Madison Layle's Blog, page 5

June 3, 2011

Midnight Deal

He wants her heart. She wants to save the farm. One wrong deal could ruin everything.



ISBN: 978-1-60088-668-3


Buy the eBook



Excerpt:


The Market District was buzzing with Saturday shoppers. Felicity had been bringing eggs and homemade jams and jellies to the small Saturday farmer's market for as long as she could remember. She still had a couple of jars of blackberry preserves from last fall she set out, along with the cartons of eggs. The space, a single card table under a canopy, was free to locals, so everything she made was profit. Only, not enough profit for what she needed right now.


The hundred dollars she got from the eggs—she always sold everything she brought, so that wasn't a worry—plus any extra from her preserves, just wouldn't cut it. The milker was dead, and a new one, even a used small one off eBay, cost over five hundred. Her hens couldn't produce enough eggs fast enough for that.


Her hands were raw and aching from milking, and she could barely keep her eyes open. She'd gotten only a couple of hours sleep last night before she was up and at it again this morning.


"Hey, Felicity," an older woman, a weekly regular of hers, said as she stepped up to the table. "Looks like your hens are working overtime." She flipped open the lids on a few boxes, always searching for the biggest eggs.


Felicity forced a smile. "Same as usual, Mrs. Camden. How's Mr. Camden doing?"


"Oh, you know." She waved a hand in dismissal. The woman's elderly husband was in the early stages of Alzheimer's. When he didn't join his wife at the market, it meant he was having a good day and could stay home alone. "Heard about your daddy's foot. How's he doing?"


"Grumpy because he can't do anything, but the doctor said he'll recover fully…if he stays off it for a few weeks," she added, almost under her breath. The more he pushed it, the longer he'd take to heal, the longer she was left to worry about…everything. It still surprised her, though, what made headline news in this little town. A crushed foot caused by a cow. Who would have thought it?


Mrs. Camden laughed. "Your daddy has always been a hard worker. I'm sure the rest is killing him. You give him our love." She'd finally chosen her dozen eggs and handed over the exact change. "You take care of him."


"I will," she said rather wistfully as the older woman walked off. She sold half of her stock in a matter of a half hour. There would be a lull, as there was every week, when the food booths began grilling their burgers, hot dogs, and the mini-donut truck set to work frying their yummy treats. The scents wafted to her on the light breeze and made her stomach rumble.


She couldn't afford a treat this week, though. She needed every damn penny she had. That thought made her frown as she reached into her bag and pulled out several blank sheets of printer paper and a fat black marker.


Help Wanted, she printed in bold letters across the top of the first sheet. Farm hand at the Colbert Farm. Must know how to milk cows.


She made a face. Experienced milker needed? she thought. Help Wanted just didn't seem to cut it. She needed help, immediately. The milk truck would come on Thursday, and if she didn't have a full tank, she wouldn't make the mortgage. If she didn't make the mortgage…


For being brought up a farm girl, she'd led a fairly easy life. She'd been working with cows since she was old enough to follow her daddy around the barn. She didn't want for anything more. But if she lost the farm because she couldn't bring in the milk, she and her dad would be…


Tears stung her eyes, and she turned her head to blink back the moisture. She let out a slow breath and tried to calm the panic rising up inside of her. She had a little bit of savings. She'd find someone to help her bring in the milk. She just had to get through this week, and everything would be okay.


But they were still behind on the mortgage. They'd missed last month's payment, and if she missed this one, that'd be two, and if she missed a third, there goes the farm.


Forget buying groceries with the egg money, as she usually did. If they got so far behind on the mortgage, even if she could keep the bank off her back, where would the money for the feed for the cows this winter come from? The feed corn was planted, and the weather so far was on their side, raining often but not too much, so the harvest would hopefully be good. But she'd need to hire the help to harvest it in the fall. Which meant putting out more cash.


She pushed the first Help Wanted poster to the side and printed out a second and a third. She grabbed a small box of tacks out of her bag, and was just about to go post them on the lamp posts along Main Street, when a potential customer came up, munching on a hot dog.


"Hi, Rupert," she said. His aunt owned the herbal shop just down the block where she bought her bath salts. He did odd jobs for his aunt, a jack-of-all-trades but master of none. Kind of the town's ne'er-do-well. In his late forties, maybe, with close-cropped salt and pepper hair and pale brown eyes, he wasn't handsome, but he wasn't unattractive, either. He was a little too skinny with stark facial features. Still, he was friendly enough and a semi-frequent customer, so she smiled at him.


"Hi, Felicity." He gave her a once-over from head to toe and grinned. He had nice teeth; she'd give him that. "How's it going?"


She had to force her lips to keep that smile. "Okay."


He finished off his hot dog and crumbled the paper wrapper in his hand. "I heard about your dad. He okay?"


It was official. Everyone in town had heard about her dad's foot. "Yep, he'll be fine." She set the signs down on the table next to the eggs.


Rupert eyed the top sheet of paper. "You need some help out there?"


"Uh…yeah. With Dad hurt, I need someone to help me milk so I can get the order out this week. Do you know anyone with milking experience you could recommend? Maybe a high school student?" She needed someone willing to work cheap.


He shrugged. "I don't know many high school students, but I worked a couple summers on a farm back in the day. I know how to milk."


"Oh, I…" She bit her bottom lip. He was a nice enough guy, but he wasn't exactly a spring chicken, and she couldn't afford to pay a fortune even with all the work she needed done. "I need someone who can put in a lot of hours, at least through this week, maybe a couple more weeks, and I can't pay a bunch." Three weeks of full-load, on-time deliveries and she should be able to afford the new milker. As long as her worker didn't need too much pay. That was why she'd thought a student would be good. Less than minimum wage—under the table. Tax free.


Rupert grinned. "I'm willing, if you need the help. You know I work for Aunt Marie, so I don't need a big paycheck, just a little extra change."


"Really? I'm not asking for favors. I will pay you, but seriously, I can't pay much."


"When do you want me there?"


"Tomorrow morning?"


"I'll see you at eight? We can work out the particulars then. What d'ya say?"


"Oh, thank you, Rupert." Her smile was genuine this time. "I'll see you in the morning."


He reached into his pocket and drew out a few bills then picked up two cartons. "Aunt Marie loves your eggs."


She dug into her change purse, but he waved her off. "Keep the change." He winked before he sauntered off.


Relief flowed through her so fast she had to sit down on the metal folding chair, her knees going weak. She couldn't believe her good fortune—to find someone so fast who would work cheap and knew what he was doing with a cow's udder. If he had the stamina she needed, they might make Thursday's delivery after all. The late mortgage payment would be paid. And if he worked out, she'd keep him on until she could get that used milker off eBay.


Things were looking up.


* * * * *


Marcus had forgotten about the Saturday market along Main Street, but it was somewhat of a boon for him. He'd officially opened his doors that morning, already had three resumes dropped off by perspective receptionists, and quite a few people—mostly old high school acquaintances—had stopped in to chat when they saw him through the window as they meandered by. Though he hadn't had any four-legged patients yet, word was sure to spread quickly that a vet was back in business.


The sign on the front door of Paws, Claws & Hooves Veterinary Clinic said he was open until 4:00 on Saturday. It was just after two, and the farmer's market was breaking down. He didn't expect anyone to drop in with a cat emergency, so he figured he'd call it an early day and go over the resumes.


He was just crossing the lobby to turn the Open sign to Closed when the bell jingled over the door.


The woman who stopped in the doorway and stared at him was plain in a pretty way. She had brown hair pulled back into a long ponytail, big brown doe eyes, and she was tall and curvy, with a cute little nose and pink lips in a tanned, heart-shaped face. She wore blue jeans with blown-out knees—obviously from wear and tear, not the stylish kind the teenagers were wearing—and a plaid, short-sleeved blouse.


"Can I help you?" he asked.


Her mouth opened a bit, but no sound came out. She glanced around the lobby, her gaze settling on the chairs, the counter, the sketches of various animals given to him by a budding artist friend of his. Then she licked her lips with the tip of a pink tongue and settled her attention on him. "You're the vet?"


He grinned, glanced down at his lab coat, then pointed to the red embroidery above his breast pocket. "Well, this says, 'Marcus Princeton, DVM,' so I guess so."


She swallowed so hard he heard it, and he wondered at her strange reaction to him.


"Do you need a vet?"


She tucked her bottom lip between her teeth, and he kept his grin to himself. Her front teeth were just a little crooked, one slightly overlapping the other, and it was rather endearing. "No. Yes. I mean…" She blew out a breath and dropped her gaze to the floor as a soft, embarrassed laugh came out of her. She seemed to have gathered her wits before she looked back up at his face. "I have a cow that is going to throw a calf in a week or so, and my dad wanted me to stop in and ask if you do house calls." She glanced at the painted lettering on the door, which she still held open. "I figured you did, since you have hooves in your name. Not many people would bring their hoofed animals into town."


She closed her eyes, and her lightly tanned cheeks reddened. "I mean…" She laughed again. "I can see why your father suggested I stop in here. He was promoting his son's business."


"Or playing matchmaker," Marcus muttered.


"What?" Her brow puckered a little, and her smile faded.


"Oh, nothing." He smiled at her and stepped forward, holding out his hand. "I think you have me at a disadvantage. You know my father, but I don't know who you are."


She smiled again, but it looked a little forced as she took his hand to shake it. Her palm was slightly rough, her skin red and raw when he glanced down. He had the urge to offer her some cream. They must hurt like hell.


"Felicity Colbert. Apparently, our fathers went to school together. I just met yours yesterday when he came out to visit mine."


"Ahh. Okay. Your dad's the one who got his foot stepped on by a cow."


She rolled her eyes. "Front page news in Everland, don't you know?"


He chuckled.


"We also went to school together," she added softly as she tugged her hand out of his and wiped her palm on her jeans as if wiping away the feel of him.


He frowned. "We did?" Marcus thought he would remember someone as pretty as Felicity.


"Sort of. I mean, we weren't in the same classes or anything like that. I was a year behind you. Anyway…Dad thinks that Ida Belle needs to be checked out, because she had a hard time birthing before. But…uh…" She glanced around the room again. "How much do you charge for house calls?"


Marcus walked over to the coffee table in the waiting area and picked up one of the brochures he'd had printed. Everland was a small town dealing with a bad economy these past couple of years, so his fees were more than reasonable, but some people were uncomfortable outright asking about prices. He handed her the brochure. "Forty-five for the house call, and then the exam on top of that."


Felicity let go of the doorknob, but she still stood in the doorway, keeping the door from closing, as if she didn't want to be trapped in the room with him. He wondered if he'd offended her in some way when they were younger and going to school together. Maybe she wouldn't want to pay him anything. For the life of him, he couldn't think of ever offending anyone. He'd kept mostly to himself and his studies.


That little frown line returned between her brows as she looked over his price list. "Okay," she said softly. "I'll give you a call if we need you. Do you charge extra for emergency house calls? If she goes into labor and there's a problem?"


He shook his head when she looked back up at him. "No, that's the set price on any house call." Obviously one of those unable to afford much right now, he thought. "You can take that with you. My number's on the back. I'll answer 24/7."


"Thanks," she said and turned away.


"Felicity," he called as he grabbed the door to keep it from shutting behind her.


She turned back and raised her eyebrows in question.


He had no idea what he wanted to say to her. No, he knew, but it seemed rather inappropriate. He wanted to ask her to dinner. He wanted to ask her if there was anything he could do for her. Wanted to know why her hands were so chapped, what he'd done to make her uncomfortable. He'd been gone from Everland for almost a decade, except for the occasional brief visits around the holidays. Could she forgive him and maybe go out on a date with him?


"Thanks for stopping in," he said, feeling like an idiot.


She nodded then turned, walking down the now quiet sidewalk, her head bent as she read his brochure.


He went back inside, shut the door, and turned the deadbolt. "What a dork," he muttered. He was back in Everland. He was a Princeton. He'd grown into his height and put on some muscle. He wasn't the geeky, bookish Marcus Princeton anymore. He had more degrees than he could ever use, owned what would become a thriving vet business, and would one day inherit a good portion of the Princeton fortune.


So why the hell did he still have a problem talking to pretty women?


He turned the sign to Closed and headed up the back stairs to his cozy, little apartment. Rip, his aged English Bulldog, lifted his head from his paws, greeting him with his sad-eyed, heavily wrinkled expression, but didn't budge from his sprawl on the comfy forest-green sofa. After stopping to scratch Rip's ears long enough to elicit a groan of contentment, he went into the kitchen to warm some of the mountain of food Sylvia had delivered that morning. She'd said she couldn't have her soon-to-be cousin starving and figured he'd be too busy to do much grocery shopping.


He smiled and slipped a small casserole dish into the microwave. He wasn't about to begrudge her the chance to cook for him. It was a whole lot better than eating out all the time or having to fend for himself.


Maybe he'd take a run out to the Colbert farm tomorrow to check on that pregnant cow. No charge. Just a doctor concerned for the wellbeing of one of the town's milk cows.


He snorted and grabbed a beer from the fridge. He'd see if he could work up the courage to actually do it.


It wasn't as if he hadn't had his fair share of women while in college. There always seemed to be someone around who needed that particular itch scratched as badly as he did. Somehow, though, being back in his hometown made him regress to that geeky, bookish kid. Although he'd attended almost every high school function from the football games to dances—mostly because it was expected of him since his older brothers were school jocks—he never quite had the courage to make the first move back then. To make any move at all.


He drank down half the beer and set the bottle on the counter when the microwave beeped. He wasn't that kid any longer.


And he would make the first move.


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Published on June 03, 2011 07:04

May 29, 2011

Cover Art Alert!

OMG, we got the cover art for our latest book in the Once Upon a Time series this weekend, and once again Melissa has outdone herself! She is a spectacular artist, and Anna Leigh and I are always amazed at how she can take our mediocre ideas and turn them into works of art.


Here's a look at the beautiful cover, so you can see why we're so happy. :)



Thank you Melissa! You and the others at Cobblestone Press' Art Dept help make our work shine!


~*~ Madi


PS. The book goes on sale this June.

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Published on May 29, 2011 11:10

May 18, 2011

Checking In…

Hello everyone,


 It's been a while since we posted, so I just want to let you know that edits are well underway on Falke's Captive, book #2 in the Puma Nights series at Carina Press, and we have a tentative release date of October 10, 2011. Yeaaa!!! *grin*


Also, Midnight Deal, book #4 in our Once Upon a Time series will be released in June from Cobblestone Press.


Thanks for hanging in there with us. Life moves faster than we do lately, it seems.


We'll keep you posted.

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Published on May 18, 2011 12:05

Hello everyone,
 It's been a while since we posted, so I ...

Hello everyone,


 It's been a while since we posted, so I just want to let you know that edits are well underway on Falke's Captive, book #2 in the Puma Nights series at Carina Press, and we have a tentative release date of October 10, 2011. Yeaaa!!! *grin*


Also, Midnight Deal, book #4 in our Once Upon a Time series will be released in June from Cobblestone Press.


Thanks for all hanging in there with us. Life moves faster than we do lately, it seems.


We'll keep you posted.

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Published on May 18, 2011 12:05

April 3, 2011

The Knight

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The Pleasure Club gives Gwen her Camelot and happily ever after—for the evening.



ISBN:   978-1-60088-650-8


Buy the eBook



Excerpt:


Dear Ms. Bromenski,


  We're pleased to welcome you to The Pleasure Club.


As you have already signed and returned the contract and filled out all the necessary forms to ensure you receive your every wish, we will be in touch with you shortly with the details of your first Pleasure Night. Your Wish List and Pleasure Forms have been turned over to our staff of highly trained Pleasure Guardians, and they are hard at work finding your perfect match.


We will endeavor to meet your personal fantasy.


When you are contacted again, you will be given a location where your Pleasure Night will begin, and you will also be given a safe word to use should you at any time become uncomfortable. There is no shame in changing your mind. We're here for your pleasure, and should your safe word be used, your match for the evening will cease all activity, and the game will be put on hold until a mutual agreement between you and your Pleasure Master(s) can be reached.


Once again, welcome to The Pleasure Club.


Please feel free to contact the office at any time should you have any questions.


Yours truly,


The Pleasure Club Management


* * * * *


 


Ms. Bromenski,


 


Your Pleasure Night will begin Friday the 5th at 6:00 PM in the Montebello Castle Winery, located at 1800 Mangrove Lane.


Your safe word is Merlin.


 


Sincerely,


The Pleasure Guardians


* * * * *


 


Gwen Bromenski stared at the monstrous mansion and its gray stone walls, and a shiver of excitement raced through her, making her tingle all over.


Her mother named her after the Guenevere of the King Arthur legends, and she grew up to the music of the Broadway cast recording of Camelot on LP, and the double VHS tape—or rather several copies of them, because her mother wore them out—of the movie. To this day, she knew every one of those songs by heart. Every word of the movie permanently ingrained in her brain.


Of course, her mother—a single mother who wasn't quite sure which of the three men she'd been seeing at the time was Gwen's father—lived in a fantasy world, waiting for her prince to come and sweep her off her feet.


Gwen lived no such lie. Why her mother never saw that Camelot was not a feel-good, happy-ending movie was beyond her. The wife cheated on her husband and was damned near put to death because of it. There were no winners there that Gwen could see.


As soon as she turned twelve, she started babysitting. By fifteen she worked on the boardwalk selling hot dogs and fries. And the day she graduated high school, she took an unpaid internship at a local law firm specializing in immigration and tax law. She'd been such an asset to them, the senior partner said at the end of the summer, they were going to pay her tuition to college, then to the university, so she could get her law degree. Three weeks ago she'd been made a junior partner in that firm.


She hadn't wiled away her life waiting for a man to sweep her off her feet and make everything okay, the way her mother had.


Her mother had died two years ago. She'd never been one to make close friends, because she'd worked so hard to make and save money since she was a young teen. She hadn't had time for friends. And now she had no family.


They'd had champagne and a cake as a small, congratulatory party at the law firm for her when they gave her the promotion, but she'd gone home to an empty house that night.


In that moment, Gwen thought perhaps her mother hadn't been completely off base in her fantasies. That night, Gwen realized she'd let the first thirty-one years of her life slip by with nothing to show for it except a couple of degrees, a two-bedroom condo in a nice neighborhood, a BMW in the garage, and a spot on the roster of a well-established law firm.


It was everything she'd ever wanted.


It did nothing to fill a yawning hole in her middle that said she'd missed out on a lot of wonderful things that could have happened if she'd stopped, or even slowed down, for a few moments. Raised her head from her books and law journals for a second or two.


Sure, there'd been a few fumbled dates in college. Even a couple of one-night stands. Who wanted to get all the way through college a virgin? She'd seen it as a rite of passage, and it had been tremendously disappointing.


She experienced lust. In the dark of the night, in the quiet of her bedroom, she had vague ideas of a man who could fulfill her needs, both in and out of bed. She had a nightstand drawer half full of graphic erotica and buzzing, pulsing sex toys. But who had the time to find a man who could actually do all the things she imagined, give her the releases she received by her own hand?


Gwen ran her hands over the rough silk of her gown and marveled as the gray stones of the mansion—her castle tonight—turned a burnished pink in the glow of the setting sun.


As if fate—which she'd never believed in because everyone makes their own fate—had dropped into her lap, the morning after her great revelation, she'd found a business card lying on the sidewalk just outside her condo.


The Pleasure Club it had read, on a beautifully embossed, cream-colored, textured hundred-pound card stock with the lightest matte finish.


Yes, she knew her business cards, and this one was classy. Professionally printed, and not by a discount store, either. But it was the handwritten note on the back that intrigued and thrilled her, even though it hadn't been meant for her.


 


You can teach this cowboy to ride anytime.


I won't forget you.


Jeb.


 


Cowboys and pleasure clubs. Her heart had raced as her mind skipped off into forbidden territory—fantasy.


She refused to fantasize. Lie to herself. That was what fantasies were; believing in something that absolutely could and would never happen. As her mother had fantasized about that white knight riding in on his steed, sweeping her off her feet, and riding into the sunset.


Yeah, right.


Gwen's fantasy was a little less complicated than a happily ever after. It involved hands and tongue and a long, thick cock pounding into her cunt. A hard, muscle-bound male body, sculpted to perfection, that she could curl her nails into and leave her mark. Her fantasy was about hot, sweaty bodies writhing in ecstasy, hearing her own screams of pleasure—something she'd never actually heard before—and having one of those orgasms she read about in that smutty erotica she read. The kind that kills brain cells, releases all inhibitions, and would make her know for certain that sex is worth the effort.


So, she'd tracked down The Pleasure Club, finding them not with a splashy ad in the Yellow Pages, but as a small listing in the White Pages. When she did an Internet search on the address, she came up with the Montebello Castle Winery. Their Web site was about the vineyard, and the cute little chapel where one could book a wedding. They rented space for company parties and family reunions, and even had a couple of cabins to rent for honeymooners in the deep forest behind the "castle."


She hadn't been to Europe, and hadn't seen any castles up close and personal, but she thought calling this place one was a bit over the top, though it was beautiful, and she could force herself to imagine, for the evening, that it was.


After a week of pondering, imagining, and letting herself fantasize all manner of hot scenarios, she'd called the number listed in the phonebook—a different number than calling the winery—and set up an appointment to meet with a Pleasure Guardian.


She'd gone after work, and kept her hand firmly on the canister of pepper spray tucked in her suit jacket pocket. She had no idea what to expect. The receptionist she'd spoken to had been very nice but wouldn't answer any questions over the phone—for legal purposes, she'd said.


The office had been downtown, not far from where she worked. The Pleasure Guardian had been a woman in her late forties, beautiful, soft-spoken, and very informative.


Gwen had left the meeting with a thick sheaf of papers to fill out, and she hadn't been able to sleep that night until she pulled herself out of bed and answered every single one of the hundred or so questions. She dropped the questionnaire in the mail with her membership check the next morning on her way to work, and then waited.


The letter had arrived a week ago.


And here she was.


Her mother must be rolling in her grave, because the only scenario Gwen could come up with was Camelot. Her very own knight. Two men battling for her favor. She'd grown up memorizing the movie, every song, every word.


"Saint Genevieve," Gwen whispered. "I'm over here, remember me?"


Gwen had gone in to take the bar exam with less trepidation than she had right now.


Sucking in a deep breath, she turned and looked out at the manicured lawn, the overflowing flowerbeds, and the acres and acres of vineyard beyond. Then she walked up the cobblestone path to the steps, her soft-soled slippers making not a sound. She did love this outfit with its long, flowing skirt and off-the-shoulders top. Not often did she dress like a woman. A woman of pleasure, not the uptight, navy suit, hair-in-a-bun woman who showed up to work five days a week.


The right side of the double doors stood open just a crack, and she pushed it open.


"Ahh, there she is, my beautiful queen," a masculine voice said, laced with the soft lull of not an English accent but more likely Irish.


Interesting.


As her eyes adjusted to the dim interior of her castle, Gwen's lips turned up into a small smile. The foyer was lit with dancing candles in sconces along the stonework walls. The scent of beeswax was strong, and in the middle of the wide hallway in front of her stood two gorgeous, tall, muscle-bound men.


"Good evening," she said with a small curtsy after she shut the heavy wooden door behind her. "We have a guest?" She'd taken one acting class in college—mandatory for one of her degrees—and she'd been pretty good. Tonight might turn out to be a little fun.


"Gwen, darling," the one on the right said, stepping forward and holding out his hand to her, "I'd like you to meet Sir Lancelot. He has come to join the round table."


Her husband, whom she assumed was the one and only King Arthur, had short-cropped blond hair with a very modern, military-type look to it, but Lancelot—be still my heart—had long black locks that flowed over his shoulders. These two sure looked better than Richard Harris and Franco Nero from the 1967 movie she'd watched about a million times in her childhood.


The clothing could have been straight out of the movie. They wore snug leggings that showed off every rippling muscle of their calves and thighs, and the jackets, or doublets, or whatever they were called, fell just above their hips, so their very nicely formed packages were practically on display. And they wore sword scabbards with big, ornate handles sticking out of them. And daggers.


Arthur wore off white; Lancelot, bless him, wore all black.

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Published on April 03, 2011 10:18

March 12, 2011

We're available on Kindle

I was just over at amazon.com and all of our books, co-written and individual, are now, finally, available for Kindle.

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Published on March 12, 2011 05:34

March 10, 2011

Harlequin's Carina Press Called (Sort of…)

Hey everyone!


This is an update to Anna Leigh's earlier post called "Whew! It's off!" As she told you, we'd finished Falke's Captive and submitted it to Carina Press. I'm thrilled to say we heard from the editor today—via email instead of phone, but that's beside the point. Carina Press wants to publish it! And of course Anna Leigh and I want them to, too! *grin*


For those that might not know, Falke's Captive revisits the sexy Falke family of puma shifters introduced in the first book entitled Falke's Peak, which came out in 2010.


So pop the champagne! The contract is on its way, and it'll soon be official. Book #2 in the Puma Nights series, entitled Falke's Captive, will be coming to an online bookstore near you very soon!


Available Now From Carina Press!

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Published on March 10, 2011 18:59

February 23, 2011

Private Entrance…Insiders Only


There are a lot of great things about being a member that we'd like you to know:



You're automatically eligible for future contest drawings held by the authors for up-coming releases. Yep, as a member you have a chance to win eBooks absolutely free! Winners receive notification and prizes via email, so make sure you keep the one you used to register here up to date.
You also have access to even more free stuff!  Anna Leigh and Madi often participate as featured authors in anthologies, which are provided as online downloads absolutely free to members. FREE Reads! Some are sweet. Some are sexy. All are free, along with plenty of other stuff available for download, too, like desktop images for your computer.
You can post your own comments on various posts throughout the site. Now's the chance to share your opinions with the authors.
As a LayleKeaton.com insider, you're also privy to what Madi and Anna Leigh are up to lately…what they are working on now. Only as logged in members can you see the WIP status trackers; that's Works In Progress. Whether they're working together or on solo projects, you can find out where they are along the way right here.  
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Published on February 23, 2011 04:08

Private…Insiders Only

Thanks for joining our site as Registered Members…aka "LayleKeaton.com Insiders".


There are a lot of great things about being a member that we'd like you to know:



You're automatically eligible for future contest drawings held by the authors for up-coming releases. Yep, as a member you have a chance to win eBooks absolutely free! Winners receive notification and prizes via email, so make sure you keep the one you used to register here up to date.
You also have access to even more free stuff!  Anna Leigh and Madi often participate as featured authors in anthologies, which are provided as online downloads absolutely free to members. FREE Reads! Some are sweet. Some are sexy. All are free, along with plenty of other stuff available for download, too, like desktop images for your computer.
You can post your own comments on various posts throughout the site. Now's the chance to share your opinions with the authors.
As a LayleKeaton.com insider, you're also privy to what Madi and Anna Leigh are up to lately…what they are working on now. Only as logged in members can you see the WIP status trackers; that's Works In Progress. Whether they're working together or on solo projects, you can find out where they are along the way right here.  
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Published on February 23, 2011 04:08

February 10, 2011

Love Songs Say So Much

Here are 9 sweet love stories that'll touch your heart this Valentine's Day.


Love Songs Anthology

Click image or link below to open PDF and save to your computer. File will open in new window.


Love Song Anthology



Featured Authors are:


Brandi Broughton

Shonna Brannon

Lisa DiDio

Anna Leigh Keaton

Kate Austin

Sheryl Hoyt

Deborah Schneider

Eden Baylee

Deborah Blake

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Published on February 10, 2011 12:18

Madison Layle's Blog

Madison Layle
Madison Layle isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
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