Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Wednesday's Warrior: Aloha to Emmy Curtis and COMPROMISED - An Alpha Ops Novel

 

It was supposed to be the happiest day of her life. But when her wedding erupts in gunfire, Sadie Walker realizes this is not the life she wants-her fiancé's work with Delta Force will always cast a shadow over their relationship. After leaving the hard-muscled hero at the altar, she thinks she'll never see him again . . . until a chance encounter reveals that he still has a strong grip on her heart.

On a covert assignment overseas, Simon Tennant is shocked when he spots Sadie with another man. Jealousy flares, as does an irresistible urge to keep her protected. Amid a dangerous game of international espionage, he'll have to convince Sadie just how perfect they've always been together. This time, nothing will take precedence over winning her back, no matter the cost to his cover-or his life . . .

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Emmy Curtis is an editor and a romance writer. An ex-pat Brit, she quells her homesickness with Cadbury Flakes and Fray Bentos pies. She's lived in London, Paris and New York, and has settled for the time being, in North Carolina. When not writing, Emmy loves to travel with her military husband and take long walks with their Lab. All things considered, her life is chock full of hoot, just a little bit of nanny. And if you get that reference...well, she already considers you kin.

Author Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads

In honor of Emmy's real life hero, I am giving away military swag to one randomly selected commenter.  To enter the giveaway,

1. Leave a comment about what would quell your homesickness.  I have a friend in Hawaii who often mails me chocolate covered macadamia nuts to quell my homesickness of the Aloha State.

2. Comments are open through Saturday, March 5, 10 pm.

3. I'll post the winner on Sunday, March 6.

Mahalo,

Kim in Baltimore
Aloha Spirit in Charm City

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Emmy offers an excerpt from COMPROMISED ...

“We might not be friends, Sadie. But we are something.”

She moved her head so that Simon let go of her chin. “You used to tell me that I was your everything. Your port in a storm. Your sanctuary when you came back from a mission. Did you ever wonder what you were to me? You were the man who always disappeared. The man who was there, but only until your phone rang. I loved you, but you were a ghost to me. Is that the ‘something’ you mean?”

“Sadie.” He looked devastated, and she cursed herself for saying those things. As true as they were, she hadn’t wanted to explore their relationship right then. Nor ever if truth be told.

“But that’s all just history, isn’t it?” she said, trying to sound flip.

He leaned in. She knew he meant to kiss her, and she wanted to move, wanted to slap his face and run. That’s what she should have done.

Instead she allowed her mouth to open slightly as her eyes fluttered closed. Just one kiss. A safe, goodbye kiss…and then all rational thought escaped her.

His tongue touched hers and her senses and nerve endings came alive. He felt like home. A dark, impenetrable, warm and sexy home. Her heartbeat raced and butterflies heralded the coming of spring in her stomach. He still wanted her. She still wanted him. She didn’t care about anything else.

She held his face as she stood and climbed astride his thighs, still kissing him. His hands went to her breasts, running the backs of his hands over the swell above her neckline. And then he found the zipper of the dress, and pulled it down to her waist.

He yanked her toward him and put his mouth around her nipples, through her bra. As he sucked and bit she arched her back, aching for him to make her feel more. And more.

She grabbed his short hair and rammed her mouth against his. She wanted to hurt him, to be hurt by him, to bruise her mouth, so she’d be sure him being here wasn’t some crazy illusion. But mostly so he’d regret lying to her and leaving her.

His dick strained against his cargo pants, and she ground herself against it, moving her hips so that she could feel the whole length of him.

“Stop,” he whispered, out of breath. “Not like this. I don’t want to hurt you.”

“Now you decide you don’t want to hurt me?” she whispered back.

His hand splayed against her throat, dragging his fingers slowly from her chin to her bra. His mouth followed, slow and firm. She wanted to protest, but his tongue snaked a hot trail over her pulse points making her heart race. She’d protest in a minute.

“You’ve changed so much,” he murmured against her throat.

She was about to respond when he found his way under her skirt to her panties. He slipped under them as if he was trained in stealth. Which, come to think of it, he was.

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17 comments:

  1. I would send care packages with candy and chips and send cards.

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  2. When I feel home-sick I just telephone my mother.

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  3. Eating something that is from Louisiana

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  4. When I moved, it was the cards and emails from friends that helped.

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  5. Really nothing helps when your homesick except maybe a surprise visit back home, or visits from friends and family you miss, or at the very least a letter from them. My grandmother used to make us homemade food to eat that was nice.

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  6. If I had homesickness it could be healed by skyping with family. Also, pictures or something from here sent to me. Not sure what, though!

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  7. I'd call my family if I was homesick.

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  8. Phone calls help. Distractions do as well.

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  9. so much easier these days with internet email & facetime - used to only had telephone calls, and prior generations only had letters.

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  10. It would have to be phone calls and texting :)

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  11. Chatting on the phone and swapping pics.

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  12. You know, if someone mailed me macadamia nuts, that might help whatever I was feeling at the time too. lol But chocolate always works to cheer me up.

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  13. Calling family because just hearing their voices brings me home. Emmy Curtis is a new Author for me but I'm happy to meet her here.
    Carol L
    Lucky4750 (at) aol (dot) com

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  14. Talking to my family always helps. I do miss my English chocolate, but Amazon have some great deals, which helps me.

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  15. I don't know, probably make Mexican Martinis and good TexMex food.

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  16. The only time I was really homesick was my first Christmas away from home while in the Peace Corps in the Philippines. Bless my grandmother for her consideration. Sugar cream pie is a family holiday tradition. My grandmother made one and mailed it to me. By some miracle it reached me before Christmas and was in excellent shape. I think I sat down and ate most of it the first day.

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