Forever
and a Day
The
Company Store, Book
2
by Ann
Gimpel
Publisher: Taliesin
ISBN: 978-1-62916-065-8
Release Date: 7/3/14
Genre: Paranormal Romantic
Suspense
Word Count: 50,000 words
Espionage
operations and runaway love travel halfway around the globe as Tamara and Lars
stay one step ahead of death. Tension heats to boiling, but it’s not half as
hot as the attraction licking at their heels.
Book Description:
Tamara MacBride has a much bigger
problem than hiding her shifter side from the world. By the skin of her teeth,
and with a smattering of Irish luck, she manages to kill her sister’s murderer.
Escaping from the scene of the crime is proving much harder than she
anticipated. Just when she thinks she might be safe, her cab driver shrieks and
slumps over the wheel. She cowers in the back seat, too scared to run,
expecting the next bullet will be for her.
An unknown assailant terminates
Lars Kinsvogel’s target. Pleased by the outcome, after all dead is dead, Lars
exchanges the glitz of Monto Carlo for a nearby airport intent on collecting
the private plane he left there. He’s no sooner arrived when a cab jumps the
curb. His instincts blare a warning, but Lars ignores them and trots over to
investigate. There’s not much he can do for the cabbie, but his passenger is
still very much alive—and absolutely stunning. It takes some tall talking, but
she agrees to come with him.
Espionage operations and runaway
love travel halfway around the globe as Tamara learns to accept her shifter
side, and Lars embraces what’s been missing from his long life. Initially
reticent to trust one another, it takes a series of crises and a near-fatal
accident for them to take a chance on love—and each other.
Book Trailer: http://youtu.be/pYbEHtRor20
Excerpt:
Lars Kinsvogel sucked in an
annoyed breath. Anxiety and greed thickened the air in Monte Carlo’s Place de
Casino, and he stifled a choking sound. Damn his hypersensitive shifter senses.
If it weren’t for them, the desperation hovering around him wouldn’t be quite
so palpable. Casinos were always like this, though, a haven for the rash and
reckless. What had likely begun as a harmless pastime turned into hardcore
addiction for an unfortunate few, forcing them to return again and again
despite diminishing returns.
Hope springs eternal. All the
poor sods need is one more spin of the wheel, another hand of cards… Lars
looked up, right into the croupier’s beady gaze.
“Would monsieur like to place a
bet?” The croupier grinned with all the warmth of a hammerhead shark,
displaying a mouthful of bad teeth. What was it with the French and their
aversion to dentistry? Lars shook his head and made shooing motions with one
hand. He’d have to either join the baccarat game soon, or move on, but he could
get away with loitering for a few more minutes without drawing undue attention
to himself.
His target, a powerfully built
man with Asian features revealing his half-Chinese ancestry, had an arm slung
around a striking brunette. Maybe she was one of the hookers who worked the
casino circuit, maybe she was a steady thing for the man. Lars considered it
and decided she could be both. Around five feet eight, she had a lush, curvy
body, hair cut into a stylish bob that fell a few inches past her shoulders,
and memorable eyes the color of a restless ocean. A short, black sheath hugged
her like a second skin. Open nearly to her waist, it displayed half her full
breasts. Even though Lars’ appraisal was surreptitious, he forced his gaze
elsewhere. The woman was sex incarnate, and he didn’t need anything diverting
him from his objective.
Jaret Chen pressed chips into his
companion’s hand and urged her to pick a number. He gave one of her breasts a
familiar squeeze, which earned him a smile, perfectly rouged lips stretching
over impossibly straight teeth—and a slight shake of her head. Color stained
her tanned skin. Lars realized he was looking at the woman again, wondering how
her breasts would feel beneath his fingers. She seemed uncomfortable with
Jaret’s frank exploration of her body, so she probably wasn’t a pro. For some
unexplained reason, Lars felt relieved. The woman was too elegant to earn her
living lying on her back.
He snorted to himself and studied
the flashing display above the baccarat table. Maybe the woman wasn’t French.
That might explain her perfect teeth—and her discomfort with having her body
mauled in public. At least she held Jaret’s attention. So far the drug dealer
hadn’t spared him so much as a sidelong glance. Lars had never met the man, but
knew a great deal about him from an extensive dossier provided by The Company,
Lars’ international security employer. Deeply involved in the heroin trade from
the Middle East, across the Mediterranean, and into Europe, Jaret was one of
the principals in a large operation—and Lars’ current project.
He sized the man up. Maybe six
feet, he had a barrel chest. Strongly muscled arms strained against the fabric
of his cream-colored silk dress shirt. His art deco tie had been loosened. Dark
eyes, pronounced cheekbones, and straight dark hair cut short blended with his
business attire. For all intents and purposes, he was indistinguishable from
the phalanx of wealthy—and wannabe wealthy—men circulating through the casino.
Lars glanced at his own cream-colored silk shirt and black linen pants. With
the exception that his tie was still firmly knotted, he and Jaret were dressed
as twins.
Guess neither of us wanted to
stick out in anyone’s memory.
Lars glanced at his Rolex. Close
to midnight and time to move on. He’d seen enough. Now it was a matter of
figuring out where and when to strike. These things always went more smoothly
when they were nearly invisible. He melted into the crowd and made his way
outside. The casino fronted the French Riviera; Lars stood looking out at the
Mediterranean for long moments. The water was quiet tonight, waves barely
slapping the white sand beach. His cell phone, set on silent, vibrated against
his hip, and he tugged it from a pocket to look at the display.
Private. Damn! Could be anyone.
Lars punched the answer icon,
held the phone to his ear, and waited. No need to say anything until he knew
who was on the other end.
“Are you somewhere you can talk?”
Lars inhaled sharply as Garen LeRochefort’s voice came through the phone’s
speaker. Another shifter, Garen had founded The Company hundreds of years ago.
The mechanics of the spy game had changed drastically between the late
seventeen hundreds and modern times, but the basics—kill or be killed—hadn’t
altered much. Everyone who worked for The Company was some type of shifter.
Lars’ animal form was a mountain lion, Garen’s a wolf.
Lars loped farther down the beach
until he cleared several couples engaged in deep, hungry kisses. “What has
happened?” Something must have, or Garen wouldn’t have risked contact.
“You need to leave.”
“But I have not—”
“Doesn’t matter,” Garen cut in.
“I’ll explain when you’re back in the office on a fully scrambled line.”
Lars thought about his twin
engine Piper Seneca waiting at the Nice airport, fifteen miles from Monte
Carlo. It gave him freedom to come and go, and was much cheaper to operate than
the business class jets he also owned. “Maybe I could still—”
“No!” The one word thundered so
loud, Lars moved the phone away from his ear. “Don’t even go back to your
room.” Garen hesitated. “Old friend. Trust me on this.” The line went dead.
Lars stared at the iPhone’s
display and dropped the cellular device back into his pocket. He’d been
compromised. He wasn’t certain quite how, and a part of him was curious as hell.
He kept walking, swinging in a wide circle to head back toward the Hotel de
Paris. Garen had said not to return to his room, but if he were careful, maybe
he could learn something critical that would help their side.
“Ja, forewarned is forearmed,” he
muttered. Keycard in hand, he let himself into a side door of the rambling old
structure, got his bearings, and started cautiously up a stairwell. His suite
was on the second floor, at the very end of the wing facing the Mediterranean.
He’d always loved the old hotel with its thick, patterned carpets and antique
lighting and furnishings. Staying next to the walls, he used a bit of shifter
magic to cast a don’t look here spell. It wouldn’t keep someone determined from
seeing him, but it didn’t require much magic, either.
He entered the second floor a few
doors from his own and scanned the empty hallway, his senses on high alert.
Midnight was early in Monte Carlo, a city where people frequently stayed up
through dawn and slept the day away, so he fully expected to see other guests,
but the hall was mercifully empty. He padded silently toward his door and
examined it, wishing he’d set a trap. He inhaled, trying to sort scents, but
there were too many to make sense of. He could leave, just walk away like Garen
had almost ordered him to, but Lars had never been a coward, and he was more
intrigued than frightened. He’d spent years worming his way out of dicey
situations. This was just one more, and he was damned if he’d walk away from
his things. Not unless he had to.
He took a deep breath, tugged his
guaranteed-not-to-set-off-metal-detectors .32 caliber revolver from its ankle
holster, and shoved the key card into the slot in the door. A tiny electric
motor hummed and the deadbolt snicked out of the way. He turned the latch,
kicked the door open, and turned from side to side scanning the sitting room of
his suite, gun at the ready. Lars waited in the doorway, barely breathing, and
then he heard a muted click, followed by an unmistakable whirr, and knew.
A bomb.
He cursed in German, not knowing
if he was more annoyed with the turn of events or with himself for not taking
Garen’s advice and getting the hell out of there.
About
the Author:
Ann Gimpel is a clinical
psychologist, with a Jungian bent. Avocations
include mountaineering, skiing, wilderness photography and, of course,
writing. A lifelong aficionado of the
unusual, she began writing speculative fiction a few years ago. Since then her
short fiction has appeared in a number of webzines and anthologies. Her longer
books run the gamut from urban fantasy to paranormal romance. She’s published
over 20 books to date, with several more contracted for 2014.
A husband, grown children,
grandchildren and three wolf hybrids round out her family.
@AnnGimpel
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Thank you so much for hosting me again, Sue! I truly appreciate your ongoing support of my books! Sorry I wasn't here on the 15th to comment, but I've been traipsing through the backcountry with my pack and no Internet. A true vacation!
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