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Weekend Writing Warriors
Hi everyone. Wheee!!! The heat wave we’d been experiencing, broke mid-week and we had rain on top of rain. I walked outside in it like a kid. 🙂
This weekend I’m sharing another snippet from Breed True, Book 7 in my Eclipse Heat series. The digital edition will be on pre-sale sale for 99¢ until it releases on August 16th. Print buy links haven’t appeared yet at the third party distros but the copies I ordered for my FB give-away have been shipped and should arrive this week.
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And check here for Snippet Sunday Facebook writers.
When he thought about it later, it seemed to Grady he hadn’t been in Julie’s presence more than a moment, before his motive for marrying her began to change. After he’d brushed his lips across hers and tasted her sweetness the first time, rather than wanting to use her to get an heir, his purpose became convincing her to stay his wife.
He knew he followed her with his gaze whenever they shared the main room of the cabin; he couldn’t help himself. Maybe because he’d been raised without a mother, his bride’s feminine loveliness fascinated him.
Every morning, he kissed her before he went to work and then spent all day thinking about the next stage of his courtship.
She neither denied, nor encouraged his advances. But gradually, over time, when he held her in his arms for their kiss, her trembling changed. Though her mind resisted him, her body responded—need answering need.
©Gem Sivad 2016
Breed True
Desperate to give her twin daughters a decent life, Julie Fulton agrees to marry Grady Hawks and produce the son he needs to inherit Hawks Nest ranch. At the end of a year, child or not, Julie will receive enough money to escape to San Francisco and leave behind her rough existence.
Grady intends to breed back to the fair skin and Scottish features of his father and Julie meets every requirement. Her red hair and pale skin are an excellent way to dilute Grady’s half Kiowa blood. If Julie breeds true, their child will prove that the Hawks family is “white” enough to own Texas land.
The formula is right, but the outcome unexpected. Siring a son is the last thing on Grady’s mind when he discovers pleasure in Julie’s bed. And San Francisco no longer seems like paradise to Julie when she finds heaven in Grady’s arms.
Weekend Writing Warriors
Greetings, everyone. The summer is going so quickly I feel like I’m rushing all the time. Apologies for my slow reciprocation last week. I finished Rhythm (Smoke Inc.) and sent it off to beta readers then headed back to the Old West for more Eclipse Heat. Now I’m scrambling to catch up with last week’s snippet reading.Thank you to all who have stopped by and given me feedback on my historical western series.
Find more Weekend Writing Warriors here.
And check here for Snippet Sunday Facebook writers.
This week I’m posting another snippet from Eclipse Heat #7, Breed True. This title will publish in print on July 31. I’ve never offered a title in print first so I’m interested to see how it impacts sales. The digital edition will release on August 16th.
“Open your eyes,” he coaxed her.
Julie hesitantly obeyed, gazing into the dark face that hovered above hers.
“We will learn to know each other when we kiss,” he explained softly.
His mouth brushed hers and then the tip of his tongue lightly traced the seam of her lips.
She gasped and attempted to step back. But his big hand cradled her head, steadying her as his tongue gained entrance. He leisurely explored her mouth, tasting her, and, by necessity, she him. Grady Hawks tasted like coffee.
©Gem Sivad 2016
Breed True
Desperate to give her twin daughters a decent life, Julie Fulton agrees to marry Grady Hawks and produce the son he needs to inherit Hawks Nest ranch. At the end of a year, child or not, Julie will receive enough money to escape to San Francisco and leave behind her rough existence.
Grady intends to breed back to the fair skin and Scottish features of his father and Julie meets every requirement. Her red hair and pale skin are an excellent way to dilute Grady’s half Kiowa blood. If Julie breeds true, their child will prove that the Hawks family is “white” enough to own Texas land.
The formula is right, but the outcome unexpected. Siring a son is the last thing on Grady’s mind when he discovers pleasure in Julie’s bed. And San Francisco no longer seems like paradise to Julie when she finds heaven in Grady’s arms.