Jack Wylie is tall, dark, handsome and brave - he's everything
you'd want in a kidnapper.
Ex-cop Jack Wylie is a born protector, tormented by the day he
misjudged a criminal and his life took a tragic turn. Now he's on a mission to
kidnap a woman to help her overcome a fear of being tied up.
He's been told by his psychologist brother to keep up the game
until the woman gives him the sign. But there has been a big mistake. Jack has
accidentally abducted the feisty and beautiful Molly Rhoades - a newly arrived
local TV reporter who has secrets of her own. And she doesn't know the sign.
After a dangerous and unlikely meeting, Jack and Molly find
themselves consumed by sexual tension, but things get even more complicated
when Molly finds out that Jack is engaged to the local Councilwoman Amanda
Everett, a ruthless career climber determined to succeed no matter what the
cost.
But why did Jack kidnap Molly in the first place? Who is pulling
the strings in this perverted puppet show? Jack vows to protect Molly until he
finds out the truth, but the layers of deception and vengeance run deeper than
he could have ever imagined.
EXCERPT:
She was ready for him when he came back.
After several frantic tries, she arranged the
comforter on the bed, hoping it looked like she was lying beneath it. Now, she
waited behind the door. The only weapons she had were her legs, but with five
years of kickboxing under her belt, she knew the vulnerable areas to target on
a man to overpower him. Groin. Throat. Nose. Finding those areas blindfolded
would be the real kicker.
She inhaled a slow breath. The key jingled in the
lock. She tensed, preparing her body to deliver swift, precise hits. Bending
one knee, she kept the other resting against the side of the door to feel it
open. Without her hands for balance, it’d be difficult to stay on her feet
after landing. If she didn’t connect with solid flesh, she’d fall. She tried
not to sweat the fact she’d never kicked a person before. He wasn’t a person —
he was a monster.
By slow degrees the door brushed against her foot
and she held a second, waiting for his first step into the room. Bounding to
the left, she kicked up and out, hoping to catch him offguard and bean him under
the nose, or at least the side of his face. Instead, her toes clattered against
something hard, and warm chunks spattered her throat. Her lunch? Determined to
do some damage, she leaped again and threw her entire body behind a kick in the
same vicinity as the last. This time she connected with flesh.
A calloused hand wrapped around her foot and she
tottered, one-legged, on the slippery floor. He released her before she toppled
over, only to grab her by the tank. A rip sounded and the fabric over her breasts
gave way.
He hauled her against his solid chest. “You’re
becoming a real pain in the ass, Laura.” He spoke the words inches from her
face, his breath hot on her lips. A hard hand clamped around her jaw, then
gentled, stroking up the side of her cheek.
He was going to kiss her.
“My name isn’t Laura!”
AUTHOR Bio and
Links:
Natalie S. Ellis worked behind the
scenes in TV news for sixteen years and will always miss the rush of a breaking
story. But the seduction of writing a fiery romance with twisty suspense is
even harder to resist, especially when she has a new curveball for the plot.
Natalie enjoys living in her hometown of Fort Wayne, Indiana, and attributes
her cheerful attitude to empty nesting, a supportive family, and way too many
lattés.
GIVEAWAY:
Natalie will be awarding
an eCopy of Fear for Hire to 3 randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter during
the tour, and choice of 5 digital books from the Impulse line to a randomly
drawn host.
The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here:
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for hosting me, Books and Other Spells!
ReplyDeleteDo you think that the cover plays an important part in the buying process?
ReplyDeleteMai--I certainly do. I, at least, still often judge a book by its cover. But, I won't buy it unless the blurb sounds good. I've learned to download a sample too. If I get to the end of the download and I have to find out what happened next, I buy the book. How about you? Are you influenced more by the cover or the title?
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