Tags

Never
Loved
Dark
Obsession # 1

By: Charlotte Stein  
Releasing July 21st, 2015
Loveswept

Blurb
Perfect for fans of Abbi
Glines, the first novel in the Dark Obsession series tells the story of a
beautiful wallflower who falls for a chiseled street fighter—and learns just
how dangerous love can be.
Beatrix Becker spent most
of her life under the thumb of her controlling, abusive father. And now that
she’s free and attending her dream college, she has no idea how to act like the
normal crowd: partying, going on dates, even having a conversation. Then she
meets Serge Sorensen. Big and surly with a whole host of riotous tattoos, Serge
is supposed to scare the hell out of her. But beneath his harsh exterior,
Beatrix discovers a kindred spirit who knows what it’s like to be a misfit.
Most exhilarating—and terrifying—is what he does for a living: illegal street
fighting.
There’s nothing like the
rush Serge gets from the intense athleticism and brutal glory of combat—though
his chemistry with Beatrix comes close. Slowly at first, he introduces her to
his world, where he lives by instinct, passion, and desire. He even helps her
out with her equally traumatized brother. But when Serge gets in too deep with
the wrong people, he ends up paying in blood. And suddenly, just as Beatrix has
been drawn into Serge’s perfectly sculpted arms, she’s thrown once and for all
into the fight of his life.

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Author Info
Charlotte
Stein has written over thirty short stories, novellas and novels, including
entries in The Mammoth Book of Hot Romance and Best New Erotica 10. Her latest
work, Run To You, was recently a DABWAHA finalist. When not writing deeply
emotional and intensely sexy books, she can be found eating jelly turtles,
watching terrible sitcoms and occasionally lusting after hunks. For more on
Charlotte, visit:
Author Links:  Website | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads


Excerpt

I know they are the ones I have to speak to. I
recognize the guy with the tattoo of a hammer on his biceps, and some of the
others look familiar from that bar on Maple Street. I’m pretty sure that’s the
guy who pointed Tommy out to me, yet still I hesitate. Of course I hesitate.
They look like such an insane rabble. As I watch
through the windscreen of my car, three of them start fighting. One of them
pushes another one; the third guy grabs the first by his dirty tank top. Harsh
words are exchanged, so fierce and forceful I can almost make out the spittle
flying.
Then suddenly there’s a knife. I see its edge gleam
in the bright sunlight, about a second before something red appears across the
chest of the guy who started it. Blood, I think dizzily. That’s blood. He’s
bleeding all over his own T-shirt, and though it isn’t anywhere close to a
mortal wound, it doesn’t encourage me to get out of the car.
Nor does the way the fight ends. The one with the
knife goes to slash at the other guy again, and I’m just about to cover my eyes
with my hand when this enormous man comes out of nowhere. He lashes out with a
hand like a shovel, and somehow the knife is on the ground. The brawling men
are scattering, as though they were never there at all.
And I understand why.
The big one is pretty terrifying. And obviously
everyone else thinks so, too, because they part like butter under a knife before
him. He goes back to his bike without anyone so much as brushing his arms, and
once there he sits down in a way that gets my attention in a fucking chokehold.
I mean, he had it before, but watching the machine balk beneath his weight is
something else. It actually seems to sag. I can almost hear its sound of
protest.
God knows how he rides the thing. God knows about
anything going on here. I try to make a list in my head of all the shenanigans
that might be ensuing, but all I can come up with is drug ring.
And I’ve got to be honest—I don’t think drug
ring
is a real thing. It sounds like something my father would have ranted
about whenever I asked if I could go anywhere, or do anything, or be out past
five in the afternoon.
The drug ring will get you, I think, which would probably be funny if I couldn’t feel his ghost
pressing down on my shoulders at the same time. Or if I understood any of this
on any level whatsoever. I mean, even if they’re not dealing meth to kids, or
about to snatch me and put me in a van, a ton of this stuff is disturbing.
For a start:
Why are they all congregating outside an abandoned
convenience store? It’s not even a nice one, with those signs people like to
collect and stick up on their walls, or some remnant of civilization still
hanging around. It’s an ugly rotten tooth of a place, striped all over with
rust streaks and half sagging in the middle.
Yet here they are, milling around in this big odd
jumble. Some of them have bikes; some of them have battered cars. Some are
dressed in leather and denim; others wander around in mismatched tracksuits. In
a couple of cases I spy business-wear, as though the wearers came straight here
from an early-morning meeting. This is secretly the abandoned-convenience-store
branch of GE, and in a second they’re all going to start funneling funds
through accounts in the Caymans.
Or maybe I just hope that’s the case, because now I
have to get out of the car.
I have to if I want to find my brother, yet somehow
I’m still not doing it. Instead I take out my phone and call the only person
who might be able to help me, even if I suspect she won’t be able to help me at
all. When I left our dorm room, she was trying to decide if scarves are in or
out now, which seems pretty far from this.
I’m not even sure if I should say. But I do anyway.
“Do you know anything about gangs that hang around
outside convenience stores?” I ask, bracing myself for all kinds of answers.
One time I tried to tell her about my brother and his problems, and she
suggested I change my name so I won’t be bothered anymore.
Of course, I couldn’t explain to her why that was
ridiculous. Whenever I try, I start doing something silly, like crying
uncontrollably. I get this urge to start spilling all my secrets, and most of
them barely make any sense. Sometimes I look back on them, and it almost seems
as if they happened to another person—one who never had to hide a magazine with
a man’s naked chest on it under her mattress, or push every clock in the house
back by two minutes so Tommy would be home on time, or fear enclosed spaces in
case the next time we never get let out at all.
Those things were just a dream.
This is the reality, where I am a cool and very normal—if
slightly older than most freshman—college girl.
Or at least, I will be one soon. All I have to do
is get through this latest disaster, and onward to the other side. On the other
side is the possibility of being a proper person, a person who is successful at
doing the things that everyone else does. I could be more interested in parties
and hairstyles and dating, to the point where Sam might actually approve and
maybe even remember me.
At the moment, that isn’t happening.

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