Synopsis
As the son of an Irish mobster, Connor O’Neil spent his
boyhood hiding from the horrors of his own home. His one reprieve was a girl he
knew only as Evelyn, but even she was taken away. As a man, Connor is
determined to stay away from his father’s business. With Sean, participation is
not a request, but a demand. The truth is, Connor might be more like the evil
he’s trying to hide away from than he would like to admit. And he’s already
spent years trying to cover the scars left over from the pain. A chance
encounter puts the lost girl from his past back on his path, and he no longer
has a choice but to face the darkness he’s been ignoring for years. Evelyn.
Sasha. Slave. She doesn’t really know who she is anymore. Or maybe she does,
and she doesn’t want to tell. She isn’t the same as she once was—now a thing to
be kept and maintained, shuffled from owner to owner until it was her time to
go. She only became Connor’s because he took her when he knew she wasn’t his to
take. Except she isn’t Connor’s at all … And he can’t keep her hidden forever.
~Inflict is a
Standalone Romance with graphic depictions of violence, sexual scenes, dark
elements and a HEA. It is not recommended for those under the age of 18.
Excerpt
“It’s art, the same thing you have all over the house,
except on canvas.” “Where it belongs,” Connor said exasperated. “Children draw
on the walls, Evelyn.” What bit of anger was in her expression melted away,
leaving a deep hurt in its place. A part of Connor regretted what he’d said
almost instantly, but the other part of him knew it was true. He understood
that it was the same way for Evelyn, too. A large part of her was all
woman—adult, grown, and a wee bit insane. But there was still a part of her
that was a wee child, stuck in a time before all the terrible things had
happened to her. “That was uncalled for,” she said. Connor scowled. “Drawing on the walls is
uncalled for.” “You’re just parroting things back to me.” “Because I’m the one
making sense, lass!” Evelyn’s green eyes rolled upwards. “Whatever, I’m
finishing the feather, and it’s staying. It’s not like it’s fucking ugly or
something.” Connor eyed the feather, silently agreeing. It was a beautiful
image, even if the majority of it was only the barebones of the drawing. Mostly
blacklines forming what would be before all the color was added in. She had
added some color toward the top, gentle strokes of metallic color that melted
with other colors, and shimmered under the kitchen pot lights. He was sure once
the light came in from the morning through the windows, the color would sparkle
even more. It was amazing. He wouldn’t deny that. But on his kitchen wall?
Surely they had better things to be doing and talking about other than drawing
on walls? “You can keep the feather,” Connor said heavily. It pained him to do
so. “You didn’t have a choice.” Feck. “But,” he added, “no more on the walls.”
Her head turned, showing off her beautiful profile as her lips pursed. “The
ceilings are okay, then. I get it.” Connor had the strangest urge to smack
himself in the face. “No.” “We’ll see.” “Evelyn—” “You’re no fun,” she said rather grumpily,
tossing her package of markers to the nearby table. Shooting him with another
one of her glares, she headed towards the sink, grabbing a glass from the
cabinet as she passed. “I thought you would like it.” Connor didn’t know how to
respond to that. “I do.” “Then why be an ass about it?” He chose to stay silent
and think about his words as she poured a glass of water, and drank it down in
her own silence. He walked forward, stopping at the kitchen island just as she
set her now empty glass into the sink. “I will buy you whatever size canvas you
want,” Connor said. “And then you’ll hang them on the walls that I could have
just drawn on anyway,” she deadpanned. “Don’t you see how that’s a little
ridiculous?” “No, what’s ridiculous is you drawing on the walls.” “Connor.”
“Evelyn.” “It’s pretty,” she whined, waving at it. “It is—it’s great. You
should let me copy it over and tattoo it up your hip and side. It’d look grand,
love. It’ll even match the wings on your back. But not on the walls.” Evelyn
frowned. “I thought you would like it.” “I said I do.” “Not enough.” All right.
Now this was getting rather dumb. Connor was all for indulging Evelyn at times,
even some of her more … eccentric moods, when they came on. Which he was
learning could be at any point, as she’d spent so much time being forced to do
the bidding of a man. This was too far. “Don’t go acting like a right wagon
about all of this,” Connor said, turning to walk out of the kitchen and go find
something else to do. “I’m not asking for something feckin’ crazy here just
that you don’t draw on my goddamn walls, Evelyn.” “What does that even mean?”
Connor, more exasperated than he was willing to admit, didn’t bother to turn
around as he asked, “What?” “Wagon. What does that even mean?” If there was a
God above, He was laughing at Connor. Laughing at his foolish arse. The Irish
had a terrible way of taking the English language and mutilating it for their
own benefit, however they saw fit. Sometimes shite didn’t make sense, not that
it had to outside of the person using it or the person being insulted, but none
of that mattered in the grand scheme of things. It was not as simple as saying
the phrase meant one thing, when in fact, it could mean a lot of things. This happened
to be one of those times, but he figured it was self-explanatory. Evelyn had
enough Irish in her to look the part, with her green eyes, pale skin,
reddish-blonde curls, and freckles every which way he looked. The sad thing
was, life had practically stripped her of the nuances and culture, which was a
feckin’ shame. “Means you’re being trite, grumpy, or bitchy—take your pick.
Whichever one fits, Evelyn.” Connor only heard the clang of metal in just
enough time to turn around and watch something fly at his feckin’ head. Sweet
Jesus, she had one hell of an aim on her. He ducked, and the frying pan
practically skimmed the top of his hair before it crashed into the floor just
outside of the kitchen. It took him all of three seconds to stare at Evelyn, check
behind him where the frying pan was now laying, and then back at the crazy
woman standing behind the island to realize what had even just happened. As
shocked as he was, he was also pissed, and amused. All five feet, four inches
of Evelyn stared him down from across the kitchen like she was daring him to
say something or move an inch. He swore he saw her hand twitch, too, like she
was considering reaching for another one of the hanging pans to whip at him.
No, the wee thing didn’t sound Irish at all. She didn’t understand him
sometimes, and he got a chuckle out of it more often than not. She was a wee
bit insane—he sort of liked that, too. But standing there like she was,
pink-cheeked, huffing, and ready to whip his arse even if she had to use a
frying pan to do it, she was every inch an Irish lass. Every feckin’ inch. It
turned him on like nothing ever had. He wasn’t even sure how to deal with that.
A smart man—a frightened man—would have turned tail, and run from the angry
woman in his kitchen, knowing he’d pushed her too far and he wasn’t going to
get anything good from her tonight. Connor was apparently neither of those
things, and he was going to blame that on his damn heritage, too. A stubborn
bastard, of course. “Did you just throw a pan at me?” Connor asked. Evelyn
spluttered in her anger before spitting out, “You called me a child and
bitchy.” “I said ‘pick one.’” “And I picked one. A pan, I mean.” “You could
have killed me.” “Probably not. I think your skull is too thick for that.” “Now
you’re just trying to piss me off,” Connor said, his jaw clenching. “Is it
working?” “Throw another pan at me, lass, and I’ll paddle your arse until its
good and red, and you’re begging to be allowed to apologize.” That was his one
warning. He’d given it. She could make of it what she wanted. Evelyn’s gaze
narrowed. “Is that a promise?” “Don’t do it again, Evelyn.” And now his feckin’
cock was hard, so feck this whole goddamn day right to hell. Figuring his
warning was enough, Connor headed out of the kitchen without a look back. A
cold shower was in his very near future to get his lust under control. He
hadn’t even gotten out of the entryway before she threw the second pan. God
save me, he thought. Connor turned back around. Evelyn’s eyes widened, her
mouth falling open with an audible pop as Connor stalked toward her.
“Wait—wait, what are you doing?” “Oh, you know damn well what I am going to do,
lass.”
About the Author
Bethany-Kris is a Canadian author, lover of much, and mother to three young sons, one cat, and two dogs. A small town in Eastern Canada where she was born and raised is where she has always called home. With her boys under her feet, snuggling cat, barking dogs, and a hubby calling over his shoulder, she is nearly always writing something … when she can find the time.
To keep up-to-date with new releases from Bethany-Kris, sign up to her New Release Newsletter here: http://eepurl.com/bf9lzD
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