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











Here in California we enjoy a large Hispanic population, many of whom hail from Mexico or are the descendants of Mexican immigrants. Cinco de Mayo, the Fifth of May, is a holiday which celebrates a major victory in the Mexican War of Independence. We party with sangria, margaritas, tequila shots and nachos.

On this blog, we’ll celebrate with a Hispanic Sunday Snog between the hero of For My Master, Ross Guerrero, and his soon-to-be submissive, Kathie. Superspies both, they’re preparing to take down a Tijuana drug lord in a very unconventional way. They’re going to infiltrate his lair disguised as Master and slave at a D/s party. IN the snog, Ross is just beginning to prepare Kathie for their mission as well as satisfy his own desires.

And here’s the snog:

The address Ross provided was a charming Craftsman style home in La Jolla, just a few blocks from the beach. Kathie parked and grabbed her bag, stuffed with spike-heeled pumps and boots along with toiletries and make-up, everything from glittery eye-shadow to softer blushers.

 What would happen today? The situation heightened all her sensations. She’d gone commando, as guys called skipping underwear, so the sea breeze teasing her naked pussy aroused her. Even the skirt of her yellow sundress swirling around her thighs turned her on.

Her heeled sandals clattered as she walked up a slate path to wood double doors with insets of etched glass. She sucked in a breath. Was this Ross’s home? Likely, since his car was parked in the open garage.

She knocked. After breathless seconds passed, he opened the door, clad casually in denim shorts and a muscle T. She’d never seen so much of Ross before. She let her gaze trail from his chin, dark with stubble, down his throat to his chest. Solid pecs bulged beneath the T-shirt. His belly looked flatter than Kansas and his legs showed that he worked out regularly.

He was hot, just as she’d guessed. Every muscle she could see was developed, hard, ready for action.

His dark eyes raked her from top to toe and her breath stuck in her throat. Did she please him? She wasn’t big on top, but her yellow dress, with narrow straps holding up a snug, white-trimmed bodice, made the most of her assets.

Her nipples hardened beneath his gaze. They rasped against the piqué trim, increasing her heat, her need. The cotton dress skimmed her waist and flared at the hips, its short skirt showing off her tanned legs in sexy, heeled sandals.

For My Master, BDSM fiction from Ellora's Cave

For My Master, BDSM fiction from Ellora’s Cave

Then his smile hit her with the same power it had packed the first time they’d met. More than ever, she was sure they were fated to be together.

He pulled her inside the threshold and kicked the door shut with a bare foot. It slammed just before he kissed her.

Soft and strong…his mouth was so soft, but there was no mistaking the strength underlying his tenderness. Her master wasn’t afraid to show his gentler side, though he took what he wanted, parting her lips with his, entering her with his tongue, not with force but with a flirtatious flick that teased and tempted.

She gave in to the temptation he offered. Assured, but without brutality, each touch of his chiseled lips, each stroke of his tongue made her his. He kissed her as though nothing else in the world mattered or even existed but their mouths, exploring, their tongues twining in a seductive dance that would have only one end.

The thought of Ross inside her dragged a moan from deep in her throat. Her hips bucked, shoving wantonly against him. She pushed against his arousal, and desire flared through her like an untamed arc of electricity.

Sinewy arms encircled her while his searching hands discovered her body. He lifted her skirt to caress her pussy. “Beautiful,” he murmured. “So sweet, so sexy.”

The stroke of his hand on the newly shaved flesh was possessive, carnal. Unstoppable, and she didn’t want to stop him as he probed her dampening folds, slid along her clit to find her opening. His finger pressed inside, and she rocked, demanding more. He slipped out and spread her juices onto her clit, stoking her fire.

He caged her head with both hands, holding her fast while he again shifted his total attention to her mouth. The tempo of his tongue’s thrusts changed, mimicking sex, presaging the thorough fucking she prayed he’d give her. She gripped his shoulders and again banged her mound against his thickening cock, asking without words, hoping to drive him insane with lust. Whatever else Ross had planned, she wanted it to wait. She’d waited long enough.

He tugged at the straps of her sundress until they gave way, sliding down her arms. When they caught at her elbows, his lips left hers. With an impatient “pfft,” he tore the dress off her, popping open the buttons with eager hands. He had her naked and underneath him before she quite knew what was happening.

Like what you read?

Buy it here:

http://www.ellorascave.com/for-my-master.html

or here:

http://www.amazon.com/For-My-Master-ebook/dp/B008JIM53A/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1367773428&sr=8-1&keywords=for+my+master+suz+demello

or here:

https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-formymaster-865423-340.html

Your blog hostess:

Best-selling, award-winning author Suz deMello, a.k.a Sue Swift, has written over sixteen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica, comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense, plus a number of short stories and non-fiction articles on writing. A freelance editor, she’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Ai Press, and

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Liquid Silver Books. She also takes private clients.

Her books have been favorably reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus and Booklist, won a contest or two, attained the finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists.

A former trial attorney, her passion is world travel. She’s left the US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas. She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.
Find her books at http://www.suzdemello.com

For editing services, email her at suzswift@yahoo.com

Befriend her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sueswift

Check out her group Facebook page, Hot Writers, Hotter Books at www.facebook.com/HotWriters

She tweets her reading picks @ReadThis4fun

 



{March 30, 2013}   I got a Sunshine Award! Again!
My Sunshine Award!

My Sunshine Award!

A while back, I was the recipient of a Sunshine Award, recognition that one blogger gives other “bloggers who positively and creatively inspire others in the blogosphere”. My award was given to me by the fabulous Catherine Cavendish, a wonderful horror writer.

Her blog’s here:  http://www.catherinecavendish.com/2013/03/the-sunshine-award-is-lovely-sunny.html. Thanks, Cat!

As with most awards, the Sunshine Award comes with a few simple rules:

(1) Thank the person who gave you the award in your blog post.

(2) Do the Q&A below

(3) Pass on the award to 10-12 deserving and inspiring bloggers, inform them and link to their blogs.

And now for the very simple Q&A:

My fave color: Wow. This is a hard one. I majored in art and still dabble in painting and furniture refinishing, so I love color–all colors. I even love the absence of color–so white is my color of choice. I love the idea of the blank slate, the empty canvas, the paper

Waiting to be filled with beautiful words.
Waiting to be filled with beautiful words.

that exists to be filled with glorious words. Favorite animal: that’s also tough. I’ve known and loved many pets in my time. I suppose my all-time fave animal was my beautiful golden, Blondie, who died of cancer in 2005. She was my companion for thirteen years, and I still miss her loving, joyous presence in my life.

Favorite Number: This changes so I can’t really say I have one.

Favorite Non-alcoholic Drink: Fresh carrot juice. Okay, I’m weird. It’s a known fact.

Facebook or Twitter: FB all the way. Makes me laugh. makes me cry, keeps me informed about my friends’ doings.

My Passion: self-improvement. I’m always trying to be a better, more patient, kinder person. gifts

Giving or getting presents: Ooh, another toughie. Giving–I seem to do that more. I love getting, sure, but picking out the perfect gift for someone I love is wonderful fun. And their reaction when I’ve hit it right– wonderful.

Favorite Day: Today!

And here are the gifted artists I’m tagging: Diane Farr: http://www.bestbyfarr.com/

Radhika: http://eradhika.com/

Beth Barany: http://www.bethbarany.com/

Maggie Nash: http://maggienash.blogspot.com/

Victoria Blisse: http://victoriablisse.co.uk/blog

Nick Roberts: http://masternickroberts.wordpress.com/

Lesley Carter: http://lesleycarter.wordpress.com/tag/lesley-carter/

Sedonia Guillone: http://www.sedoniaguillone.com/blog/

Emmy Ellis: http://emmyellis.blogspot.com/p/emmy-ellis.html

Deb Stover: http://debstover.blogspot.com/

Your blog hostess: Best-selling, award-winning author Suz deMello, a.k.a Sue Swift, has written over sixteen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica, comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense, plus a number of short stories and non-fiction articles on

Author Sue Swift/Suz deMello
Author Sue Swift/Suz deMello

writing. A freelance editor, she’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Ai Press, and Liquid Silver Books. She also takes private clients. Her books have been favorably reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus and Booklist, won a contest or two, attained the finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists. A former trial attorney, her passion is world travel. She’s left the US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas. She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.

Find her books at http://www.suzdemello.com

For editing services, email her at suzswift@yahoo.com

Befriend her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sueswift

‘She tweets her reading picks @ReadThis4fun    



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.



I met Cat Cavendish when working as senior editor at Etopia Press. That gig is in my past, but I’ve maintained relationships with some of the authors I met there. You’ve read her work a number of times on this blog,and that’s because she’s  a fabulous writer. Her work is imaginative, engaging and well-written. The Second Wife is no exception.

Being a second wife can have its problems – although, hopefully, not with such deadly and frightening consequences as those experienced by the main character in my latest paranormal horror novella.

 Here’s the blurb: 

The Second Wife by Catherine Cavendish

The Second Wife by Catherine Cavendish

Emily Marchant died on Valentine’s Day. If only she’d stayed dead…

When Chrissie Marchant first sets eyes on Barton Grove, she feels as if the house doesn’t want her. But it’s her new husband’s home, so now it’s her home as well. Sumptuous and exquisitely appointed, the house is filled with treasures that had belonged to Joe’s first wife, the perfect Emily, whom the villagers still consider the real mistress of Barton Grove.
A stunning photograph of the first Mrs. Marchant hangs in the living room, an unblemished rose in her hand. There’s something unnerving and impossibly alive about that portrait, but it’s not the only piece of Emily still in the house. And as Chrissie’s marriage unravels around her, she learns that Emily never intended for Joe to take a second wife…

And now for an extract:

I leaned back, closed my eyes, and luxuriated in the warm, fragrant water. Mustn’t fall asleep, I told myself. But I found myself drifting, as my muscles relaxed and the tension in the back of my neck dissolved.

The house was almost silent. The only sound was the slight lapping of the water as I shifted position. The scent of jasmine floated into my nostrils from the bath oil. Warm, sensuous. I drifted further, poised in that neverland between wakefulness and slumber.

And that’s when the smell of vanilla poured over me. Something pulled me down in the bath. My eyes shot open and I struggled to sit up, a

Author Cat Cavendish

Author Cat Cavendish

second too late. I tried to scream, but water poured into my mouth. I thrashed out, desperate to find purchase. Something was weighing me down. Something I couldn’t see or hear. Blackness descended. I was drowning.

From somewhere, a new strength took hold of me, and with a huge push I emerged, coughing and spluttering, bathwater and saliva pouring from my nose and mouth as I took hold of the sides of the bath and hoisted myself out.

I stood on the sodden bathmat, bent double, retching and trying to catch my breath. I reached for the towel and buried my face in its reassuring softness. By the time the coughing subsided, my throat was raw, the lining of my nose burned, and my eyes stung. I was shaking all over.

Wrapped in the towel, I sat on the toilet and dried my face. My teeth started to chatter, even though I was warm. I looked at the bath. Water had splashed everywhere, splattering the wall tiles, turning the floor into a puddly mess. I shivered.

I had fallen asleep, I reasoned. That had been why I felt as if something was pulling me under. My brain had gone to sleep, so my muscles had ceased to function properly. It sounded plausible enough, and there couldn’t be any other explanation, could there?

If only I understood why I had smelled vanilla so strongly.

The Second Wife is available now from:

Amazon.com

Amazon.ca  

Amazon.co.uk

Barnes and Noble

Kobo 

You can find Cat here:

www.catherinecavendish.com

http://www.facebook.com/CatherineCavendish

www.goodreads.com as Catherine Cavendish

http://twitter.com/#!/cat_cavendish

Your blog hostess:

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Best-selling, award-winning author Suz deMello, a.k.a Sue Swift, has written over sixteen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica, comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense, plus a number of short stories and non-fiction articles on writing. A freelance editor, she’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Ai Press, and Liquid Silver Books. She also takes private clients.

Her books have been favorably reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus and Booklist, won a contest or two, attained the finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists.

A former trial attorney, her passion is world travel. She’s left the US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas. She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.

Find her books at http://www.suzdemello.com

For editing services, email her at suzswift@yahoo.com

Befriend her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sueswift

She tweets her reading picks @ReadThis4fun

 

 



Today I’m premiering a new feature which will appear at this blog every once in a while. I’d love to be able to say that I’ll post a Monday Munch every week, but I’m sure I won’t! So I’ll get to it here and there :)

Why a Monday Munch, you ask?

Preparing food for someone is a very loving act, and all the more so when such an act is contrary to character. Our concept of an alpha male excludes food preparation as a normal activity. We don’t think about big manly men cooking food anywhere except at a barbecue, so when one of my heroes fixes a meal for his lover, well–that makes my little heart go pitter-pat because he isn’t afraid to show her his softer side. He isn’t afraid to go out of his way, against his macho character to show her he loves her.

So a number of my heroes prepare meals for my heroines.

Here’s one of my faves, from Spy Game. The setup is that Ani Sharif, a low-level operative for a secret security agency, is trying to get to a laptop on millionaire software tycoon Richard Rexford’s boat; he’s suspected of selling secrets to the Chinese, and her handlers believe that proof might be on the laptop.

The menu:

Appetizers: lox, cucumber and sour cream on a cracker with chardonnay

Salad

Main course: Bouillabaise

Dessert: Strawberry shortcake

Here’s a snippet from the scene:

Ani followed Richard into the galley and watched him rummage in the refrigerator.  She couldn’t figure him out.  He’d arrived at her house looking like a vagrant, but kept an immaculate boat.  He’d taunted her at the pizza parlor, but tonight, treated her as though she were a duchess.  He’d opened doors, pulled out her chair, and served her a perfectly prepared meal.

He tried to act like a vicious T-Rex but had gone to the trouble of fixing the mess his father had made, not once but

Sue Swift: Spy Game

Sue Swift: Spy Game

twice.

As hard as she tried, she couldn’t label the evening a disaster, especially since she now knew where he kept his computer.  On top of that, she and Richard had a lot in common.  A love of freedom, for one thing.  Computers, for another.  Maybe she’d see him after she’d completed her assignment.  Maybe.

Richard straightened up and smiled at her, each hand holding a dessert plate filled with a pile of sliced strawberries atop shortcake.  His laser-blue eyes glinted.

Their gleam hit her like an electric shock, zapping her back into reality.  What was she thinking?  He wasn’t a cute little guppy.  This was Richard Rexford, one of the biggest, baddest great white sharks around.

No doubt his father had a completely different story of the start-up of Richard’s firm.  Gossip said that Richard had ruthlessly stolen every talented programmer in the place, leaving CompLine reeling.  Rumors still abounded; apparently Thomas and Sundeen plotted to destroy Richard for his alleged crimes against the family firm.

He was her target, maybe even a traitor.  Get with the program, Ani, she reminded herself.

She swallowed, her mouth parched.  She was definitely in over her head.  Thinking that she could play games with Richard Rexford was crazy.  She needed to get to his laptop computer and get out.  She wasn’t sure how to do it, though, but hoped to figure that out before the end of the night.  She had to minimize contact with Rexford.  Another date would be insane.

She cleared her throat, which felt thick and dry.  “I don’t want to like you too much.”

“You’re right.”  He put the desserts onto a counter and crossed the galley to stand in front of her, mere inches away.  ”So why don’t we stop this right now?”

His heat radiated, igniting every cell in her body.  The raw sexual tension between them, thicker than the stew she’d eaten, unnerved her.  That dangerous flutter started again, but this time it made her tingle from head to toes.

She couldn’t speak.  She couldn’t move.  She couldn’t look away from his unfathomable blue eyes.

Taking her chin in his hand, he brushed her lips with his.  He didn’t break eye contact, and neither did she.  The intimacy created was unbearable, as though he’d reached inside her and caressed her soul with the gentlest of touches.

The brief kiss wasn’t nearly enough, but sharpened her appetite for him. She wanted more, and took it, digging her fingers into his shirt front to bring him closer so she could flick her tongue over his lips, deliberately enticing him.

He pulled her into his arms, drawing her to his male heat.  He dipped his head again to kiss her and this time, he didn’t hold back.  He slid his tongue between her lips, making love to her mouth with an insistent rhythm.  Desire pounded at her in waves, intense and powerful as a high tide.  Her body throbbed with passionate hunger.

“It’s going to be very good between us, you know that?” he whispered into her ear.

“Mmmm, yeah.”  Too good, maybe.  She’d never experienced anything like Richard’s kiss.  Hot and deep and all-encompassing, like a desert whirlwind, he threatened to sweep her away.

But she couldn’t let herself be swept away.  She couldn’t take what he offered, no matter how much she wanted it.

If you like what you read, you can find it here:

http://tinyurl.com/afhng93

The bouillabaise recipe can be found here, in a FREE cookbook full of romance writers’ favorite recipes:

https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-passionatecooks-944744-174.html

Enjoy!

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Your blog hostess:

Best-selling, award-winning author Sue Swift, a.k.a Suz deMello, has written over fifteen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica, comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense. A freelance editor, she’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Ai Press, Liquid Silver Books and Etopia Press. She also takes 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, her passion is world travel. She’s left the US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas. She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.



In time for your Halloween reading pleasure: a selection from Immortal Hunters,vampire erotica in FANGS, an anthology.

What’s it about?

Genre: Paranormal action-adventure.

vampire erotica

A century-old vampire, Rama is used to shadows and loneliness. She uses the name Hestia White and lives in a California coastal town working as a private investigator. If some bad guys disappear on her shift, no one cares…until John van Helsing shows up. Bearing the name of the vamps’ greatest foe, he interferes in her case and in her life.

Friend, lover or enemy?

And here’s the excerpt:

Being a vampire can suck…oops, sorry about the bad pun. Well, it’s true, it can bite….yikes, there I go again. What I mean to say is that it has its ups and downs. I’m virtually immortal, which is pretty cool. My hair and nails don’t grow, but when I awaken, they’ve been restored to the state they were in when I became undead. It’s inconvenient, since I grew up in a shithole with no running water. A mani-pedi was not merely unavailable, but unimaginable. I was an unkempt mess when I was changed, so every evening when I awaken, I devote an hour or two to personal grooming. My long, black hair is a no-brainer. Up it goes into a French twist or a braid. Nails are more difficult.

So there I was one night on surveillance, tucked into the comfy front seat of my undistinguished Camry in a dark corner of Santa Martina, contemplating the choices I faced: Mango Madness or Ruby Delite? Through my increasingly foggy windshield, I occasionally cast a glance at the crappy apartment a half-block away where I’d run my quarry to ground. Soon I’d take him, after the lights were doused and he’d fallen asleep.

I work for a private investigations firm, and my boss understands my rules. First of all, ask me no questions and I’ll tell you no lies. Second, night jobs only.

And if a bad guy or two (or three or five or seven) disappears during my shifts, nobody really cares. Operating in Santa Martina is especially convenient due to its location, the northern California coast. Offshore lies a marine mammal sanctuary. Because of the plethora of seals and otter, lots of great whites come to call. The occasional surfer gets chomped. Bodies disappear, or they may wash up on shore, drained of blood.

Get the picture?

As I was saying, there I was one night, picking at a chipped edge of the Ruby Delite flaking off my left index fingernail when someone tapped on my window.

I could see a uniform, so I unrolled. “What’s up, officer?” I asked in a pleasant tone. No sense offending the local cops, you know.

“We’ll have to ask you to move along, ma’am,” he said, an officer at his most officious.

We? I looked beyond the uniform and there he was: a suit. An undercover dick on my turf.

In gray pinstripes, he would have been as inconspicuous as I, if it weren’t for his cornpone, white bread, wheat-fed wholesome handsomeness. Blue-eyed and blond, he would have screamed farm boy in TV Land, but in California most farm workers are Hispanic or Asian immigrants.

“Well, if it isn’t John-boy Walton,” I drawled.

He drew closer, no doubt taking in my black hair, black eyes, black leather, red slash of a mouth and white, white skin. ”Well, if it isn’t Ms. Goth Barbie,” he drawled. Back atcha, honey.

I couldn’t stifle my smile. I like a man with a quick tongue–they have more than one use. “It’s Hestia, actually. Hestia White.”

“Hestia? The Greek goddess of hearth and home? That’s incongruous.”

My smile broadened. I knew few men with “incongruous” in their vocabularies, and fewer still who knew the meaning of the name I cynically used. I liked him. Shame I had to run him off.

He leaned against my door panel, ignoring the condensation wetting his elegant gray pinstriped sleeve. “Well, Ms. Hestia White, you do need to move on out. Police business.”

I lounged back into my seat. “But I kind of like it here.”

“Why? This isn’t the nicest part of Santa Martina. Completely lacks the charm of the marina or the nightlife in downtown.”

I looked into his blue, blue eyes. “I prefer down and dirty.”

He met my gaze without falter. “I could arrest you for loitering.” He leaned closer, partway into my window. “Take you in. Lock you up.”

“Oooh, handcuffs.” I shivered theatrically.

“Actually, Ms. White, we’re on the job.” His voice had gone crisp and businesslike.

“Actually, Detective Whoever, so am I.” I flipped open my wallet to flash my P.I. license.

His eyes widened. “How come I’ve never heard of you?”

I shrugged. “I keep a low profile. Safer that way. Hey, I’ve shown you mine, so why don’t you show me yours?”

I’d teased out a reluctant smile, one that reached deep inside to heat me from my brain to my box. Yes, that box. I was surprised. Mortals don’t usually turn me on.

He reached for his wallet to show me his shield and I.D. John van Helsing. A tremor ran through me, ruffling the tiny hairs on my nape and my arms. Was it chance that this detective bore the name of the most famous enemy of my kind?

“John-boy,” I said with phony delight.

Reviewers liked this story, saying:

…a highly charged, sexually stimulating and all around pleasurable trip…
Robin, MyBookCravings.com

Rating: 4.5: … terrific…Suz deMello did another awesome job…
Tara Renee, Two Lips Reviews

…cool and interesting…
Tammie King, Night Owl Reviews

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

Buy it here!

http://tinyurl.com/afhaheq

Your blog hostess:

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.

 



About Biting Oz  by Mary Hughes

Gunther Marie  “Junior” Stieg is stuck selling sausage for her folks in small-town Meiers Corners. Until one day she’s

Biting Oz by Mary Hughes

offered a way out—the chance to play pit orchestra for a musical headed for Broadway: Oz, Wonderful Oz.

But someone is threatening the show’s young star. To save the production, Junior must join forces with the star’s dark, secretive bodyguard, whose sapphire eyes and lyrical Welsh accent thrill her. And whose hard, muscular body sets fire to her passions.

Fierce as a warrior, enigmatic as a druid, Glynn Rhys-Jenkins has searched eight hundred years for a home. Junior’s get-out-of-Dodge attitude burns him, but everything else about her inflames him, from her petite body and sharp mind to what she can do with her hip-length braid.

Then a sensuous, insidious evil threatens not only the show, but the very foundations of Meiers Corners. To fight it, Junior and Glynn must face the truth about themselves—and the true meaning of love and home.

Warning: Cue the music, click your heels together, make a wish and get ready for one steamy vampire romance. Contains biting, multiple climaxes, embarrassing innuendos, ka-click/ka-ching violence, sausage wars and—shudder—pistachio fluff.

Here’s an excerpt:

I was late. Dinner-skipping, running with twenty tons (including a tenor sax case the size, weight and maneuverability of a dead body), panting late by the time I found the theater house doors.

Chop me into sausage. My first night with the full group and I needed to make a good impression, but I had three minutes to assemble instruments and wet reeds and find my seat and warm up and—

The tuning note sounded. Chop me into sausage and slap me on a bun. Not only was I late, when I did start playing I’d be out of tune like a fifth grade wire choir. I juggled instrumentalia to free a hand, yanked open the heavy house door and ran through—

Straight into a sea of Munchkins. Which, since I wasn’t Moses, refused to part.

Chop me, slap me and serve me with ketchup and a side of kraut fries.

Running, squirming Munchkins blocked the aisles, crawled over stinky-new seats and generally terrorized the otherwise empty auditorium. Not real Munchkins, of course, but local kids who hoped to sing and dance their way to fame and fortune in the new musical, Oz, Wonderful Oz. The inaugural production would open our brand-spanking-new Meiers Corners Marlene Dietrich Performing Arts Center. Actors and musicians had been rehearsing separately and tonight was our first time together. I was playing reed two in the pit orchestra.

If I could get to the pit, that was.

Bull my way through? At five-two, I wasn’t much bigger than the rugrats. But with the tenor sax deadweight… I eyed the sea of Munchkins and sighed. It was vital I get to my seat but not at the cost of hurting a kid.

Besides, those poor harried teenagers needed help. I sloughed my cases and music stand and went to render what aid I could.

A Lollipop Guilder, scrambling to escape the auditorium, rammed into me. I snagged him by his suspenders and plopped him into a seat. Just as I straightened, a scuffling pair of boys with missing front teeth (not from the scuffle, I hoped) rolled into me. I broke them up, rescued their hats and sat them next to the Lollipopper—who Lolli-popped out of his seat. I grabbed him, but the gap-toothed boys bubbled up, timing it like a tag team. I managed to corral all three with a bear hug and wrestled them into their seats.

I huffed to catch my breath. No wonder Mom only had the one of me.

Two giggling girls darted past and bumped me into the boys. Or into their empty seats, as they’d climbed out and were now Spidermanning into the next aisle.

“Overture, please.” Up front the pit director called the musicians to attention.

I forked fingers into my hair, forgetting my scalp-tight braid, and nearly tore out a chunk. Not only was I officially screwed, I couldn’t even corral a few kids. Cocktail weenies on a stick, could it get any worse?

Of course it could. “I’m a filly!”

Speaking of corral. A stampede of girls playing horse galloped into me, knocking me off my feet again. I fell, trampled under their small hooves. Terrific. My obituary would now read, “Gunter Marie ‘Junior’ Stieg, pit musician and sausage queen, pounded flat by a herd of size-three Mary Janes.” I braced myself for death, or at least a bad bruising.

Big, warm hands slid under my arms, drew me to my feet. “Here now,” said a musical baritone. “I’ll take care of this, babi. You sit here, out of the way.”

The hands assisted me to a plush seat. I sank in. Mmm, comfy. The city sure had gone all out remodeling the theater…babi?

I blinked. A pair of shoulders wider than a freeway waded out into the sea of kids. The leather-jacketed shoulders belonged to a man, black-haired, tall and strong-looking—but even Gulliver fell to a raging river of Lilliputians. I called out a warning too late. Kids grabbed the man’s hands, his jacket, and climbed him like a tree. He was swarmed, overwhelmed, swallowed up by the horde of prepubescent terrors. I covered my eyes.

“Sit now, younglings. All in a row, that’s it. Sit quietly until it’s your turn to have makeup.”

He had a lovely accent. I uncovered my eyes. Somehow he’d freed himself from the swarm of kids and was calmly shepherding them into the first two rows of seats, adjusting a tie here or hat there as they filed neatly by.

Holy Dr. Spock. There was a handy man to have if I ever wanted kids.

I smacked myself discreetly between the eyes. No children, at least not right now. First, make a good impression on the director of this show, turn the show into a smash hit, and go to New York.

Which meant getting into that pit before the overture started. Maybe I still could. I jumped to my feet, snatched up my Manhasset stand and corpse sax, shouldered my instrument bag and trotted down the rapidly clearing aisle.

And nearly slammed into a six-kid pileup.

The adults doing Munchkin makeup had stopped the kids from filing into the third row of seats in order to fix one Munchkin’s smears. I screeched to a stop on my toes, off-balance. My bag slipped, dropped off my shoulder, jerked me into stumbling. I nearly dropped the sax, did drop my stand, tangled feet with it and had to wrench myself backward to keep from falling.

Except the sax didn’t hear about the change in plans. Momentum carried it in my original direction, popping it from of my grip.

To my horror, the tenor case pitched straight at the kids.

The man turned instantly, as if preternaturally aware of the danger. But he was behind the kids. He’d have to hurdle like Jesse Owens to get between the deadly sax and those small bodies.

Palming the wall, he levered against it to kick up and over Munchkin heads, clearing them with incredible grace and ease, landing on my side.

On the way he snatched my tenor. Midair.

I set down my instrument bag and blew out my tension. “Wow. Thanks. I…”

Straightening to his full height of six-OMG, he faced me, emanating strength and energy. Powerful chest muscles pushed into the jacket’s gap right in front of my nose.

I gaped, realized I was starting to drool and looked up.

Sondheim shoot me. His face was all dark, dangerous planes. His eyes were twin sapphire flames that hit me in the gut. My breath punched out and none came to replace it. Bad news for a wind player.

He turned to set the sax down. I started breathing again.

A tapping caught my ear, the conductor ready to start. I needed to get into that pit now.

Half a dozen kids and two makeup adults were still in my way.

I’d have crawled over the seats myself but my joints weren’t as limber as the kids’…unless I used my black Lara Croft braid as a rope. I was desperate enough to consider it.

The man, turning back, saw my predicament. He lifted my instrument bag and music stand over kids with the same strength and grace as when he’d snatched the tenor. Then he turned to me.

And swept me up into his arms.

An instant of shock, of male heat and rock-hard muscle. A carved face right next to mine, masculine lips beautifully defined—abruptly I was set on my feet beside the pit. The sax landed next to me with a thump.

“There.” His accent was jagged, as if he were as rattled as me. “There’s your instrument.” He bounded to the back of the theater and was gone.

Like what you read? Buy this ebook  at Samhain Publishing, Amazon, Barnes&Noble

Mary Hughes is the bestselling author of the Biting Love series. A musician, computer consultant, and author, she has a wonderful husband (though happily-ever-after takes a lot of hard work) and two great kids. But she thinks that with all the advances in modern medicine, childbirth should be a lot less messy.

http://www.maryhughesbooks.com; https://www.facebook.com/MaryHughesAuthor
http://www.twitter.com/MaryHughesBooks

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.

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 was kidnapped not once but twice and now someone wants her dead…

Bailey knew her upbringing wasn’t normal but she’s worked hard to stabilize her life. At 29, she finally has a good business, a stable home; her life is far different from her childhood. Then suddenly her mother dies, leaving a gaping hole

Captured Lies by Maggie Thom

in Bailey’s heart and the discovery that they may not even be related.

Then mysterious private investigator Guy shows up to tell her that her life is a lie. But how does she know if he’s friend or foe?

Using skills she learned on the streets, Bailey explores her sketchy and dangerous past to find answers and her true family while dodging bullets and death threats.  To discover the facts, she’ll have to untangle a web of deceit, lies, and secrets, dating back over thirty years.

Everyone seems to have a story, but who’s telling the truth? And who wants her dead? Is Guy part of the solution? Or the problem?

Here’s an excerpt:

Passengers screamed and shouted. The stewardesses flung out instructions as they raced down the aisle, checking on everyone. “Please remain calm. We’re going through some rough weather. Stay seated and ensure your seatbelts are secure. Put your tray tables in the upright position.” The instructions were thrown out so fast they were almost incomprehensible.

More booming and cracking shook the plane like it was having a grand mal seizure. The plane dropped, nose down. They were descending. Rapidly…too rapidly. The stewardesses swayed and scrabbled, grabbing seats, staggering as they pulled themselves down the aisle heading to strap themselves in. The plane bucked. People screamed.

Mary slammed forward, smacking her head on the seat in front of her. The baby shrieked with terror. Mary forced herself back, glancing at the infant in her arms. “Shh, baby. Shhh. We’ll be all right.”

Papers flew around like frantic birds despite her seatmate’s attempt to catch and hold them. Ignoring him, she looked out

Debut author MAGGIE THOM

the window. The sky was a blur of ominous black lit up to a gun-metal grey every now and then by a flash of lightning. She wasn’t sure what dropping out of the sky looked like but she figured this was it. It reminded her of a ride at the fair, where the floor fell out from under her as she’d spun around in a drum. She’d taken that ride only once, and only because she’d been teased into it. And the ride had been hell. She’d puked her guts out when she’d gotten off. Now, the lurching of her stomach gave her the same sensation. She swallowed hard.

The grubby, green-eyed passenger turned and regarded her with a solemn gaze. “We’re going to die.” Another had started

to pray. Everyone seemed to realize what Mary was.

“I’m going to go to hell. I know it.”

About the author:

Maggie Thom made the hard decision to leave her successful, twenty year career in management to write full time. The

leap was easy, but the freefall was adventurous and very enlightening. When she’s not running her children around or spending time with her best friend, her husband, she’s writing – anywhere, anytime. Give her five free minutes and you’ll find her busy scribbling down ideas. She lives in the real world but loves to get lost in the lives of her characters. She is busy writing her second novel to be released spring of 2013.

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.

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.



Passionate Cooks from All Romance Ebooks

I’m proud to participate in this FREE cookbook from ARE, All Romance Ebooks.

My recipe for Ridiculously Easy Bouillabaise is featured. I picked that recipe because the hero in one of my latest books, SPY GAME, prepares it for the heroine. Many if my books feature a man fixing food for a women–I think it shows that my heroes aren’t afraid to show their softer side. I also feel that food preparation can be a very loving act.

Here’s a little about the book:

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 an excerpt that sorta features the bouillabaise:

Ani swallowed, her mouth parched. She was definitely in over her head. Thinking that she could play games with Richard Rexford was crazy. She needed to get to his laptop computer and get out. She wasn’t sure how to do it, but hoped to figure that out before the end of the night. She had to minimize contact with Rexford. Another date would be insane.

She cleared her throat, which felt thick and dry. “I don’t want to like you too much.”

“You’re right.” He put the empty soup bowls onto a counter and crossed the galley to stand in front of her, mere inches away. “So why don’t we stop this right now?”

His heat radiated, igniting every cell in her body. The raw sexual tension between them, thicker than the stew she’d eaten, unnerved her. That dangerous flutter started again, but this time it made her tingle from head to toes.

She couldn’t speak. She couldn’t move. She couldn’t look away from his unfathomable blue eyes.

Taking her chin in his hand, he brushed her lips with his. He didn’t break eye contact, and neither did she. The intimacy created was unbearable, as though he’d reached inside her and caressed her soul with the gentlest of touches.

The brief kiss wasn’t nearly enough, but sharpened her appetite for him. She wanted more and took it, grabbing his shirt front and dragging bring him closer so she could flick her tongue over his lips, deliberately enticing him.

He pulled her into his arms, drawing her to his male heat. He dipped his head again to kiss her and this time, he didn’t hold back. He slid his tongue between her lips, making love to her mouth with an insistent rhythm. Desire pounded at her in waves, intense and powerful as a high tide. Her body throbbed with passionate hunger.

“It’s going to be very good between us, you know that?” he whispered into her ear.

“Mmmm, yeah.” Too good, maybe. She’d never experienced anything like Richard’s kiss. Hot and deep and all-encompassing, like a desert whirlwind, he threatened to sweep her away.

But she couldn’t let herself be swept away. She couldn’t take what he offered, no matter how much she wanted it. Linda might be able to have sex with a target without hesitation or regrets, but Ani didn’t think she was built the same way as was her sister.

Allowing caution to assert itself, Ani sighed and pulled away from him.

As if reading her mind, Richard said, “Look, I’m in no rush. I just had to know how you’d feel and, umm, taste.” He looked at the floor. A lock of blond hair fell across his forehead.

Ani wanted to stroke it, play with it … and with the rest of him. Every inch. Instead, she somehow managed to lift her brows. “Like really good fish soup, I bet.”

“Yeah, really good.”

“Even if you do say so yourself.”

They both laughed.

“But now that the first kiss is over, we can relax and enjoy the night, okay?” Richard picked up the desserts and carried them outside.

Enjoy the night. Ri-ight.

*****

Who I am:

Best-selling, award-winning novelist Sue Swift, a.k.a. Suz deMello, has written fifteen books plus several

Sue Swift/Suz deMello

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.

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

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

 

 



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.



et cetera
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