Monday, November 9, 2009

Excerpt Monday


Excerpt Monday Logo
Once a month, a bunch of authors get together and post excerpts from published books, contracted work or works in progress, and link to each other. You don’t have to be published to participate–just an writer with an excerpt you’d like to share. For more info on how to participate, head over to the Excerpt Monday site! or click on the banner above.

This month, I'm sharing the first chapter of Blood and Roses, which will be available at Samhain tomorrow!

---


I was not the only man in the parlor that night, but I was one of the few not looking for a whore.

The girls sat about, mostly, combing their hair or bent in gossip with one another. There was little else to do; it had been a slow night, and patrons came in a discouraging trickle. Occasionally a girl would spy someone she fancied, rise, stretch, and amble over so as not to betray her interest too readily. I sat by a window where the breeze might reach me and played draughts with Elise. There were too many of us in the parlor, crowded and overheated, not enough patrons culling our ranks to keep the numbers at a reasonable level. The chair put my back to the door, and Elise was to spy over my shoulder and give a signal if any patrons seemed to be the sort who might find me a more suitable companion than one of the girls.

I was bent over the board studying my next move when a collective shiver seemed to overtake us all as one. I straightened and saw Elise staring over my shoulder, leaning to get a better view. The other girls, those who I could see, were already scrambling to their feet, idle pursuits cast aside, tripping over their skirts as they rushed to greet this newcomer.

I rose from our table, one of only a handful not already flinging myself at this newest patron, and cast a brief glance behind me, wondering who it was this time the women were making fools of themselves over.

I did not have to wonder what it was. Only one thing turned these working women to sycophants at a mere glance.

Vampire. The king himself might have walked through our doors and not received such a welcome.

I saw a shock of hair as dark as sin in that brief glance, and a flashing glimpse of narrowed eyes, just as black. But mostly what I saw were the women, thronged about him, simpering and sighing and tugging their bodices down in the futile hope that a flash of breast might set them above the others and earn them his company in their bed. Already his name was being whispered in hushed tones better reserved for gods or saints.

Maikel van Triet,” they murmured, reaching, as though his very name might summon him to them.

I swept the pieces from the board in disgust and slipped about the edges of the parlor to the stairs. The night was a loss already, and dawn near enough that I had little hope of salvaging it. There was no reason to stay and watch these women I worked with and mostly liked turn to mindless fools.

Behind me, he began to speak, and though I could not make out the words, I could feel the way they fell upon the crowd like stones dropped into a puddle, reaction rippling out in waves.

I had one foot on the stairs and thought I might have managed a clean escape when he spoke again, and this time I did hear it: “Wait,” he said.

He might have been talking to anyone, any one of the women pressed in close about him. Surely he hadn’t noticed me, with so many others vying for his attention. And yet, I could not help it. I stopped and turned back, hoping I would see him addressing another.

He was looking straight at me, over the heads of the women as though they did not exist, or as though he was so accustomed to such displays that they didn’t even merit attention. His eyes were not narrowed now, but open and dark, watching me with puzzlement.

“Come back,” he told me. “Come here.”

“Will you buy a place in my bed, sir?” I asked him, unmoving. I would not return for less. I was not even sure I would do it for that.

“Will you have me?” he countered, and gave a grin that made the women sigh like besotted girls.

I crossed my arms and regarded him across the distance. He was pleasant enough to look on, a contrast of dark hair, dark eyes and pale, ivory skin. He dressed to emphasize the drama of it. Were he any other patron, I would lead him to my bed and consider myself lucky to have anyone there at all.

But he was vampire, and his kind never failed to turn the very sensible members of my acquaintance into the greatest of idiots, all slavering to get close and earn a taste of eternity. Who could resist such a temptation?

Not even I, though it was not the lure of his immortality that decided me. It had been a slow night, and business had been poor all week. I was not so well-off that I could afford to turn away a paying customer.

I jerked my head at the stairs. His grin spread, and he wended his way through the crowd to my side. He reached for me, took my hand before I realized what he was about and could snatch it back.

The women gossiped about their patrons, of course, and the lucky few who had taken vampires to their beds gossiped about that most of all. Perhaps they spoke of what a vampire’s touch was like. I did not know, for I had not cared to listen. If I had taken the effort to wonder, I would have supposed that, without the fire of life burning within them, their touch would have been cold as ice and chilled to the bone.

Maikel’s palm burned against mine like an ember. His fingers wrapped about my hand and scorched like tongues of flame.

I jerked from his grasp, turning up the stairs. He followed. Neither of us spoke, but the whispers of the others carried after us. If he heard, he gave them no mind. I supposed he was probably used to it.

I stopped before my door, fingertips resting on the handle, and turned back to him. I held my other hand out, open, palm up. “Is it a tryst you want? Or to stay the night?” We both of us ignored the fact that it was nearly dawn, and night to him meant the full bright of day.

He laughed a little. “A tryst, no. That’s not what I came for.” He counted guilders into my palm, more than I normally charged for a full night, more even than I’d have asked of him, so many that it was all I could do not to gape in astonishment. When he had finished, he curled my fingers around the coins and held my hand in his, giving me a crooked smile. “I’m Maikel,” he said quietly.

I looked down at the silver glinting between my fingers, enough to turn this whole miserable night into a remarkably profitable one. “I know who you are.” I pushed my door open and led him inside.

“Do you, then?” That odd, bemused half-smile still hovered about his face. He lingered in my doorway, watching as I crossed to my bureau and put his fee in my coffer. “I had wondered.”

“You are Maikel van Triet, and a vampire, and your reputation precedes you.” He knew it, of course. It was not only the brothel whores who fawned over his kind. Some days, it seemed all anybody in Amsterdam cared to talk about.

He closed my door with a muted click of the latch and crossed to the window as I tucked my coffer into the back of a drawer. My view looked out over the canal, and the sounds of conversation and gurgling water drifted up to us on the night’s breeze.

“What will you?” I asked when it seemed he might stand there looking out until the sun rose. “Your reputation has preceded you, but not so much that I know your desires.”

He did not answer me at first, but closed and latched my shutters with deliberate care. When they were shut fast against the approaching dawn, he turned to face me, hands braced behind him on the sill. “I desire a bed until dark,” he said. “And surety that the shutters will remain closed until then.”

My brows climbed my forehead. I stared at him, nonplussed. “That’s all?”

His head fell forward, sending a lock of dark hair curling against his cheek. It didn’t quite hide the slight smile that curved his lips. “And the decency not to send me to bed hungry.”

I had expected he might request something of the sort. Still, I turned aside, crouching to tug at a boot as pretense, for fear my expression might betray me. I was not like the others, who took vampires to bed and proudly displayed their bites the next morning, whispering in rapturous tones of an experience so transcendental it brought them closer to God, or who hoped silently that a patron might one night take too much and make her one of his own. I did not care to be bitten. But he was a patron, and I had taken his coin.

Barefoot, I straightened and rolled up my cuff to uncover my left arm, the arteries of which were said to carry the sweetest, purest blood, pumped direct from the heart. I crossed to the bed and sat on it, stretched my arm out toward him, wrist turned up.

He sat facing me and took my hand in both of his. His thumbs brushed across my wrist and lingered over my pulse. “You don’t like me, do you?” he asked without a bit of resentment.

He didn’t look away from me and there was no challenge in his gaze, nothing in it daring me to confess. It was simple and direct, an honest request for nothing more or less than the truth.

I shrugged and broke my gaze away. “Not very much, no.”

I had to look back when he laughed, soft and amused. “And yet you would offer me this?”

“You paid for it.”

He kept my hand cradled in both of his, holding it in his lap like something cherished, fingers stroking tenderly. “I believe I am at a disadvantage. You seem to know a great deal about me, but I do not even know your name.” He didn’t look away from my wrist, where fine blue veins drew wandering tracks beneath the skin.

“It’s Arjen,” I said in a voice gone rough and dry.

“Arjen,” he echoed and bent over my wrist.

His hair fell about his face, so I could not see. His lips were warm on my skin, his kiss as sweet as a lover’s. My hand curled into a fist, then spasmed when his thumb dug into the flesh, finding a vein and pinning it in place. I braced my other hand behind me, clenched on the blankets.

His lips parted, breath gusting across my skin like a summer breeze off the water, hot and damp. His mouth formed a seal on my skin, sucking hard enough that I gasped and had to wrestle down the urge to jerk back. His fingers, gentle before, now held my hand with an iron grip. I could try to pull away, but I doubted he’d let me. Fangs pricked my skin like needles, probing. And without warning he bit deep, sinking into me.

I thrashed, unthinking, as agony coursed through me, and realized it hadn’t been greed that made him hold me so tight. I’d have torn my wrist open on his teeth if he’d let me.

He drank, sucking hard at the wound with a rhythm that echoed the thundering beat of my heart. I twisted and tore at the blankets, struggling against the overwhelming instinct to fight.

He bore me down onto my back, his body stretched along mine, and pinned me in place with a surprising strength for someone as lean as he was, so that I could not fight even if I tried. For my benefit, I wondered, or for his? His fangs never withdrew, and his throat never ceased its steady, rhythmic sucking.

I had suffered any number of indignities at the hands of my patrons, and most of them I had done in willing trade for the coin they put in my coffer. But I had never felt as completely helpless as I did then, fully clothed beneath Maikel’s slight weight with his fangs buried in my wrist.

Mentally, I cursed the gossips a hundred different ways. There was no rapture in this, no transcendence, only the throb of the wound and the heat of Maikel’s mouth as he drank my blood from me.

Somehow, my hand had found its way into his hair, fingers twisting knots into the strands, though I did not remember putting it there. I didn’t think I meant to do something so foolish and useless as try to push him back, but my fingers needed something to cling to, something to grip, and it seemed as likely a place as any to bury them.

When at last he released his grip on my arm and let his fangs slip free, I felt as exhausted as if I’d wrestled a badger. I slumped back into the mattress, and Maikel leaned his brow against my shoulder. His back rose and fell like he’d exerted himself just as hard. After a moment, he rolled off me. I pushed myself up on my uninjured arm and looked down at him. “That is truly all you want of me?”

He nodded slowly, keeping his eyes closed. “Let me sleep in peace and I’ll count myself quite satisfied.”

“As you like,” I muttered and crossed the room to my bureau. We all kept bandages tucked away in our rooms in case of something like this, though in truth, when I’d shoved mine into the back of a drawer I had not expected to ever have the need to dig it out again. Still, I was glad now to have it, and I sat gingerly at the end of the bed to dress my wound. By the time I’d finished, Maikel was fast asleep, sprawled quite comfortably upon my blankets. I crept out and ventured downstairs in search of breakfast.

Elise agreed to let me sleep in her bed, then kept me up all morning with endless, breathless questions about Maikel. She sighed like a romantic when I told her he’d refused my services after they’d been rightfully purchased, and shivered as though party to a lascivious secret when I showed her my bandaged wound. She asked me to describe it over and over again, until I realized that what she really wanted was for me to tell her a story like all the others she’d heard, of sweeping romance and unimaginable pleasure and enough cloying sentiment to make a person sick. I shooed her off, pleading exhaustion, and managed a few hours of sleep before the afternoon sun slanting through her window woke me.

I could have risen and closed her shutters and had a few more hours sleep. Instead I lay there for a few moments, my arm shading my eyes, thinking of my own shuttered room and the man in my bed.

My wrist throbbed with a dull ache. I stretched my arm out to inspect the bandage and sighed to see that blood was showing through in places. It’d dry and stick to the wound if I let it. I rose and poured water from Elise’s ewer into a basin. I soaked my forearm in it as I began to carefully unwrap the bandage.

I went slowly, giving the water time to work its way in and soften it. Even so, when the last strip came off, the wound had cracked open and a few drops of blood seeped out. I rinsed them away and returned to my room to rebandage it.

Wary of Maikel’s admonishment that he wished for undisturbed sleep, I pushed the door open gently so the hinges would not squeak. Even so, I had not taken two steps into the room when he stirred and pushed himself up onto an elbow.

I hesitated. “I did not think you’d be up so soon.”

He shoved his hair out of his face. His gaze sought out my wrist. “I smelled blood.”

I grimaced and showed him my newly opened wound as explanation. “Sorry.”

He shook his head and waved as though to dismiss my concern. Instead of lying down again, he propped his back against my headboard and watched me as I went about dressing my wound again.

I turned my back to him, scowling at the weight of his gaze upon me, and the sensation of crawling insects that it sent prickling across my skin.

“You really don’t like me, do you?” he asked unexpectedly. He sounded surprised and—surprisingly—somewhat pleased.

“Not very much, no,” I told him again. I did not turn to look at him.

The bed creaked, and I could imagine him leaning back in it, contemplating me with that strange half-smile. “You could have said no.”

I did turn, then, my brows drawn together with irritation. “And you could have slept in any bed in Amsterdam, fed from anyone you cared to have, for free. If you’re not interested in our trade, why come here for a bed and pay such an exorbitant fee?”

He looked up at my ceiling and lazily brushed away a strand of hair that had caught on his lips. “Those others, the ones who throw themselves at me. They’re all the same. They don’t really care about me, and they don’t care that I don’t care about them.”

“But you care that I don’t?” I shook my head and tied the bandage off with a knot.

“Well, it’s a change,” he said, and the smile was back, lurking at the edges of his expression as though too shy to venture out in the open.

I scooped my boots from where I’d left them. “There’s a few hours left to dusk. You should make use of what you’ve paid for. Soon as night falls, I’ll need my bed again.”

He nodded amiably enough, but made no move to lie back down.

I strode out with an impatient gesture. If he expected me to stay and press the matter with him, he was wrong. He had bought my bed from dawn to dusk, and it was his to do with as he pleased, even if that meant refusing my services and casting me out and sitting awake, imprisoned by the sun and all alone in my drab little room with nothing better to do than study the grain of the wood in the planks that formed my walls.

Downstairs, most of the girls were awake and beginning to prepare for the evening to come, dressing their hair and debating perfume. A few wielded needles, repairing garments that had been rent by overzealous patrons. A whore’s pride was in her appearance, her baubles and scents, in the lengthy measures it took to stand out from the dozens of others in the crowded brothel, and in the whole of De Wallen itself. And every one of them ceased their ministrations when I came down the stairs, crowded around me as though I were a vampire myself, and demanded I spare no detail.

I sat on the second-lowest step, unable to progress farther into the parlor without pushing people out of the way, and wondered if Maikel van Triet might not have been the better choice in company.

---


Links to other Excerpt Monday writers
Note: I have not personally screened these excerpts. Please heed the ratings and be aware that the links may contain material that is not typical of my site.
Excerpt Monday Logo

Labels:


Posted by Aislinn Kerry :: 5:25 AM :: 1 comments

Post / Read Comments * Link

---------------oOo---------------

Monday, September 14, 2009

It's Excerpt Monday once again!


Excerpt Monday Logo

Once a month, a bunch of authors get together and post excerpts from published books, contracted work or works in progress, and link to each other. You don’t have to be published to participate–just an writer with an excerpt you’d like to share. For more info on how to participate, head over to the Excerpt Monday site! or click on the banner above.

This month, I'm posting another except from Copper Kiss, to celebrate it's release today from Liquid Silver Books! You can read more excerpts here and here, and if you like what you see, head on over here to buy it.

---


Logan's car was in the driveway when they pulled up, and lights glowed within the house. Reina's heart started to flutter with hope, until she saw Kynan walking towards the house from the car. His shirt was ripped and stained with blood, his face and arms smeared with it.

"Oh my God." Reina threw herself out of the car before it had stopped moving. She ran to him. "Kynan! Are you all right?"

He took her arms, held her still when she might have whirled off in a hundred different directions. "I'm fine, Reina." He hesitated and glanced towards the house.

She didn't wait to hear more; she ran for the door.

Inside, the house was in an uproar. People ran from one place to another, shouting to others as they went. Everyone bore wounds, but all were on their feet and more or less intact.

Everyone but Logan, who sat on the couch in a daze, the eye of the storm of activity. Reina ran to his side. She dropped to her knees in front of him, took his hands in hers. "Logan?" Her voice wavered, caught, broke like ice on the pavement.

He turned slowly. His eyes took too long to focus on her. "Reina. Got your message. Too late." He closed his eyes and listed forward. She caught him, held him close, and swallowed panicked tears. "Thank you," he whispered, lifting his hand to her cheek.

It was a clumsy move, completely devoid of his usual grace, but Reina gave him a tremulous smile and pressed her hand over his.

"Don't thank her, you damned idiot," Keachan growled from behind her. He leaned close and spread a pale gel on the wounds on Logan's face. It smelled strongly of antiseptic. "If you hadn't gotten her message, you wouldn't have gone running off like a fool and gotten half your blood spilled on the asphalt."

"What happened to him?" She half-turned to look at Keachan over her shoulder.

"The stupid bastard tried to protect us, to keep us out of it. He took the brunt of the attack on himself."

Reina looked back at him. She hovered her hand just above his heart. Beneath the tattered remains of his shirt, his skin was blistered and blackened in the silhouette of a cross. Tears stung her eyes. She had to look away.

Logan listed further forward. His head rested heavily on her shoulder. Reina stroked his hair and looked up at Keachan. "He ought to lie down. Help me take him to my room?" It would take more manpower than they had to get him up the stairs.

Keachan nodded and slipped Logan's arm over his shoulder. Reina helped, and the rest of the brood trailed anxiously behind them. Keachan laid him down on the bed. Reina knelt by his head, gently stroking the strands of hair that spilled across his cheek.

Logan looked up at her through a heavy-lidded gaze. "Tá mo chroí istigh ionat, ma mhuirnín." He gave her a drowsy smile. "Tá mo chroí..." His eyes dropped closed. The Gaelic slurred into incoherent syllables.

"He's going into shock," she muttered. "Damn it. He needs blood." She stripped off her jacket and began to roll up the cuff of her sleeve.

Everyone in the room was suddenly staring at her, motionless.

Reina stopped and looked up at them. "What?"

Keachan cleared his throat. "Reina--"

"I'm the only mortal here, aren't I? What else do you suggest?" She didn't wait for a response.

She leaned over Logan and pressed her wrist to his mouth, but the angle was awkward. He barely seemed to notice. "Come on." She lifted his head and shoulders onto her lap. "Come on, Logan, you need this."

The angle was better this time, and he roused at the touch of her skin. His lips parted and his tongue slid wetly along her wrist, but he still wouldn't feed.

Reina pressed her eyes shut against the sting of frustrated tears. She tightened her other arm around his shoulder and pressed her lips against the top of his head. "Please, Logan," she whispered into his hair. "I know what you are, and I know what I'm doing. It's my choice. I offer it to you freely. Please, take what you need."

With a brief, violent shudder, he closed his mouth around her wrist and bit.

---


Links to other Excerpt Monday writers
Note: I have not personally screened these excerpts. Please heed the ratings and be aware that the links may contain material that is not typical of my site.
Excerpt Monday Logo

Labels:


Posted by Aislinn Kerry :: 4:30 AM :: 8 comments

Post / Read Comments * Link

---------------oOo---------------

Monday, August 10, 2009

Excerpt Monday -- August


Welcome to Excerpt Monday! If you want to join in the fun, you can stop by the Excerpt Monday blog for more information.

This month's excerpt is a scene from my current work-in-progress, Iconoclast:

--

It had been a very long time since Samyazaz was a child. He remembered it as a quiet time, a time of study and learning, marked by the wonder of discovery and the somber honor of his duty. He had never even been so careless as to rip a garment, to his recollection.

The first time Sariel and Baraquiel had brought their young daughter to him, her palms scraped raw and dirty scuffs upon the hem of her skirt, he had been speechless with appalled surprise.

Now, years later, as he ushered her into his workroom yet again, he thought ruefully that he had ceased to be surprised by her. Weary resignation had taken its place.

"I was in a hurry," she said by way of explanation, and remained standing even though he motioned for her to sit upon his table. "Father said we were having the Council over for supper and I must be well-presented, but I lost myself in the library and before I knew it—"

"You were running," Samyazaz said grimly, stretching out her arm. The shoulder of her sleeve was in tatters, its edges stained with flecks of blood. Through the rent camisole he could see that her arm was abraded and inflamed. A few long cuts had gone deep enough to break the skin.

"My feet flew right out from under me." She sent him a sheepish grin, which he countered with stern disapproval. It was not lost on him that she had not rebutted his statement, but had not conceded to it either.

"It is unbefitting a Watcher to run through the halls of her own home," he scolded her, not for the first time and surely not for the last, as he drew a dagger from his drawer. He turned in time to catch her making a face.

"It is unbefitting a Watcher to come unkept to a supper with the Council, as well, or so my father tells me," she mocked, her tone light. And then, glancing up at him through her lashes as he began to cut her sleeve off at the shoulder, "Sam—"

He ignored her until she blew out her breath and said, "Samyazaz."

"Your father is right, of course." He set aside the bloodied ruins of fabric and turned her wound to the light for a better look. "You might consider that the rest of us manage to arrive at supper on time, and well-kempt, and needn't rush about and injure ourselves to accomplish it."

She did not answer, so he turned away and hung a kettle of water on the hearth to boil. Penemue's gaze followed him as he moved about his workroom, gathering herbs and ointments. He dropped a pinch of slender orange petals into a cup and she said, "What's that?"

"Calendula," he answered without turning from his work. He added comfrey and shreds of butterburr, then retrieved the kettle from the fire. The water steamed gently as he poured it into the cup and the petals and herbs floated brightly on the surface. A delicate scent rose from the tisane, comforting, the scent of herbs and healing, of knitting broken bodies back together.

While the infusion steeped, he turned back to Penemue and looked on her unhappily. "How old are you now?" he demanded of her.

She swung her legs and caught her lower lip between her teeth. "Fifteen come spring," she said at length.

Fourteen. He closed his eyes. It seemed unbearably young. Could he even remember being such an age? Not clearly. He had a vague impression of hours spent in vast libraries, and hauling around books that seemed to weigh more than he did. Certainly he recalled nothing like Penemue's distressing irreverence, of flaunting the dictates of behavior and being scolded only to flaunt them again.

He opened his eyes and frowned at her. "You're old enough to know better, then." He did not know what to make of her. He wished she would behave herself and act like a proper Watcher, but nothing he had said to her over the course of her short lifetime seemed to have any effect at all.

When the tisane was cool enough to touch, he strained the herbs from it and soaked the corner of a cloth in the infusion. Penemue had been a patient of his enough times to know his intent, and she turned her arm to him and held it still while he dabbed the tincture into the wounds. She drew a swift breath, hissing slightly through her teeth, but knew better than to complain.

When he was satisfied that her wounds were clean, he gave it a final wipe with the herbal infusion, then left her side to retrieve an ointment. He saw her gaze on the jar as he returned.

"Meadowsweet," he told her by rote, working the stoppered cap free. "It's for--"

"--Aiding healing," she interrupted him. "And reducing inflammation."

He looked up at her, startled, jar and lid forgotten in his hands. She sent him an impish smile and glanced away.

"I paid attention."

When he had recovered his voice, all he said was, "Indeed." And, "Give me your arm, then."

She stretched it out, grimacing at the movement, and arched her wings back so that they were not in his way. Samyazaz scooped the ointment up on his fingers and spread it carefully over her wounds. They were already blossoming black and purple, spreading down to her elbow and around her shoulder. The scrapes alone did not seem so bad, but the bruises told another story. A fall that bad could have easily broken bones.

She must have been very late, and running very fast.

If it had not been the floor she'd hit, but another Watcher...

Displeasure made him careless and heavy-handed. Penemue hissed in her breath, and released it with a faint, "Ow." He glanced at her, then away, and continued wordlessly.

It was prudence that made him lighten his touch, not sympathy. If she could inflict such wounds upon herself without a thought, then she could very well endure their treatment without protest.

"Penemue," he said when he thought he might be able to control his ire. "Did it not occur as you raced about your home that it might be someone else you injured, and not yourself?"

She looked up at him, stricken, and he had his answer.

"No," she whispered. "I didn't think-- But everyone would have been at supper, or preparing for it--"

Samyazaz took a roll of bandages from his supplies and began to wrap her arm tightly. He did not speak until he had tied it off, and given her the bandages and the ointment so she could change them herself. As he walked her out of his villa, he hesitated at the front gate and wrapped his hand about her uninjured arm. She stopped and looked up at him, hope dawning beneath the uncertainty in her eyes.

"You are not a child anymore," he said roughly. "You are nearly a woman. You might consider acting like one."

Disappointment crushed out the light of hope. She nodded, downcast, and wrenched her arm from him. "Yes. I might." She turned down the street. "Thank you for your help, Samyazaz."

He watched her go from beneath furrowed brows, resisting the urge to call out a chastisement as she rubbed at her bandaged arm.

No. He had surely never been like that, as a child. If he had been, he did not know how the others could have ever tolerated him.

--

Check out these other great reads!



So, to kick it off, your hosts:

Mel/Alexia Reed, Urban Fantasy (R)

and

Bria Quinlan, Rom Com (PG)

Joining us this week:

AJ O'Donovan, Poetry (PG13)

Stephanie Draven, Paranormal Romance (PG 13)

Heather S.Ingemar, Dark Fantasy/Poetry (PG13)

Babette James, Fantasy Romance (PG 13)

Cynthia Justlin, Romantic Suspense (PG 13)

Kaige, Historical Romance (PG 13)

Julia Knight, Fantasy Romance (PG13)

Ansha Kotyk, Middle Grade Adventure (PG13)

Adelle Laudan, Contemporary Romance (PG 13)

Jeannie Lin, Historical Romance (PG 13)

RF Long, YA Paranormal (PG13)

Caitlynn Lowe, Epic Fantasy (PG13)

Shawntelle Madison, Paranormal Romance (PG 13)

Crista McHugh, Contemporary Erotic Romance (PG 13)

Bria Quinlan, Rom Com (PG)

Leigh Royals, Historical Romance (PG 13)

Megan S., Paranormal (PG13)

Dara Sorensen, Historical Paranormal (PG 13)

Bethanne Strasser, Historical Romance (PG13)

Melissa Aires, Futuristic Romance (R)

Melissa Blue, Contemporary Romance (R)

Jax Cassidy, Contemporary (R)

Christina DeLorenzo, Furturistic Sci-Fi (R)

Maya Doyle, Parnormal Romance (R)

Ginny Glass, Paranormal (R)

Amber Green, Romantic Suspense (R)

Cate Hart, Paranormal YA (R)

Kinsey W. Holley, Erotic Romance (R)

Ali Katz, Erotic Paranormal Romance (R)

Aislinn Kerry, Fantasy (R)

Inez Kelly, Fantasy Romance (R)

Cherrie Lynn, Contemporary Erotic Romance (R)

Mel/Alexia Reed, Urban Fantasy (R)

Rebecca Savage, Romantic Suspense (R)

Fae Sutherland, Contemporary Erotic Romance (R)

Stephanie Adkins, Paranormal Erotic Romance (NC 17)

Evie Byrne, Erotic Historical Romance (NC17)

Ella Drake, Erotic Contemporary (NC17)

Dawn Montgomery, Erotic Paranormal Romance (NC17)

Lauren Murphy, Erotic Romance (NC 17)

Kim Knox, Erotic Paranormal Romance (NC17)

Emily Ryan-Davis, Historical Western Romance (NC17)

Kirsten Saell, Erotic Fantasy Romance (NC 17)

Jeanne St. James, Contemporary Romance (NC 17)

Labels:


Posted by Aislinn Kerry :: 5:00 AM :: 2 comments

Post / Read Comments * Link

---------------oOo---------------

Monday, July 13, 2009

It's Excerpt Monday again!


It's that time again! Excerpt Monday! This month I'm sharing an excerpt from Sacrifice, my upcoming release from Liquid Silver Books.

When an unnatural eclipse hangs in the sky, portending doom, Ryllana is chosen to be sacrificed to ensure her land and her people's survival. She expects her fate will bring a swift, violent death at the claws of Teppal's beast. But though the beast comes to claim her, he does not devour her. Instead, he carries her away to his castle.

There, she waits for him to return and demand the sacrifice required of her. In the meantime, she finds a companion in the beast's human servant, Draig, who surprises Ryllana with his tenderness and compassion. Despite herself, she begins to fall for him -- but the beast still waits, and the secrets Draig is keeping might destroy everything she loves.


---


The eclipse rose in my window and passed out of sight at midday, so I had no means of tracking the time beyond the number of candles that I burned through. It might have been minutes, or days, when my door crashed open. I jumped, my heart in my throat, and a smile bloomed across my face to see Draig in the doorway. I pushed my books aside and started toward him, but cried out in dismay not halfway across the room, for his tabard dripped with blood and he clung unsteadily to the jamb. His face was ashen, his head drooping forward, as though he hadn't the strength to hold it upright.

I ran to him and helped him to the bed. He held on to me, stumbling across the rug. I eased him onto the bed, then took his face in my hands and turned it to me. His expression was slack, his eyes half-closed. "Draig!" I cried. "What happened?"

He opened his eyes. It looked as though it took a great effort. "Ryllana," he breathed, and smiled as though it was a wonderful surprise to see me. Then he grimaced and groaned with pain. "I'm hurt."

"You don't say." I pulled frantically at his tabard. "Draig, help me! I must see where you're injured."

He rose up onto his elbow and I began to strip his tabard off, but his strength only lasted a moment before he collapsed back onto the bed. His ragged breathing made fear twist through my stomach.

"A kiss, lady," he whispered, a thread of sound. "For strength."

I stared down at him. "Don't be absurd. Now is not the time." I gripped his tabard at the throat and tore it open down the front. Draig blinked at me, but didn't protest. It took another moment to unlace his shirt, and then I had his chest bared.

Four parallel gouges cut across his chest, each as long as my forearm and bleeding freely. I clasped my hands over my mouth, horrified. "Oh, Draig..." I sought out his gaze. "This is bad."

He nodded, and I saw recognition in his eyes. He knew. He knew, and had come to me. I crouched on the bed and tore strips of fabric from the hem of my robe, trying not to cry. I could clean him and bandage him, but little more. I had meager sewing skills, and no needle or thread in any case. I helped him sit and wound the makeshift bandages around his back, then took his hand in mine and bent over it, pressing a fierce kiss to his palm.

He pulled from my grasp and raised his hand to my cheek. "A kiss, lady," he whispered again.

I shook my head wildly and dashed tears from my cheeks. "Fool," I whispered down at him. "How can you think of stealing kisses now?"

"So be it, then." He gave me a crooked smile. "Will you refuse the last request of a dying fool?"

I covered my face in my hands, protests rising unbidden to my lips. But they were an empty comfort. We both knew the truth. He might die, and there might be nothing I could do to prevent it.

I knelt at his side in the mattress and put my hands to his cheeks. I looked gravely down at him, his face grey and pale, then bent and pressed my mouth to his.

I meant it to be only that, a momentary brush. But when I tried to draw away, he curled his hand around the back of my neck and held me to him with startling strength.

His lips coaxed mine, urging them to part so he could take the kiss deeper. I pressed them together and shook my head. When he persisted, I broke away. "Don't tax yourself," I commanded unsteadily. "You've better things to save your strength for."

"Better things than kissing?" He eased back onto the bed with a lopsided smile. "I can only think of a very few."

"Living?" I demanded.

His smile softened, warmed. "What's the use of that when pretty women refuse to kiss you?"

---


Make sure to check out the rest of this month's great excerpts!

Mel Berthier, Urban Fantasy (PG 13)
and
Bria Quinlan, Rom Com (PG)

Joining us this week:

Kinsey W. Holley, Paranormal (PG)
Caitlynn Lowe, Epic Fantasy (PG)
Dara Sorensen, Paranormal (PG)

Babette James, Fantasy Romance (PG13)
Christina DeLorenzo, YA (PG 13)
Nika Dixon, Romantic Suspense (PG 13)
Bryn Donovan, Paranormal Romance (PG13)
Kaige, Historic Romance (PG-13)
Julia Knight, Fantasy Romance (PG 13)
Adelle Laudan, Contemporary Romance (PG 13)
Jeannie Lin, Historical Romance (PG13)
RF Long, Paranormal (PG13)
Rebecca Savage, romantic suspense (PG 13)
Crista McHugh, Paranormal Romance (PG 13)
Michelle Arroyo, Historical Romance (PG 13)

Jax Cassidy, Contemporary Romance (R)
Maya Doyle, Paranormal Romance (R)
Cate Hart, Paranormal (R)
Ali Katz, Historical Erotic Romance (R)
Inez Kelley, Romantic Comedy (R)
Aislinn Kerry, Paranormal Romance (R)
Elise Logan, Fantasy Romance (R)
Cherrie Lynn, Paranormal Romance (R)
Alina Morgan, Urban Fantasy (R)
Vivienne Westlake, Erotic Historical (R)

Stephanie Adkins, Erotic Romance (NC 17)
Evie Byrne, Medieval Paranormal Romance (NC 17)
Kim Knox, Erotic SF Romance (NC17)
Lauren Murphy, Erotic Romance (NC 17)
Kirsten Saell, Erotic Romance (NC 17)

Labels:


Posted by Aislinn Kerry :: 5:00 AM :: 2 comments

Post / Read Comments * Link

---------------oOo---------------

Monday, June 15, 2009

Excerpt Monday


It's Excerpt Monday again! This month, I'm sharing an excerpt from my upcoming Samhain release, Blood and Roses.

The last thing Arjen wants is a vampire in his bed, despite the rest of the world's obsession with the creatures. Unfortunately, his reticence is precisely what attracts Maikel van Triet to him. After hundreds of years of being adored because of what he is, Maikel is enthralled by Arjen's apathy.

What starts as a simple arrangement soon becomes something more than either of them expected. But vampires are shallow, fickle creatures, and Maikel could never truly love another. Could he?

---


I stopped before my door, fingertips resting on the handle, and turned back to him. I held my other hand out, open, palm up. "Is it a tryst you want?" I asked him. "Or to stay the night?" We both of us ignored the fact that it was nearly dawn, and night to him meant the full bright of day.

He laughed a little. "A tryst, no. That's not what I came for." He counted guilders into my palm, more than I normally charged for a full night, more even than I'd have asked of him, enough that it was all I could do not to gape in astonishment. When he had finished, he curled my fingers around the coins and held my hand in his, looking up at me with a crooked smile. "I'm Maikel," he said quietly.

I looked down at the silver glinting between my fingers, enough to turn this whole miserable night into a remarkably profitable one. "I know who you are." I pushed my door open and led him inside.

"Do you, then?" That odd, bemused half-smile still hovered about his face. He lingered in my doorway, watching as I crossed to my bureau and put his fee in my coffer. "I had wondered."

"You are Maikel van Triet, and a vampire, and your reputation precedes you." He knew it, of course. It was not only the brothel whores who fawned over his kind. Some days, it seemed all anybody in Amsterdam cared to talk about.

He closed my door with a muted click of the latch and crossed to the window as I tucked my coffer into the back of a drawer. My view looked out over the canal, and the sounds of conversation and gurgling water drifted up to us on the night's breeze.

"What will you?" I asked when it seemed he might stand there looking out until the sun rose. "Your reputation has preceded you, but not so much that I know your desires."

He did not answer me at first, but closed and latched my shutters with deliberate care. When they were shut fast against the approaching dawn, he turned to face me, hands braced behind him on the sill. "I desire a bed until dark," he said. "And surety that the shutters will remain closed until then."

My brows climbed my forehead. I stared at him, nonplussed. "That's all?"

His head fell forward, sending a lock of dark hair curling against his cheek. It didn't quite hide the slight smile that curved his lips. "And the decency not to send me to bed hungry."

I had expected he might request something of the sort. Still, I turned aside, crouching to tug at a boot as pretense, for fear my expression might betray me. I was not like the others, who took vampires to bed and proudly displayed their bites the next morning, whispering in rapturous tones of an experience so transcendental it brought them closer to God, or who hoped silently that a patron might one night take too much, and make her one of his own. I did not care to be bitten. But he was a patron, and I had taken his coin.

Barefoot, I straightened and rolled up my cuff to uncover my left arm, the arteries of which were said to carry the sweetest, purest blood, pumped direct from the heart. I crossed to the bed and sat on it, stretched my arm out toward him, wrist turned up.

He sat facing me and took my hand in both of his. His thumbs brushed across my wrist and lingered over my pulse. "You don't like me, do you?" he asked without a bit of resentment.

He didn't look away from me and there was no challenge in his gaze, nothing in it daring me to confess. It was simple and direct, an honest request for nothing more or less than the truth.

I shrugged and broke my gaze away. "Not very much, no."

I had to look back when he laughed, soft and amused. "And yet you would offer me this?"

"You paid for it."

He kept my hand cradled in both of his, holding it in his lap like something cherished, fingers stroking tenderly. "I believe I am at a disadvantage. You seem to know a great deal about me, but I do not even know your name." He didn't look away from my wrist, where fine blue veins drew wandering tracks beneath the skin.

"It's Arjen," I said in a voice gone rough and dry.

"Arjen," he echoed and bent over my wrist.

His hair fell about his face, so I could not see. His lips were warm on my skin, his kiss as sweet as a lover's. My fingers curled against my palm, then spasmed when his thumb dug into the flesh, finding a vein and pinning it in place. I braced my other hand behind me, fingers digging into the blankets.

His lips parted, breath gusting across my skin like a summer breeze off the water, hot and damp. His mouth formed a seal on my skin, sucking hard enough that I gasped and had to wrestle down the urge to jerk back. His fingers, gentle before, now held my hand with an iron grip. I could try to pull away, but I doubted he'd let me. Fangs pricked my skin like needles, probing. And without warning he bit deep, sinking into me.

I thrashed, unthinking, as agony coursed through me, and realized it hadn't been greed that made him hold me so tight. I'd have torn my wrist open on his teeth if he'd let me.

He drank, sucking hard at the wound with a rhythm that echoed the thundering beat of my heart. I twisted and tore at the blankets, struggling against the overwhelming instinct to fight.

He bore me down onto my back, his body stretched along mine, and pinned me in place with a surprising strength for someone as lean as he was, so that I could not fight even if I tried. For my benefit, I wondered, or for his? His fangs never withdrew, and his throat never ceased its steady, rhythmic sucking.

I had suffered any number of indignities at the hands of my patrons, and most of them I had done in willing trade for the coin they put in my coffer. But I had never felt as completely helpless as I did then, fully clothed beneath Maikel's slight weight with his fangs buried in my wrist.

---


You can find the full list of participants here, or follow some of the links below:

Mel Berthier, Urban Fantasy (PG 13)
Bria Quinlan, Rom Com (PG)
Christina DeLorenzo, YA (PG 13)
Bryn Donovan, Paranormal (PG)
MG Braden, Contemporary Romance (PG 13)
Babette James, Fantasy Romance (PG 13)
Cynthia Justlin, Contemporary Romance (PG 13)
Kaige, Historical Romance (PG 13)
Adelle Laundan, Contemporary Romance (PG 13)
Jeannie Lin, Historical Romance (PG 13)
RF Long, Paranormal (PG 13)
Crista McHugh, Paranormal (PG 13)
Bria Quinlan, Rom Com (PG)
Dara Sorensen, Paranormal (PG)
Grace Draven, Fantasy Romance (R)
Cate Hart, YA- Paranormal (R)
Aithne Jarretta, Paranormal (R)
Inez Kelley, Contemporary Romantic Comedy (R)
Kim Knox, Erotic- Sci-fi Suspense (R)
Cherrie Lynn, Erotic- Contemporary Romance (R)
Alina Morgan, Urban Fantasy (R)
Stephanie Adkins, Erotic- Supsense (NC 17)
Evie Byrne, Historical Romance (NC17)
Ella Drake, Sci-Fi Romance (NC 17)
Annie Nicholas, Sci-Fi Romance (NC 17)
Kirsten Saell, Erotic – Fantasy (NC 17)

Labels:


Posted by Aislinn Kerry :: 1:00 AM :: 7 comments

Post / Read Comments * Link

---------------oOo---------------

Monday, May 11, 2009

It's Excerpt Monday


Here's an (unedited) excerpt from Copper Kiss, my upcoming release from Liquid Silver Books:

---


A shiver rippled down Reina's spine, a chill that had nothing to do with the temperature of the room, and spread icy fingers up the back of her neck. All thoughts of sleep fled. Slowly, she sat up and reached her empathic senses out, searching for the disturbance.

What she found was a void, an absence where there should have been her own residuals, and Brett's, and Adri's fading ones, still lingering about. But just beyond her door there was nothing, only a cavernous emptiness that made terror run through her veins.

She felt out for the wards she had set around her room the first day she and Adri moved in, reached empathic fingers up to the ceiling and down into the floorboards. And in the doorway, just before the void, she found a tiny opening, a paper-thin slice made with surgical precision, just big enough for a man to slip through without anyone the wiser.

If she hadn't woken, if she'd slept through the tiny shiver of reaction that the breach had sent through her...

She reached blindly for her nightstand, and the cross she always placed there when she removed it for the night. Her fingers grasped metal that burned like ice. She drew it close against her chest and reached out again, found the small, solid weight of her cell phone.

Quiet, she eased the flip phone open and thanked any gods who were listening that she had thought to program Logan's number into her speed dial. Two buttons--one for the number, one to send--and help would be on its way.

She pressed the first, gripped her cross tightly, and hoped she'd be able to last until it arrived.

And, reaching for the second, the button that would connect the call and bring in the cavalry, a slow, sibilant voice whispered, "Oh, little girl. I wouldn't do that, if I were you."

She froze, while every fiber of her being screamed for action. Froze in fear and panic and indecision, and the sudden overwhelming certainty that if she just held absolutely still, if she didn't make a sound, he might forget about her and go in search of other prey.

Flight was impossible, trapped in her room where the only exit led directly into danger, and to fight was sure suicide. Anyone who left an empathic void like that was a vampire, and not a newly-fledged one. Anyone who could slice through her wards with such neat elegance had psychic skills beyond her comprehension.

A low chuckle slid down her spine like razors. "Put the phone down, child, and let's talk."

She lowered the phone to the nightstand, let the plastic case click audibly against the wood. Her bedroom door swung open on hinges that she was sure had never been so quiet for her.

All she could make out was a shadow darker than the benighted hall behind him. He stepped into the room with a slow, purposeful stride, the calculated stalk of a predator who knows his prey is cornered and all that's left is to wait for the proper moment to strike. She curled her hand around the edge of the nightstand and fought the insane urge to run.

"Fine," she said in a voice that somehow managed to sound strong and steady. "Let's talk."

A flash of smile in the darkness, starlight reflecting off of pointed teeth. "You're an empath of some skill." A twist of shadow suggested a head tilting back as he inspected... what? The posters on her walls? "I could use your talents."

"You break into my apartment, cut through my wards, and you're trying to recruit me?" Her voice rose to a shrill pitch that belied her terror. He laughed quietly. "Your pitch sucks."

"Does it?" He laughed at her. "Well then, how about this for incentive. If you do not offer me your aid, I shall tear your throat out and drink your blood as from a fountain."

Bile rose in her throat. She forced it down and locked her knees against the faintness that threatened her. Lily's uncertain words echoed through her memory.

There was a man. Adri didn't say much about him, just that he was harassing her. He wanted her to do something for him.

"Oh God," she whispered.

His smile flashed through the darkness.

Her finger twitched toward the phone. He held up a hand. "I really wouldn't."

"Why? You'll rip my throat out?" Her voice was tight with fear, but anger was beginning a slow burn deep in her chest. "Better get on with it, then."

"You won't help me?" He laughed. He sounded delighted. "Whyever not?"

Slowly, she inched her hand toward the phone. And focused on keeping the other very, very still. "I'm starting to suspect you killed my best friend. That doesn't put you very high on my to-do list."

"Oh, tut." He made a moue of disappointment. "That's such a petty reason. I could give you eternity, child."

"Eternity as one of your relatives? I think I'll pass." With a flick of her wrist, she slapped her hand onto the phone and pressed the button to connect the call. Almost immediately, an iron-cold grip circled her forearm and pulled her away. He was a tall, solid presence before her, still cloaked in shadows. His fingers bit deep into her arm, at odds with the pleasantry of his tone.

"Well, my dear, that is unfortunate." He pushed her back against the bed, bent over her throat. "Are you sure I can't convince you? We're kin of a different sort, you know. Campbells, both of us. Magic always did run strong in our line."

"If you're going to start giving me a 'blood is thicker than water' speech, you can save it."

He slid a finger along her throat. The tenderness of his touch was even more revolting than the blatant hunger in his gaze. "Are you sure? Think hard. I won't ask again."

"Oh, I'm sure all right," she said. And when he leaned in, fangs bared, she twisted the arm he'd pinned between them and shoved her cross against the vulnerable skin beneath his chin.

---


You can find the full list of participants here, or follow some of the links below:

Kirsten Saell, Erotic Romance/Fantasy (NC-17)

RF Long, Fantasy (PG)

Gina Ardito, Historical Paranormal (PG)

Alina Morgan, Urban Fantasy (PG 13)

Inez Kelley, Rom Com (R)

Labels:


Posted by Aislinn Kerry :: 5:00 AM :: 5 comments

Post / Read Comments * Link

---------------oOo---------------