Description:
Take a road trip with the undead . . . in this latest in the argeneau series by New York Times bestselling author Lynsay Sands
For Basha Argeneau, anything is better than facing her estranged family. Even hiding out in sweltering southern California. But when a sexy immortal in black shows up determined to bring her back to the clan, she'll do anything to keep far, far away from the past she can't outrun.
Marcus Notte isn't here to play games—especially not with someone as crazy as the infamous blonde. Asked by Lucian Argeneau to bring her back for questioning, Marcus is determined to carry out Lucian's request—no matter how the seductive little mind-reading vamp feels about it.
Basha doesn't mind fighting fire with fire, especially with a hot immortal involved. But if he wants to take her away, he'll have to catch her first . . .
EXCERPT:
Chapter
One
Divine
saw her latest customer out, surprised to note that there was no one outside
her door waiting for a reading. It was the first time that day that there was
no line outside her RV. A glance at her watch explained why-- it was
dinnertime. That was the only time she ever had a lull in customers. Right now
the food stalls would have ridiculously long line as everyone at the
fairgrounds converged on them in search of greasy treats to power the rest of
the evening’s rides and fun. Which meant she had a few minutes to catch her
breath and relax a bit.
She’d
barely had the thought when she spotted a couple of women moving purposefully
toward her trailer. After a brief hesitation, Divine quickly flipped the “Back
in five minutes!” sign, let her screen door slide closed and descended the few
steps to the ground. Ignoring the fact that the women were looking alarmed and
rushing forward, she slipped around the side of her RV. Most customers would
have stopped then, sagged with disappointment and waited, probably impatiently,
but waited just the same, so Divine was a little surprised when her arm was
grabbed from behind. She was more surprised, however, by the strength in the
hand that latched onto her…until she turned and noted that it wasn’t one of the
women at all, but a man.
A couple
inches taller than her, dark haired and good-looking, he was built like a line
backer. He was also looming over her, deliberately invading her space in a
threatening manner as he growled, “What the hell did you say to my wife?”
Divine
rolled her eyes with exasperation, wondering how she was supposed to know since
she didn’t know who his wife was. She was about to say as much, but then
realized that there was something familiar about the man and quickly dipped
into his thoughts. A heartbeat later she was relaxing.
“Allen
Paulson,” she murmured his name, getting an almost childish satisfaction when
his eyes widened incredulously.
“How do
you--?”
“I told
your wife that you were having an affair with your buxom, blonde, twenty year
old secretary, Tiffany,” Divine interrupted sharply, silencing him at once. “I
told her that this Tiffany was pushing for marriage and that you, not wanting
to lose her, but unwilling to give up your wife’s money preferred widowhood to
divorce. I told her about your plans to bring about that widowhood on your
upcoming vacation. I believe it was either her drowning or suffering a fall
while camping in Yosemite National Park?” She tilted her head. “As I recall
that trip was scheduled for this week, wasn’t it?”
When his
mouth dropped open and his hold on her arm eased, Divine added, “I’m guessing
by the fact that you’re here rather than in Yosemite, that she listened to my
advice to make an appointment with her lawyer the next morning to change her
will as well as remove you as the beneficiary on her life insurance.”
His hand
dropped away, falling limply by his side.
“No doubt
she also listened to my advice and hired a private detective. I gather she sent
him to get photographic proof of your infidelity at that cheap little motel you
like to take your secretary to everyday at lunchtime?” She slipped into his
thoughts briefly, read the answer in the chaos there, and smiled with
satisfaction. Not only had the wife done that, she’d then taken the proof
straight to a good divorce lawyer. The woman was now safe and on her way to
being single again. After that, though, the woman had told her dear hubby that
the fortune teller at the carnival was the one who had given her the heads up
and put her on this path and it had been the best twenty bucks she’d ever spent.
Which was why Divine now had an irate and soon to be divorced and destitute
husband on her hands.
Divine
waited, braced for the man’s anger. But instead of the explosive rage she
expected, he asked in a small, frightened voice, “How did you know? No one knew.
I didn’t tell anyone what I planned. Not even Tiffany.”
“Did you
even bother to read the sign when you walked your wife to my trailer that day
two weeks ago in Pahrump?” she asked with amusement and then reminded him,
“Madame Divine. Let her do a reading and define your future,” she reminded him.
“Yeah,
but that’s just… It’s a scam,” he protested. “You’re a carnie. You just scam
people out of their money for a laugh.”
“Yes, of
course ,” Divine agreed coldly, and then tilted her head. “So why aren’t you
laughing?”
Allen
Paulson flinched as if she’d struck him, and then his awe and dismay gave way
to the rage she’d expected earlier. Divine saw it roll over him, knew he was
about to blow his top without the need to read him, but slipped into his
thoughts anyway. It was like cutting through soft, half melted butter with a
ceramic knife. The man was so angry his thoughts were wide open. Divine wasn’t
terribly surprised to read that he’d brought a gun with him and planned to use
it. She waited until he’d pulled the weapon from inside his jacket and raised
it, though, before reacting. In fact, she let him get so far as to put his
finger on the trigger before snapping her hand out, latching onto his throat
and lifting him off the ground. She then whirled and slammed him against her
RV.
When the
gun fell from his hand and he moaned in pain, she released him. The man fell
like a rag doll. He landed on his ass with his legs splayed, a dazed expression
on his face, and Divine immediately dropped to straddle his lap. Gravel ground
painfully into her knees, but she ignored that, caught him by the hair at the
nape of his neck, pulled his head to the side and sank her fangs into his
throat.
A little
shiver of pleasure slid through Divine as thick warm blood began to gush from
the wound, was collected by her teeth and passed into her body. It gave her an
immediate rush as the nanos in her body swarmed, eager to collect this new
supply of nourishment. The man had jerked in surprise when her teeth pierced
his skin, and he’d raised his hands to try to push her off, but he never
actually got around to exerting any pressure. Instead, he froze briefly, his
mind overwhelmed as hers automatically began to transmit her own pleasure to
him. In the next moment, he was moaning and tugging at her instead, pulling her
closer with one hand, clasping her head with the other and murmuring
encouragingly, “Oh, yeah, baby. Please.”
He was
also arching his body under her, rubbing a sudden hardness against her. Divine
usually didn’t cause pain in her victims, but this one deserved it. She also
wasn’t terribly eager to let a man who had planned to murder his own wife dry
hump her there on the carnival grounds, so she deliberately withdrew the
pleasure that she was experiencing and had unintentionally shared. But she also
slipped into his mind to control his reaction to prevent him from screaming out
in horror and pain as his mind cleared and he became aware of what was
happening.
Divine
was always careful not to kill her hosts. Why kill the cow that gave the milk?
Besides, killing was wrong, no matter how despicable the person was, so while
she drank more than she normally would have, she pulled back and freed him at
the point when he was weak and woozy, but long before the man could come close
to dying.
Smiling
coldly at his horrified expression, Divine stood, lifting him as she went. Once
they were both upright, she released him, leaving him to lean weakly against
the RV rather than have to touch him anymore.
“Listen
carefully Allen Paulson,” she said grimly. “You will not hurt your wife, or
ever again consider harming or killing anyone for profit or any other reason.
If you do, I’ll find out, and then I’ll find you…” She raised her hand to run
one finger lightly over the wound on his neck. “And then I will finish this
meal, cut your head off and leave your cold dead body somewhere no one will
ever find you. Do we understand each other?”
Allen
Paulson nodded weakly. The man’s face was as white as his t-shirt, his eyes
almost sunken with horror and he was sliding slowly along her RV, obviously
eager to escape, but afraid to try and be stopped. Divine scowled. “And if you
tell anyone about this, about me,”
she emphasized, “I’ll do worse.”
He began
shaking his head frantically and whispered, “I won’t. I swear.”
She
narrowed her eyes, and then her nose wrinkled as the acrid scent of urine
wafted up between them. Glancing down, she saw the wet spot growing on the
front of his trousers and stepped back with disgust. “Get out of here before I
change my mind and wipe yours.”
Allen
Paulson didn’t have a clue what she meant by that-- she could see it in his
expression-- but he didn’t stick around to ask.
He simply nodded wildly and sidled along the RV for a couple feet before
finding the courage to turn his back to her and run.
“You
should have wiped his mind.”
Divine
stiffened at those words from behind her, and then turned slowly. She peered at
the tall fair-haired man who had spoken. He was a greenie, an unskilled laborer
and supposedly a local who had been hired to help out at the carnival while
they were in town. The name he went by was Marco. Divine knew this secondhand,
because while she was normally in on the hiring process, using her “special
skills” to help Bob and Madge Hoskins who owned and ran Hoskins Amusements,
this time she hadn’t been here. Family issues had kept her away and the hiring
had been done by the time she’d caught up to the carnival. Had she been here to
help weed out the troublemakers in the hiring process as she usually did, she
never would have allowed Bob and Madge to hire the man. One, she couldn’t read
him, and that was usually a sign of insanity in a mortal. This leads into the
second reason she wouldn’t have hired him; the man, like herself, was an
immortal. She’d sensed that about him quite quickly. Divine wasn’t sure how
she’d known. She didn’t run into a lot of immortals. In fact, she’d arranged
her life so that she wouldn’t. But there had been a frisson of awareness as
she’d first passed him on returning to the carnival just before noon that day,
as if the nanos in her body recognized and sent signals to those in his. She’d
been avoiding him ever since.
But that
hadn’t stopped her from finding out all she could about him. Not that there had
been much to learn. He went by Marco, last name Smith of all things. The women
all thought he was a hunk. The men thought he was practically a God because he
was strong and could do the work of four men, and Bob and Madge were hoping
he’d not just help out through their stay in this town, but travel with them to
the next and the next and so on. For herself, Divine was wary. She had avoided
other immortals for a reason and had been doing so for a very long time. She
didn’t like having one around. It made her anxious and she disliked feeling
anxious.
“Don’t
you have something to do?” she asked, moving past the man and toward the back
of her RV. The sign she’d turned had said back in five minutes and that time
was up. Besides, she’d snacked on Allen Paulson and felt better for it. Break
time was over.
“You
should have wiped his mind,” Marco repeated, falling into step with her.
“He’ll
keep his mouth shut,” Divine muttered, annoyed, mostly because she knew he was
right. The truth was she hadn’t wiped Allen Paulson’s mind because it was
slimy, and she hadn’t wanted to have to spend any more time inside his mind
than necessary. Besides, he deserved to go through life terrified that she
might someday revisit him should he set a foot wrong.
“And if
he doesn’t keep his mouth shut?” Marco asked as they neared the end of her RV.
“What if he goes to the police?”
“If he
goes to the police, and if they don’t
immediately lock him up as crazy but instead come to speak to me…” She
shrugged. “I’ll wipe his mind, the officer’s mind and leave this carnival for
another.”
“Is that
how you landed at Hoskins’ Carnival?” Marco asked as they rounded the end of
the vehicle. “You didn’t wipe someone you should have and had to move on?”
Divine
turned on him sharply, an angry retort on her lips, but just as quickly caught
back the words that wanted to spill out and merely said with forced calm,
“You’re an inquisitive fellow, Marco. It’s not healthy around here. Carnies
mind their own business. I suggest you do the same.”
Turning
away from him, she smiled at the two women who were waiting in front of her
door. Others had joined them. In fact, Divine now had a line up of a half a
dozen people and it was growing by the minute, but she reserved her smile for
the first two only and said, “Which of you would like to go first? Or shall I
take you together?”
“Oh, me
first,” one of the women said eagerly. “This was my idea.”
Divine
nodded and led the woman inside, leaving Marco and all thought of him out on
her stoop.
“Here,
Mister.”
Marcus
tore his gaze from the door Madame Divine had just ushered her client through
and peered down at the small boy tugging at the top of his pant leg and holding
out a half eaten ball of cotton candy on a cardboard cone.
“Here,”
the boy repeated, holding it a little higher. “I don’t feel good. You can have
the rest.”
Marcus
arched an eyebrow, but took the cotton candy. He suspected the boy didn’t feel
good because he was stuffed full of cotton candy, something drenched in
mustard, powdered elephant ears and—he considered the last stain on the boy’s
shirt consideringly and then decided it had to be – ice cream. The kid was a
walking menu of everything he’d eaten that day. At least, Marcus hoped it was
all the kid had eaten that day. Otherwise he’d be wondering if Dante and
Tomasso hadn’t fathered the little tyke. They were the only two people he knew,
mortal or immortal, who could have eaten like that as a boy.
“Danny!
What are you doing? Get over here and leave that man alone.”
Marcus
glanced at the woman rushing toward them from the midway and offered a
reassuring smile even as he slipped into her thoughts to ease her mind that he
wasn’t a child molester and nothing untoward was happening. By the time she
reached them, she’d slowed to a fast walk, and was smiling in a relaxed manner.
“I hope
he wasn’t bothering you?” she said apologetically as she took the boy’s hand.
“Not at
all,” Marcus assured her.
The young
mother smiled again and then nodded and turned away with the boy, saying, “Come
on, honey. Your daddy is waiting with your sister in the Ferris wheel line.
They’ll be worried.”
Marcus
watched them go and then turned his gaze back to Madame Divine’s RV. The door
was closed now as were the blinds. He couldn’t see the woman anymore, except in
his mind’s eye and he was definitely seeing her there. Madame Divine was more
than memorable in her gypsy getup. A white peasant blouse, worn off the
shoulders, a crimson under skirt, a bright teal scarf skirt, an orange sash
tied at the waist with gold chains hanging from it and tinkling merrily, a wide
leather belt and a crimson scarf around her head. Gold hoops had dangled from
her ears, a gold chain hung around her neck, several gold bracelets dangled
from her wrist, and knee high black leather boots with stiletto heels strapped
up the front of her legs had finished the outfit.
The woman
looked damned sexy in the getup, so sexy in fact that when she’d straddled the
would-be wife killer, Marcus had wanted to pull her off the man and onto his
own lap. He’d been rather startled by that urge. Marcus hadn’t been interested
in women for a while. Okay, for a couple millenia. Still, he hadn’t come across
a woman like Madame Divine in quite a while either. The woman was walking sex
in her get up, and his body was waking up and responding to it.
Obviously
he had a gypsy fetish, Marcus thought wryly. It made as much sense as anything
else at the moment. Certainly more sense than his own life presently did. It
appeared at the ripe old age of 2548 he was having a midlife crisis of sorts.
That was the only explanation for how he found himself doing a favor for Lucian
Argeneau.
Marcus smiled
wryly at the thought. Lucian Argeneau was not only the head of the powerful
Argeneau clan, but also oversaw the Rogue Hunters and led the North American
immortal council. Rogue Hunters were the immortal police force, they hunted
down rogue immortals to be presented to the immortal council who then passed
judgment on them and sentenced them to whatever punishment they saw fit, often
death.
As the
head of those two organizations, Lucian could arguably be the most powerful
immortal in North America. It was hard to imagine him needing anyone’s help.
But he did. He was searching for a family member, his niece, Basha Argeneau,
who had been thought to be dead for millennia, but who may now be alive after
all…and whom he feared had gone rogue.
Which is
how Marcus had come to find himself at the carnival, eyeballing the trailer of
a woman he couldn’t read and found incredibly sexy. Not that his not being able
to read her bothered him. If this was Basha Argeneau, she was even older than
he was and younger immortals usually couldn’t read immortals older than
themselves. It wasn’t like any of the other signs of having met a life mate
were cropping up, like renewed interest in food and such. Thank God, because if
she had been a possible life mate and
was Basha Argeneau…well, that would
have been a doomed relationship from the start. Because Basha Argeneau was
considered rogue…and rogues were executed. The last thing he needed at this
point in his life was a rogue life mate.
“Hey!
Marco! Are you going to stand around stuffing your face all night or help me
with the pogo stall?”
Marcus
glanced around with surprise to find Kevin Morrow walking toward him. The
twenty-year old carnie was tall and stick-thin, his face a collection of
freckles so thick that from a distance it looked like a tan. Up close though
you saw that his face was definitely freckled, and it was also presently
scrunched up with displeasure, reminding him that he was only supposed to take
a fifteen minute break from helping to man the food stall.
“I was--”
“Stuffing
your face,” the young carnie interrupted dryly and then turned away, gesturing
for him to follow. “Come on. If you’re hungry you can have a corn dog while you
work. It’s probably better for you than that sugary fluff anyway.”
Marcus
blinked and glanced down at the cone with the half eaten cotton candy the boy
had given him several minutes ago. Or what had been half eaten cotton candy.
There was nothing left of the sweet treat now. Surely he hadn’t eaten it? He
hadn’t eaten in more than a millennia. He didn’t remember eating it. But he did
have a sweet taste in his mouth that was rather pleasant.
“Damn,”
he muttered, tossing the cardboard cone into a garbage bin as he headed after
Kevin. He’d eaten it. Couldn’t read Madame Divine, and was lusting after the
woman. Oh, this wasn’t good.
About the author:
Lynsay Sands is the nationally bestselling author of the Argeneau/Rogue Hunter vampire series, as well as numerous historicals and anthologies. She’s been writing stories since grade school and considers herself incredibly lucky to be able to make a career out of it. Her hope is that readers can get away from their everyday stress through her stories, and if there’s occasional uncontrollable fits of laughter, that’s just a big bonus. For more information, go to:
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8 comments:
I am a huge fan of the Argeneau series. I've read them all to date and am waiting with bated breath for my library to get their copies in. Unless one of my friends gifts me with one.
I'd love to own One Lucky Vampire to add to the two other titles I'm proud to own.
I'm a huge fan of this series and am super excited for this next book! I love that this series is still going strong!
I love the vampire spin in the City of Atlantis. I have read about two to three books of this series and love it.
This series was actually what started my romance addiction!!! I love Lynsay Sands books (both her Argeneaus and historicals) and am always happy when she releases a new book.
I love paranormal and scifi reading. Have all my life.
I love reading this series.
I am a fan of this series. Thanks for the giveaway!
I really love this series. Her books always make me laugh and the romance is super sexy.
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