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Refrain - Neriza - Blood Courtesans: A Vampire Blood Courtesans Romance
Refrain - Neriza - Blood Courtesans: A Vampire Blood Courtesans Romance
Refrain - Neriza - Blood Courtesans: A Vampire Blood Courtesans Romance
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Refrain - Neriza - Blood Courtesans: A Vampire Blood Courtesans Romance

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One fateful night changed my life forever and brought secrets to light I never could have imagined, leaving me parentless, penniless, and caring for an ailing sister. My father was not the man I thought I knew, and his greed and sickness have left me with virtually nothing to use to care for my sister and get her the treatments she needs to maybe one day walk again. And now, we might lose our house, as well.

Luckily, an ad in the paper helps me regain some hope. I have something to barter with that not many courtesans have, after all, and it just might be enough to earn what's needed to secure my future as a successful Blood Courtesan. My first client turns out to be the man of my dreams, the sexy-as-sin vampire rock star I've lusted after since I was a teen, but he wants nothing to do with me or what I have to offer.

My father's misdeeds continue to haunt me and I'm left with only one option: I need to make the talented and headstrong Lyric Rivers desire me, or lose everything. Maybe even my life.

The Blood Courtesans Series, where vampires are real, rich, powerful--and hungry.

Blood is bought and sold like fine wine, and the best blood goes to the highest bidder.

It's not supposed to be about love ... until it is.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherSusan Griscom
Release dateSep 12, 2018
ISBN9781984053794
Refrain - Neriza - Blood Courtesans: A Vampire Blood Courtesans Romance
Author

Susan Griscom

About Susan Griscom I grew up in a small town in Pennsylvania, spending most of my time daydreaming or playing around in the mud. I grew out of the mud play, well, most of the time, a good soak in the mud is always fun. I still daydream often and sometimes my daydreams interrupt my daydreams. So I write to remember them. If I didn't write, I think my mind would explode from an overload of fantasy and weirdness. To the annoyance of my friends and family, my characters sometimes become a part of my world. During my childhood, I would frequently get in trouble in school for daydreaming. Eventually, my vivid imagination paid off and I had the privilege of writing and co-directing my sixth-grade class play--a dreadful disaster, though not from my writing, of course. I'm pretty sure it was the acting. I enjoy writing about characters living in small quaint towns and tend to lean toward the unusual and edgy. My paranormal playing field delves into a different milieu, abandoning vampires and werewolves, but not discounting them. Someday I might like to write a novel about vamps and those furry creatures. But for now I like the bizarre mixed with romance. A strong hero or heroine confronted with extraordinary forces of nature, powers and capabilities gets my blood running hot, as does a steamy contemporary romantic suspense. Find out more about Susan Griscom by visiting her website. http://susangriscom.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/SMGriscom Follow Susan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SusanGriscom

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    Refrain - Neriza - Blood Courtesans - Susan Griscom

    Chapter 1

    Neriza


    IN THE GRAND SCHEME of things, what’s a little blood loss? The nurses at the hospital had already squeezed me practically dry just the other day. After everything I’d been through the past few months with my parents’ death and my sister Nina’s new disability, giving more as a blood courtesan didn’t seem so bad.

    I’d read plenty of articles about how the blood courtesans had changed the way society viewed vampires. Blood was now a rare commodity and humans were sold to the highest bidder. I’d become intrigued, and frankly, I needed the money.

    I heard a lot of the vampires paid top dollar for virgins, a commodity I still happened to possess. A brand I hadn’t been able to change. So here I was, driving through the streets of San Francisco, on this awfully foggy morning on my way to enter the world of the blood courtesans. This would be the solution for all my problems. Hopefully.

    The shrill ring of my phone through the car speakers startled me. I pushed accept on the screen when I saw Uncle Lars’s name.

    Hi Uncle Lars.

    Neriza. Sweetheart. I’m worried about you. Let’s meet for brunch.

    I can’t. I’m on my way to … an appointment. There was no way I could tell him I was about to become a blood courtesan. I knew he would hate the idea because he’d once called courtesans ‘blood whores,’ claiming they were the cause of many vampires starving and living on the streets. He didn’t have any issues with the vampires, just blood courtesans, and made no apologies for telling me exactly what he thought of it, claiming that rogue vampires who couldn’t afford to hire a courtesan preyed upon humans in alleyways in the city, sometimes killing them because they couldn’t control their intake.

    He’d also argued that too many young women were throwing away their virtue because society now condoned prostitution to vampires. He didn’t believe blood courtesans should be allowed to sell their blood and bodies as a commodity that shouldn’t have a price tag.

    I’ve been thinking about your request for money. I’m sorry I don’t have enough to help pay for Nina’s care, but I do have something that might interest you.

    Um … I’ll have to get back to you on that. I’m late for a job interview, and if I get it, I won’t need your help.

    That’s terrific. Keep me posted. Your father would want me to make sure you and Nina are well taken care of.

    I will. Bye. I pushed the end button on the console and took a deep breath. I hated lying to him. He was my dad’s younger brother and now the closest thing to a father that Nina and I had. I missed my dad so much, though, that just hearing Uncle Lars’s voice made memories of my mom and dad rise to the surface in my mind. I loosened my tight grip on the steering wheel, remembering how he’d taught me to drive. I’d begged and begged for him to teach me from the time I was fourteen. When I turned fifteen, he’d finally agreed.

    I glanced over at the empty passenger seat beside me, wishing he was sitting there now. But he was gone. Both he and Mom killed in a horrific car accident. The same one that left my younger sister paralyzed from the waist down. I should have been with them, but I’d been at a dress rehearsal that day. I had a passion for live theater and I’d been cast as Gypsy, in the musical, Gypsy Rosalie, for the community performing arts center. It was opening night and they’d all been on their way to see me perform. If only I hadn’t gotten that part, then they’d all be fine right now. If only my dad were still here, then I wouldn’t be driving on this foggy morning for my second, and hopefully final interview with Madame Bouchard. It seemed I had a bundle of if only’s polluting my mind these days.

    The road before me disappeared into pillows of clouds as moisture accumulated on my windshield. Even at fifteen miles an hour, I couldn’t see more than five feet in front of me.

    My hands tingled from gripping the steering wheel so tightly and I tried to recall my dad’s soothing words to help me relax. He’d been so calm and patient with me. I missed him so much.

    Relax, Neriza, my father’s reassuring voice echoed in my mind. You’re doing fine. Relax your hands. That’s right. Keep them at the ten and two o’clock positions, but not so tight. Your knuckles are turning white. He chuckled. You’re going to put dents in the steering wheel, sweetie.

    A blurry red light glowed up ahead and I slowed my already crawling speed. The fog dissipated to reveal a quiet intersection with no other cars, and I exhaled with a sigh of relief as my old, dilapidated Jeep rolled to a stop. Even though the fog lightened, it was dark for eight o’clock in the morning.

    I tapped my fingers on the steering wheel, waiting for the light to change when an expensive looking stretched black sedan pulled up beside me, the dark windows preventing me from seeing who sat inside. I wondered if it was someone famous. You’d have to be famous or extremely wealthy to live in the west part of San Francisco and I’d heard a few celebrities had houses near the coastline. Maybe someone like … Lyric Rivers, lead singer of Crimson Rivers, sat in the back seat of that expensive looking black car. I’d heard he lived in this part of the city.

    I’ve been a fan since I was thirteen. I’ve been to five of his concerts. I’d even gone backstage last year when my friend scored VIP tickets from KCRA and asked me to join her. It was amazing. Lyric was sweet, and funny, and gorgeous, and sexy as hell. He’d kissed me on the cheek, an imprint that still made my stomach quiver every time I remembered the way his lips had pressed into my skin, hot and soft and sensual.

    Ahhh … What I wouldn’t give to be riding in that limo with him right now instead of on my way to become a blood courtesan. That is, if it was actually him. But with the dark windows up, I had no way of knowing.

    The light stayed red forever and I rolled down my window for some air, the thought of Lyric Rivers heating my blood. I pushed the power button on the CD player for a distraction. The speakers had been turned on high for the phone conversation and one of the Crimson Rivers’ songs blasted out since that disc was still in there from the last time I drove my car.

    The rolling down of the dark window in the backseat of the limo caught my attention and I glanced over. My heart caught in my throat when Lyric Rivers’ sexy smile caught my gaze. And then the light turned and the limo took off. I sat in my Jeep, stunned silly, because Lyric Rivers just smiled at me from the backseat of his limousine. It really was him. It wasn’t just my overactive imagination or my farfetched fantasies getting out of control. There was no mistaking that smile. I’d know it anywhere. He was my idol. It was definitely my all-time favorite rock star. That’s super crazy that one minute I’m imagining he’s in there and bam, there he is!

    I edged my car slowly forward as the two lanes merged into one. Seeing Lyric Rivers just then made my day, my week, my year. Now this dreaded drive up all the hills and one way streets didn’t seem so scary and confusing anymore. Heading up a steep incline, I glanced in the rearview mirror as another black sedan drove up close behind me.

    Hmmm … Maybe they were part of the band and were attempting to catch up to the limo up ahead. But the black sedan continued to stay too close. Too close for comfort. Why were they tailgating on such a foggy day? What was the driver’s deal? Any closer and he’d kiss my bumper. I hope the driver had good insurance because he’s about to rear-end me. Why don’t they just go around?

    I sped up a bit, but the stupid jerk just got closer.

    What an asshole, I said with a growl in the mirror. If you want to pass me, pass me. Just get off my tail, will ya?

    I hated impatient drivers who thought they owned the road. I steered to the right toward the curb to let them pass. I’d rather wait and go slow than put up with their aggravating aggression, but when they slowed along with me, my heart just about jumped out of my chest. What the hell? What was this guy’s deal? Why were they following me?

    At the top of the hill, I stopped at the stop sign. My old 2004 soft-top Jeep had a temperamental clutch and the sedan stopped so close behind me, there was no room to spare. Taking off on a hill with a temperamental five-speed stick shift was tricky. I’ll probably roll backward and smash into them.

    Doesn’t he realize how close he is?

    Beads of sweat accumulated between my breasts and under my arms. Ugh, my dress was going to be drenched by the time I got to my interview. I needed to calm down. I turned the music down to concentrate and took a deep breath, exhaling slowly. It was probably nothing. Just an incompetent driver who didn’t know how to maneuver the hills of the city. I eased off the clutch and pressed on the gas, cringing as I anticipated the impact, but to my relief, I sped ahead without backing into the car. My dad would have been proud I’d executed that maneuver so efficiently.

    Heading down the backside of the hill, I glanced into the mirror and saw the sedan still riding my bumper. I would’ve pulled over to let them pass, but there was no shoulder. The only thing to my right was a steep cliffside overlooking the Pacific Ocean.

    I slowed, hoping they would go around me. Glancing in the rearview again, I watched the black car veer left. I let out the breath I’d subconsciously been holding and wiped the moisture from below my eyes as they attempted to pass. But then I screamed as the car scraped against the side of my Jeep, causing me to tug the steering wheel to the right, moving me so very close to the edge of the steep cliffside. They sped by as if they had no idea they’d made contact with my car.

    What the …?

    With my heart pounding frantically in my chest, I stopped my Jeep, too shaken at that moment to continue. Pulling over to exchange insurance information would have been the normal thing to do, but they just kept going as if nothing happened. I stayed stopped there for a few minutes longer to steady my breathing.

    I glanced at the time on my phone. I would be late for my interview if I didn’t get moving.

    Shifting the Jeep into gear, I guided the vehicle back onto the road just as the black car appeared once again behind me. But how? They’d already passed me. Tears stung my eyes and my hands shook. My heart beat so loudly I could hear it in my ears. Thump, thump, thump.

    I shouldn’t have stopped for so long, giving them the chance to get behind me again, but why were they doing this to me? Who were they? I sped up, but my Jeep was no match for the large, now ominous, black sedan as it rammed into my side. Were they trying to run me off the road? I headed down Pacific Drive, drove past the zoo that hadn’t even opened for the day yet and realized the grave mistake almost instantly as the steep cliffside loomed to my right. The black car sped up beside me and inched toward me, forcing me closer to the edge of the cliff. I screamed and slammed on the brakes as the black beast zoomed by, showing me the Mercedes emblem on the back. The car didn’t stop in front of me like I’d feared it would. Instead, it kept going down the highway as if nothing had happened.

    Stupid jerks! What was that all about? Why pick on me that way? I never did anything to them. I was a good driver. I never cut anyone off or did anything to incite such road rage. At least, I didn’t think I did. I didn’t even know who they were. Maybe they mistook me for someone else. Or maybe they were just some dumb ass teenage boys out for a joyride in daddy’s nice Mercedes, getting off on scaring a female driving alone on a foggy morning. Most likely the latter, because as far as I knew, I never did anything to provoke that.

    I eyed the side of the road and the cliffside, all too similar to the spot where my parents’ car took a nosedive just three months ago. The memory of that horrible night, the accident that took both my parents’ lives and left my sister paralyzed skimmed through my mind like a pebble across a glassy lake, plopping into the deep, dark abyss, leaving a hollowness entrenched in the bottom of my heart.

    I swiped away the tears dripping down my cheeks, quickly turning my Jeep onto the next road. When I came to the bottom of the hill, a police car rounded the corner and parked in front of a row of townhomes. Exhaling a heavy sigh, I turned into a parking

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