Fearless, Fast-paced Fiction: Suz deMello/Sue Swift











The perfect antidote to the bygone seriousness of the elections. This charming, funny story is available in both print and digital formats.

Waitlisted by Laurel Gans

Here’s what it’s about:

Kacey Barlow had no idea it would be this hard to get into grad school. Her well-to-do family has been attending UI for generations, and admissions had been recruiting her since high school! She was a shoo-in-that is, until they gave her the boot.

She can’t tell her parents, and can’t stand the thought of her friends going off to grad school without her. Her grades are slipping. Her professors can’t remember her name, and her tutor, Taylor, won’t stop hitting on her when they’re supposed to be studying.

Okay, maybe that last one isn’t so bad. But it’s not going to help get her a seat in another school…and applications are due in two weeks…

Excerpt:

Dear Professor Harper,

Unfortunately, I will not be able to make it to microbiology lab today. My roommate was cooking (well, attempting to cook) when she set off the smoke detector. Now, our entire apartment smells of burnt grilled cheese and Febreze. We are attempting to get the smoke smell out of the carpet now so that we do not lose our deposit at the end of our lease. Thank you for your understanding.

Sincerely,

Kacey Barlow

With a little imagination and a click of the send button I have my afternoon free. I sit up on my bed with my legs crossed, the heat of my little computer warming my lap. I can’t help but wonder if the e-mail I sent needed a little more detail to be convincing. Or, perhaps, it had too much detail for a simple get-out-of-lab-free pass. Either way, it is already in the in-box of my professor across campus and I am, most importantly, a senior who is already accepted into grad school. It’s going to be a good day!

I leave my laptop on the bed and stand up to stretch my arms and legs. I haven’t left my bed yet all morning. I couldn’t help it. You try getting out of bed when there is a marathon of The Nanny on. I grab my remote and give my television a break. It’s nearly noon, but I’m still in my plaid pajama pants and faded high school T-shirt.

I leave my room and go directly into the den. It’s not a huge apartment by any means, but for my roommate and me, it’s perfect. On the coffee table are breakfast dishes from yesterday and an unfinished game of Scrabble from the night before. Off the den is a small but functional kitchen. The table is buried under piles of science books covering everything from genetics to organic chemistry. I wish I could say the apartment isn’t usually like this but I can’t. I only lie to professors.

The laminate floor in the kitchen is starting to peel from years of use, and it’s pretty clear the electrical work is not nearly up to code, but I love the place just the same. It’s mine. Well, financially it’s my parents’, but they’re an hour away.

The apartment has an almost eerie silence to it. Not even our neighbor, Noisy Nick, is living up to his well-earned title. Contrary to my little note, I have the place all to myself. My roommate, Natalie, has physics lecture, and that girl does not miss a class. OK, one time she missed a biology lecture, but it was my fault. I had told her it was canceled. I was in the class too, and I had already e-mailed the professor telling him that our apartment had a roach problem, and we needed to wait for the exterminator.

I pop some frozen waffles into the toaster and sit at the kitchen table to wait for the “ding.” Deep within the pile of papers and textbooks I can hear a low, steady hum. It pauses for a few seconds, then returns. My cell phone. I put it on vibrate last night while Natalie and I were watching a Lifetime movie about a woman having an affair with her brother-in-law who was a kleptomaniac with a drinking problem.

It was really good.

My hands crawl through the mess in search of my tiny link to the outside world. I finally

Author Laurel Gans

find it and pull it out of the turmoil. I look down at the screen. I don’t recognize the number but I know it is the campus prefix.

“Hello?”

“Hi. Is this Kacey?” a man’s voice answers back.

“Yes.”

My heart begins to pound. Please don’t let this be Professor Harper. I swear I’ll come to lab next week.

“This is Mark Boyd. Your academic advisor.”

My body relaxes. Screw next week’s lab! “Oh, hi! How are you?”

“Good, um, I need to speak with you about your academic record. Are you free this afternoon to come in?”

I sigh. There goes my afternoon off. “Sure. I can come in.”

“Great. I’ll see you in my office around two?”

“Yeah. That’s fine.”

So much for my free time. I put my phone down and turn to face the odd smell coming from behind me. Tiny waves of smoke grow from my toaster. I jump up and unplug the old machine from the wall. I drop my inedible breakfast into the garbage.

Those were my last two waffles!

The apartment begins to faintly smell of the undesirable odor of smoke. I reach into the pantry and pull out my greatest weapon, a bottle of Febreze. I can’t help but wonder if lies count as lies if they come true minutes later.

Links:

http://www.amazon.com/Waitlisted-Laurel-Gans/dp/1939194148/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1352211865&sr=8-1&keywords=waitlisted

http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/waitlisted-laurel-gans/1106367627?ean=9781939194145&itm=1&usri=waitlisted

‘Like’ me on Facebook! http://www.facebook.com/WaitlistedtheNovel

Follow me on Twitter! https://twitter.com/LaurelGans

Author Bio:

Laurel Gans is a graduate of Bowling Green State University where she studied Spanish. She is currently a dental student at Ohio State University with her twin sister, Stephanie. She enjoys writing, water sports and spending time with her family and friends.

Your blog hostess:

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Best-selling, award-winning author Sue Swift, a.k.a Suz deMello, has written over fifteen novels, plus several short stories and non-fiction articles. She writes in numerous genres including romance, mystery, paranormal, historical, contemporary comedy and erotica. She’s a freelance editor who’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Ai Press, Liquid Silver Books and Etopia Press. She also takes on private clients.

Her books have been favorably reviewed in PW, Kirkus and Booklist, attained the finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists.

A former trial attorney, she resides in northern California. Her passion is world travel, and she’s left the US over a dozen times, including stints working overseas for many months. Right now, she’s working on her next manuscript and planning her next trip.

Find her reading picks @ReadThis4fun on Twitter, and befriend her on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/SueSwift ). Her sites are at http://www.sue-swift.com and http://www.suzdemello.com.



{June 23, 2012}   Snog by the Sea from Spy Game

The amazing Victoria Blisse has arranged a Blisse Kiss by the Sea  Summer Snog tour for us, so I’m calling this post the Snog by the Sea, presented especially in honour of the summer solstice.

Snog by the Sea 2012

This kiss is from Spy Game, forthcoming in digital format from Etopia Press. I don’t have the new cover yet, so you’ll have to make do with the cover from the hardcover version which was published by Five Star a few years ago.

In Spy Game, fledgling agent Ani Sharif has finally been assigned to her first undercover mission—to seduce software tycoon Richard Rexford, known as the fearsome T-Rex of Silicon Valley. He’s suspected of selling software secrets to the Chinese. Ani must succeed at her first assignment, but will handsome, clever Richard uncover her secrets and seize her heart?

And here’s your sexy seaside snog:

“Time for act two,” Richard said.

Ani dragged in a breath. “Act two? What’s that?”

He went to the closet and removed a paisley-printed robe. Patterned in red and blue, it looked like silk. After shrugging it on and belting it, he extracted something else.

Something long and silken.

Twisted silk cords, the kind she’d seen tying back heavy brocade curtains. These were a dark, metallic gray.

Like chains.

He turned. The cords dangled from his fingers. He smiled.

Her cheeky mood evaporated. Her heart thudded against her chest wall, a wild bird desperate to escape the cage. But she didn’t move.

“Come with me.”

She reached for her sweater.

“No,” he said. “Just as you are. Naked.”

“Outside? You’re kidding, right?” She searched his face.

He grinned. “Outside. Come along, now.”

Spy Game from Five Star. New version SOON from Etopia Press!

Remembering her agreement, she gulped and followed him topside. Out on deck, Ani discovered that Richard was right. No other boats were in sight. Land was a narrow brownish strip on the eastern horizon. The only sounds were waves slapping against the boat’s hull, the cries of seabirds, and his breaths, puffing warm against her nape.

Despite their isolation, she felt unbearably exposed, her naked vulnerability heightened. The spicy sea breeze stiffened her nipples and slid over the tender skin inside her thighs, caressing her body with cool, flowing fingers. But the sunshine had pooled and warmed the wooden decks, including…

Including a padded lounge chair, draped with quilts, set in the middle of the deck.

Richard sat on the lounge and reached for her.

She resisted. “You want to—”

“Yep.”

“Out…out here?” She gestured at the open ocean.

“You got it.” He pulled her onto his lap. His erection poked out of the slit in the robe, jabbing her in the thigh. He adjusted so it slipped between her legs. She sighed and shifted, wanting him against the sweetest spot.

“This is weird,” she said. “I feel as though someone could come along at any time.”

“True enough. That’s part of the fun of it. Anyone could come along at any time, but right now, it’s just you, me, and the sea gulls.”

Reaching around her, he looped one end of the cord around her wrist, then pulled it behind her back. He captured the other. He tugged the silken rope tight and tied her wrists together in some elaborate manner; a sailor’s knot, she supposed. He’d left plenty of rope, using it to loosely wrap her forearms together.

The position arched her back, causing her breasts to thrust out, exposed and available. He took their unspoken invitation, cupping them with skilled fingers. The heat from the sun melded with the warmth of his hands.

“I don’t want anyone seeing me like this.”

“I’m seeing you. Is that all right?”

“Ye-es.”

“You don’t sound convinced.”

“I’m not.”

“Too bad. You’re mine now. Ever since I saw you with that chain around your ankle I wanted you this way.” His whisper was husky, rough, sexy.

He nuzzled her neck, and she thought she’d come apart from want. She leaned against his silk-clad chest, trying to breathe.

Richard’s big palms covered her aching breasts and she moaned, wanting him with a desperation she didn’t understand. He left her breasts and grabbed fistfuls of her hair, drawing her head back so he could cover her mouth with nibbling kisses that heightened her craving for completion.

“Richard, oh, Richard, please, please…”

He laid a row of tiny bites along her jaw and down her neck. “What? Please, what?”

“You know what. Please.”

“Tell me what you want,” he growled into her throat.

“I can’t say it! You know I can’t.” Ani’s mind blanked.

“Say it.”

She gabbled something in Arabic.

“In English, sweetheart.” He feathered his lips along her neck, soothing where he’d savaged.

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

“Inside me. Please.” She squirmed on his lap, seeking his entry.

With a tug, he loosened the cords binding her; they fell away, dropping onto the deck. “Turn around, honey, and face me.”

Oh, no. She’d have to look into those laser-bright eyes, the ones that saw her secret desires. But she couldn’t refuse, could she?

He’d untied her bonds, so she wasn’t bound with anything but her word, and her love. 

Learn more about my books at my sites and at my Amazon pages,

https://www.amazon.com/author/sueswift

 https://www.amazon.com/author/suzdemello

Happy reading!



Try it, you’ll like it :)

Of this romantic suspense story one top reviewer said, “fans will enjoy this fine, at-sea mystery.”

Here’s where you can get it:

http://www.amazon.com/Sherry-Baby-ebook/dp/B007ZS6VIA/ref=sr_1_21?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1336144949&sr=1-21

Here’s what it’s about:

The cruise from hell…

Gen X meets Agatha Christie on the high seas of the Bermuda Triangle when Sherry Case, gofer for the battling bigwigs in the family-owned firm Genesplice, arranges for a team-building cruise aboard the yacht Swashbuckler. The mismatched group of passengers feuds even before the yacht has left the harbor.

A rogue wave, faltering navigational instruments and a trio of sharks continue to challenge Sherry and her new lover, the yacht’s Captain Freeman. But Free and Sherry aren’t fazed until a passenger turns up dead in her locked cabin. The vicious murder throws the ship, its crew and passengers into panic. Who could the killer be? Suspects and motives abound.

Ordinary twenty-somethings thrown into an extraordinary situation, Sherry and Free must solve the mystery, defeat the myriad dangers of the triangle, and reach land before the villain can kill them.

And here’s a snippet:

Prologue

He turned the tap counterclockwise. After waiting a couple of minutes for the water to heat, he stepped into the oversized shower. He admired its custom glass-block construction and four shower heads, which rinsed the blood from his body quickly and efficiently.

He preferred to kill naked. Blood-soaked garments were a disposal problem and, if found, easily traceable evidence. Though he avoided ruining good clothes, getting blood out from under his fingernails was a bitch.

 



This is to celebrate the impending re-release of Sherry, Baby, previously published by Five Star as Triangle, where it sank without a trace as though it had been lost in the Bermuda Triangle, where the book is set. With a few revisions, it’s now ready for prime time.

In it, twenty-nothings Free and Sherry discover they can foil a killer, save a ship and fall in love.

BTW this isn’t yet edited so the final version may be different. And the cover you see here is the draft.

***

Sherry went to her quarters to brush her hair and her teeth, then donned a sweater against the cool October evening. By the time she went topside, full night had fallen. The only light illuminating the main deck of the Swashbuckler came from the salon; a smaller lamp in the wheelhouse enabled the pilot to guide the craft. Above her, a match flared, briefly illuminating someone seated on the deck that topped the wheelhouse.

“Come on up,” Free said.

She eyed the metal rungs soldered to the outside of the wheelhouse, deciding that they looked simple and sturdy enough for her to negotiate. She climbed up and found Free slouched on a built-in bench, smoking a hand-rolled cigarette. A beer was balanced on the railing next to him. He offered her the cigarette.

“What is it?” she asked.

“A spliff. Try it.”

She sucked on the end, pulling smoke into her mouth. She coughed. “What’s in it?” 

“Jamaican and tobacco.”

“Oh.” Taking a chance that the mixture wouldn’t sear her throat, she drew a hit deep into her lungs. She let the smoke out slowly, waiting for the marijuana to calm her. She hoped she wouldn’t get the munchies. She’d had a good diet day, though it had been tough. Chaz was a crazy culinary genius who could destroy her body singlehandedly.

Free knocked on the floor—which was, she realized, the ceiling of the bridge—and a hand holding another bottle of beer thrust out of one of the wheelhouse’s open windows. Simmons, she guessed, engaging in a routine familiar to both men. Free handed the beer to her and, in a surprisingly amicable silence, she and Free finished the smoke and sipped their beers.

Finally he spoke. “Quite a scene, down at dinner.” He tossed the roach over the side of the boat.

She watched the tiny red ash disappear into the roiling water flowing past the yacht. “Yes, they have their spats.”

“What does Blair Armstrong have on Dr. Rankin?”

“What do you mean?”

He hesitated. “When I went outside, she seemed to be threatening him with something. He almost went for her throat.”

“Nathan? Hmmm. That’s strange.”

“What do you think of Nona and Orlando?”

She laughed. “They’re perfect. I can’t believe we haven’t seen them satirized on Comedy Central.”

“So your Board of Directors thinks that Hippy and Dippy can teach Philip, Blair, and Nathan to make nice?”

They both laughed.

“And Blair seems to have brought her private agenda,” Sherry said. Nathan usually spent most of his time in his lab, using assistants to keep Blair at bay. Here, Blair could pressure him constantly about her fertility, which everyone at Genesplice knew was her fixation.

“Hell, everyone on this trip has a private agenda.”

Sherry rubbed her cheeks, hoping to hide her guilty flush from Free.

He asked, “So what’s your game? I noticed that you and the good Dr. Rankin seemed pretty chummy.”

She hated the way her face gave away everything she thought or felt. “He should be.”

“Have you slept with him yet?” Free’s tone was casual.

She glared at him. “You have no right to ask that question.”

“Don’t get your panties in a bundle. If anyone’s playing musical beds, the captain and crew need to know in case of emergencies.”

“Oh. Well, we have.”

He cocked a brow at her. “You don’t sound all head-over-heels to me. Is he good in the sack?”

She nearly fell off the bench. “That’s none of your business!”

“Okay, he’s lousy. So why do you bother?”

Whoa. After maybe fifteen seconds of analyzing her relationship with Nathan, Captain Freeman had nailed her to the wall, defining the issue in a nutshell. Nathan was as single-minded in pursuit of orgasms as he was in pursuit of his scientific goals, and after he got what he wanted in bed, he was done.

Regardless of whether or not Sherry had gotten what she wanted or needed.

Crap. She didn’t want to discuss this with Free, did she? Why would he care?

This was one of the strangest conversations Sherry had ever experienced, even while under the influence of multiple substances. But the pot had made her a little loose and chatty, so she said, “I care about Nathan, but—”

“He doesn’t ring your chimes.” Free’s voice was rough.

She blew out a breath. Tipping her head back, she regarded the stars. “He’s my best chance.”

“Your best chance at what?”

“To get out of the hole I’m in. My job stinks. I can’t do anything else. I need to get married, and fast.”

“You pregnant?”

“No.”

“So what’s your hurry? Pretty girl like you ought to be playing the field.”

Sherry wondered if Free meant playing with him. She said, “I’m nearly thirty. Washed up. Getting old. If I can’t find a secure situation soon, I’m toast.”

“Why don’t you get a better job? These jerk brains treat you like garbage. You know, there isn’t enough money in the world to make me put up with these people for any longer than this cruise. I don’t know how you do it.”

“I can’t get a better job.” Fury, shame, and sorrow made her spit out the words. “I barely crawled through high school.”

“I don’t believe that. You’re not stupid.”

“Yes, I am. I was diagnosed with a learning disability when I was nine. My mother told me that my face was my fortune, and I’d better marry well. Nathan’s my best chance.”

Free started to laugh, then guffaw. “I’ve never heard such a crock of shit in my entire life.”

“It’s true.” She heard the bitterness in her voice, but she didn’t care what Free thought.

“You want to be Nathan Rankin’s trophy wife? Come on. You can do more than type and screw.”

“How do you know?”

“I’ve watched you. You handle a group of very difficult people with tact and aplomb.”

“Aplomb?” She turned that over in her mind.

“Yeah. Aplomb. What about the poofters?”

“Poofters?” Free’s change of subject momentarily startled Sherry. “Oh, Philip and his latest fling. Philip can be as mouthy as Blair, but he’s really a fangless snake. Slimy but harmless. Greg is just his meal du jour. Philip chews ‘em up and spits ‘em out on a regular basis. He’s quite a piece of work. He loves shallowly, hates deeply, and holds a grudge forever.”

Free leaned back and eyed her. “We’d best keep an eye on Philip, the crew and I.”

“Yeah, but don’t let him get the wrong idea.” Sherry shrugged. “Heck, for all I know, for you it could be the right idea.”

“What?”

Even in the starlight, she could see astonishment all over his face. She was seized by a fit of the giggles. The pot had definitely kicked in.

“I’ll have you know…” Free started. “Aw, what the hell,” he said, and jammed a hand into her hair, bringing her close. Their lips were no more than a hairsbreadth apart.

Sherry gasped.

He drew back. “No,” he said.

“N-no?” She searched her feelings, trying to figure out if she was disappointed or not.

“No.” He sounded firm. “You think men value you for your looks, and that you have nothing else to offer. I’m going to prove you wrong.”

Picking up his Red Stripe, he left the upper deck.



The Valentine Day blog hop is officially over and Tammi won the grand prize of a $60 gift certificate. Joanne won one of my ebooks and she chose The Wilder Brother. Good choice! If any of you want to read it also, it’s everywhere ebooks are sold. And it’s also available in print.

Here’s the blurb:

The Wilder Brother, contemporary erotic romance from Ellora's Cave. Available in both print and ebook.

For Colton Wilder, the invitation to his brother’s wedding is an invitation to trouble because Colt, having boinked the bride, knows what she’s really like. He doesn’t want his brother Max marrying selfish, manipulative Nicole Newcombe, a famous supermodel. In his view, Nicole stole the groom from her sister Dana.

For staid scientist Dana Newcombe, the invitation to her identical twin’s wedding is an invitation to humiliation. For while Nicole was conniving to steal Max away from Dana, Dana had wild monkey sex in a glass-walled elevator with his brother Colt.

When they meet again at the wedding, she doesn’t want to want Colt, but she can’t help remembering and re-enacting their earlier sexy tryst in oh so many different ways.

***

Here are some reviews:

Rating: 5 hearts: excellent…playful…fast-paced and humorous. The sexual activity is very explicit but not offensive… I heartily recommend this book…different from the norm…
Brenda Talley, The Romance Studio

Rating: 5 stars: An extremely entertaining page-turner…Storytelling at its best!
Mahaira Fatima, Just Erotic Romance Reviews

Rating: 4 angels: an enchanting tale of love… The sexual chemistry between Dana and Colton is explosive while they are able to connect with one another on a deeply emotional level…
Tewanda, Fallen Angel Reviews

***

And a buy link:

http://www.jasminejade.com/m-251-suz-demello.aspx



I met the wonderful Janey Fraser (aka Sophie King) at the Women’s Fiction Festival in Matera last year. Four of us–Beth Barany, a book promoter, my traveling companion Laura Mills, Janey and I shared several wonderful dinners together. At the time, another of Jane’s books was on the Italian bestseller list, which she was incredibly modest about. I would have been jumping up and down and freaking out all over everyone had that happened to me.

She’s got another book out–in English this time–and her launch party is on Monday at The Players’ Rehearsal & Club Rooms Basement, 10 Craven Street WC2N 5PE in London from 6pm – 8pm.

 People have been saying wonderful things about The Playgroup:

Fay Weldon said: I read it without stopping all the way home. Sincerely meant. Rings true, and homey.   Unputdownable.

From Katie Fforde: A must read for anyone who has small children or knows them. Hugely enjoyable.

A lovely book. I really, really enjoyed it. It has a sparkle, a lightness of touch and a deep, true charm.     Written from the heart.  (Elizabeth Buchan)

Just coming to the end of The Playgroup and loved it.  Terrific story and enormous fun.  Also the characters were all great.  (Judy Astley)

From Trisha Astley: Warmly and engagingly written and with an engaging cast of characters, The Playgroup captivated me from the very first page.

Here’s an excerpt:

from CHAPTER 1

‘Mrs Merryfield, Mrs Merryfield. We went to More-ishus. And it rained.’

‘Hi, Gemma!  Nice tan! Listen, I’m pretty certain Molly is dry now but just in case she’s not, there’s a spare pair of pants in her sandwich box. That’s the one with the picture of a giraffe on it – sorry I didn’t have time to label it.’

‘Morning, Miss Merryfield. Had a good break? Darren, have you said hello to your playgroup leader?’

‘Gemma, I’m so sorry. But we’ve just had Beth checked again and it turns out she’s allergic to wheat as well as salt, sugar, any kind of additives and – get this – any food that’s yellow. Weird, isn’t it? So can you make sure she doesn’t have any biscuits at breaktime?’

The stream of traffic on the first day of term was always hectic with the children running up to swing on her arms, wrap their small, warm bodies round her legs, bobbing up and down, unable to stand still for a second and announcing in breathy excited voices exactly what they’d been up to in the holidays. It was like lots of different hands playing piano notes at the same time.

The parents too would understandably want to chat, some calling her Gemma because they felt they knew her while others preferred a more formal address. As for the children, well, she’d given up explaining that she was a Miss. In their minds, any woman like their mum had to have a Mrs in front of their name.

Yes! You got a real mixture of tiny feet and parents here at Puddleducks Playgroup. For a start, there was Darren’s mum squatting down by the playdough table to settle in her three year old, who was nervous about coming back after a whole summer off.

Then there were mums like Kyle’s who arrived in skinny tops and casual jogging bottoms (so casual that they looked as though they’d just rolled out of bed and were going back to watch daytime tv) and just waved goodbye to their children without a second glance. Kyle’s mother always dressed her son in a skimpy Power Rangers t-shirt, winter and summer even though Gemma kept asking her to bring in something warmer. It had got to the point now when she just lent Kyle something from the Lost Property box when his arms went blue.

And of course there were the one-offs like Clemmie’s mum, who used to be a model, and arrived every day in beautifully cut trousers, earrings and flawless foundation complete with lip liner. ‘Don’t forget your handbag, Clemmie darling. It’s got your oatmeal snack in it so we can keep an eye on those naughty calories.’

Some parents – although they had grandparents on the playgroup run too – came from the council flats down by the bottom end of the canal. A good smattering came from the smart houses up at the top end where house prices had been known to go into seven figures. There were also a lot of in-betweeners from roads where you could park your car in the drive and those where you couldn’t.  It was a testament to Puddleducks that families who could have afforded to go private, were actually keen to send their under-fives to a state playgroup like this one.

Mind you, there were times when she felt she did run a private one- to- one service.

‘I’m reely sorry to bother you, Gemma. But Mikey’s lost his favourite sweat shirt and we think he might have left it behind here last term. Could you have a look for it when you have a second? You can’t miss it. It says ‘Granny went to Adelaide and came back with a new Grandad.’ Not very funny, actually, under the circumstances but I’ll tell you about that one later.’

‘Miss Merryfield? Could I have a word? Poppy is rather upset because she only got three gold stars at the end of last term for her letter outlines and Alex got four even though Poppy can do lovely p’s and q’s  whereas Alex, I couldn’t help noticing from his work sheet over there, still gets his ‘b’s back to front. We did a teeny bit of practice during the holidays. So I wondered if you could bear this in mind because it does make a difference to her confidence, don’t you think?’

‘Morning, Mrs Mayfold. Did you have a good holiday? Lucky you, having eight whole weeks off.’

Merryfield, she tried to say to Sienna’s mum who was always getting her name wrong, partly because she usually conducted a conversation while checking her  iPhone for emails at the same time. As for the long holidays, like most teachers, Gemma was used to digs like that. She’d actually spent quite a lot of time preparing for the new term. Besides, as Miriam had warned her before going on maternity leave, you couldn’t win with Sienna’s mum who always criticised everything. She was already complaining about someone’s parking outside to the father behind her.

Gemma’s eyes softened. She liked Toby’s dad although he was married so of course, she didn’t like him that way. No, it was because he was one of that increasingly common breed of fathers who looked after their children while their wives went out to work. It wasn’t, they had both told her confidentially, at the last parents’ evening, what they had intended but redundancy and the cost of child care had made it work out that way and actually it was panning out quite nicely because it meant he had more time to be with the children.

‘Sorry to bother you.’ Toby’s dad, always polite, was pushing a packet of tablets into her hand. ‘It’s the last of Toby’s antibiotic course. It was just a chesty bug and he’s not infectious any more but he does keep making some rather bad smells because of the medicine and …’

There was a squeal behind him. ‘Chesty bug? Are children allowed into playgroup if they’re sick?’

Gemma’s heart sank. When it came to going back to playgroup after an illness, there was always a fine line between ‘almost better’ and ‘completely better’. The mother who had squealed, in what sounded like an American twang, was new. Poor thing. She’d need reassuring.

‘Have you got a letter from the doctor to say that he is fit for playgroup?’ Gemma smiled apologetically. ‘You might remember that we need that now.’

Toby’s father nodded enthusiastically, delving into his jeans pocket and bringing out a scruffy envelope along with a nappy wipe, a black dog poo bag (clean), a tissue (not so clean). and a smattering of small change which then scattered all over the floor.

‘Oh my word!’ The alarm was evident in the twang. ‘Danny might try to eat those coins. He’s always putting things in his mouth.’

Danny! It was coming together now. This was the American mother who had already rung her twice with all kinds of questions. Were the Puddleduck sweat shirts optional because polyester made Danny’s skin itch? Did the staff ratio conform to the current guidelines here in the UK?

‘Please don’t worry, Mrs Wright,’ soothed Gemma looking past her to where Danny had already shot off to the Messy Corner where one of her helpers was introducing the new intake to the joys of splashing in bowls of soapy water and measuring containers.

The painfully-skinny woman with the short, spikey haircut and a worry-groove on her forehead, frowned. ‘It’s Carter Wright without a hypen. Not just Wright.’

‘Sorry.’ Gemma smiled, mentally kicking herself for not having memorised the register properly. ‘I do understand it’s difficult leaving your son for the first time. All our parents find that at first. But we do take great care of the children. I promise.’

Toby’s dad, bless him, was nodding enthusiastically. ‘Honest. Toby’s our baby and I didn’t know what to do with myself when he started here – only two and a half, he was -  so we got a dog. I know, crazy isn’t it. By the way, congratulations.’

Gemma’s heart threatened to stop. ‘I’m sorry?’

‘Congratulations!’ repeated Toby’s dad, beaming. ‘I gather you’re our new pre-school leader while Miriam is on maternity leave. What did she have?’

Gemma’s heart began beating again. ‘A boy. Nicolas. That’s Nicolas without an ‘h’.’

‘Great news! Did you hear that everyone? Miriam had a healthy baby boy! We ought to rustle up a parent collection.’

Gemma watched Toby’s dad springing into action and already wheedling donations from some of the other parents as they finally drifted out of the exit door,  through the enclosed outdoor play area and on with their own lives until 11.30 pick up time. Some of them were, at the same time, reading spare copies of the playgroup newsletter she’d brought in. Miriam had said that was a great idea although at the moment, Miriam thought everything was a good idea apart from giving birth again!

Trailing behind them was the American mother with the spikey haircut, reluctantly looking back at her son who was now blowing bubbles. ‘You don’t think he’ll try to eat that stuff, do you?’ she asked Gemma plaintively.

It was all she could do not to give the poor woman a hug. ‘He’ll be fine. Please don’t worry. We’ll take good care of him.’

‘DON’T WANT TO STAY ! DON’T WANT TO STAY!’

Oh dear. By the door was a screaming human tourniquet of Gap meets Boden as Daisy, who had just been presented with twin baby sisters, entwined herself around her mother’s legs. The American woman gave her a look that said ‘Is this what they do when we’re not here?’ and headed back, head bowed towards the car park.

‘She’s been really clingy ever since these two came along.’  Daisy’s mother’s watery brown eyes appealed to her. ‘I can’t leave her like this!’

Gemma could have said the usual stuff about not worrying because most children stopped crying once their mothers had gone. But she also knew that if she was a mother herself, that wouldn’t really help.

So instead she had another trick up her sleeve.

‘Daisy?’

Gemma pretended to be surprised by the voice which came from the back of her throat so that her lips hardly moved. It was an action she’d been working on over the summer, much to her landlady’s amusement.

‘Daisy? It’s me. Mouse.’

Daisy opened her eyes a fraction as Gemma knelt down with her hand inside the hand puppet made out of an oven glove, felt scraps and sequins. Mouse was the class’ favourite toy! When they had ‘Quiet Talk Time’, during which the children would sit in a circle and take it in turns to say something about the day, it was tradition that Mouse would be passed around at the same time and they were only allowed to talk if they were holding him. It worked brilliantly in stopping other children – even Billy – from interrupting another.

Animal distraction had been a trick that her grandmother had taught her. ‘Give them something to look after, dear, and they forget getting upset about themselves.’

So far, it hadn’t failed to work.

‘Hello, Daisy.’ Gemma crouched down so she was on the same level. ‘I wonder if you can help me. There’s something very tiny inside my pocket and it’s trying to get out.’

The yelling got louder. Daisy’s puce face was now firmly buried into her mother’s feet so she was in danger of falling over, complete with twin slings.

‘Oh no!’ Gemma somehow managed to make her voice loudly authoritative and yet calm at the same time. ‘Mouse says he’s got a terrible headache from all this noise. He wants you to stop and see what he’s been getting up to in the holidays.’

Slowly, she pulled out the felt finger mouse she had made: a smaller version of the glove puppet made from fabric remnants sold by the craft shop on the high street. Bending her finger up and down to indicate distress, she made whining noises so it seemed that miniature mouse, with his red sequinned eyes, was crying. Daisy lifted her head very slightly in concern.

‘It’s Mouse’s new baby and it’s his first day at Puddleducks Playgroup,’ explained Gemma. ‘ Poor baby mouse is feeling a bit scared and wants you to help him make a pasta calendar with the rest of us or may be some leaf printing . By the way, he says he loves your daisy tights!’

There was a sudden knock on her shoulder. Ouch! ‘Me! I want to hold Mouse. Me. Me.

Gemma liked to think of herself as a patient teacher but Billy would have tested the fortitude of St Trinian. Last term, she’d had to see his parents again when Billy had given another child an impromptu bowl-shape hair cut with the aid of a plastic Christmas pudding dish from the play box and a pair of so-called safety cutting scissors.

‘You can hold another baby mouse,’ said Gemma, delving in her other pocket for the spare she’d made in case this happened. Daisy had stopped crying now and was tenderly stroking Mouse’s whiskers which were loosely sewn on with large tacking stitches in brown thread. Sewing had never been one of Gemma’s strong points.

‘No!’ Billy had grabbed a plastic hammer from the toy tool box now and was banging it against the wendy house with huge, angry thwacks. ‘I want the big proper Mouse.’ He pointed to Daisy’s. ‘Not this stupid one.’

If Billy’s mother hadn’t already dumped him and left in indecent haste without even an anorak for break time, she might have felt tempted to have called her back.

‘Tell you what, Billy,’ said Gemma suddenly. ‘Remember how you promised not to cut anyone’s hair any more?’Billy’s hammer banging intensified and was now to the count of four instead of two. ‘Supposing I said you could give Mouse a trim?’

‘Wot ?’

For a four year old, his tone of voice was more suited to one of those rough police dramas in which her friend Kitty had once been an extra as a singer in a sleezy nightclub. ‘Well, maybe after Music Mania, I could show you how to tidy up Mouse’s whiskers. We might make him a new outfit too.’

Billy was very keen on dressing dolls, something that his dad, a 6ft 2in builder, had raised at the last parents’ evening.

‘All roight then.’

Fantastic! She hadn’t expected him to cave in quite so fast.

‘Would someone please take that child’s batteries out!’ said a voice behind her with a definite fed-up edge. It was Bella, her young assistant who was, as usual, dressed in clothes more suited to a catwalk than a playgroup with those high heels and skinny short stretchy black skirt that had attracted the eye of that Scandinavian au pair. ‘By the way,’ sniffed Bella, checking her register, ‘everyone’s here apart from someone called Lily without a surname. She’s one of the new ones, isn’t she?’

Gemma tried to sound normal but Beryl, the headmistress’ words were still ringing round her head from their meeting last term  ‘There’s something very important I need to tell you. It’s about one of the new children who will be starting in September’.

‘Yes, she is. Maybe she’s not coming. I gather there was a bit of a question mark over her.’

Bella’s voice had an irritated click in it that matched the sound of her smart red kitten heels which had, she’d informed Gemma earlier, cost her nearly a month’s wages. ‘Well if there was any doubt, she ought to have given up her place. There are enough people on the waiting list.’

‘Actually,’ said Gemma in a low voice, ‘there aren’t. Not now. Beryl says that the Ofsted report on the main school, has put parents off sending their children to Puddleducks.’

Bella’s beautifully- threaded eyebrows rose in consternation. ‘But that’s outrageous.’

‘I know.’ Gemma glanced up to check that Jean had sat all the children round in a circle with their various tambourines and shakers made out of plastic washing up bottles and beans, ready for Music Mania. ‘So we have to prove that we’re the best playgroup in the area if we want to keep going.’

‘It’s that serious?’

She nodded. ‘There’s something else too.’

But before she could say anything, there was a ping, indicating that someone was at the door. She’d been waiting for this! ‘I’ll go,’ said Gemma leaping up, her heart thudding in her throat.

This was ridiculous, just as she had told Beryl. She treated all the children the same, whatever their backgrounds. Even so…

‘Miss Merryfield?’

She nodded, transfixed by the husky voice that was coming out from this tall, elegant, wafer thin vision in sparkly jeans, black satin jacket that looked more like a man’s DJ and beautiful, soft-looking pale pink cashmere scarf that was entwined round the woman’s neck, partly shrouding what little face there was on show thanks to the huge dark sunglasses which were so shiny that they reflected back Gemma’s startled expression. There was also the overpowering smell of the woman’s trademark perfume that she’d read about in Kitty’s well-thumbed copies of OK and Hello.

‘This is Lily.’

Only then, to her shame, did Gemma glance down at the small girl who was standing between them. Her mother’s beautiful pale white hands were on her shoulders; the two of them looked like flowers in a vase, one tall and the other short but each a mirror image of the other. The child had the same chalky white complexion but it was one which seemed effortlessly beautiful like a fine china. In contrast, her dark straight hair, cut in a precise bob, made her startling bright blue eyes appear like a Siamese kitten’s.

‘Be good.’ For a minute, the stranger’s gravelly yet somehow feminine voice was so bewitching that Gemma almost thought she was addressing her. ‘Someone will be here at lunchtime to pick you up.’

The beautiful woman glanced at her. ‘I won’t be here in person very often.. You understand, don’t you?’

Gemma nodded. My boss has already explained, she tried to say but too late. The woman had slipped out and in the distance, she could see a huge, black, highly polished car waiting. Gently, she bent down towards Lily. ‘Do you like music like your mummy?’

The little girl nodded.

‘ We’ve got a xylophone over here. Shall I show you?’

They turned round and almost went smack into Bella who had come up to see what was happening. ‘Was that who I think it was?’ she breathed, glancing out of the window at the blacked out limo pulling away.

‘Shhh,’ said Gemma fiercely. No one, her grandmother used to say, was more placid than Gemma except when it came to defending others. ‘You can’t tell anyone. Or else we’ll all be out of our jobs. Even more important, we could be putting this child’s safety at risk. And no, I’m sorry. I can’t tell you why.’

***

Who knew so much could go on in a toddler playgroup?

If you want to read more, buy the book :) It’s at: http://www.amazon.com/Playgroup-Janey-Fraser/dp/009955819X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328987499&sr=1-1

And check out Janey’s site: www.janeyfraser.co.uk

 

 

 



How Well Developed Are Your Storytelling Skills?
by Lois Winston

Without a good plot and well-developed characters, you don’t stand a chance of selling your manuscript, no matter how well you’ve honed your technical skills. You can have the most beautifully crafted sentences the publishing world has ever seen, but if your plot is mundane or your characters are cardboard, your chances of publication are nil.

 Plot is story, and story is about what happens in a book, specifically what happens to the characters who populate that book. Characterization is what drives the people who populate the story.

 Every scene in a book must do one of two things — either advance the story (plot) or tell the reader something essential that he or she needs to know about the characters (characterization) at that particular moment. If a scene does neither of these things, it’s filler and doesn’t belong in your book.

Plot and characterization go hand-in-hand. Even though some books are more plot driven and others more character driven, a good book needs both.

Both the plot and the main characters in a novel must feature growth of some sort. The story must have a beginning, middle, and resolution. That’s the plot arc.

When it comes to characters, a story that begins and ends with the main characters having the same attitudes and in the same place emotionally and psychologically (and sometimes even physically) is not a successful story. The main characters need to learn and grow from their experiences and the impact the other characters have had on them throughout the course of the story.

Another way to look at plot and characterization is to break them down in terms of the characters’ internal and external goals, motivations, and conflicts. Plot deals with the external GMC; characterization deals with the internal GMC. All characters in a novel, no matter the genre, must have both internal and external goals, motivation, and conflict. Without GMC you have melodrama, not drama.

 So ask yourself the following questions:

Who are the characters in your story?

What do they want?

Why do they want what they want?

What’s keeping them from getting what they want?

 

You must be able to answer these questions for all the major characters in your story, both the hero and heroine or protagonists, as well as any villains or antagonists. Once you break your story down in this way, you should be able to see if you’ve crafted a solid plot and characters that a reader will identify with on some level.

This doesn’t mean that all characters have to be likeable. If a character pushes a reader’s buttons, that’s a well-written character. You’ve successfully drawn the reader into the world you’ve created and made her have feelings about the character, even if it’s negative feelings.

If you can’t answer some of the above questions for some of the characters in your story, those are the areas of your manuscript that are weak and need work.

***

Here’s a little about Lois and and her books:

Death By Killer Mop Doll: 
Overdue bills and constant mother vs. mother-in-law battles at home are bad enough. But crafts editor Anastasia Pollack’s stress level is maxed out when she and her fellow American Woman editors get roped into unpaid gigs for a revamped morning TV show. Before the glue is dry on Anastasia’s mop dolls, morning TV turns crime drama when the studio is trashed and a member of the production team is murdered. Former co-hosts Vince and Monica—sleazy D-list celebrities—stand out among a lengthy lineup of suspects, all furious over the show’s new format. And Anastasia has no clue her snooping has landed her directly in the killer’s unforgiving spotlight.

 

Bio: Lois Winston is the author of the critically acclaimed Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mysteries published by Midnight Ink. Assault With a Deadly Glue Gun, the first book in the series, received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist and has been nominated for a Readers Choice Award by the Salt Lake City Library System. The new year brings with it the release of Death By Killer Mop Doll, the second book in the series. Read an excerpt at http://www.loiswinston.com/excerptap2.html. Visit Lois at her website: http://www.loiswinston.com and Anastasia at the Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers blog: http://www.anastasiapollack.blogspot.com. You can also follow Lois and Anastasia on Twitter @anasleuth.

 



The Sunday snog, with thanks to Vicky Blisse for cleverly creating this promo device and generously sharing it with the rest of us. http://www.victoriablisse.co.uk/sunday-snog/

Today’s snog is from Seducing the Hermit, a retelling of the Fisher King myth that’s set in Alaska (see, erotica writers can be literary too!). Here’s a little about the book:

Deejay Valerie Percy rejects the phony life she’s led in L.A. and travels to remote Takinsha Island, Alaska, determined to start over. She’s looking for a fuck buddy, an accessory she considers more important than mascara. She wants a warm, outgoing man to laugh with her, hang out with her and shag her silly. She doesn’t think she’ll encounter any difficulty in Alaska, where the odds of men to women are twenty to one. But as the locals say, the odds are good, but the goods are…odd.

Valerie falls for Fisher Chugatt, a loner who doesn’t do relationships. But Cupid has other plans for this couple, and so does Valerie. She doesn’t waste any time seducing Fisher. Sex in the shower, hummers on the couch and a spectacular encounter beneath the northern lights seal the deal in Valerie’s mind. Having fallen in love, she wants it all—home, husband, babies. But shadows from his past may prevent Fisher from committing to anyone…Valerie included.

***

From the open doorway, Fisher could see that Valerie had unpacked, but he didn’t understand how she’d stuffed so much into her little V.W. She’d spread several Oriental-style carpets over the cracked, cold linoleum. Swaths of printed fabric—bedsheets?—billowed over the windows, dimming the long August twilight. Her bower glowed from the light of a dozen perfumed candles.

She reclined on a thick, white fur spread over an unzipped sleeping bag. Pillows, patterned in zebra stripes and leopard spots, lay in a tumbled pile at one end of her exotic bed.

She’d taken off her sweater and boots, leaving her slender form clad in a snug T-shirt and tight jeans. And, of course, her silly fur-trimmed socks. Dark and sinuous against the white pelt, Valerie reminded Fisher of a resting mink. Slim and touchable, the lines and curves of her body begged for a man’s stroking hand.

His hand.

Nevertheless, he stepped into the ultrafeminine room on hesitant feet, feeling like an awkward, shambling giant. He bent to touch the pelt. The soft, silky fur caressed his fingers. “I brought you the air mattress.” His voice sounded as if it had struggled over broken glass to exit his throat.

She watched him, blue eyes glimmering in the shadowed room.

He straightened. “Do you—do you want it?”

Setting a glass of wine onto a coaster with a soft click, Valerie uncurled and stretched, as though exhibiting her hourglass body. As she arched her back, her breasts lifted, pressing against her flimsy top. Her blonde, flyaway hair had a just-bedded look.

Fisher began to sweat. This woman was dangerous. Not because she was more sophisticated than any other girl on the island, and he’d met plenty of exotic, interesting females when he’d served in the military. No, there was something about her that he couldn’t identify.

She was all woman, no question about it. He clenched his fists behind his back. He would not touch her.

Now only a foot away from him, she looked him boldly in the eyes. “Yeah, I want it.” Her gaze, laden with feminine desire, dropped to his mouth.

Both of them knew she wasn’t talking about the air mattress. He had to say something, anything, before he jumped her bones like the love-starved, pathetic fool he was.

“Did you, uh, know you have your own washer-dryer?” Suave, Fisher, really suave. Jerking his gaze away from her, he reached for the knob of a small closet on his left. Opening it, he showed her the apartment-sized setup.

“Oh, that’s nice.” The sexy timbre of Valerie’s voice altered into innocent delight.

He breathed easier. “Works great too. If you ever have a problem, just let me know.”

Valerie looked into Fisher’s eyes and smiled. “Yes.” Coupled with the female heat in her smile, the implications weighing that one word tied his tongue into twenty knots, sucked every molecule of air from his lungs and forced all the blood in his body southward.

She was temptation incarnate. Though he knew it was wrong, he couldn’t help wanting her, and if he didn’t get out of her orbit soon, he’d kiss her. He’d be a goner. If he kissed her, everything would change. He would change, and he couldn’t handle that.

“Th-that is, a problem with anything in the apartment.”

She reached down and took a phallus-shaped device from amidst the pelts. “I’m having trouble recharging my massager.”

A laugh broke free. “Your massager? Is that what they’re calling them inL.A.?”

Straightening, she looked him in the eyes. “Think you can help?”

He threw caution to the wind, telling himself that his tangled thoughts about Valerie Percy were nonsense. She was no more compelling than any other woman and wouldn’t have a mysterious hold over him no matter what happened. He grinned at her. “Oh yeah, I’m sure I can help.”

Reaching for her, he slid a hand through her tousled hair, sifting the soft, blonde strands through his fingers. Her fragrance rose along with a husky moan from deep in her throat. Sensing that moment was right, he let his palm rest against her nape and drew her close.

Valerie saw the unmistakable signs of male need. A flaring of the nostrils. A heated narrowing of Fisher’s eyes. She smelled his masculine aroma, an intriguing mixture of sky and forest, with the biting tang of the sea caught in his long, sexy hair.

Yes. The first touch of his firm lips against hers ignited her blood. She turned on as if he’d flicked a switch, and suddenly she felt alive, the way she always felt when she made love. This was the feeling she craved. This was what she lived for. When she touched a beautiful man, it was as though her world morphed from black-and-white into color. God, she needed this, needed him.

She opened her mouth to let him in. His lips trembled ever so slightly against hers and she thought, Hmmm… But whatever conclusions she could have reached became lost when Fisher thrust his tongue into her mouth. One, two, three, four times, deep and hard, the way she liked it, communicating clearly what he wanted, a long, deep, hard fuck. He pulled her tight against him, and their hips met with a sudden, sharp bang that presaged what she hoped would happen. His cock was a long, thick ridge against her mound, and he ground his pelvis from side to side, rubbing that heavenly bulge against her. She bent one knee and raised it high, wrapping her leg around his waist, opening herself so he’d hit the sweetest spot. Each push of his rod against her clit took her higher, made her hotter.

She tore her mouth away from his and panted for breath, seeking control of herself. She didn’t know him well enough to let herself completely lose her head, and it wasn’t smart to fall into lust with the first man she’d laid eyes on in her new home.

“Isn’t this the kind of help you had in mind?” Fisher’s eyes were languorous, his beautifully sculpted mouth half open, wet, seductive.

***

And they go on…and on…and on…

If you like what you read, and want more, here’s a link for ya.

http://www.jasminejade.com/m-251-suz-demello.aspx

Enjoy!



Erotic romance author Victoria Blisse runs a blogfest called the Sunday Snog every week–for the non-Brits, a snog is a kiss :) I participate most Sundays.

This week, I’m featuring The Infamous Elevator Scene from The Wilder Brother, one of my most popular books. It’s available in both print and digital form from Ellora’s Cave at this URL: http://www.jasminejade.com/m-251-suz-demello.aspx

Enjoy!

***

Stricken, Dana watched her almost-fiancé leave with her sister.

Max hadn’t known who she was. When would he figure it out? When he bedded Nicole?

Whatever happened, it was clear that Nick was right, Max was clueless and Dana couldn’t marry him.

Supper passed in a blur of champagne, appetizers and conversation. Nicole and Max’s betrayal loosened the chain that had prevented Dana from enjoying Colt’s company. Now she could admit to herself that she was attracted to Colt, handsome, funny, interesting Colt. He paid a flattering level of attention to her, touching her frequently. He played footsie under the table and kissed peanut sauce off her fingers. She accepted the caresses, wondering what Nicole and Max were doing. Two bottles of champagne later, Dana didn’t care.

Colt left only to pay the bill at the desk rather than at the table. He took several minutes. She wondered why, but took the opportunity to freshen her lipstick.

After his return, he took Dana’s elbow and steered her toward the elevator. She didn’t know why but decided she didn’t care when she stepped inside. “Oh wow.” A modern, glass-walled structure, the elevator car afforded a view out of the hotel, dark now, punctuated by glittering lights. “Ooh, pretty.” She stared with fascination.

As the double doors closed, he punched a button. The city’s lights winked and glowed, turning into shining streaks of color as the car rose. He punched another button and the lights inside the elevator turned off. They could see out but no one could see in.

Colt crowded her against the elevator wall, pressing his hips against her. He dug one hand into her hair, fisting it, holding her face steady as he kissed her. Slow and sensual, his mouth leisurely explored hers with nibbles, licks and sucks that teased and enticed without assaulting or demanding. His kiss was the essence of erotic promise, and she tingled even though they hadn’t gone farther than two inexperienced twelve-year-olds. He didn’t seem to be in a hurry, and she appreciated that. She parted her lips, impliedly saying yes to whatever he chose to take. He slipped his tongue inside for a deep, sexy, soul kiss.

Heat flashed through her body and she pulled him tighter. Even through their clothes she relished the rub of his hard chest on her breasts, which had grown achy with need.

He must have rented a room when he paid the bill, she realized hazily. Did she want this?

The memory of Max leaving the restaurant with his arm around Nick taunted Dana. But did that really matter? Max didn’t know.

Anyway, did their acts excuse hers?

She tried to squirm away from Colt, but his weight pinned her. With his tongue stalking hers, stroking hers, she couldn’t protest.

She didn’t want this. Did she?

She turned her head away, detaching her mouth, and panted for air. He kissed along her jawline and down the side of her throat, parting his body from hers only to glide his free palm against her breast, plucking the nipple until it burned and she moaned. She hadn’t wanted to show him her desire, but she couldn’t help herself. He rocked his hips against hers again, using one thigh to urge her legs apart then wedging himself against her.

His hard-on nudged the sweetest spot. Pleasure flared, intense and sharp. She bit his lower lip without thinking then pulled away with a gasp. If he kept doing that, she’d come, and she didn’t want an orgasm with Colt. Did she?

His hand left her breast to fumble at the strap of her dress. He tugged it down, exposing her. His fingers took her breast again, cupping her as he recaptured her mouth. He plunged deeper with his tongue and rubbed his erection back and forth across her mound. Every rub of his hard cock against her clit, every caress of his tongue, every squeeze of her breast took her higher and higher, forcing jagged shards of pleasure through her body.

With his next kiss Dana came, tearing her mouth away from his to draw ragged breaths. He feathered his lips along her throat toward her ear. A tender afterglow enveloped her in ecstasy.

But he wasn’t done. He lifted her skirt and palmed her inner thigh, reaching toward her pussy. His fingers on her thigh zinged electric before he found a tiny rip in the crotch of her pantyhose. He tore the hole wider and pushed a finger into her moist folds, caressing her clitoris, probing her slit.

Desire continued to flare and with a long, low moan, Dana kept coming. Colt lifted her leg high and set her heeled foot onto the elevator rail while unbuttoning his fly with hasty fingers.

A condom packet crackled, and then he was inside her, easing into her pussy, her welcoming, slick, wet pussy. His thick cock parted the tissues and filled her delightfully, but…

“C-Colt?”

“Yeah, baby?” Rotating his hips into hers, he slid a hand between them and stroked her bud.

Another blaze of pleasure shot through her, and she sucked in a breath. Colt didn’t stop, and she couldn’t.

But she had to.

“We c-can’t do this.”

He laughed. “We are doing this.”

“It’s wrong for me.”

“Shh. Do me, baby, real good. Come for me.”

And she did. Again, with one of his hands rolling her nipple and the other playing with her clit. She was on fire, way out of control, her entire being centered on his hard cock stretching her sheath, his eager hands exploring every inch of her body he could reach, his tongue filling her mouth.

She dropped her head back against the glass elevator wall, turning her head so her cheek touched its coolness. Her panting breaths gradually calmed as the aftershocks mellowed into a gentle, soft bliss.

Colt nibbled on her earlobe and asked, “You’re not going to marry my brother, are you, Dana?”

Every muscle in Dana’s body spasmed, and she sobered in an instant. She shoved him away from her. “You— You— You—” She clawed for the elevator’s control panel, stabbing randomly at buttons before grabbing a round red knob marked STOP. She yanked on it and the elevator halted with a jerk. An alarm sounded.

Howling with laughter, Colt clutched his sides as Dana frantically punched at the button she hoped would open the elevator doors. The doors finally slid apart. They’d stopped between floors, with only a two-foot space at the level of her head. She could see light and carpeting in the gap, and that was enough for her. She grabbed onto the rim of the sixth floor, trying to haul herself out of the elevator.

Colt’s laughter increased to guffaws interspersed with snorts. “Dana, Dana. Stop, honey. You’ll hurt yourself.”

She dug her elbows into the carpet. Her hips and legs were still inside the elevator, and she could feel one of Nicole’s high heels slipping off her foot. She curled her toes, trying to keep the shoe on. She didn’t care about explaining the loss of a shoe to Nick, that traitor. But Dana needed the shoe to get home.

Colt grabbed her hips. “Seriously, darlin’, what if the elevator starts up again?” He wasn’t laughing anymore.

“Let me go, you scumbag!”

“I’m a scumbag? You’re steppin’ out on your boyfriend and I’m the scumbag?”

“You— You knew!”

“Yeah, I knew. I knew you and your sister are making fun of my brother.”

“We’re not making fun. This— This is serious.”

“Then what are you doing?”

“None of your business.” She tried to squirm out of his grasp.

“Didn’t expect me to stop by, did you?”

“I tried to tell you—” The alarm bell clanged again, and she could hear running feet. Someone shouted from the floor below, “Don’t worry, we’ll get you out!”

She decided that dying would be better than continuing to endure this humiliation. “To hell with it,” she snapped. Kicking Colt away, she flipped the shoes off her feet. She climbed out of the elevator and ran along the carpeted hotel hallway toward a door marked EXIT.

Leaning against the elevator wall, Colt continued to laugh so hard that tears leaked from his eyes. He slapped his palm against the red STOP knob, shoving it in. The elevator doors closed and the car again started to rise. When it stopped, he tapped the L button, intending to look for Dana and see her home when he arrived in the lobby.



et cetera
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 353 other followers

%d bloggers like this: