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Swept Away, Volume 1
Swept Away, Volume 1
Swept Away, Volume 1
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Swept Away, Volume 1

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I'm a prisoner here. But even if I could escape...would I be strong enough to leave?

Ethan Williams radiated confidence. His darkly handsome good looks and ocean-blue eyes mesmerized me. But it was the way he looked at me that drew me in. He wasn't looking at my past or at my scars, but the real me behind all that baggage I was trying so hard to leave behind.

But Ethan had secrets--dark, ugly secrets. I was trapped in the middle of the ocean in a dangerous tangle. The problem was, I was happy to be trapped forever...if it meant I could have him.

Warning: Swept Away is a 4-part serial romantic suspense. Parts 1-3 end with cliffhangers, and part 4 completes the series. This story is messy and twisted and very, very sexy. It is not for people under 18.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherDawn Halliday
Release dateJan 28, 2015
ISBN9781311545596
Swept Away, Volume 1
Author

Dawn Halliday

USA Today bestselling author Jennifer Haymore is the author of sexy historical and contemporary romance. You can find Jennifer in Southern California trying to talk her husband into yet another trip to England, helping her three children with homework while brainstorming a new five-minute dinner menu, or crouched in a corner of the local bookstore writing her next novel.

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    Book preview

    Swept Away, Volume 1 - Dawn Halliday

    Swept Away

    Volume 1

    J. Haymore

    Table of Contents

    About This Book

    Connect With J.

    Prologue

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    Chapter Nine

    Chapter Ten

    Excerpt From Swept Away, Volume 2

    About the Author

    Also by J. Haymore

    Swept Away

    First Digital Edition November, 2014

    Copyright 2014 Jennifer Haymore

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imaginations or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

    All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the author.

    Digital books are not transferable. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the copyright holder is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials.

    Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

    www.jenniferhaymore.com

    Connect With J.

    Connect with J:

    Sign Up For Jennifer’s Newsletter

    Website: www.jenniferhaymore.com

    Twitter: @jenniferhaymore

    Facebook: jenniferhaymore-author

    Goodreads: www.goodreads.com

    Dedication

    For L, as always. Love you, babe.

    Prologue

    I grip my cane hard, my knuckles growing white over the polished metal of the handle. I stare narrow-eyed at the convenience store, a squat building with bright lights pouring from the inside onto the parking lot.

    Every muscle in my body screams at me to turn around towards home. My toes curl, my feet itching to run. But I lock my knees and fight it.

    This is the time to move forward, not back. No one can survive forever trapped between the walls of a little apartment. I need this. I need to be out here.

    Traffic roars behind me, headlights slashing over the sidewalk. The smell of exhaust permeates the air. A couple strides out of the store hand in hand, a bottle of wine peeking from the top of a grocery bag the man carries.

    In the past three months I’ve forgotten all this...the sights, the sounds, the busy thrum of the city. It presses in on me from all sides, crushing. My heart pounds. Cool beads of sweat pop out across my forehead. My throat is so constricted, it feels like I’m pushing out breaths through one of those tiny red-and-white restaurant straws you use for coffee. My bad leg throbs, unused to walking, even though I’m only three blocks from home.

    Another two blocks, and there will be a smorgasbord of choices for food, from Thai to Italian to Persian. But there’s no way I’m going to make it two more blocks. It’s convenience-store food for dinner tonight.

    I push my legs forward, hobble to the glass door and jerk it open with my free hand. A bell tinkles as I enter, feeling like I’m dragging my body against its will.

    Thank God. It’s quieter in here. Though it’s not late, the store is empty, not even one person inside except the cashier—a pimply guy about my age, who offers me a polite nod. I go straight to the refrigerated section and start looking over my options. Tuna salad sandwiches with wilted lettuce. Sushi with avocado slices that have browned at the edges. Fruit in bulging plastic containers. The frozen burritos appear safer than any of the other options.

    Burritos it is, then.

    My fingers wrap around the freezer door handle, but a commotion rising from the front of the store stops me short. And then a man shouts, Show me your fucking hands, or you’re going to get a fucking bullet through your head. Do you fucking understand?

    The voice booms through the store, ripe with anger and desperation. And there is no doubt in my mind that this man is close to going over the edge. He won’t hesitate to kill.

    Terror holds me there, suspended in motion, as another man demands the money in the cashier’s register. All of it, he says. This guy sounds cool, calm, and somehow even more dangerous than the first man. You keep the fifties and hundreds in the back, right? You dumbasses don’t even have a safe. Take me back there. Now.

    Okay, okay, the cashier says in a breathy, frightened voice.

    Footsteps clomp into the back room of the store, and I can’t help it. I suck in a shaky, gasping breath.

    What the fuck was that? screeches the first man.

    My fingers squeeze the handle of the glass door of the freezer while my other hand tightens over the top of my cane. My feet are rooted to the linoleum floor.

    The guy strides around a display of potato chips and stops, staring at me over the barrel of his pistol. I have no idea what he looks like. All I can see is the flashing silver of the gun.

    Get down! The shrill command hurts my ears. He waves the gun at me.

    I just stare at it, too frozen, too stiff to even collapse onto the floor.

    Did you hear me? I said get the fuck down!

    I try to unlock my arms and my legs and sink to the floor, but it’s not working.

    Snap. He’s flipped the safety off. And then, beyond him, there’s movement. A man yells, No!

    A cacophony of shouts fills the store, loud and angry. Another man tackles the guy holding the gun in a blur of motion. He barrels backward, his body slams into a shelf, and aluminum cans crash everywhere. The gun skitters over the linoleum.

    The men tumble around on the floor along with the fallen canned goods, one in black leather, the other in black slacks and a white shirt, while I stand there, frozen in place, even as my mind screams to cower or to run or to pick up the gun—do something but stand there like a damned statue.

    They’re both big men with dark hair, though one has lighter skin than the other, and the guy who was holding the gun is bulkier. Their arms fly as they try their hardest to kill each other, grunting and growling.

    I just stare. I’ve never witnessed violence like this before. Only on TV, and this has a grittier, uglier feel to it than anything I’ve ever seen on TV.

    "What the fuck, Anthony?" comes a shout from the direction of the register.

    The man in slacks punches the man in black leather—Anthony, I’m sure—in the face, and there’s a loud crack. Anthony screams in agony. The other man jumps to his feet and rushes toward me, his face a blur.

    Just beyond him, Anthony scrambles for the gun, and I gasp as he grabs it and points it at me…or at the man. One of us.

    Be care— I scream to warn him. But it’s too late. Anthony fires. The loud boom of the gunshot overwhelms my senses. The man bulldozes into me, and my head cracks against the glass of the freezer door. The impact knocks my cane from my grasp. He jerks against me, and pain shoots through my head.

    Something warm and wet trickles down my cheek. Blood. Is it mine or the man’s?

    It must be the man’s. There’s a hole in his shirt, beneath his left collarbone. Blood pours out of the hole.

    He’s going to bleed to death. I reach out, intending to press my hand to his wound to put some pressure on it, but black edges my vision, and my body slides down the glass with the weight of the man half on me. Dizziness rushes over me in a sickening flood. I try to hold on, but everything blurs and then fades away as I lose my grasp on consciousness.

    Chapter One

    Fifteen Months Later

    The car comes to a stop in front of the marina, but instead of opening the door and getting out, I sit glued to the leather seat, gazing through the backseat window, my fingers curling into fists, then opening again, over and over.

    I need to get out of this car. Venturing outside is nowhere near as scary as it was a year ago. The convenience-store robbery was a setback, but after that, I worked hard, and I got better. Therapy—lots of therapy—helped. I caught up with my required classes during the summer and went back to school for my senior year in the fall. I can leave home without having a panic attack now. And I’m a newly minted college grad—I even went to my graduation ceremony last month and had a great time. My best friend, Kyle, took me to a bar with a group of friends afterward, and we all got shit-faced drunk. It was a first for me, and it was fun. Real fun, like a girl my age should be having.

    I’m feeling normal again. Human again.

    This, though—this is different. This is not walking three blocks to a convenience store, or going out with friends. This is more.

    It’s more than more. It’s crazy.

    Beyond the sidewalk and a chain-link fence, boat masts sway gently to the cadence of the afternoon breeze against the backdrop of a clear blue Southern California sky.

    I unclench my fingers and grip the door handle, ready to open it and face whatever lies ahead, but my hand falls away when Juan opens the door.

    Thanks, I say. Juan is the driver who always comes for the car service whenever I need a ride somewhere. We’ve grown friendly over the past couple of years.

    No problem. Juan helps me out, then turns toward the trunk. I’ll get your luggage.

    I watch him unload my duffel and my laptop bag.

    All I need to do is ask, and Juan would take me home. He’d return me to the comfort and safety of my apartment, where I wouldn’t need to face boarding a fifty-foot boat or spending three weeks sailing across an ocean with four other people, three of them virtual strangers.

    Stop it! It’s my sister who scolds me in my head. You need this. Do it. That’s an order.

    Emily would have done it. She wouldn’t have hesitated for a second. And that’s what spurs me on, in spite of my clammy hands and the fact that my heart feels like it’s going to hammer out of my chest.

    Have a great trip, Miss Jameson. Juan hands me my laptop bag.

    Thanks, Juan.

    He gives me his kind smile, flashing bright white teeth. I’ll see you next month when you get back.

    Yes. You definitely will. There. That sounded strong and confident. I’ll be back in Los Angeles in just six weeks. What can happen in a mere six weeks?

    Juan walks back to the driver’s side and gets in. I grab the handles of my duffel bag, which is packed with everything I need for crossing an ocean on a sailboat, and heft it over my shoulder. I watch the car roll away, and when it disappears behind the apartment buildings that line the marina road, a part of me feels like my only lifeline has been severed.

    My breaths start to speed up. There’s a panic attack coming on, but I know how to control them. Most of the time.

    I grip the handles of my duffle and force myself to inhale and exhale slowly, turning my thoughts to simple, logical truths—You have lifelines right here, Tara. Literally and figuratively. You’re safe. Nothing bad is going to happen.

    My gaze

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