Release Boost: Bennett by Seraphina Donavan
Title: Bennett
Series: Bourbon & Blood #1
Author: Seraphina Donavan
Genre: Contemporary
Release Date: January 14, 2016
Mia Darcy plays by the rules, and her Daddy, Samuel, for better or
worse has made them all. She takes care of her ailing mother, she
manages PR for the family’s distillery, Fire Creek. And every day
she quietly resents the fact that he stepped in and kept her from
being with the one man she loved… a man who still lives there in
their small town of Fontaine, Kentucky and who haunts her every
minute of the day, waking or asleep.
Bennett Hayes has
loved Mia his whole life, and for one brief moment, when they were
young and full of hope, it seemed like even the long history of bad
blood between their families wasn’t enough to keep them apart. But
he’d been wrong. Mia never showed the night they were supposed to
run away together and when he confronted her about it, she broke his
heart.
But fate and circumstance throw them together
again and the fire that raged between them at eighteen is even hotter
now. The burn is inevitable. But there are forces at play, people on
the periphery of their lives whose agenda goes far beyond just
keeping them apart… they want Mia dead and will stop at nothing to
make that happen.
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She took a deep breath. When that didn’t work to calm her
nerves, she took a sip of the amber liquid. There was no burn. It was
smooth and sweet on her tongue.
“Did you see anyone at the scene? Any other vehicles?” she
asked.
“No. I drove up and saw the churned up mud and broken light
covers where you hit the guardrail. If it hadn’t been for that—.”
He stopped to take a sip of his own whiskey. When he continued, his
voice was deeper, gruffer. “You drive too fast, Mia. You always
have. You hit that curve like a bat out of hell. If I hadn’t come
along, hadn’t realized you’d been on that road right in front of
me, you would have died there.”
Her blood ran cold. He said it so matter of factly. It was true.
She knew that. But it didn’t change the fact that she hadn’t been
alone on that road, and her car hadn’t gone into the creek without
someone else forcing her over the edge. “I do drive too fast… but
I only swerved and lost control because of the other car, Bennett!”
“I know,” he said softly.
“It was a big black SUV… I’m not really sure what kind. With
all those bars on the front of it,” she continued on, not quite
processing that he’d agreed with her.
“The deer guard.” The words were supplied in an even tone, no
censure, not disbelief.
“Yes,” she replied adamantly. “I rounded the bend and it was
parked in a way that it blocked both lanes!”
“I believe you,” he said. “You don’t have to convince me
that it happened that way.”
She stopped then, drew a deep breath and stared at him in stunned
disbelief. “You believe me?”
“Yes. I saw the glass and plastic where your headlights got
busted in… Directly in line with where your back wheels went over
the edge. It’s not possible for you to have simultaneously damaged
the front and back end of your car in a single car accident before
the rollover.”
“It was deliberate,” she said softly.
“Maybe they just panicked,” he offered.
“I need another drink,” she said.
Bennett refilled her glass.
“Someone tried to kill me, Bennett,” she stated it
emphatically. “I’m not imagining that… they waited for me on
that road!”
“Why would someone do that, Mia? No one has any reason to hate
you that badly,” he shot back before draining his glass.
“You do,” she finished quietly.
His eyes widened for a second in surprise, before narrowing in
anger. “You come into my fucking house and accuse me of something
like that?”
She shook her head. “No. I wasn’t accusing you… I know you’d
never do anything like that. But it’s true, Bennett… you do have
every reason to hate me.”
He settled back against the counter, arms crossed over his chest,
muscles rippling and bunching beneath the open plaid shirt. “I
don’t hate you, Mia… I’ve tried to. I’ve tried to every damn
day of my life, and I just can’t.”
She set her glass on the counter. Her hand was trembling too much
to hold on to it. “Do you need to hate me, Bennett? Clearly
whatever was between us hasn’t kept you from having a very active
love life!”
He leaned his head back against the cabinet door and stared up at
the ceiling as if praying for strength, or possibly patience. “That’s
not how it works. I was’t the one who stood you up.”
She glanced beyond the kitchen and into the living room, where new
and decidedly feminine curtains hung over the window behind the
couch. “It looks like you’ve managed okay… You and Lacey.”
His eyebrow shot up. “You really wanna go there? We’ve not
been together for ten years! Should I have waited, Mia?”
“No,” she said quickly. “And I didn’t mean it like that,
Bennett! … Yes, I did, but I know I don’t have the right. I’m
jealous and not just because you’re with someone else, but
because…You’ve made a life for yourself. And… I’m still doing
the same thing I was at eighteen. Taking care of Mama, handling the
distillery tours and—.” She stopped speaking abruptly, the
unfinished words hanging between them.
The silence was heavy, laden with the anticipation of what went
unsaid between them, the tension building until it was unbearable. It
was Bennett who finally snapped. “And what, Mia? For the love of
God, just say it!”
“And thinking about you. All the time,” she replied. “At
this point, I should be nothing more than a distant memory to you,
and you’re on my mind all the time.”
He smiled, but there was no humor in it. It was a bitter and
self-deprecating twist of his beautiful mouth. “Not so distant. I
see you in town. I see your car speeding up and down this road. I
hear your name whispered by every gossip in town as I walk past them…
People in this town remember everything. They remember us. And so do
I.”
She had memories of her own. His mouth on hers, his hands on her
body. They’d been greedy then with the newness of it all, just a
couple of inexperienced kids with more hormones than skill. Of
course, Bennett was more experienced now, but more than that, the
heat that burned between them then was still there. Dating wasn’t a
part of her life. There was no time for it. With taking care of her
mother and her job at the distillery, it was almost like time had
stopped for her that summer. He’d gone on with his life, at least
somewhat, and she was in the same rut she’d always been in.
The mistake she’d made in coming there was glaring. Panic hit
her, sinking into her gut like a twisting knife. Seeing him, being
close enough to him to smell him, to touch him, it was an epic error
in judgement on her part. Nothing in this world could hurt her as
much as the man in front of her. The first time had been bad enough.
To go through it all again when the outcome couldn’t be any
different was just more than she could contemplate. “I should go,”
she managed. “Coming here was a mistake.”
She whirled and headed for the door and was halfway there when he
caught her. One of his large hands snaked out and captured her
undamaged wrist, closing over it and tugging her back to him. “You’re
right. I know you’re right… and I don’t fucking care.”
With her chest close to his, her head just below his chin, his
arms slid around her. It was like breathing, the most natural thing
in the world. She leaned into him, savoring the heat, the hard press
of him against her. “I cannot even count the number of ways in
which this is a bad idea… There’s no way this ends well,
Bennett.”
“Never say never,” he advised softly.
“Highly unlikely, then,” she amended.
“Lots of things are unlikely, oh wise one. Doesn’t mean they
can’t happen.” His voice was little more than a deep murmur, his
lips brushing against her forehead as he spoke. He held her gently,
tenderly. It was something she’d missed so much it wasn’t even
possible to put into words. Even then, the heat was there, arcing
between them, taking on a life of its own.
“Like what?” she asked. Her skin burned beneath his hand like
he’d set her on fire. With nothing more than a touch, it raged for
him.
“You… standing here in my kitchen for starters.”
“I’m blaming my lapse in judgement on painkillers.” The
statement was flippant, but the quavering of her voice and the slight
hitch to her breathing told the truth. There was nothing casual about
what was happening between them. It was life or death.
“Why is it a mistake?” he demanded as he pulled her a little
closer to him.
All the reasons fled along with the fear. With the heat of his
body against hers, his breath warm on her skin, she couldn’t pull
them to mind anymore. She could see the fine sheen of sweat on his
skin from where he’d been working. Her breath caught as she looked
up. His eyes weren’t locked on hers. Instead, they were locked on
her mouth. He looked at her lips as if he wanted to bite into her and
in that moment, she would have let him.
“Mia,” he murmured. It was the last thing that was said
between them. He descended upon her, his lips on hers as his hands
slid upward to tangle in the fall of her hair.
It was a gentle kiss. She didn’t doubt for a moment that Bennett
was aware of every injury and mindful not to hurt her. That was just
who he was. But as his mouth moved over hers in a kiss that was
achingly tender, her body burned for him. When he captured her bottom
lip between his, she melted against him. His arms closed around her
pulling her even closer, until she was firmly pressed against the
hard wall of his chest. She could feel him everywhere.
Then his hands slid downward, cupping her behind, pressing their
bodies even more tightly together. The blatant evidence of his desire
was unmistakable and her body responded to it insistently. She wanted
him. She wanted him with a desperation that she couldn’t even
articulate.
The dog whined then, butting his large head between them and
demanding to be given the lion’s share of the attention.
Breathless, aching, desperate, and more than a little embarrassed
that she’d fallen so easily into Bennett’s arms, Mia backed away
from him.
“What are we doing, Bennett?” The question was anguished,
reflecting the war that raged inside her between the desire to have
what she wanted and the need to do what was best for everyone.
“We’re doing what we want for a change,” he replied. “I
don’t know why you bailed on me that night. I may never know… but
there’s one thing I’m sure of, Mia.”
“What’s that?”
“Whatever your reason for not showing up,” he said firmly. “It
wasn’t because you don’t want me—because you don’t want us.”
Forcing herself to move away from him completely, Mia disentangled
herself from his arms. She couldn’t think clearly when he touched
her, obviously. “Wanting something doesn’t mean you should have
it.”
“That’s a fine rule for children… It doesn’t fly with me.
I’m a grown man, and God knows you’re a grown woman. Nobody, Mia,
and I mean nobody, ought to have a say in what happens between us
except us.”
Seraphina Donavan is a hopeless romantic with a wicked &
occasionally dirty mind! Those things, combined with her love of
writing, prompted her to take the leap and transform those fantasies
into written words on a page. As a curvy girl herself, Seraphina has
made it a point to celebrate those women with delicious curves with
her work through writing and the hot men who love them.
She currently has 18 published books and one anthology and is
working on many more.
Living in Central Kentucky, Seraphina spends her time rescuing
stray animals, working for a non-profit agency and dreaming of
becoming a best-selling author. She lives in a home that has more
character than working parts and enjoys spending time with her fur
babies. Feel free to contact her with any questions or thoughts on
your mind.. She loves connecting with her readers & hearing from
anyone!
A long time reader of historical romance,
Seraphina writes Paranormal Regency Romance as Chasity Bowlin.
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