I'm happy to be a part of the release of Elise's Marion's newest contemporary romance novel, The Groom.
Summary:
When
Lyle Cummings is left standing at the altar on his wedding day, all of his
carefully composed plans for the future come crashing down around him. The
pragmatic doctor is left questioning his well-ordered existence and wondering
if there isn't more to life than the achievements of wealth and career.
When
he meets Katrina Giordano, a fiery lounge singer with more passion in her pinky
finger than he possesses in his entire body, his mundane life is turned upside
down. In Katrina, he finds everything his life has been lacking. With her, he
will learn that what he thought was love really wasn't at all.
But
will Katrina's dark past threaten the happiness that Lyle has found after so
much heartache? With her life, and now his, hanging in the balance, Lyle will
find himself tested when it comes to how far he will go for love.
Excerpt:
“ROUGH DAY?”
Lyle Cummings glanced up from the surface of
the gleaming bar top and into the eyes of the petite woman moving around behind
it. She was holding a frosted beer mug in one hand and controlling the Miller
Lite tap with the other. Sympathy flashed in her stare, causing Lyle to jerk
his own gaze away as if stung. He didn’t want her sympathy. All he wanted was
peace, and . . .
“Single malt scotch on the rocks with a twist.”
He knew that his request had come out more like
a raspy, barked command but Lyle didn’t care. Today of all days, he had the
right to act like a jackass.
An understanding nod followed, and the
bartender quickly moved to fill his order. She sat the scotch in front of him
and accepted his debit card.
“Would you like me to start a tab?” she asked
as she swiped his card.
“Yes.”
Hell yes. Today was also a day for getting
drunk.
Plastered.
Shit-faced.
Wasted.
He wrapped his fingers around the perspiring
glass and inspected the bruised knuckles of his free hand. Mottled splotches of
blue, purple, and green marred his sun-bronzed skin, and swelling edged the
bruise with a ring of deep red. Lyle’s fingers curled into his palm as he
downed the scotch in a few long gulps, the fire racing through his gut
elevating the adrenaline rush he felt at the thought of smashing Jack
Thompson’s face in. A few drops of blood stained the cuff of his white dress
shirt and the sight of it sent primal satisfaction through Lyle’s gut. It was
the only pleasure to be salvaged from the disaster that should have been the
happiest day of his life. Well that and . . .
“Another,” he rasped, sliding the empty glass
back toward the bartender.
She arched an eyebrow at him while reaching for
a clean glass. “Who’s the unlucky guy?” she asked, nodding toward his bruised
knuckles.
Lyle grasped his newly filled glass. “Nobody.”
She laughed. “Looks like Nobody took quite a
beating.”
That’s not all he
took,
Lyle thought. The reminder of the earlier events caused his rage to flash back
to boiling point; Jack Thompson may have been on the business end of his fist,
but ultimately the other man had won. Even now, Jack was riding off into the
sunset with his Holly and probably felt not an ounce of guilt over what he’d
done. And why should he? Holly was everything a man could want in a woman. Jack
had lost her once to divorce. It was unlikely that he was going to be stupid
enough to repeat the mistake after winning her back again.
A frown pulled at the corners of Lyle’s mouth
as he stared down into the contents of his glass. The bartender reached across
the wooden top and clasped his injured hand. Lyle flinched and snatched it
away, glaring at her with narrowed eyes.
“I was just going to offer you some ice,” she
said gently. Lyle felt like an ass when he saw the bundle of paper towels
clenched in her small fist. He tried to offer her a smile as she pressed the
ice-filled towels against his knuckles, but it turned into a grimace as the ice
came in contact with his flaming skin.
“You should stick around,” she said warmly
after he’d taken over with the ice. “We have live music on Saturdays.”
She placed another filled glass in front of him
and Lyle took it, nodding his thanks and looking away, freeing the bartender to
wait on her other customers. He took his time with this drink, the tentacles of
the first two already reaching out through his body with warm intent. He hadn’t
noticed much about his surroundings since arriving, but he took stock of them
now as he drank.
The lighting was dim, which was good because if
someone in the room knew him, Lyle didn’t want to have to deal with that. The
pitying eyes of the bartender were one thing; the probing stares of people who
were expecting to see him with a ring on his finger and a bride on his arm
would be enough to make him want to go somewhere and splatter his brains across
the wall. The bar was long, wrapping in a serpentine pattern around half of the
room. At least three other bartenders worked the gathered patrons, who sipped
beer and munched on peanuts while waiting for the music to start. Conversation
filled the room in a dull buzz.
The other half of the room was filled with
round, cloth-covered tables and wooden chairs. Waitresses bustled in and out of
the crowd in short skirts and white tops, pens in their hair and comfortable
shoes on their feet. Lyle’s stomach rolled and clenched with nausea at the
smell of nachos and greasy hamburgers. He took another sip of scotch and sighed
in relief at the feel of fire burning the nausea away. Just then, he didn’t
care if he ever had another bite of food again in his life. If he could just
crawl into the bottom of the liquor bottle and curl up in the fetal position,
he could die somewhat happy . . . or, at least, numb.
Jutting out from the back wall was a stage
hosting a microphone stand and a couple of speakers. A red velvet curtain
separated the stage from whatever was going on backstage. Lyle tipped his glass
back and stood, deciding that listening to some bartender’s sister’s band sing
the blues was the last thing he wanted right now. Another drink, preferably in
a quieter location, was just what he needed.
“Closing out the tab?” the bartender asked as
he stood and dropped a few dollars in the tip glass. He nodded.
“Yes, thank you,” he said, holding up the
makeshift ice pack. “Have a nice—”
Lyle’s sentence was cut off by a man’s voice. A
burly bouncer in a tight black T-shirt was on stage, announcing the act for the
night. He could barely hear him because of the catcalls and whistles coming
from the audience. Every man in the room seemed to lean forward in anticipation
as the curtains parted to reveal the figure of a woman holding a guitar. She
walked forward with a bright smile, her skin bathed in the glow of the
spotlight as she took a seat on the stool.
Lyle felt frozen in place as she strummed on her guitar and opened her
mouth to sing. Her voice was like velvet, a purr that wrapped itself around him
tightly and squeezed, flooding his insides with warmth
and . . . something else—he wasn’t quite sure what. He felt
himself moving, and somewhere in the back of his mind realized that he’d backed
toward the stool he’d left seconds ago and was sitting down again.
Title: The Groom
Author: Elise
Marion
Genre: Interracial
Contemporary
Size: Novel
ISBN: 978-0-9923696-0-6
Price $5.99
Publisher: Bottom Drawer Publications
Publisher: Bottom Drawer Publications
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Elise
Marion is a lover of books and has a special place in her heart for sweet and
sensual
romance. Writing about love across all walks of life is her passion, as is
reaching
people through the written word. The Army wife and stay-at-home mother
of
two spends most of her time taking care of her children. Her second job
includes
writing
stories about characters that people can fall in love with. When the Texas
native
isn’t caring for her family or writing, you can usually find her with her nose
in
a book, singing loudly, or cooking up something new in the kitchen.
You can find Elise
at
≈≈≈≈
A
little about Bottom Drawer Publications
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are an inclusive publisher, believing love is love, which is why you won't see
a separate LGBT genre—we publish hetero and gay fiction in all of our
romance sub-genres:
Contemporary - Historical - Literary Drama - New Adult
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Paranormal - Sci-fi - Fantasy - Mystery -Thriller - Steampunk
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