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Changing Woman’s Hair Teaser

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Marin Sinclair, Book 2

 

Suspense Thriller

 

Date Published: 09/15/2025

Publisher: RabbitHole LLC

 

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When Marin Sinclair discovers teenager Garret Washburn in danger from a
deadly conspiracy involving bootlegged alcohol, wolf-witches, an election
campaign, murder, and an unknown bomber, she looks to Navajo Nation Police
Sergeant Justin Blue Eyes and Federal Agent Cullen MacPherson to help protect
Vangie Tso’s son from the dark forces at play.

 

Excerpt

 

—“It’s likely the same guys,” Franklin
whispered. “You need to go for help. Get word to Sergeant Blue
Eyes.”

“I can’t go without you,” she said, and Franklin took her
hand and pressed it against his side. When she pulled her hand away, it was
wet and sticky.

“You’re bleeding!” she said, and Franklin’s nod was
dimly visible in the darkness lit only by the fires. “I’ll find
something to help,” Marin said, and crawled through the hogan’s
entrance, searching by feel until she found several pieces of soft clothing or
bedding.

“Hold this over the wound and press,” she said, making a thick
pad. She tied the pad around Franklin using a length of bale twine, and he
gasped, then sat taking deep breaths.

“Sorry, we need to get the bleeding stopped,” she whispered.

Franklin took another breath and gave a low whistle. A horse broke away from
the bunched group and came close to the rails, snorting softly.

“Here is your friend, Otekah,” Franklin said and ducked into the
corral. “You must take her and go.”

“Go where?”

Franklin didn’t answer. He took a rope from a corral post and ran the
rope behind Otekah’s ears, made a quick turn around the mare’s
muzzle, and looped a knot into the side of the make-shift halter. He pushed
the end of the rope into Marin’s hands.

“No,” she said. “I can’t leave you. You’re
hurt.”

“They’ll soon come looking,” Franklin said. “Trust
Otekah to find the way. She’ll be going home.”

“I can’t find my way in the dark!” Marin said.

“She knows the way. There is only one gate to open; our home is near the
canyon’s end. You will be able to climb out.”

“No … ” Marin said.

“Climb up to the rim road. Bring back help.”

“Franklin, I can’t climb the canyon wall!”

“There are handholds to guide you,” he said, and he pushed
something cold, round, and metallic into her hands … a flashlight.

“I shot one of those Indian kids,” said a man’s deep voice
and she and Franklin froze, sinking deeper into the hogan’s shadows.
“He ran over here.”

“Lay off. I’m not about to get trampled trying to find him,”
a second man answered.

“He’s in here, I know it.”

“He’s not going anywhere. He’s got nowhere to run with this
hut built up against the canyon wall.”

“You can either come out or you can bleed to death!” the first man
shouted, and there was a sudden blast of gunfire.

Marin yelped, and Otekah reared, yanking the rope from her hands and whirling
away. Yuma, his gray coat barely visible, whistled shrilly and kicked against
the corral poles until the saplings shuddered.

“I said lay off, you idiot! A pole fence won’t hold half-ton
horses! You’ll get us trampled! You don’t even know if the
kid’s in there.”

The first man raised his voice. “You hear that, Injun boy? We’re
gonna start shooting your horses if you don’t come out!”

“Stow it, Jack! You start shooting and these horses will go crazy. That
kid’s not going anywhere. We need to get back to the prisoners.”

“Prisoners,” Marin breathed when the men walked away. “We
have to stay and help them.”

“No. You must go, shadi,” Franklin said, making a soft clucking
noise until Otekah once more came close, tossing her head as the other horses
restlessly circled the corral, stamping and blowing. “My beauty,”
Franklin murmured, picking up the trailing rope and looping it around
Otekah’s neck.

“This is a bad idea,” Marin said, but she climbed between the
corral poles to lean against Otekah’s warmth. The horses were bunched
together, pressing hard against the gate poles, anxious to escape, eager to
run. Still …

“I’d never forgive myself if you and the others … ”

“You must bring help, tell the Sergeant what has happened.”

There was no one else to go.

When Franklin again pushed the flashlight into her hands, she took it and
shoved it into her waistband, then caught Otekah’s mane and rolled onto
the mare’s back, catching up the rope in one hand.

Franklin murmured something that sounded like a prayer and slid a pole from
the top of the gate. Carefully he lowered one end to the ground, then reached
for the next pole and did the same. Even with only two poles down, the horses
began to push into the gap, Otekah with them, and Marin clutched the halter
rope breathing in the familiar scent of horse—dust, dried grass, musky
sweat.

“I’m not sure I can guide her.”

“Just stay on,” Franklin returned.

Marin wrapped the rope tight around her hand and twisted both hands into
Otekah’s mane, aware of a familiar rush of excitement, that
stomach-clenching tension when Dandy’s muscles had bunched beneath her
the second before the rodeo arena gate flew open and they shot forward.
She’d done this a hundred times or more, and she bent low to
Otekah’s neck, gathering focus.

“Ready … ” Franklin whispered, and he eased the last pole
to the ground.

“Franklin, I … ” Marin began, but Franklin stepped back,
gave a shrill, yipping yell, and slapped Otekah across the rump, waving his
hat as the horses surged forward.—

 

 

About the Author

Jan D. Payne
Drawing from her own life story in the Four Corners area of the Navajo
Nation, author Jan D. Payne offers readers a journey into the heart of the
American Southwest in a modern-day romantic suspense series. Writing
characters who navigate diverse cultural influences to explore the lines
between the seen and the unseen, the modern and the traditional, the present
and the past—she creates a world where the impossible becomes possible,
and mythical legends come to life.

Jan is a member of Western Writers of America and Women Writing the West. She
and her husband live in northern Minnesota with their three big
dogs—Kaibab, Rudi, and Orrin. Visit her website at: jandpayne.com

 

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Bunny’s F*ckfest Teaser

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BDSM Erotica

Date to be published: August 29, 2025

Publisher: ‎ Changeling Press LLC

 

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Warning: This is a Razor’s Edge Daddy Dom BDSM Erotica short
story. Expect limited plot and character development, and lots of heat. If
you’re looking for a lengthy plot driven erotic romance, this is not it!

 

Every night with Max is a rush, a storm of sensation and wild, beautiful
chaos. But today? Today feels different. From the moment Max wakes me, in the
naughtiest of ways, I know something’s about to change. I have a feeling
whatever he has in store for me today may break me, unravel me to my very
core, only to rebuild me stronger than ever before.

 

Excerpt

 

All rights reserved.
Copyright ©2025 Wanda Violet
O.

 

I woke up to the feel of Max’s tongue between my thighs, pulling me from
sleep with waves of pleasure that made my back arch off the silk sheets.

“Fuck, Max,” I gasped, my fingers tangling in his dark hair as he
worked me with that skilled mouth of his. The morning light streaming through
the windows of our suite caught the blue of his eyes as he looked up at me,
never breaking rhythm. He knew exactly how to make me come undone, his tongue
circling and flicking until my orgasm forced a scream from my throat as I
trembled beneath him.

“Good morning, beautiful,” he murmured against my skin, his voice
rough with desire. “I wanted to give you a treat.” Another swipe
with his tongue. Another moan from me. “Before you go to work
today.”

“Work?” Oh, boy… I tried to act nonchalant, but I thought
I’d failed when Max smirked at me.

“Yep. And, boy, are you going to need your strength today.” The
wicked gleam in his eyes never failed to make me wet. That always meant
something naughty and fun as fuck was about to follow.

I could barely form words as he continued his assault on my senses, building
me higher and higher once more until I shattered with a cry that echoed
through the room. My body convulsed as waves of pleasure crashed over me, and
Max didn’t stop until I lay panting and boneless beneath him.

He crawled up my body like the predator he was, all muscle and controlled
power, before claiming my mouth in a kiss that tasted of me and pure hunger.
“You’re insatiable,” I said, my voice a hoarse whisper.

“Daddy Jacob said I should put you in a good mood.” The rough
timbre of his voice vibrated through my chest. “I’m just following
orders.”

A shiver of anticipation raced through me. Daddy Jacob did this often for me
and his Kitten — a game we played. He and Max knew how we loved our
“jobs” and they both took great delight in keeping me and Kitten
as busy as we wanted to be. I’d come to love this play time. I also
loved coming back to our suite and letting Max question me and repeating every
single thing I’d done while away from him.

He didn’t push into me. Not yet. Instead he braced his weight above me,
his arms caging me in, and bent to kiss me. His kiss, soft, almost reverent,
carried the taste of my pussy on his tongue, filthy and sweet. I opened for
him, letting him take what he wanted.

Max kissed like he did everything. With full attention, like there was nothing
else in the world. I wrapped my arms around his neck, pulling him closer,
burying my fingers in his thick hair. He growled low, a vibration that started
in his chest and echoed in mine.

When he broke away, his face hovered just above mine, his eyes impossibly blue
and focused.

“I need you, Max,” I whispered, my body still on edge despite the
two earlier orgasms.

He flashed me a wolfish smile. “You’ll have me, little
Bunny.”

Max reached over the edge of the bed, rummaging in the nightstand, a practiced
move. Condoms and lube were two staples in this house. With practice ease, Max
tore open the packet and rolled the condom down his length with a downward
stroke of his hand. For a second, I let myself savor the view, admiring the
way his cock jutted from his body, thick and veined and angry red at the tip.
I ached for him to fuck me.

Max must have seen the hunger on my face because he gripped my hips tighter,
his fingers digging into my soft curves. He lined up, teasing the head along
my slit, and the heat of the intimate contact the ultimate tease.

He paused, holding himself at my entrance, his mouth at my ear. “You
ready, Bunny?”

 

 

About the Author

Welcome to Wanda Violet O.’s world of bedtime fantasy, where you’ll find a
variety of sexy creatures ready to drink their fill. Wanda specializes in
extreme kink. Monsters, BDSM role play… she’s got it all. Come take a look
for yourself!

Author Contact Links

Wanda on Facebook

Wanda on Goodreads

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

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The Well-Tempered Violinist Teaser

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Book 1 of The Gift

 

Historical Fiction

Date to be Published: November 5, 2025

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

Marthe Adler dreams of making history as a great violinist. But in 1905
Germany, tradition and deep-seated prejudice against women musicians stand in
her way. To make matters worse, her beloved father’s sudden death
shatters her family’s comfortable life, pushing them to the edge of
poverty.

But the violin Marthe’s father left her is a constant reminder of the
profound bond between them, and it gives her the strength to begin healing.
When the Köln Conservatory offers her an unexpected scholarship, she
seizes her chance to reach for excellence.

Under the rigorous tutelage of Professorin Wolff, and subjected to predatory
harassment by a fellow student determined to destroy both her self-worth and
her chances of success, Marthe quickly learns she will need more than
motivation and talent to rise to the top.

Filled with heart, wit, and music, The Well-Tempered Violinist is an enduring
coming-of-age tale about an artist striving for greatness against enormous
odds.

 

Excerpt

 

FEBRUARY 1949, HEIDELBERG

In the very beginning was the sound, bright and rich, with an edge of
darkness.

I knew it before birth, my mother said, for whenever my father played, I
became still in her womb, as if I were mesmerized.

In the sitting room of our house in Eberlinstrasse, I became the audience,
propped with pillows before I could sit up, listening to my father and his
friends play string quartets on Saturday nights—for love, he said, not
money, for he was a banker, though as a young man he had studied with the
famous Schradieck in Hamburg. Later, he told me I never fussed, never had to
be removed, but remained transfixed, no matter how rough the music nor how
often they repeated it. So perhaps my mother was right.

***

The second beginning was my fourth birthday, when my baby sister Anni stuck
her fist into my birthday cake when no one was looking and my grandparents
gave me a music box that played “Papageno’s Magic Bells”
from The Magic Flute, which I listened to until everyone but me was sick of
it. Best of all, my father gave me my own small violin and began to teach me
its mysteries. First, the names of the strings and their personalities: A,
sensible and even-tempered; D, cheerful and impetuous; down to G, serious and
thoughtful; up to E, nervous and temperamental, with a tendency to squeak. How
to tune them, how to find the notes and make them pure instead of scratchy. He
turned exercises and drills into games and improvised harmony to my
children’s songs, something different every time. Alle Meine Entchen,
All My Ducklings. Bruder Jakob, a round. Kleines Mädchen, Little
Girl—my favorite, because it was about me.

I practiced every afternoon for my evening lesson. Occasionally, with nerves
like caterpillars in my stomach, I played for the applause and praise of my
father’s friends. I might have thought all children were as docile as
myself, if not for Anni. Anni’s temper tantrums, Anni thundering up and
down the stairs, Anni meddling with my toys and often breaking them. I
couldn’t imagine where my parents had found her, or why. Someday, I
thought—preferably soon—she would run off to become a pirate and
leave us in peace.

The pirate would surely come to no good. But I dreamed I would become a famous
violinist and lead an exotic and sophisticated life on the concert stages of
the world.

***

When I outgrew my first violin, Anni inherited it and my father began to teach
her—at least, he tried. Anni never practiced and she hated lessons of
all kinds. The experiment was short-lived and a spectacular failure.

I felt horribly smug for weeks.

My father and I shared a secret language, a world full of treasures where Anni
couldn’t stick in her fat little fist and grab anything and where my
mother didn’t care to go. A bond grew between us as between two fibers
of the same tree, pure and deep. . .

***

 

MARCH 1906, KÖLN

Both of these beginnings came before the real one, like the prologue in
fiction.

The third beginning, the real one, is now: a cold March morning a month past
my eighteenth birthday, before the grand front door of one of the grandest
houses in Köln. Herr Dietrich keeps a firm grip on my elbow, probably to
keep me from running away. In my other hand, I carry my violin in its case.
This house, on Leopoldstrasse in the heart of the Lindenthal district, belongs
to Herr Ferdinand Kurtz, president of the Bank of Köln. My father’s
bank.

Yes. It begins here.

The violin I carry is my father’s, because he is dead.

 

***

 

 

About the Author
Barbara Thornburgh Carlton
Retired architect Barbara Thornburgh Carlton is an author of fiction,
nonfiction, and poetry. Though not a musician, she remains music-adjacent as a
volunteer for the San Diego Opera and the Orcas Island Chamber Music Festival
in Washington. The mother of two grown children who are remarkably considerate
about keeping in touch, she lives in San Diego, California, with her
photographer husband, Barry.

The Well-Tempered Violinist, Book 1 of The Gift series, is her first novel.

Contact Links

Facebook: Barbara Thornburgh Carlton, Writer

Instagram: @btcarlton_writer

 

 

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Pain Teaser Tuesday

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(Kiss of Death MC)

Motorcycle Club Romance, Suspense, Age Gap

Date Published: August 22, 2025

 

Redemption doesn’t come free. And sometimes, the price is paid in blood.

Pain — When I walked out of Terre Haute Prison, I wasn’t the same man who
went in. I’ve got blood on my hands, but I’m determined to pay my debt and
take back what’s left of my life. Once I’m home, inside the walls of the
motorcycle club that welcomed me when I had no one, I have more hope than I
dared to have the whole time I was incarcerated. Problem is, the past doesn’t
stay buried. When I recognized Nadine, a young woman from my past, and got to
know the woman she’d become, I’d convinced myself there’s no way to be worthy
of a woman like her. Until she’s put squarely in the crosshairs of a situation
she knows nothing about. That’s when it’s time to earn my road name and bring
her enemies a world of hurt.

Nadine — I know better than to fall for an ex-con. I’ve seen the worst of
humanity from inside prison walls where I work as a nurse. But something about
Dr. Raven, or Pain, as they call him, gets under my skin. There was a time
when he was my hero, the person I wanted to be most like. I admit I might have
a huge case of hero worship and the tiniest little crush on him. I don’t know
the rules in his world outside the prison, but I know I need to learn fast.
Especially since corrupt cops seem to be hell-bent on cutting in on the Kiss
of Death territory. It sometimes feels like I’m fighting just to breathe. But
the scariest part? It’s not the blood, the bullets, or the bodies. It’s that I
might actually be falling in love with Ford “Pain” Raven.


A gritty, steamy romance featuring a protective alpha, a fierce heroine who
refuses to break, and the family you choose when the world tries to tear you
apart.

 

Pain tablet

 

 

EXCERPT

 

Pain

The minute I stepped foot in the infirmary, the smell of antiseptic hit me
like a damn freight train. It’s the same scent that used to greet me
every morning when I started my day as a surgical intern five years earlier.
That scent had been soothing to me then, proof of how clean and organized my
environment was. But now it’s a black stench, tainted with the putridity
of this godforsaken place. You’d think after months of being in prison,
I would have been immune to the smell, but I guess some things just stuck with
you. Besides, every hospital — or infirmary — had a unique scent underneath
all the bleach and other chemical cleaners. This infirmary was no different.

I was escorted by a guard who probably ate doughnuts for every meal and kicked
puppies for fun, but hey, I’m not judging or anything. He shoved me into
a chair, cuffed me to the table, and disappeared, probably off to shake down
an old lady or something. I seriously doubted he was capable of anything more
strenuous.

“See ya around, Brutus.” I lifted my chin at the rotund man. He
frowned at me but I just grinned. I liked to pick one guard at a place and
harass him until he broke. I was a surgeon and, if I was honest, I
didn’t think I saw psychiatrists as “real” doctors.
I’m ashamed to admit it now for multiple reasons. Mostly because
I’ve been in places in the prison system where there is more true mental
illness than I ever thought could possibly be concentrated in a single
building, but also because I’ve learned a new appreciation for how a
good psychiatrist could get into someone’s head. It was a powerful
feeling. I had no desire to fuck with someone’s head — much — but
teasing them a little was too fun to resist. The guards anyway. Occasionally
I’d fuck with other staff members or the occasional prisoner if he was a
pain in my ass, but mostly it was the guards.

As I sat there, I caught a glimpse of a nurse. She looked like a tiny, curvy
angel in this sea of steel and misery. Honey-colored hair pulled up in a messy
bun, and those gray eyes that seem to see right through me. For some reason, I
don’t associate those eyes with a woman. I knew I’d seen those
eyes before, but for the life of me, I couldn’t place her.

“Good afternoon, Dr. Raven,” she said as she approached me, and
holy shit, I recognized that tinkling voice. Then her eyes widened and she
winced. “I’m so sorry,” she whispered, obviously devastated
at her inadvertent mistake. We both knew I was no longer a doctor. While a
felony conviction didn’t always mean someone had to surrender their
medical license, doing so had been a condition of my plea agreement. One I
didn’t fight even though my brother tried to get me to. With anyone
else, or if I didn’t know this woman, I’d have thought it was
intentional, designed to either make me feel small by reminding me of how far
I’d fallen or to see if they could make me snap with mental torment. But
not Nadine Brentner.

“It’s all right, Ms. Brentner. I know it wasn’t
intentional.”

Her jaw drops. “You remember my name?” Real wonder and a touch of
hero worship tinted her expression. She looked more than a little starstruck
and for the first time I could ever remember, I wanted to puff my chest out in
pride. Because some girl I never knew very well was happily surprised I
remembered her fucking name. Maybe Knuckles, the fucker, was rubbing off on
me. I’d heard about him and his woman and how disgustingly mushy they
could be. Only this wasn’t my woman. Also, when I knew her, she was
still in high school, volunteering in the hospital’s Explorer program, a
“class” in which the students volunteered at the hospital in
different departments so they could see what the world of healthcare was like
and outside the classroom.

I couldn’t help but smile. Nadine had been a ray of sunshine from the
first day I saw her in my OR waiting room. We didn’t interact, though I
tried to acknowledge her when I saw her. She had been handing out snacks and
taking family to their loved ones as they came out of recovery. It seemed like
she had a natural ability to empathize with those around her. On more than one
occasion, I saw her help calm someone down when no one else could.
Administration had been angry with her for stepping in. She was underage and a
student, but she’d been there at the time and had already made a
connection with the woman. I didn’t see her after that and I’d
wondered on more than one occasion if she’d been moved to another
department because of that incident or if she was simply finished with her
class.

“Of course, I remember you.” I tried to drop my “Pain”
persona and adopt some kind of gruff, long forgotten version of “Dr.
Raven” she might remember. “You were one of the few Healthcare
Explorers to come through my area who I thought might make a career in
medicine someday.”

She seemed startled before she gave me a smile filled with wonder. Her eyes
widened and she looked down at the floor. Taking a breath, she met my gaze
again. This time, she looked more settled. Apparently, she hadn’t
thought I’d notice her. Truth was, it was impossible not to notice her.

Nadine Brentner, the teenager, had been beautiful, but like a porcelain doll
you were afraid to touch for fear of breaking her. I appreciated her outer
beauty then, but it was her inner beauty that caused me to remember her. I
don’t think there was ever a time I saw her without a smile.

“I hope I live up to your expectations then.” She smiled as she
pulled a computer in front of her and began typing. “Give me just a
moment,” she mumbled as she continued to peck on the keyboard.
“Stupid thing locked me out again.” She gave me a sheepish grin.
“I took too long and it thought I’d left.” She was muttering
under her breath now and it was almost too cute for words. Mainly because I
could remember her doing much the same thing a few times back when I’d
had a life and an identity. Only thing she’d improved upon was that now,
she seemed to need to stick the tip of her tongue out while she concentrated.

She sat across the small table from me. I was shackled at the ankles and
wrists and secured to a bar bolted in the middle of the steel table. This
might be medical, but I wasn’t sick or injured and the guards
didn’t know me. No one was taking any chances. New face, new place.

As she continued her login, I glanced around the room. The big guard who
brought me here was gone, but there were two other guards. One of them cleared
his throat and frowned in our direction.

Nadine glanced at him before she looked up at me again. This time, her smile
was still polite but not as welcoming. I noticed she seemed nervous now when
she hadn’t before. I made a mental note and waited until Nadine was deep
into her questioning about my medical history and such before I snuck a glance
at the guard. There were no names on their ID badges, but I’d find out
who he was and what beef he had with Nadine. And why the fuck she was scared
of him.

 

About the Author

Marteeka Karland is an international bestselling author who leads a double
life as an erotic romance author by evening and a semi-domesticated housewife
by day. Known for her down and dirty MC romances, Marteeka takes pleasure in
spinning tales of tenacious, protective heroes and spirited, vulnerable
heroines. She staunchly advocates that every character deserves a blissful
ending, even, sometimes, the villains in her narratives. Her writings are
speckled with intense, raw elements resulting in page-turning delight entwined
with seductive escapades leading up to gratifying conclusions that elicit a
sigh from her readers.

Away from the pen, Marteeka finds joy in baking and supporting her husband
with their gardening activities. The late summer season is set aside for
preserving the delightful harvest that springs from their combined efforts
(which is mostly his efforts, but you can count it). To stay updated with
Marteeka’s latest adventures and forthcoming books, make sure to visit her
website. Don’t forget to register for her newsletter which will pepper you
with a potpourri of Teeka’s beloved recipes, book suggestions, autograph
events, and a plethora of interesting tidbits.

Author on Instagram & TikTok: @marteekakarland

Author on Facebook

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

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One Year in Paris Teaser Tuesday

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Contemporary Romance

Date Published: 07-25-2025

Publisher: Lipstick Publishing

 

 

When Annalise Garner arrives in Paris to study art, she’s chasing
quiet—far from her Southern roots, far from expectations. What she
doesn’t expect is to meet Jett Hunter, a star American soccer player
with green eyes, a bruised past, and a future under a constant spotlight.

Jett lives for the game. Annelise lives for the canvas. But when fate
intertwines their worlds on a rain-soaked street in the City of Lights,
neither is prepared for the slow-burn connection that follows.

As their hearts tangle between café tables and gallery walls, the
intrusion of the press and career choices threaten to pull them apart.

Jett faces pressure to return to New York.

Annalise wrestles with who she is beyond her art.

And just when they start to find their rhythm, a devastating injury changes
everything.

Set against the romance of Paris and the quiet beauty of rebuilding a life,
One Year in Paris is a tender story of love that endures the noise, finds
strength in the silence, and blooms where it’s least expected.

 

Excerpt

Chapter One

Paris, France.

March.

Paris smelled like warm bread, rain, and the kind of freedom you didn’t
realize you were starving for until you tasted it.

Annelise Garner pressed her sketchbook to her chest as she crossed Place du
Tertre, her long blond curls pulled into a loose braid and a soft, excited
nervousness fluttering in her chest. This wasn’t just a
vacation—it was a year away from all expectations. No cotillions, no
pageants, no family name to maintain. Just art, sunlight, and the faint
promise of something more.

She passed a café tucked between a bookstore and a patisserie, where
laughter spilled onto the street. A gust of wind tugged at her scarf, and she
caught it just before it flew—only to stumble directly into someone
walking briskly around the corner.

Hard chest. Expensive cologne. An arm around her waist, steadying.

“Whoa—pardon,” a deep voice rumbled. American, unmistakably.
Rough with surprise. Smooth with heat.

Annelise looked up—and found herself staring into the greenest eyes
she’d ever seen.

The man holding her was tall…Ridiculously tall. His hair was dark and
swept back in the kind of effortless way that meant effort had definitely been
involved. A few people nearby had slowed down to look. Some pointed.

“Y-you’re American,” she blurted in surprise before she
could stop herself.

He smirked. “So are you.”

“Atlanta.”

“New York.”

They paused.

“I’m Annelise.”

“Jett Hunter.”

And as he stepped back, letting her go with a soft brush of his fingers, she
noticed the gym bag over his shoulder, scuffed cleats peeking out the side.

That name…Jett Hunter. It tickled something in her brain. A memory from
a sports magazine her friend from back home, Abigail, had fawned over.

She blinked.

“You play soccer…”

He gave her a crooked smile. “A little.”

“How long have you been in Paris?”

“Two years…You?”

“Two months…I’m here studying art for a year courtesy of a
generous inheritance from my grandpa.”

“My contract ends in seven months.”

Annelise nodded. “I wish I could stay forever, but—” she
shrugged.

She didn’t give a reason and Jett didn’t know her well enough to
ask.

Jett Hunter didn’t believe in fate. He believed in timing—on the
field, in life, in love, if that was even something he still believed in at
all.

But when he spotted her again the next morning, crossing Rue des Abbesses with
a portfolio twice her size and sunlight catching in her golden hair, he felt
something stir.

She hadn’t seen him yet. She was juggling her sketchbook tucked under
one arm and what looked like a artists satchel in the other. Same soft curls,
same honey-sweet presence…Annelise.

He pushed his sunglasses down the bridge of his nose to be sure.

Yep. It was her.

Jett stood up from his table before he thought better of it, dodged a Vespa,
and stepped into her path just as she looked up.

She gasped, nearly bumping into him again, and blinked in surprise.
“You?”

He gave a crooked grin. “Starting to think you’re following
me.”

Her lips parted—then curved. “Or you’re following me.”

“Touché.”

She shifted the satchel and sketchpad awkwardly. “Do you usually begin
your mornings by bumping into strangers?”

“I had a need for croissants,” he explained. “And accidental
run-ins with beautiful strangers are a bonus,” he added.

Her cheeks colored faintly. It looked good on her. Real. Not rehearsed like
the women he usually met who were after him for nothing more than his fame and
fortune.

He nodded toward the café behind him. “Sit with me?”

She hesitated for a breath. Then nodded.

They sat under the striped awning, a plate of flaky pastries between them. Two
Americans in the heart of Montmartre pretending Paris wasn’t working
some strange kind of magic on them.

Annelise told him about her art studies and Georgia summers. She spoke briefly
of her political family, being an only child, how she used to sketch horses in
the back pasture and dream of painting sunrises in another country.

Jett told her about New York, the endless push of fame, and how Paris had been
a necessary escape. He didn’t mention the pressure from the club or the
headlines speculating about his focus slipping. Not yet.

“I prefer to keep to myself. I don’t usually do people,” she
admitted, stirring her espresso slowly. “They’re
too…complicated.”

“Yet here you are sat across from one this morning.”

Annelise looked up. “You’re different. You feel like—”
She stopped herself.

“Like what?” he asked softly.

“Like someone real.”

Jett became quiet. It had been a long time since anyone had said that to him.
Even longer since it felt true.

When Annelise stood to leave, she gave him a smile that felt like spring.

“Same café tomorrow?” he asked, not wanting to let her slip
from his life.

She looked over her shoulder as she walked away. “If the croissants are
this good again.”

He watched her go—shoulders relaxed, curls bouncing lightly, sunlight
wrapped around her like a promise.

Jett sat back in his chair, let the Paris air fill his lungs, and for the
first time in a long time, he didn’t feel like he was running toward the
next match or away from himself.

He just felt…here.

And that was enough.

 

About the Author

Susan Horsnell

 

I’m an Australian author who writes in a variety of genres,
including Western romance, historical romance, Gay Romance, and contemporary
romance. I also have a Thriller Murder/Mystery, children’s, non-fiction
and young adult.

I have published over 60 books and novellas, many of which feature strong,
independent heroines and rugged, alpha male heroes. Some of my popular series
include the Outback Australia series and The Carter Brothers series.

My books are known for their well-researched historical details and vivid
descriptions of the Australian landscape.

My work has garnered praise from readers and critics alike, and I have won
several awards for my writing.

If you’re interested in learning more about my books:

Linktree: https://linktr.ee/SusanHorsnell

 

Contact Links

 

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Purchase Links

 

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