Sizzling Hot Alpha Male Paranormal Romance Box Set

Home > Other > Sizzling Hot Alpha Male Paranormal Romance Box Set > Page 23
Sizzling Hot Alpha Male Paranormal Romance Box Set Page 23

by Roth, Mandy M.


  “I know.” He winked. “I like to tease you because you let me eat you then.” He eased her onto her desktop.

  “Oh no you don’t.”

  “Mmm,” he said, lifting her skirt slightly while he spread her legs. “You should use your power to close the door now, Ava. I’m about show you how good I’ve gotten at allowing parts of me to shift at will. I think I’ll start with my tongue.”

  “I love you.” Ava ran her hand over his cheek lightly.

  Donatus kissed her inner thigh and looked up at her with emerald green, glistening eyes. “And I love you.”

  THE END

  About the Author, Mandy M. Roth

  Mandy M. Roth grew up fascinated by creatures that go bump in the night. From the very beginning, she showed signs of creativity—writing, painting, telling scary stories that left her little brother afraid to come out from under his bed. Combining her creativity with her passion for the paranormal has left her banging on the keyboard into the wee hours of the night.

  She’s a self-proclaimed Goonie, loves 80s music and movies and wishes leg warmers would come back into fashion. She also thinks the movie The Breakfast Club should be mandatory viewing for...okay, everyone. When she's not dancing around her office to the sounds of the 80s or writing books, she can be found designing book covers for NY publishers, small press and indie authors.

  Mandy writes for The Raven Books, Samhain Publishing, Ellora’s Cave Publishing, Harlequin Spice, Pocket Books and Random House/Virgin/Black Lace. Mandy also writes under the pen names Reagan Hawk, Mandy Balde, Rory Michaels, Darby London and Kennedy Kovit.

  To learn more about Mandy, please visit www.mandyroth.com or send an email to [email protected].

  For latest news about Mandy’s newest releases subscribe to her newsletter

  www.mandyroth.com/newsletter.htm

  The Raven Books’ Complimentary Material

  The following material is free of charge. It will never affect the price of your book.

  Act of Mercy (PSI-Ops Series / Immortal Ops) by Mandy M. Roth

  Paranormal Security and Intelligence Operative Duke Marlow has a new mission: find, interrogate and eliminate the target—Mercy Deluca. She’s more than he bargained for and Intel has it all wrong. She’s not the enemy. Far from it. Intel forgot to mention one vital piece of information—she’s Duke’s mate. And this immortal alpha werewolf doesn’t take kindly to her being in danger.

  Excerpt from Act of Mercy (PSI-Ops / Immortal Ops) by Mandy M. Roth

  Duke Marlow finished typing the last of the reports due into his handler. Corbin handled more than one Paranormal Security and Intelligence Operative (PSI-Op) and Duke already knew he was Corbin’s most trying. He enjoyed getting under the man’s skin. Corbin was a panther shifter and everyone knew cats and dogs didn’t mix well together. As a full-blooded, born werewolf, Duke tended to get a kick out of giving Corbin as hard a time as possible.

  Duke rotated his neck, working out a kink as he sniffed the air, the wolf in him catching the scent of pending rain. He grinned, knowing he’d be running free in it soon enough. Well, as soon as he finished this damn paperwork. He didn’t understand the point of it. It wasn’t like the organization existed to anyone who asked about it. They were ghosts. Operatives who never were and never would be, at least on paper.

  What the fuck did they want with a paper trail then?

  The truth of the matter was most of the people within the organization had been there a hell of a long time. Immortality afforded them that luxury. They had some young ones—people under the age of fifty often seemed like pups in his eyes. When you got to his age, most everyone seemed young.

  He looked across the main office in PSI headquarters. Rows of desks filled the large bullpen. There was a raised walkway that circled the rounded room. Various doors dotted it. Some were offices. Others interrogation rooms. Some were termed briefing rooms. One was a hallway to restrooms and a kitchen area and the one he disliked visiting most was just past that—the infirmary.

  He’d been alive a long time and lost too many people to count that he considered friends, even loved ones. He didn’t do well around hospitals or anything of the like. They made him itch. Not as much as planes or anything that flew did.

  He fucking hated to fly.

  He’d had to fly more times than he’d cared to for the week prior when he’d been called in to help a fellow PSI-Op. Eadan Daly was someone he’d consider a friend. Eadan was young yet, barely thirty, but like Duke he’d stopped aging. Somehow, Eadan, even at his young age within the immortal world, had managed to find love and happiness. He and his mate were together. That was what was important. Not the how or whys of how they’d come to be that way.

  Longing still lingered deep within Duke. He wanted what Eadan had. What so many of the I-Ops had—a mate. Wouldn’t happen. Not at his age. If his woman had been out there, he’d have found her by now.

  He focused on his reports. While they may be done, they still needed to be emailed. Damn, he hated computers. Everyone around him seemed to love them, but he liked putting pen to paper, not fingertips to keyboard. He took a lot of grief at the office about his aversion to certain technologies. He wasn’t a luddite, but the others in PSI seemed to enjoy calling him one.

  While he would forever look to be in his mid-thirties, he was considerably older. With that age came the reluctance to accept change with ease. Plus, he was stubborn by nature. And truth of the matter was, most of what he was given technology-wise ended up breaking. In his opinion it was shit.

  He’d seen a lot in his life-span. Some good. Some not so good. And some downright horrifying.

  An auburn-haired giant poked his head into the room. Striker McCracken was there, grinning a grin that said he was ready to be up to no good. He was Dougal only to his momma, who had been buried over a century. Duke knew his real name because he’d actually met the man’s mother way back when. She been a sweet woman who managed to be half her son’s size, yet still keep him in line nicely.

  “You almost done?” asked Striker, traces of the Scottish accent that had once been so thick Duke had a difficult time understanding the man, showing through. “I’m positive the bar at the corner has beers with our names on ‘em.”

  With a groan, Duke emailed off his reports. “I fucking hate this thing,” he said, as he tried to get the computer to go to sleep, but it kept instantly waking back up.

  “Name one thing you do like.”

  “Women,” returned Duke.

  Laughing, Striker came to his recuse. He took the wireless mouse from Duke’s grasp. “It’s nae gonna shut down with you bumping the mouse. Here. Let me.”

  Duke slid back in the chair and then stood. “Keep the fucker.”

  Striker continued to laugh. “You know, if you tried a little harder, you might actually learn to like the thing.”

  Sliding his long-time friend a hard look, Duke stood silent. No words needed to be spoken. He’d never bond with his damn computer.

  Administrative Control (Immortal Ops) by Mandy M. Roth

  As Director of Operations for the Immortal Ops Organization, Colonel Asher Brooks has his hands full. When he’s not trying to keep six alpha males in line, he’s trying to help them to defeat the enemy. Brooks isn’t the type to share about his personal life. When given the opportunity to have quality time with the one woman who rocks his world, he takes it, regardless the cost.

  Excerpt from Administrative Control (Immortal Ops) by Mandy M. Roth

  Colonel Asher Brooks stepped out of the shadows near the old warehouse. The warehouse had been the scene of one hell of a throw down. Brooks had seen worse.

  Much worse.

  Truth was, this was hardly a drop in the bucket for him.

  The entire area smelled like a mix of death and fish. Neither were great on their own, but combined they were nauseating. He avoided deep breaths as he surveyed the situation.

  Carnage.

  No one had seen him arrive. They ne
ver did. It was how it should be. He needed to be someone the supernaturals he worked with trusted fully without fearing or questioning his loyalty.

  His allegiances were his own and not up for debate with the group or the organization. When he’d been brought into the Immortal Ops program it had not been lightly. The people who thought they had control of it were wrong.

  Dead wrong.

  Bad decisions had been made. Good people had lost their lives. Brooks was their answer to that. A one man clean-up crew, if you will.

  He checked his watch. The current crew should have already been done with the warehouse and the pier. The I-Ops and the PSI-Ops had left one hell of a mess. He couldn’t blame them. Helmuth had an army at the ready and had used a portion of it to attack the I-Ops. Sure, the dead were paranormal thugs hell bent on being part of the new wave of supernaturals, but still, a mess was a mess.

  Your men all returned alive. You can’t ask for anything better.

  He could ask that the violence stop, period, but that would never happen. Since the dawn of time, good had been pitted against evil. It would continue to be until the end. There was no changing it.

  He knew. He’d tried.

  He walked up behind the cleanup crew who had yet to notice his arrival. He’d have a talk with them later about that. They should always be on the ready.

  “Speed it up,” he barked. The two nearest him nearly jumped out of their skin.

  They needed to get their shit together and clear out soon. He wouldn’t risk any of them learning personal information about him. He’d been alive too long and seen too many turncoats to trust anyone with what he held precious.

  Or rather who.

  For more information about these titles and other bestselling Mandy M. Roth titles please visit www.MandyRoth.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev