Book Tour: Singe by Aly Martinez
SINGE is the first book in an ALL NEW
smokin-hot standalone series by Aly Martinez NOW AVAILABLE!
Amazon US: http://amzn.to/2kfNgXh
Amazon UK: http://amzn.to/2kfyRdL
Nook: http://bit.ly/2kQyB5S
Kobo: http://bit.ly/2kC4kru
She was my nightmare. Every time I
closed my eyes, I watched her fall into that inferno. Over and over,
I failed to save her.
I hadn’t been able to reach her, and
the guilt only burned hotter over time. Four years later, I was the
unreachable one.
Heroes aren’t always saints.
Sometimes, we’re nothing more than jaded sinners driven by
sleepless nights and hearts full of darkness.
And then I met her. She was a dreamer
who managed to soothe my scars and heal my wounds.
But, as the flames closed in around us,
I feared I wasn’t the right man to save her. That is until I
realized she was the one woman I’d burn the world down to protect.
Chapter One
Jude
“Tomorrow, it’s on me,” I said,
standing up off the barstool.
Behind the bar, Carmen waggled her
eyebrows, seductively calling out, “Funny, I could be on you
tonight if you stayed awhile longer.”
I laughed at her innuendo and tossed
her a wink. “I gotta get home, babe. Seven a.m. comes way too
early.”
“Well, offer’s on the table,” she
purred.
It always was with her. And, if I
wasn’t careful, I’d eventually take her up on it.
Not that sleeping with Carmen wouldn’t
have been good. But, when you find a cheap bar only five minutes from
your house, you don’t fuck that up by dipping your cock into the
bartender.
“Later, Carmen,” I called, pushing
the door open and heading to my car.
I wasn’t out of the parking lot
before I heard, “Officer Levitt? We’ve got an alarm going off in
Park Hill. You mind taking a look on your way home?”
Banging my head back against the
headrest, I groaned to myself. Park Hill was about as “on my way
home” as swinging past California on the way to Maine.
Switching my radio to my other hand, I
complained, “I’m off the clock, Jocelyn.” I had been for
several hours, even if I hadn’t made it home yet.
She laughed. “I’m sorry, but you’re
the only one remotely close. I had to send two cars out to the
Laslows’ to break up another argument between Cam and his old man.”
“They at it again?” I asked.
“Apparently, Cam told Lindsey he
didn’t want the baby. Lindsey told his dad. Old Man Laslow lost his
mind.”
I chuckled, putting my blinker on and
then doing a U-turn in the middle of the empty road. “Christ. I bet
he did. I know the man’s seventy-five, but I sure as hell wouldn’t
want to go toe-to-toe with him.”
“I’m with you on that. So…you
gonna head out to Park Hill?” she asked in a sugary-sweet tone.
I grumbled deep in my chest. “You’re
gonna owe me some of that banana bread for this. I missed it the
other day when you brought it up to the station.”
“I don’t owe you anything.” She
giggled. “However, as a personal thank-you from the state of
Illinois, Park County, and the owners of Park Hill, I’ll bring you
in a loaf on Friday. Deal?”
“Deal. I’m en route now.”
“Stay safe, and radio in with your
report.”
“Yes, ma’am,” I replied, knowing
exactly how much thirty-year-old Jocelyn loved being called ma’am
by a twenty-five-year-old man.
“Don’t you—”
“Gotta go.” I turned the volume
down to mute her, grinning to myself as I flipped my lights and siren
on.
I’d been a cop for two years. And, in
that time, I’d been out to the privately owned Park Hill estate at
least a dozen times. It wasn’t unusual for the alarm on the mansion
to get triggered. It never amounted to anything. The expansive estate
was on the very edge of the county, and trouble didn’t usually
travel that far out. More often than not, a bird at a window or a
bumbling new member of the grounds crew would accidentally trip the
alarm. Truth was, no one actually lived in Park Hill. The owners
visited sporadically. But, for the majority of the time, it remained
empty.
Some minutes later, I cut my siren as I
pulled up to the entrance. The cold air assaulted me as I stepped out
of my patrol car with my flashlight in hand and aimed at the keypad
on the massive security gate that blocked the driveway off. That damn
thing alone had to have cost more than I’d make in a lifetime.
Forget about the house inside.
The smell of wood burning in a
fireplace wafted through the night air. I guessed someone was home
for a visit.
I typed in the emergency code on the
gate panel and then climbed back in my car and made my way down the
tree-lined driveway. I’d spent the day on patrol, and, with the
exception of some minor vandalism across town, it had been a slow
one.
Though, in the blink of an eye, that
would change.
Along with my entire life.
“Oh fuck,” I breathed as the main
house came into view on the top of the hill.
After throwing my car in park, I jumped
on the radio at my shoulder. I could barely get the words out as I
slung my door open and took off at a dead sprint.
“This is Officer Levitt! I need fire
support at Park Hill immediately!”
And then I froze as a wave of
adrenaline crashed into me like a tsunami.
An inferno roared in the night sky, but
it was the small silhouette of a woman perched outside a third-floor
window, smoke pouring out all around her, that knocked the breath out
of me. My heart stopped, but my feet continued to pound against the
pavement.
Jocelyn’s voice caught me. “What’s
going on?”
“I need medical too!” I barked as I
got closer. “The whole damn place is in flames and there’s a
woman trapped!”
The woman’s long, black hair blew out
behind her like a battered flag whipping in a storm. I couldn’t
make out her face or her skin color or even guess at her age for the
black soot covering her, but her fear was unmistakable.
And unforgettable.
“Hang on!” I yelled up to her.
“Oh my God!” she screamed before it
turned into a fit of coughing. “Help me!”
“Hang on! Don’t let go!”
Frantically, I searched the perimeter
for a way in, but it wasn’t only her house that was on fire. Flames
were encompassing her. The yard and all the surrounding flowerbeds.
Top to bottom. The first and second floors were completely engulfed,
and if the sound of shattering windows was any indication, it was
quickly making its way up to the third floor—to her.
“No! Don’t leave me!” she
screamed, panic thick in her garbled voice, as I started around the
side of the house.
A wall of heat stopped me in my tracks.
Throwing an arm up, I did my best to block my face while scanning the
building for any possible entry—or, in her case, exit.
But there wasn’t a surface of that
house that wasn’t ablaze.
Except the roof.
Son of a bitch.
I spoke into the radio. “I need an
ETA on fire.”
Jocelyn replied, “They’re on their
way. Five minutes out.”
I didn’t have one minute, much less
five.
Fuck.
My pulse quickened, sending blood
thundering in my ears. I was a cop. I’d trained for chaos. I should
have been able to come up with a solution for a situation like this,
but they didn’t teach you how to conquer the impossible at the
Academy.
And, as I took inventory of the flames
dancing beneath her, I knew that was exactly what I was up against.
My gut wrenched as I helplessly sped
back around the house. She appeared almost childlike, hovering
barefoot on that narrow brick ledge, but her long-sleeve top and her
loose-fitting pants clung to the body of a woman.
Jesus Christ! Where was that fucking
fire truck?
“Is anyone else in the house?” I
yelled up to her.
Not that I could have helped them,
either. Short of running into a burning building, on what would
surely be a suicide mission, there was not one thing I could do. And
didn’t that little reality feel like a wrecking ball to the chest.
“No!” she cried, a loud sob lodging
in her throat. It turned into more coughing, her body shaking
violently with every heave.
I fisted my hands at my sides as my
anxiety spiraled higher.
“Please. Do something!” she begged.
I ground my teeth together and once
again glanced around as if a water hose and a ladder were going to
suddenly appear out of nowhere. “Hang tight, okay? Fire trucks are
on their way.”
“I can’t hold on much longer!”
she cried.
“Yes, you can,” I demanded.
“I…I think I need to jump,” she
coughed out.
I assessed the massive fire below her.
I’d never be able to reach her before it swallowed her. But there
was no way I’d be able to stand by and watch her burn.
No. If she jumped off that ledge, she
was going to get us both killed.
“Don’t you dare,” I barked.
“Don’t even think about it. Two minutes. They’ll be here.”
“I…I can’t.”
“Two minutes,” I repeated. “Hold—”
Suddenly, a window to her left
exploded, shooting glass and flames in all directions.
I covered my face as she screamed in a
paralyzing mixture of fear and agony. It cut me so deep that I knew
I’d bear the scars for the rest of my life, and that had nothing to
do with the glass and everything to do with the heavy weight of my
failure already lingering in the smoke-filled air.
When I opened my eyes again, I caught a
glimpse of orange flickering in the window behind her. Panic built in
my chest.
“You need to move!” I yelled.
She shook her head and continued to
cough and cry.
But it wasn’t an option. I couldn’t
help her. Though I damn sure refused to watch her die.
“Please. Just listen to me.” I
swallowed hard. “You can’t stay there.” I looked to the roof.
Sending her higher seemed wrong and
went against everything I’d learned in my limited fire training.
But fuck, my options were having her jump into a conflagration or
scale up the side of a building in hopes of buying us the precious
minutes needed for the fire department to arrive.
Drawing in a smoke-filled breath, I
made a decision that would haunt me for the rest of my life. “You
need to climb up to the roof.”
“I can’t!” she shrieked.
My stomach twisted, but I gentled my
voice. “Look, I know you’re scared. But I’m right here. I’ll
help guide you up, but, sweetheart, it’s bearing down on you. You
gotta move, and I mean now.”
She choked on a mouthful of smoke as
she attempted to look over her shoulder.
“You’re going to be fine. I swear
to you,” I lied. “But you have to move.”
“I’m not going to make it!” She
had to have yelled it in order for me to hear her, but I felt her
defeat slither over my skin like a whispered goodbye.
I took a long step forward, too focused
on her to feel the heat singeing my skin. “Yes, you are!” I
declared. “Move your ass up to the roof and we’ll both be out of
here in time for breakfast.”
Her gaze landed on mine, tears forging
paths down her soot-covered cheeks, her disbelief obvious even from
yards away. “Are you sure?”
It was a ridiculous question. It wasn’t
like I could make any guarantees. It was fire, for God’s sake. But
that didn’t stop me from covering my heart with my palm and vowing,
“I swear on my life you’re going to make it through this.”
Her hesitation was evident, but with
one last sob, she inched her small body farther out onto the narrow
ledge, reaching the tips of her shaking fingers out for the
windowsill above her.
“Good girl,” I praised, a fraction
of relief washing over me.
And then I sucked in a sharp breath as
one of her shaking legs slipped out from under her.
“No!” I yelled.
On instinct, I rushed toward the
flames, my arms stretched out in the air as though I could catch her.
A scalding heat blistered my face and
forced me to stop, but the real pain was in my chest. I watched in
horror for what felt like a lifetime as she fought to right herself,
her dainty arms flailing like a wounded butterfly frantically trying
to catch the wind.
But there was none to be found.
My heart lurched into my throat, and my
breath seized in my lungs.
And then a deep, guttural sound tore
through me, shredding me from the inside out, as I watched her fall.
I woke up in a cold sweat. It wasn’t
exactly something new. I’d been dreaming of Butterfly for over four
years. She always flew directly into the flames, screaming as I stood
helpless to save her.
Swinging my legs over the side of the
bed, I cradled my head in my hands and tried to pretend I was okay.
That wasn’t exactly something new, either. I could still feel the
heat on the back of my neck. My lungs were still thick with smoke.
The pressure in my chest never left me.
The distance while I was living in LA
had helped. But, in the week since I’d been back in Illinois, I’d
woken up every morning at that blazing house. I didn’t even have to
be asleep for the memories to assault me.
I should have gone back to sleep. It
was my first day at my new job, and the last thing I needed was to
show up haggard and sleep-deprived. But, as I’d learned over the
years, another fiery butterfly awaited me on the other side of REM.
No way I was volunteering for that.
I pushed myself off the bed and tugged
a T-shirt on, preparing to head down to the hotel gym with hopes that
I could outrun the mental fog that had been hovering over me since
I’d returned. There was a reason I’d thrown all of my shit in my
car and driven as far as I could all those years ago.
Yet, somehow, I’d come full circle.
But I’d come back a different man.
At least that’s what I’d told
myself as the deafening roar of doubt had overwhelmed me the moment
I’d driven across the state line.
Regardless, it had been time to go
home.
I’d been gone too long.
Or, as I’d decided as I’d passed
the exit to Park County, not nearly long enough.
Another great read from Ms. Aly! I love this book!!! I easily fell in love with Rhion and Jude. Oh and also the other men in the Guardian Protection. **swoon** Those men....my gawd!!! Anyway, from the start up to the last, the book is amazing! I was easily get pulled in to the story and the characters. Overall, Ms. Aly did an amazing job - totally! I can't say any bad things on this book, it's perfect for me! The twist and turns and the suspense of this book had me holding my breath! Gah!!! Just WOW! I can't wait for more of this series!
#mustread
#mustread
Born and raised in Savannah, Georgia,
Aly Martinez is a stay-at-home mom to four crazy kids under the age
of five- including a set of twins. Currently living in South
Carolina, she passes what little free time she has reading anything
and everything she can get her hands on, preferably with a glass of
wine at her side.
Comments
Post a Comment