Enter to Win a
$25.00 Amazon eGift Card
ATONE
Recovered Innocence #2
Beth Yarnall
Releasing February 23rd, 2016
Loveswept
Beth Yarnall’s sexy and emotional
Recovered Innocence series continues as two broken souls discover that keeping
their hands off each other is even harder than facing their demons.
Beau: Six years. That’s how long I spent
behind bars for a crime I didn’t commit—the murder of the woman I loved. Now
I’m free, but life on the outside is a different kind of prison. I don’t know
who I am or who I want to be. At least I have my sister, Cora. She never
stopped believing in me. She even got me a job at the private investigation
agency that cleared my name. And then Vera Swain walks into Nash Security and
Investigations and kicks my world on its ass.
Vera: There’s only one thing that would
make me come out of hiding after two years on the run: finding my sister. I
made the mistake of telling a monster about her, the same monster who beat me
and broke me. Now I’m forced to confide in Beau Hollis of Nash Security and
Investigations. He looks at me like he knows me—the real me. He sees too much,
makes me feel too much. The pleasure he offers is exciting and
addictive. But I can’t fall for him . . . because my love could get us both
killed.
BUY NOW
Amazon | B
& N |Google
Play| iTunes | Kobo
I
don’t have much of value. I’ve left so many things behind that objects no
longer have any meaning for me. I could walk out of this pay-by-the-week motel
with nothing but the clothes on my back and I’d find a way to survive. It’s a
skill that served me well as I got tossed from group home to foster home and
back again, and then when I was finally spit out into the world with literally nothing.
I left everything when I escaped . . . including my name. You don’t know what
your limits are until they’re pushed past breaking. My boundaries have been
stitched and restitched back together too many times. I no longer have a sense
of what it’s like to be able to set my own parameters.
I’m
working on that, but it’s slow going and meticulous. Mostly I stay isolated.
Interactions with other people are kept to the bare minimum, unavoidable social
necessities. I avoid eye contact and speak only when forced to. I don’t like
what I see. You can tell a lot about a person by what lurks in the depths of
their eyes. Every ugly thing they think and feel hides there. They smile, but
it doesn’t pretty up the person they are inside. What’s that saying? Like
putting lipstick on a pig. That’s what smiles are for me. People will smile at
you while they hurt you. I no longer trust them.
Everybody
has an agenda. I learned this from my mother, whose only plan was letting
anyone who would pay her shove their dick in her so she could put a needle in
her arm. I learned it from the foster families who accumulated children like
part-time jobs, cashing in the checks they got for taking us in, then barely feeding
us. And I learned it from the police who failed to protect, and the only
serving they did was to their own self-interests.
I
don’t know how long I can stay in San Diego. The need to keep moving rides me
hard. I’m too close to where everything started and where it ended. Marie is
the reason I’m here and the only reason I’ll stay for any length of time. I
have to find her. Javier knows about her. I was too stupid not to mention her
when I first met him. He’ll remember and he’ll use her to get to me, to get
back at me. I can only fight him so far. I will never win against him. But I
can try to outsmart him by staying ahead of him and finding Marie first.
Someone
bangs on the door and I jump. No one knows I’m here. At least they shouldn’t
know. I’ve been careful. But obviously not careful enough. I pull out my gun.
It’s always on hand. I don’t have to check it to know it’s ready if I need it.
At the door, I stand off-center and look through the peephole to see who’s
there. My heart explodes in my chest and I sag in the corner between the door
and the wall, breaking out into a sweat.
What
the hell is he doing here?
He
strikes the door again. “Vera!”
What
does he want?
“I
can see your shadow under the door,” he says. “Open up.”
I
can’t make myself unhook the latch or answer back.
“I’ll
keep your secret, but I at least need to know why I’m keeping it.”
I
try to work up some spit so I can speak. How did he find me?
“The
cameras in front of the agency picked up your Colorado license plate,” he says,
answering my unasked question. “It wasn’t easy finding you.” His voice gets
quiet, as if his face is pressed to the door. “I want to help you. Let me help
you.”
I
swipe the sweat off my upper lip. The gun is heavy and reassuring in my shaky
hand.
“I
didn’t tell Cora. I didn’t tell anyone. I promise. Please, open up.”
My
feet barely support me as I come off the wall. I don’t know why I’m doing it,
but I slide the lock back and open the door, staying behind it for whatever
imaginary protection it can give me. Beau sidesteps through the door and into
the room. He’s larger than I remember, crowding his big body into the small
room. With the flat of his giant hand he closes the door. I hesitate for a
moment before choosing the greater of two fears and slide the lock back into
place.
His
gaze goes to my gun. He shoves his hands into the front pockets of his jeans
and acknowledges it with a jerk of his head. Other than that, he doesn’t do
anything. He doesn’t say anything. We stare at each other, sizing each other
up. I hope I haven’t made a mistake letting him in. A thousand questions sit on
my tongue, but I don’t ask them. He said he was here to help. I need help. I
don’t want to need it. But there it is. I don’t want to trust him, yet somehow
I do. I think I should be afraid, but there’s nothing about him that drives me
to run.
“Why
are you here?” I finally ask.
“Is
she really your sister?”
“Yes.”
“You’re
afraid for her.”
“Yes.”
“You’re
not going to tell me why.”
“No.”
“Okay.”
He
doesn’t ask the question I would ask: Who are you? Because there’s no doubt he
knows I’m not who I say I am. He could’ve called the burner number I put down
on the agency’s form. Instead, he tracked me down. Was it only to show that he
could do it, or is there another reason? Maybe he’s trying to prove to me that
I can trust him with this gesture. He could’ve handled it so many different
ways, but he chose to maintain my need for anonymity.
“Do
you mind if I sit down?” he asks.
Don't Miss the first title in the Recovered Innocence Series
now on Sale for $0.99
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Beth Yarnall writes romantic
suspense, mysteries, and the occasional hilarious Tweet. She discovered romance
novels in middle school and hasn’t stopped writing since. For a number of
years, she made her living as a hairstylist and makeup artist and co-owned a
salon. Somehow hairstylists and salons always seem to find a way into her
stories. Yarnall lives with her husband, two sons, and their rescue dog in
Orange County, California, where she’s hard at work on her next novel.
No comments:
Post a Comment