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Excerpts From: ELLORA’S CAVEMEN:
DREAMS OF THE OASIS II
An Excerpt From: TREASURE HUNTERS
Copyright © SYLVIA DAY, 2006
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
If the guy in her office weren’t so damn gorgeous she
might be able to think properly. But he was yummy. In fact, he was so
unbelievably handsome Samantha was staring, something that was brought to
her attention by the long, masculine fingers snapping in front of her face.
“Miss Tremain.” His deep
voice, though soft, was filled with exasperation. “Are you listening to
me?”
“Beg your pardon?” She blinked rapidly.
He exhaled and took the seat in front of her desk.
Crossing one ankle over the opposite knee, he bared to her view an
impressive bulge behind the tightened lacings of his pants.
“Animal,” she breathed. The bulge jerked in response.
“Huh?”
Sam coughed into her hand as her face heated. “A-animal
skin.”
“Yeah. It is.” Bright blue eyes flashed briefly before
narrowing. “I was told that you’re the foremost expert on literary
antiquities in this part of the galaxy, Miss Tremain.
Is that right or should I be looking for help elsewhere?”
“Mr. Bronson—”
“Rick.”
“Oh…” The way he said his own name, like it was a sensual
threat, made her shiver. And the way he was dressed, in animal skin and
some billowing material for a shirt, made her mouth dry. “Why aren’t you
wearing a bio-suit?”
A dark brow rose. “You want to talk about my clothes?”
He shook his head. “You brainy types are always a little weird.”
“Look who’s talking,” she retorted, stung by his comment,
one which she’d heard a thousand times. “You are a twenty-third-century
mercenary who dresses in nineteenth-century clothing while tracking down a
legendary twenty-first-century treasure. Shouldn’t you be doing something
else? Killing for hire or something of that nature?”
Blowing a loose tendril of hair from her face, Sam stood
and began to pace. As long as she didn’t look at that breathtaking face,
she could keep her wits about her. His dark hair, tan skin and eyes like
the Laruvian
Ocean were bad
enough. When you added in the broad shoulders, tapered hips and animal
skin-covered bulge, she had a living wet dream sitting right in her office.
Rick Bronson chuckled and the warm sound of amusement
made her womb clench. “Whatever a mercenary does, he does for credits.
Hunting treasure is a hunt for credits. Pretty easy to figure out.”
“But why this particular treasure?”
“It’s worth a fortune.”
“It’s rumored to be worth a fortune. Just as it’s
rumored to exist. You’re most likely wasting your time.” She
hazarded a side glance and her heart skipped a beat at his soft smile. “It
seems an odd treasure for a man to hunt for. Why not the Draken Cup? Or the Sarian Stone?
Why the erotic e-books?”
“That’s a silly question.” The curve of his lips
deepened. “You know how much those Romantica
stories are worth. Ever since the Conservative Censorship Committee
succeeded in banning erotica and erotic romance back in 2015 it’s almost impossible
to find. All the print books have long since turned into dust, but the
remaining e-books that manage to make it to the black market bring in a
small fortune. Can you imagine how much a database full of those stories
would be worth?”
Sam sighed with longing. “Now that the ban has been
revoked, finding those stories would not only return literary treasures to
the people, but it would help lift this sexual repression that has stifled
us all for so long.”
“You sound like a woman who appreciates the erotic,”
Rick purred. He stood and came toward her, his gait slow and filled with seductive
promise. The blaster strapped to one thigh and the laser sword strapped to
the other only emphasized how dangerous he was. Against the backdrop of her
small office, he was even more intimidating. And tantalizing.
An Excerpt From: ALLERGIC TO LOVE
Copyright © ANNA J. EVANS, 2006
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
Ella swallowed, but it was hard. Very hard. Almost
impossible.
What had he put in there? And was it really worth
possibly risking her life to prove that Marcus Ashton was a completely
unprofessional and potentially dangerous man who should be fired
immediately, do not pass go, do not collect your 401k?
She was a chemist for god’s sakes, she should just test
the cocoa, find out what he’d used, and turn him in. Why did she feel
compelled to drink the damn stuff? Because she was a sick cookie? Perhaps.
Or maybe because she knew whatever he’d dumped in her hot chocolate
probably wouldn’t kill her.
Probably.
“Relax,” she whispered to herself, setting her cup down
in the section of her lab station reserved for personal effects. She wasn’t
the sort to risk a spill that might contaminate an experiment.
But you’re the type to risk being poisoned? Are you
nuts?
“Ella—”
“Shit!” Ella screamed, jumping
half a foot as Mandy popped her head into her station.
“You’re cussing now? When did this happen?” Mandy asked.
“I’m just a little nervous today,” Ella said.
“Maybe you should lay off the hot chocolate,” Mandy
joked. If she only knew.
“Right!” Ella giggled, somewhat hysterically. Would
Mandy think she was totally crazy if she hugged her and begged her to take
care of her cat if she mysteriously dropped dead in the next few hours?
Or days. It could be some sort of cumulative toxin.
“All right, you’re definitely coming to happy hour
today. I was going to ask you to go, but now I’m telling. You need a drink.
I’ll meet you outside at five-thirty,” Mandy said, turning to leave.
“But I—”
“Five-thirty, psycho. No overtime on Thirsty Thursdays,”
Mandy ordered and then disappeared.
No overtime on Thursdays. If she hadn’t been logging
overtime yesterday, then she wouldn’t be in this mess. Well, she would
still be in the mess, but wouldn’t know that she was in the mess, wouldn’t
have, with her very own eyes, seen Mr. Scary doctoring her cocoa mix. Given
the choice, Ella supposed she would rather know that she was being
poisoned, even if it made her a mass of paranoia nearly incapable of
getting anything resembling work accomplished.
“Ella? Can we talk?” came
another voice from the entry to her station, a male voice this time. A
deep, sexy, lust-inducing male voice that belonged to a certifiable psycho
nut job who could be trying to kill her.
“Yeah. Sure. What?” Ella snapped, spinning around to
face him, hoping that her eyes weren’t as wide and frightened as she
thought they were. It was bad enough that her nose started running every
time he was in a ten-foot radius, the last thing she needed was to look
like a terrified snot-nosed kid.
“I wanted to apologize,” Marcus said, folding his arms
across his incredibly broad chest, his bright blue eyes shining intently
down at her. As her entire body tingled with response to his nearness, Ella
braced herself for the inevitable sneezing and itching and the migraine
that never failed to make a torturous appearance seconds after the Sex
God’s arrival.
Hurriedly, she reached for a tissue and…
Nothing. Nothing happened. She could still breathe, her
head didn’t hurt, there was no running nose, no
itchiness, nothing, nada. There was absolutely nothing going on in her
allergic body to distract her from the rush of raw desire that swept
through her every cell. It was crazy, but she felt herself actually tremble
as she took him in, symptom free.
Of course, he was ridiculously gorgeous. His nearly
black hair was cut close to his head, his eyes passionate and expressive,
and all six foot whatever of him composed of pure testosterone-enhanced
muscle. He was her dream man—handsome, smart, and just a little bit
dangerous. Too bad he made her allergies act up like nobody’s business.
And he was trying to kill her or drug her or poison her
or something. Mustn’t forget that little detail.
An Excerpt From: ECLIPSE
Copyright © DENISE A. AGNEW, 2006
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
Dawn Chartrier sat in her
parked car and held her breath, certain she might
walk into the Den of Wolves tonight and meet her death if things didn’t go as
planned. Tonight she could discover the mystery of what happened beyond the
darkness between death and rebirth.
Dawn looked out at the New Orleans night, with its foggy nuance
and mysterious layers. She felt the chill down to her marrow. She’d seen
costume-clad revelers around the streets, but once she’d arrived at the
club, fundamental change brought a deathly hush over the street. Edginess
prickled her skin, her stomach uneasy and her heart throbbing a little too
fast. Dawn had never experienced a panic attack, but she fought with rising
anxiety to keep her heart steady and her trembling at bay. She’d always
been the brave one in the family, willing to take chances. Now that she was
here, reluctance dogged at her heels.
What insanity lurked around this single street and
caused Halloween partygoers to avoid this area? Did the reputation of the
club keep them away? Her heart pounded, and fear threatened to smash her
resolve. She could start the car and escape.
But she would never forgive herself if she didn’t help
her sister.
Taking time away from her financial analyst job in Denver hadn’t
endeared Dawn to her work-fourteen-hours-a-day boss. He’d grudgingly given
her a week off when she explained her sister could be in grave danger. The
boss from hell might use this trip as a reason to mark her down on her
evaluation next month. If so, she’d start looking for another job, or
another career.
“Shit.” Cursing came easy to her now—she’d never been a
potty mouth, but circumstances and stress made her do things she didn’t
think she would.
If she didn’t watch out, she’d follow her sister
Maureen’s destructive path. She could still hear Maureen’s chilling words
when she’d called. Dating a werewolf is a bitch.
Well, her sister had given her life over to something
unnatural, and now she paid the price.
Yet one fact plagued Dawn more than other concerns. If
she left this vehicle, if she went into the fog-enshrouded night
surrounding the club, she might not come back alive.
Plus, she didn’t want to ask the help of one very, very
dangerous man. A man she’d fallen for ten years ago and had never
forgotten. Rumors about him abounded in New Orleans.
Was he a vampire?
Or a werewolf?
She didn’t know if either applied to him, or neither.
No matter. She would find out tonight.
She’d located a parking spot as close to the club as she
could. The streets were lined with cars, and she must traverse a block
before the dubious safety of the club could embrace her. She smiled without
mirth.
She glanced at her watch in the dim light from a
streetlamp. Close to midnight. She unlocked her side of the BMW
sedan, then stepped out of the car.
“Now or never,” she said into the dank breath of New Orleans at night.
An Excerpt From: GENESIS
Copyright © B.J. MCCALL, 2006
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
“Kysis Station, this is Currus.
Currus hailing the Kysis
Station. Do you read?”
Dr. Tria Anara
listened as the communication unit translated the words of the male
speaker. Contact. Others in the galaxy had survived.
“This is the Currus of
the Sarruian Expeditionary Force hailing Kysis Station. Repeat. Currus
hailing Kysis Station. Do you read?”
Tria clasped her hands
together and thanked the Mother. Salvation had arrived.
“Station Kysis hailing Currus.”
“Kysis, I am Captain Dax Rann of the Sarruian Expeditionary Force. We are responding to your
signal. Are you in distress?”
This male voice was deeper, richer, more mature and
confident. Instead of masking the voice, the translator enhanced the tonal
quality.
“Negative. This is Dr. Tria Anara of science station Kysis.
You are the first contact since the invasion.”
“Status of station?”
The strength in the Sarruian
captain’s voice filled Tria with hope. After the
Purge had passed through the Zyrai system
decimating the population, Tria had feared all
intelligent life in the galaxy had perished.
“Secure. Functional.”
“How many on station?”
“Five. Females.”
Seconds ticked by before the captain responded.
“Four hours to your position. Permission to land?”
Tria thanked the Mother.
“Standby for landing beacon and coordinates.”
When the ship had entered orbit about the mother planet,
Zyrai, Tria started an
analysis scan. Ever cautious, she’d suppressed her excitement and allowed
the Scan-net to evaluate the vessel before making contact. Her
excitement had grown as Scan-net spit out information giving her
specifics about the Sarruian ship. The scan had
picked up five compatible life forms, all male, and although the Currus was armed, Sarru
had never shown aggression against Zyrai.
The Sarruians had made
peaceful contact over a century ago and were perfect male specimens to
begin the genesis mission.
Tria uncloaked the station’s
docking portal. “Landing beacon initiated.”
After signing off, Tria left
the communication center. She hurried through the lush gardens, her feet
flying along the pathway leading to the bathing pool. Edible and medicinal plants, and a variety of flowers graced the vast science
laboratory and station conceived and built by her grandfather. Seven years
had passed since the Purge had invaded the Zyrai
system and destroyed all sentient life forms. Only Tria
and her young charges had survived on Kysis.
Before her, four beautiful young women representing the
future of Zyrai bathed beneath one of many
recycling waterfalls. “Dr. Tria, join us.”
“Thank you, ladies, but something important has come up.
Naci, will you accompany me to the communication
center?”
An Excerpt From: BLIND DATE
Copyright © ELISA ADAMS, 2006
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
“A penny for your thoughts, Ruthie. A quarter if they’re
dirty.”
Ruthie shot a teasing glare across the couch at Mike. “Please.
If my thoughts were dirty, I wouldn’t share them with you, of all people.”
He shook his head and let out a dramatic sigh. His blond
hair, a little shaggy on top, drooped over his forehead. “Why not? We share
everything else.”
She snorted and gave his shoulder a swat. He was only
kidding, and they both knew it. He was her best friend. Her confidant. The
down-to-earth guy she could confess her worries and fears to and know he’d
always be willing to offer an objective opinion. Whether she asked for one or
not.
“Not everything. Some things aren’t meant to be shared
with friends.”
“Friends? Is that all I am to you? A shoulder to cry
on?”
Pure sex and sin flashed across his gaze and it made
something flutter low in her stomach. Something that had been fluttering an
awful lot in the past few months. But she knew better than to take him
seriously. He was playing around with her, trying to get her temper going.
No way was she taking the bait.
“Nah, you’re pretty good for taking out my aggravation
on, too.”
She’d had a crush on him once—when they’d first met in
their senior year of college. But she wasn’t a kid anymore and that crush
was long gone. Mostly. It was hard not to be a little bit attracted to him,
but her attraction was more of an appreciation of the male form in its
absolute perfection rather than a desire to want him in her life as more
than a friend. Women drooled over him all the time. Damned near swooned at
his feet, despite the fact that swooning had gone out of style eons ago.
The last thing Mike needed was to find out that his best friend, of all
people, harbored a teeny, tiny little infatuation. Not even an infatuation.
It was more like an involuntary twinge. Just because her body reacted
didn’t mean her mind had any interest in him—or that he had any interest in
her.
Of course, a girl could dream, right?
And dream she did. About his long, muscled body honed
from ten years working as a personal trainer. About his thick blond hair
that just about screamed for her to sink her fingers into it. About his
warm brown eyes and strong jaw and the goatee she’d always found so sexy.
She took a big gulp from her can of soda to wet her
suddenly dry throat. Maybe she wasn’t as over her crush as she’d thought.
Mike cupped her chin in his big palm and swiped his
thumb across the corner of her mouth. His touch lingered for a beat too
long, his gaze locked with hers, and something passed between them that she
couldn’t explain. She wanted to pull out of the amazing, discomforting touch,
but she couldn’t make her muscles move even an inch away from him. Her
nipples pebbled against the soft material of the tank top.
His finger trailed down her chin as he pulled away.
An Excerpt From: SIR STEPHEN’S
FORTUNE
Copyright © SAHARA KELLY, 2006
All Rights Reserved, Ellora's Cave Publishing,
Inc.
Had it not been for his mother, Stephen’s life would
have been a misery. But she had interceded between him and his father,
buffering the currents of distaste, protecting him from the worst of his
father’s volatile temper and his brother’s vicious taunts.
Now Stephen could understand the emotions. Could easily
see how Lionel would not view him as his son and heir but as an interloper
fathered by another. This awareness did not ease the pain he felt, but as a
man he could at least understand.
Even armed with that knowledge, he’d been unprepared for
his instant dismissal. Preparing for his mother’s funeral, his father had
stormed into the room waving a small book that Stephen recognized as his
mother’s diary.
“A filthy gypsy. That’s who sired you, boy. A filthy gypsy.
And to think today I have to pretend to grieve for the death of that—that—whore,
your mother.”
Stephen was caught unawares, shocked at the vitriol in
his father’s voice. He knew he’d said something in response, but couldn’t
remember what.
“She admits it. Relishes it, the doxy. It’s all
here…” Lionel had thrown the small diary at Stephen, hitting him on the
shoulder. “I knew it was a mistake from the start. You’ve been nothing but
trouble your whole life.”
“Father, that’s unfair…”
“Father?” Lionel’s veins had stood out on his
forehead as his temper approached apoplectic. “I’m no father to you. You’re
no son of mine. Get out of this house and never come back.”
And there they were again, those heated and angry words
that haunted Stephen. He had ridden away from his mother’s grave, vowing
never to return.
He was a bastard. A homeless, landless bastard
with nothing to recommend him to anybody. As if in sympathy, droplets of
rain began to dapple his shoulders and he sighed. A fitting conclusion to a
perfectly rotten day.
He rounded a bend in the lane and stopped short. Here
was the source of the smoke…a small country fair, tucked into a fallow
field miles from anywhere. The hardiness of the local residents showed
quite clearly in the small crowd which must have walked or ridden for quite
some distance to get here and enjoy a day away from their labors.
Music and laughter assailed his ears and the most
delectable smells of good hearty fare crept around his nostrils and made
his stomach rumble.
Trying to remember if he’d eaten anything that day,
Stephen led his horse toward the fair. There must be a blacksmith around
someplace who wouldn’t mind taking a look at the injured hoof.
In spite of the rain, children ran around the few
stalls, giggling at their own games while their parents tried their hand at
throwing a ball at a target or discussed the finer points of one or two
large sows and their litters. It was the quintessential gathering of simple
country folk and Stephen found himself smiling as he walked through the
raindrops to join the throng.
Tethering his mount to a convenient post, he looked
around—just as the skies opened and produced a heavy downpour. Stephen
cursed and darted in to a small colorful tent beside him.
“Sorry. It’s the bloody rain…”
“Welcome. Yer here just in
time…”
CLOSE WINDOW
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