The Dangerous Hero

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Authors: Linda Barlow

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BOOK: The Dangerous Hero
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Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright 2014 by Linda Barlow

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Linda's Bio

The Dangerous Hero

by

Linda Barlow

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright 2014 by Linda Barlow

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

 

Linda Barlow Books

www.lindabarlow.com

ISBN: 978-1-941982-51-8

 

Publisher’s Note:
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.

 

 

 

Author's Note:
The Dangerous Hero
is a contemporary romance about a couple who get a second chance. It was inspired by a novel that I wrote many years ago
(Beguiled
). The original was written at a time when BDSM relationships were still very much in the closet. As an author, I had to dance around a subject that was close to my own heart. Now it is possible to write candidly about kink, and the ways in which modern lovers negotiate and communicate about their sexuality.

 

This novel is intended for mature audiences.

 

Stephen Silkwood, the hero of
The Dangerous Hero,
has previously appeared in two other stories of mine—
Blazing Nights
and
A Kiss is Just a Kiss
. He was mentioned briefly in my romantic suspense novel,
Uncover Me.
Stephen is a friend of Kate, Jeff, Max, and Nick, who are all main characters in my other books. However,
The Dangerous Hero
is a standalone novel. You do not have to read the other books before reading this one.

 

For more information about these novels and all my other books, please check out my website at
http://www.lindabarlow.com

For new releases, giveaways, and advanced reading copy opportunities, sign up for my
Mailing List

Join me on
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Short blurb:

 

Stephen and Viola had amazing sex nine years ago, and the chemistry is still sizzling when they meet again. But after suffering through an abusive marriage, can she trust a man whose home contains a dungeon?

Chapter 1

She recognized him instantly. It had been nine years since she had last seen the tall man with curly dark hair who was striding toward the table where she was seated. He was Stephen Silkwood, the mystery writer, and he was famous, at least among detective fiction buffs. But as he moved to the empty chair beside her, looking too damn hot for words, Viola forgot about his novels, which she loathed. Stephen had been the first man she had ever loved.

He was also the first to break her heart. The pain of that experience rushed back with surprising intensity. Shit. She thought she’d recovered from that melodrama years ago.

She wanted to jump up and flee the small Massachusetts college where she and her old flame were about to meet. But she couldn't do that.

Calm down, heart. Stop thumping. It happened eons ago.

She shot a pained glance at Jeff Slayton, a professor in the Whittacre College history department, who had told her that Silkwood had declined the invitation to participate in tonight’s panel discussion. She'd mentioned to Jeff that she didn't want to be grouped with this author.

Slayton had grinned at her and said, "Are you afraid he’ll reproach you for that scathing review you wrote when his latest book came out?"

The review
had
been scathing. Viola had argued that Silkwood’s popular historical mysteries pandered to the public’s lowest taste for brutality and violence. She objected to Silkwood’s hero Bartholomew Giles, intelligence agent for Queen Elizabeth’s spymaster Walsingham. Giles had a nasty predilection for torture, and he seemed particularly fond of torturing women. Viola's review had suggested that Silkwood should depend less on blood and guts and more on realistic character development and plot.

She knew that Silkwood had seen her review—which had appeared in both print and digital forms—because she had heard him interviewed on a popular podcast. "V. J. Bennett, whoever he—or more likely
she
—is, sounds like a malicious idiot," he'd said. "Maybe she should stick to reading cozy mysteries and romances."

He didn't know, apparently, that V. J. Bennett was Viola Quentin, his brief summer love of nine years ago, whom he had lied to and abandoned.

Viola pretended to be clicking through the notes on her tablet as Stephen coiled his long-limbed body into the chair beside her, accidentally bumping against one of her legs. The brief contact electrified her, transmitting a jolt that sizzled all the way down to her toes. Jeez! Didn't sexual chemistry have an expiration date?

Any hope that, up close, his once-gorgeous features would have aged into something ordinary vanished. The years barely seemed to have touched him. He'd been a sex god nine years ago, and he still was. It wasn't classical beauty that he possessed—his features were a bit too honed and edgy for that—rather it was that smoky impression of something dark and dangerous lurking beneath the surface. He'd always had that bad boy thing going for him.

His green eyes met and held hers. Hot, shared connection. She saw curiosity in those eyes, and a trace of amusement, but no hint of recognition.

"Am I late?" he asked, glancing around at the other seated participants. "I had a bit of car trouble."

He spoke with the impersonality of a stranger. The years that had passed since their final encounter must have erased her image from his mind.

"You're fine. We haven't started yet."

So. He didn't know who she was. Good. Much easier that way. There wouldn't be any awkwardness. She could pretend not to remember him, either.

As he surveyed the audience and the other panelists, she gave in to the temptation to check him out a bit more. His wavy dark hair was longer than was fashionable, its silky ends brushing the back of collar. Those expressive green eyes were distanced by a pair of dark-rimmed glasses, the angular cheekbones and sensuous mouth were just as she remembered them. A tingle went through her as she recalled some the wicked things he could do with that mouth.

Stop that, hormones! Behave yourselves.

His gaze shifted, and he caught her staring. He smiled as she hurriedly glanced away. It was a friendly smile, and it reminded her that he used to smile a lot. He had been an outgoing, genial sort of guy. "I’m Stephen. Who are you?"

Pinned to her jacket was a tag that identified her simply as Prof. Bennett. He stared at it for such a long moment that she thought he'd identified her as the hostile book reviewer. But then she realized he was focusing on the open neckline of her blouse. That wretched tingle ran through her again, moving lower this time. Grrr! Surely that was nothing more than old memories churning. He was hot, yes, but so what?

"So, Professor," said Silkwood. "What do you profess?"

Something about the way he pronounced the word made it sound as though he regarded teaching as an activity that got you all slick and sweaty. "English lit." She nodded at Slayton, who had risen to make the introductions. "I think we're about to begin."

Silkwood politely turned his attention to Slayton, who got the panel rolling.

He didn't remember her. She could hardly believe it. His face and form were branded on her memory, but he had obviously forgotten the many hours they'd spent together back when he'd been a student of her father, Percy Quentin, also a novelist. Viola had been a teenager, just graduating from high school. Stephen had been a charming and talented writer who had not yet published his first book.

In those days, her father and Stephen had been close. Because her parents were divorced and Viola spent most of her time with her mother in San Francisco, she didn't meet Stephen until she spent that lazy summer before college on Cape Cod.

Stephen came down several times to visit her dad and talk about writing. He'd made friends with the cheerful teenager who was his mentor's only daughter. When he wasn’t busy workshopping the latest chapters of his novel with her father, they’d hung out. One balmy weekend in August, she tried to teach him how to windsurf. Although Stephen was fit and athletic—he had been a track star in college—he couldn't quite get the hang of windsurfing.

Her lesson had caused them both to collapse with laughter as he kept toppling over into the waves. They'd spent several hours in close physical contact, hauling each other up onto the board while she demonstrated the positioning and tried to help him stand and remain upright. He was determined to learn, and took his setbacks with good grace. She'd liked that about him. He had a calm, lighthearted attitude, and he didn't seem to mind that she, a teenager, was far more adept at the sport than he was.

Although she'd thought of Stephen as her father's friend, and much too old for her, on this afternoon the knowledge penetrated her brain that he wasn't
that
old. He had a beautiful body, long and lean, subtly muscled, with an ass to die for. At some point, as they bumped up against one another in the water, a spark caught. Stephen shoved the windsurf rig toward the shore, swam up against her slick body, fondled her long hair, and kissed her salt-sprayed lips.

She had fallen for him on the spot. She hadn't found out until later that he was engaged to be married.

Her father had broken the news to her at the end of that weekend, not long after Stephen had left. Percy Quentin must have noticed the change that had come over both of them after the windsurfing lesson. "He's got a girlfriend," he'd told her gently. "They're getting married. He's an unprincipled rascal. Forget him, child."

Forget him? She had tried. But she'd fallen hard. Even though he never wrote her any of the emails he promised, never texted, never called, it had taken a long time for the magic of that weekend to recede from her mind. Now here he was again, unearthing all those painful memories.

"What are we supposed to be discussing, anyway?" he asked under his breath. "Tell me, Professor, so I don't make an ass of myself."

"I think you'll mostly be taking questions from the audience." Mischievously she added, "I see several other members of the English department present, so you'd better be prepared to discuss stuff like post-colonial metaphor and allusion."

"Ouch. Wake me up when we get to the symbolism of murder or something equally literary."

"If you don't care for academic discussions, why are you here?"

"Jeff's an old friend. He talked me into it. Besides, my publisher likes it when I do these things." He grinned at her. "Gotta try to sell a few books." There was a cheerful note of self-mockery in his tone.

Once again, his deep green gaze flickered over her without a trace of recognition. His eyes were the same shade as the sea. The damn water where he had first kissed her...touched her...given her pleasure.

But he didn't remember. Well, shit. She didn't want to remember either.

She knew she must look different now. In those days, she still had the short, spiky black hair she’d adopted for her senior year of high school. It had been summer vacation, so she’d run around with no make-up, dressed casually in shorts and bikini tops, spending so many hours in the sun that her fair skin must have been dotted with freckles. Today she was clad in a well-tailored suit. Her hair, long restored to its natural auburn, was loose on her shoulders. Her freckles, mercifully, had faded. She was more mature than she'd been that summer, more self-assured, and, she hoped, more resistant to the man's deadly charm.

"Relax," she said, tossing him a grin. "Think of the royalties."

He smiled back, sipped water from the bottle someone had left for him, and fielded a question from the audience. He answered with wit and self-deprecation, and after a couple of brief exchanges, he said, "I think you ought to ask this lovely lady beside me a question or two." He glanced once again at Viola's nametag. "Professor, uh, Bennett is undoubtedly an expert on Umberto Eco or Ellis Peters or—"

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