Down and Dirty
Coming May
22!!
BLURB:
Get in, get down…and get filthy with these sexy, hardworking,
blue-collar heroes who don’t mind when things get a little dirty at work or at
play.
This collection of 22 brand new stories from USA Today and International Best-Selling authors is full of scorching hot romance tales that will be sure to leave you breathless for more. These men work hard and play even harder.
From cops to mechanics, miners to brewmasters, they aren’t afraid to go all in. At the end of the day, when they find the woman who completes them, they learn love and life can be as messy as their day jobs…and they wouldn’t have it any other way.
Featuring stories from: Lori King, Maia Dylan, Sarah Marsh, Elena Kincaid, Cecile Tellier, London Saint James, Bella Settarra, Rose Nickol, RL Merrill, Ashley Malkin, Lucy Felthouse, Scarlett J Rose, Sydney Lea, CR Moss, Samantha A. Cole, Danielle James, Ava Campbell, Eva Moore, Kimberlie L. Faye, Sabrina Sol, Nikki Prince, and Mia Hopkins
This collection of 22 brand new stories from USA Today and International Best-Selling authors is full of scorching hot romance tales that will be sure to leave you breathless for more. These men work hard and play even harder.
From cops to mechanics, miners to brewmasters, they aren’t afraid to go all in. At the end of the day, when they find the woman who completes them, they learn love and life can be as messy as their day jobs…and they wouldn’t have it any other way.
Featuring stories from: Lori King, Maia Dylan, Sarah Marsh, Elena Kincaid, Cecile Tellier, London Saint James, Bella Settarra, Rose Nickol, RL Merrill, Ashley Malkin, Lucy Felthouse, Scarlett J Rose, Sydney Lea, CR Moss, Samantha A. Cole, Danielle James, Ava Campbell, Eva Moore, Kimberlie L. Faye, Sabrina Sol, Nikki Prince, and Mia Hopkins
PREORDER LINKS:
Lockdown
BLURB:
Alice
For the past
year, my life has been a raging trash fire. Right now, a house sitting job
sounds perfect—one long summer, alone in someone else’s mansion with nothing
but my stupid broken heart. Everything is going fine…until I find the key.
Until I find him.
Ivan
I’m the only
locksmith in the city who can crack this lock. It’s a complicated job, made
even more complicated by the gorgeous, mysterious woman who hired me. She lives
here alone, haunting this house like a ghost. What is her story? And why can’t
I get her out of my mind?
EXCERPT:
She’s right.
This feels good—so good.
I break the
surface and take a deep breath. I rub my hair out of my eyes and tread water,
laughing. I can’t remember the last time I went swimming.
Alice splashes
me with water. “Race you to the other side?”
“You’re on.”
“One, two,
three, go!”
I do some kind
of weird freestyle-butterfly stroke until my lungs are busted, but it’s no use.
A 38-year-old sack of lead has nothing on a 23-year-old mermaid. She reaches
the end of the pool three seconds ahead of me.
“Again!” she
says. “The other side. One, two, three, go!”
I swim with
one arm ahead of me, making sure not to smash my face into the concrete. It’s
pitch black out here. I come to realize this is a long, narrow pool, like a
business envelope, meant for laps. We criss cross it two more times with Alice
winning every race until I have to call a time out, my old man lungs wheezing
and burning while she cackles with delight.
“Chan takes
the gold!” she hollers, apparently not winded at all. She puts on a sports
announcer’s voice. “Mendoza nabs the silver. Not a bad showing for the former
locksmith turned extremely unlikely Olympic swimmer!”
I can’t help
it. I start laughing like a little kid.
To catch our
breath, we swim a lazy backstroke back and forth across the pool. Even after my
eyes adjust to the darkness, it’s a crescent moon—too faint to see Alice’s
face, even though she’s less than a foot from me.
“Do you swim
out here a lot?” I ask.
“Every day.
It’s my favorite thing about this house.”
“It’s a nice
perk,” I say. “Do you swim at night? Alone?”
“Every now and
then.”
“Seems like it
could be dangerous. Out here by yourself. Something bad could happen.”
“Something bad
could happen anywhere. At least here it’s peaceful.” When we reach the middle
of the pool, she stops swimming. “Here, try this. Just float on your back and
close your eyes.”
I do as she
says. I lie on my back and float so that only my face is above the surface.
With water in my ears, I can hear only my own breathing. I close my eyes and I
feel weightless, like I’m flying. Drops of water cool on my skin. Inhale,
exhale. In the stillness, I can hear my own heartbeat, slow and even. Is it
always like this? As loud as this? Am I just too distracted to ever listen to
it?
“Okay,” Alice
says quietly. “Now open your eyes.”
The chlorine
stings just a little, but I blink it away. When I look up, the only thing I can
see is the night sky. My eyes, accustomed now to the dark, discern a whole
field of stars, some bright, some faint. Far from the city lights, out here in
the mountains, the stars are dazzling. And suspended in the swimming pool, my
body tricks my brain into believing I’m flying, weightless.
“Wow,” I say.
“Amazing.”
“Right?”
“That’s so
cool. Did you discover this?”
“A long time
ago,” she says.
We float
together among the stars for a long time. I listen to the rhythm of my
breathing and my heartbeat. Two fancy beers and I’m feeling good. A warm breeze
blows across my face and chest and I get goosebumps.
Working the
hours I’ve been working, pushing as hard as I have, I don’t get a lot of
opportunities to be still.
In that
moment, Alice and I drift together, bumping each other’s forearms.
She stops
floating and begins to tread water. “Oops.” She gives a little laugh.
“Collision course.”
The pool is
shallower here, so I get to my feet. Because of her height, Alice can’t reach
the bottom. She puts her hands on my shoulders and I lead her up the slope of
the pool until she can stand up on her own. But when she does, she doesn’t let
go of my shoulders. My skin tingles where her fingers grip me. Blood rushes
through my body.
It’s been two
years since a woman’s touched me.
I’m
grateful—grateful for the darkness and the way it’s hiding the embarrassing way
my body is reacting to this.
Alice steps
closer to me. I don’t know which urge to fight—the urge to throw my arms around
her or the urge to pull away. I’ve shied away from contact like this for a
reason. I don’t know how to withstand it. I barely survived one woman. I don’t
think I could survive a second, no matter how fun and meaningless something
like this is meant to be.
Alice steps
even closer. I hold my breath.
In the
starlight, I can see the faintest outline of her cheekbones, her chin. I can
feel her soft breath on my lips. She wants me to kiss her. When she runs her
hands from my shoulders down to my chest, her palms brush my nipples. I almost
jump out of my skin.
My brain pings
everywhere. Suddenly I feel like a high school student, messing around with a
girl while her parents are away. Everything about this screams adolescent
fantasy—skinny dipping, underage drinking, a young woman who’s making all the
moves for me. I’m confused. Was it ever like this in reality? High school was
twenty years ago, but I’m pretty sure this didn’t happen to me back then.
“Ivan,” she
whispers. “Are you okay?”
With cupped
hands, Alice pours water over my bare shoulders and chest. She touches my face.
The smooth skin of her hands brushes my unshaven jaw and she runs her thumb
back and forth over my mouth. My nervous system threatens to blow like an
electrical panel. My brain is a crazy, confused bird bashing itself to pieces
inside my skull.
Shit.
Is this what
it’s like to be seduced? I’ve never been seduced in my entire life. Do men get
seduced?
“Are you
okay?” she asks again. “Is this okay?”
“Sure, it’s—I
mean…it’s just…”
I stop
talking, take a deep breath, and force myself to regain control. Under the
surface of the water, I rest my hands on her hips and take a half-step closer
to her. In the dark, in the water, hidden by starlight, I can imagine she’s
just a dream. It feels safer that way.
“This is
okay,” I whisper. “I’m okay.”
Softly, I kiss
her forehead. Her skin is cold, and the chlorine tastes bittersweet.
Remembering
her pale brown freckles, I kiss her right cheek, then her left.
I copy her
movements and brush my thumb against her mouth. Her lips are parted, and her
warm breath washes over my skin.
When I lean
down and kiss her at last, my eyes close tight. She wraps her arms around my
shoulders and kisses me back, this strange young woman, this bit of starlight,
this mermaid, this dream.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Mia Hopkins writes lush romances starring fun, sexy characters who love
to get down and dirty. She’s a sucker for working class heroes, brainy heroines
and wisecracking best friends. She lives in Los Angeles with her roguish
husband and waggish dog.
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