Blurb:
In a harsh new world, only she can bring him to life…
Crux Survivors, Book 2
Chase Hawthorne is on the run from a ghost. The shooting that took his little sister and scarred Chase’s face and body has left far deeper scars on his brother Tripp’s soul. Driven to pull up stakes and head for the most haunted place in Louisiana, Chase hopes to prove to Tripp there is no ghost of his twin beckoning from the afterlife.
When he comes upon a young woman fighting off raiders, Chase doesn’t hesitate to help the first female he’s seen in years. And he tries to ignore his instant attraction, hoping Tripp will feel it, too—and emerge from his frightening depression.
Keera has been alone too long, and Chase makes her feel things she never thought she’d feel again. Tripp may be the needier brother, but it’s Chase she wants. Scars and all.
But letting people too close comes with risks. And as they are drawn into the search for a young man’s family, both must accept the possibility that there’s more to life—and love—than simple survival.
Samhain Publishing- http://store.samhainpublishing.com/sole-survivors-p-73187.html?osCsid=5c9c135821c928458acc97a00e3dca32
Amazon- http://www.amazon.com/Sole-Survivors-Crux-Dani-Worth-ebook/dp/B00GEJPNX0/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1388271977&sr=1-1&keywords=sole+survivors+dani+worth
Excerpt:
Copyright © 2013 Dani Worth
All rights reserved — a Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication
“I wasn’t. I’m passing through with my younger brother. We stopped to hunt and I followed the sound of a gun. Were you shot?”
He shut his briefly before opening them and offering her a rueful smile. “Look, I won’t hurt you. I promise. It’s just been a long, long time since I saw anyone as beautiful as you.” He hoped she wouldn’t look down and catch the very uncomfortable evidence of his desire, but she did. He groaned. “Ignore that. I can’t help it.”
Her chuckle was husky and it brushed over his skin like velvet. “I’d be flattered but when was the last time you saw a woman?”
All rights reserved — a Samhain Publishing, Ltd. publication
“Why won’t you come out where I can see you?” Splattered with blood,
the brunette curled her lip at the bodies, and stepped away from them.
She squinted, obviously trying to see him through the leaves. “Who else
is in the woods with you?”
“There was a woman with those men, but she took off. She also threw the knife so I don’t think she was willingly with them.”
She moved upstream and knelt in the clean water to wash the blood off
her arms. She grimaced at the splotches on her shirt, then seemed to
realize the side of her blouse was open to the waist…and that it was
see-through. She crossed her arms, hunched her shoulders and grabbed the
ripped sides of her blouse in one fist. “Let me see your face.”
“Trust me, you won’t be happy you asked,” he muttered to himself before stepping into the sunlight.
She winced.
He didn’t blame her. Raiders had thought it would be great fun to
race up and down the streets in pickup trucks while firing into rows of
“empty” houses. He’d been sharing one of those houses with his younger
brother, sister and two other people. A bullet had shattered his right
cheek. Two more had hit his upper chest. None had healed well in the
year since it had happened. He’d been too busy grieving over the three
who’d died, including his sister, Maggie. She’d been standing in front
of the window when the first bullet struck.
The woman stood. “Why did you help me if you were with them?”“I wasn’t. I’m passing through with my younger brother. We stopped to hunt and I followed the sound of a gun. Were you shot?”
She shook her head, frowning when wet black hair stuck to her lips.
She reached up fast to pull her hair off her face, then re-crossed her
arms. “They weren’t trying to kill me, just scare me into going with
them.” Her lips turned down as she looked at the bodies. “I hate this.
Hate that people act like this, make me kill.” She looked up. “There are
so few of us left. I can’t understand the way they think.”
“Me neither.”
“You said you were passing through? To where?”
“I heard there was a settlement near here. I’m taking my brother by The Myrtles Plantation on the way.”
Dark eyes went wide. “Why would you want to go there? Most of the roof caved in years ago—the place is a moldy deathtrap.”
“I have—had—reasons.” Damn. It had been a gamble and the trip here
had been a bitch. Most of the roads were overgrown with trees splitting
them into barely passable chunks of old asphalt. He’d hoped the place
would finally lay to rest Tripp’s ridiculous obsession with the
afterlife. The Myrtles had been reputed to be the most haunted place in
America once. The boy, well, he was really a man now at twenty-three,
couldn’t get past his twin’s death and the longer they traveled without
finding other people, the more often he stayed in these scary, depressed
silences. The more he talked about ghosts and what happened after a
person died.
“Suppose your reasons are your own.” She knelt in the water again—this time to wash her knives. She stayed hunched.
He guessed she thought the position hid her breasts. It didn’t. The
wet blouse slicked to her like a second skin. Damn, her body was fine.
He had to work hard not to let his gaze lock onto her chest again. But
he didn’t say anything, didn’t want to make her more uncomfortable than
she already was. As it was, needs he’d kept rigidly suppressed his
entire adult life suddenly raged through his bloodstream, making sweat
pop up on his forehead.
She must have been able to see some of what he felt in his expression because fear crept back into her pretty, brown eyes.He shut his briefly before opening them and offering her a rueful smile. “Look, I won’t hurt you. I promise. It’s just been a long, long time since I saw anyone as beautiful as you.” He hoped she wouldn’t look down and catch the very uncomfortable evidence of his desire, but she did. He groaned. “Ignore that. I can’t help it.”
Her chuckle was husky and it brushed over his skin like velvet. “I’d be flattered but when was the last time you saw a woman?”
“About five minutes ago…in the woods.” He cleared his throat, told
his dick to settle down. “Are there more people where you come from?”
“Not anymore, though I probably shouldn’t tell you that.” Keeping her arms over her breasts, she walked out of the water.
He frowned at the rate her shivering was increasing and reached up to remove his jacket, hesitating when she lifted her knives.
“What are you doing?” Her voice had gone lower.
He instantly thought of that low, husky voice whispering things close
to his ears and had to keep himself from shuddering. It took effort.
“You’re cold. I’m going to toss you my jacket. It’ll help if you cover
those up anyway.”
“From the looks of your clothes, you should keep that jacket. I’ll
warm up fine once I’m on the move and it’s time to do that. Where’s your
brother?”
“We have an RV parked a couple of miles or so from here.”
“An electric RV? How do you charge it on the road?”
“No. it’s solar, with panels along the top—some we found and
installed ourselves. It’s why we park in the middle of the day when the
sun is like this. So they can power up. You have an electric car?”
She nodded. “Don’t use it much—just to take the odd short trip into town to dig through the rubble. My house is solar powered.”
She looked healthy, too. He wondered if she had a garden. He and
Tripp had broken into a freeze-dried food factory and hit pay dirt, but
they were always on the lookout for any overgrown mass of green that
looked like it might have a few surviving vegetables. They got lucky
with wild asparagus once in a while, but it had been a long time since
either had seen a green bean or a bell pepper. He’d hated peppers as a
kid, then spent most of his adult life craving the taste of one so much
he dreamed about them. The ones his mother had stuffed with sausage,
rice and cheese—three other foods he hadn’t had in years.
Food and people. It was the reason he’d braved this trip with his
brother. That and hoping a new place would snap Tripp out of his funk.
Chase had read handwritten notes left in several places about a new
settlement in the south and he’d thought with the warmer climate, some
farmers could have saved seeds, kept gardens going every year. He craved
fresh food nearly as much as he craved a woman. Nearly.