DIRTY POOL
by Bethany-Kris
Publication Date: May 6, 2019
Genres: Adult, Romantic Suspense, Organized Crime. Erotic Romance, Standalone
AVAILABLE NOW!
Amazon: https://geni.us/ DirtyPoolAMZ
Amazon CA: https://amzn.to/2VDDj9S
Amazon UK: https://amzn.to/2LjV1Lv
SYNOPSIS
To get what he wants, he’ll have to play a game of dirty pool.
Michel Marcello never wanted to be a mafioso like every other man in his family—he wanted to be more. That doesn’t mean he’s unfamiliar with the life, or that he can’t hold his own against other made men.
They forgot where he came from …
His chance encounter with the fiery and beautiful daughter of Detroit’s most notorious Irish mob boss stokes flames beyond the ones that ignite between Michel and Gabbie Casey. Rivals shouldn’t mix, but these opposites have never been more attracted, either.
The lines between family loyalty, their duties, and responsibility begin to blur.
Love ruins all.
But these two aren’t the only ones playing this game, and it just became far more dangerous to get out alive.
*
Dirty Pool is a standalone romantic suspense.
EXCLUSIVE RELEASE EXCERPT
Dirty
Pool by Bethany-Kris
“Here, duckies!”
Michel’s dark chuckles came close
to her ear as his nose grazed the back of her neck. Gabbie had all she could do
not to shiver from the feeling of his
lips pressing to her skin with featherlight kisses.
“I don’t think they recognize being
called duckies,” he murmured.
“Shut up.”
“I’m just saying they don’t speak
human, Gabbie.”
She didn’t mind his teasing.
Much.
“Says the man who had a small bag
of birdseed in his car because bread is
bad for the ducks.”
His hands landed on her waist, and
she loved the way his fingers dug
into her sides. He squeezed, a silent warning for her to stop the teasing. She
heard it loud and clear, not that it made much of a difference. If he could
dish it, then the man would learn to take it.
That was Gabbie’s way.
“I told you, I jog here.”
“Yes, with birdseed for the
duckies, apparently.”
“Because they quack at me when I
pass, and I feel bad for them.”
“Mmhmm. Of course, you do.”
Michel let out a laugh. “You’re
impossible.”
Gabbie winked at him over her
shoulder as she pulled out a handful of birdseed. Michel wasn’t wrong—bread was
terrible for ducks. It got stuck to
the roof of their mouths, and if it did get in their bellies, it would swell up
to make them think they were full when they weren’t. It was harder for them to
digest, too.
She adored he had birdseed in his
car to toss to the ducks when he jogged at the park. He wasn’t all bad, despite what people in her
family liked to say about the Italians. How could someone be bad if they
remembered to feed the ducks when they went jogging?
It was sweet, really.
“You must be getting hungry,” he
said.
“A little.”
“You want to go—”
“Not yet.”
She was enjoying this.
The park, peaceful at almost midnight,
was dark and quiet. There wasn’t a soul around, and the small pond was rarely ever this empty
when she came to see it in the daytime.
“I like that you chose here for a date,” she said.
Michel rested his chin on her
shoulder, and wrapped an arm tightly around her middle. “Oh, why is that?”
“Most guys would pick a club, or
something. Dinner, and a show. The usual.
I like this better. It’s just us, and we can talk.”
“I would have taken you for all
that other shit, too, but it’s late.”
It was.
Most restaurants were closed,
although she was sure they could find a hole-in-the-wall diner to eat at, if
they really wanted to. Not that any of the food would be the kind of stuff she
was supposed to eat. Michel probably knew that, too, and took it into consideration
without telling her he was doing it.
She appreciated it.
Gabbie grinned. “All of that for a date, too?”
“Yeah, probably not. I wanted to be
alone with you … can’t exactly do that when there’s other people around, can
I?”
EXCLUSIVE RELEASE EXCERPT
“Here, duckies!”
Michel’s dark chuckles came close to her ear as his nose grazed the back of her neck. Gabbie had all she could do not to shiver from the feeling of his lips pressing to her skin with featherlight kisses.
“I don’t think they recognize being called duckies,” he murmured.
“Shut up.”
“I’m just saying they don’t speak human, Gabbie.”
She didn’t mind his teasing.
Much.
“Says the man who had a small bag of birdseed in his car because bread is bad for the ducks.”
His hands landed on her waist, and she loved the way his fingers dug into her sides. He squeezed, a silent warning for her to stop the teasing. She heard it loud and clear, not that it made much of a difference. If he could dish it, then the man would learn to take it.
That was Gabbie’s way.
“I told you, I jog here.”
“Yes, with birdseed for the duckies, apparently.”
“Because they quack at me when I pass, and I feel bad for them.”
“Mmhmm. Of course, you do.”
Michel let out a laugh. “You’re impossible.”
Gabbie winked at him over her shoulder as she pulled out a handful of birdseed. Michel wasn’t wrong—bread was terrible for ducks. It got stuck to the roof of their mouths, and if it did get in their bellies, it would swell up to make them think they were full when they weren’t. It was harder for them to digest, too.
She adored he had birdseed in his car to toss to the ducks when he jogged at the park. He wasn’t all bad, despite what people in her family liked to say about the Italians. How could someone be bad if they remembered to feed the ducks when they went jogging?
It was sweet, really.
“You must be getting hungry,” he said.
“A little.”
“You want to go—”
“Not yet.”
She was enjoying this.
The park, peaceful at almost midnight, was dark and quiet. There wasn’t a soul around, and the small pond was rarely ever this empty when she came to see it in the daytime.
“I like that you chose here for a date,” she said.
Michel rested his chin on her shoulder, and wrapped an arm tightly around her middle. “Oh, why is that?”
“Most guys would pick a club, or something. Dinner, and a show. The usual. I like this better. It’s just us, and we can talk.”
“I would have taken you for all that other shit, too, but it’s late.”
It was.
Most restaurants were closed, although she was sure they could find a hole-in-the-wall diner to eat at, if they really wanted to. Not that any of the food would be the kind of stuff she was supposed to eat. Michel probably knew that, too, and took it into consideration without telling her he was doing it.
She appreciated it.
Gabbie grinned. “All of that for a date, too?”
“Yeah, probably not. I wanted to be alone with you … can’t exactly do that when there’s other people around, can I?”
ABOUT BETHANY-KRIS
Bethany-Kris is a Canadian author, lover of much, and mother to four young sons, one cat, and two dogs. A small town in Eastern Canada where she was born and raised is where she has always called home. With her boys under her feet, snuggling cat, barking dogs, and a hubby calling over his shoulder, she is nearly always writing something … when she can find the time.
To keep up-to-date with new releases from Bethany-Kris, sign up to her New Release Newsletter here: http://eepurl.com/bf9lzD
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