Title:
Paris
Love Match
Author:
Nigel
Blackwell
Publisher: Bandit Publishing
Release
date: May
2, 2013
Genre: Romance humorous
Age
Group:
New Adult
Getting a taxi in Paris can be hell.Piers Chapman expected a boring business trip to Paris.What he didn't expect was to fight over a cab with a beautiful girl.After a bad meeting, Sidney Roux just wanted to hail a cab, go home, and have a glass of wine.She didn't expect to fight over a cab with some pompous British tourist.Neither of them expected another man to jump in their cab.Or to be involved in a gun fight.Or a car chase through the streets of Paris.Or for the man to die.But they're thrust together when the mob demands they return what the dead man stole.Will Piers and Sidney work together?Will they find what he had stolen?Will they stay alive?And will they do the last thing they expected?Will they fall in love?
Giveaway: (1) e-copy of PARIS LOVE MATCH. Books will be gifted from Amazon or Barnes and Noble. Open International. Enter the rafflecopter below.
Nigel Blackwell was born in rural Oxfordshire in England. He has a love of books, a PhD in Physical Chemistry, and a black belt in pointing out the obvious. As a teenager he toured Europe and loved seeing the wonders of the world and the people in it. Since then he has been fortunate enough to travel across Europe, North America, the Middle East, and Japan, and hasn't been anywhere that doesn't have the potential for a story.He now lives in Texas with his wife and daughter, where they enjoy the sunshine and listen tothe coyotes howl at night.
Excerpt:
Piers slammed the taxi
door and sank into a seat that had long since given up any effort to support
its occupants. “Hotel Lafayette, si vous—“
The opposite rear door
whipped open. Piers’ mouth froze half-open with his tongue poking out. His
forehead wrinkled and his eyebrows inched closer together. The face of an angel
stared at him and he glimpsed the mesmerizing curve of a tight-fitting skirt
and long legs as she bounded into the taxi. The angel leaned back in the seat
and undid the top button of a business suit. His thoughts danced uncomfortably
between modesty and wanting to look at her cleavage.
She ran a hand through her
long, jet-black hair, flipped one side over her ear, and turned to look at him
with deep mocha eyes. She smiled, big and broad, intense and confident, a full
thousand watts. Her high cheekbones and soft lips underlined her angelic
presence. Tiny dimples rippled as she opened her mouth to speak.
Piers held his breath as
the sight of her paralyzed his voice.
“Get out,” she said.
Piers blinked in shock.
“What?”
“Get the fuck out.”
“What?” The wattage had
gone from her smile, but Piers still feared his heart might stop as he looked
at her. “But I—“
She leaned across him and
yanked at the door handle on his side. “Go on, get out.”
The sounds of Paris wafted
in through the open door, a hundred languages, all spoken at once.
“I beg your pardon, but I
was here first.”
“And?”
“Well, doesn’t that mean
it’s my taxi?”
The voices outside turned
to shouts.
She shook her head.
Piers sighed. “I hate to
be rude, but I was seated before you arrived, and I was giving the driver the
address when you got in.”
She huffed. “You are being
rude. In Paris there is a certain etiquette regarding taxis.”
He raised his eyebrows.
“Etiquette?”
She gave a patronizing
smile. “I started for the taxi before you. That means it’s my taxi.”
The driver leaned back
over his seat. “Will one of you tell me where we’re going?”
Her eyes remained locked
on Piers. “I saw it first. And you’re just some tourist. Get out. I live here.
I need a taxi.”
“Please. One of you tell
me where we’re going,” the driver said, agitated.
Piers glanced at the
driver. “Hotel La—“
She waved her hand in
front of his face. “Non, non. Rue de—“
There was more shouting
outside the cab then a large, wet man dived headlong through the open door and
across the rear seat. The man rolled around, his elbows and knees digging into
Piers. The girl lurched away from them.
Piers opened his mouth,
but his throat closed up at the sight of a gun in the man’s hand. His heart
thumped hard against his ribs. His arms locked solid and his legs felt like
lead. He tried to swallow, but his mouth was dry.
The man waved the gun at
the driver. “Vite, vite! Drive! Go!”
Thanks for posting this.This is awesome!!
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