Free Read Novels Online Home

Hot Soldier Cowboy (The Blackjacks Book 2) by Cindy Dees (7)

Chapter Seven

Mac’s hand wandered to Susan’s hair, stroking it gently as she sprawled half on top of him, dead to the world. What in the hell was he going to do about her? He shouldn’t even think about her in that way, let alone have feelings for her. He was on a mission, for God’s sake.

His impulse to play amateur psychologist was huge. Every time she called herself crippled or told him what she couldn’t do, it set his teeth on edge. One of the first lessons of special ops was to think positive. Concentrate on what assets you have and what you can do with them.

But it wasn’t as if Susan was going to listen to him anytime soon. She could hardly stand to be in the same state with him. Unless… He turned the idea over in his head. It might just work—a little reverse psychology to get Susan defending her abilities. It was worth a try. If that killer kiss they’d shared last night hadn’t convinced her that he didn’t give a damn about her bum knee, not much else was likely to work.

One step at a time. First he had to gain her trust. Then he could show her how valuable a person she was. And then he could move on to the real challenge—gaining her forgiveness.

At least she was speaking to him now. It was an improvement over the past ten years of stony silence. He’d asked Tex once if she ever mentioned him, and her brother hadn’t hesitated in answering, “Never.”

He could only hope she wasn’t so far gone that he couldn’t rescue her from the lonely, unhappy world she’d locked herself away in. Whether or not Susan wanted to admit it, there was definitely something simmering between them that still had to be dealt with. Something spicy and wild. Ten years ago their relationship had been sensational. But last night…that kiss had been in another class altogether. Hot. Racy. Unlike anything that had ever passed between them. He wanted to know more about this new, even sexier Susan. A lot more.

But not here. Not now. They were in the middle of a dangerous situation, and he needed to make decisions with his head, not his cock.

Despite his assurances to her, this mission had a couple of serious problems.

In the first place, they were undermanned. Tex was on a well-earned vacation with his fiancée, Colonel Foley was back at Ops getting the paperwork and permissions for an arrest or execution of Ramon Ruala, and it would be a couple more days before Doc and Howdy got back from Washington.

In the second place, Ruala was a highly dangerous opponent no matter what the environment, unpredictable and smart.

Protective worry for her surged in his gut. He would keep her safe. At all costs. And that was their third problem. The surest and fastest way to send a mission straight to hell was to inject personal feelings into the mix. They were distracting, caused undisciplined behaviors and bad decisions, and were a general pain in the butt.

The way the other guys on the squad were standing back from Susan bothered him. Like he’d staked out his territory with her. He supposed Dutch could’ve made out with Susan instead of him while he tracked the scout

Mac’s thoughts derailed abruptly. Damn. The very thought of Dutch doing with Susan what he’d done last night had just shot his heart rate up thirty points and sent a rush of hot, adolescent rage to his face.

He froze beneath her sleeping form. He was in trouble, here.

Susan murmured sleepily, her hand wandering across his chest, her mouth nuzzling the base of his neck like a kitten seeking food. Her thigh rode higher, rubbing him in places that didn’t need to be rubbed just now. He gritted his teeth and tried to think of cold, painful things. It didn’t help.

“Take it easy, honey,” he murmured into her hair. “You’re killing me, here.”

Her reaction was violent. She lurched upright, awakening with a squawk of outrage. “How dare you let me do that!”

“How dare I…?” he spluttered.

“Yes! How dare you!”

He glared at her, matching her outrage. “How am I to blame because you were crawling all over me in your sleep?”

She glared back at him. “You just are.”

“Hey. I’m out here putting my neck on the line to save your cute behind. A little gratitude wouldn’t hurt.”

“Gratitude? Why you arrogant…oaf! Why don’t you just go home?”

The insult bit a lot deeper than he wanted to let on. She’d been the one with the stellar future before her as a brilliant computer scientist. He’d been just a slogging soldier. Except now they were on his turf. This was his world, his area of expertise.

“An oaf, am I? Who found the scout last night? Who laid the false trail away from our camp to buy us time this morning?” He couldn’t shout, but he did lean forward until he was nose to nose with her. “Who spent the past three hours doing a perimeter check of this whole godforsaken corner of Texas so you could have a peaceful nap? And who spent a solid hour hauling water so your damn horses could have a drink?”

That made her blink. “You hauled water?”

“Yeah,” he grumbled.

“Damn you, Mac Conlon! Just when I was sure I hated your guts, why did you have to go and do something thoughtful like that?”

He stared down at her, shocked. “Thoughtful? We need the horses, so I took care of the asset.”

“It was still kind of you to take care of them so quickly,” Susan declared.

He added slowly, “Do you have any idea how many people I’ve killed in the last decade?”

“No, and I don’t want to know. Thank you for watering my horses.”

“You’re welcome,” he mumbled. Kind? Him? Not hardly. Mac couldn’t remember the last time he’d met a woman who was completely unimpressed by his work. Yet here was Susan, tickled pink he’d watered her horses and totally disinterested in the number of people he’d killed. He couldn’t say that about most of the women he met. Groupies who wanted to bed Special Forces types were abundant near the military bases where the teams were stationed.

But what about being loved? The question crept insidiously into his consciousness and stuck there. He tried to shake it off, but it wouldn’t go away. What did he care about love? It was a weak emotion meant for women. Another thought wormed its way inside his head. Susan had loved him once. And it had been pretty damned wonderful.

Dammit! He wasn’t going down that path again. Love had been great right up until the part where his whole life and hers had come crashing down upon his head. Would that cursed night never end? Its horror stretched on and on in front of him, swallowing his whole life in that one, black moment.

All he had to do was close his eyes to hear the shots ringing out below him. A high-powered rifle. Ripping into the thin metal skin of the surveillance van like Godzilla’s claws. He could still feel the gut-wrenching nausea of realizing Susan was caught inside a tin-can deathtrap with bullets ricocheting around in it like pinballs. He’d never run so fast in his life. He had one lousy pistol on him. Nine shots. But by God, he’d nicked Ruala. Made the bastard take cover and then run before police arrived. More important, he’d backed Ruala off of taking any more shots at Susan.

He’d been out of his mind with terror when he literally tore open the van’s ruined door with his bare hands as the fire Ruala had set to burn it licked at the interior. He would never forget the sight of Susan crumpled on the ground, lying in a huge pool of her own blood. He’d died inside. Right there on the spot. Until she took a single rattling breath. It was the longest couple of seconds of his life until she drew the next one. And then the paramedics had shoved him aside and hauled her away to the nearest hospital.

He still felt guilty as hell for not anticipating that she would take the van and try to do the surveillance on Ferrare’s meeting by herself. He should’ve seen it coming. She’d been too smart to buy his line that the Blackjacks were just walking away from the mission. She was too confident, too focused on nailing Ferrare to walk away herself. He’d underestimated her. And the rest was history.

“Could you please step outside?” Susan’s voice intruded upon Mac’s bleak thoughts. He blinked as a tent came back into focus overhead.

“It’s my turn to sleep,” he protested. That probably didn’t make any sense to her. He tried again. “I’m supposed to be asleep right now. I’m taking the first watch tonight.” He didn’t add that he hadn’t slept at all last night and wouldn’t sleep tonight, either. He could go sixty hours without sleep if he had to, but it was no fun, and he’d rather skip the stimulant pills.

“You can sleep as soon as I’ve changed my clothes and freshened up” she retorted. “I’m wearing half the dirt in Texas right now.”

He supposed cranky was better than that long-suffering-victim mode of hers. Rather than burn any more time arguing with her, he just crawled out of the tent. He passed in a jug of water for her and stood up, surveying their position.

Susan eventually appeared beside him. “Go take your precious nap. I’m going to check on the horses.”

“Gee, thanks,” he said dryly. It was probably just as well that she was being antagonistic. It made objectivity where she was concerned a whole lot easier to achieve.

* * *

Susan headed for the horses, a little farther up the valley. The task of brushing them usually was soothing to her, but today her thoughts kept going around in circles. She was supposed to hate Mac. But she kept remembering how good it used to be between them. Kept wanting to crawl all over him. Kept wishing he found her as attractive as she did him. But that was a dead-end road. She couldn’t get rid of the scars or the limp. Except when he’d put his arms around her and kissed her into oblivion last night, her imperfections suddenly hadn’t seemed nearly as important.

The horses’ coats glistened, and still she had come up with no profound revelations. Frustrated, she headed back toward camp. A movement up high caught her eye. It was Dutch, stretched out on the ground, peering over the ridge through a pair of binoculars. She picked her way up to his position.

“See anything interesting?” she murmured.

He passed her the binoculars. “Look for yourself.”

She put the lenses to her eyes and another camp leaped into view. Ruala and another man stood by a truck, smoking. She recoiled sharply. “They’re so close!” she gasped, startled.

“They’re about a half mile away,” Dutch replied. “These are high-powered binocs.”

“What’s keeping them from just walking into our camp?” she asked.

Dutch grinned over his shoulder at her. “Besides the fact that we’d blow their heads off if they tried?”

She gestured at Ruala and his men. “They don’t know that.”

“They don’t know we wouldn’t do it, either. Ruala’s suspicious of us, but he’s not willing to chance a confrontation until he knows more about who we are.”

“How will he learn more about us?”

Dutch shrugged. “He’ll try to draw us out, test us, maybe. We’ll no doubt play some cat and mouse games with him tonight.”

“You sound like you’re looking forward to that.”

He grinned wolfishly at her. “I am.”

Susan shuddered. She didn’t like being a mouse one bit. Especially with a deadly cat like Ruala camped over the next hill.

“Can I bring you anything, Dutch?”

“Nah, I’m fine. But you could…”

“What?”

“Never mind. It’s none of my business.”

“What were you going to say?” she prompted. “It was about Mac, wasn’t it?”

“Yeah,” he answered reluctantly. “Back off a little, okay? He hasn’t slept much since the colonel told us you were in trouble. He didn’t get any sleep last night, and he’s going to be up all night tonight.”

She hadn’t realized…and she’d been snippy to him about taking a nap, too. Sheesh. She owed him an apology.

“Thanks for telling me, Dutch. I’ll leave him alone.”

“No problem.” The Viking trained his binoculars on his quarry once more.

She puttered around the camp, fidgeting really, trying to keep her mind off cats and mice until Mac woke up. He emerged from the tent just as the sun touched the western horizon.

Susan held out a canteen. “Water?”

He took the canteen and tipped it up. The tanned column of his throat caught her attention, its corded muscles contracting each time he swallowed. Lord, he oozed sex appeal.

He handed the canteen back to her. “Thanks.”

He sounded distant. Impersonal. Panic tickled her ribs. “Look, Mac. I shouldn’t have snapped at you earlier. I appreciate you putting your neck on the line for me.”

He looked hard at her but didn’t say anything.

She swallowed her pride and added, “I’m sorry.”

He nodded briefly, acknowledging her apology. Drat. Why did he have to go all strong and silent on her now, when she was laying her guts out to him? “Truce?” she tried.

He considered her for a moment. Then his dimples flashed in that devastating grin of his. “Truce.”

Relief poured over her. She watched Mac sit down on a boulder and rip open a brown plastic pouch he’d dug out of his pack. He pulled out something that looked marginally like food.

“What’s that?” Susan asked dubiously.

“Supper,” he replied with obviously false enthusiasm. “Want an MRE of your own? Stands for meal-ready-to-eat. Seventeen hundred calories of prepackaged cardboard, but it’ll keep you going.”

“Aren’t you at least going to add water to that…stuff?”

He grinned. “We reserve that for gourmet occasions. I suppose this qualifies.” He pulled out another MRE and added water, squishing it around in the plastic pouch. In a cheesy Italian accent, he said, “For your dining pleasure, I geeva to you zee beefa ravioli.”

Susan grinned. “Dehydrated ravioli, huh? Sounds yummy.”

They ate in companionable silence. It felt shockingly familiar. Once upon a time they’d been so attuned to each other that words weren’t necessary to share their thoughts. An insidious warmth seeped through her as the moment drew out. She ventured a glance up at Mac, and he was looking at her, a curious expression in his eyes. She would describe it as affection if that weren’t the farthest thing from what he must feel for her. She looked away, but the warmth persisted.

When they finished eating, Mac gathered the food packaging and stowed it in a saddlebag. He sat down on his rock once more. “Talk to me about the horses, Suz.”

Susan blinked. Just like that, the charming man she used to know and love was replaced by this hard, businesslike warrior. She replied, “They’re tired but not worn out. As long as they get plenty of water and rest, they’ll be fine. Right now, they’re grazing some grass I found further up the canyon.”

“When will they be ready to go again?” he asked.

“It depends on what you mean by going. They could move tonight if they had to, but I wouldn’t do more than walk them.”

Mac shook his head. “When we move again, we’ll probably go hard, like we did this morning. How long until they can do that?”

Susan flinched. They were going to have to do that to her lovely Arabs again? “They’ll need at least twenty-four hours of solid rest before they give another maximum effort.”

Mac nodded. A frown of intense concentration wrinkled his brow. She’d never doubted that Mac was highly intelligent, and it was gratifying to see him apply his formidable intellect to the work. She only wished their lives didn’t depend on it.

He spoke abruptly. “Dutch has the right idea, then. We’ll mess around with these guys tonight. Ruala should back off by daylight tomorrow. We’ll rest through the day, and then leave tomorrow night.”

“Please tell me we’ll be heading back to the ranch,” she said.

“Ideally, we will. Okay, now for our next problem.”

When he didn’t continue, Susan asked, “And that is…”

“You.”

“Me? And here I was trying so hard not to be a pain in the neck.”

“It’s not that,” Mac answered, grinning reluctantly. “Dutch is down the valley doing surveillance on our visitors. I need to go set up a few traps, but I don’t want to leave you alone in camp. If Ruala moves on us, Dutch might not be able to get back here fast enough from his current position to pull you out.”

“So take me with you.” It seemed like a perfectly simple solution to her. Except Mac tended to treat her like some porcelain doll in constant need of protecting.

He looked hard at her. His gaze strayed down to her leg. “I dunno…”

She winced as liquid shame pooled in her gut. “I try not to let it stop me from doing much,” she said quietly. She would not beg. And she would not argue. Not with a killer waiting for her just over that hill.

He gave her a long, assessing look and then finally nodded slowly. “Okay, then. You’ll go with me.”

Wonderment wiped her brain blank. He’d said yes? He was letting her go with him to do his work? In spite of being a gimp? “Great!” she said brightly to cover her utter amazement. “It’ll be fun. I’ve always wanted to know how to lay a booby trap.”

He frowned. “This isn’t fun and games. People will die tonight if anyone gets stupid. You could die.”

She met his worried gaze head on. “I know, Mac.”

He looked away first. And sighed. “Why don’t you go check the horses while I get my bag of tricks and radio Dutch.” 

She was annoyed he wouldn’t let her carry any of the gear until she lifted his pack by one of the shoulder straps a few minutes later. It weighed a ton. “Good grief! What’s in this thing? Bricks?”

Mac crouched in front of her, surveying a waist-high pile of rocks by the side of a natural path. Without looking over his shoulder, he replied absently, “Explosives. Detonators. Wire, batteries, pliers, timers, det cord…”

Susan gulped. She watched, fascinated, as Mac fished around in his pouch by feel with one hand. He came up with a gob of gray putty. He rolled it into a cone shape and wedged it carefully between the rocks. He poked a blasting cap into the putty and ran an olive-green, gossamer-thin wire across the path about twelve inches off the ground. He secured the far end of it on the other side of the trail.

“What is this going to do?” Susan asked.

“I’ve put just enough of a directional charge in there to make those rocks roll down into the path. They’ll knock down whoever trips this wire and make a lot of noise.”

“What if an animal hits the trap?”

Mac grinned over his shoulder. “Never fear, Miss Greenpeace. There’s too much fresh scent of humans here for critters to wander around this valley tonight. They’ll stay well away from the area.”

In a matter of minutes it became clear to her that Mac was a veritable artist at his work. None of his traps were lethal, and they were all set up to look like natural occurrences. A branch snapping in someone’s face, a cactus popping up under foot, rocks sliding down in the path. All of it sure to annoy and hinder whoever encountered it, however. She was beginning to understand what Dutch had meant earlier when he said they’d be playing games with Ruala and his men, tonight.

As hard as she wished for the light not to fade, the heavens went from twilight gray to dark blue to black, and the first stars began to shine. The vast emptiness above sent shivers down her spine. “Isn’t it about time we headed back to camp?” Susan asked nervously.

“We’re not going back to camp,” Mac answered as he balanced rocks on top of a log that was set to roll down a hillside.

“We’re not?”

“Certainly not. It’s the first place the thugs will go. Besides, while you were checking the horses, I trapped the bejeezus out of the whole place.”

“Where are we spending the night, then?” She felt stupid for asking, but her mind wasn’t coming up with any mental images of where they were going to sleep. Or at least hide.

“Out here.” Mac gestured around him.

She’d been afraid he’d say that. “It’ll get cold,” she protested weakly.

He grinned at her. “Cold is when you spend six hours swimming in fifty-degree ocean water to a beach landing.”

“That’s practically ice water!”

“Keep your voice down,” he admonished. “Yeah, it’s cold.”

“You guys are nuts!” she mumbled.

He chuckled. “So I’ve been told. I had a little extra room in my pack, so I tossed in a blanket for later. We’ll be plenty warm.”

One blanket. Singular. That they’d share. Susan gulped at the memory of what had happened between them last night. Would there be a repeat tonight? Her heart beat faster.

“The fun should begin soon,” Mac commented, interrupting her train of thoughts. “I brought a radio for you, Suzie. That way you’ll be in the loop with what Dutch and I are doing.”

She looked at the jumbled wires he held out to her. “How do you put it on?” she asked around the tightness in her throat.

Would he run his hands up under her shirt like she had his when she helped him don a microphone? Shivers of anticipation raced across her skin, and her cheeks felt hot all of a sudden.

He stepped so close she felt the warmth radiating from his body. One of his hands eased under the edge of her shirt and settled on her waist. His fingers slid up her torso, counting ribs and threading cool wire across her skin. His palm slid around to the front, and continued upward into the warm valley between her breasts. His touch was hot, exquisitely gentle.

“I’m sorry, honey,” he murmured.

She wasn’t. Oh, no. Not at all. His fingers traced higher, approaching the hollow above her collarbone. And then his other hand traced her shoulder to the neck of her T-shirt, sliding across her throat in a dangerous, delicate caress. His fingers scooped down into her shirt, meeting his other hand. The heat of them scalded her skin and sent her heart racing.

His fingers encircled her neck as he guided the throat mike into place. He reached under her hair to her nape. His thumb ran from her hairline down to the base of her neck, sending wild sensations cavorting across her skin.

Then his nimble fingers attached the Velcro closure, and threaded an earpiece into her right ear. His fingertips ran around the sensitive shell of her ear, then trailed down her neck as if reluctant to retreat.

His voice was a bare whisper of sound. “You activate your mike by pushing the button here.” His fingers entwined with hers, guiding her fingertip to a flattish button at the base of her throat. His palm cupped her hand, swallowing her flesh in his heat and carefully restrained strength.

“Or you can go hot mike, where everything you say gets transmitted automatically,” he murmured, his mouth close enough to her temple for her to feel the warm humidity of his breath.

Her skin felt hot to the touch, her pulse beat rapidly under her fingertips where he held them against her neck. Blood rushed through her ears, made louder by the earpiece she now wore. Or maybe that sound was her breath rushing in and out of her suddenly constricted lungs.

“You slide this button up to go hot.” He guided her fingers to her ear, showing her a tiny switch.

How wrong he was. All she had to do to go hot was think about him. She was imagining him running his fingers all over her body in just the same way he was doing to her ear right now. Her breath rasped loudly as he slid the little switch up. She was huffing like a racehorse.

Mac looked down sharply at her. “Are you okay?”

How in the heck was she supposed to answer that? Of course she wasn’t okay! “Uh, yeah, sure. It just makes me a little…nervous…being out here in the dark with Ruala and his men out there somewhere.”

Mac slid the hot switch down to the off position, and the sounds of her racing breath went away.

“Don’t worry about Ruala and his men,” he murmured. “Dutch is keeping an eye on them. He’ll let us know when they start moving. Until then, there’s nothing to worry about.”

Nothing except keeping herself from leaping on top of Mac and tearing all his clothes off.

“Relax, sweetheart,” he murmured. “There’ll be plenty of reasons to get nervous later.”

The promise in his voice was thick and hot and made her insides melt. One blanket, huh? Hoo, baby.

“Come on, Suzie. Let’s go find a spot to watch our handiwork.”

“Uh, right.” She followed him on wobbly legs as he picked his way up a steep hillside. Whenever the terrain got rough, he stopped and put a hand under her elbow. Little did he know that when he touched her like that, he put her in grave jeopardy of her legs collapsing right out from under her. At one point they stopped before a wide patch of loose shale and gravel.

“Suzie, when you walk across this stuff, set your feet down slowly. Test the gravel roll under your foot by moving it side to side before you put your full weight down. Can you do that?”

She nodded, watching closely as he took a few steps.

He started across the treacherous terrain, and she followed, very slowly. It wouldn’t have been so bad if there weren’t a sheer drop to her right, maybe ten feet away. Worse, the patch of shale sloped toward the cliff. If she slipped the wrong way, she could slide right over the edge. She risked a peek into the abyss. And froze.

The gully fell away into blackness. She could see a good fifty feet down the opposite cliff face before it was lost in the dark.

“Suzie,” came Mac’s voice very calmly. “I need you to take another couple of steps.”

She turned back toward his shadowed form, which loomed ahead of her on the far side of the pale patch of shale flakes. She put her right foot down and took a step. And then her left. She began to feel light-headed and realized she was holding her breath. She stopped to breathe for a second.

“Just a little bit farther, honey,” Mac coaxed.

She reached out with her left foot and moved it side to side the way he’d shown her. There was an ominous little wobble beneath the ball of her foot, but she was too terrified to stop moving. She was going to keep going until she reached Mac.

She put her weight on the foot, and it shot out from under her. Her knee collapsed and there wasn’t a chance she could stop herself from going down.

A scream escaped her as she fell. She crashed onto her left side, sliding feet first toward the beckoning ravine. She picked up speed as she scrambled for a toehold or a handhold. Anything to stop her from going over that cliff!

And then her left arm was all but yanked out of its socket. Her death slide was halted abruptly. Her feet were hanging in midair.

“I’ve got you,” Mac grunted.

She looked up, and saw him sitting on his behind, his heels dug into the gravel, both powerful hands wrapped around her wrist in a painfully tight grip.

“Don’t move a muscle, Susan. Let me do all the work. Got it?”

“Yeah,” she panted.

“Okay, here we go.” He wiggled his heels into the gravel and pushed backward gently. She moved maybe an inch. But it was an inch away from the edge of the cliff. Gradually he eased them higher, away from the ravine. It took several minutes, and Susan was sure her arm was being torn off before Mac gave a final heave.

He let go of her, and she realized she was lying on solid rock once more. And then his arms went around her as he gathered her into a fierce hug. “God, that was close.”

Way too close. He’d saved her life. “Thanks,” she whispered.

One of his hands pressed her head tight against his shoulder. He murmured raggedly, “What would I have done if I’d lost you?”

Susan froze. She pushed away from his chest far enough to look up at him in the scant moonlight. “Would it really have mattered to you that much?”

He stared back at her, his eyes dark, unfathomable pools within the black night around them. He looked at her for a long time before he finally answered.

“Yeah, it would have mattered.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Michelle Love, Jordan Silver, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Bella Forrest, Penny Wylder, Dale Mayer, Amelia Jade, Alexis Angel,

Random Novels

by Jane Henry

Paranormal Dating Agency: Fated to Mate (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Anne Conley

Their Best Friend's Little Sister (A MFM Romance) by J.L. Beck

The Krinar Chronicles: Number 101 (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Heather Knight

Thrill of Love by Melissa Foster

Shattered King: A Lawless Kings Novel by Sherilee Gray

Sail (The Wake Series Book 2) by M. Mabie

Climax (The ABCs of Love Book 3) by Clover Hart

His Dream Baby: A Miracle Baby Romance by B. B. Hamel

Nathaniel (Dragon Hearts 1) by Carole Mortimer

Riley's Mate (Sexy Shapeshifter Romance Book 1) by Kathryn Kelly

Adored (Seven Brides Seven Brothers Pelican Bay Book 2) by Belle Calhoune

Fidelity (Infidelity) (Volume 5) by Aleatha Romig

An Improper Deal (Elliot & Annabelle #1) (Billionaires' Brides of Convenience Book 3) by Nadia Lee

Trust An Even Hand (Club Volare Book 10) by Chloe Cox

Royal Heir (Westerly Billionaire Series Book 3) by Ruth Cardello

Fearless Mating (An A.L.F.A. Novel) by Milly Taiden

The Heir (Kelderan Runic Warriors #3) by Jessie Donovan

Dirty by Cole, Stevie J.

Boxcar Christmas: Delos Series, Book 8 by Lindsay McKenna