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











http://victoriablisse.co.uk/sunday-snog

Celebrating the release of my romantic thriller, Puckheads, set in the world of ice hockeye, and thanks again to Victoria Blisse for this marvelous promo opportunity.

How far would you go to win your lifelong dream?

 When Zoë Whipple agrees to make a documentary about a hockey team’s season, she doesn’t sign on for scandal, crime and murder. But she discovers that players, rabid to win the championship, don’t let morality or the law stand in the way of their ambitions.

 When a rookie dies from cardiac arrest, Zoë is saddened but not suspicious until another player, in the grip of ’roid rage, goes berserk on the ice and ends up in the hospital. Digging into the mess reveals illegal painkillers and steroid abuse among most of the team. Zoë, whose reputation for honest filmmaking is at stake, threatens to expose the scandals.

Is her new lover, team captain “Crash” Crasseau, responsible for the harassment and vandalism meant to scare her into silence? When Crasseau’s ex-wife is murdered, and Zoë’s daughter is threatened, Zoë must choose between her career ambitions and her child’s safety.

And here’s the snog:

As Zoe left the room, the first person she saw was Daniel Crasseau. Just her luck. She again wondered how she was going to manage Crasseau and his Cro-Magnon possessiveness. He didn’t seem to get the message that she wasn’t going to play his idiotic games. How many times had he hit his head on the boards? Enough to scramble the brains inside, she bet.

He leaned against the wall and regarded her with a broody stare. His eyes were the same chilly color as compressed glacial ice, which didn’t help her composure. His dark blond hair, still damp from a post-game shower, brushed the collar of a navy polo shirt. He’d belted his jeans with a strip of leather that seemed clumsily hand-tooled. Aside from his stature, he looked like any other man might. So why did Crasseau get to her?

“Zoë Whipple,” he said in his deep, rough voice.

Her nipples tightened, scratching against her lace top. She didn’t like it or him, but she finally admitted to herself what bothered her about Crash.

He was damn sexy and knew it. How was she going to deal with him?

She resented his effect on her. As a filmmaker, she regularly dealt with the rich and famous. She knew Robert Redford, for heaven’s sake. She’d flown in Harrison Ford’s plane, but her stomach had never done somersaults.

“Whipple. What a suggestive, seductive name.”

She raised a brow. “If this is your idea of sweet talk, hockey groupies are way too easy.”

Smiling, he drew closer. She caught a whiff of his cologne, a compelling, spicy scent. Then he asked, “Do you like whips, Zoë Whipple?”

Though jolted, she shot him a cool smile. “You’ll never know.”

“Oh, I think I will.”

She sucked in a breath, aware of the tiny hairs up and down her back bristling at Crasseau’s staggering arrogance. “I’m convinced you don’t get enough, Crasseau, and I’m not the answer to your, uh, little problem.” She pointedly glanced at his pants.

He reared back, putting distance between them. “I’m getting plenty, and I don’t have a little problem.”

Ha. She’d nailed him where he was weak, in his male ego. “Really?” She hoped she sounded derisive.

“Yeah, really.” He imitated her contemptuous tone.

“So why are you flirting with me? I’m old enough to be your mother.”

Those ice blue eyes again surveyed her. He smiled. “I very much doubt that. I think we are of an age, you and I, and have more in common than you may know.”

“I’m pushing forty, studboy.”

He shrugged. “Big deal. In five years, I will be also.” He sipped his whiskey and eyed her over the rim of his glass.

That meant he was, what, thirty-four? Thirty-five? Not old, but in this sport, a senior. She tried not to appear deflated, but so many hockey players were kids that she’d overlooked that Crash was a man, and a very sexy one at that.

His gaze dropped to her mouth, and then to her breasts. His scent tickled her nose while his sexual aura filled her senses. How did he do that? she wondered. Was it his reputation? Would the fact he was so obviously thinking about sex make him seductive, make her think about bed?

Puckheads by Sue Swift

Puckheads by Sue Swift

Zoë took another deep breath, resolving that she was not going to get involved with a man as clearly troubled as Daniel Crasseau. Any kind of intimacy with him would insult her husband’s memory. She was going to get rid of Crash, fast and forever.

She said, “What if you’re looking for something else?”

“What?”

“You get laid plenty, or so you say.” She wondered what imp had taken over her tongue. When she talked with Crash, she often said the darnedest things. She’d certainly never used so many rude, crude terms.

But Crasseau was rude and crude, and, determined to scare him off, she figured she’d fight fire with fire. “So if you don’t want sex, what is it that you want?”

He shrugged. “What could that be?”

“What if you want to open your head and heart, and sharing your body just isn’t enough?” Zoë knew that men hated to talk about feelings. There was a thousand-percent chance that Crash would turn tail and scram.

He stared at her, looking as though she’d bitch-slapped him. “I don’t want that kind of commitment.”

“Then go hit on someone else. You don’t need me, and I don’t need you to mess up my life. You come over here and flirt—”

“I hardly said anything.” Raising his hands defensively, Crasseau backed off.

“You don’t have to say anything. You flirt with your eyes, your smile, your entire body. You come in here, pure testosterone, giving off pheromones like…like the sun gives off light and heat, and you’re saying now—” She stopped, hearing a door open behind her and footsteps advance. Lauren. Damn.

He ignored the interruption. “So you are interested.”

“I have children, Crasseau,” she hissed. “I’m supposed to be setting an example.”

Her daughter slid an arm around Zoë’s waist and said, “Hi, Mom. Why don’t you introduce me?”

He smiled and extended a hand. “Daniel Crasseau.”

Grinning, Lauren shook Crash’s hand. “Lauren Whipple.”

“May I date your mother?”

“You can try. Good luck.” With a wink, she slipped past them on her way downstairs, passing another partier.

“So you’re a tough one, eh?” His eyes gleamed. “That’s all right. I like a challenge.”

Zoë folded her arms across her torso, deciding she’d deal with Lauren later. “I’m not a challenge, I’m a person.”

“Even better.”

“Right,” she sneered. “The kind of female you want is right over there.” She nodded toward the staircase, where a blonde woman now leaned against the rail, displaying her body. She wore a damp halter top, inflated breasts, thick makeup and an avid expression.

Crasseau’s gaze passed over her with total indifference. “I’m done with hockey hos and puckbunnies.” He waved a hand dismissively, and the blonde woman went back downstairs, calling Thor’s name. Crash continued. “They’re boring. Why shouldn’t I be interested in you?”

“You’re not. I don’t do one-nighters.”

“If we’re good together, there could be more.”

“Be still my heart.” She placed a hand on her chest.

As though magnetized, Crasseau’s glance followed her hand to her breasts. She again crossed her arms over herself and narrowed her eyes at him. He grinned back.

He looked infuriatingly sexy.

He looked as though he could deliver on every seductive promise.

He looked like a six-foot-four-inch problem.

How was she going to get rid of him? She said, “Crasseau, listen to me. I’m a widow. My husband died two years ago. I’m not getting involved with you or anyone.”

His eyes went blank as glass, concealing his thoughts. “I am sorry for your loss.” His voice was precise, polite, as if he were reading lines he’d memorized from Miss Manners.

Hmm, she thought. There’s something going on here.

He took her hand and kissed the back of it. She hated to admit that the gesture, though corny, felt good. What was wrong with her?

“I could make you forget the past.” His voice had gone dark and husky.

“Forget my husband? I don’t want to forget him.”

“I could make you forget the pain.” He brushed his knuckles over her collarbone, leaving a trail of sensual longing in his wake.

She shivered.

Not a cold shiver. A shiver of need, of passion.

As quickly as her desire had arisen, she squelched the feeling. The humiliation of becoming another notch on Crasseau’s hockey stick was one factor. And there was Zoë herself. Paul had been the love of her life. Why should she settle for anything less than the joy she’d known?

Crasseau was nothing but trouble. She didn’t need or want him. Did she?

While she’d ruminated, he’d eased closer. Though he’d cornered her at the end of the hallway, she didn’t feel trapped. Her heart banged against her ribs. But she wasn’t scared. She was excited.

He ran seductive fingertips up and down her bare arm. The tiny hairs lifted, tickling her, raising a tremor of response he must have seen.

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

One more bedroom smile and that’s where she’d be headed. To his bedroom.

He bent his head close to hers. “I could do it too. I could make you forget.”

He was too close and too right, damn him. “I’m…I’m cold. I want to get my jacket.”

“Funny, you look pretty damn hot to me.”

Her mouth dropped open. Hot? She was hot? Since when?

“Nice blush.” He winked at her. “You look good in red. Come with me. I’ll warm you up.”

That one had been old when Zoë was sixteen. “Warm me up? Are you kidding?”

“Ah, you’re smiling. That’s a good sign.” He covered her mouth with his.

He tasted her as though she were fine wine, sipping at her mouth rather than ravaging it. Every gentle touch of his surprisingly tender lips quivered through her body.

No one had kissed her mouth since Paul died. The shock of it made her limp, and the pleasure, a pleasure she’d forgotten, made her reel and sway, pliant in his arms.

Then there were his hands. Big, rough hockey player’s hands that had scored hundreds of goals, fought through a thousand scrums. Hands that now stroked Zoë with the delicacy of a kitten’s paws, sliding up and down her back, then palming her bottom. He pressed her hips against his with those big, firm hands.

He wasn’t lying about his desire. In instinctive response, her need whispered through every cell, as though something quiescent had awakened.

His distinctive scent filled her nostrils. What was it?

“What was what?” he asked.

Damn. She must have spoken aloud, murmuring against his mouth. No way to hide…

“Your cologne,” she said.

“I’m not wearing any.”

Double damn. That meant she found his natural scent attractive. “That’s not good.”

“Of course it is,” he said, understanding perfectly. He nibbled on her earlobe before trailing gentle kisses along the side of her throat toward her breasts.

Despite how good he felt, how good he smelled, she wasn’t ready for this, or him. A good, sharp shove forced him all the way to the opposite wall of the hallway.

“Do not,” she snarled, “do not, under any circumstances, push me into a corner like that. I am not here to wax your stick every time you think it needs polishing.”

“Maybe not, but you want me.”

“So what?” She jammed past him, planning to leave.

But a delightful, tingling warmth had spread throughout her limbs. She recognized the unfamiliar feeling. Pleasure.

A man, not her husband, had flattered her, kissed her, desired her, and she’d found it pleasurable.

She wasn’t sure she wanted that.

Zoë glanced back at Crash, who followed her. His eyes held an intensity, a desperate hunger she didn’t understand.

She couldn’t trust someone she didn’t understand.

Author bio: 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.

Her blog is at http://www.fearlessfastpacedfiction.com. 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.



Thanks again to Victoria Blisse for this marvelous promo opportunity.

This kiss comes from Puckheads, a romantic suspense tale set in the fast-paced world of pro ice hockey.

 How far would you go to win your lifelong dream?

 When Zoë Whipple agrees to make a documentary about a hockey team’s season, she doesn’t sign on for scandal, crime and murder. But she discovers that players, rabid to win the championship, don’t let morality or the law stand in the way of their ambitions.

 When a rookie dies from cardiac arrest, Zoë is saddened but not suspicious until another player, in the grip of ’roid rage, goes berserk on the ice and ends up in the hospital. Digging into the mess reveals illegal painkillers and steroid abuse among most of the team. Zoë, whose reputation for honest filmmaking is at stake, threatens to expose the scandals.

Is her new lover, team captain “Crash” Crasseau, responsible for the harassment and vandalism meant to scare her into silence? When Crasseau’s ex-wife is murdered, and Zoë’s daughter is threatened, Zoë must choose between her career ambitions and her child’s safety.

And here’s the snog:

As Zoe left the room, the first person she saw was Daniel Crasseau. Just her luck. She again wondered how she was going to manage Crasseau and his Cro-Magnon possessiveness. He didn’t seem to get the message that she wasn’t going to play his idiotic games. How many times had he hit his head on the boards? Enough to scramble the brains inside, she bet.

He leaned against the wall and regarded her with a broody stare. His eyes were the same chilly color as compressed glacial ice, which didn’t help her composure. His dark blond hair, still damp from a post-game shower, brushed the collar of a navy polo shirt. He’d belted his jeans with a strip of leather that seemed clumsily hand-tooled. Aside from his stature, he looked like any other man might. So why did Crasseau get to her?

“Zoë Whipple,” he said in his deep, rough voice.

Her nipples tightened, scratching against her lace top. She didn’t like it or him, but she finally admitted to herself what bothered her about Crash.

He was damn sexy and knew it. How was she going to deal with him?

She resented his effect on her. As a filmmaker, she regularly dealt with the rich and famous. She knew Robert Redford, for heaven’s sake. She’d flown in Harrison Ford’s plane, but her stomach had never done somersaults.

“Whipple. What a suggestive, seductive name.”

She raised a brow. “If this is your idea of sweet talk, hockey groupies are way too easy.”

Smiling, he drew closer. She caught a whiff of his cologne, a compelling, spicy scent. Then he asked, “Do you like whips, Zoë Whipple?”

Though jolted, she shot him a cool smile. “You’ll never know.”

“Oh, I think I will.”

She sucked in a breath, aware of the tiny hairs up and down her back bristling at Crasseau’s staggering arrogance. “I’m convinced you don’t get enough, Crasseau, and I’m not the answer to your, uh, little problem.” She pointedly glanced at his pants.

He reared back, putting distance between them. “I’m getting plenty, and I don’t have a little problem.”

Ha. She’d nailed him where he was weak, in his male ego. “Really?” She hoped she sounded derisive.

“Yeah, really.” He imitated her contemptuous tone.

“So why are you flirting with me? I’m old enough to be your mother.”

Those ice blue eyes again surveyed her. He smiled. “I very much doubt that. I think we are of an age, you and I, and have more in common than you may know.”

“I’m pushing forty, studboy.”

He shrugged. “Big deal. In five years, I will be also.” He sipped his whiskey and eyed her over the rim of his glass.

That meant he was, what, thirty-four? Thirty-five? Not old, but in this sport, a senior. She tried not to appear deflated, but so many hockey players were kids that she’d overlooked that Crash was a man, and a very sexy one at that.

His gaze dropped to her mouth, and then to her breasts. His scent tickled her nose while his sexual aura filled her senses. How did he do that? she wondered. Was it his reputation? Would the fact he was so obviously thinking about sex make him seductive, make her think about bed?

Puckheads from Ellora’s Cave

Zoë took another deep breath, resolving that she was not going to get involved with a man as clearly troubled as Daniel Crasseau. Any kind of intimacy with him would insult her husband’s memory. She was going to get rid of Crash, fast and forever.

She said, “What if you’re looking for something else?”

“What?”

“You get laid plenty, or so you say.” She wondered what imp had taken over her tongue. When she talked with Crash, she often said the darnedest things. She’d certainly never used so many rude, crude terms.

But Crasseau was rude and crude, and, determined to scare him off, she figured she’d fight fire with fire. “So if you don’t want sex, what is it that you want?”

He shrugged. “What could that be?”

“What if you want to open your head and heart, and sharing your body just isn’t enough?” Zoë knew that men hated to talk about feelings. There was a thousand-percent chance that Crash would turn tail and scram.

He stared at her, looking as though she’d bitch-slapped him. “I don’t want that kind of commitment.”

“Then go hit on someone else. You don’t need me, and I don’t need you to mess up my life. You come over here and flirt—”

“I hardly said anything.” Raising his hands defensively, Crasseau backed off.

“You don’t have to say anything. You flirt with your eyes, your smile, your entire body. You come in here, pure testosterone, giving off pheromones like…like the sun gives off light and heat, and you’re saying now—” She stopped, hearing a door open behind her and footsteps advance. Lauren. Damn.

He ignored the interruption. “So you are interested.”

“I have children, Crasseau,” she hissed. “I’m supposed to be setting an example.”

Her daughter slid an arm around Zoë’s waist and said, “Hi, Mom. Why don’t you introduce me?”

He smiled and extended a hand. “Daniel Crasseau.”

Grinning, Lauren shook Crash’s hand. “Lauren Whipple.”

“May I date your mother?”

“You can try. Good luck.” With a wink, she slipped past them on her way downstairs, passing another partier.

“So you’re a tough one, eh?” His eyes gleamed. “That’s all right. I like a challenge.”

Zoë folded her arms across her torso, deciding she’d deal with Lauren later. “I’m not a challenge, I’m a person.”

“Even better.”

“Right,” she sneered. “The kind of female you want is right over there.” She nodded toward the staircase, where a blonde woman now leaned against the rail, displaying her body. She wore a damp halter top, inflated breasts, thick makeup and an avid expression.

Crasseau’s gaze passed over her with total indifference. “I’m done with hockey hos and puckbunnies.” He waved a hand dismissively, and the blonde woman went back downstairs, calling Thor’s name. Crash continued. “They’re boring. Why shouldn’t I be interested in you?”

“You’re not. I don’t do one-nighters.”

“If we’re good together, there could be more.”

“Be still my heart.” She placed a hand on her chest.

As though magnetized, Crasseau’s glance followed her hand to her breasts. She again crossed her arms over herself and narrowed her eyes at him. He grinned back.

He looked infuriatingly sexy.

He looked as though he could deliver on every seductive promise.

He looked like a six-foot-four-inch problem.

How was she going to get rid of him? She said, “Crasseau, listen to me. I’m a widow. My husband died two years ago. I’m not getting involved with you or anyone.”

His eyes went blank as glass, concealing his thoughts. “I am sorry for your loss.” His voice was precise, polite, as if he were reading lines he’d memorized from Miss Manners.

Hmm, she thought. There’s something going on here.

He took her hand and kissed the back of it. She hated to admit that the gesture, though corny, felt good. What was wrong with her?

“I could make you forget the past.” His voice had gone dark and husky.

“Forget my husband? I don’t want to forget him.”

“I could make you forget the pain.” He brushed his knuckles over her collarbone, leaving a trail of sensual longing in his wake.

She shivered.

Not a cold shiver. A shiver of need, of passion.

As quickly as her desire had arisen, she squelched the feeling. The humiliation of becoming another notch on Crasseau’s hockey stick was one factor. And there was Zoë herself. Paul had been the love of her life. Why should she settle for anything less than the joy she’d known?

Crasseau was nothing but trouble. She didn’t need or want him. Did she?

While she’d ruminated, he’d eased closer. Though he’d cornered her at the end of the hallway, she didn’t feel trapped. Her heart banged against her ribs. But she wasn’t scared. She was excited.

He ran seductive fingertips up and down her bare arm. The tiny hairs lifted, tickling her, raising a tremor of response he must have seen.

One more bedroom smile and that’s where she’d be headed. To his bedroom.

He bent his head close to hers. “I could do it too. I could make you forget.”

He was too close and too right, damn him. “I’m…I’m cold. I want to get my jacket.”

“Funny, you look pretty damn hot to me.”

Her mouth dropped open. Hot? She was hot? Since when?

“Nice blush.” He winked at her. “You look good in red. Come with me. I’ll warm you up.”

That one had been old when Zoë was sixteen. “Warm me up? Are you kidding?”

“Ah, you’re smiling. That’s a good sign.” He covered her mouth with his.

He tasted her as though she were fine wine, sipping at her mouth rather than ravaging it. Every gentle touch of his surprisingly tender lips quivered through her body.

No one had kissed her mouth since Paul died. The shock of it made her limp, and the pleasure, a pleasure she’d forgotten, made her reel and sway, pliant in his arms.

Then there were his hands. Big, rough hockey player’s hands that had scored hundreds of goals, fought through a thousand scrums. Hands that now stroked Zoë with the delicacy of a kitten’s paws, sliding up and down her back, then palming her bottom. He pressed her hips against his with those big, firm hands.

He wasn’t lying about his desire. In instinctive response, her need whispered through every cell, as though something quiescent had awakened.

His distinctive scent filled her nostrils. What was it?

“What was what?” he asked.

Damn. She must have spoken aloud, murmuring against his mouth. No way to hide…

“Your cologne,” she said.

“I’m not wearing any.”

Double damn. That meant she found his natural scent attractive. “That’s not good.”

“Of course it is,” he said, understanding perfectly. He nibbled on her earlobe before trailing gentle kisses along the side of her throat toward her breasts.

Despite how good he felt, how good he smelled, she wasn’t ready for this, or him. A good, sharp shove forced him all the way to the opposite wall of the hallway.

“Do not,” she snarled, “do not, under any circumstances, push me into a corner like that. I am not here to wax your stick every time you think it needs polishing.”

“Maybe not, but you want me.”

“So what?” She jammed past him, planning to leave.

But a delightful, tingling warmth had spread throughout her limbs. She recognized the unfamiliar feeling. Pleasure.

A man, not her husband, had flattered her, kissed her, desired her, and she’d found it pleasurable.

She wasn’t sure she wanted that.

Zoë glanced back at Crash, who followed her. His eyes held an intensity, a desperate hunger she didn’t understand.

She couldn’t trust someone she didn’t understand.

Author bio: Suz deMello:

Best-selling, award-winning author Sue Swift, a.k.a Suz deMello, has written over fifteen novels, plus several short stories

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

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.

Her blog is at http://www.fearlessfastpacedfiction.com. 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.



The ever-active Victoria Blisse has thought up a fun blog hop celebrating the Summer Olympics in her native England.

This blog hope requires the participants to be all sweaty and sexy, instead of just sexy.

I happen to think athletes are hot, mega-hot, hotter than any other kind of guy. So I’ve written a coupe of books starring athletes. Today I’ll be showcasing Puckheads, my romantic suspense set in the fast-paced world of pro hockey.

Here’s the blurb:

How far would you go to win your lifelong dream?

When Zoë Whipple agrees to film a documentary about a hockey team’s season, she doesn’t sign on for scandal, crime and murder. But she discovers that players rabid to win the championship don’t let morality or the law stand in the way of their ambitions.

When a rookie dies from cardiac arrest, Zoë is saddened but not suspicious until another player, in the grip of ‘roid rage, goes berserk on the ice and ends up in the hospital. Digging into the mess reveals illegal painkillers and steroid abuse among most of the team. Zoë, whose reputation for honest filmmaking is at stake, threatens to expose the scandals.

Is her new lover, team captain “Crash” Crasseau, responsible for the harassment and vandalism meant to scare her into silence? When Crasseau’s ex-wife is murdered, and Zoë’s daughter is threatened, Zoë must choose between her career ambitions and her child’s safety.

Here’s an excerpt:

“Quit delaying.”  Crasseau pulled her onto the ice.

Zoë tried to control her shaking limbs, but it was tough.  She was so nervous that she was sweating through layers of clothing.

Crasseau spun so he was skating backwards and hauled her along with him, impossibly fast.  “Relax, will you?  You’re wearing full gear.  You could fall down a flight of stairs and not get hurt.”

She began to push her skates outward the way she used to do when roller skating.  Suddenly it came back to her and she was speeding along, scarcely noticing when Crasseau let go of her hands.  When she did notice, she fell, but he didn’t let her hit the ice.  The warmth of his arm around her waist, startling and intimate, shot a palpable charge through her body.

Puckheads from Ellora’s Cave

Other players gathered around to hoot and holler.  “Nice skating, câlisse.”  Rene Thorion laughed and cuffed Crash on the shoulder, shoving him back to the ice.  “Zoë, skate with me.  I’ll show you the ropes.”

Crash said something back at Thor that sounded like tabernac, which Zoë didn’t understand, but her French was lousy.  “What?”

“Don’t pay attention to those crazy Québeçois.”  Manny took Zoë’s hand.  “We got a stick for this girl?  I teach you how to play defense.  It’s easy.  Even big dummies like me and Crash, we can play D.”

“No, she’s a winger.  Small and fast, like Martin Saint-Louis.”  Thor skated circles around them.

“Guys, please.”  Zoë let Manny pull her to her feet.  “Right now, I’d settle for learning to skate again.  Can anyone teach me crossovers?”

“I will.”  Jack Taber edged closer to Zoë.

Jeff Durand elbowed Jack in the side. “Better let the captain.  He’s pretty possessive of his girl.”

“I’m not—”

“Are so.”  Crash grabbed her hand and skated with her around the rink.

Like what you read?

Buy it here:

http://tinyurl.com/cw855sn

A little about me:

 
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

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

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.

 



Happy Holidays, everyone!

The charming and generous Victoria Blisse has arranged another blog tour that celebrates Christmas because–who can get enough holiday merriment and joy! Certainly not me, and because the blog hop is holiday themed, of course there’s a gift–a $50 voucher to All Romance Ebooks, where you can pick up a few of the titles you enjoy. You’re automatically entered when you leave a comment at any of the hop’s sites.

I’ve picked a scene from one of my best selling novels to share with you. Walk Like A Man was originally published by Five Star in an expensive but lovely $25 hardcover edition. Now it’s available from Etopia Press at a price that’s much more wallet-friendly–the ebook retails at all the usual places for $5.99.

Here’s the blurb:

Macho quarterback Jim Wellman meets his match in bright and sassy physical therapist Marti Solis, who goads him out of his wheelchair, pushing him to walk again. Unlike every other woman Jim has wanted, she refuses to jump into the sack with the celebrity athlete. Though attracted to his bedroom smile and rugged good looks, she’s intimidated by his fame and turned off by his arrogance.

Can Jim become the lover Marti needs? Can he learn to walk like a man?

Set in California’s beautiful Napa Valley, this multicultural romance delivers humor and pathos, sparkling dialogue, layered characters, a heroine to root for and a hero who’s pure fantasy.

And here’s a little snippet from deep in the book to sharpen your appetite. The set-up is that Jim and Marti hooked up and of course it was amazing :) But Jim, involved with his legal case against his team, blurted out to her that his attorney didn’t want them to see each other while his case was active. Marti took this as rejection–who wouldn’t?–and ran.

Neither Jim’s nor Marti’s Christmas was especially merry. Here’s a bit about what Jim was doing and feeling over the holiday:

“A white Christmas!” Shawna exclaimed with satisfaction. From inside the warmth of the living room, Jim, his best friend, and his sister surveyed the snow-covered lawn, which sloped down to the icy pond. “Just what I wanted!”

Jim raised his brows. “We’ll see if you’re still happy with the snow tomorrow when we have to dig out the

Walk Like A Man

http://tinyurl.com/6mn6hr9

driveway.”

Shawna giggled as Carl led her to a sofa near the fire, which crackled merrily in the big stone hearth. Jim watched as his sister and his friend laughed and flirted by the Christmas tree, which towered near the fireplace in his stone, wood, and glass home deep in the forest. A flash of envy jabbed through his heart, as sharp as the scalpels that had ruined his leg and torn apart his career. Why not me? What’s wrong with me?

He turned away from the joyous scene in his living room and stared out the window at the falling snow.

A presence at his side made him start. “What’s wrong, son?”

He slipped his arm around his mother’s still-slim waist. Karen Wellman hadn’t had many opportunities to gain weight while running after three active children and working two jobs. Later, when her sons had become successful, she’d started to enjoy the benefits of their wealth. A personal trainer was only one of the goodies Jim and Jack had been able to provide their mom.

Karen brushed Jim’s hair off his forehead with a gentle hand. “That wasn’t a rhetorical question, dear.”

He smiled. “Sorry. I was thinking.”

“Don’t work too hard. It’s Christmas. It’s a time to be happy, not to brood. And you’ve been very broody lately.”

“I know.” He gazed at the fluffy white puffs floating down outside the window without really seeing them. “I miss a friend, that’s all.”

“That girl Shawna told me about—what was her name—Marti?”

“Yeah. I really blew it bad, Mom.”

“So go get her back. You’ve never had trouble getting a woman before.”

“This one’s different.”

“Good. You need different.”

The harsh note in his mother’s voice surprised Jim. “I thought you liked Glenda.”

“I liked Glenda, and Rachel, and Wanda, and Trudi, and Margo, and all the rest of them in the same way I like reading Style magazine. Amusing but hardly essential.”

“I miss Marti. You’d like her. She’s more like Newsweek. She’s got substance.”

His mother smiled. “So what are you doing to get this substantial woman back into your life?”

He waved his hands helplessly. “I’ve done everything I could think of! Phoned, sent letters and flowers—I’ve even gone out to Napa to try to see her a couple of times. I can’t catch up with her at work—she’d blow a fuse—but I’ve stopped by her house a couple of times. Somehow, she’s never there. Once I stayed in Napa all night. I guess she was out of town or something.

“I don’t know what else to do, Mom.” His voice cracked, embarrassing the heck out of him, but he’d never bothered to keep his feelings to himself, and didn’t try now.

“Does she love you?”

“Well, she said so, and she’s a very truthful person. I think she’s avoiding me because I hurt her so much. I can’t really blame her, ‘cause I’ve been such a jerk.”

“Why?”

“I knew she was . . . well . . . not shy, but cautious, like those deer out there.” He gestured to a pair of does who picked their way through the snow toward one of the piles of fodder he and Shawna had put out for them. After every few steps they lifted their graceful heads, scanning the terrain for any dangers that might lurk in the surrounding forest. In contrast to their wariness, blue jays brawled loudly at a nearby bird feeder.

“Spooked her, huh?”

“Yeah, really bad. Norm Whitehead told me to stop seeing Marti until the case is over, and, like a fool, I told her.”

Karen winced. “Well, you know what they say. Nothing good comes easy. And you’ve had it pretty easy till this year.”

“I know. I’ve been lucky. But right now, I feel as though my luck’s run out.”

“You’ll think of something. You’re very resourceful, son. It’s one of your best qualities.”

If you enjoyed what you read, please check out the book at any online outlet, including:

http://www.amazon.com/Walk-Like-a-Man-ebook/dp/B0087IOG0W/

http://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-walklikeaman-814090-149.html

Remember to leave a comment in order to be entered into the drawing :)

Happy reading!

Sue Swift/Suz deMello



It’s my pleasure to participate in this blog hop with not one but two of my books. I do love jocks and have been labeled one myself. That must have been because I earned a 2d degree black belt and used to play ice hockey. These days, being older and smarter, I do yoga. But when I played hockey, I wrote a murder mystery with hot pro hockey players, Puckheads. I’ll give a digital copy away to a lucky commenter.

Here’s what it’s about:

How far would you go to win your lifelong dream?

When Zoë Whipple agrees to make a documentary about a hockey team’s season, she doesn’t sign on for scandal, crime and murder. But she discovers that players, rabid to win the championship, don’t let

Jocks in July

morality or the law stand in the way of their ambitions.

When a rookie dies from cardiac arrest, Zoë is saddened but not suspicious until another player, in the grip of ’roid rage, goes berserk on the ice and ends up in the hospital. Digging into the mess reveals illegal painkillers and steroid abuse among most of the team. Zoë, whose reputation for honest filmmaking is at stake, threatens to expose the scandals.

Is her new lover, team captain “Crash” Crasseau, responsible for the harassment and vandalism meant to scare her into silence? When Crasseau’s ex-wife is murdered and Zoë’s daughter is threatened, Zoë must choose between her career ambitions and her child’s safety.

Here’s an excerpt:

Puckheads

Excerpt from Chapter Ten

Fingers entwined, they walked back to the hotel together in the chilly November night. Daniel stopped at her door and held out his hand for the key. Zoë handed it to him.

He asked, “Do you want me tonight?”

She looked at his craggy, unpretty face, and said, “Yes, I do.”

He nodded and opened the door.

Her room was dark and cold with the close, dank scent of hotel rooms everywhere. Crasseau lit the bedside lamp. Without a word, he turned to her, opening his arms. In two quick strides, she went into his embrace, snuggling, allowing the warmth to turn to heat and passion.

He slid big hands into her hair and tilted her head so he could kiss her mouth with a patient thoroughness that left her breathless and hungry for him.

Denying her want had been a lie. Worse, it had been a waste of time. In the foolish belief that they’d have forever, she’d thrown away so much time that she could have spent with Paul. Now she swore to herself she’d never again make the same mistake.

She began to tug at Crash’s clothes and he at hers, leaving coats, scarves, hats in a pile on the floor.

Easing her onto the bed, Daniel knelt to take off her boots. “Are you sure about this, Zoë?” He didn’t know why he’d asked because he’d jump out the window if she said no, she wasn’t sure, and could he please leave while she decided?

A moment passed during which he died twenty deaths before she said, “Yes, I’m sure. If only to get you out of my system.” She gave him the kind of apologetic smile that girls give when they really aren’t sure.

He shoved aside his insecurity and laughed softly. “I’ll take you any way I can, but this is somewhat more than putting Part A into Slot B, eh?”

She went pink. Or was that from the chill? Then she whispered, “Yes, it is.”

Her boots off, he removed her socks and began to rub her cold, narrow feet.

Zoë gazed at Crasseau’s dark blond hair. The entire event had taken on an atmosphere of unreality. From the moment he’d whirled her out of her hotel room to experience Montreal on a November night, she’d been separated from her ordinary life.

The commitment she’d made crashed down on her. She was going to have sex with this man. She was going to let him strip her naked, take away her defenses, and then put a part of himself inside her.

Puckheads, romantic suspense from Ellora’s Cave

She began to shake, and he rose to embrace her trembling body. He kissed her, using lips and tongue and teeth until she shook not from fear but from pleasure.

“Take my clothes off, please, Zoë.”

That he’d said please meant everything. She tugged at his sweater, unbuttoned his shirt, unbuckled the odd belt he liked to wear. She ran the strip of badly tooled leather through her fingers and wanted to ask him about it, but decided to leave the question for a better time.

The zipper of his trousers rasped loudly in the room, quiet except for their harsh exhalations. Naked, he reached for her, holding her close again, kissing her mouth as though he never wished to stop. But she was ready to move on. She pulled away, and at the sudden hurt on his face, said, “Too hot,” and yanked her sweater over her head. She’d skipped a bra, and her breasts, now free, bobbed and swayed, crinkling at the tips in the cool air of the hotel room.

He tumbled her onto the bed and hauled at her jeans, getting them down to her knees before he buried his face in her muff. “Ahhh.” His sigh was that of a happy man.

“Do you like…”

He raised his head, eyes gleaming in the soft bedside light. “Oh yeah. I like. I like a lot.”

She laughed with relief, knowing that it would be all right, probably much better than all right. He tugged at the hems of each pant leg, taking off the jeans.

Her skin prickled. She flung the spread down to the foot of the bed and hauled at the sheets and blankets. Burrowing under the bedclothes, she reached for him.

They cuddled together in bed, letting body warmth fill the space before they began to make love.

She touched and explored and kissed. Crash’s body was a wonder. She couldn’t evade comparisons with Paul, lean and tanned, who’d been a Southern California beach boy before he’d attended med school. Crasseau was the opposite, pale and bulky, but shapely in an aggressive, male way. Learning his body would take more than one short night.

At the thought, she tensed. She hadn’t considered a continuing relationship with Daniel Crasseau. Did she want that?

He stroked her breasts, and asked, “What?”

“There is so…much of you.”

He laughed. “And so little of you, ma petite Zoë. I could eat you up.”

“Who’s stopping you?”

So he did, and when she was wet and quivering and satisfied, he pushed into her. She was deliciously tight, almost too snug, and he guessed that he was her first since her husband had died. He wanted her all the more but managed to control his savage urge to take her hard and long. He wouldn’t pound on this delicate creature. She’d honored him with her trust, and betrayal was unthinkable.

He held back, moving slowly inside her until she cried out again, clutching his shoulders with a pure, feminine greed.

Author Sue Swift

Then he let go and fell into the bliss of Zoë’s love.

Like what you read?

You can buy it at Ellora’s Cave, and at a reduced price of 99 cents! 

Happy reading!

If you want to continue the blog hop, go here for a list.

 And here’s a little about me.

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 reached the top ten on a bestseller list.

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.

Her blog is at http://www.fearlessfastpacedfiction.com. 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.




She got me! That is, Victoria Blisse tagged me to participate in the Lucky Seven blog challenge, open only to writers. Here’s how it works: You go to your work in progress, head to page 7 or 77, count down 7 lines, then post the next seven sentences, no matter what they are.

So here’s a selection from Desire in Tartan, the sequel to Temptation in Tartan. It takes place just after the hero and the heroine have become handfasted.

It’s gonna be a hot wedding night!

“Stand up and take off your clothes.” His voice had taken on a shard of steel running through it.

“What?”

“Ye heard me. Take off your clothes, every stitch. You’ve done a great wrong, me wife, and ye’ll be punished for it.”

She stared at him open-mouthed.



http://victoriablisse.co.uk/sunday-snog

The first manuscript I wrote remains one of my most popular books. I don’t know why–Walk Like a Man is a really simple boy-meets-girl tale. You decide if it’s worthy of its enduring popularity.

Here’s the blurb:

Macho quarterback Jim Wellman meets his match in bright and sassy physical therapist Marti Solis, who goads him out of his wheelchair, pushing him to walk again. Unlike every other woman Jim has wanted, she refuses to jump into the sack with the celebrity athlete. Though attracted to his bedroom smile and rugged good looks, she’s intimidated by his fame and turned off by his arrogance.

Can Jim become the lover Marti needs? Can he learn to walk like a man?

Set in California’s beautiful Napa Valley, this multicultural romance delivers humor and pathos, sparkling dialogue, layered characters, a heroine to root for and a hero who’s pure fantasy.

Here are the cover and the smooch :)

Jim smiled back, taking her in. The white lace blouse Marti wore concealed her slender body while it outlined her curves. A strapless bustier peeked through the lacework. His curiosity teased. He didn’t know if Marti liked sexy lingerie. He sure hoped so, and wanted to find out right away.

Offering her his arm, he walked her down the hall to his suite. He closed the door of his room behind them and took her into his arms, stroking her back. One hand freed pearl buttons from tiny loops. He opened the shirt while softly kissing her lips, and ran his fingers over the pale amber swells of her breasts where they thrust from the bustier.

She murmured against his mouth, “I’m scared.”

“Scared of what?” he asked, still caressing her breasts. He lifted one out of the bustier and rubbed his thumb over the tender nipple. It puckered instantly. He bent his head to nibble at the enticing nub.

“Someone may come in,” she said weakly.

“Door’s locked. You’ll keep your job today, sweetheart.”

“But—”

He stopped her protest with a kiss, then loosened his hold. “Marti, I’m not into forcing you. Whenever you feel uncomfortable, just tell me to stop.” He stroked her cheek. “I promise you won’t be sorry.”

She hesitated.

“Make a choice, now.” He knew she didn’t want to tell him ‘no.’

She gulped. “I’ll stay. For a while, at least.”

Jim tried not to let his surge of masculine triumph show on his face. “That’s all I ask.” He walked her over to his big bed and lowered her onto it, gazing down at her.

She had never looked so exciting. The high-collared blouse contrasted with her flagrantly exposed breast. She was mind-numbingly sexy. His Halloween costume–a pirate outfit–made him feel like an outlaw ravishing a prim and proper Victorian virgin.

Erect and flushed, her nipple glistened where he had licked it. Her hair partially escaped from the old-fashioned style, framing her face with soft wisps that begged for his touch.

Jim joined her on the bed so they lay side by side. He captured her in his arms and kissed her mouth thoroughly, voluptuously. He groped at her side to find a row of buttons securing the high, tight waist of her skirt, and unfastened them as she stroked his chest through the pirate’s shirt. Arousal sparked through his body like electric shocks with every caress of her knowing hands.

He again took her breast with his mouth, sucking the nipple before gently nipping it with his teeth. It rose, hot and hard on his tongue, and he tugged on the sexy little point. She was tasty as hell and he wanted to eat her right up.

Sue Swift/Suz deMello is the author of sixteen novels plus a number of short stories and articles about writing. Her current release, Temptation in Tartan, is an ARE bestseller.



The fine folks at three related sites,  CataRomance.comSensualReads.com and SingleTitles.com are sponsoring a blog hop from now until June 10. They’re giving boxes of books away, and every participating author is giving something, whether swag, a print book or an ebook. I’m giving away an ebook to a randomly chosen, lucky commenter–and this giveaway opportunity is open to anyone, regardless of where you may live.

The people at this site have always supported my books, even back when I was writing traditional romance for Silhouette– a looooong time ago. So I’m happy to support them.

So here’s a little about my other June book release–this isn’t fiercely erotic, like Temptation in Tartan. Walk Like A Man was my first manuscript and, as such, is a simple boy-meets-girl, boy-gets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-gets-girl back story. It’s been quite successful, but I don’t know why. Maybe readers prefer simple to entangled, but these so called “simple” books are very hard to write. The more that happens to my characters, the more I have to write about. So simpler is harder. In general, I like my characters to have a mystery to solve or a danger to confront while falling in love. It’s easier.

So here you are, for your reading pleasure: Walk Like A Man.

The blurb:

Macho quarterback Jim Wellman meets his match in bright and sassy physical therapist Marti Solis, who goads him out of his wheelchair, pushing him to walk again. Unlike every other woman Jim has wanted, she refuses to jump into the sack with the celebrity athlete. Though attracted to his bedroom smile and rugged good looks, she’s intimidated by his fame and turned off by his arrogance.

Can Jim become the lover Marti needs? Can he learn to walk like a man?

Set in California’s beautiful Napa Valley, this multicultural romance delivers humor and pathos, sparkling dialogue, layered characters, a heroine to root for and a hero who’s pure fantasy.

The excerpt:

“Mr. Wellman, you’re not concentrating.”

Jim glared at his physical therapist. He was concentrating so hard the top of his head was gonna blow off. Didn’t she get it?

His life was on the line. He had to walk again, because he’d lose everything if he couldn’t. His legs had shattered eight months ago at the Pro Bowl in front of a TV audience of millions. His career as an N.F.L. quarterback had shattered with them.

Jim searched for her nametag, but couldn’t see it through the sweat dripping into his eyes during this first painful therapy session at the rehab center. He leaned against the parallel metal bars and rubbed his forehead dry with his wrist, then peered down at his therapist.

A small woman, his brunette taskmaster had a cute pointy chin and greenish eyes. Her nametag, pinned over her left breast, drew his glance; the breast, small but perky, spiked his hormones. “Miss, er, Marti, I’m trying very hard.” His glance shifted to her ringless left hand.

“Staring at my hand won’t help.”

She’d caught him. Embarrassment made him hotter and sweatier. He couldn’t help his habit. Whenever he met a pretty woman, he automatically looked at her left hand to find out if she was free. “Just checking for a ring.” Concluding that Marti was available, he grinned at her and waited for her to smile back.

“I’m not available,” she snapped. “Mr. Wellman, if you don’t want to focus on your recovery, it’s nothing to me.”

Jim gaped.

She turned and pointed at his wheelchair. “You can sit there like a fat, useless blob for the rest of your days for all I care. In the meantime, I have other patients. Patients who care.” Pivoting, she walked to the door, her steps decisive.

He recovered, managing a laugh. “Good try, but you’re as transparent as glass. What happens now? Does Katrin pat me on the back and play the good cop?” He glanced at the other therapist, a pretty blonde with a big, square rock on her ring finger.

Marti returned and gave a little shrug. “Well, it was worth trying.”

“Yes,” Jim said. “Very entertaining.”

“Now that the banter is over, can we get back to work? I want you to focus, Mr. Wellman. Focus on the muscles of your legs, how your feet feel on the floor.”

Jim glowered at his sarcastic little slave driver, who glared back, not giving an inch. He swallowed his annoyance and focused, tensing then relaxing his leg muscles. Damn, it hurt! But it was a good hurt, the hurt of muscles on the mend. Jim knew and welcomed that ache. After eight months, it felt great to finally get out of the wheelchair. He looked at his therapist for guidance.

“Now, push your feet into the floor and stand up straight.” Marti’s voice rose. “Come on, I know you can do it!”

Jim hitched his pants and pushed, stubbornly willing his legs to hold his weight. Clutching the parallel bars, he hauled up his body, using the strength in his shoulders and arms. The championship ring on his right hand clattered against the metal bars. The clank cut through his harsh, raspy breaths.

He placed his feet onto the floor beneath his body. For two exhilarating seconds his legs held firm. Joy shot through him. He pictured himself running down the field, escaping a horde of linebackers and passing for a touchdown. Then his ankles buckled. His sweaty hands slipped off the bars, and he collapsed toward the floor.

Marti and Katrin grabbed Jim on his way down, breaking his fall. “Be careful,” Katrin said, as the two therapists guided him down to the mat. “Let’s not get hurt.”

Jim sat limply, shoulders bowed, letting his head drop into his palms. Thirty years old, and my life’s in the toilet. He rubbed his damp face as he bit back a string of pungent curses.

“Let’s try just the one leg,” Marti said. “Mr. Wellman, there’s nothing wrong with your left leg that a little exercise won’t cure. Your file says that ankle healed months ago. It’s the right that’s giving us problems. Katrin, let’s get him up again. Tommy, help us out.”

A male attendant came forward to assist. Jim gritted his teeth against the ache as the trio helped him get onto his feet. Sweating, he leaned against one end of the therapy bars.

“Katrin, let him go. Hold on now, Mr. Wellman.” Marti backed away to the other end of the bars. Her hazel-green eyes narrowed, and her little chin reminded him of a feral cat. She was as focused as any feline on the hunt.

“Come on, come to me, Mr. Wellman.” Marti raised a clenched fist. “Come on, I know you can do it!”

Held by her compelling gaze, Jim found himself responding to her intensity. A sudden superstition came over him: this was the moment where it all had to happen. He’d walk now . . . or never.

Tension thickened the air. Sucking in a deep breath, he went for it.

Miraculously, his left leg held when he pushed down hard, grabbing onto the parallel therapy bars with both hands. He clenched his jaw and took a couple of quivery, hesitant hops toward Marti.

Katrin and Tommy burst into applause. Sighing with relief, Jim leaned against the parallel bars as Marti slipped a supporting arm around him.

“Yes! Excellent! Excellent job!” she cried. “Okay, that’s all for right now. Good work.” She smiled up at him. Again he noticed the sharp little chin, but ignored her catlike aura as Tommy pushed out Jim’s wheelchair. “Not that,” his therapist said. “Get a walker. No more chair.”

Katrin turned, raising her eyebrows.

“He’s too dependent,” Marti said. “The wheelchair is the reason he can’t bear his own weight anymore. He should have been out of that chair as soon as the left ankle healed. Someone with Mr. Wellman’s excellent physique should have made far more progress by now.” She loosened her right arm from around his waist to give him an impersonal pat on the shoulder.

Jim slid his left arm around her so he wouldn’t fall, keeping a steadying grip on the parallel bars with his right. He managed to keep a grip on his resentment as well, though he didn’t like her condescending little pat. He wouldn’t let this woman treat him like a child.

“That’s not his doctor’s orders,” Katrin pointed out.

Marti folded her arms across her chest. The frown that creased her mouth didn’t look good with the chin. “I’ll talk to the doctor, but in my professional opinion, the wheelchair is contraindicated.”

Jim turned and lifted her chin so she’d have to look him full in the face. He jutted his head down toward her. “I’m sorry, but I won’t use a walker.”

“Excuse me?” Marti’s face was less than four inches from his.

Keeping his arm around her shoulders, he fingered her chin with a practiced hand. A slight tremor ran through his therapist’s slim body.

****

If you like what you read, check it out at http://tinyurl.com/6mn6hr9 or at my site, http://www.sue-swift.com



Two of my books, one a new book and the other a reprint–were published a few days ago, on June first.

I’d known for quite some time that Walk Like A Manwould be released that day, but received the final file the day before and the book cover on the day the book was published. Needless to day, that created a number of issues regarding

promo.

As for Temptation in Tartan, Ellora’s Cave surprised me by giving me a pub date within a couple weeks of turning in the edited manuscript. And I found out by looking at the site (!?). Not ideal.

But after freaking out for a couple of minutes, I swung into action and emailed everyone I knew (okay, that’s an exaggeration, but you get the picture) and asked if they’d help me with a blog tour.

Authors are wonderful. Within minutes (and this is not an exaggeration) a number of people had responded, and I thank them all so very very much:

Catherine Cavendish

http://www.catherinecavendish.com/2012/06/vampire-clan-wages-war-in-highlands.html

Crystal Kauffman

http://crystalkauffman.blogspot.com/

Linda Andrews

http://lindaandrews.wordpress.com/2012/06/01/temptation-in-tartan-by-sue-venice/

Maria-Claire Payne

http://maria-clairepayne.com/will-his-bride-say-i-do-or-bite-me-welcome-suz-demello

Victoria Blisse

http://victoriablisse.co.uk/blog/suz-demello-blog-swap

Lisabet Sarai

http://lisabetsarai.blogspot.com/2012/06/temptation-in-tartan.html

And upcoming:

sensualreads.com

Fayth Devlin

Morgen Bailey

Viajera del Mar

Maggie Nash

Mary Hughes

Sue Lyndon

Romancing the Genres

…and more!

Not bad for an off-the-cuff effort. Then I discovered a wonderful group of writers who will trade such things as Amazon likes and tags, FB posts and twitter feeds. I also asked my friends to help, and I’m gratified to say that a lot of people responded. Who helped me? Almost impossible to list but I’ll try:

Cindy Spencer-Pape, Regina Duke, Patricia Kay, Debra Holland, Nina Pierce, Linda Golden, Sylvia McDaniel, P.O.

Dixon, Elysa Hendricks, Donna Tunney, Helen Scott Taylor, Linda McLaughlin, Felice Fox, Thea Hutcheson, Suzanne Welsh, Leanne Tyler, Marie Higgins, Cindy Woolf, Carolynn Carey, TC Archer, Misty Dietz, Marika Weber, Cyndi Faria, Pamela Turner, Kristy Swords.

I also sent everyone who helped me an individual email if I could. If I’ve left anyone out I do apologize.

So we’ll see when the royalty statements come in if all this activity has helped! I think it has. Already Temptation in Tartan has reached and maintained a solid Amazon sales ranking, which is great for a book that appeared on Amazon late (ugh) and without a cover (double ugh). I”m working on these issues right now.

BTW…if anyone out there thinks (1) a career as a writer is easy money, or (2) your job as a writer is done when you’ve finished the manuscript…this blog should tell you that you’re sadly mistaken. There’s nothing easy about this job, and not a day goes by that I contemplate doing something easier, like, say, digging ditches with my teeth or cleaning toilets at a truckstop.



{June 1, 2012}   Happy Release Day!

Not one but TWO books are released today.

Available June 1 from Ellora’s Cave

Here’s the 4-1-1:

Re: Temptation in Tartan:

She had to marry a monster…

Rumors had followed the chieftains of Clan Kilborn for centuries. Said to be descended from the Viking Berserkers, they were ferocious in battle, known for tearing off the heads of their enemies and drinking their blood.

But English noblewoman Lydia Swann Williston would marry Kieran, Laird Kilborn, to bring peace to the Kilborn lands after the horror of Culloden and the brutal pacification. A widow, she also brought needed wealth to Clan Kilborn. For her part, eighteen-year-old Lydia wanted children. With her husband killed at Culloden, she would make a new life in the Highlands.

The old chieftain of Clan Kilborn also died in battle, and she hoped that the new young Laird would lack his ancestors’ ferocity.

She was wrong.

Buy the book at http://www.jasminejade.com/p-10121-temptation-in-tartan.aspx

Walk Like A Man

And there’s also Walk Like A Man:

Macho quarterback Jim Wellman meets his match in bright and sassy physical therapist Marti Solis, who goads him out of his wheelchair, pushing him to walk again. Unlike every other woman Jim has wanted, she refuses to jump into the sack with the celebrity athlete. Though attracted to his bedroom smile and rugged good looks, she’s intimidated by his fame and turned off by his arrogance.

Can Jim become the lover Marti needs? Can he learn to walk like a man?

Set in California’s beautiful Napa Valley, this multicultural romance delivers humor and pathos, sparkling dialogue, layered characters, a heroine to root for and a hero who’s pure fantasy.

 Buy the book at http://tinyurl.com/6mn6hr9

I hope you love my books!



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