BREATHLESS
book two in the Rhine Trilogy
book two in the Rhine Trilogy
By Beverly Jenkins
Releasing on January 31,
2017 from Avon Romance
As manager
of one of the finest hotels in Arizona Territory, Portia Carmichael has respect
and stability-qualities sorely missing from her harsh childhood. She refuses to
jeopardize that by hitching herself to the wrong man. Suitors are plentiful,
but none of them has ever looked quite as tempting as the family friend who
just rode into town…and none have looked at her with such intensity and heat.
Duchess.
That’s the nickname Kent Randolph gave Portia when she was a young girl. Now
she’s a stunning, intelligent woman-and Kent has learned his share of hard
lessons. After drifting through the West, he’s learned the value of a place to
settle down, and in Portia’s arms he’s found that and more. But convincing her
to trust him with her heart, not just her passion, will be the greatest
challenge he’s known-and one he intends to win…
A NOTE FROM
Beverly Jenkins
Dear
Readers,
This
is the second book in the Rhine Trilogy and I do hope you enjoy it. With all
the issues and heartache Portia carried inside, I knew it would be difficult
for her to give her heart to someone, but Kent Randolph proved to be the man
for the job, even if I didn’t know he would be her hero when the story began.
Hope you’ll enjoy seeing Rhine and Eddy from Forbidden and, yes, they are still very much in love.
The
Fontaine Hotel is loosely based on the Mountain View Hotel founded in Oracle,
Arizona, in 1895 by Annie Box Neal and her husband William “Curly” Neal, who
were both of African- American and Native-American descent. The Mountain View
was a combination hotel and spa and catered not only to European royalty but to
wealthy visitors from places like Russia, Australia, and China, too. Look them
up.
The
great Apache chief Geronimo surrendered on September 4, 1886, and was promptly
declared a prisoner of war. He and his people eventually wound up in Florida
along with the Apache scouts the army employed to hunt him down. He died at
Fort Sill, Oklahoma, in 1909. The Apache warrior Lozen, also captured in 1886,
was sent to the barracks at Mount Vernon, Alabama, where she died of
tuberculosis in 1887. Although her name has faded from America’s memory, her
bravery and fearlessness remains legendary with her people.
I
only touched briefly on African-American women and the fight for suffrage but
hope to get back to it in depth sometime in the future. Until then, if you’d
like to do some research on your own, here are two excellent sources:
African American Women
and the Vote: 1837–1965 by Cynthia Neverdon-Morton, et al.
African American Women
in the Struggle for the Vote: 1850–1920 by Rosalyn Terborg-Penn
Having
the opportunity to create characters and stories that reflect my heritage as a
woman of color is priceless. Representation matters. Thanks again for the support and love. Thanks
also for spreading the word about my books to everyone you know. It’s much
appreciated.
Until
next time, happy reading.
B.
EXCERPT from BREATHLESS:
Portia saw the curiosity on the faces of
some of the other people seated nearby and wondered if sitting with Kent would
cause gossip, but she went ahead and told him about Eddy and the other ladies
leaving her to help in the kitchen.
“You didn’t want to help?”
She smiled ruefully. “Let’s just say I’m
better with numbers than I am with pots.”
“Can’t cook, huh?”
“No.”
“Then you’ll need a man who can.”
“Are you volunteering?”
He shrugged. “If it’ll keep you from
starving to death, I suppose I can make myself available, if called upon.”
She wondered if he had this effect on all
women.
“How’s the managing of that passion
going?” he asked.
Her heart thumped. “Fine.” His eyes were
so piercing, she trembled in response.
“You’re fibbing of course, but that’s
okay.”
“I am not.”
“Uh-huh.”
She leaned closer so they wouldn’t be
overheard. “I am not. One kiss was all I needed and now I’m fine, just as I
said I would be.”
“Duchess, your uppity mouth’s been
wanting another taste all day.”
Heat sent her senses galloping. “It has
not, and stop calling it that.”
“Okay. Your sweet mouth has been wanting
another taste all day.”
She almost keeled over. “I do like those
high-collared blouses you wear.”
She looked down at herself.
“Makes me want to undo all the little
buttons and see how you manage with my kisses against your bare throat. Curious
about what scent you place there, too.”
Her eyes widened.
He smiled. “No?”
“No.”
“Okay. Just something for you to think
about later. Do you want the legs or the wings?”
Her mind was stuck like it had stepped in
tar. How in the world was she going to remain unmoved by his teasing ways
without wanting to box his ears or wonder how his kisses would feel against
bare throat?
“I’ll take the wings.”
“We have only one set of flatware. Shall
I feed you or do you want to feed me?”
Scandalized by the suggestion, she forced
herself not to glance around to see how closely they were being observed.
“Neither,” she said. “I’ll have the wing. You can eat the rest.”
“Thought I’d ask.”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
BEVERLY
JENKINS has received numerous awards, including five Waldenbooks/Borders Group
Best Sellers Awards, two Career Achievement Awards from Romantic Times
Magazine, and a Golden Pen Award from the Black Writer’s Guild. Ms Jenkins was
named one of the Top Fifty Favorite African-American writers of the 20th
Century by AABLC, the nation’s largest on-line African-American book club. She
was recently nominated for the NAACP Image Award in Literature. To read more
about Beverly, please visit her website at www.beverlyjenkins.net.
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