument.

“Sure, at least you’d be doing something. You’re… you’re burnt out, Stella.” As soon as Vuk says this, I realize just how burnt out my voice sounds.

I take a deep breath. His accusation has hit the spot.

“Then tell me what I should do. Give Jamie a call? Plan to go out?”

“Listen, little girl, I think maybe you… need help.” Vuk holds his breath awaiting my reaction.

“And what’s that supposed to mean?”

“Well, maybe you need to talk to someone close to you,” he replies in frustration. “Your dad, for example.”

“Do you really want Jeff to come back?” My tone is sharp, now that I understand what he’s aiming for.

He punches the wall again.

“I want whatever is best for you!”

“Ok,” I retort. “But first you’re upset because I sit here doing nothing, then you say that you don’t want me to go out with Jamie?”

“Look, we both know what is going on, Stella, and it’s not doing you any good.”

“Right.” My voice is low, monotonous. “If you say so.”

“Stella,” he whispers, his voice velvety smooth.

I look at him, uncomfortable but keep listening. Something about the expression on his face captures my attention for a moment.

“I know that our rules say I’m not allowed to wish you a happy ‘welcome home’ anniversary, but this is the first one since we met and it only comes once in a lifetime. You ought to celebrate the event.”

“What do you mean?” I hiss, the words barely coming out, the thought flashing through my mind that it has been exactly one year since Jason left. “Are you saying what I think you mean?” I ask breathlessly. It’s meant to be a rhetorical question.

“You know exactly what I mean. That it’s a special occasion.” I feel his sweet breath on my face.

“Right, what an idiot I am,” I whisper. “I didn’t realize that today is the fourth of October.”

“Yes, it’s October 4th today,” he confirms, smiling at last. “Sometimes, you are out of this world, you know that?” Vuk’s hoarse, earnest laugh is like a warm embrace.

“Want to celebrate your anniversary moving here with me? But take it easy, this is the first one.” His eyes burn deep gold.

I don’t lower my guard. “I don’t want to celebrate, and I don’t want to be wished a happy anniversary.”

“That’s a shame.” He brushes a lock of his unkempt golden hair from his face. “I thought you might have changed your mind. Usually humans love birthdays, anniversaries, parties, presents, stuff like that.”

“Well, you did say that I was out of this world, right?”

I’m dismayed. My nightmares veiled in fear now seem a reality. First of all, I have absolutely no intention of celebrating the day I lost Jason. And then I have Vuk here by my side, watching me, determined to come back into my life. I feel the warmth of tears looming over my eyes a glimmery sheen that brightens and dims my gaze.

“Whatever. Maybe later, then. Just please don’t try to create a barrier between us, I can’t stand it. But I think a celebration would be cool, fun. Everyone will be there. And everyone will be good to you and do everything you say, little girl. That’s what’s so great about an anniversary.”

“And what’s it all mean to you?”

“Same as ever. A lifetime of captivity, a tie that can never be broken, that sort of thing.” He taps the leather bracelet on his right wrist, a symbol of his promise.

“Oh well, if that’s all it is.” I laugh, still trying to make the boundary clear. As usual, when Vuk is around, boundaries get blurred.

“You see, Stella,” He purrs my name. “Given that the date slipped your mind, it’s the least I can do.”

“I guess, technically, speaking,” I say. “Yippee!”

Vuk’s lips curve into that irresistible smile of his.

“You should be in a good mood. If not today, when?”

“What if I don’t want to be in a good mood?”

“Now there’s a surprise.”

He leans over me, taking my face into his hands, stroking it gently, his fingertips delicately tracing my cheekbones, the outline.

“I’ll see what I can do,” he whispers into my ear, his expression now composed. But there’s something about his stubbornness that raises doubts.

“You know, I’ve just realized that you’re dressed all in black, sharper than usual.”

“I told you, kid. You’re not really present just lately.”

“I guess so.” I feel helpless and somehow vulnerable in his embrace.

My ear is crushed against his chest, I hear his hypnotic, reassuring heartbeat. I smell the sweet, familiar aroma on his skin. He holds me tenderly, holding my head with one hand, as if I were as fragile as a newborn baby. And that’s just how fragile I feel in his arms.

“Why don’t you start making your way there. I’ll just get my wits about me and join you.”

“Yeah, sure! Like I believe you!”

“You’d just wait for me to leave to find an excuse not to come. I gotta strike the iron while it’s hot.”

“Vuk, do you know how many moving here anniversaries I’ve had?”

“That’s got nothing to do with it. And four isn’t many, anyway,” he smiles. “Am I wrong, or do humans not usually celebrate a few anniversaries before they get sick of them? Anyway, we can talk about it later. Right now, I have to take you someplace.”

“What do you mean?” I reply with a grunt, my curiosity perked.

“You have no idea?”

“No! Just tell me.”

“No way!”

I pout as he drags me to my closet. He opens a door and looks over my clothes.

“Oh no!” I cry. “No party, no presents. Scott promised me!”

“You don’t want to spoil everyone’s fun, do you?”

“I thought that I got to choose what to do on my anniversary,”

He picks out a blue dress and throws it at me.

“Put this on.”.

Vuk waits outside the door as I put clothes on. I realize that taking time to look over my overly clean, sterile room, as if I never lived in it, could be dangerous. I lie still on the bed for a few minutes, waiting for him to come back, but nothing happens. Surely something will come back. The pain, or that dull feeling. Surely it won’t last.

Then I try to remove that thought and, as I dress, I concentrate on the fact that Vuk will be there when I emerge from my bedroom.

I dress without really thinking about what lies ahead, gazing aimlessly at the dark vegetation outside the window. The clouds, which have just begun to form, are swollen; tonight there’s no chance that they’ll allow a ray of moonlight from the west to penetrate, the same beams that earlier brightened Vuk’s divine face. As the seconds tick by, thoughts of how to get out of what Vuk has in store for me race through my mind. I take no pleasure in being forced to celebrate when I’d much rather just curl up into a ball and despair about the bad hand life has dealt me. And I did kindly request, actually I ordered in no uncertain terms, that no one was to throw a party for me or even mention the date. To avoid running the risk, I’d even taken the evening off work. But it would seem that Vuk is not the only one to have blindly ignored my request.

Worse still––not only do I have to attend a party, but I will be the center of attention, something that for someone as shy and gawky as me is never welcome. I know that I’ll probably fall flat on face at some point in the evening. Please just let me not be my clumsy, self-conscious self tonight!

As soon as I open the door, Vuk loads me on his back and carries me down the stairs to the front door. In the driveway I can make out the outline of a vehicle––a big, bright metallic red Ford truck lurking in the shadows.

Vuk slides me off his back, ignoring my astonished expression. “Did you buy another pickup?”

Vuk leans proudly on the hood, grinning broadly.

“Yup, yesterday. This’ll be its maiden voyage.”

“Cool!” I raise my hand to high-five him. When our hands meet, though, my fingers weave into his, I hold his hand to mine.

“A mean machine, rides like a rocket.” His face lights up proudly.

“I bet it does. But I was kinda’ fond of the old one,” I sigh. “She was a beauty.”

“Sorry,” Vuk apologizes. He nods toward the engine. “But I didn’t have much choice.” He shrugs and unintentionally reminds me of the awful moment of the accident.

“This one is awesome too, huge!”

“You gotta change your ride sometimes, right?” He smiles.

“Yeah, sometimes you need a change.”

I release my grip on Vuk’s hand. I act nonchalantly, determined to be easygoing about maintaining that boundary between the two of us.

“I was thinking about getting something else,” adds Vuk. “A fierce motocross bike, with wheels up to my waist, the back lights with a metallic protective cover, and two spare plates on the bearings.”

“If I win the lottery, I’ll buy you one for Christmas,” I promise.

He looks at me tenderly and puts his mouth to my ear.

“I already have everything I need.” He runs his warm fingers down my check to my chin. Then he tries to help me into the shiny new pickup.

I cross my arms and don’t budge an inch, staring challengingly into those golden eyes.

“It’s my anniversary, I should be allowed to drive.”

“I thought we were pretending this wasn’t a special event.”

“You’re the one who insisted.”

“Now I’m doing as you asked.”

“If it’s not a special day for me, then I don’t have to come out with you tonight, right?” Being forced to go out unexpectedly had gotten on my nerves, already on edge, so much that I was being even more sarcastic than I wanted.

“Ok then.” He slams the passenger door shut and walks around the truck to open the driver’s door. “It’s all yours, happy anniversary.”

“You’re really going to let me drive your brand new pickup? Wow, that’s some news!”

As I say this, Vuk glances at my Corvette and shakes his head in disapproval.

“Yeah, your car ain’t exactly in the best shape.”

I wrinkle my nose. I don’t like it when my car, my baby, is criticized. It’s my pride and joy. It has never let me down, we’ve shared joy and pain. And it’s got charisma to kill for, despite its years of honorable service.

“Whoa, cool it,” I warn him. “My car is a veteran.” I never lose my cool with Vuk, even if lately he’s been putting me to the test. Vuk, barely able to contain his laughter, smiles.

“I can’t argue with that, kid.”

“That’s more like it.”

“But you want a better ride?” He asks, leaning his arms on the roof of the pickup. “Then get in. But I’d better do the driving.”

I stand still, uncertain, scrutinizing him.

He peels his body off the truck’s bodywork and walks toward me, his face becoming warm, soft. His arms around my waist are a snare I cannot and don’t want to escape.

“Please, little girl, we need to get moving.” His voice is delicate, a fine sandpaper whisper. I sigh and resign myself to getting into the pickup, half regretting not to have insisted. I slide into the passenger seat. His face cracks a smile and he jumps into the cab, his emerald eyes fiery as he prepares to hit the road.

“Right, let’s go!” he says, after making sure I’m comfortable in my seat. “We’ve got some celebrating to do.” His usual smile becomes even more breathtaking.

“Ok,” I consent.

And Vuk backs up the long, narrow drive.

 

 

2 News

 

As he drives, I scan radio stations looking for some decent tunes. But white noise fills the cabin.

“Reception’s not great, is it?”

He glances over at me and shakes his head in disapproval. “This stereo is the latest generation. Turn off the multimedia option if you want to listen to the radio.”

I feel the my face flush as I follow his instructions. I sneak a look at Vuk’s expression as some hard rock fills the cab. I can’t help but smile––nobody could deny that the contrast of his black outfit with those stunning green eyes takes his good looks to a new level, almost surreal. And the fact that he’s wearing such an elegant black suit makes me nervous. But a glance down at my own outfit makes me even more nervous.

“Us wearing these fancy clothes, it makes me edgy. Nothing good can come of it!”

“Oh, yeah?” Vuk replies. “You’re leaving the house for the first time after your time as a zombie, and suddenly you’re the expert?”

“Can I just ask when will you take the time to tell me exactly what we’re doing tonight?”

“How can you not have guessed yet?”

“Is it so obvious that I should be ashamed I don’t remember?” Unless it’s … but I’m too scared to translate my suspicions into thoughts or words.

“You know, I really don’t want to embarrass you, but yes, absolutely!” Vuk stifles a laugh and looks at me. “I love it when you blush.”

I ignore him, shake my head to rid it of certain thoughts, and change the subject.

“I swear, I won’t go anywhere else with you if you insist on choosing what I have to wear, like this ridiculous blue dress with the label still attached that has been stuffed in the back of my closet under all the other clothes I never wear.” It’s more suited to a fashion runway than Medford. But it’s too late to regret not having worn the bottle green dress my mother gave me a couple birthdays ago.

“Did I tell you how lovely you look tonight?”

“Maybe you need glasses!”

“My eyesight is just fine, thanks.”

“Well, you did choose this dress!”

He pretends not to hear me, as a mischievous smile curls his lips.

“Maybe your judgment isn’t exactly objective,” I add.

“I couldn’t disagree more.”

At that point, my phone begins to ring, distracting my gaze from his face. I pull the phone from my coat pocket and, for an instant, scrutinize the “unknown caller” written on the display.

“Hello?”

“Yes, it’s me. Who is this?” I ask.

“No, to be honest, I don’t remember.”

“Ah, you’re Scott’s nephew. Hi.”

“Tyler?” asks Vuk, suspiciously.

I nod and cover the phone with my hand. “What’s up?” I mouth.

He just shakes his head and stifles a laugh.

“No, I’m in the car,” I reply. “What are you doing in town?”

I hear a noisy vehicle passing and the sounds of a crowd in the background. His voice becomes shrill. “I’ve just arrived at the station,” he yells.

Overhearing, Vuk rolls his eyes incredulously, and smiles broadly.

“He’s gotta be kidding! Let me talk to him.”

I frown and the terrible truth begins to dawn on me. I hesitate, pass him the phone, and then look down at the unlikely dress Vuk has forced me into tonight.

“Hey, Tyler. It’s Vuk Wolf.” Friendly enough. Then his tone changes, becomes more menacing.

“Sorry, but Stella is busy right now, for everyone but yours truly. No offense, man.” I know Vuk’s voice well enough to notice the underlying hostility. “Sorry if there’s been some kind of misunderstanding!” And he hits the “end call” button, a laugh of satisfaction escaping his lips. Then he turns to me, radiating sweet innocence.

“What?”

In a moment his eyes melt away my anger. I can’t argue with him when he cheats like this.

“What was all that about?”

“Maybe I should warn you.”

“Please do.”

He sighs, but doesn’t reply. He hits me again with the full intensity of those shining emerald eyes.

I try to read them, and an instant later my relief fades to dust as my intuition points me to the terrible truth. My mind is so hazy that such an obvious and important detail completely slipped my mind, despite Vuk’s clues.

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Free Excerpt! Romance/Fantasy Hybrid Back to You (Don’t Forget Me – The Saga Book 2) by Sia Wales

  Last week we announced that Sia Wales’s Back to You 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 Back to You, you’re in for a real treat:

Back to You (Don
5.0 stars – 1 Review
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The second chapter of the saga finally reveals the secrets and the mysteries that were barely hinted at in Don’t Forget Me, the introductory chapter. Desire mixes with a strong dose of suspense. The storyline, romantic and complex on one side, melts; and on the other thickens.
“I want to be the worst thing that, regardless, you would still find yourself choosing over and over, in spite of all the best you might have in life… This. This is enough, forever.”
Stella has put behind her the beginning of a difficult academic year, full of conflict and contradictory temptations. There is a new arrival in the Whitely house. Jeff, her father, has recently relocated to Medford––this time to stay. What better opportunity to organize a party? But nothing is as it seems; beginning with Tyler Bradford, his childhood friend, whose presence turns out to be much more than a banal coincidence. With Siberian origins, he seems to hide a great secret, one greater than himself. It is the second day from the start of term at the university, and when Stella finds Donn Brooks once again, her life takes a dangerous and unexpected turn. It’s more than she could have imagined, beginning with an encounter in the library basement. What began as an agreement will transform into something much greater than a pure and overwhelming desire.
In reality, Stella has no other options. However, she doesn’t seem to regret her choice. In the end, the decision is only hers. Donn will not force her into anything. She does it to save a life. She does it because life is all she has to offer in exchange for another. For Stella, only one thing is truly important––Jason Rees; but she will discover that being in love with a special vampire is extremely dangerous and requires sacrifices. Why, therefore, does Jason leave Stella once again in the arms of the dark and fascinating vampire who introduced her to the dark side?
Aware of his lack of indifference toward her, will Stella fall once again into the trap of the enigmatic hunter who hides behind the mask of the powerful businessman, Donn Brooks? Will her best friend Vuk be enough to help her forget the irresistible Donn? Forced to choose between love and friendship, Stella knows that her decision risks reigniting the millennial fight between vampires and wolves.
After all, for Stella and Vuk, to live apart is simply inconceivable. Only together will they be able to fight the pain and the guilt, face the truth, and experience the unexpected power of an unbreakable bond.
In the meantime, now that the Council, Donn’s family, is no longer after her, the rebels, the enemies of the Council, are closing in and ready to capture her. For Stella, the moment of truth has is increasingly near.
In a novel where every day is crucial, the time for decisions and renunciation has arrived. Constrained by the events to be hanging in the balance, will she be able to stay balanced on her own two feet?

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

1 A Special Occasion

 

I feel like I have slept for an eternity. My body is stiff, as if it has been sitting still all this time, and my confused thoughts drag through my mind slowly. A blinding ray of moonlight surrounds my body and brightens Medford, the cold and cloudy town in Massachusetts, which became my hometown four years ago. A tangled, multicolored web of bizarre dreams and nightmares weigh down on my head. Intense. Very intense.

Excruciating anxiety and fear permeate my typically frustrating nightmare in which I can’t run ahead fast enough.

The massive monster with blazing yellow eyes that I know so well makes the nightmare even more terrifying, and I know his name. Vuk Wolf. Terror and ecstasy combine to form an indescribable cocktail. And the faster I try to run, the clumsier I become.

Then the moment arrives. I feel him getting closer, but never seem to wake up in time. And when I forget just what I’m running from, I realize there’s nothing to run from, nothing to fear. That nothing exists beyond that dark, dreary forest. This is about the time when the screaming begins. My nights are crowded with nightmares, and the nightmare has always been the same these past few weeks. You’d think I would have anticipated it that after so many times, after the last full moon, and that I would be bored if not numb to it. I doubt that anyone else would be frightened by a nightmare like this––yet terror is not the most powerful emotion I feel in the nightmare, because I see the clear image of J., the angel, in clear view.

“Stella,” whispers the familiar voice.

But it is not J.’s voice I hear.

The vortex, more like the abyss I fell in, already submerges me in deep pain, so why not? I search the recesses of my memories. Not the real ones––that would be too painful––but the conjured-up ones, like Vuk’s voice, which I heard the night before and the night before that. I keep reliving them before falling asleep with tears rolling down my emotionless face.

It is difficult to leave that vision and awaken. It is a dream that cannot be buried in Jason’s gloomy and surreal crypt, which I refuse to visit because it would hurt too much. I force myself to leave the nightmare behind, and while I come about, the real world emerges.

I can’t remember what day of the week it is, but I’m pretty sure that I should be at school. After the road accident that no one talks about anymore, I took a break for a few days. Or maybe I should be at work? I take a deep breath and wonder how to face the day, the evening ahead, the next day, and the one after that.

“Stella,” the voice calls again. Something warm brushes my forehead gently. Life seems so gloomy that I could try to trick myself into pretending a little.

I turn to see who is joining my adventure, but there’s no need to see him to know whom it is. Vuk, my best friend. I’d recognize that voice from a million miles away, and it never fails to stir deep emotions inside me. He’s sitting on the floor at the end of the sofa with an arm perched on the armrest. He stares at me, immobile, just a few inches from my face.

The bright white moonbeams, the glimmer of a flawless, cloudless evening takes the place of my dream’s blindingly yellow eyes––the same eyes I now see probing my pale, ashen face. In those eyes I read the pages of a mysterious book that only I can decode.

He would look at me with those same eyes. His smile would be on those same lips, or nearly. He would keep being the person that knows me best, at least for as long as I’ve been here. This is what I read in his eyes at first glance. But I keep telling myself it’s just a dream. The gloomy glance betrays his deep sorrow.

It’s clear that beyond the impossible feelings he has for me, there is also a tie that binds us, one that runs deep and goes beyond our friendship, for which he would always come for me.

It was a mistake to let my imagination run wild. Well, maybe “let” is the wrong word. I forced it to run after my recurring nightmares, and I lost all control. I allowed myself to get carried away, yet it is still much better than the silent visit of a few nights ago. He was more cautious; he kept his distance, even if just by just a few steps.

I force myself to keep my eyes closed. The dream is extraordinarily lifelike. But I’m about to awaken, and I know that in a few seconds he will vanish, as he usually does. Sometimes I get lost in daydreams too. With a sigh of resignation, my eyes let the real world enter and dissolve the mirage. Vuk is still here; the sharp features of his perfect face just a few inches from mine.

It takes me no time to decide that, given I’ve already lost my mind, I will continue enjoying the illusion of a gentle Vuk for as long as I am able.

Vuk, with that breathtaking smile of his, puts an arm around my shoulder and looks at me intensely. His facial expression mesmerizes me. The bright emerald of his eyes lights up and begins to glow.

Rather than being frightened, I choose to stare at him awkwardly, as if I were expecting to be reproached.

I stretch out my other hand to touch him; he mirrors me as if he were my reflection. But where our fingers should meet, there is nothing but burning heat.

It’s real. Vuk is next to me, I can feel his embrace. His voice, the scent of his body, his face. It all feels so much closer than when he came to see me the other evening.

He’s always there, by my side. He seems intent on not leaving this time. His warm, perfect lips brush against my numb cheek.

“Happy anniversary, little girl,” he whispers, his usual crooked smile spread across his face. He nods his head to welcome me back into the world.

“What?” I ask, puzzled. My throat feels coarse. And that golden reflection of his eyes suddenly blinds me. I shield my eyes with my fists and wake up, startled, breathless, eyes wide open.

His hand brushes a lock of hair from my cheek.

“If it’s all the same to you, I’d rather see your face. You have no idea how much I’ve missed it. Did I frighten you?”

“Huh”? I sense an underlying unease in his voice. I open my eyes, barely breathing.

“Did I frighten you?” he repeats, and I notice the dark circles under his eyes that resemble burns. “But you know that I would never, ever hurt you.”

“Yes, Vuk, I know.”

My eyes wander away from his face and search my surroundings to make sure that I’m not still dreaming. I see the darkness outside the open window.

“Wow, that sure was sticky sweet.”

“Not really,” I whisper shyly.

I look at him again and feel my cheeks blushing along with the certainty that Vuk really is there, next to me. His eyes continue to glow in emerald green. This surprises me; usually the version of Vuk that appears in my dreams has jade eyes.

“Oh, shit.” My voice is still coarse from sleeping. His face looks even more anxious.

A shiver runs through my bones, from the ends of my hair to the tips of my toes and with a moan, I fall back against the headrest, pulling the duvet high over my head.

I knew this moment would come, it had been on the tip of my thoughts for a long while, constantly threatening to make an appearance. But I didn’t expect it to come so soon.

Without a sound, he slides onto the sofa next to me and lifts the cover to look at me.

“What’s wrong, Stella?”

I don’t think I can face him just yet, but he’s leaning over me, his face an inch away from mine. I try to control my breathing, to calm down, but I jump when I see the flash of jade in his eyes.

“You’re here. You’re … back.” I hadn’t really been following what he was saying. I hadn’t even realized we were talking and that he’d come in through the window. And I don’t understand to what he referred.

“Yes, I’m home.” Vuk’s smile is reserved. “I’ve come back to you.”

Reality suddenly becomes clear to me and it weighs down in my belly.

“Time goes by. Even when it seems impossible.” My eyes stare blankly, veiled by tears that are on the verge of flowing.

“Time might go by randomly, little girl, but it does go by. Even for you.” His fingers trace the outline of my face. “Maybe you should get some more sleep. You’re delirious.”

“I’m not tired anymore,” I yawn. “What time is it?”

“It’s already past nine in the evening. You’ve been sleeping for a couple of hours.”

I frown. It’s all been clear for days now. Vuk is my best friend, I would have loved him for a lifetime, but that would never have been enough for him. But I need Vuk, like a junkie needs her drug. For so long now, almost a year, he’s been my crutch and I’m into it deeper that I could ever have imagined possible. How I wished he were my brother, a blood brother, so that I could have a relationship with him that didn’t make me feel guilty.

Tears of anguish and frustration flow down my cheeks. When you love someone, you have a weapon of mass destruction in your hands. Anyone who is loved risks being crushed, as I was a year ago, and then again just a few days back.

“Stella.” Vuk turns the full force of his golden, fiery eyes onto me.

“What?”

“This is silly. Why are you crying?” He bends down to delicately embrace me. “Did I frighten you, really?”

“What are you doing here?” I wipe away the smudged mascara from my face.

“First tell me why you’re crying.”

“Because I’m pissed at you,” I retort angrily, crossing my arms protectively over the duvet.

His hands approach my face as he gazes into my eyes.

“I’m here for a very special occasion. If you remember a while back, you said I could stay at Jeff’s house whenever I wanted to.”

“Didn’t the way I avoided you at Jamie’s party send a clear enough message to you? It was my way of retracting that invitation!” I try to force a smile, but feel as if I am about to burst into tears.

“Listen, Stella, I’m sorry about the night of the full moon and everything that happened.”

“Why were you so angry at me?”

“I wasn’t angry at you.”

“Why did you attack me at the factory?”

“I’ve explained that a million times.”

“Just tell me the truth, I beg you.”

“I could just blame the animal that is in me, but the truth is that it was just the man I’ve become. I screwed up and I truly am sorry.”

“Thanks for being honest.” I lift my blank gaze from my hands and look at him, bewildered, but my eyes are still a blank.

“Look, I didn’t come here to talk about me.” Vuk lowers his gaze.

“What is it, then? I’m listening.” I sink further into Jeff’s sofa in the study next to my bedroom and stare lifelessly into space.

“You’re still upset, Stella.” I don’t understand what he means, but I feel like he’s pushing me and I make an effort to concentrate.

“I’m not upset.”

“Maybe that came out wrong. I just don’t want you to be sad anymore, Stella, that’s all I wanted to say.”

I look at him out of the corner of my eyes, and see him turning to look at me, worried.

“I’m just fine.”

He scrutinizes my stern expression and changes his strategy.

“I waited a while, I hoped you’d get better!” He punches the wall next to my head to get my attention. “Now you have to pull yourself together, Stella!”

He succeeds. We both know that my mood has not improved.

He stares at me in frustration, and I mull over the meaning of his words.

“Now I’m going to call Scott and ask him to send Jeff home,” he warns. I feel my world collapse. But my eyes light up with the first flame of life since who knows when.

“Maybe that would help you,” Vuk adds.

“Or maybe not.” My reply is sharp as I realize just where all this is leading. I’m not sure it will work, if I can’t be totally frank and willing to talk it over. Of course, I could just spout out the truth, if I wanted to spend the rest of my days in a padded cell.

“What did I do?” I ask, mystified.

“Nothing! That’s the problem!”

I act dumb, staring at the armrest of the sofa.

“What?” I repeat, distraught and confused. “I don’t get it, Vuk. Just what is the problem?”

“You never do anything, ever!”

“That’s not fair! Would you prefer me to get myself into trouble, as I usually do?” I try to inject as much energy into my voice as possible.

“Getting into trouble would be better than this.”

“Oh, yeah?” I object, challengingly. But my face gives away the weakness of my argument.

“Sure, at least you’d be doing something. You’re… you’re burnt out, Stella.” As soon as Vuk says this, I realize just how burnt out my voice sounds.

I take a deep breath. His accusation has hit the spot.

“Then tell me what I should do. Give Jamie a call? Plan to go out?”

“Listen, little girl, I think maybe you… need help.” Vuk holds his breath awaiting my reaction.

“And what’s that supposed to mean?”

“Well, maybe you need to talk to someone close to you,” he replies in frustration. “Your dad, for example.”

“Do you really want Jeff to come back?” My tone is sharp, now that I understand what he’s aiming for.

He punches the wall again.

“I want whatever is best for you!”

“Ok,” I retort. “But first you’re upset because I sit here doing nothing, then you say that you don’t want me to go out with Jamie?”

“Look, we both know what is going on, Stella, and it’s not doing you any good.”

“Right.” My voice is low, monotonous. “If you say so.”

“Stella,” he whispers, his voice velvety smooth.

I look at him, uncomfortable but keep listening. Something about the expression on his face captures my attention for a moment.

“I know that our rules say I’m not allowed to wish you a happy ‘welcome home’ anniversary, but this is the first one since we met and it only comes once in a lifetime. You ought to celebrate the event.”

“What do you mean?” I hiss, the words barely coming out, the thought flashing through my mind that it has been exactly one year since Jason left. “Are you saying what I think you mean?” I ask breathlessly. It’s meant to be a rhetorical question.

“You know exactly what I mean. That it’s a special occasion.” I feel his sweet breath on my face.

“Right, what an idiot I am,” I whisper. “I didn’t realize that today is the fourth of October.”

“Yes, it’s October 4th today,” he confirms, smiling at last. “Sometimes, you are out of this world, you know that?” Vuk’s hoarse, earnest laugh is like a warm embrace.

“Want to celebrate your anniversary moving here with me? But take it easy, this is the first one.” His eyes burn deep gold.

I don’t lower my guard. “I don’t want to celebrate, and I don’t want to be wished a happy anniversary.”

“That’s a shame.” He brushes a lock of his unkempt golden hair from his face. “I thought you might have changed your mind. Usually humans love birthdays, anniversaries, parties, presents, stuff like that.”

“Well, you did say that I was out of this world, right?”

I’m dismayed. My nightmares veiled in fear now seem a reality. First of all, I have absolutely no intention of celebrating the day I lost Jason. And then I have Vuk here by my side, watching me, determined to come back into my life. I feel the warmth of tears looming over my eyes a glimmery sheen that brightens and dims my gaze.

“Whatever. Maybe later, then. Just please don’t try to create a barrier between us, I can’t stand it. But I think a celebration would be cool, fun. Everyone will be there. And everyone will be good to you and do everything you say, little girl. That’s what’s so great about an anniversary.”

“And what’s it all mean to you?”

“Same as ever. A lifetime of captivity, a tie that can never be broken, that sort of thing.” He taps the leather bracelet on his right wrist, a symbol of his promise.

“Oh well, if that’s all it is.” I laugh, still trying to make the boundary clear. As usual, when Vuk is around, boundaries get blurred.

“You see, Stella,” He purrs my name. “Given that the date slipped your mind, it’s the least I can do.”

“I guess, technically, speaking,” I say. “Yippee!”

Vuk’s lips curve into that irresistible smile of his.

“You should be in a good mood. If not today, when?”

“What if I don’t want to be in a good mood?”

“Now there’s a surprise.”

He leans over me, taking my face into his hands, stroking it gently, his fingertips delicately tracing my cheekbones, the outline.

“I’ll see what I can do,” he whispers into my ear, his expression now composed. But there’s something about his stubbornness that raises doubts.

“You know, I’ve just realized that you’re dressed all in black, sharper than usual.”

“I told you, kid. You’re not really present just lately.”

“I guess so.” I feel helpless and somehow vulnerable in his embrace.

My ear is crushed against his chest, I hear his hypnotic, reassuring heartbeat. I smell the sweet, familiar aroma on his skin. He holds me tenderly, holding my head with one hand, as if I were as fragile as a newborn baby. And that’s just how fragile I feel in his arms.

“Why don’t you start making your way there. I’ll just get my wits about me and join you.”

“Yeah, sure! Like I believe you!”

“You’d just wait for me to leave to find an excuse not to come. I gotta strike the iron while it’s hot.”

“Vuk, do you know how many moving here anniversaries I’ve had?”

“That’s got nothing to do with it. And four isn’t many, anyway,” he smiles. “Am I wrong, or do humans not usually celebrate a few anniversaries before they get sick of them? Anyway, we can talk about it later. Right now, I have to take you someplace.”

“What do you mean?” I reply with a grunt, my curiosity perked.

“You have no idea?”

“No! Just tell me.”

“No way!”

I pout as he drags me to my closet. He opens a door and looks over my clothes.

“Oh no!” I cry. “No party, no presents. Scott promised me!”

“You don’t want to spoil everyone’s fun, do you?”

“I thought that I got to choose what to do on my anniversary,”

He picks out a blue dress and throws it at me.

“Put this on.”.

Vuk waits outside the door as I put clothes on. I realize that taking time to look over my overly clean, sterile room, as if I never lived in it, could be dangerous. I lie still on the bed for a few minutes, waiting for him to come back, but nothing happens. Surely something will come back. The pain, or that dull feeling. Surely it won’t last.

Then I try to remove that thought and, as I dress, I concentrate on the fact that Vuk will be there when I emerge from my bedroom.

I dress without really thinking about what lies ahead, gazing aimlessly at the dark vegetation outside the window. The clouds, which have just begun to form, are swollen; tonight there’s no chance that they’ll allow a ray of moonlight from the west to penetrate, the same beams that earlier brightened Vuk’s divine face. As the seconds tick by, thoughts of how to get out of what Vuk has in store for me race through my mind. I take no pleasure in being forced to celebrate when I’d much rather just curl up into a ball and despair about the bad hand life has dealt me. And I did kindly request, actually I ordered in no uncertain terms, that no one was to throw a party for me or even mention the date. To avoid running the risk, I’d even taken the evening off work. But it would seem that Vuk is not the only one to have blindly ignored my request.

Worse still––not only do I have to attend a party, but I will be the center of attention, something that for someone as shy and gawky as me is never welcome. I know that I’ll probably fall flat on face at some point in the evening. Please just let me not be my clumsy, self-conscious self tonight!

As soon as I open the door, Vuk loads me on his back and carries me down the stairs to the front door. In the driveway I can make out the outline of a vehicle––a big, bright metallic red Ford truck lurking in the shadows.

Vuk slides me off his back, ignoring my astonished expression. “Did you buy another pickup?”

Vuk leans proudly on the hood, grinning broadly.

“Yup, yesterday. This’ll be its maiden voyage.”

“Cool!” I raise my hand to high-five him. When our hands meet, though, my fingers weave into his, I hold his hand to mine.

“A mean machine, rides like a rocket.” His face lights up proudly.

“I bet it does. But I was kinda’ fond of the old one,” I sigh. “She was a beauty.”

“Sorry,” Vuk apologizes. He nods toward the engine. “But I didn’t have much choice.” He shrugs and unintentionally reminds me of the awful moment of the accident.

“This one is awesome too, huge!”

“You gotta change your ride sometimes, right?” He smiles.

“Yeah, sometimes you need a change.”

I release my grip on Vuk’s hand. I act nonchalantly, determined to be easygoing about maintaining that boundary between the two of us.

“I was thinking about getting something else,” adds Vuk. “A fierce motocross bike, with wheels up to my waist, the back lights with a metallic protective cover, and two spare plates on the bearings.”

“If I win the lottery, I’ll buy you one for Christmas,” I promise.

He looks at me tenderly and puts his mouth to my ear.

“I already have everything I need.” He runs his warm fingers down my check to my chin. Then he tries to help me into the shiny new pickup.

I cross my arms and don’t budge an inch, staring challengingly into those golden eyes.

“It’s my anniversary, I should be allowed to drive.”

“I thought we were pretending this wasn’t a special event.”

“You’re the one who insisted.”

“Now I’m doing as you asked.”

“If it’s not a special day for me, then I don’t have to come out with you tonight, right?” Being forced to go out unexpectedly had gotten on my nerves, already on edge, so much that I was being even more sarcastic than I wanted.

“Ok then.” He slams the passenger door shut and walks around the truck to open the driver’s door. “It’s all yours, happy anniversary.”

“You’re really going to let me drive your brand new pickup? Wow, that’s some news!”

As I say this, Vuk glances at my Corvette and shakes his head in disapproval.

“Yeah, your car ain’t exactly in the best shape.”

I wrinkle my nose. I don’t like it when my car, my baby, is criticized. It’s my pride and joy. It has never let me down, we’ve shared joy and pain. And it’s got charisma to kill for, despite its years of honorable service.

“Whoa, cool it,” I warn him. “My car is a veteran.” I never lose my cool with Vuk, even if lately he’s been putting me to the test. Vuk, barely able to contain his laughter, smiles.

“I can’t argue with that, kid.”

“That’s more like it.”

“But you want a better ride?” He asks, leaning his arms on the roof of the pickup. “Then get in. But I’d better do the driving.”

I stand still, uncertain, scrutinizing him.

He peels his body off the truck’s bodywork and walks toward me, his face becoming warm, soft. His arms around my waist are a snare I cannot and don’t want to escape.

“Please, little girl, we need to get moving.” His voice is delicate, a fine sandpaper whisper. I sigh and resign myself to getting into the pickup, half regretting not to have insisted. I slide into the passenger seat. His face cracks a smile and he jumps into the cab, his emerald eyes fiery as he prepares to hit the road.

“Right, let’s go!” he says, after making sure I’m comfortable in my seat. “We’ve got some celebrating to do.” His usual smile becomes even more breathtaking.

“Ok,” I consent.

And Vuk backs up the long, narrow drive.

 

 

2 News

 

As he drives, I scan radio stations looking for some decent tunes. But white noise fills the cabin.

“Reception’s not great, is it?”

He glances over at me and shakes his head in disapproval. “This stereo is the latest generation. Turn off the multimedia option if you want to listen to the radio.”

I feel the my face flush as I follow his instructions. I sneak a look at Vuk’s expression as some hard rock fills the cab. I can’t help but smile––nobody could deny that the contrast of his black outfit with those stunning green eyes takes his good looks to a new level, almost surreal. And the fact that he’s wearing such an elegant black suit makes me nervous. But a glance down at my own outfit makes me even more nervous.

“Us wearing these fancy clothes, it makes me edgy. Nothing good can come of it!”

“Oh, yeah?” Vuk replies. “You’re leaving the house for the first time after your time as a zombie, and suddenly you’re the expert?”

“Can I just ask when will you take the time to tell me exactly what we’re doing tonight?”

“How can you not have guessed yet?”

“Is it so obvious that I should be ashamed I don’t remember?” Unless it’s … but I’m too scared to translate my suspicions into thoughts or words.

“You know, I really don’t want to embarrass you, but yes, absolutely!” Vuk stifles a laugh and looks at me. “I love it when you blush.”

I ignore him, shake my head to rid it of certain thoughts, and change the subject.

“I swear, I won’t go anywhere else with you if you insist on choosing what I have to wear, like this ridiculous blue dress with the label still attached that has been stuffed in the back of my closet under all the other clothes I never wear.” It’s more suited to a fashion runway than Medford. But it’s too late to regret not having worn the bottle green dress my mother gave me a couple birthdays ago.

“Did I tell you how lovely you look tonight?”

“Maybe you need glasses!”

“My eyesight is just fine, thanks.”

“Well, you did choose this dress!”

He pretends not to hear me, as a mischievous smile curls his lips.

“Maybe your judgment isn’t exactly objective,” I add.

“I couldn’t disagree more.”

At that point, my phone begins to ring, distracting my gaze from his face. I pull the phone from my coat pocket and, for an instant, scrutinize the “unknown caller” written on the display.

“Hello?”

“Yes, it’s me. Who is this?” I ask.

“No, to be honest, I don’t remember.”

“Ah, you’re Scott’s nephew. Hi.”

“Tyler?” asks Vuk, suspiciously.

I nod and cover the phone with my hand. “What’s up?” I mouth.

He just shakes his head and stifles a laugh.

“No, I’m in the car,” I reply. “What are you doing in town?”

I hear a noisy vehicle passing and the sounds of a crowd in the background. His voice becomes shrill. “I’ve just arrived at the station,” he yells.

Overhearing, Vuk rolls his eyes incredulously, and smiles broadly.

“He’s gotta be kidding! Let me talk to him.”

I frown and the terrible truth begins to dawn on me. I hesitate, pass him the phone, and then look down at the unlikely dress Vuk has forced me into tonight.

“Hey, Tyler. It’s Vuk Wolf.” Friendly enough. Then his tone changes, becomes more menacing.

“Sorry, but Stella is busy right now, for everyone but yours truly. No offense, man.” I know Vuk’s voice well enough to notice the underlying hostility. “Sorry if there’s been some kind of misunderstanding!” And he hits the “end call” button, a laugh of satisfaction escaping his lips. Then he turns to me, radiating sweet innocence.

“What?”

In a moment his eyes melt away my anger. I can’t argue with him when he cheats like this.

“What was all that about?”

“Maybe I should warn you.”

“Please do.”

He sighs, but doesn’t reply. He hits me again with the full intensity of those shining emerald eyes.

I try to read them, and an instant later my relief fades to dust as my intuition points me to the terrible truth. My mind is so hazy that such an obvious and important detail completely slipped my mind, despite Vuk’s clues.

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Free Paranormal Romance! Back to You (Don’t Forget Me – The Saga Book 2) by Sia Wales

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Back to You (Don
5.0 stars – 1 Review
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

The second chapter of the saga finally reveals the secrets and the mysteries that were barely hinted at in Don’t Forget Me, the introductory chapter. Desire mixes with a strong dose of suspense. The storyline, romantic and complex on one side, melts; and on the other thickens.
“I want to be the worst thing that, regardless, you would still find yourself choosing over and over, in spite of all the best you might have in life… This. This is enough, forever.”
Stella has put behind her the beginning of a difficult academic year, full of conflict and contradictory temptations. There is a new arrival in the Whitely house. Jeff, her father, has recently relocated to Medford––this time to stay. What better opportunity to organize a party? But nothing is as it seems; beginning with Tyler Bradford, his childhood friend, whose presence turns out to be much more than a banal coincidence. With Siberian origins, he seems to hide a great secret, one greater than himself. It is the second day from the start of term at the university, and when Stella finds Donn Brooks once again, her life takes a dangerous and unexpected turn. It’s more than she could have imagined, beginning with an encounter in the library basement. What began as an agreement will transform into something much greater than a pure and overwhelming desire.
In reality, Stella has no other options. However, she doesn’t seem to regret her choice. In the end, the decision is only hers. Donn will not force her into anything. She does it to save a life. She does it because life is all she has to offer in exchange for another. For Stella, only one thing is truly important––Jason Rees; but she will discover that being in love with a special vampire is extremely dangerous and requires sacrifices. Why, therefore, does Jason leave Stella once again in the arms of the dark and fascinating vampire who introduced her to the dark side?
Aware of his lack of indifference toward her, will Stella fall once again into the trap of the enigmatic hunter who hides behind the mask of the powerful businessman, Donn Brooks? Will her best friend Vuk be enough to help her forget the irresistible Donn? Forced to choose between love and friendship, Stella knows that her decision risks reigniting the millennial fight between vampires and wolves.
After all, for Stella and Vuk, to live apart is simply inconceivable. Only together will they be able to fight the pain and the guilt, face the truth, and experience the unexpected power of an unbreakable bond.
In the meantime, now that the Council, Donn’s family, is no longer after her, the rebels, the enemies of the Council, are closing in and ready to capture her. For Stella, the moment of truth has is increasingly near.
In a novel where every day is crucial, the time for decisions and renunciation has arrived. Constrained by the events to be hanging in the balance, will she be able to stay balanced on her own two feet?

Check out Book 1 in the “Don’t Forget Me” series: Don’t Forget Me (DFM – The Saga Book 1) by Sia Wales

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Entertaining and Romantic… Great Evening Read:
Free Sample of Reclaiming His Bride (DiCarlo Brides book 3) by Heather Tullis

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Reclaiming His Bride (DiCarlo Brides book 3)
4.6 stars – 73 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Secrets rule Lana’s life. Her father’s death brought some out into the open, but she has a few of her own: 1) she’s been married to Blake for nearly a year—and trying to get a divorce for most of that time. 2) A moment of emotional weakness and too much champagne ended with her in her husband’s arms—and now she’s pregnant.Blake hasn’t thought of another woman since they first met, though she believes otherwise. When Lana’s hotel-magnate father offers him the job of regional manager—and an office in the hotel Lana would be managing, Blake jumps at it. Keeping her attention when it’s split between her sisters, the ins and outs of running a resort, and the ‘ghost’ who’s been haunting the building isn’t easy. Learning about the baby convinces him to redouble his efforts though—he isn’t going to give up without a fight, and when someone comes after Lana, the stakes are raised again.

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

Chapter 1

What am I doing here? Lantana smiled blindly over the table at Jeremy, the cute photographer contracted for events at their resort. His best friend, Vince, sat beside him, with his fiancée—Lana’s sister Cami—snuggled at his side. The air was relaxed, the food good and the conversation friendly, but she couldn’t help kicking herself for agreeing to join them. It was late September, the hotel had only been open three weeks, and she needed some time alone.

“What have we here?” Blake Bahlmann’s voice cut through the noise and it was all Lana could do not to cringe. Now she was in for it.

“Hey, Blake, come join us,” Cami offered, gesturing to a chair.

Lana carefully avoided meeting his gaze, but she could tell from his stance, hands in the pockets of his jeans, that he was unhappy. She told herself he had no right to be—but it wasn’t really true. They were still married. Technically. This hadn’t been intended as a double date—Cami had invited all of the sisters to join them that night, but somehow the other four had begged off or changed their minds as the evening progressed. And one of Vince’s best friends had backed out, leaving a very awkward, totally unintended, pseudo-date situation. The fact that Jeremy seemed no more interested in her than she was in him was irrelevant.

“I’m afraid I can’t right now. I’m the on-call manager at the hotel tonight and only popped in to pick up my order,” Blake explained. “I’d like a quick chat with Lana, though.”

She swallowed and smiled in his direction, though she avoided meeting his gaze. “I’m sure it can wait until morning.”

He grabbed her hand, which had been sitting on the table top. “No, I’m afraid it can’t.”

She looked back at her companions and widened the smile, hoping it didn’t look like a grimace. “We’ll only be a minute. Excuse me.” She rose and allowed him to pull her across the room to a quiet corner near the door.

When he rounded on her, his pale blue eyes were as cold as a Nordic winter. “You’re on a date?”

She wanted to tell him it was none of his business—she even opened her mouth to do so when good sense kicked in. “I know what it looks like, but you’re wrong. It was supposed to be a big group, but somehow it ended up being just the four of us. Nothing’s going on. Unlike some people I know, I consider marriage to be sacred. If you’d sign the divorce papers, I’d be able to move on.” Not that she was interested in getting involved with anyone again after the way he’d broken her heart and trampled on her fragile trust.

The muscle along his jaw ticked. “You know what I want.”

“Not going to happen.” No way was she giving him another chance. She wasn’t stupid enough to put her heart on the line a second time, even if her fingers itched to brush away the lock of hair that fell over his forehead. She could smell his musky cologne mixed with the spicy Italian scent of the pizzeria and again felt the pain of his betrayal.

He crossed his arms over his broad chest, dark brows rising. “Your call. But until it’s official, you’re not dating someone else.”

She wanted to rip out her hair. “It’s not a date. It’s a group of friends—”

“Who happen to form two couples,” he interrupted. “Spare me.”

“Hey, Pot, Kettle’s calling.” He had a lot of nerve to think he had any right to lay into her for a pizza with friends.

His lips thinned and his eyes grew dangerous before his shoulders loosened. “And that wasn’t what you thought it was, either.”

“Right. Sorry, but I got a better visual of your interlude than you think.” When the pain of seeing him with another woman tried to get past her protective walls, she forced all thoughts of that day away.

“I don’t know how you could have, since nothing happened.” He waited a few beats, and his tone softened a little, though the earnestness of his gaze filled his voice. “I would never cheat on you.”

“Funny how I’ve heard that before.” She held up her hands to stop his rebuttal. This was an old argument and she wasn’t having it tonight. “Forget it. Sorry I brought it up. I’ll be more careful next time Cami invites me to go out with them.”

He shook his head. “Not good enough.”

She drilled a finger into his chest. Fury roared through her. “You don’t get to dictate to me.” She was going to make some comment about how he wasn’t her boss, but caught herself in time, since he sort of was—at least at the hotel.

He grabbed her hand and held on tight enough she couldn’t get it out of his grip, but not hard enough to hurt her. “If you go back in there and sit down, I’m telling everyone about us. I don’t know why we didn’t do it ages ago.”

Lana sucked a breath through clenched teeth. “Fine. Let me get my purse and make my excuses.” She yanked on her wrist, but he didn’t release it.

His face softened and his voice dropped several degrees, turning velvety. “I want another chance with you, Lana.”

Several emotions rolled through her: grief and longing topping the list. “I’m not my mom. I’m not going to look the other way.”

He released her wrist and held out both hands. “Look all you want. I have nothing to hide, baby.” His voice was low and had the silky Southern edge that always made her go soft when he used his favorite endearment.

Furious that he was starting to get to her, and that he would call her baby, she whirled around and returned to the table. By the time she got there, she’d managed to get her expression calmed to apologetic even though she was still steaming inside. “I’m sorry. Something’s come up back at the hotel. I’ll have to catch up with you guys another time.” She included all of them in her words, ending with Jeremy. “It was good to meet you again. I hope we get another chance to talk.”

“Same here. I hope you’re able to straighten things out quickly.” His smile was friendly, but not particularly concerned or upset. He was a nice enough guy, but even if there had been no Blake in her past or present, she and Jeremy never would have clicked.

“Thanks.” She flashed him one of her best smiles, then collecting her purse, said goodnight and headed back for the door.

Blake was still standing there—this time with his takeout container—tall, suave and infuriating.

“You didn’t have to wait for me,” she snapped as soon as he’d followed her out the door.

He put a warm hand onto the small of her back. “Verisimilitude, baby.”

“Don’t call me baby.” Deciding he had a point, though, about making it look like a real work emergency, when she got onto the road, she headed for the hotel to check things out.

A quick walk through the public areas of the hotel proved all was well with the wedding clean up, the restaurant, bar and spa. She veered back through the entry and then went up to her office. There was always a pile of work to do, so she’d take an hour or so to clear some of it out before returning home for the night.

G

Blake sat in front of the television in his suite, letting the news fill the silence as he tried to focus on forecasts for the Portland resort. Instead he kept seeing Lana sitting at the table with her sister, Vince and Jeremy. Why had he reacted like that? Did he really think she would start chasing someone else? Jeremy knew Blake and Lana had something going on—though no one knew the particulars. Except Alex, but as Lana’s father’s executor, he seemed to know more about everyone than any of them would have liked.

Like the fact that Blake was married to Lana. He wished he hadn’t let her convince him to keep their elopement to themselves. It was only supposed to be for a few days—a week at the most—but after their breakup neither had mentioned it to their families. He didn’t think even Cami knew about them.

Which brought him right back to Lana again, and their defunct relationship. Did he really think she would listen to him if he acted like some Neanderthal?

He pushed away the laptop and stood, crossing the room for a drink of water. As the cool liquid slid down his throat, his cell phone rang. The light tempo announced it was his mother. Blake sighed, then swallowed the last of the water as he fished the phone from his pocket.

“Good evening, Mother. How are you tonight?”

“We’re going to a party at Luther’s—it’s going to be terrific. All the best people will be there. What are you doing dear?” She frequently reminded him of the social opportunities he was “giving up” by working in the Colorado Rockies.

He looked around his sterile suite and wished he had something planned. Something that would satisfy her and get her off his back. “Nothing much, just taking care of some work issues and enjoying dinner.” He glanced at the barely touched pizza that sat across the room. He doubted anyone would reference his lack of interest in food since his argument with his wife as enjoying it.

“Eating alone again, darling? Really, you need to get out more. That little town is hardly conducive to your meeting the right kind of woman. Did I mention Charity says hello?”

The sound of his father’s voice rang in the background, telling his wife they were nearly there and to get off the phone.

“Well, I ought to go, Blake. We’ll arrange to visit soon, okay? Maybe you can show me what’s supposed to be so great about the place.”

He could imagine the pinched look her face had taken on with that comment—it was the way she always looked when she disapproved of Blake’s decisions. And since she disapproved often, he’d seen it a lot.

He slipped into placation mode. “If nothing else, I’m sure you’ll love the spa. It’s first rate.” He spoke with forced enthusiasm. He didn’t know if he could handle his parents at the hotel right now, not with everything else that was going on.

“You should get a treatment as well. You know it’ll make you feel more relaxed. Then maybe you can attract the kind of woman a man from our family deserves. Bye, bye, sweetheart.” She hung up without giving him a chance to reciprocate.

Blake tossed the phone onto a nearby overstuffed chair and fished a soda out of the fridge. He desperately wanted a shot of whiskey—or three—but being on call meant he shouldn’t indulge. If he drank one, he might not stop there. And if there was one thing he was raised to be, it was a professional.

His eyes drifted to the wall safe and he thought of what was in it, then forced himself to look away—it would only remind him of what he’d lost. He thought of the hurt and anger in Lana’s eyes after he pulled her away from dinner, and felt that familiar tug of guilt. Damn it, he’d overreacted.

He took another fortifying swig of his soda and set it on the counter before heading for her office. She might not be there anymore, but if she was, he better apologize.

 

Chapter 2

The back corridors of the hotel were quiet, and Lana decided this had been a good idea, coming to work for a while. During the day there were so many people running around, phones ringing, faxes coming through, that she had trouble staying on task. As she tapped away at her computer, she admitted to herself that knowing Blake was in the next room during the day and could pop up at any moment wasn’t helpful either. She did better when he was on the road.

She was getting into the swing of things when someone came to her office door and stood in the opening. Blake, she realized even before she lifted her head to look his way. She’d always been unnaturally aware of his presence in a room.

He watched her, and they sat in silence for a long moment. Her throat ached as she thought about what they’d once shared. Their romance had been a whirlwind: quick, sweet and exciting. Forbidden—or at least they’d chosen to treat it as forbidden, as there were definitely strange angles and twisted relationships to consider—he had been her boss at the Chicago hotel, and she was the owner’s daughter. Not entirely unlike the current situation since her dad had died the previous spring and left the hotel to her and her sisters.

She and Blake had married quietly on a whim within a month of their first date, and eleven days later it had been over. She tore her eyes away, staring back at the monitor. “Is there something I can do for you?”

“I’ve spent the past hour trying to convince myself that I was justified in the way I acted tonight. I haven’t been able to do it.” Blake shut the door behind him and walked over to the desk. “It was knee-jerk—I want to be the one eating dinner with you, hearing bits about your day. I know you’d never date someone else while you were still married to me.”

Hot tears stung her eyes as she stared at the screen. Her sight swam and she had to fight to keep the tears from falling. “And now you’re working the guilt angle.”

“I’m not working an angle, Lana. It’s called an apology.”

She looked up, met his blue eyes and saw sincerity. “Fine. Apology accepted.” A tear fell and he reached across the desk, wiping it away with his thumb. The tenderness nearly undid her. She pulled back. “I’m going to finish this up, then head home. When I come back tomorrow, I’ll pretend none of this happened and that we can get back to our usual professional relationship.”

“I wish you’d reconsider. I thought the other night proved there’s still something between us.” His voice was low and a little sultry, winding through her system.

She couldn’t meet his gaze, but her eyes strayed to his firm, expressive lips over the sexy cleft in his chin. “It was a mistake. I shouldn’t have let it happen.” The memories of their night together after the hotel’s opening gala still hit her at random moments, taking her by surprise. When she closed her eyes, she still tasted his kisses, the rush of rightness she’d always felt in his arms. It made keeping her distance harder than ever. She returned her gaze to the screen and began typing with the hope that he would take the hint.

A moment later he left, the door standing open behind him. Though she stayed another hour, she couldn’t concentrate on work anymore.

G

When Lana came into the house her father had bought for his daughters, she found Delphi sitting at the kitchen island, her laptop open and a stack of papers beside it. Delphi—short for Delphinium—was the fifth in line of the six daughters, and only six months Lana’s junior—the result of one of his many affairs.

“That was a late dinner,” Delphi commented, peering over the glasses she only wore for reading. Her short-cropped blond hair created a halo against the light behind her.

“I went back to the hotel to do some paperwork. It looks like you brought yours home.” Lana hung up her purse and jacket, then moved into the kitchen.

“Kay Jones wants these numbers by tomorrow, but I have that crazy wedding this week and it’s taking up most of my time.” Delphi rubbed her neck. “Can’t wait until it’s over. Jill is the bride from Hades.”

Lana smiled despite herself. Even though Jill was being a serious pain, she would leave the hotel never knowing that Delphi disliked her, or realizing all of the little tweaks the staff was doing in the background to make her wedding go smoothly. “It’s a good thing you’re so amazing at your job then.”

“Right.” Delphi folded up the glasses and set them on the stack of papers, then shut down the computer. “My brain is fried. Was the pizza any good?”

“Yeah, it was great. It ended up just being the happy couple, me and Jeremy, though. Everyone else bailed. You should have come.” Maybe then Blake would have let her finish dinner.

Delphi shook her head. “Too much going on. If Jeremy was there, all the more reason for me to stay away.”

It was too bad Jeremy had started things off on the wrong foot with Delphi—they actually had quite a lot in common. Lana poked into the cupboards, but wasn’t hungry, so she finally grabbed a bottled water out of the fridge instead and headed for the stairs. “I guess I might as well get some sleep. I have a few more things to take care of before our morning meeting.”

“You’re such a work-a-holic,” Delphi said as she cleared away her things.

“And a work-a-holic like yourself would know.” She shared a grin with her half-sister before heading up the open stairway to her room.

The house had really begun to feel like home since all of George DiCarlo’s daughters—two by his wife, and four others by four other women—had come to live there a few months earlier. Becoming the youngest general manager in history for the DiCarlo hotel chain had been Lana’s goal since she was still in elementary school, and she had worked toward it with single-minded determination since she was a teenager. Getting the shocking news after her father’s death that she had four half-sisters in addition to the one she’d grown up with, had put all of their worlds in a tailspin. She still wasn’t sure how she felt about the new siblings.

Figuring out her feelings about the revelation and her father were far easier. Lana still thought her father could have found a nicer way to break the news to his daughters than leaving it for the reading of his will. And she couldn’t get over her fury with the way he’d played fast and loose with his marriage to her mom.

Lana walked past Cami’s door—she was probably staying over at Vince’s tonight—and smiled when she heard the recording of rain sticks that Sage loved so much as she passed that room as well. Finally, she arrived at her own room, all done up in shades of blue with a huge picture of the ocean hanging on one wall.

Her father had picked it out for her, chosen the color schemes and linens, selected furniture, decorations and the music that each of his daughters loved when he set up their rooms in Colorado. She supposed it was intended as an apology for everything he thrust upon them. Very few of the sisters had been happy when he virtually forced them to open up the newest hotel in the DiCarlo chain, and to cohabit ‘unless they were living with their husbands’ a phrase that had been placed there specifically for her, though the others didn’t know it.

She was the only one with a husband—at least at the moment, though Cami’s wedding date had been set and things between Joel and Sage were getting interesting.

After lining up her shoes in the bottom of the closet beside the others, she changed from her day clothes to a pair of pajamas and settled into bed.

Tonight, after her run in with Blake, she wished she could speak to her dad and ask him what he was thinking. Instead, she pulled out the first letter he left for her.

 

Dear Lantana,

I know this must all be a major shock for you, though unlike Cami, you at least knew about my less-admirable tendencies. I know you’ll be an amazing general manager, and that you’re ready for it. You’ve been walking in my footsteps for all of your life in so many ways. You should be proud of your accomplishments—I certainly am.

None of your half-sisters knew about the others. You’re all going to have a lot of adjusting to do as you get to know one another, but I know that if you can pull together, the six of you will accomplish something amazing. Sage will accept things, because fate is a real, living, breathing entity for her, but the rest of them are going to struggle with this news as much as you will, maybe more. They’re going to need a sure hand to guide them and bind them as a group. That’s you—just so you know. You’re the key to making everything work.

But hey, no pressure.

If you’re reading this, you’ve already heard the terms of the will, which means you know that I’m aware of your marriage to Blake. He’s a good man, sweetheart, devoted to you. I’m not telling you how to live, but don’t let your anger toward me stop you from finding happiness and a home of your own.

Never doubt that I loved your mother, whatever else happened in my life. It wasn’t the kind of all-consuming love you read about in novels, but it was sweet and comfortable. It worked for us, but it wouldn’t work for you—if Blake gives you the fire and warmth that you crave, don’t let him get away. And if you find upon reflection that what you have really is only warm and comfortable, have the strength to let him go. If he’ll let you.

I love you with everything I have.

Dad

 

It wasn’t long enough to say everything she wished to know—didn’t explain how he could love her mother so much, but constantly step out on her with other women. It didn’t explain how he could juggle his job, wife and six daughters sprinkled across the continent, and still find time for more affairs—but she knew from experience that he managed it.

Had her mother always known about the other women and looked the other way? Remembering the grateful way she’d treated George as he doted on her in the months before her death, Lana couldn’t believe her mother hadn’t known.

He was such a hateful jerk, and though she longed to rip up the letter and throw it away, to give his headstone a good, hard kick, and to damn him for not deserving her erstwhile hero worship, she folded the note and put it away instead.

She missed him every day.

She flipped off the light and slid down under the covers. Throwing a tantrum wouldn’t solve anything. And tomorrow was sure to be a long day.

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Romance readers alert! Free excerpt from Kindle Nation Daily Romance of The Week: Reclaiming His Bride (DiCarlo Brides book 3) by Heather Tullis

 Last week we announced that Heather Tullis’s Reclaiming His Bride 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 Reclaiming His Bride, you’re in for a real treat:

Reclaiming His Bride (DiCarlo Brides book 3)
4.6 stars – 73 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Secrets rule Lana’s life. Her father’s death brought some out into the open, but she has a few of her own: 1) she’s been married to Blake for nearly a year—and trying to get a divorce for most of that time. 2) A moment of emotional weakness and too much champagne ended with her in her husband’s arms—and now she’s pregnant.Blake hasn’t thought of another woman since they first met, though she believes otherwise. When Lana’s hotel-magnate father offers him the job of regional manager—and an office in the hotel Lana would be managing, Blake jumps at it. Keeping her attention when it’s split between her sisters, the ins and outs of running a resort, and the ‘ghost’ who’s been haunting the building isn’t easy. Learning about the baby convinces him to redouble his efforts though—he isn’t going to give up without a fight, and when someone comes after Lana, the stakes are raised again.

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

Chapter 1

What am I doing here? Lantana smiled blindly over the table at Jeremy, the cute photographer contracted for events at their resort. His best friend, Vince, sat beside him, with his fiancée—Lana’s sister Cami—snuggled at his side. The air was relaxed, the food good and the conversation friendly, but she couldn’t help kicking herself for agreeing to join them. It was late September, the hotel had only been open three weeks, and she needed some time alone.

“What have we here?” Blake Bahlmann’s voice cut through the noise and it was all Lana could do not to cringe. Now she was in for it.

“Hey, Blake, come join us,” Cami offered, gesturing to a chair.

Lana carefully avoided meeting his gaze, but she could tell from his stance, hands in the pockets of his jeans, that he was unhappy. She told herself he had no right to be—but it wasn’t really true. They were still married. Technically. This hadn’t been intended as a double date—Cami had invited all of the sisters to join them that night, but somehow the other four had begged off or changed their minds as the evening progressed. And one of Vince’s best friends had backed out, leaving a very awkward, totally unintended, pseudo-date situation. The fact that Jeremy seemed no more interested in her than she was in him was irrelevant.

“I’m afraid I can’t right now. I’m the on-call manager at the hotel tonight and only popped in to pick up my order,” Blake explained. “I’d like a quick chat with Lana, though.”

She swallowed and smiled in his direction, though she avoided meeting his gaze. “I’m sure it can wait until morning.”

He grabbed her hand, which had been sitting on the table top. “No, I’m afraid it can’t.”

She looked back at her companions and widened the smile, hoping it didn’t look like a grimace. “We’ll only be a minute. Excuse me.” She rose and allowed him to pull her across the room to a quiet corner near the door.

When he rounded on her, his pale blue eyes were as cold as a Nordic winter. “You’re on a date?”

She wanted to tell him it was none of his business—she even opened her mouth to do so when good sense kicked in. “I know what it looks like, but you’re wrong. It was supposed to be a big group, but somehow it ended up being just the four of us. Nothing’s going on. Unlike some people I know, I consider marriage to be sacred. If you’d sign the divorce papers, I’d be able to move on.” Not that she was interested in getting involved with anyone again after the way he’d broken her heart and trampled on her fragile trust.

The muscle along his jaw ticked. “You know what I want.”

“Not going to happen.” No way was she giving him another chance. She wasn’t stupid enough to put her heart on the line a second time, even if her fingers itched to brush away the lock of hair that fell over his forehead. She could smell his musky cologne mixed with the spicy Italian scent of the pizzeria and again felt the pain of his betrayal.

He crossed his arms over his broad chest, dark brows rising. “Your call. But until it’s official, you’re not dating someone else.”

She wanted to rip out her hair. “It’s not a date. It’s a group of friends—”

“Who happen to form two couples,” he interrupted. “Spare me.”

“Hey, Pot, Kettle’s calling.” He had a lot of nerve to think he had any right to lay into her for a pizza with friends.

His lips thinned and his eyes grew dangerous before his shoulders loosened. “And that wasn’t what you thought it was, either.”

“Right. Sorry, but I got a better visual of your interlude than you think.” When the pain of seeing him with another woman tried to get past her protective walls, she forced all thoughts of that day away.

“I don’t know how you could have, since nothing happened.” He waited a few beats, and his tone softened a little, though the earnestness of his gaze filled his voice. “I would never cheat on you.”

“Funny how I’ve heard that before.” She held up her hands to stop his rebuttal. This was an old argument and she wasn’t having it tonight. “Forget it. Sorry I brought it up. I’ll be more careful next time Cami invites me to go out with them.”

He shook his head. “Not good enough.”

She drilled a finger into his chest. Fury roared through her. “You don’t get to dictate to me.” She was going to make some comment about how he wasn’t her boss, but caught herself in time, since he sort of was—at least at the hotel.

He grabbed her hand and held on tight enough she couldn’t get it out of his grip, but not hard enough to hurt her. “If you go back in there and sit down, I’m telling everyone about us. I don’t know why we didn’t do it ages ago.”

Lana sucked a breath through clenched teeth. “Fine. Let me get my purse and make my excuses.” She yanked on her wrist, but he didn’t release it.

His face softened and his voice dropped several degrees, turning velvety. “I want another chance with you, Lana.”

Several emotions rolled through her: grief and longing topping the list. “I’m not my mom. I’m not going to look the other way.”

He released her wrist and held out both hands. “Look all you want. I have nothing to hide, baby.” His voice was low and had the silky Southern edge that always made her go soft when he used his favorite endearment.

Furious that he was starting to get to her, and that he would call her baby, she whirled around and returned to the table. By the time she got there, she’d managed to get her expression calmed to apologetic even though she was still steaming inside. “I’m sorry. Something’s come up back at the hotel. I’ll have to catch up with you guys another time.” She included all of them in her words, ending with Jeremy. “It was good to meet you again. I hope we get another chance to talk.”

“Same here. I hope you’re able to straighten things out quickly.” His smile was friendly, but not particularly concerned or upset. He was a nice enough guy, but even if there had been no Blake in her past or present, she and Jeremy never would have clicked.

“Thanks.” She flashed him one of her best smiles, then collecting her purse, said goodnight and headed back for the door.

Blake was still standing there—this time with his takeout container—tall, suave and infuriating.

“You didn’t have to wait for me,” she snapped as soon as he’d followed her out the door.

He put a warm hand onto the small of her back. “Verisimilitude, baby.”

“Don’t call me baby.” Deciding he had a point, though, about making it look like a real work emergency, when she got onto the road, she headed for the hotel to check things out.

A quick walk through the public areas of the hotel proved all was well with the wedding clean up, the restaurant, bar and spa. She veered back through the entry and then went up to her office. There was always a pile of work to do, so she’d take an hour or so to clear some of it out before returning home for the night.

G

Blake sat in front of the television in his suite, letting the news fill the silence as he tried to focus on forecasts for the Portland resort. Instead he kept seeing Lana sitting at the table with her sister, Vince and Jeremy. Why had he reacted like that? Did he really think she would start chasing someone else? Jeremy knew Blake and Lana had something going on—though no one knew the particulars. Except Alex, but as Lana’s father’s executor, he seemed to know more about everyone than any of them would have liked.

Like the fact that Blake was married to Lana. He wished he hadn’t let her convince him to keep their elopement to themselves. It was only supposed to be for a few days—a week at the most—but after their breakup neither had mentioned it to their families. He didn’t think even Cami knew about them.

Which brought him right back to Lana again, and their defunct relationship. Did he really think she would listen to him if he acted like some Neanderthal?

He pushed away the laptop and stood, crossing the room for a drink of water. As the cool liquid slid down his throat, his cell phone rang. The light tempo announced it was his mother. Blake sighed, then swallowed the last of the water as he fished the phone from his pocket.

“Good evening, Mother. How are you tonight?”

“We’re going to a party at Luther’s—it’s going to be terrific. All the best people will be there. What are you doing dear?” She frequently reminded him of the social opportunities he was “giving up” by working in the Colorado Rockies.

He looked around his sterile suite and wished he had something planned. Something that would satisfy her and get her off his back. “Nothing much, just taking care of some work issues and enjoying dinner.” He glanced at the barely touched pizza that sat across the room. He doubted anyone would reference his lack of interest in food since his argument with his wife as enjoying it.

“Eating alone again, darling? Really, you need to get out more. That little town is hardly conducive to your meeting the right kind of woman. Did I mention Charity says hello?”

The sound of his father’s voice rang in the background, telling his wife they were nearly there and to get off the phone.

“Well, I ought to go, Blake. We’ll arrange to visit soon, okay? Maybe you can show me what’s supposed to be so great about the place.”

He could imagine the pinched look her face had taken on with that comment—it was the way she always looked when she disapproved of Blake’s decisions. And since she disapproved often, he’d seen it a lot.

He slipped into placation mode. “If nothing else, I’m sure you’ll love the spa. It’s first rate.” He spoke with forced enthusiasm. He didn’t know if he could handle his parents at the hotel right now, not with everything else that was going on.

“You should get a treatment as well. You know it’ll make you feel more relaxed. Then maybe you can attract the kind of woman a man from our family deserves. Bye, bye, sweetheart.” She hung up without giving him a chance to reciprocate.

Blake tossed the phone onto a nearby overstuffed chair and fished a soda out of the fridge. He desperately wanted a shot of whiskey—or three—but being on call meant he shouldn’t indulge. If he drank one, he might not stop there. And if there was one thing he was raised to be, it was a professional.

His eyes drifted to the wall safe and he thought of what was in it, then forced himself to look away—it would only remind him of what he’d lost. He thought of the hurt and anger in Lana’s eyes after he pulled her away from dinner, and felt that familiar tug of guilt. Damn it, he’d overreacted.

He took another fortifying swig of his soda and set it on the counter before heading for her office. She might not be there anymore, but if she was, he better apologize.

 

Chapter 2

The back corridors of the hotel were quiet, and Lana decided this had been a good idea, coming to work for a while. During the day there were so many people running around, phones ringing, faxes coming through, that she had trouble staying on task. As she tapped away at her computer, she admitted to herself that knowing Blake was in the next room during the day and could pop up at any moment wasn’t helpful either. She did better when he was on the road.

She was getting into the swing of things when someone came to her office door and stood in the opening. Blake, she realized even before she lifted her head to look his way. She’d always been unnaturally aware of his presence in a room.

He watched her, and they sat in silence for a long moment. Her throat ached as she thought about what they’d once shared. Their romance had been a whirlwind: quick, sweet and exciting. Forbidden—or at least they’d chosen to treat it as forbidden, as there were definitely strange angles and twisted relationships to consider—he had been her boss at the Chicago hotel, and she was the owner’s daughter. Not entirely unlike the current situation since her dad had died the previous spring and left the hotel to her and her sisters.

She and Blake had married quietly on a whim within a month of their first date, and eleven days later it had been over. She tore her eyes away, staring back at the monitor. “Is there something I can do for you?”

“I’ve spent the past hour trying to convince myself that I was justified in the way I acted tonight. I haven’t been able to do it.” Blake shut the door behind him and walked over to the desk. “It was knee-jerk—I want to be the one eating dinner with you, hearing bits about your day. I know you’d never date someone else while you were still married to me.”

Hot tears stung her eyes as she stared at the screen. Her sight swam and she had to fight to keep the tears from falling. “And now you’re working the guilt angle.”

“I’m not working an angle, Lana. It’s called an apology.”

She looked up, met his blue eyes and saw sincerity. “Fine. Apology accepted.” A tear fell and he reached across the desk, wiping it away with his thumb. The tenderness nearly undid her. She pulled back. “I’m going to finish this up, then head home. When I come back tomorrow, I’ll pretend none of this happened and that we can get back to our usual professional relationship.”

“I wish you’d reconsider. I thought the other night proved there’s still something between us.” His voice was low and a little sultry, winding through her system.

She couldn’t meet his gaze, but her eyes strayed to his firm, expressive lips over the sexy cleft in his chin. “It was a mistake. I shouldn’t have let it happen.” The memories of their night together after the hotel’s opening gala still hit her at random moments, taking her by surprise. When she closed her eyes, she still tasted his kisses, the rush of rightness she’d always felt in his arms. It made keeping her distance harder than ever. She returned her gaze to the screen and began typing with the hope that he would take the hint.

A moment later he left, the door standing open behind him. Though she stayed another hour, she couldn’t concentrate on work anymore.

G

When Lana came into the house her father had bought for his daughters, she found Delphi sitting at the kitchen island, her laptop open and a stack of papers beside it. Delphi—short for Delphinium—was the fifth in line of the six daughters, and only six months Lana’s junior—the result of one of his many affairs.

“That was a late dinner,” Delphi commented, peering over the glasses she only wore for reading. Her short-cropped blond hair created a halo against the light behind her.

“I went back to the hotel to do some paperwork. It looks like you brought yours home.” Lana hung up her purse and jacket, then moved into the kitchen.

“Kay Jones wants these numbers by tomorrow, but I have that crazy wedding this week and it’s taking up most of my time.” Delphi rubbed her neck. “Can’t wait until it’s over. Jill is the bride from Hades.”

Lana smiled despite herself. Even though Jill was being a serious pain, she would leave the hotel never knowing that Delphi disliked her, or realizing all of the little tweaks the staff was doing in the background to make her wedding go smoothly. “It’s a good thing you’re so amazing at your job then.”

“Right.” Delphi folded up the glasses and set them on the stack of papers, then shut down the computer. “My brain is fried. Was the pizza any good?”

“Yeah, it was great. It ended up just being the happy couple, me and Jeremy, though. Everyone else bailed. You should have come.” Maybe then Blake would have let her finish dinner.

Delphi shook her head. “Too much going on. If Jeremy was there, all the more reason for me to stay away.”

It was too bad Jeremy had started things off on the wrong foot with Delphi—they actually had quite a lot in common. Lana poked into the cupboards, but wasn’t hungry, so she finally grabbed a bottled water out of the fridge instead and headed for the stairs. “I guess I might as well get some sleep. I have a few more things to take care of before our morning meeting.”

“You’re such a work-a-holic,” Delphi said as she cleared away her things.

“And a work-a-holic like yourself would know.” She shared a grin with her half-sister before heading up the open stairway to her room.

The house had really begun to feel like home since all of George DiCarlo’s daughters—two by his wife, and four others by four other women—had come to live there a few months earlier. Becoming the youngest general manager in history for the DiCarlo hotel chain had been Lana’s goal since she was still in elementary school, and she had worked toward it with single-minded determination since she was a teenager. Getting the shocking news after her father’s death that she had four half-sisters in addition to the one she’d grown up with, had put all of their worlds in a tailspin. She still wasn’t sure how she felt about the new siblings.

Figuring out her feelings about the revelation and her father were far easier. Lana still thought her father could have found a nicer way to break the news to his daughters than leaving it for the reading of his will. And she couldn’t get over her fury with the way he’d played fast and loose with his marriage to her mom.

Lana walked past Cami’s door—she was probably staying over at Vince’s tonight—and smiled when she heard the recording of rain sticks that Sage loved so much as she passed that room as well. Finally, she arrived at her own room, all done up in shades of blue with a huge picture of the ocean hanging on one wall.

Her father had picked it out for her, chosen the color schemes and linens, selected furniture, decorations and the music that each of his daughters loved when he set up their rooms in Colorado. She supposed it was intended as an apology for everything he thrust upon them. Very few of the sisters had been happy when he virtually forced them to open up the newest hotel in the DiCarlo chain, and to cohabit ‘unless they were living with their husbands’ a phrase that had been placed there specifically for her, though the others didn’t know it.

She was the only one with a husband—at least at the moment, though Cami’s wedding date had been set and things between Joel and Sage were getting interesting.

After lining up her shoes in the bottom of the closet beside the others, she changed from her day clothes to a pair of pajamas and settled into bed.

Tonight, after her run in with Blake, she wished she could speak to her dad and ask him what he was thinking. Instead, she pulled out the first letter he left for her.

 

Dear Lantana,

I know this must all be a major shock for you, though unlike Cami, you at least knew about my less-admirable tendencies. I know you’ll be an amazing general manager, and that you’re ready for it. You’ve been walking in my footsteps for all of your life in so many ways. You should be proud of your accomplishments—I certainly am.

None of your half-sisters knew about the others. You’re all going to have a lot of adjusting to do as you get to know one another, but I know that if you can pull together, the six of you will accomplish something amazing. Sage will accept things, because fate is a real, living, breathing entity for her, but the rest of them are going to struggle with this news as much as you will, maybe more. They’re going to need a sure hand to guide them and bind them as a group. That’s you—just so you know. You’re the key to making everything work.

But hey, no pressure.

If you’re reading this, you’ve already heard the terms of the will, which means you know that I’m aware of your marriage to Blake. He’s a good man, sweetheart, devoted to you. I’m not telling you how to live, but don’t let your anger toward me stop you from finding happiness and a home of your own.

Never doubt that I loved your mother, whatever else happened in my life. It wasn’t the kind of all-consuming love you read about in novels, but it was sweet and comfortable. It worked for us, but it wouldn’t work for you—if Blake gives you the fire and warmth that you crave, don’t let him get away. And if you find upon reflection that what you have really is only warm and comfortable, have the strength to let him go. If he’ll let you.

I love you with everything I have.

Dad

 

It wasn’t long enough to say everything she wished to know—didn’t explain how he could love her mother so much, but constantly step out on her with other women. It didn’t explain how he could juggle his job, wife and six daughters sprinkled across the continent, and still find time for more affairs—but she knew from experience that he managed it.

Had her mother always known about the other women and looked the other way? Remembering the grateful way she’d treated George as he doted on her in the months before her death, Lana couldn’t believe her mother hadn’t known.

He was such a hateful jerk, and though she longed to rip up the letter and throw it away, to give his headstone a good, hard kick, and to damn him for not deserving her erstwhile hero worship, she folded the note and put it away instead.

She missed him every day.

She flipped off the light and slid down under the covers. Throwing a tantrum wouldn’t solve anything. And tomorrow was sure to be a long day.

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Reclaiming His Bride (DiCarlo Brides book 3)
4.6 stars – 72 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Secrets rule Lana’s life. Her father’s death brought some out into the open, but she has a few of her own: 1) she’s been married to Blake for nearly a year—and trying to get a divorce for most of that time. 2) A moment of emotional weakness and too much champagne ended with her in her husband’s arms—and now she’s pregnant.

Blake hasn’t thought of another woman since they first met, though she believes otherwise. When Lana’s hotel-magnate father offers him the job of regional manager—and an office in the hotel Lana would be managing, Blake jumps at it. Keeping her attention when it’s split between her sisters, the ins and outs of running a resort, and the ‘ghost’ who’s been haunting the building isn’t easy. Learning about the baby convinces him to redouble his efforts though—he isn’t going to give up without a fight, and when someone comes after Lana, the stakes are raised again.

5 star Amazon reviews

“This book draws you in and is impossible to put down! Fantastic just like the previous books and as I’m sure the next ones will be!”

“The author has written an intriguing and entertaining account of the third sister’s interaction with the other characters we met in the first book. These women and men keep the reader wanting more!”

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