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by Moira Rogers


  Look for these titles by Moira Rogers

  Now Available:

  Red Rock Pass

  Cry Sanctuary

  Sanctuary Lost

  Sanctuary’s Price

  Sanctuary Unbound

  Southern Arcana

  Crux

  Crossroads

  Deadlock

  Building Sanctuary

  A Safe Harbor

  Undertow

  …and the Beast

  Sabine

  Kisri

  Wilder’s Mate

  Coming Soon:

  Children of the Undying

  Demon Bait

  Hammer Down

  Hunter’s Prey

  He’s no one’s hero. She’s no one’s pawn. And now they’re caught in the crossfire…

  Deadlock

  © 2011 Moira Rogers

  Southern Arcana, Book 3

  Abandoned by her wolf shifter father and raised by her human psychic mother, Carmen Mendoza can’t deny she’s different. She craves things most women shy away from—and she has a trail of shapeshifting ex-boyfriends to prove it.

  Working at a clinic for supernatural creatures, she’s escaped the notice of her father’s legacy-obsessed family. Until they need a pawn in their bid for power. Snared by a vicious spell designed to wake her inner wolf, Carmen’s only hope is to trust the one man strong enough to soothe her darkest instincts.

  Alec Jacobson was once the heir apparent to the wolves’ ruling elite, until he walked away to marry the woman he loved. She paid with her life. Now he lives as a rebel, a black-sheep alpha who protects the supernatural residents of New Orleans from the wolves’ barbaric class system. Too bad he can’t protect himself from his need for Carmen.

  Yet staking his claim on his enemy’s niece will turn his city into a battleground. Unless he can find a way to stop breaking the rules—and start making them.

  Warning: This book contains a renegade alpha wolf, a smart empathic doctor, very dirty sex with psychic safe-words, the occasional dominance game in and out of the bedroom, and a group of supernatural citizens ready to take on the corrupt leaders of their world.

  Enjoy the following excerpt for Deadlock:

  Carmen slowed and spun, walking backwards. “How long have you lived here?”

  “This house?” He slowed too, to a casual amble. “Bought it…oh, nine or ten years back.”

  “And do you do this often?”

  “Run? Or chase women through the woods?”

  “That’s chivalrous of you, to keep pretending you’re the one doing the chasing here.”

  One eyebrow quirked up. “You’re right. If I were really chasing you, you’d be under me already.”

  “Now there’s a thought.” She had to get used to the blatant, idle flirtation. She couldn’t get aroused every time he said something like that, or she’d be perpetually horny—and frustrated. “I meant your obvious role as protector and mentor. Do you have a lot of new wolves beating down your door?”

  “A few,” he acknowledged with that infuriating little smile. “Someone has to take care of them, and I’m good at it.”

  And he needed it. She might never hear the admission from his lips, but she felt it plainly. “Thank you.”

  “You’re welcome. You’re going to trip and break your neck if you keep walking backwards on this path.”

  She stopped. “I was trying not to be rude.”

  He jerked his chin toward the path. “Quarter mile, maybe a little more. There’s a nice clearing. I’ll give you a ten-second head start.”

  The predatory glint in his eyes stole her breath and kicked her heart rate into high gear. “Head start for what?”

  “Before I chase you. For real.”

  She had to be crazy to consider it, even if the thought made her body buzz. “And then what? More dirty talk because you can’t sleep with me, but you can sure the hell torture me with your eyes and muscles and ridiculously hot voice?”

  He actually laughed. “Can’t do much to fix any of that. I could back off, I guess, but you’re not going to like that much better.”

  “No, I suppose I wouldn’t.” She didn’t feel like a crazed animal, but she’d never been quite so moved by feral instinct, either. “Go easy on me, would you?”

  Pacing herself wasn’t a problem, not if it was only a quarter of a mile, so Carmen ran hard, pushing herself almost at a sprint. Soon, the near-echo of trampled brush drifted from behind her, and she smiled through her panting.

  He let her get three long strides into the clearing before he tackled her, somehow twisting their bodies as they fell so she sprawled across his chest. His low, delighted laughter curled around her, warm as the arms that circled her waist. “Easy as I get.”

  Too easy. Too intimate. She wiggled out of his arms and landed on the ground beside him. “You smile like you’re not used to it, did you know that?”

  Laughter died, and he twisted his head to stare at her. “It’s been a while. Only other person willing to poke at me until I laugh is Kat. I always figured she did it because she knows I’m not going to kill her, even if I’m glaring like I want to. An empathy thing.”

  “Maybe.” She wanted to reassure him with her touch, but she thrummed with a sexual awareness he could surely sense. “Is everyone else so careful with you because they’re scared?”

  “Some of them are.” He slid his fingers over hers, his hand a heavy weight. “What do you feel? Beneath the sex, what does my power feel like?”

  Dominant. Implacable. “You’re strong, and you’re intense.” All things so wound up in her attraction to him that there could be no separation.

  “And I’m a little crazy. Or I act that way enough that everyone thinks it’s true. Better if most of the scary people in town are wary of pissing me off.”

  “Makes sense.” His hand was huge, warm and a bit rough. She wanted to feel it on her body, sliding down her back and curling around her hip to hold her still for a hard, demanding thrust.

  The mental image formed so quickly that all she could do was bite her lip as she blinked and willed it away.

  His fingers tightened around hers. “I hate not knowing what to do. If I’ll hurt you more leaving you alone, or by giving you what you crave. I don’t want to hurt you at all. Do you have any fucking idea how long it’s been since I didn’t know what to do?”

  “You’re too hard on yourself,” she admonished. “It isn’t your job to keep me from hurting, and no one knows everything all the time.”

  “It’s my job to keep from hurting you.” He lifted his hand and hers with it, sliding it up until they pressed into the grass over her head. Then he released her and rolled to his side, propped up on his elbow so the bulk of his body loomed above her. “It’s all a damn excuse. It’s my job, and I’d be doing it anyway…but that’s not why I’m doing it now.”

  It was the most nonsensical thing she’d heard in a while. “Are you saying you want to protect me?”

  “I’m saying I want to protect you.” His free hand landed on her stomach, skimming up to skip over her breasts and land on her collarbone. “You’re not scared of me. Even when I’m acting crazy.”

  “Because you’re not crazy.” She caught his hand and held it still. “Don’t do this just because you think I need it. It’s not worth it.”

  His eyes looked so dark they might as well have been black. “Honey, I thought you were an empath.”

  “You know what I mean. If you still think I’m not in my right mind, the guilt would kill you, and I only want you to feel good about this.”

  He considered that for a moment, then guided her other hand up above her head. “I’m going to kiss you. Deep. Hard. You okay with that?”

  He’d urged her into a position of submission—both hands over her head, her body stretched out beneath his—and it made her shake with anticipation. “More than okay.”

  “You want me to stop, you say stop.” One hand curled around both of her wrists, gentle but u
nyielding. “You want more, ask for it. Okay?”

  Carmen pulled against his grasp, not to free herself but to test his strength. He held tight, her eyes fluttered shut under a wave of need. “Yes.”

  His free hand settled at her hip in a possessive grip. Power built in the space between them, a slow, steady rise that mirrored the dark heat in his eyes as he lowered his mouth, lips barely touching hers. “Let me in.”

  The command released something inside her, a tension she hadn’t noticed before he eased it, and she closed her eyes again. Honesty was one thing, even a kiss…

  Don’t think, Carmen. Feel.

  She obeyed, loosening her tight hold on control, gasping when the first waves of empathic feedback echoed off him to heat her own body.

  His beard scraped her chin as he closed the distance between them with a shuddering groan. He kissed the way she’d seen him live, reckless arrogance and power and an intensity that bordered on intimidating. Lips and teeth and his tongue stroking her mouth until she parted her lips, then surging forward to taste and take, his hunger and satisfaction twisting between them on the threads of her empathy.

  She wasn’t prepared for the depth of her reaction to his satisfaction. Beyond the undeniable physical pleasure of the kiss was a whole world of intimacy, a power she’d flirted with but never really embraced.

  She could give him everything.

  More, he’d take it. There could be no doubt of that, not with his desires laid bare before her, the hot need for her pleasure dwarfed by the steely craving to be the only one who provided it. Nothing tentative there. Nothing tentative about the way he teased his tongue against hers, his pleasure spiking every time she moaned and arched closer.

  It had to stop, even if depriving herself of his touch drove her mad. Carmen turned her head to break the kiss. “Oh God.”

  Get in. Do the job. Get out. If only it were that easy.

  Ghost Soldiers

  © 2011 Keith Melton

  The Nightfall Syndicate, Book 2

  Vampire hit man Karl Vance has a new target: a rogue, charismatic sorcerer building an army of paranormal creatures in Eastern Europe. The stakes have never been higher, nor the odds so long, but he’s in too deep to turn back. If Karl fails to kill, the powerful Order of the Thorn will hunt down Maria Ricardi, the vampire he loves, and destroy everything he’s fighting for.

  When Karl is cut off in enemy badlands, he’s reduced to survival mode, doing the kinds of things he’d sworn would never be part of his vampire existence. Things that will forever color his relationship with Maria…if he survives to see her again.

  In Boston, Maria is haunted by disturbing dreams of Karl as she struggles to keep control of her mafia syndicate against a growing tide of threats—traitors, FBI agents, hostile crime families, and the fear that power will turn her into a creature like her hated Master, Delgado. Then she discovers Karl is walking straight into a deadly trap…and there may be nothing she can do to stop it in time.

  Warning: Explicit language and intense, violent content. Assassinations, betrayals, paranormal warfare, explosions, gangland slayings, chaos, calamity, rampant pandemonium, and an occasional fiery explosion.

  Enjoy the following excerpt for Ghost Soldiers:

  Karl stared through the scope of the M82 Barrett sniper rifle, firing from the prone position, one finger resting along the outside edge of the trigger guard, ready to finish the job and get out. Now if only he could find Cojocaru and put the crosshairs on him…

  His sniper nest was hidden on a rocky outcropping, surrounded by evergreen trees and looking down into a valley sloping between mountain ridges. He wore black, but not a ghillie suit, and he hadn’t painted his face since he could weave darkness to conceal his position, negating the need for the elaborate camouflage suit. Surprise would work in his favor, but he wouldn’t stay hidden after the first shot, not against the small army Cojocaru had amassed. Both last night and tonight he’d expected to find an ambush waiting in the forest as he stalked to his firing position, but there’d been nothing. No sign of wolves or ghouls or sorcerer.

  It made him more uneasy, not less.

  “I count forty-four hostiles,” Bailey said over his headset earpiece. “And five more in the tree line.”

  The shot, when he took it, would be in the four hundred and thirty to four hundred and fifty meter range, the distances on his range card all verified last night from this exact position via a laser range finder, and all within his comfort zone with the rifle.

  He waited, scanning with the riflescope as she scanned with the camera. A vampire had advantages over a human sniper. A heart which did not beat. No need to breathe. He could see in the darkness. His hands remained completely still, he could lie motionless for hours, and even the chill lingering in the air didn’t bother him. Every part of him was ready to take the shot when it finally came.

  The valley below was inaccessible by road, the clearing bordered on all sides by trees and thick undergrowth. An area about fifty meters across had been dug up, the earth turned over and tamped flat again. Farther out, the wild grasses had been mown all the way to the trees.

  He swept the scope farther around the clearing’s perimeter. The rest of the creatures were a wild clash of nasty species, gray-skinned Nassid, shadowlings and more, but each wore the same slave collar. He sighted in on one of the three werewolves loping along the edges of the green firelight. The werewolf was in its wolfbreed form—the upright man and wolf hybrid they preferred for combat—and lifted its muzzle to scent the air, but Karl was far enough away to be safe from their keen noses.

  A succubus swooped low from time to time, her dark wings like black smoke pouring from between her shoulders. She was a high-priority threat because she could fly.

  He counted dozens of ghouls, their gray flesh sewn with heavy black stitches and their skin ritually scarified. None of them had cheeks or lips, so he could peer right through to their jawbones and sharpened teeth. He hated ghouls. He’d killed one once below a tavern in London and burned the place down along with it.

  Another flying creature skip-hopped with a bird-like strut—something very thin with a human body, black wings for arms and the head of a raven. No vampires, though. Or not that he’d seen so far.

  He silently cursed the Thorn for allowing him no other weapons except the .50 caliber rifle. His SIG-Sauer, his silver knife or any other secondary weapon would’ve made him less vulnerable. He didn’t even have a spotter next to him, watching his back and able to give support with an assault rifle. If he missed or somehow failed to kill Cojocaru, he’d have hell crashing down on his head, with only his claws and fangs to fight back against so many. Grim business no matter how he looked at it.

  Was it paranoid to suspect the Order of the Thorn didn’t mean for him to come out of this in one piece?

  “I’ve got Cojocaru.” Bailey’s voice crackled over the headset. “In motion through the ranks, moving east toward the vampire. Repeat, positive ID on primary target, over.”

  It took Karl a moment to dial in on him. Cojocaru was wrapped in a red cloak like the others, but he’d pushed back his hood, revealing his face. The same severe features Karl remembered from the photo on Bailey’s screen. The ex-military man who’d sicced his ghouls, Nassid and wolves on those humans who’d had the bad luck to stumble across his path. The sorcerer who, according to the Thorn, was just another cold-blooded would-be tyrant, wanting to control, eager to coalesce power around himself, and using the strength of others to do so. Karl had seen the same thing happen in the world for hundreds of years. Nothing ever changed. He settled his finger on the rifle’s trigger.

  The ranks of acolytes swept aside to let Cojocaru pass. When he passed the last row, the succubus came floating down and landed next to him. She ran her hands over his chest, wrapping her sensuality around her with every liquid movement. Cojocaru ignored her, staring off at something beyond the edges of the scope. She smiled, her slit-eyes flashing, as she drew down the black cord
s tying his cloak and slipped it off him. As in the photo, he wore a Soviet-era full dress military uniform beneath his cloak—olive-drab service jacket, matching trousers with a red stripe, high black riding boots, shoulder boards with two gold stripes and three silver stars.

  Cojocaru walked across the clearing past the bonfires. Waves of power pulsed off Cojocaru, strong enough for Karl to sense even from this far away. The sorcerer must’ve been shielding himself before because there was no missing it now.

  He tracked Cojocaru with the crosshairs, leading him as he moved, five minutes of angle lead on a walking man at four hundred meters. He waited for the ideal shot. He wasn’t confident enough in his shooting to risk sniping at a moving target, even from this close. The feeling of wrongness intensified, crystallizing into a hard spiked ball in his chest. Even if he hit with his first shot and killed Cojocaru, how did the Thorn expect him to survive the ensuing firestorm? Bailey believed his followers would fight each other or flee if Cojocaru died, but what assurance did Karl have of that? The Thorn held all its cards close. So how much did he trust them now?

  Simple. He didn’t.

  Cojocaru lifted his head and scanned the barren mountain peaks. Then, for the briefest second, he seemed to stare straight at Karl through the riflescope. Impossible. A trick of perspective. Cojocaru’s smile was nothing more than a razor slash above his jaw.

  “I’m scrapping the mission,” Karl said into the mike.

  “What?” Bailey sounded half-choked.

  “It’s a suicide mission. It’s over. I’m pulling out.”

 

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