The Highest Tide
by
Marian Perera
Samhain Publishing
ebook
285 pages
ASIN: B00NOM4INQ
From the Back Cover:
One touch, and the tide isn’t all that’s rising.
Eden, Book 4
When brothel health inspector Jason Remerley finds a uniformed woman waiting impatiently in the Velvet Court parlor, wanting to hire a man’s services, he’s struck by lightning. His intense, immediate attraction compels him to pretend his way into her arms.
Enough silver, and most men forget about Captain Lera Vanze’s half-burned face. She senses something off about the handsome, ill-dressed prostitute who sells himself so cheaply. But with his first touch, goose bumps turn to shivers of desire—right before the truth drives them in opposite directions.
Her fury is still simmering when they face each other in a more “official” capacity. She’s joined a warship to stop a terrorist only Jason can identify. Though trust is scarce, they’re swept away in a tidal wave of murderous plots and an explosive attraction that could leave them marooned in an emotional—and very real—minefield.
Warning: She knows how to wield her sword, he knows just how, when, and where to apply his…mind. Contains deception in a brothel, sex in a cave, a shark with a bad habit, and one very large wave.
GIVEAWAY!
Excerpt:
Her clothes were almost as intriguing as her appearance. In
stark contrast to the rich colors and glamour of the room, she had on a
well-worn white coat and brown breeches, so she looked crisply efficient as
well as exotic. He’d never seen a woman in men’s garb before. A foreigner,
obviously, but what was she doing there? One arm was bent, knuckles resting on
her hip and holding her coat back enough for him to see the saber that hung
from her belt.
Lightning, he realized, had just struck.
He had stopped when he saw her, and he didn’t think he was
breathing, much less making a sound, but the woman turned from the window as if
she sensed someone was there. And he saw the other half of her face.
A burn scar, he knew at once. Dark and thick as armor,
except without the smoothness of steel or skin. The injury had missed her eye,
thankfully, but it scorched all the way down to her jawline, and while there
was nothing at all pretty about the scar, it made her look unusual and real,
fiercely alive in the cold, poised surroundings of the Velvet Court. An old
quote came to mind: the imperfection that
enables perfection.
Her eyes narrowed a little in a way that suggested she was
braced for shocked reactions when people saw the right side of her face. “Do
you work here?”
Surely she couldn’t be there for that. But he didn’t see any other reason a foreigner might come to
a brothel.
“Yes,” he heard himself say.
The woman’s gaze swept down his body, swift and evaluating.
Jason had a moment to feel grateful he didn’t have to wear any particular
uniform or badge of office as a health inspector, before his startled better
sense caught up with him. What in hell did he think he was doing?
“And does this establishment provide services to women?”
That was the kind of question only a foreigner would need to
ask. Jason swallowed, pushing doubts and common sense alike away. When
lightning struck, one had to react just as swiftly, seize the moment.
“Of course,” he said. “We wouldn’t turn away half our
potential customers.”
“Good. How much do you charge?”
Damn. He had no
idea, and even if he did, he would have said a lower figure. The woman saw his
hesitation, but misinterpreted it.
“I have silver,” she said. “It’s Denalait money, but still
silver.”
So she was from Denalay. That explained the slight accent
yet the features which—apart from the scar—were indistinguishable from those of
a Dagran woman’s. Except for being more beautiful.
“That will do.” He fell back on years of experience in
keeping his voice calm and emotionless, his face as bland as if he were playing
cards for high stakes—and no stakes could be higher than this. “Please come
with me.”
He started up the steps, ears attuned to the soft thuds of
her boots behind him, more attuned to any creaks from upstairs that would
indicate a door being opened. Benevolent
Ones, don’t let anyone come out of their rooms, he thought before he
wondered if he had truly gone crazy. The Benevolent Ones were probably looking
down at the unfolding spectacle with horrified eyes. He’d be fortunate if they
didn’t strike him dead for his iniquity.
Walking as though he was in no hurry at all was an effort,
but to his relief no one was in sight when he reached the landing. He went to
the nearest open door and glanced in to make sure the room was empty before he
stepped aside to let the woman enter.
He breathed in deeply as she walked past him—keeping a
careful space between their bodies, he noticed. A crisp, salty scent clung to
her clothes, the smell of sun-warmed wood and sea wind.
Of course, her people were seafarers and Sandcliff was a
port city. He’d even figured out what she was doing in a foreign land, because
he had heard of a recent race between Denalait ships and a Dagran vessel, a
race which had ended at an island off the coast and had, naturally, been won by
the Dagran ship. A thread of disappointment wove itself through an attraction
stronger than anything he had felt before, because she wouldn’t be here for
long, would she? Soon she would sail back to her homeland.
Brisk footsteps hurried up the stairs. Jason was inside the
room in the next instant, closing the door behind him with a soft click, and to
his relief there was a key in the lock. He turned it. If the worst came to the
worst and Mary or the house guards started hammering on the door, he might try
climbing out of the window. In all his life he had never done anything so
unhinged, had never dreamed of putting his career at such risk.
But in all his life he had never met a woman like her, a
woman he wanted so much.
It was almost a surprise to realize he still didn’t know her
name.
***
Lera Vanze had heard the Velvet Court spoken of as high class,
as brothels went. The common room had certainly lived up to that, but the man
didn’t strike her as particularly well dressed, let alone decked out in such a
way as to display his wares. He wore a suede jacket the color of doeskin, and
dark trousers that weren’t exactly formfitting.
Then again, it was the middle of the day, so she couldn’t
expect the merchandise to get all prettied up yet. Besides, he didn’t really
need it. He was lean but tall, with brown eyes only slightly creased at the
corners to indicate his age. Everything about him seemed neat—the thick black
hair, the clean-shaven jaw, the clothes that had clearly been laundered and
pressed. Yes, he would do.
She looked around the small but comfortably furnished room
and sat on the bedspread. Time to get down to business.
“How much?” she said.
He hesitated again, and she lifted the coin pouch at her
belt, clinking it to show she wasn’t poor. Not that she had any intention of
letting the purse out of her sight.
“A silver,” he said.
That was it? She wondered if there was something about the
exchange rate she wasn’t aware of, because she would have expected to pay three
shrikes or more in Denalay. Oh well, nothing like a bargain. She extracted a
single silver coin stamped with the likeness of a bird of prey perched on a
long thorn. On its other side was the circle of Denalay and the words In Unity Is Strength. With one flick of
her fingers, it flew across the room.
The man caught it and set it on the chest of drawers beside
him. He leaned a hip against the piece of furniture and stared at her, his lips
parted as though he was caught between speaking and thinking better of it.
Was her nationality a problem? Surely not; it wasn’t as
though she was from Lunacy. Then it had to be her scar. That probably looked
worse in the sunlight from the open window than it had in the cool shadows of
the common room.
“How much time does that buy me?” she said.
“Oh. As much time as we need.”
Lera blinked. That was unexpected, but perhaps due to the
earliness of the hour; the house was sure to become busier during the evening.
“I’ll start by telling you what I want, then.”
“Certainly.”
She had been an officer for years, so giving orders and
knowing they would be obeyed came naturally. “Nothing fancy or acrobatic,” she
said. “Nothing where I’ll have to make an effort. Use your mouth and your
hands. I’d like to come at least twice, and whether you do or not is your own
concern, but if you please me, there’ll be another silver for you. Do you
understand?”
The man had listened without a muscle moving in his face,
but when she finished he nodded slowly, as if it was the first time he was
hearing such instructions. She frowned. Surely he wasn’t a new hire.
“I understand,” he said. “My name is Jason Remerley. What’s
yours?”
Lera could hardly believe she had heard right. Her mouth
opened involuntarily before she shut it and gave him the kind of look that
would have put any of her subordinates back in their place. “I don’t believe
that’s any of your concern.”
Instead of being intimidated, he smiled, as if he thought a
complaint from a foreigner wasn’t likely to threaten his continued livelihood.
Or perhaps he had enough regulars who were charmed by his presumptuous manner,
not to mention the way his smile reached to his eyes, making them warm and
candid at once. The look in them made her skin feel strange, as though a light
wind had stolen tickling beneath her clothes, raising goose bumps across her
flesh.
About the Author:
Marian started reading fantasy at six when she found a huge hardcover copy of The Lord of the Rings. Parental units took that away but replaced it with a more age-appropriate paperback of The Hobbit, which she could also carry around easily. Soon afterwards she found another book with an adorable bunny rabbit on the cover. Yes, that was Watership Down. She had to wait almost ten years for romance novels, but once she discovered those she never looked back, and now combines the two for maximum fun.
Marian was born in Sri Lanka, grew up in the United Arab Emirates, studied in the United States (Georgia and Texas), worked in Nunavut and lives in Toronto. For now. Her apartment contains: nearly a thousand books, no television set, two dancing bear sculptures, and a replica of Sting.
She blogs at Flights of Fantasy, is on Twitter, and loves to hear from readers. Visit her website or email her: mdperera@hotmail.com.
I'm new to Steam Punk. But I do like the way they dress based on covers and excerpts I've read so far. This is on my TRL. I loved this excerpt and want to definitely read the rest of their story. Thanks for the chance.
ReplyDeleteCarol L
Lucky4750 (at) aol (dot) com