Garen
Rubicon
International, Book
One
Ann
Gimpel
Dream Shadow Press * 55K words
Release Date: 6/14/16 * Genre: Shifter Romantic Suspense
Undercover
Shifter Bad Boys = Alphas With Serious Attitude
Tumble
Across the Rubicon Into the Death-Riddled World of International Espionage
Book Description:
As an agent for an international espionage firm, Miranda has her hands more than full. Between secretly lusting after her boss, Garen, and making sure the dirty little secret about her double life as a wolf shifter remains hidden, she’s still a virgin at nearly thirty.
As an agent for an international espionage firm, Miranda has her hands more than full. Between secretly lusting after her boss, Garen, and making sure the dirty little secret about her double life as a wolf shifter remains hidden, she’s still a virgin at nearly thirty.
Sent to eliminate the head of a
human trafficking organization in Amsterdam, she barely escapes with her life.
Injured, frightened, and under attack the second her private jet lands in the
U.S., she’s not certain where to turn.
Garen’s watched Miranda just as
surreptitiously as she’s been eyeing him.
Unfortunately, the fact that she
works for him is a showstopper. Plus, he has a few secrets of his own that have
kept him single. When Miranda insists on heading up a covert operation, he
can’t come up with a plausible reason to stop her. Watching her sprint headlong
into danger damn near kills him. He wants to hold her, love her, protect her.
Miranda’s life is on the line. Will
Garen risk exposure to save her?
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Excerpt
from Garen:
The Gulfstream
G280 shuddered as it banked hard right. Miranda Miller pushed one of the window
blinds out of the way. Damn. Black as pitch outside the aircraft. She felt like
warmed-over crap. Her mouth tasted sour, and her eyes were hot and gritty. She
rubbed them and tallied how long it had been since she’d slept. At least two
days. She reached for a Styrofoam cup in its no-spill metal holder, sloshed
cold coffee around her mouth, and swallowed.
Her headset
hummed. “Wakey, wakey, fraulein,” a heavily accented German voice rumbled. “We
land at JFK as soon as the tower clears us.”
“What?” Fear
sliced through her fatigue. “I told you we needed a smaller airport.”
“Sorry, fraulein.
This one was closest. We are below recommended minimums on fuel.”
She considered
asking the pilot why he hadn’t planned better but decided not to antagonize
him. It was bad enough they were flying without a copilot—probably against FAA
regulations. She had a dummied-up commercial pilot’s license tucked in her
wallet under one of her many assumed names. Hopefully it matched the one on her
phony passport. She hadn’t had time to check. If it came down to it, she’d been
instructed to tell the tower she copiloted the flight.
As if he’d read
her thoughts, the pilot’s next words were, “I need you to move into the
cockpit, fraulein.”
“Alrighty. Give me
a minute.”
“You do not have
much more than that. I do not wish further difficulties with the U.S.
authorities.”
Miranda wondered
just what other problems the pilot might be referring to. She almost asked him,
and then decided she didn’t really care. Her international security company
engaged professionals. Most of them came from either the military or law
enforcement and had checkered pasts. She unbuckled her seat belt and stumbled
to her feet. Her crumpled, black pantsuit stank, but maybe only to her lycan
senses. She hoped humans wouldn’t be able to smell stale blood.
A muffled chortle
made its way past her lips. Maybe once anyone got a whiff of days old sweat,
they’d give her a wide berth. Her body ached, especially her ribs where her
target had slammed a lead pipe into her. She fingered her side and wondered if
anything was broken. Not much you could do for ribs. They had to mend on their
own.
A few steps took
her to the tiny head in the rear of the aircraft. She splashed cold water on
her face and winced when she took a good look at her scraped knuckles. Her
target in Amsterdam—head of a worldwide human trafficking organization—had been
much harder to eliminate than she’d expected. She’d needed her supernatural
speed and strength—and her wolf form. One more face-dunking in cold water and
she grabbed a towel to dry herself.
“Now, fraulein.”
The jet shuddered again as its landing gear clicked into place.
The pilot sounded
so exasperated, she rushed down the aisle and hurtled through the already-open
cockpit door. He grabbed her arm and threw her into the empty seat.
“Watch it!” she
snapped. Her upper lip pulled into a snarl. Claws pressed against the ends of
her fingertips. Miranda struggled for control. Her wolf wanted to kill the
human who’d manhandled her.
“Sorry.” The
pilot’s voice was mild. She recognized compulsion beneath his words and
wondered what the hell he was. “I do not wish to draw anyone’s attention,” he
went on smoothly. “The rules regarding business-class jets are in constant
flux.” He glanced at her with gray eyes that didn’t miss much. “Are you hurt?”
She nodded. “My assignment ran into unexpected snags.”
She nodded. “My assignment ran into unexpected snags.”
“Will you require
medical attention before you proceed to the West Coast?”
She snorted. What
a subtle way of asking if she’d been shot or stabbed. Lars Kinsvogel—or
whatever his name really was—had obviously dealt with people like her before.
Something he said caught her attention. “Won’t you be my pilot?”
He shook his head.
“Someone fresh will relieve me.”
“Will I be able to
stay aboard?”
He shot her an odd
look. “Of course not. You must go through customs.”
She rolled her
eyes and pressed her lips into a thin line. “That’s why I wanted to land
somewhere inland.”
His gray eyes
narrowed to slits. “All flights from foreign destinations are subject to
customs, no matter what the airport. Is this your first international
assignment?”
Heat rose to her
face. “No.” She was damned if she’d say anything else. She didn’t know him from
Adam.
The radio crackled.
The pilot responded in pilotese and banked the plane. “Flights from Europe are
cleared to land at certain airports. With the fuel we have left, we could have
landed in Philadelphia or Newark, but I have a feeling those two destinations
would not meet your needs, either. What are you afraid of?”
Miranda wasn’t
certain what she could tell him. Company policy was clear. Talk to no one.
“Never mind.”
She thought about
Garen, her boss and chairman for Rubicon International. She’d been half in love
with his razor-sharp mind, lithe build, salt-and-pepper hair, and sky-blue eyes
for years, but he didn’t see her as anything but a junior-grade agent. Rumor
had it he scarcely acknowledged employees until they became full-fledged
operatives. If her fellows were any indication, she had a way to go. At least a
few more assignments. And then there was the problem of her being a lycan.
She sighed, and
fantasies of Garen went up in smoke like they always did. It was nice to dream,
but Miranda steered clear of men. Between her wolf side and her somewhat
unorthodox career, intimate relationships carried too much risk of discovery.
She relied on her fingers, a vibrator, and the occasional one-night stand to
take the edge off her needs.
The jet banked yet
again and dropped lower. Its wheels made contact, and the pilot hit the brakes.
Because she wasn’t belted in, Miranda nearly plunged into the instrument
cluster. Lars made an aggravated clucking sound, but he didn’t say anything.
They taxied off the runway.
“Since I have to get
off, I need to get my things together.”
“Wait until the
aircraft comes to a complete stop, fraulein.”
He sounded so much
like a bot, she stifled a laugh. The plane moved smoothly into an enclosed
hangar. Once it rolled to a halt, she pushed out of her seat, returned to the
passenger compartment, and unhooked her small duffel from the wall. Lars’
breath hissed against her ear. “Where are your weapons?”
“On me and in my
bag.”
“Put everything in
your bag. Clips separate.”
“I’m not that
stupid.” She pulled a 9mm semiautomatic from its shoulder holster and punched
the button to discharge its clip. She drew back the slide, extracted the
chambered bullet, and stuffed it into the clip. Next came a snub-nosed .38
revolver and two knives. She spun the chamber to make certain all the bullets
were out and then placed everything in locked gun cases in her carry-on.
Lars still stood
practically on top of her. She met his gaze, noticing he was a few inches
taller than her five feet eleven. “Yes?” She quirked a tired brow.
“Has anyone ever
told you how beautiful you are?” He settled his hands on her shoulders. She
smelled his arousal and knew he had a hard-on without even looking.
“Christ! Not now.”
She spun from beneath his grip. “Let’s just get through customs and allow
whoever’s knocking to search the plane.”
“We will have some
downtime in the terminal. At least an hour.” He sounded hopeful.
Miranda looked at
him. Really looked at him. Lars was attractive in a Teutonic sort of way, with
ice-blond hair and gray eyes. His trim body suggested he worked out. Interest
flickered but then died. She shook her head. “I haven’t slept for forty-eight
hours. I’m dead on my feet.”
“Why did you not
sleep during the flight? The air was smooth.”
Good question.
She’d wondered the same thing. “I have no idea. Too keyed up, I guess.”
He shouted
something in German to whoever was pounding on the side of the jet and took her
arm. “I will watch over you until you are safely back in the plane.”
She opened her
mouth to tell him it wasn’t necessary, but something in his face stopped her.
In that moment, she understood he was a trained operative just like her. His
role this time around happened to be pilot, but she was certain he’d stood in
her shoes before. “Which branch of the military trained you?”
He shook his head
and let go of her arm. “It does not matter. Follow me, fraulein.”
She shouldered her
duffel and walked to the rear cabin door. Lars had just sprung the locks. He
spoke soothingly in German to an obviously agitated customs officer standing at
the top of the stairs. The agent’s beady, black eyes settled on her. “Do you
speak English?”
“Yes. Is there a
problem, sir? It’s been a long flight, and both of us are tired. It took me a
while to get my bag together.”
Nostrils flared,
the agent looked intently at her and then stepped into the aircraft, waving
them down the jet’s steps. “Customs is the last door at the north end of the
hangar,” he barked. “Don’t even think of running. This hangar is locked and
fully alarmed.”
Lars placed a hand
beneath her elbow and guided her across a concrete floor. “It is best if we do
not deviate from a straight line,” he muttered.
“Holy crap,” she
said. “Why are they so uptight?”
He shrugged. “As
you Americans say, it goes with the territory.” He grinned, displaying very
white, very even teeth. “Everything we do and say between here and the customs
area is filmed and recorded.”
*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*
Lars
Rubicon
International, Book
Two
Ann
Gimpel
Dream Shadow Press * 63K words
Release Date: 6/28/16 * Genre: Shifter Romantic Suspense
Undercover
Shifter Bad Boys = Alphas With Serious Attitude
Tumble
Across the Rubicon Into the Death-Riddled World of International Espionage
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 much harder than she anticipated. Just
when she thinks she might be safe, her cab driver shrieks and slumps over the
wheel.
An unknown assailant terminates
Lars Kinsvogel’s target. Pleased by the outcome—after all dead is dead—he
exchanges the glitz of Monte 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, and he races over to investigate. There’s not much he can do for the
cabbie, but his passenger is still very much alive.
Trying to hustle Tamara out of the
cab is tough. She’s frozen by fear, but when Lars lays out the rest of his plan
to move her out of danger’s path, her temper flares. He can’t leave her alone
in Monte Carlo. Can he convince her to trust him in time to save her life?
Excerpt
from Lars:
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 glanced 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 features revealing Chinese ancestry, had an arm slung
around a striking brunette. Maybe she was one of the hookers who worked the
casino circuit, or 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, dark 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 Rubicon International. 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 target.
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 he was close to invisible. He melted into the crowd and made
his way outside. The casino fronted the French Riviera, and 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 Rubicon International with Lars hundreds of years before. 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 Rubicon International 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
before responding. “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 encrypted
line.”
Lars thought about
his twin engine Piper Seneca waiting at the Nice airport, twenty-four
kilometers 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 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 was 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 before the deadbolt snicked out of the way.
He turned the latch, kicked the door open, and pivoted 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.
* * * *
Tamara MacBride
pushed the betting chips back into Jaret’s hand. “Sure and I’m not feeling like
wagering just now,” she murmured. “Why don’t you do it for me?”
He shot her an odd
look. “But you like to gamble.”
You only think I
do.
“Something we had
for supper didn’t quite settle. Would you mind if I sat somewhere?” She swayed
a bit on her feet to make her statement more realistic and sent a weak smile
his way. In truth, she was a bit nauseated. Between sweat and greed, the air in
the casino stank of humanity’s darker side. Expensive colognes added a queer
edge, their rich scents intensifying as their owners’ anxiety rose. If she
hadn’t been a shifter, she might not have noticed, at least not as much. So
far, she’d done a decent job hiding what she was from Jaret. She aimed to keep
things that way.
He ran a thick
index finger down the bare skin between her breasts. “We could return to our
rooms.”
She crinkled her
face in what she hoped looked like an apology and did her best to ooze regret.
“Better wait until my tummy settles.” He was arrogant enough, he had no idea
how repulsive she found him. Thank all the bloody saints, she’d managed to keep
any sexual activities between them tamped down to nothing because of his heroin
habit. According to a bit of Internet research, she supposed he could probably
get hard, but the drug suppressed orgasms. At least so far, he’d been much more
interested in his next shot of dope and drifting into an opiate-induced dreamy
void than in bothering her for sex.
Jaret returned his
attention to the baccarat table. “I’ll just be over there.” She pointed to a
row of padded Louis Fourteenth chairs with bowed legs. Jaret nodded absently.
His pupils were very small, so he was still fully under the influence of his
last shot. That meant she had at least a couple of hours before he’d need to
leave the casino.
Tamara tottered to
a chair on ridiculously high heels. They made her feet ache, but Jaret liked it
when she dressed like a fancy woman and pleasing him was high on her list. She
settled onto the plush seat and slipped her shoes off. A waiter stopped and
arched an inquiring brow. Nodding pleasantly at him, she ordered club soda.
Rubbing the bridge of her nose between two fingers, she made a grab for her
courage. So far, her plan had gone off without a hitch. The only thing left was
to finish things off.
The waiter handed
her drink over, along with a bowl of salted nuts, and she set both on a nearby
chair. The ebb and flow of noise in the crowded room eddied around her. A quick
glance at Jaret reassured her that he was still deeply engrossed in
gambling—his second favorite addiction, right after heroin. He didn’t care much
for women, other than as window dressing and so the other men would see him as
some sort of stud.
*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*
Ann Gimpel is a national
bestselling author. 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. Once upon a time, she nurtured clients,
now she nurtures dark, gritty fantasy stories that push hard against reality.
When she’s not writing, she’s in the backcountry getting down and dirty with
her camera. She’s published over 30 books to date, with several more planned
for 2016 and beyond. A husband, grown children, grandchildren and wolf hybrids
round out her family.
Find Ann At:
www.anngimpel.com
http://anngimpel.blogspot.com
http://www.amazon.com/author/anngimpel
http://www.facebook.com/anngimpel.author
http://www.twitter.com/AnnGimpel
http://anngimpel.blogspot.com
http://www.amazon.com/author/anngimpel
http://www.facebook.com/anngimpel.author
http://www.twitter.com/AnnGimpel
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Thank you so much for inviting me back to your blog, Sue. I truly appreciate it. You were one of the first blogs I was on many years ago. I didn't know if you were aware of that.
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