Showing posts with label Marie Treanor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marie Treanor. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2015

IN HER SECRET FANTASY by Marie Treanor


Book 2 of the IN series

Desire beyond imagination…danger that’s all too real.

A sequel to In His Wildest Dreams

World-weary, burned-out undercover cop Aidan Grieve’s latest assignment has brought him home to the Highland village he couldn’t wait to leave, but something’s definitely wrong in Ardknocken.

When did his parents get so frail? What is his sister thinking, befriending the chief suspects in his investigation—the ex-cons of Ardknocken House? And why can he barely control his instant attraction to the house’s beautiful manager?

Her mind and body still mending from a vicious attack, ex-parole officer Chrissy Lennox isn’t ready for a complication like the charming, empathetic, gorgeous Aidan, a restless adrenaline junkie for whom this sleepy village has never been big enough.

Yet as easily as the meddling selkies shed their skins, desire strips away their hesitation, and not even the cold Scottish sea can cool the fire. But as Aidan’s investigation progresses, so does the danger—revealing secrets that could leave their hearts in pieces.

Warning: When our hero is good, he’s very good…but when he’s bad, he’s delicious! Also contains lusty, mischievous selkies who’ll steal your heart with one flipper while stealing your underwear with the other.

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Excerpt:

Copyright © 2015 Marie Treanor
All rights reserved — a Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication

Aidan exhaled briskly and strode up the path to the road. Someone—Hugh—called an enthusiastic greeting from an upper window next door, and Aidan grinned and waved back. But he didn’t stop. If there had been less frost on the road, he’d have run, just to ease his muscles.

Settling for a fast walk, he avoided the High Street and cut down past the church towards the harbour. The salty smell of the sea, the calling of the gulls and the clean chill of the air invaded his senses, dragging a mountain of memories from childhood. A simpler life, one he couldn’t wait to escape. The enclosed, isolated life of the village had never been enough for him. He’d known he’d miss his family and friends when he left, but he’d never imagined he’d miss anything else. He must be a bigger wreck than he’d imagined.

What the hell were his bosses thinking of, sending him home for his final mission? Had they worked out before he did that he needed to come home?

Hardly. Like so much of his work, this was driven by drug abuse. There was an all mighty stink about so many recent, scattered deaths from the same batch of contaminated heroin. Especially during the festive season, although Aidan couldn’t see why the time of year should make any difference. Whatever, the suppliers couldn’t be traced beyond the little guys, and the police in Glasgow and Dundee had come up with only one tenuous connection, a known villain by the name of Gowan, who seemed to be living now in the peaceful west Highland town of Oban, where there was no real concentration of criminals—except, a couple of hours down the road, the ex-cons now living at Ardknocken House.

No, as far as the police force was concerned, Aidan was here because he had a natural cover, not because they were doing him any favours.

Laughing at himself, he walked round to the deserted harbour. A couple of cars were parked there, but there was no one around. When he was a kid, several fishing boats had tied up here, but not anymore. A few rowing boats still bobbed against the harbour wall, alongside a couple of slightly bigger vessels, including Old Tam’s, and another one covered in canvas, the one his father had given him for his sixteenth birthday. It might have been to bribe him to stay. But Aidan had just wanted to sail away in it. He grinned, remembering his fantasies of sailing down to Glasgow, even to London, and across the Channel. In reality, he’d only ever sailed north. He and his friend Dan had gone as far as Orkney, once, and even considered Norway, but Dan had had to go home.

Aidan untied the ropes and threw back the canvas. The boat smelled musty, unused, but it still drew him. He jumped down onto the deck, loving the rocking under his feet, the salty spray on his face. Shit, he could sail it off now, round the headland and back before tea.

And probably drown himself. God knew what condition the old tub was in. He began an inspection, quickly getting lost in the task and making mental notes of obvious repairs. He’d have to haul it right out of the water…

A sudden crash of breaking glass from the shore made him straighten and jerk around. A few yards from one of the parked cars, a woman had fallen in a tangle of limbs and plastic bags. Aidan vaulted over the side of the boat onto the quay and ran across to her.

Patches of black ice slipping under his feet probably explained her accident. The woman on the ground was young and slightly punk, with her black hair backcombed and tied in a haphazard yet stylish way. She wore big, jet earrings, a padded jacket with a fur collar, and black leggings, which right now displayed the full shapeliness of her legs as she tried to right herself.

“You okay?” Aidan said, crouching down beside her.

She paused, clear brown eyes flying to his. She didn’t blink. She had very long, black lashes and wore smoky dark eye shadow. It wasn’t a look he’d ever consciously admired, and yet her beauty stood out like a solitary star in a dark night sky.

It might have been the fine bone structure of her face that struck him like a blow in the chest, or the fiercely independent “Sod off, I can manage” look in her large, brown eyes. Or perhaps it was the oddly vulnerable curve of her mouth, tightened in the pain of her fall. She’d come down with some force.

A frown tugged at his brow as he tried to place her. She was about his own age, surely, or a couple of years younger like Louise. Either way, he should know her.

And with an unpleasant jolt, he did. They hadn’t grown up together, had never met, but he knew who she was.

Christine Lennox, the ex-parole officer who “worked” up at the big house, with the ex-cons. She too had an unsavoury story in her past… But whatever the truth of it, and despite his experience of the more sordid, squalid and plain nasty elements of life, he was oddly reluctant to attach it to her. She seemed too…vital.

“Are you hurt?” he asked, when she didn’t immediately answer him.

From the delicate way she shifted position, she’d bruised her hip when she landed. But at his question, she seemed to deliberately smooth away all signs of pain from her face, which flushed now with embarrassment. She’d rather have gone down without a witness.

“I survived the fall,” she said lightly, “but I doubt the carry-out did.” Her accent was vaguely Glasgow, her voice low and slightly husky—the kind that sent shivers down his spine. Apparently.

“Black ice,” he said. “Gets you every time.”

He rose and stretched down his hand to her. For a moment, even accepting that tiny courtesy seemed to hang in the balance for her. He thought she drew in a sharp breath before she took his bare hand in her gloved one, and clambered warily to her feet. She wore stout-looking boots, although on closer inspection, the soles were somewhat thin and probably smooth. Old boots. If she was rich, she wasn’t flashy with it.

She released his hand immediately, almost flustered, he thought, and began raking through her bags. They all clanked.

“Planning a party?” Aidan enquired.

“I was,” she said wryly. “Ah well, less drink is good for hangovers.”

“That much damage?”

“Nah. Only one bottle. The beer and the whisky are safe, so who cares? Thanks for your help.”

Aidan picked up the clearly leaking bag and gingerly removed the intact whisky and beer before striding over to the wastepaper bin next to the road to deposit the broken glass and soggy bag. As he returned, the girl, moving just a little stiffly, was picking up the other bags. He took one from her.

“That your car?” he asked, jerking his head towards the Land Rover.

She nodded.

“Mind your feet,” he advised.

“Thanks,” she said sardonically, and in spite of himself, he grinned.

She walked without limping to the car and opened the boot. Aidan waited until she’d dropped her own bags in before adding his and the loose items. He watched her shut the boot and glance at him with a rather charming mixture of wariness and awkward friendliness. She wasn’t what he’d expected.

A thrill of sexual interest caught him off guard. He wondered what she looked like under the coat, wanted to spark a similar excitement to his own in those clear, almost defiant eyes. What would it take to melt her bones, to have her breathless and eager in his arms?

Thursday, January 22, 2015

SERAFINA AND THE FOUNDER by Marie Treanor

SERAFINA AND THE FOUNDER by Marie Treanor


Serafina's Series Book Five

Will curiosity kill the witch? 

Kind witch Melanie Merrow regards herself as an honourary aunt to the eccentric staff of Serafina’s Psychic Investigations. But Melanie has buried a terrible past that her friends bring unwittingly to the surface during a séance. Plus her insatiable quest for knowledge has fixated on the most elusive and dangerous being on the planet – the ancient, tragic Founder, from whom all vampires are descended. 

The Founder, who hides himself in shadows and illusions, even from the scattered vampires over whom he watches from a distance, plans to leave the world of humans forever. He should not be engaging in banter and seduction with the beautiful and intriguing Melanie, let alone buying her chips or involving himself in the chaos that is Serafina’s. But, fighting the human police, the possessive spirit of a dead serial killer, a pack of vengeful wolves, and the anger of the Tuatha de Danann is easy compared to dealing with his own reawakening desires.

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Chapter One

The Founder had always possessed a low opinion of humanity.

Which was, of course, the fatal flaw in his design of the undead. A stupid human would undoubtedly make a stupid vampire. Once, when the world was young, he’d had control over who became immortal, and he had, on the whole, chosen wisely. Now, he had the felicity of observing a moronic vampiress called Margaret demonstrating her power to a recent interloper—in a fashionable Sydney bar stuffed with uneasy and downright terrified humans.

She stood on a tabletop in the centre of the bar, fangs on full display, hissing at her undead enemy like a ham extra in a bad horror film. For his part, the vampire who’d intruded on Margaret’s territory had the grace to look appalled. Every vampire knew from the moment he or she was turned, that the first rule—the only rule—of the undead was discretion.

He stood facing her, tense, but at least with his mouth well shut. He even tried to reason with her.

“There’s room for us both,” he told her telepathically. “I won’t get in your way. I’ll hunt the other side of the city.”

“You’ll hunt another city altogether, or I’ll kill you.”

The new kid in town, whose name was Bruce, bridled at that, and from his corner shadows, the Founder knew, wearily, that things were about to get nasty.

Bruce curled his lip. “You’re no stronger than me.”

“But I break the rules,” Margaret boasted. “And that makes me meaner. And makes this city too hot for you, pom. Go back to London.”

“Too many vampires in London now. It’s why I came to Australia.”

“And now there are too many vampires in Sydney. I’ll kill you after dinner.”

As the vampiress swooped down from the table, faster than human eyes would have been able to see, she grabbed for the girl protecting her beer close by. The imbecile was going to bite her in public, just to convince her interloper how badass she was.

Time, clearly, for the Founder’s own demonstration. Almost resigned, he stepped out of the shadows, watching the action partly through the eyes of Bruce, to whom he seemed to fly from nowhere in a blur, sweeping Margaret away from the human girl and out the door before anyone else could move. At the last moment, the Founder yanked Bruce outside too.

To the humans, the Founder would have been invisible. It probably looked to them as if Bruce had pushed his drunk girlfriend outside, so just in case any of the bar patrons followed from curiosity or compassion, he sped his captives around the corner into the nearest alley and hurled them against the wall.

It took him less than a second to drain Margaret to dust. Gazing through it with his mouth open, Bruce muttered in the Founder’s head, “What the fuck?”

The Founder, shimmering the air to make himself more or less invisible in the darkness, leapt onto the low roof above Bruce’s head.

The Founder slid unnoticed into the vampire’s numbed mind. “So what, pray, is the lesson you take from tonight’s sad events?” he enquired.

Bruce spun around, searching. “You’re…you’re the Founder,” he murmured in amazed awe. “You do exist…”

“Exactly. So don’t piss me off,” the Founder said, already walking away. “Here endeth the lesson.”

He supposed he’d saved the day. The humans would rationalise what they’d seen, and no one would imagine for a moment that either Margaret or Bruce were real vampires. Margaret had been more of a hazard than an asset to vampire kind—which was why the Founder had been keeping a close eye on Sydney. He didn’t mourn Margaret’s loss, because she wasn’t one. He’d solved the problem and should have felt if not triumphant, at least satisfied. Instead, he was conscious of minor irritation. Had he really created vampires just so he could stop them behaving with all the uncontrolled violence and idiocy of humans?

The Founder took himself to Sydney Harbour Bridge and found an invisible seat amid the tangle of metal that supported the massive structure. From there, he gazed down into the calm sea and passed his hand over the stretch of water in his line of focus, until it reflected what he chose to see of the rest of the world.

There was a ripple over Scotland. Nowadays, there was always a ripple over Scotland. The Founder blamed the humans who’d become entangled with the vampire Blair and upset the supernatural balance. It hadn’t been like this before Blair’s human, Serafina, had started flexing her psychic muscles. Or before her friend, the beautiful and overcurious little witch, Melanie, had started poking into the Founder’s past and present, searching out his knowledge and abilities. He’d put the hems on that, of course, which should have pleased him more than it did.

His hand hovered over Scotland, taking in the locations of his vampires, and, inevitably, the witch. She had a vampire with her, and it wasn’t one he knew. One of the new breed who should never have been made.

He had an excuse to check up on her again. His earlier annoyance vanished, swept away by a secret, insidious excitement he tried to ignore. Rising on his narrow ledge, the Founder stood upright and walked off, folding the world in front of him.

****

It was dark when the doorbell rang. Melanie, who’d been thinking about an early night with a good book—well, a bad book in many eyes—leapt up to answer it. Her day had been dull, and she hadn’t yet given up hope of finding some excitement before bed and the bad book.

As always when she opened her front door, the view took her breath away. Trees at the foot of her garden, the hills beyond, and, sparkling between, the waters of “her” little loch, only a few miles distant from Loch Lomond. She was so lucky to live here. She acknowledged all that in an instant that banished her vague discontent—and that was before she even glanced at her visitor.

He wasn’t tall or threatening, but he stood staring at her without blinking. In the glow of Melanie’s outside light, he looked unhealthily pale, and his skin seemed to sag a little, like a man who’d lost too much weight too quickly. And yet he was a comparatively young man. Certainly no older than forty. He wore a suit, although the jacket didn’t seem to fit properly.

“Hello,” Melanie said.

“Good evening,” the man said politely. “I apologise for calling so late. My name is Richard Wayland. I don’t have an appointment, but I understand you do consultations.” He gave a wan smile. “I’m desperate.”

Melanie was a sucker for a wan smile. And a man prepared to give his name to a witch. She said, “You understand I don’t guarantee to help you. I don’t even guarantee to try until I’ve heard your problem.”

“I understand.”

Melanie opened the door wider. “Then please come in.”

Many people would—and did—consider her rash to the point of foolish for allowing strange men into her house at all when she was alone. At night, she hated to imagine the lectures. But Melanie wasn’t afraid of people. Nor was she stupid. She had her own forms of protection, and they covered the whole house.

Leading her visitor across the hall to her consulting room on the right-hand side, she switched on the lights and offered him a cup of tea or coffee, or a glass of water. He turned them all down, and she indicated the comfortable chair at the near side of her desk.

She’d dithered about the desk when she’d first designed this room. Her original idea had been an informal sitting room where people would be more comfortable spilling their problems and accepting her help. But in the end, although most of the room remained her original vision, she’d decided to begin each new consultation behind the desk. For some reason, it inspired confidence and set the tone that this was a serious business, not some airy-fairy fairground nonsense.

Richard Wayland moved towards the desk with odd stiffness and lowered himself gingerly into the seat.

“So, how can I help you?” Melanie asked, sitting opposite him and picking up her pen. She gazed at him with an encouraging smile. In the light, his suit was revealed as old and worn and just a little dirty, which sat oddly with his precise, educated speech. The man had a story.

He gazed back at her without blinking. “I expected someone older. You seem very young.”

“I’m forty-two years old,” Melanie replied calmly. “And I’ve been doing this a long time.”

“You look younger.” Her would-be client gazed distractedly at the curtains behind her, as if he could see through them. “I suppose that will be witchcraft?”

“Lots of greens and a pure heart,” Melanie said flippantly.

Her client blinked, possibly with surprise, and refocused his attention on her. “I heard you can help with…medical problems.”

“Sometimes,” Melanie said with caution. “I’ve studied herbal medicine and practiced with some success, but I’m not a faith healer.”

Wayland took off his tie, then grasped his lapel and the shirt beneath and yanked them down from his shoulder. Chunks of flesh seemed to be peeling from his bones, flapping. Although there was blood, it didn’t ooze or leak, just hung around, part of the general mess.

Melanie stood up with a gasp of pity. “God, that looks painful. What happened?”

“I don’t know. It just started about a week ago, and it’s getting worse. I don’t know what to do.”

Melanie came around the desk. “What did your doctor say?” Reaching out, she touched the sound flesh of his throat just beside the rotting flaps. His skin was cold.

Not just the kind of cold that came from being outside too long on an autumn night, but deep-down chill, like stone that never saw the sun.

Slowly, she dropped her hand and raised her eyes to his face. Still, pale features. Unblinking, dead eyes.

He said, “I haven’t seen a doctor. For obvious reasons.”

“You’re a vampire,” Melanie observed.

Her client gave a wry smile. “It doesn’t seem to even surprise you. Not quite Count Dracula, am I?”

“Far from it,” Melanie said. “You talk.”

“Some of us do.”

“Only those of you who were made last year by the magic of the sorcerer Nicholas Smith.”

Wayland frowned. “How do you know so much about vampires?”

“Luck, mainly,” Melanie said wryly. “You’re a banker?” It wasn’t just a guess. The new vampires made with the aid of Nicholas Smith’s magic were nearly all from the financial sector of employment.

“I was. A while after I was turned, I found I couldn’t cope with the stress of working and hiding my nature, so I resigned and moved up here. There are a lot fewer people, of course, but I’m discreet. Sheep blood is okay between occasional humans. I thought I could get by until this happened.”

“Has anything else changed for you?” Melanie asked curiously. She knew a couple of much stronger, more dangerous vampires than this one would ever be, but although she didn’t really fear unprovoked attack, she did wish she kept one of Sera’s neat little pointy sticks in her desk.

The vampire shook his head. “Apart from tiredness—which is odd, because I’m finally getting to sleep when I want—and loss of strength. Almost like I’m ill, only I thought vampires didn’t get ill.”

“Maybe it’s the sheep’s blood,” Melanie reflected. “I never heard of a vampire drinking sheep’s blood.”

The vampire stared at her. “Are you saying I’ve got scrapie or something?”

“No, you wouldn’t get diseases like that… Would you? I just meant, maybe sheep’s blood doesn’t agree with you. Or maybe… I heard someone complaining the other day about an animal he swore was a wolf, killing one of his sheep. Maybe it was a sick dog or something that’s infected other sheep? A species-jumping infection?” She sighed. “Unlikely, I know. The sheep just worry me for some reason. I probably shouldn’t say this, but perhaps you should stick to humans for a while, see if this goes away.”

The vampire gave her another wan smile. “Well, that’s the problem. I don’t think I’ve got a while. I think I’m dying. It feels as if I’m dying.”

It was, Melanie reflected, a bit of a bummer. He was a relatively young man. Left to his own devices, he could have expected to live another forty years or so. Until some arsehole made him immortal.

“Is it as painful as it looks?” she asked.

The vampire nodded. Melanie walked to the big dresser that took up most of the back wall, and took out a bottle.

“This will help with the pain,” she said, coming back to him. “For the rest…I need to do some research. I’ve never come across vampire illness before. Or even vampire injuries that couldn’t be cured by blood.”

“Trust me, blood doesn’t help,” Wayland said mournfully. He took the bottle from her, unscrewed the cap, and took a large slug. “How much of this can I take?” he asked belatedly.

“I wouldn’t glug any more before dawn. How long do you think you have? What’s your best guess?”

He shrugged. “A week, maybe less. If I’m too weak to hunt, I’ll die quicker.”

Melanie hesitated. Her reputation as well as her business depended on discretion. Success and discretion. She suspected taking this case would sacrifice both. Which would be a pity. Word had got around about her in the last year or so. Despite moving out here to the sticks, she had no shortage of clients from all over Scotland, and from down south too. They came for all sorts of reasons—alternative medicine, revenge, financial problems, love problems, and she got a kick as well as a living out of fixing those cases. Was a being who was already dead worth sacrificing all this for?

She knew other beings who’d been dead a lot longer than this one. Sera, who was probably the most important person in Melanie’s life, would grieve horribly if her dead—undead—lover died, as this vampire seemed about to.

Besides, he looked so miserable and helpless that he aroused all her motherly instincts. She could at least make enquiries of Blair, Sera’s lover.

The Founder would know, of course.

Her stomach tightened with the odd thrill of fear and excitement she associated with that particular being, the first vampire, the one from whom all the others, including Blair and the sick one on the other side of her desk, were descended. Reclusive as he was, the Founder would know what was wrong with Richard Wayland and how to cure him.

Or perhaps she was just stupid to place so much faith in a shadow who’d never even spoken to her, except, perhaps, in a dream. “Curiosity killed the witch.”

She’d been well warned—by him and by everyone who knew anything about him. Whatever his knowledge, he wouldn’t share it with her. Even if she knew how to ask him.

She pushed her pen and a piece of paper across the desk to Richard Wayland. “Write down your name and who turned you. And where I can get back in touch with you.”

“I can come here.” Obviously, he still retained some of a vampire’s secretive instincts.

“It’s up to you. But if you weaken further, I might need to come to you. Don’t misunderstand me, I might not be able to help at all, but I’ll try.”

****

The Founder wasn’t sure what drew him to the witch. He did know that, having warned her away from her apparently insatiable study of him, and having listened to his people discouraging her from the same via their human contacts, it was somewhat counterproductive to enter her home.

Her home soothed him for some reason. Even at night, it gave him a strange impression of brightness, of age and quiet learning. Like the lost library of Timbuktu. Like his early days of study as a youth with the various village doctors he’d visited. In those days, he studied mostly under the stars and the heat of the African sun. It wasn’t Melanie’s building, it was the idea of learning that comforted him still. She wasn’t afraid to learn, although he’d tried to make her so. He was, it seemed, a hypocrite in this. If he’d met her away back at the beginning, in the mists of his half-forgotten first memories, he’d have been enchanted.

He stood inside the front door, letting it close softly, silently behind him, and listened. He could hear her heart beating steadily in sleep.

It wasn’t the first time he’d entered her home. That had been a year ago, when he’d felt her summons. Well, her effort at summons. He doubted there was any being in this world or any other who could summon him against his will. He’d gone to see what she was up to, particularly since she was connected to the human who was hanging around with the vampire Blair.

She’d been reading about him in a book whose existence he’d forgotten about. It came from the days when he’d still been able to read everything that had ever been written down, and he’d been impressed by the lengths of her curiosity. She’d reminded him of his own youth, when he’d still been human.

That had been uncomfortable. He rarely remembered his human days. They were too painful, too long ago, and too few to count in the millennia which had followed. And yet he’d kept his eye on her. He’d helped her save the humans in the Tuatha portal, and he’d added his energy to that of the creature Angel to save Melanie herself when she’d been shot and had, in fact, technically died. Not giving in to death was his speciality. And he’d used the opportunity to visit her unconscious mind and warn her to stay away from him.

And yet here he was in her house, walking into her study and her kitchen, to see what she’d been reading, what spells she’d been casting, and what brews she’d been concocting. This curiosity, it seemed, stretched both ways.

She was reading about vampires again. He frowned with displeasure. One of the undead had entered her house this evening. He could smell the presence in her study. A new one, of the kind Blair looked after in Edinburgh, when he remembered. Something was wrong with this vampire: his thread was too long.

He moved through the cottage and glided into the witch’s bedroom. He’d done such things so often it generally bored him. To watch a human sleep before he drank her, or his, blood. Generally, he did it without waking them. He didn’t need much blood anymore, and he barely had to touch them to extract what he wanted.

Looking at the witch didn’t bore him.

He stood in the shadows by the window and gazed at the sleeping woman in the big bed, watching the rise and fall of the covers as she breathed, appealingly helpless, vulnerable…

Desire gathered low in his belly, insidious, sweet…and dangerous when applied to this woman. Perhaps that was part of her attraction for him. He was old and bored.

A worn, open book lay on the pillow beside her, the corner of the binding pressed against her cheek. Strands of her luxuriant hair spread across the pages like a veil. Her heart beat steadily, pumping hot, sweet blood around her veins and arteries. It smelled like nectar.

She was beautiful. Many human women were, of course. Beauty alone wasn’t enough to pierce his ennui. But something about this beautiful woman did. Perhaps the combination of pale, flawless skin, the perfect shape of her skull beneath the taut flesh, and the rare, dark red shade of the hair spilling around her face as she slept. Her eyes, when open, were green, he remembered, sparkling with fun and compassion and an eternal quest for knowledge—the best of human characteristics, and traits he found only too seldom in anyone.

She breathed deeply in her sleep, her full lips parting temptingly, her body shifting slightly so that the quilt moved and revealed the soft curve of her naked shoulder. His mouth opened in want, and he licked his razor-sharp fangs. His own blood trickled from his tongue.

This was why he came here. To torture himself with a powerful lust he wouldn’t assuage.

Curiosity killed the witch, he’d told her. Despite that, he wouldn’t kill her. He would, however, drink her blood one night. Maybe even this night. His throat grew dry with the force of hunger. It swept down to his stomach and lower, joining with his lust.

He could do it now. Step out of the shadows and cross the room to her bed, sit beside her so that her warmth enfolded him as he bent over her sleeping body, inhaling the scent of her skin, piercing it with his fangs and letting the heady sweetness of her blood rush into his mouth. He could make her enjoy rather than simply endure or fail to notice. After all, there was no real reason for his abstinence where she was concerned—at least not beyond his own absurd fear that he wanted her too much.

He could let the blood kiss arouse her, and then he could take her while he drank, pushing deep inside her hot, wet depths, having all of her, body and blood…

She’d like the dream, when she remembered it in the morning. He already intrigued her, and he’d make it good for her.

Or he could wait, draw out this game he played with himself a little longer, to heighten the anticipation and the joy of eventual fulfilment. A sip from the witch’s veins would be more, so much more. He’d no need of sex with her. Her blood alone would be amazing. He could tell that merely from the beguiling, so tempting smell.

He savoured the moment, rocking on the cusp of indecision while his body held still, racked with such powerful desire and thirst that even he found it hard to control. To take, or not to take…

He stepped one pace forward—and realised her breathing had changed. She was panting, a frown marring the previous smoothness of her brow. A sound of breathless distress broke from her lips. Her head twisted from side to side on the pillow in a desperate attempt to escape.

Intrigued, he stepped back into the shadows. She was trying to wake up, to make whatever was in her head stop. Memory twisted deep inside him. He understood nightmares only too well.

What scares you so much, little witch? You never seemed half so frightened of me in your head, not even when you thought I was God.

****

Melanie woke with a cry. Her heart thudded painfully. Her skin prickled with sweat as she stared into the darkness, listening to the sound of her own ragged panting.

The edge of the book pressed into her cheek. She’d fallen asleep reading, looking for clues as to the vampire Richard Wayland’s mysterious illness. And dreamed.

A nightmare. Well, memory. But in daylight it would seem like a nightmare again, or a film about someone else’s life. A horror film, where a child watches her mother being murdered and can do nothing to stop it. All she can do is save her father.

She lay still, waiting for her heart to slow, for the terror to resolve into present-day safety. But for some reason, the nightmare presence seemed to linger in the air and cling.

Lyall Clark, serial killer.

Dead serial killer. He’d died in prison twenty years ago.

Melanie wanted to reach out and switch on the bedside lamp, to dissolve the shadows of memory into her familiar bedroom, so lovingly restored and decorated with the rest of her cottage. But she refused to give in. She’d learned to control the terror in childhood. She wouldn’t let it defeat her in adulthood, not for an instant. So she stared into the darkness, breathing deeply, acknowledging that Lyall Clark wasn’t here, had never been here and was, in fact, very, very dead.

No, Clark wasn’t here. But something was. Someone.

Subtly, the cause of her drumming heart changed from the cold, helpless fear of memory to the excitement of knowledge. He was here again, the Founder, lurking in the shadows, watching her.

She’d sensed him more than once since the night she’d been shot and he’d walked into the depths of her mind, warning, “Curiosity killed the witch.” The first time, she’d been terrified he’d come for her, and pretended she didn’t know he was there. He was gone in seconds.

Since then, she’d almost looked forward to his occasional, fleeting visits. They never felt like stalking, for some reason. Instead, she greeted his soundless, watching presence with a little thrill of excitement that acknowledged his power. The strongest power she’d ever encountered. The most powerful being she’d ever encountered: the Founder. The first vampire who’d made himself, from whom all other vampires, including Blair and Phil and her new sick client, were descended.

But he’d been right when he’d spoken in her mind; her fear of him was laced with dangerous curiosity.

She couldn’t control his visits by physical means, willpower, or magic. She had no more say in those than she had in the nightmares. But perhaps she had some say in what happened during the short moments he was here.

Her heart still beating hard, she stared into the shadows by the curtains. Although she couldn’t see him, the darkness there seemed blacker, almost shimmering.

“Well, don’t just stand there,” she said loudly to the curtains. “Since you’re here, have a seat. Let’s chat.”

This was why she didn’t have flatmates anymore. They’d have had her sectioned.

The curtains didn’t move. Neither did the shadows. But after a moment or two, she realised the shimmering black shade had dulled to normal darkness. She sighed. Speaking to him clearly scared him off—which was good. Who wanted to be stalked? Especially by something even vampires were afraid of.

Still, as she sat up and reached for the lamp switch, she was conscious of a disappointment—which vanished into sudden, galloping terror as a figure seemed to loom out of the darkness in front of her. This was no vague, shimmering blackness. This was the definite shape of a man, only two or three feet away from her.

Oh shit. I’ve done it now…

“The Founder does not chat.”

Deep, soft, icy, with just a trace of self-mockery, his voice bypassed her ears and spoke straight into her mind, almost like a daydream or a fantasy. She’d have considered insanity if it hadn’t been the same voice which had once told her, “Curiosity killed the witch.”

Old vampires didn’t speak aloud. They communicated telepathically. Only Sera could hear them because she was telepathic, or perhaps because she could talk to the dead. Melanie could do neither. At least not without some very powerful spells. And yet she heard him. Surely more humorous than supercilious: “The Founder does not chat.”

She thought she could make out the whites of his eyes, a gleam of amber directed at her like a torch.

“I suppose he doesn’t stare either?” Melanie retorted.

There was a definite pause before he said, “That would be rude.”

“And breaking into someone’s home isn’t?”

“Not when I’m invited.”

“Invited?” she repeated, aware now that she was doing the staring. Not that she could see much.

“You have a short memory,” he remarked, “even for a human.”

Oh shit. Melanie grasped the quilt tighter as she remembered a certain spell cast a year ago, when she’d first learned about vampires and the legend of the Founder. “I tried to summon you. It didn’t work.”

“Of course it didn’t work. I have free will. On the other hand, I’d have heard your magic in hell. I chose to be invited.”

“And if I rescind my invitation?”

The air stirred, almost as if he was laughing at her naivety. She shivered.

He said, “You’ve been reading too many novels.”

Melanie swallowed, peering through the darkness at him. She could see two eyes now, but one seemed darker than the other. A trick of the nonexistent light. She said, “Are you speaking to me?”

“Is there anyone else here?”

“No, I mean are you speaking to me? Not, are you speaking to me?”

“Questions, questions,” mocked the Founder. “Do you want to end up like me?”

“You mean staring at people while they sleep?”

She knew that wasn’t what he meant. Legend said his own curiosity had caused him to face down ignorance and prejudice, had led him into torture and suffering and ultimately to defy death itself. But she couldn’t resist the barb.

For a moment, she imagined she’d actually thrown him. He didn’t move or speak for several seconds. Then he said, “You weren’t sleeping. You were waking. From a nightmare.”

Melanie twitched without meaning to. She never spoke of this. To anyone. She shrugged. “Everyone dreams.”

He stirred. She heard the faint rush of his clothes, whatever they were. What did the Founder wear? Her fingers itched for the light switch, but she was too afraid to move, in case he came any closer. A shiver thrilled down her spine.

“What do you dream, little witch?” he asked softly. “What scares you more than I do?”

She stared at the brighter of his eyes. “Nothing. I admit that.”

“Then you lie. Though I’m not often the one called upon to frighten away the demons.”

She caught her breath. Was that what she’d done?

She hadn’t called on him—of course she hadn’t. But if it hadn’t been for the dream, she’d probably have said nothing, just waited for him to go as she always had before. Everyone, including the vampire Blair, had told her never to speak to the Founder, never to try to engage.

Oh hell. I’ve engaged. Even more surprising, not to say terrifying, so had he.

“Well, thank you,” she said politely. “The demons have gone. Apart from yourself.”

“That’s the danger of inviting the biggest demon to dispel the lesser. Who’s going to scare me?”

“Can you be scared?” she countered.

“You could try with one of your little spells.”

“Now you’re being insulting.” Should she really be bandying words with the Founder? Oh well, in for a penny… “Actually, since you’re here, I want to ask you something.”

“How to keep the dreams away?”

“Oh no. The dreams are mine.”

For some reason, the answer seemed to intrigue him. She caught a faint head movement, as if he’d leaned it to one side, considering her. Then the darkness blurred, and her heart lurched as the mattress depressed.

Oh God help me, the Founder’s sitting on my bed.

Surely she should have been able to make out more of him than this blur and odd glimpses of his eyes? She was used to the dark now, and there was moonlight gleaming through the curtains. And he was close enough to touch. She could move her knee and brush his hip through the quilt. If she was insane enough.

No, she couldn’t see him properly, but he could see her. His very stillness told her that. She wondered what he thought, and her body heated with embarrassment and something more, because she wanted him to like what he saw. She wasn’t just a curious witch, she was a woman, and she could sense the caress of his eyes on her naked arms and shoulders, on her breasts, which, while mostly covered by her nightdress, probably revealed the outline of her tense nipples…

In the dark? Get a grip, Melanie.

He’s the Founder. He’s vampire. He doesn’t need light.

And this is so not the point.

“Do vampires get sick?” she blurted.

There was a pause. “Not often.”

“I have a vampire client who is. I don’t know how to help him.”

The mattress shifted very slightly, and she tensed, terrified he was coming closer, longing to know how it would feel if he did.

The Founder said, “He isn’t your concern.”

“Then you’ll help him?”

“I’m not your concern.”

“But you are.” Lunging for the lamp, she grabbed the switch and flicked it on.

A warm glow swam around the room. The empty room, containing only herself and her possessions. She didn’t even hear the window rattle, but she could have sworn that just for an instant, soft laughter echoed in her head.
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Wednesday, September 24, 2014

BLOOD HUNGRY by Marie Treanor

BLOOD HUNGRY by Marie Treanor 

Blood Hunters, 6

A love doomed by time...

Tough young ex-soldier, John Ramsay is in Amsterdam with his posse of vampire hunters, investigating the bizarre nightly battles between local vampires and skinheads, when he finds himself transported from his hotel bed to a strange, sleazy nightclub. There, he encounters a dangerous, beautiful young woman who stakes and seduces with equal style. Although he knows nothing about her, she appears to know everything about him.

Eva's Amsterdam assignation has gone horribly wrong. The vampire lover who once drank her blood, is dead. Grieving, frustrated, full of hunger she can never assuage, she's looking for trouble when she finds John Ramsay, the reason she can never truly fall in love with anyone else. Now, at last, she wins his attention and his love - a happiness she's doomed to lose, for tangled with John's mystery of a spontaneous world-wide epidemic of skinhead fights, are events twenty years in the future that will threaten the fragile peace between vampires and humans.

John and Eva work together to prevent a disaster spanning two decades. But destiny seems determined to keep them tragically apart...

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~Excerpt~

She seemed to hesitate, then set down her glass again. “There were too many of them. Without you, I’d have been in trouble.” The smile flickered once more, and he wanted very badly to kiss her lips. “You’re good, aren’t you?”

He shrugged. “Practice.”

“In the army? Or vampire hunting?”

He raised one eyebrow. “Drinking in Glasgow on a Friday night.” It was his standard response when he wanted to evade awkward questions, and it usually got a laugh. “Why do you want to dance with me?”

“I’ve always wanted to dance with you.” Her dark eyes were only half-mocking. Behind that, he caught again that tinge of fear and something very like a plea. It was the plea that won. Or perhaps his own desires.

He stood up, offering his hand. “Why?” he asked again.

She gazed at his fingers, another smile hovering on her lips before she took his hand and slid off her stool. She raised her eyes to his. “I can’t tell you that yet.”

“Well,” he murmured, leading her onto the dance floor. “What can you tell me?”

“What do you want to know?”

He slid his good arm around her waist, and this time there was no rigidity in her. She relaxed into his hold, draping her own arm around his neck.

“For starters,” he said, “where the hell are we?”

A hiss of laughter escaped her lips. “That’s why I like you, John Ramsay. You don’t say much, but when you do, it’s totally honest. We’re in a nightclub that doesn’t even have a name, in the middle of Amsterdam’s old red-light district. Why? Where are you supposed to be?”

So she got that much. She did know more than he did about the dreams.

“In Amsterdam,” he admitted. “In my hotel room across the city.” Waiting for another woman, he recalled. For the first time, he really hoped Sarah wouldn’t knock on his door. This woman, who wasn’t called Kate, laid her head against his shoulder, and he inhaled the exotic scent of her perfume, heady and yet light. Maybe it wasn’t even perfume. It could simply have been her skin. Whatever, it coiled around his senses, feeding his desire.

The music was awful, jerky and loud and almost entirely without melody. John didn’t care. He could ignore the music and just hold her soft, yielding body in his arms. Not so soft, he remembered, when she was knocking lumps out of men—and vampires—about twice her size. Nor would he be the first man seduced by a sexy body and a self-satisfied belief that a dangerous woman was “different” with him.

The hand not around his neck lay flat against his chest. Slowly, she began to move it upward to his shoulder and then down over the stump of his left arm and the prosthetic below.

This was the moment relationships tended to break, in his head, at least. For the first time ever, he didn’t want to see a girl’s reaction. He’d have closed his eyes to avoid this one. He didn’t need to, since all he could see was the top of her head. But there was no stiffening in his arms, no hasty removal of her exploring hand. Instead, she ran her fingers up and down his arm several times before coming to rest on his shoulder.

“It doesn’t bother you,” he murmured into her hair.

She shook her head. He had the unexpected notion she was smiling. “I find it—comforting.”

“That’s different,” he observed, tightening his arm around her. He brought up his other arm too, holding her in both, and she lifted her head to smile at him, a sensual, siren’s smile. Too confident in her own undoubted powers of seduction. Deliberately, he lowered his hands to reach the first swell of her bottom and pressed her closer into his straining erection.

He caught her gasp, saw the heat flood her face, and knew with fierce triumph that he wasn’t the only one being seduced. In fact, it was time, more than time, to change leaders. He moved his hips, swaying, rubbing, and lowered his head.

Her eyes melted. As her lips parted for him, they trembled, until he covered them with his and kissed her.

Her eyes fluttered shut, her fingers closed on his neck almost painfully, and then clung. Her mouth opened at the first pressure of his, but oddly, hers was no siren’s kiss after all. It was almost…virginal. She tasted divine, her mouth soft and warm and yielding as she clung to his lips.

He released her lips slowly, reluctantly, and only to draw breath before he went back for more. He’d expected passion from this woman, but not that sweetness, and he was enchanted.

“So that’s how John Ramsay kisses,” she whispered.

He smiled. “Let me count the ways,” he said and sank his mouth back into hers. This time, she met his tongue with her own, sliding, caressing, and suddenly she kissed him back, not with that almost shy, wondering response but with fierce, demanding sensuality, and John was lost.

He caressed her hips, holding her firmly to him, drawing her up on tiptoe so that he could fit his straining erection between her thighs. She gasped, sliding her fingers into his hair, bunching the back of his shirt in her fist.

“You would make love with me,” he said against her lips.

Laughter trembled in her throat. “Of course I bloody would.”

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Monday, August 25, 2014

IN HIS WILDEST DREAMS by Marie Treanor

IN HIS WILDEST DREAMS by Marie Treanor

Every dream can come true…in unexpected ways.

The only time Glenn Brody acted on the waking dreams his mother called second sight, he landed in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. Now he keeps himself grounded in the real world, turning a neglected Scottish mansion into a co-op that gives ex-cons a second chance.

He’s almost managed to ignore the persistent, erotically charged dreams featuring a beautiful, passionate woman—until that woman accosts him in the street to ask for a job.

In hiding from her violent ex, Izzy Ross has made a peaceful life for herself and her young son in the isolated Highland village of Ardknocken. Handsome men with a criminal record aren’t high on her list, but when work dries up, she’s forced to ask Glenn for a menial cleaning job at the big, dusty house.

Their mutual attraction turns all their preconceived notions upside down, and stirs the mansion’s legendary ghost. Attracting the kind of media attention that could force Glenn to make a perilous choice to save the woman he’s grown to love.

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Excerpt:Copyright © 2014 Marie Treanor
All rights reserved — a Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication
He didn’t look like a laird. He was big and rough, wore tatty, mud-stained jeans and a baggy grey sweater, and he crouched on the roof of the largest outhouse, hammering nails into slates. His thick, too-long brown hair was tied back in a careless ponytail.

As Fiona and Jeremy emerged around the side of the big house into the yard, he lifted his head to face them. For the tiniest instant, he remained perfectly still, then he slid down the roof and dropped lightly to the ground. He still gripped the hammer in one large hand as he walked toward them. Something in his stride reminded Fiona of a caged animal, its violence temporarily controlled but far from tamed. It did things to her libido—until she looked into his watchful, scarred face and remembered, finally, why his name had seemed familiar.

Oh shit! He was holding a hammer, and Jeremy had no idea who he was.

Frozen, Fiona watched Jeremy walk forward to meet him, hand outstretched. “I’m told you’re the laird,” he said jovially.

“I’m Glenn Brody.”

She was right. It was him—Glasgow gangster and reputed hit man, recently released after serving ten years of a murder sentence. And yet G. Brody was listed as the owner of Ardknocken House and estate.

Clearly, the name meant nothing to Jeremy, who’d never had the benefit of working in Scotland. He beamed at the ex-con. “Excellent! My name’s Jeremy Danehurst. I work for a television company called Genuine. This is my colleague, Fiona Marr—whom you may recognize!”

Brody took his time to shift the hammer to his left hand before grasping Jeremy’s in his right for the briefest shake. Then he glanced at Fiona, who felt like a rabbit trapped in headlights. Or staring down the barrel of a hunting rifle. His lips twisted slightly, but no one could have called it a smile. To her relief, he didn’t offer to shake hands with her.

Jeremy said, “Fiona’s going to be fronting a new series we’re doing on haunted houses.”

“Another one?” Brody said sardonically.

“This one’s going to be a bit different,” Jeremy assured him. “We’re looking at historically significant places, bringing genuine background into the story of the haunting. So we’d love to feature Ardknocken House in one of our programmes. You should have had a letter, but we didn’t receive your answer, so I don’t know—”

“I didn’t send any answer,” Brody interrupted. “I understood that would be taken as ‘no’.”

Jeremy laughed easily. He was good at this stuff. But even his southern English ears must have picked up Brody’s accent, by now—hardly public school, or even regionless Scottish like her own. Brody’s was pure Glasgow. Although, admittedly, you could make out the words.

“Mr. Brody,” Jeremy said with an expansive wave toward the weathered grey turrets and stone walls of Ardknocken House. To Fiona, they no longer looked romantic and atmospheric; they seemed as threatening as the man who owned them. “You can’t expect us to give up on such a fabulous opportunity without a second try.”

“Is that why you’re here? Sorry you’ve wasted your time. My answer’s no. Unequivocally. I’ll walk you to your car.”

Somewhere, in prison or out, he’d developed enough social presence to make it impossible for them to stay. Almost like obedient children, she and Jeremy allowed themselves to be shepherded around the side of the house. From inside, a muffled cacophony of rock music and machinery drifted through the stone or from open windows. Fiona could hear a television too.

“Can I ask why?” Jeremy hazarded, still not giving up.

Brody shrugged. “Too busy. And besides, the house isn’t haunted.”

“We wouldn’t get in your way,” Jeremy promised.

Brody looked at him. “Yes,” he said, “you would.”

Even Jeremy blinked rapidly at that, a rare sign of fluster.

They rounded the corner to the front of the house, where they’d parked the car. Outside the impressive—and now open—front door, a young woman and a wiry, middle-aged man were arguing, although they shut up when they caught sight of “the laird” and his visitors.

“Good-bye,” Brody said with finality. He stood still as they walked on to the car. Fiona felt only relief.

But Jeremy, bloody Jeremy, paused with his fingers already on the door handle. He turned back and said over his shoulder, “You do understand that we’d pay you?”

It was, she supposed, inspiration. A place like this must cost a fortune to keep up. And even Brody, who didn’t look exactly tempted, gazed at him consideringly before he asked, “How much?”

Fiona gaped when the number rolled off Jeremy’s lips. Twice what they’d agreed to pay even the most mercenary of participants so far.

“F*ck,” said the wiry man on the doorstep with undisguised admiration.

Brody’s expression didn’t change. Then: “I’ll think about it,” he said abruptly, and turning on his heel, he walked up the steps past the two people at the door and disappeared inside.



“What’s to think about?” Chrissy demanded, following him into the house. “Money like that would solve more than a few immediate problems!”

Glenn could hear the car’s engine starting up outside. He shrugged but kept walking toward the dark oak staircase. “Whether or not we want them here. They’re making TV programmes about haunted houses, so they’d be under our feet day and night.”

“Meeting tonight, then?” Chrissy pursued.

Without turning, he could see the pound signs in her eyes. With the TV money, they could buy the new equipment now and still deal with the most necessary of the house repairs. Though she’d have to sell the idea of visitors to more grumpy ex-cons that him.

When he’d first got out of prison, Glenn couldn’t bear being indoors, even in the pouring rain or howling gales. But here at Ardknocken, it never felt like being enclosed. The house was too big, too gracious. Light poured in its big, Victorian windows, flooded all the way down the main stairwell from the huge skylight in the roof. It was why he’d first let others stay here, because even if you heard their voices, you never needed to see their owners, let alone walk into them. Unless you chose.

He chose now to leave the rest of the outhouse roof until tomorrow. Instead, he felt the urge to play, solely for his own amusement. And making these choices for himself was still a pleasing novelty. He leapt up the stairs two at a time, stretching his legs out, and strode along the landing to the next flight, which he took at equal speed.

At the end of the next hall, he pushed open his bedroom door and went in, swiping up his favourite acoustic guitar as he went. Then he sat cross-legged on his unmade bed, by the window, the guitar resting on his thighs as he gazed out over the rugged landscape to the scattered village and the sea beyond. Farther to the right, the hills loomed tall and ancient, reminding him of his own and everyone else’s tiny place in the hugeness of the world.

He strummed the guitar once, and then he saw her, the woman who’d been haunting his waking visions for months, a fraction of a second before the world altered.

That was different. The tilt into the dream usually happened first. Perhaps it had just been hard to perceive, because in the dream, he was still in bed, just not with the guitar. And it wasn’t this bed or this room.

But the really important thing was, he lay naked, cradled between the bare hips of a woman, pushing slowly and exquisitely inside her. Her long, black hair spilled over the white pillow. Her huge, liquid-brown eyes stared up into his with aching passion as she clung to him, undulating beneath him.

He was so struck with her expression, with his effect on her, that it was several moments before he recognized his own state of physical bliss—something he seemed to have no control over. He didn’t choose how or when to move, he just did, sliding in and out of her, arching to bend his head and kiss her beautiful dusk-peaked breasts. She had such beautiful breasts, full and pert, a perfect fill, surely, even for his big hands. He wanted to try, to see if the hand that caressed her was his, but he was stroking lower down, holding her hips steady.

He plunged faster now, licking the tiny beads of perspiration from her brow as she moaned and gasped with increasing intensity. Her fingers ran up and down his spine, digging, clutching. He could stay here all day and into the night. Oh yes.

When the storm broke over her, a smile split her face like sunshine, and yet tears spilled from the corners of her eyes as she writhed and convulsed beneath him. He took her mouth, swallowing her cries, driving into her again and again until, finally—

He sat on his own unmade bed, the guitar barely held in his slack hands.

Glenn squeezed his eyes shut in desperation, but the vision had gone.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

SERAFINA AND THE PSYCHO SOUS-CHEF by Marie Treanor

SERAFINA AND THE PSYCHO SOUS-CHEF by Marie Treanor

Serafina's Book 4

A lust more addictive than spirits...

Whisky-swilling vampire Phil has his own reasons for returning to Edinburgh. They don't include rescuing beautiful amnesiac damsels in distress, and yet one night after escaping from an old enemy, that's exactly what he does. At first his motive is curiosity because of Linnie's apparent connection to his enemy, but once he involves his old drinking companion Blair, who comes these days with a gaggle of wacky humans from Serafina's Psychic Investigations, everything gets out of hand.

While hunting his old enemy, Phil gets side-tracked into helping psychic human Sera in her bizarre cases involving a missing child, a designer drug for Holywood celebrities, and a psychotic chef who heals her victims - maybe. But he has mysteries of his own to solve - is Linnie's amnesia real, and if so, how did she lose her memory? Who is she? Why does her blood taste so much more delicious than anyone else's? And why has she interested the reclusive Founder?

For Linnie, since her accident, every day is one of self-discovery. One of the few things she does know, is to fear vampires. Especially the fun, sexy Phil, who melts her bones and shows her all the excitement she secretly craves.

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Excerpt:

“Give it a rest, Phil,” she snapped. “Even my people pretend eternal love in order to get what they want. I don’t buy yours either.”

Aengus, she thought stunned, as both name and handsome, careless face rolled into the front of her mind. The first man who’d lied his way into her knickers—as Sera would put it…

“I’m not selling eternal love,” Phil said. “It doesn’t have to be forever to be good, to be exciting, memorable, sweet.” His telepathic murmur sank through her whole body, provoking a sexual response that only made her angrier. “I thought you wanted to live? Isn’t that why you came here?”

Furiously, she tried to elbow him in the ribs. “To give my all to an abomination?” she raged, and kicked out at him, connecting forcefully with his shin. “Absolutely not!”

“I don’t want all of you.” He stopped and hooked his leg around hers, stilling her lashing feet. “Just your blood and your body. Your soul, you keep.”

She didn’t know why she was so angry. Mostly, it wasn’t even aimed at him, but at the stuff rushing back into her mind; stuff she didn’t recognise and didn’t want to. It was all wrong. More than that, she didn’t want it to be true.

She knew she was losing her footing and hung on grimly to his fingers to make sure he fell with her. At the same time, she lashed out with her free hand.

It never touched him. Even as she lost her balance, she found herself not falling but soaring as he leapt through the air with her held in both arms. The wind whipped her hair back, whistled past her ears. There was a jolt as if he’d landed, but she was aware of no more than his powerful arms at her back, his hard body fitted so close into hers that they might have been naked.

Dizzy, she could see only dark sky, the odd distant twinkle and scudding silver swirls of cloud, blotted out by the vampire’s wicked angel face, his intense eyes like impossibly burning ice. And then the world went black, and there was only his mouth on hers, wild and hard and demanding.

She reached up to claw and scratch and hurt, grabbing handfuls of his soft hair between her fingers as he opened her mouth and took her kiss before she even knew she was giving it. An inarticulate moan escaped her, half fury, half helpless want. But she wasn’t helpless. She never had been.

Her fingers closed in his hair, on his scalp, not to hurt now, but to caress. Her mouth opened wide under his. She sucked his tongue greedily, stroking it with hers. His wicked fangs grazed her lips, and she licked and sucked those too.

“Bastard. Total, total bastard,” she whispered incoherently between kisses. They were standing on the ridge of a tenement building, no doubt silhouetted against the sky for anyone who cared to look far enough up. The knowledge made her even dizzier, and she didn’t care about that either.

“Because I want you?” he asked in her head.

“Because you know I want you.”

His lips smiled on hers. His leg moved, caressing her thigh. Without warning, her foot slipped, and she was falling. There was a thud as she landed on top of him, but they both kept sliding down the slope of the roof. Phil didn’t even stop kissing her, and when she tried to break free, if only to save herself some broken bones, he simply rolled her until it was her back pressed into the cold, hard slates, and, abruptly, their descent ended with his weight holding her under him on the sloping roof.

One of his legs was rigid, as if his foot hooked into the guttering or some other hold between slates. She gasped, trying to speak under his mouth.

But he was speaking inside her head. “This is what you want. Danger, risk, love in all its forms. You want to feel.”

Almost involuntarily, she pushed upward into him, gasping for breath, for more. He dragged his mouth over her lips to her jaw and downward to the throat as if inhaling her, tasting every inch of skin. His hair tickled her chin, his lips caressed the length of her neck and closed. His tongue flickered over her skin, her vein, surely, and then his teeth grazed the same path. Sensation swam outward from his mouth until every nerve in her body seemed to sing. She twisted her head around in pleasure, and as if that was the invitation he’d been waiting for, he bit.

She cried out, though not with pain. If there was any, it got lost in fierce, urgent pleasure as his mouth moved on the oversensitised skin of her throat, caressing, sucking. His whole body shuddered on hers. His silent groan vibrated right through her; it sounded like agony, like impossible, unendurable pleasure. Ye gods, yes, that was exactly what it was. Her blood rushed through her veins and arteries, triggering all sorts of pleasure points she hadn’t known she possessed. The vampire drank her in, making love to her vein, to her, and Linnie surrendered utterly.

Sunlight and joy seemed to bombard her mind. Is that you? she wondered with awe.

“Oh yes, that’s me. Sweet Jesus, Linnie…”

Vaguely, she was aware of his urgent hand working between their bodies. She didn’t mind. She wanted him everywhere. A chill blasted her hip, her thigh, as if she were naked. But it wasn’t until he tugged her jeans down over her thigh that she realised what he was about. She tried to speak without knowing what it was she wanted to say. Shockingly cool fingers thrust, bathed in the heat between her barely parted legs, and then something wider, blunter nudged her, pushed, invaded. So big, so cold, so overwhelmingly…necessary.


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Thursday, March 27, 2014

HEARTS AND MINDS by Marie Treanor

HEARTS AND MINDS by Marie Treanor

The Gifted Series Book Two

Darkness and light in one dangerous, irresistible stranger...

Down to earth psychologist Jenna Hunt arrives in obscure Zavrekestan to find her missing friend, Nell, last seen with notorious gangster Rodion Kosar. But nothing goes the way Jen intended. Complete strangers want to harm her. She shoots one man and travels with another who may or may not be the elusive Kosar, but who's constantly pursued by armed secret police. Dangerous attraction flares, adding excitement as well as unexpected fun to her search.

But Jen's dark, mysterious travelling companion is both gifted and cursed. A powerful healer with blood on his conscience and a terrible tragedy in his past, he's now suffering agonies whenever he exercises his gift, and in this he's not alone. As Jen is drawn deeper into his world of radical dissidents and the paranormally gifted, she discovers the terrors of a ruthless government which will stop at nothing to hold onto power. She finds herself risking all to help the very people she came to rescue Nell from, and neither common sense nor principles can keep her from the arms of the sexy, tormented Nikolai.

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Excerpts:

Nikolai’s world was blood. It ran in crimson rivers before his eyes. He could feel its thick, sticky wetness on his skin and clothes as he ran, roaring, into the prison guards beyond his cell door. His gory handcuffs hung from one wrist, and he swung them like a mace, tearing more flesh, creating more blood. He didn’t care how many there were. He wanted more to fight, more to kill.

“Bring him down, now!”

Although the order penetrated his ears and his understanding, it didn’t slow him up. One of the guards, too close to shoot him, tried to hit him with the butt of his gun instead. Nikolai snatched it from him, felled him with a much more brutal blow of his own, and kicked him into his fellows. He increased his speed. He didn’t really know why—he was in hell, and wherever he ran to would still be hell. All he could do was kill and fight and yell his way along passages of prison guards and police, forcing his way through with as much violence as he could wreak.

Gunfire exploded in his head as he wielded the cuffs and his feet, using his whole body as a battering ram when necessary. But then there was no one to fight now, only guns firing where he couldn’t reach them, so all he could do was run. His body jerked sometimes, as if he’d been shot, but he didn’t feel the bullets, didn’t care. They didn’t slow him up.

Blood ran into his eyes, dripped from his body. He only wanted more.

“Draw him toward the door!” yelled the commander, his voice penetrating the chaos, as daylight began to pierce the dark, red mists through which Nikolai ran. “Units both sides! We’ve got him!”

Have you fuck.

It was his first conscious thought for a long time. They’d actually opened the heavy prison door to be sure he went in that direction. They thought it was a trap. He charged right through, jerking, swinging his cuffs and his fists, kicking, spinning, beating, breaking his way through bodies to fresh air.

Although the noise deafened him, none of it—not his own roars or the gunshots or yells of agony filling his ears from every direction—could drown out the screaming in his head. Even then, in the midst of the blood-madness, he knew it was the kind of screaming that went on forever.




*





She breathed a sigh of relief, dumped the food on the side table, and took off her leather jacket, throwing it on the bed. She turned to wish him a cordial good-night and discovered he was inside, closing the door and locking it.

Never, ever make assumptions.

“Shit, I thought we’d have one each,” she blurted.

He glanced at her. “Sorry. I didn’t have enough money.”

She had enough money. But that wasn’t the point. For the first time since she’d met him, he sounded almost…humble. About money, for God’s sake.

“It doesn’t matter,” she muttered. It spilled out more ungraciously than she intended, but God, she’d really been looking forward to that shower and bed and properly relaxing for the first time since she’d parted from her guide at the border and turned the hired car toward that dreadful pub…

“You’re quite safe,” he drawled. “I believe I can control myself to the extent of not raping you.”

Memory flooded back. Her knees gave way, and she sank onto the bed, and suddenly he was there beside her, his arm around her shoulders.

“Fuck, I’m sorry. Ignore my stupid mouth. I’m sorry I didn’t get there quicker.”

“He didn’t hurt me. He didn’t.” She pinched the skin of her throat where her would-be rapist’s hand had gripped her.

“There are many kinds of hurt,” he said, taking her pinching fingers in his. “And Yegor’s a total fucker who should have been shot years ago.”

A sob that was half laughter rose up her throat and came out as a watery smile. She found herself holding hard on to his fingers. “How do you manage to make me feel better by saying stuff like that?”

It was true. The sudden panic attack, the remembered fear and horror had faded again into manageable memory.

“Magic,” he said, and without thought, she lifted the fingers she held to her cheek, a gesture of warmth and gratitude. Only she glanced at his face as she did so, and felt the shock of attraction hit her in the stomach like a blow. His face was much too close, his dark, velvet eyes intent on hers. For an instant, they looked bewildered, almost desperate, mirroring her own vulnerability. His other arm was warm and suddenly heavy around her shoulders. She could feel the hardness she’d always known lurked beneath his shabby hoodie, and instead of frightening her, she wanted more, to be closer.

She was afraid to breathe. The only sound seemed to be the beating of her heart. His gaze dipped to the region of her mouth, and everything inside her seemed to turn over. It would take so very little just to close the distance between, touch his lips with hers, taste him…

What would it be like to kiss him, this stranger? In every sense of the word.

“Don’t look at me like that,” he whispered. “I’m only human.”

God, yes, let me tempt you. Lose your strong, superior self in me…

His arm tightened. The fingers she still held moved, brushing her cheek, making her gasp. His breath kissed her lips, and he hauled her against his chest, hard and arousing. But his lips pressed only to her forehead, and then he released her.

“You’re shattered. Eat, shower, bed.”


Tuesday, August 27, 2013

BLOOD PROPHECY by Marie Treanor


BLOOD PROPHECY by Marie Treanor

Blood Hunters Series Book Four

From a shameful past, rises a vital destiny...

"The junkie whore shall save the trinity in the first hour." So spoke the insane Luk, last of the Ancient undead prophets. The enigmatic vampire Dmitriu believes he knows the junkie whore in question, destined to save the daughter of his creator Saloman.

But the Edinburgh prostitute Janine, who once showed Dmitriu kindness, has not only got clean; she's become a vampire hunter, determined never to be helpless in anyone’s power again; and Dmitriu's pretty high on her kill list. Instead of renewing his beguiling sexual relationship with her, he has to kidnap her to force her cooperation. Bombarded with sensual memory and the lust Dmitriu still inspires in her, Janine also has to fight her way through renegade hunters, Dmitriu's rebellious creation, Antonia, the bizarre Militant Church for the Defence of the Holy Trinity and the first anti-vampire protests. It’s too much; the prophecy could be broken.

 Unless Janine's destiny is Dmitriu.

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Excerpt

“How monstrous, exactly, do you think I am?”

“As monstrous as you want to be?” she guessed.

“Good answer,” he approved. “And about right too. I will do my utmost to save this baby. And I think you’ll want to as well. You smell good.”

She blinked at the sudden change of subject. He didn’t appear to be inhaling her, but his eyes had darkened, and a faint smile played around his lips. He looked—predatory.

Her breath caught. “Like good, fresh meat?” she retorted.

“Like a summer day in the hills,” he said unexpectedly. “It’s an old memory. Can I have the stake now?”

“Fuck off.”

He considered her, his head leaning slightly to one side. “You do know I’m humoring you?”

Her heart thudded once, but she refused to be cowed. “You do know I’m grateful?”

“You should be. Why do you think I killed your other visitors? Just to clear the competition?”

“It crossed my mind,” she said evenly.

His gaze dropped again, this time to her lips, but his next words, although softly spoken, were hardly romantic. “I could have killed you here two years ago. I was tempted, but I didn’t do it. I could have killed you in London, in Essex, or on the train. I could have killed you tonight and still taken out my enemies with my free hand.”

She forbore to mention the vampire she’d killed. And the one who’d run away. She had the lowering feeling that it had made no real difference to the inevitable outcome of the fight.

“I know who you are,” she said coldly.

His lips curved. His head bent closer. “Then say hello as if you remember.”

There was nothing she could do. A quick, instinctive jerk only confirmed his immovable strength. Desperately, she tried to glare at him, but she was concentrating so hard on keeping the fear at bay that God knew what he read in her face as he slowly, inexorably, lowered his mouth onto hers, and fastened.

Jesus, she remembered the soft, tender surface of those lips, a tempting, seductive disguise for the controlling hardness that lurked beneath. Memory, emotion battered at her as he took his kiss and coaxed, gentled, persuaded her mouth to give up its response.

She couldn’t remember much of what had really happened two years ago. She had a vague idea she’d never kissed her ‘clients.’ But she knew she’d kissed Dmitriu, and he’d kissed her like this before. Before he’d taken her to bed. After he’d drunk from her, like a thank-you, as if the orgasm hadn’t been enough.

Shame tangled with past and present pleasure. His tongue dipped between her lips, over her teeth, and inside her mouth, caressing, exploring, inviting. Kiss me. Give me your blood, your body.
She shuddered beneath his mouth, against his hard, lean frame. She couldn’t escape him; she could only deny him her response, and so she hung in his powerful arms and let him deepen the kiss, devouring her mouth without violence, using only the devastating sensuality of his cruel, tender lips.

She could force herself not to kiss him back, but she couldn’t prevent her body’s arousal. Hot dampness had gathered between her thighs, flooding her with new weakness. She shook with the effort of resisting, of not lifting her free arm to his neck. But she’d never be that willing victim again. Never.

And yet his mouth was so sweet; his body felt so good crushing hers. One of his hands slid down her arm to her naked wrist, feeling her pulse, the bastard… His thumb moved to her fingers, her palm…

And she realized he’d taken her stake.

She gasped into his mouth, jerking against him once more, but he didn’t release her, just took advantage of her further opened mouth to deepen his kiss even more, drawing her tongue into his mouth, stroking, caressing, kissing.

“Bastard,” she whispered against his lips, and they smiled against hers and kissed some more before finally he raised his head. His eyes were impenetrable black, and yet somehow they glittered with naked lust.

His long, cool fingers touched her cheek, the corner of her mouth. “Now you remember me.”

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Monday, May 27, 2013

BLOOD DESCENT by Marie Treanor

BLOOD DESCENT by Marie Treanor

Blood Hunters Book Three

A child is born...into the final showdown of Vampire and Hunter

The face of a killer, the heart of a lost child… Konrad once led the legendary first team of Hungarian vampire hunters. Now, refusing to ally with the undead, he goes his own way, slaughtering vampires across the length and breadth of Europe.

The dying thoughts of one such vampire send Konrad to Britain in search of a dangerous instrument that might be just what he needs in his obsessive war with undead overlord Saloman – a war he’s determined to win at any cost. The only being who can lead him to the instrument and its current, evil possessor, is sexy, mysterious, young Glaswegian vampire Maggie, who holds herself aloof from her own kind.

Maggie sees much more than Konrad’s anger and cruelty. She makes it her mission to reach beyond the horrors of his past and find the man he should have been. Difficult, when he threatens her heart as well as everything she believes in; and when her whole being clamors for his body and his blood.

While journalists circle, about to break the news of vampire existence on mainstream television, Elizabeth Silk labors to give birth to Saloman’s daughter, and Maggie plays a dangerous game that risks everyone for her belief in one troubled man.

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Excerpts:

“Torture?” Maggie stared at him. “Why do you imagine Dmitriu would torture her? It’s hardly his style.”

“He’s a vampire,” Konrad retorted, glaring at her with something very like defiance. “However civilized the veneer, brutality’s never far from the surface. Now stay out of my fucking mind.”

He turned away from her, and she gazed at his rigid back. None of the vampires in his vision resembled Dmitriu. In fact, the victim wasn’t even Janine.

“Oh, Konrad,” she whispered. “That’s what happened to you…”

“Crap,” he said shortly, throwing himself onto the bed. “And if it was, I bloody wouldn’t want another vampire’s pity!”

But she wouldn’t have that. She flew at him before he was prepared, and managed to hold him only because he’d grown too used to her and too dismissive. She knocked him backward, straddling him, holding his straining wrists on either side of his head.

“No vampire’s pity,” she agreed. “And no human’s either. You can’t go on like that.”

Pure hatred, fury, spat from his eyes. It wasn’t really for her. He wasn’t even seeing her, not as she was.

“Konrad. There’s nothing wrong with pity. Here’s mine.”

He was strong. She couldn’t hold him for long. So she leaned down to him, put her lips to his forehead, and kissed him. Warm, male human skin. With delicious hunter blood flowing beneath. He stared up at her as she raised her head.

“Just that?” he said and lunged upward, crashing his mouth into hers, seizing her lips.

Surprise loosened her fingers on his wrists, and abruptly he pushed her off him, flipping so that he now lay over her. His mouth bore down harder, opening hers for the invasion of his tongue, devouring her.

And, God, it felt good. Pity and compassion drowned in need of his hard, muscular body, in wanting the rich, powerful blood now rushing through his veins. She met his tongue with hers, caressed it, moved her lips with his, struggling for a dominance she didn’t really want. She was enjoying the fight too much. And it did feel like a fight, a hot, sexy battle. She undulated beneath him, loving the feel of his warm, strong body pressing her down into the bed. Between her legs, lust raged as she rubbed her tenderness against his erection.

This was what she’d wanted in London, when they’d fallen together over the wall above the canal—this wild, rising passion, his erection grinding into her, reaching between her thighs, his mouth hot, commanding, his hands all over her body like this, one closing on her breast, his thumb grazing over her aching nipple again and again.

But he hadn’t done it earlier, because he’d almost liked her then. He hadn’t wanted to punish her.

God help him, he imagined this was punishment.

She tore her mouth free, glaring at him. “Why are you such an arse?” she raged.

Just for a moment, he looked blank. His blue eyes, no longer hard or icy, were clouded with lust, his lips softened from kissing her. Slowly, the mists cleared, and yet something fierce remained, overlaid with the faintest hint of humor, which was, surely, his saving grace.

“Well, at least we know where we stand,” he observed. “I want to fuck you. You want me to fuck you. But we’ll never do it, because you’re a vampire and I’m an arse.”

Hurt and fury melted under the hunter’s mouth. She’d never imagined he could or would kiss like that, tenderness mixed with the ferocity sizzling just below the surface. Need blazed under the weight of his hard body, weakening and arousing. When she heard the soft thud of the stake hitting the floor, she let out a sound like a sob, muffled by his mouth, and her fist tightened in his soft hair.

His tongue found her fangs, and he growled, licking them and sucking them, and triumph soared because he wanted all of her. Releasing his hair, she swept her hand down his back to the hem of his T-shirt and plucked.

He released her mouth, sat up, and tore the T-shirt off. His chest was beautiful, smooth under her caressing hand except for the ridge of old scars and the scattering of fine hair at the center. Deliberately, he tugged at her already rucked-up dress. With both hands, he pushed the fabric up over her waist and breasts, where he lingered. His breath caught, perhaps because she was naked beneath.

A smile played around his lips. She’d never seen them so softened by sensuality. He pushed the dress up over her head and her free arm, and threw it to one side over the cuffed arm.

“Fuck,” he whispered, staring at her, devouring her with his eyes. “Just fuck.”

“That,” she said unsteadily, “would be acceptable.”

He cupped one breast in his palm, moving his palm across the nipple, then slowly lowered his head and kissed the other. His lips, his tongue caressed, and she closed her eyes in bliss, arching up into him. With her free hand, she held his head to her breast, then slid it down over his naked back in a sweeping caress that ended at his jeans. She pushed inside the waistband, feeling the hot curve of his buttock, and pulled him closer.

His lower body shifted, as he shoved his hand between them to unfasten his jeans, which he all but kicked off in his urgency. Then, at last, he was naked between her legs, kissing her breast once more while his hand caressed the length of her leg and swept inward, bathing in the wetness of her need. He muttered something under his breath, adjusted himself, and pushed inside her with a groan.

“Oh yes,” Maggie whispered as anticipation drowned in excitement and intense, rising pleasure. She pushed up onto him and twisted her hips, moaning as the hot thickness slid farther inside her.

He began to move with a fierce urgency that delighted her. She squeezed him, writhed and pushed under him, egging him on until he slammed into her over and over. Excruciating bliss built and soared. When his mouth crushed hers, she nibbled his lips, tasted the tiniest droplet of his gorgeous blood and bucked as she scrabbled against his undulating back. He arched once more to reach her breast with his mouth, sucked strongly on her nipple, and orgasm exploded...

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

SERAFINA AND THE VIRTUAL MAN by Marie Treanor


SERAFINA AND THE VIRTUAL MAN by Marie Treanor

Serafina's, Book 2

Real man versus dead man - no contest!

Dale Ewan, the wealthy owner of Genesis Gaming, has a serious poltergeist problem. In desperation, he calls on Edinburgh's unique psychic investigation agency, Serafina's.

But Sera and her hacker friend, the beautiful and aggressive Jilly, find more than one spirit haunting the ugly country house. While Sera fights the poltergeist, Jilly encounters what appears to be the ghost of Dale's brilliant ex-partner, Genesis Adam, trapped in his own new virtual reality system.

 Jilly delves headlong into Adam's mystery. How did he get there? Why is he more exciting and attractive than any of the real men in her life? How are Jilly's own criminal brothers involved in his death? And what are Dale and his wife Petra hiding? Apart from the body buried in their garden...

While Jilly falls in love with the sexy, virtual ghost, Sera has problems of her own, not least the shadowy presence of the undead Founder that seems to threaten Sera, her vampire lover Blair, and all her friends.

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~Excerpt~

He groaned into her mouth and lifted his head. His breathing was ragged, his voice unsteady. “Would you allow a dead man to make love to you?”

Jilly, who’d had such difficulty encountering a live one she could even tolerate, just said, “Please, please…” in a mindless sort of way she suspected she’d despise in the morning. Right now, it didn’t matter, since she was pulling him with her toward the large, ornate bed.

He muttered something beneath his breath, and suddenly he lifted her off her feet and strode across the room with her. Now here was the Rhett Butler that Dave Jenner had so signally failed to emulate the other night—masterful, urgent, strong. And yet he laid her on the bed with gentleness and straightened to drop the braces from his shoulders and tear off his tie and shirt.

She reached for him, and he came into her arms as if it was the most natural place in the world to be. He lay over her, his body deliciously heavy on her hips, her pubic bone. His still-covered erection pushed between her parted thighs. His skin felt warm and smooth under her hands as she ran them over his shoulders and arms and back. He was beautiful, she realised; a naked man could be astoundingly beautiful, and suddenly she wanted to see all of him.

She wriggled under him, which had the additional advantage of pleasing her body, so avid now for new and greater thrills, pushing at him until his face changed and he yanked himself off her as if afraid he’d been hurting her. Suddenly terrified he’d go too far away, she seized his naked shoulder, pushing him onto his back on the pillows so she could stroke his lean, broad chest.

Breathing deeply, he let her, watching with obvious pleasure. She smiled and kissed his chest just above the nipple, then the nipple itself, letting her lips linger there to enjoy the novel sensation.

Muttering something that was at least half groan, he reached up to the unseen fastenings of her dress and tugged once. It slipped down her shoulders to her elbows, revealing some weird corsetry that he began to unfasten at her back, hook by hook. His gaze never left hers, and suddenly it was unspeakably exciting to feel his fingers working at her back, knowing that any moment, she’d be naked. Greatly daring, she traced one finger down the central line of his chest to the waistband of his trousers. She unfastened the buttons there and kept going, revealing the fine line of hair that ran from his belly button into his shorts.

She paused. The full length of his erection lay thick and hard over his flat stomach. She laid her hand over it, and he exhaled as if he’d been holding his breath for ages. She liked the feel of it, hot, ridged, enticing; she yearned to see it.

But she hesitated, suddenly unsure. A thread of panic brushed through her, threatening her with memory. But he seemed to read her mind and obligingly shoved his trousers and underwear down over his hips.

Her breath caught. He took her hand, and, under her widening eyes, he kissed her fingers and palm and then placed them over his naked cock. She swallowed. The skin felt so soft over all that steely hardness, so amazingly hot under her hand. She closed her fingers around the shaft, and he smiled at her.

“Oh yes,” he approved softly, and then, swiftly, he sat up and rolled her under him, and there was no dress, no corset between them. A quick scuffle of his feet, and the last of his own troublesome clothes vanished too. His hand closed over one breast, softly, tenderly caressing.
Slowly, oh so arousingly, he lowered his gaze from her eyes to her uncovered breast.

“Fuck,” he said huskily. “I knew you’d be beautiful all over. But your breast is like…” As if he ran out of words, he lowered his head and took her nipple reverently between his lips. The pleasure was exquisite, especially when his lips moved in the sweetest caress she’d ever imagined, gently rolling and tugging.

She closed her eyes, never wanting it to stop. And it seemed he was in no hurry, for he kissed her nipple for a long, long time while his hand kneaded the other, doubling her pleasure. His leg, long and muscled, stretched over both of hers, and he moved it caressingly until he shifted position and lay instead between her thighs.

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