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	<title>Ruby Slippered Sisterhood &#187; books</title>
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	<description>Blog &#38; Website of the 2009 Golden Heart ® Finalists</description>
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		<title>Welcome to Last Chance</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jul 2010 21:33:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Hope Ramsay</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA["One ticket to Last Chance," the agent said as he took Jane's money.  "The bus leaves in five minutes."  

Jane picked up the flimsy slip of paper and hurried through the Atlanta, Georgia, Greyhound terminal.  She found the gate, climbed aboard the motor coach, and sank into one of the plush seats.  

She tried to think positive thoughts.

It was hard.  She had five dollars left in her pocketbook, a zero balance in her checking account, and bad guys in her recent past.  Her dreams of making it big in Nashville had just taken a dive over the cliff called reality.  

<em>Thank you Woody West, you peanut brained weasel.</em>

The diesel engines roared to life, and the bus glided out of the parking lot heading toward South Carolina, which was not where Jane really wanted to go.  

She took three deep breaths and tried to visualize her future the way Dr. Goodbody advised in his self-help recordings.  If she could just unleash her inner consciousness through positive thinking, the Universe would give her a road map for success.  

That seemed like a good plan.  She needed a road map to a better future in the worst way.  And where better to seek a new start than a place called Last Chance?  She had never been to Last Chance, but the name sounded hopeful.  

She sank back into her seat and tried to see the place in her mind's eye.  She imagined it like Pleasantville where the streets were picturesque, the people friendly, and the job opportunities plentiful.  

Eight hours later, reality intruded.  

The Greyhound left her standing on a deserted sidewalk right in front of a place called Bill's Grease Pit.  Thankfully, this establishment was not a fast-food joint but an auto-repair service that doubled as a bus terminal.  Both the garage and the terminal were closed for the night.  

She looked down the street and knew herself for a fool.  Last Chance had exactly one traffic light.  The only sign of life was the glow of neon shining like a beacon from a building two blocks down the main drag.

Okay, so Last Chance wasn't Bedford Falls, from the fabled movie <em>It's a Wonderful Life</em>.  She could deal.  

She told herself that where there was Budweiser and neon there was hope of finding some dinner.  Although how she was going to pay for it remained a mystery.  She fought against the panic that gripped her insides.  She hugged herself as she walked up the street, running through her usual list of positive affirmations.  

She would get herself out of this mess.  She had done it before.  And the truth was, she should have read the warning signs when Woody walked into the Shrimp Shack six months ago.  If she had read those signs, she wouldn't be standing here today.  Well, every mistake was an opportunity to learn, according to Dr. Goodbody.

The bar bore the name 'Dot's Spot' in bright blue neon.  It sported a dark wood exterior and small windows festooned with half a dozen beer signs.  Jane stood in the garish light cast by the signs, thinking it would be truly awesome if she could walk through that doorway and find Sir Galahad waiting for her.  But wishing for Sir Galahad was not positive thinking.  Heroes didn't magically appear in Southern honky-tonks on a Wednesday night.  

Besides, this particular fantasy of a knightly rescue had gotten her into trouble every time she allowed herself to believe it.  So she pushed it out of her mind.  She needed to focus on manifesting a hot meal and a place to spend the night.  Period.  She fixed that positive plan of action in her mind and pushed through the front door.  

Hoo boy, the place was like something right out of a bad country and western tune.  Smoke hung over the place and a five-piece country band occupied a raised stage at one end of the barroom.  They played a twangy Garth Brooks tune in waltz time.  No one was dancing.  

The men in the band were, by and large, a bunch of middle-aged geezers, with beer bellies and wedding rings and receding hairlines.  

Except for the fiddler.

Jane stared at him for a moment, recognition washing through her.  No question about it--there stood another peanut-brained weasel in the flesh.  She could tell this because he was a big, powerfully built man with a ponytail and facial hair.  He also wore a black Stetson, and a black shirt, and black jeans that hugged his butt and thighs, and a gem that sparkled from his earlobe like a black diamond. 

What was that thing?  A sapphire?  

He was the real-deal, bad-for-any-females-who-came-within-range package.  Someone should hang a big yellow warning sign on his neck that said danger.

Guys like him didn't rescue girls.  They rode around on Harleys, and were mean and tough and bad, and got into lots of trouble with the local law.  They also had really big shoulders that a girl could lean on, and in a moment of confusion, a girl could confuse one of these bad boys with Sir Galahad, only on a motorcycle.  

Good thing Jane planned on rescuing herself, because this guy was like some walking embodiment of Murphy's Law.  The spit dried up in her mouth, and her heart rate kicked up.  The Universe had just thrown her another curve ball.

So she looked away, sweeping the room with her gaze.  The rest of the pickings were slim and ran to old men and floozies, and a few obviously married guys in John Deere hats.  She might be about to do some serious flirting in order to get a drink and some food, but she would not hit on any married men.  That ran counter to her moral code.  

She scanned the bar.  Bingo.  Two prospects, twelve o'clock.  

Prospect One wore a dirty Houston Astros hat, his chin propped up on his left fist as he watched the World Series game on the big screen television.  He was devilishly handsome, but the words "hard drinking" scrolled through her mind.

Jane turned her attention to prospect number two.  He turned on the stool, and she got a good look at him.  He was a smaller than average guy, with sandy hair, a widow's peak and regular features.  He wore a blue work shirt with his name--Ray--embroidered above the right pocket.  Unlike the other two hunks in the room, this guy wore work boots.  He wasn't a cowboy, and he didn't look dangerous at all.

He looked up from his drink.  

Okay, he would do.  Kindness shone from his eyes.  She concentrated on holding his gaze . . . counted to three . . . then dazzled him with a smile.

He blinked two or three times like a deer caught in a hunter's sight.  But she wasn’t a hunter, not really.  She was vulnerable, and scared, and hunted herself.  And that explained why she was about to do something not very nice--something she would most likely regret in the morning.  
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center">
<h2>WELCOME TO LAST CHANCE, SOUTH CAROLINA </h2>
</p>
<p><em>Dear Reader,</em></p>
<p><em>Yes, our town is way off the beaten path but strange, wonderful miracles happen a lot around here.</em></p>
<p><em>I’ve owned the Cut ‘n Curl beauty shop for years, and I’ve seen folks come for a visit then stay for a lifetime.  Take Jane—that pretty firecracker of a girl who just arrived in town.  I would swear she’s running from something.  She came with only five dollars in her pocket but she’s worked real hard to make a fresh start.  She’s turned my son Clay’s life upside down without even realizing it. </em></p>
<p><em>And thank goodness for that!  Ever since Clay left his country western band, he’s played everything too safe.  He needs to take a chance on Jane.  Besides, the more he tries to keep his distance, the more he’ll realize that he and Jane are singing the same tune.</em></p>
<p><em>But I should quit ramblin’ and go check on Millie’s permanent wave.  Next time you’re in Last Chance, be sure to swing by…we’ve got hot rollers, free coffee, and the best gossip in town.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>See you soon,</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Ruby Rhodes</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Serengeti Lightning</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Jul 2010 19:20:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivi Andrews</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[upcoming]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<div>

Copyright © 2010 Vivi Andrews</div>
<h4>All rights reserved — a Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication</h4>
<div>

On cue, the door squeaked open behind her and her breath caught. The hairs on  the back of Mara’s neck stood to attention. She didn’t need to look to know who  had just walked in. The temperature of the room escalated until Mara was tempted  to press the ice-cold glass against her temple. She swirled the amber liquid in  the tumbler, her eyes locked on the glass. She refused to look at him, but her  breathing quickened as her sharp ears picked out the sound of him prowling up  behind her. All thought of lists, plans and break-up speeches flew from her  mind.

“Mara.”

His voice was a delicious rumble. She felt it like a  hand, stroking from her nape to the base of her spine. Mara tightened her  fingers on the cool glass, focusing on the tactile sensation to keep from  melting into a puddle of hormones at his feet. “You’re late.”

Muscular  arms appeared on either side of her, caging her between the heat of his body at  her back and the unyielding wood of the bar at her front. “Sorry, gorgeous.  Unavoidable. I got held up.”

He was so close. The warmth of his breath  carried the words to caress the skin of her neck. Mara couldn’t have suppressed  her reaction even if she wanted to. A shiver snaked down her spine. Goose bumps  leapt up on her forearms. She set the whiskey glass back on the bar before she  dropped it—or crushed it in her grip, no longer sure of her ability to control  her leonine strength.

She braced her hands on the chipped wood of the  bar. Her fingers flexed and gripped the wood as she fought against the  instinctive urge to press back against the firm wall of his chest. She so rarely  resisted anything where Michael was concerned, throwing herself into each  moment. Coyness and playful obstinacy provided a delicious novelty.

“You  know I would never keep you waiting if I could help it,” he continued, the words  stroking against her skin.

Her eyes fell closed at the slumberous intent  in his voice. Heat pooled low in her belly. God, to think he hadn’t even touched  her yet.

Just the thought of his touch was enough. Her mind provided a  thousand vivid images of his hands on her, half memory, half fantasy. She knew  his touch, inside and out. She could almost feel his fingers probing her slick  folds. Her thighs clenched on another rush of wet heat.

He inhaled  sharply and she knew he’d scented her reaction. “Am I forgiven?” he asked  against her neck. The whisper-soft brush of his mouth was the only point of  contact between their bodies, but she felt him on every inch of her  skin.

Mara’s breath shuddered out. “Just this once,” she whispered, too  hungry for him to be mortified that he’d reduced her to panting need in the span  of a minute and a half.

“Good.” His mouth curved in a smile against her  throat. He pressed a quick kiss to her pulse point. Then his heat shifted,  drawing away from her abruptly as his arms released her from the cage of his  body. Mara bit her lip to keep from moaning at the loss.

Michael snagged  the barstool next to hers and dragged it closer. He didn’t so much sit on it as  lean against it, keeping his body angled toward hers. His eyes dropped to her  legs and his lips quirked in a little smile to let her know he appreciated the  view.

She kept still, turning only her head to meet the wicked sparkle in  his bright blue eyes. Landon, the pride’s Alpha, looked like a lion even in  human form—all tawny golds and browns. Not Michael. His hair was nearly black,  his eyes a striking pale blue.

Mara’s own feline pelt was the exact shade  of her not-quite-dark-enough-to-be-brown hair, her eyes a greeny-brown that  would have looked at home on any feline. When Michael walked as a lion, his mane  was nearly as dark as his hair, which was unusual but not unheard of among  lions.

It was his eyes that stood out. The pale, crisp blue looked  unnervingly human in his leonine face.

At one time, Mara had wondered  whether the oddly human appearance of his lion form was part of why he had such  difficulty drawing a line between the human and feline aspects of himself. The  animal was so much stronger in Michael than in any other shifter she’d ever met.  At first, that animalism had unnerved her. Now she found herself drawn to his  wildness. Something she never would have expected, given her own rigid  control.

He propped one muscled forearm on the bar in front of her and  Mara’s eyes locked on it. She’d been surrounded by strong men her entire life.  She didn’t know why the play of muscle beneath his sun-bronzed skin should be so  hypnotically fascinating, but she couldn’t tear her eyes away from the visible  evidence of his strength.

He scanned their less-than-impressive  surrounds. “So this is your idea of a romantic night out, eh, gorgeous? You  never cease to surprise me.”

Mara forced herself to focus on the playful  words, rather than the heavy pulse of lust still throbbing in her veins. “You  said you wanted a date. No one said anything about romance.”

He shrugged  and her attention snagged on the play of muscles across his shoulders. Had he  been working out? He’d always been strong, but now he was almost as heavily  muscled as his brothers. The youngest Minor brother had finally grown into those  divine shoulders. Mara licked her lips. <em>Hallelujah.</em>

“I thought  the romance angle was implied. This is…rustic.” He coughed.

Mara followed  his gaze. Rustic. That was putting it nicely. The Bar Nothing was a seedy  meat-market on a good day. Wednesday was apparently not a good day.

The  gloomy dive was populated by morose drunks at scarred tables, a chipped,  almost-sanitary bar, and a battered jukebox which had been stuck on moaning  country ballads ever since she walked in the door. He was right. It was a far  cry from romantic.

Michael grimaced as he took in the pair of  hard-drinking cowboys at a nearby table. “I feel like I’m on suicide  watch.”

Mara couldn’t even contradict him. This place was damned  depressing. And it was definitely killing the mood. The buzz of sexual friction  faded as the miserable reality around them sank into her skin.

She felt  like she was counting down the seconds to the death of their relationship. This  was supposed to be their last hurrah. It couldn’t end like this.

Mara  polished off the last mouthful of whiskey and set the empty glass on the bar.  “Let’s go home. I don’t know why we’re here in the first place.”

Michael  caught her barstool when she tried to spin away, spinning her back. “Hey, I’m  taking my girl out for a good time. That’s why we’re here. And we’re going to  have a good time.” He flashed her a grin, slathered in charm, and laid his hand,  palm up, on the bar in front of her. “Come dance with me. We’ll make our own  ambience.”

“Michael…”

“One dance. Then I promise to take you  straight back to the ranch and do unwholesome things to you all night  long.”

A smile tugged at her mouth. “Promise?”

He grinned.  “Scout’s honor, gorgeous. C’mon.”

Mara couldn’t work up much enthusiasm  for swaying back and forth to the world’s most depressing country song in the  world’s most depressing honky-tonk, but she took his hand anyway. She trailed  her lover onto the uneven slab of floor in front of the jukebox that doubled as  a dance floor and slipped naturally into his arms.

Two minutes ago she’d  been ready to jump his bones and now she just felt tired. Michael was so damned  charming. So determined to make their date a success.

He had no idea she  was going to break up with him tonight. Guilt sliced through her, further  souring her mood.

Not that he’d probably give a rat’s ass. But the  thought of having that conversation—the one where she told him there would be no  more sexual marathons and mind-blowing orgasms—weighed heavily in her stomach,  like she’d swallowed a boulder of doubt.

She kept her distance, leaning  back in the circle of his arms. No sense getting comfortable there. Those arms  wouldn’t be wrapped around her for much longer.

But Michael didn’t know  that.

“What’re you doing way over there?” he grumbled, hauling her  closer. He tucked her tight against him, her breasts pressed against his chest,  her thighs rubbing his firmly muscled legs as he swayed. The heat of his body  enveloped her, his strength a warm contrast to her softness, and the boulder of  doubt melted away.

She couldn’t think about tomorrow, or even later  tonight. All she could do was feel him.

The man was sin incarnate. His  strong arms wrapped around her, keeping her snug to his body as they rocked in  time with the lazy drawling rhythm of the song. The music was more heartache  than sex, but somehow in Michael’s arms it sounded like <em>Let’s Get It On</em> and <em>Sexual Healing</em> all rolled into one. Her body felt thick and warm,  as if every molecule were heating and expanding, but at the same time lighter  than air. If she weren’t holding onto his rock-hard biceps with both hands, she  could have floated away.

The hand he curved into the small of her back  began a slow, deliberate circle, teasing the upper flare of her ass, then  retreating again. His erection rubbed her stomach, a promise of the night to  come.

The last night.</div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Love can be a force of nature.</p>
<p><em>Serengeti Shifters, Book 3</em></p>
<p>Mara Leonard is through hitting the snooze button on her biological clock.  The Three Rocks Pride schoolteacher is ready to get serious about starting a  family, and she needs a serious man to make that happen.</p>
<p>Regrettably, that means crossing less-than-serious Michael Minor off her list  of potential mates. Michael is impulsive and passionate, but his spontaneity  leaks into shapeshifting whenever his emotions run high—a tendency he should  have outgrown long ago. As a sex buddy, he’s delicious. Daddy material?  Disqualified.</p>
<p>Michael is blindsided by Mara’s rejection. Nine years separate them, and his  genetic malady means no one in the pride treats him as an adult. But if she  thinks he’ll simply slink away to lick his wounds while she steps into the arms  of another man, she has seriously underestimated him.</p>
<p>The tricky part will be convincing his over-analytical lover that he’s more  than a disposable sex toy. That real bravery means tearing up her damn checklist  and following her heart. And doing it without letting their explosive sexual  chemistry expose the Pride’s secrets to the outside world.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Butterfly Swords</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jun 2010 12:57:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeannie Lin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[upcoming]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Chapter One
<i>Tang Dynasty China, 758 A.D.</i>
<p></p>
	The palanquin dipped sharply and Ai Li had to brace her hands against the sides to stay upright. Amidst the startled cries of her attendants, the enclosure lurched again before crashing to the ground with the splintering crack of wood. She gasped as the elaborate headdress toppled from her lap and she was thrown from her seat. A tight knot formed in her stomach and she fought to stay calm.
<p></p>
	What she heard next was unmistakable. The clash of metal upon metal just beyond the curtain that covered the wedding sedan. Sword-strike, a sound she woke up to every morning. With heart pounding, she struggled to free herself from the tangle of red silk about her ankles. This skirt, the entire dress was so heavy, laden with jewels and a hundred <i>li</i> of embroidery thread.
<p></p>
	She fumbled behind the padded cushions of her seat, searching frantically for her swords. She had put them there herself, needing some reminder of home while she was being sent so far away. The way another girl might find comfort in her childhood doll.
<p></p>
	Her hand finally closed around the hilt. She tightened her grip to stop from shaking. From outside, the sounds of fighting grew closer. She ignored the inner voice that told her this was madness and pulled the swords free. The short blades barely fit in the cramped space. She had no time for doubt, not when so much was at risk. With the tip of one sword, she pushed the curtain aside.
<p></p>A stream of sunlight blinded her momentarily. The servants scattered like a flock of cranes around her, all posts abandoned. Squinting, she focused onto the hulking figure that blocked the entrance and raised her blades in defense. 
<p></p>
A familiar voice cried out then. “<i>Gongzhu!</i>”
<p></p>
Old Wu, the elder lieutenant, rushed to her while she faced off against the stranger. Her armed escort struggled against a band of attackers. In the confusion, she couldn't tell who was who.
Wu pulled her behind the cover of the palanquin. The creases around his eyes deepened. “<i>Gongzhu</i>, you must go now.”
<p></p> “With them?” 
<p></p>She stared at the thugs surrounding her. Wu had been a bit too successful at finding men to pose as bandits. 
<p></p>“There are clothes, money.” 
<p></p>Wu spoke the instructions and the head “bandit” grabbed onto her arm. Instinctively, she dug in her heels to resist him. Everything was unfolding so quickly, but she had known there would be no turning back.
The stranger relaxed his grip, but did not release her. An act, she reminded herself, fighting the panic constricting her chest. 
<p></p>“There is no more time,” Wu pleaded.
<p></p>“Your loyalty will not be forgotten.”
<p></p>	She let herself be pulled through the trees, stumbling to keep up with the ragged band. Who were these men Old Wu had enlisted? When she looked back, he was standing beside the toppled sedan, his shoulders sagging as if he carried a sack of stones. The secret he’d revealed to her two days ago weighed her down as well. Ai Li hoped that she could trust him. 
<center>***</center>
<p></p>God’s teeth, the scent of cooking rice had never smelled so sweet.
<p></p>Ryam’s stomach clenched as he stared across the dirt road. An open air tavern stood empty save for the cook stirring an iron pot over the fire. The establishment was little more than a hut propped up in a clearing; four beams propping up a straw-thatched roof. Bare wooden benches offered weary travelers a place to rest between towns and partake of food and drink.
<p></p>Travelers with coin, of course. The only metal Ryam had touched in months was the steel of his sword. He was nearly hungry enough to eat that. 
<p></p>The proprietor perched at the entrance, whip-thin and wily in his black robe as he squinted down the vacant trail. Nothing but wooded thickets in either direction. A single dirt road cut through the brush, leading to the stand. 
<p></p>Ryam pulled his hood over his head with a sharp tug and retreated into the shade. He was too big, his skin too pale, a barbarian in the Chinese empire. Bái guǐ, they called him. White demon. Ghost man. 
<p></p>He wrestled with his pride, preparing to beg if he had to. Before he could approach, a mottled shape appeared in the glare of the afternoon sun. The proprietor jumped into motion and waved the newcomer into the tavern. 
<p></p><i>“Huānyíng, guìzú, huānyíng,”</i> the proprietor gushed. His head bobbed as he bowed and bowed again.
<p></p>Welcome, my lord, welcome. 
<p></p>Four men followed the first traveler inside and tossed their weapons with a clatter onto the table. Their presence forced Ryam back beneath the branches. A heartbeat later, he realized what was bothering him. That was no man at the center of this rough bunch. <p></p>Not with hips that swayed like that. He was wrong about many things, but there was no mistaking the instinctive stir of his blood at the sight of her. 
<p></p>The woman wore an owl-gray tunic over loose-fitting trousers. A woolen cap hid her hair. With her height, she could have passed for a lanky youth. She affected a lofty confidence as she addressed the proprietor. Behavior appropriate for a male of superior status. 
<p></p>Ryam knew the rules of status. As a foreigner he was the lowest creature on the ladder, a hair above lepers and stray dogs. It was one of the reasons he skirted the backcountry, avoiding confrontation. Today, the promise of a hot meal had tempted him into the open. The sight of this woman tempted him in another way. Beneath the formless clothing, she moved with a fluid grace that made his pulse quicken. He had forgotten that irrational pleasure of being distracted by a pretty girl. Blind masculine instinct aside, the determination with which she carried on with her ruse made him smile. 
<p></p>He wasn’t the only one paying such careful attention to her. The proprietor cast a scrutinizing glance over his shoulder while he spoke to the cook, then donned his previously submissive demeanor as he returned to the table, balancing bowls of rice soup on a tray. Apparently, the woman overestimated the effectiveness of her disguise. 
<p></p>The proprietor set down the last bowl before his customers, then looked up. His mouth twisted into a scowl the moment he saw Ryam across the road. 
<p></p>“Away with you!” He strode to the edge of the stand. “Worthless son of a dog.” 
<p></p>	Ryam let his hand trail to the sword hidden beneath his cloak. He had become a master at biting his tongue, but the sun bore into him like bamboo needles and the ache in his belly felt all the more hollow. Under normal circumstances, he wouldn’t think to use his weapon against this fool, but he seriously considered it as the verbal abuse continued. It was like being pecked to death by an irate rooster. 
	<p></p>He gritted his teeth. “The old man does not own this road,” he muttered. 
<p></p>At least he hoped he said that. All the years on this side of the world and the only phrases he had at his command were bawdy insults and a smattering of pillow talk.
<p></p>The rooster ducked inside only to re-emerge with a club bigger than his arm. Ryam straightened to his full height with a warning growl. From her seat, the woman craned her neck at the disturbance. The men around her turned in unison. The four of them pinned him with their cold stares. He was making a wonderful impression. 
	<p></p>“Leave him, Uncle.” The woman’s voice rang clear across the road, lowered in an attempt to further her pretense. “He means no harm to you.”
	<p></p>The proprietor backed away, muttering about foreign devils. The woman rose then, and Ryam stiffened with his back pressed against the tree. Now was the time to leave, but pure stubbornness held him in place. Stubbornness or reckless curiosity. 
<p></p>He focused his attention onto her boots as she came near. The hilt of a weapon teased over the edge of the tanned leather. He wondered if she could wield it with any skill.
<p></p>“Are you hungry, Brother?”
<p></p>She held her bowl out to him, extending her arm with great care as if approaching a wild beast. The steam from the rice carried hints of ginger and scallions to his nose and his stomach twisted in greedy little knots. 
<p></p>He was well aware of how he must look to her. Another one of the hordes of beggars and vagrants roaming the empire since the collapse of the old regime. Against his better judgment, he lifted his head and for the barest second, he forgot that he was stranded and that he was starving. 
<p></p>Her eyes widened as she met his gaze. Hazel eyes, like the turning of autumn leaves. How anyone could mistake her for a man was beyond his understanding. 
<p></p>Now that she had seen who he was, he assumed she would recoil in fear or disgust or, even worse, pity. Instead she regarded him with curious interest. Next to kindness, it was the last reaction he expected. 
<p></p><i>“Xiè xie.”</i> He mumbled his thanks as he took the food from her slack fingers. Any words he knew would be inadequate for this moment. 
<p></p>She nodded wordlessly and backed away, still staring. Only when she had returned to her companions did she turn away. By then the rice had gone cold. He gulped it down in three swallows and set the bowl on the ground before pausing to steal a final glance.
<p></p>Inside the hut, the group finished their meal with little conversation and tossed a scatter of copper coins onto the table. A sense of desolation fell over him when she turned to go, but she did look back. He nodded once in farewell. They were both in hiding after all. He in the shadows and the woman behind her disguise.
<p></p>Once she disappeared down the road, he scarcely had time to straighten before the old man returned with his club and his viper tongue. Ryam presented his back to the stream of insults. 
<p></p>He trudged westward, as he had done for the last month. The last remnants of their legion remained in the marshlands outside the northwestern border. Perhaps he would no longer be welcome, but he had no other place to go. 
<p></p>Five years ago, they had fought their way across the silk routes to end up at the edge of the Tang Empire. The Emperor had tolerated their presence, but his last blunder had likely destroyed any hope of a continued truce. 
<p></p>A hundred paces from the tavern and his step began to drag. He swayed, caught off guard by the lurch in his step. A tingling sensation stole to his fingertips and toes. This feeling was all too familiar. Heavy headed, off balance, tongue thick in his mouth. 
<p></p>He was drunk.
<p></p>Not drunk, drugged. The little beauty had drugged him and then abandoned him. But that didn’t make any sense. Cursing, he shook his head to clear the fog in his skull. Thinking was becoming an even harder task than moving. 
<p></p>The woman had given him her food...which meant the drug was meant for her. 
<p></p>He reached for his sword then froze with his fingers clenched over the hilt. This was the sort of impulse that had almost gotten him killed. His head spun with whatever they had slipped into the rice. He grappled with the odds. He was an outsider. He knew nothing about her or her bodyguards. 
<p></p>But those startling eyes had looked at him as if he was something more than an animal. 
<p></p><i>To hell with it.</i> 
<p></p>Lifting one leaden foot after another, he forced himself around and drew his sword, lumbering back toward of the tavern. The old proprietor shrieked when he saw him. The stack of bowls he carried crashed to the ground as the man scrambled for cover. Ryam ran past him and continued down the road.
<p></p>He heard shouting in the distance and tore through the brush in pursuit of it. Branches snapped against him, scraping over his arms and face. He stumbled into a clearing and everything slammed into his head at once; the pound of footsteps and the flash of steel. A dozen bandits armed with knives surrounded the swordsmen from the tavern. Ryam blinked through the haze clouding his eyes and searched for the girl.
<p></p>She stood her ground at the center of the swarm, wielding a blade in each hand. The swords flew in a whirl of motion. Rushing forward, Ryam slammed his shoulder into one of her opponents and then struck the hilt of his sword against the man’s skull. The bandit crumbled to the ground. 
<p></p>One down. With an air of satisfaction, he swung to face her, grasping at the proper words. “I’m a friend—” 
<p></p>Her boot slammed neatly into his groin. 
<p></p>Pain exploded through his entire body. Nauseatingly bad pain. He should have left her to the wolves.
<p></p>Without mercy, she came at him with the swords while he was doubled over. He hefted his blade up and parried once and then again. God’s feet, she was fast. He shoved her aside roughly. His body begged to sink to the dirt. 
<p></p>“Here to help,” he ground out.
<p></p>Her arm stopped mid-strike as she focused on him. Another one of her companions collapsed as the drugs took effect and the bandits circled closer. She swung around, swords raised to face the next attack. 
<p></p>The battle continued for him in bits and pieces. He struck out again and once again he connected. In minutes he would be as useless. He grabbed the woman’s arm. 
<p></p>“Too many,” he forced out. 
<p></p>She hesitated, scanning the field before going with him. More bandits gave chase, but he drove them back with a wild swing of his blade. Then he was running. Tall grass whipped at him while his world tilted, strangely yellow and dark at the edges. He blinked and when he opened his eyes the surroundings were unfamiliar. The woman had pulled ahead and she was shouting something at him. He stumbled and the next thing he knew was the smack of solid earth against his chin. 
<p></p>The muddled taste of blood and dirt seeped into his mouth. Spitting, he rolled himself over, his arms and legs dragging. He could no longer feel them. He could no longer feel anything. 
<p></p>The swordswoman hovered over him, her lips moving soundlessly. He fought against the blackness that seduced his eyelids downward, but the ground felt really, really good. Unable to resist any longer, he let his eyes close. He hoped he’d have a chance to open them again.

<p></p><i> Copyright &#169; 2010 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited </i>
<i> Copyright &#169; 2010 by Jeannie Lin </i>
<i> Permissions to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A. Cover art used by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises Limited. All rights reserved. &#174; and &#8482; are trademarks of Harlequin Enterprises Limited and/or its affiliated companies, used under license.  </i>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><em>Journey to the very edge of honor, loyalty . . . and love</em></strong><em> </em></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p>During China’s infamous Tang Dynasty, a time awash with luxury, yet littered with deadly intrigues and fallen royalty, betrayed Princess Ai Li flees before her wedding.</p>
<p>Miles from home, with only her delicate butterfly swords for a defense, she enlists the reluctant protection of a blue-eyed warrior…</p>
<p>Battle-scarred, embittered Ryam has always held his own life at cheap value. Ai Li’s innocent trust in him and honorable, stubborn nature make him desperate to protect her – which means <em>not</em> seducing the first woman he has ever truly wanted….</p>
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		<title>Masquerade</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/masquerade/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 16:07:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Heather McCollum</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[MASQUERADE: Book Three of THE DRAGONFLY CHRONICLES
Orphanage director by day, jewel thief by night. Using her magic to rob from the rich to keep the orphanage running seems like the perfect solution until Kat steals from the wrong man, a man who sees through her magic, a man who can see the scars she hides [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><strong>MASQUERADE: Book Three of THE DRAGONFLY CHRONICLES</strong></p>
<p>Orphanage director by day, jewel thief by night. Using her magic to rob from the rich to keep the orphanage running seems like the perfect solution until Kat steals from the wrong man, a man who sees through her magic, a man who can see the scars she hides from the world.</p>
<p>Toren MacCallum is cursed. An old witch tore him from his sixteenth century world and threw him into the twenty-first century. But he’s found an ancient dragonfly necklace to bait the witch to return him to his time. For he must find a way home to save his sister and his clan from disappearing off the pages of history.</p>
<p>When a mysterious woman steals the necklace in front of a hundred witnesses, the witch, followed by a storm of demons, sends Kat and him to Elizabethan England. Toren agrees to return the necklace, but he won’t give up the greater prize, the thief who’s stolen his heart.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Magick</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/magick/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 16:04:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Heather McCollum</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[MAGICK: Book Two of THE DRAGONFLY CHRONICLES
ISBN# 9781601548207
Fury and guilt assail Hauk, a fierce Viking warrior, after he allows false healers to cure his family to death. When he’s ordered to capture the Great Witch of the Woods in Northumbria, he doesn’t anticipate that his hatred for all things magick would be challenged by a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><strong>MAGICK: Book Two of THE DRAGONFLY CHRONICLES</strong></p>
<p align="center">ISBN# 9781601548207</p>
<p>Fury and guilt assail Hauk, a fierce Viking warrior, after he allows false healers to cure his family to death. When he’s ordered to capture the Great Witch of the Woods in Northumbria, he doesn’t anticipate that his hatred for all things magick would be challenged by a long-legged beauty with sparking brown eyes.</p>
<p>Even with her great healing powers, Merewin’s fear of failure nearly cripples her resilient spirit. Strong wills clash as Merewin and Hauk battle their instant attraction. Can Hauk trust a healer with his remaining family and with his heart? Can Merewin conquer her own pride to love this powerful man who possesses an unacknowledged magic of his own? In the end Merewin and Hauk must put their faith in each other and in their love. For love is the only magick that can heal someone’s soul.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Prophecy</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/prophecy-book-one-of-the-dragonfly-chronicles/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/prophecy-book-one-of-the-dragonfly-chronicles/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 15:55:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Heather McCollum</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[upcoming]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Coming Soon]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>PROPHECY: Book One of THE DRAGONFLY CHRONICLES</strong></p>
<p>ISBN # 9781601547231</p>
<p>Serena Faw must shut out the barrage of thoughts from everyone around her. Her telepathic powers reveal the darkness and true intentions behind every false smile. When her adopted brother is accused of murder, the only man who can help her is the one person she cannot read. Can she trust him with the life of her brother? Can she trust him with her heart?</p>
<p>Keenan Maclean is the younger brother to the new chief of the Macleans. A dark prophecy shadows him. One brother will live wed to a witch and one will die. Keenan is raised to defend his clan and die.</p>
<p>Serena and Keenan hunt a loyalist murderer before the Battle of Culloden and fall in love despite the prophecy’s warning that she heralds his death.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Vegas Two Step</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/vegas-two-step/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/vegas-two-step/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Mar 2010 13:25:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Liz Talley</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Coming Soon!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Naughty…or…Nice?</p>
<p>Nellie Hughes decides she’s a little bit like Hannah Montana – she wants the best of both worlds. So she sets out to shed her dowdy small town image for the sexy alter ego Elle Hughes and a trip to Vegas. After all, who’s really gonna know what she does in Sin City?</p>
<p>But even with her inhibitions cut loose, Nellie finds it hard to leave her good girl behind, especially with her late Grandmother Tucker’s sensible sayings popping into her subconscious. But when she runs into the gorgeous nightclub owner Jack Darby, she’s ready to quash her inner librarian. He’s everything she could ever dream of in a guy, so she embarks on a five day spree of martinis, limousines, and make-out sessions. No big deal. Except her heart isn’t buying it.</p>
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		<title>The Sexorcist</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/the-sexorcist/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Mar 2010 19:01:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivi Andrews</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Brittany Hylton-VanDeere believed in Love at First Sight the same way born-agains believed in their Savior—with a fervor that was awe-inspiring and, at times, downright frightening.
</p><p>
Her instant adorations were not limited to people. Oh no. She was just as likely to fall suddenly, madly in love with a car, a pair of shoes, a skinny-half-caf-no-foam latte, or a new job.
</p><p>
Especially a new job.
</p><p>
When she first walked through the door to Karmic Consultants, she <em>knew</em>, with a passion that was as sincere as it was irrational, this was The One. This was where she belonged.
</p><p>
Karmic Consultants was a place where people <em>believed</em>. Where the outside-the-everyday happened every single day. And where one slightly-off-kilter, cockeyed optimist such as herself could fit right in.
</p><p>
No two ways about it. Brittany was in love.
</p><p>
And then she saw <em>him</em>.
</p><p>
The man who stomped into Karma’s office was unlike anyone in Brittany’s—admittedly limited—experience of men.
</p><p>
For one thing, he was swearing. And calling himself a gigolo. Or rather, not a gigolo, which really only seemed like the kind of protest a gigolo would feel the need to make. So, clearly a gigolo. A swearing gigolo. And a hot one.
</p><p>
<em>Hot</em> was not a word Brittany often had cause to use regarding the men of her acquaintance—the men her family approved of. Proper, yes. Distinguished, absolutely. Respectable? Heck yes, with a side of darn straight.
</p><p>
But <em>hot</em>? Sizzling, smoking, white-hot-sex-on-a-tropical-beach-in-front-of-God-and-everyone hot? That was another matter.
</p><p>
He had tattoos. Tribal, lay-me-naked-on-the-altar-as-an-offering-to-the-gods-of-sex tattoos that slashed and spiraled their way up his deliciously muscled arms to disappear beneath the short sleeves of his snug black T-shirt. Brittany’s eyes traced those heavy black markings and she imagined she could hear the sound of distant drums. Aboriginal. Primal. Oh yeah, Mr. I’m-Not-A-Gigolo was primal, all right.
</p><p>
Hair so black it had blue highlights tumbled over his brow in a disarray so carelessly sexy it would have taken the average mortal two hours and seventeen different greasy hair products to reproduce it. Big Sexy here probably rolled out of bed looking that good.
</p><p>
He was tall-ish, but not grotesquely so, which Brittany appreciated, being a bit on the petite side herself. She’d have to tip her head back for a kiss, but he wasn’t so huge he could tuck her under his arm like a football.
</p><p>
He strode into the room and toward Karma’s desk without glancing a single time in Brittany’s direction—so she could only speculate on the color of his eyes.
</p><p>
Emerald, perhaps? Or maybe a deep, mossy hue?
</p><p>
Green was Brittany’s favorite color, and if he was going to be her dream man, he could at least be so considerate as to have her favorite color eyes. She’d let him pick the shade.
</p><p>
He folded his tattooed, muscled forearms across his chest and glowered at the cool, composed, and utterly unfazed woman behind the desk.
</p><p>
Karma rose from her chair. “Rodriguez, if you could wait outside for just a moment…” She waved an elegant hand in Brittany’s direction.
</p><p>
Rodriguez’s gaze tracked the movement to where Brittany sat. He grimaced and turned back to Karma. Brittany internally flinched at being so summarily dismissed.
</p><p>
“Sorry,” he grunted. “Didn’t realize you had a client in here.”
</p><p>
Brittany bounced out of her chair. She was not a client. And she would not be brushed aside. She hadn’t even gotten a good look at his eyes yet.
</p><p>
“I’m not a client. I’m the secretary.” She tried to sound definitive. Professional. But she hadn’t had much experience with professionalism and she had a feeling she sounded more like a cheerleader. She’d never been a cheerleader, but people tended to express outright shock when she told them that. Apparently cheerleader was more a type than an occupation. She hoped secretaries were just occupations. If it was a type, she might be in trouble.
</p><p>
She really wanted this job. They <em>believed</em> here.
</p><p>
In everything, except her, apparently.
</p><p>
Rodriguez didn’t even turn his head this time. He just slid her a look out of the corner of his eyes. “This week’s disaster?” he asked Karma with a wry twist to his mouth.
</p><p>
Brittany stiffened, balling her hands into fists. He may be sexy and primal and all, but that didn’t give him an excuse for being rude. Rudeness was never called for. “Excuse me,” Brittany clipped off the words, channeling her mother in disciplining-the-underlings mode. “I am an excellent secretary.” Or rather she was sure she would be, if she put her mind to it. She had yet to find an occupation she couldn’t master. She would master this one too. Provided being a secretary didn’t require being the secretary <em>type</em>. “I am going to be here far longer than a week and I am not a disaster.”
</p><p>
Rodriguez treated her as if she hadn’t spoken at all. He turned all of his attention to Karma as if Brittany weren’t standing right there being brilliantly secretarial.
</p><p>
“Mrs. Sullivan called up a demon to possess her own daughter just because she wanted me to come to her house to exorcise it,” he growled.
</p><p>
The subtle warmth of his accent wrapped around the words, sending little hubba-hubba chills down Brittany’s spine and distracting her from the words themselves—and from the fact that she was irritated with him. Really, who could be irritated with a man whose very voice licked words into submission?
</p><p>
Karma gave a low laugh. “Well, that’s one kind of job security. Far be it from me to question our clients’ needs to pay us to eradicate problems they cause themselves.”
</p><p>
“She wanted me to come to her house so she could screw me,” Rodriguez snapped. “She might as well have opened the door bare-ass naked with a condom in one hand for all the subtlety she had about it.”
</p><p>
Brittany took a step toward where they were squared off across the desk, inserting herself back into the conversation. “At least she was thinking about safe sex. STDs are a real risk. Not to mention birth control. Did she really open the door naked?”
</p><p>
Rodriguez shot her a hot glare—his eyes too slitted for her to get a good look at the color—then turned back to Karma. Dismissed <em>again</em>.
</p><p>
“They’re taking bets,” he snarled at his boss. “This <em>putana</em>,” he spat the word like an epithet, so Brittany decided it must be, “she came right out and admitted that they are betting on which one of them can get me into the sack first. A bunch of goddamn bored homemakers with too much time on their hands have painted a goddamn target on my ass.”
</p><p>
Karma winced. “It’s a compliment, of sorts,” she said without conviction.
</p><p>
“It’s demeaning.”
</p><p>
Well, yes. It was that. But Brittany could definitely see the housewives’ side of it. She was tempted to paint a bull’s-eye of her own. The man was hot.
</p><p>
Not that she would ever wager on him. That did seem rather insulting. Although, she couldn’t say for sure. No one had ever bet on getting her into bed. Which was kind of sad really. What was wrong with her that men weren’t placing bets on her as a sex object? Not even frat boys! Weren’t they known for that kind of behavior? Wasn’t she sexy enough?
</p><p>
Rodriguez slapped his hands palm down on the wide black slab of marble that was Karma’s desk, jolting Brittany from her musings. “This has to stop. I’m not taking any more calls from desperate housewives. You can send another exorcist.”
</p><p>
Karma grimaced. “You’ll have to take over the holy site jobs then. And I’ll have to figure out some way to convince Edwin that it isn’t beneath him to do residential work. Are you sure you aren’t willing to just take a bonus? Hazard pay?”
</p><p>
A sound came out of Rodriguez’s throat that distinctly resembled a growl. Brittany shivered. He was so animalistic. If only he weren’t also ignoring her so completely.
</p><p>
“Do I look like I’m for sale? If you pay me extra every time some trophy wife gropes me, you might as well start advertising my goddamn stud fee as part of the exorcism package. I will not be paid to be molested.”
</p><p>
Karma sighed and dropped back into her chair. “I’ll work something out with Edwin. And we’ll screen the new clients more carefully in the future. You won’t have to go back there again.”
</p><p>
“I better not,” Rodriguez grumbled, shoving himself away from the desk and striding back toward the door. “A goddamn pit of vipers would be preferable.”
</p><p>
He was leaving? So soon?</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everything that can go wrong, will…especially when a demon <em>helps</em> things along.</p>
<p><em>Karmic Consultants, Book 3</em></p>
<p>When a mischief demon threatens a wedding, who’s a Karmic Consultant gonna  call? Brittany Hylton-VanDeere. Brittany’s never planned a wedding before, but  how hard could averting demon-induced matrimonial disasters be? Her particular  brand of cockeyed optimism has always carried her through—but this time there’s  a complication. A tattooed, badass exorcist who’s tempting her to break the  no-office-dating rule.</p>
<p>Luis Rodriguez isn’t sure what to make of bright-eyed, somewhat illogical  Brittany, but he’ll take any job that gives him a break from exorcising demons  for pampered, lusting housewives. Helping pull off a wedding is not exactly his  idea of a break, but who knew that Brittany’s infectious enthusiasm would be so,  so seductive?</p>
<p>As the demon keeps finding ways to throw Brittany and Rodriguez together,  they find themselves sliding deeper into a forbidden romance. But distractions  are something they can’t afford. The demon’s aggression is rising, and it plans  to stop the wedding. Even if it means stopping Brittany…permanently.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Lily in Wonderland</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/lily-in-wonderland/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/lily-in-wonderland/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Sep 2009 16:27:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kelly Fitzpatrick</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[(coming soon)]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lily has a past, an adiction problem, and legs that are nearly as long as her criminal record.  Lily also has dead bodies piling up around her.  Deputy Toby Dodd thought he wanted to settle down with a nice girl, until he met Lily.  Bad girls need love too.</p>
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		<title>Shifting Dreams</title>
		<link>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/shifting-dreams/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rubyslipperedsisterhood.com/rss/index.php/shifting-dreams/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Sep 2009 07:43:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivi Andrews</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[(Coming Soon)]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>One way or the other, the fur’s gonna fly…</em></p>
<p><strong><em>The Man of Her Dreams</em> by Robie Madison</strong><br />
When Megan inherits an antique locket, she’s shocked to discover her dream lover’s portrait inside. The same man who defends her against the wild stallion of her nightmares.</p>
<p>After 170 years suspended between man and beast, Owain has three days to regain human form…if he can win Megan’s unconditional love. Or remain the object of her nightmares. Forever.</p>
<p><strong><em>Serengeti Heat</em> by Vivi Andrews</strong><br />
As the smallest in a pride of shape-shifting lions, Ava’s always had to toe the line. Now, with a sexy new alpha in control, she grabs her chance to revel in one wild night.</p>
<p>When Ava crosses his path, all Landon’s noble intentions are incinerated by her heat. And he has no intention of letting his rebellious, seductive lioness go…</p>
<p><strong><em>Kiss and Kin </em>by Kinsey W. Holley</strong><br />
Lark has always been in love with her cousin by marriage, Taran. But he’s always treated her like a child. Little does she know Taran couldn’t bear her pity—or her disgust—if she learned he wants her for his mate.</p>
<p>Now someone wants her dead. Keeping her safe means keeping her close—and it’s getting harder to keep their paws off.</p>
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