Today I'm delighted to be joined by the hilarious and gorgeous Sheryl Browne and she'll be letting you read a excerpt from her book Warrant for Love (which is fabulous by the way - you can find my review by clicking here!) so for once I'm going to stay quiet and I'm going to hand you straight over to Sheryl.
Hi Kim! Thank you so much for hosting me! I’m thrilled to
be here on your beautiful site! Today, I’m sharing a final excerpt from Warrant
for Love. I hope you enjoy! Please do
leave your comment and (appropriate) suggestions as to what YOU might do if you
found yourself in Lee’s situation.
Warrant for Love
Love, blackmail, lies,
adultery, entrapment.
Three couples in a twisting story that resolves perfectly.
Life for Paul sounds like your typical country
song. He comes from a broken home, his wife is divorcing him, he's got no place
to live, he's losing custody of his son, and his sergeant, who's sleeping with
his wife, is a loud-mouthed braggart who won't let up on him – not even at work.
Leanne's caught her (now) ex cheating on her again,
but before she can give him the what-for, she's wrongfully arrested for
soliciting – by Paul and his partner. One thing leads to another and things
could be looking up for Paul, except for Leanne's friends – quarrelling mom
Nicky and financial goddess Jade – have it out for her ex.
Leanne wants closure, Paul wants a home, and Nicky
and Jade want revenge. Blackmail, lies, adultery, entrapment. Will it all work
out in the end or will Paul uphold the law? It sounds like he needs a Warrant
for Love.
Excerpt:
‘Come on, Lee, please pick up.’ Nothing. She must have unplugged
the phone. And switched off her mobile.
And Paul wondered why.
Because he’d been a complete bloody idiot, was why. She was
about as capable of deceit as having her dog put down, and he knew it.
Paul rammed the car into reverse. Why hadn’t he gone home and
talked to her instead of waiting until sun up to come to his senses?
So, what did he do now? Skulk back with lame excuses, hoping she’d
offer one for Simons being there without him having to ask, or skulk into the
station later than he already was, which wouldn’t go down well.
He wouldn’t be any use to anyone without a job.
Paul pulled into the car park, and headed for the station, hoping
he could get hold of Lee before lunch. Determined to find her if he didn’t. At
work. At home. Wherever.
He passed through reception unnoticed. Cummings’ attention was
diverted. Some kid dealing drugs it looked like, which could have been his
destiny if not for Mike’s intervention.
Still no answer from Lee. Paul pocketed his mobile, and slipped
into the gents’, intending to make himself presentable before anyone noticed
his appearance, which was definitely unacceptable after a night spent in the
car.
Oh, crap. He gulped and
swiftly about-faced back to the door.
‘Davis?’ the DI called behind him.
Paul turned around apprehensively. That was it. He was stuffed.
The DI looked him up and down. ‘Are you having a laugh, Davis?’
he asked, his tone worryingly quiet.
Paul dropped his gaze. ‘No, Sir.’
‘I’ll see you directly after you’re off duty.’ DI Short brushed
past him. ‘And I suggest you make use of Sergeant Cummings’ razor before you go
on duty.’
Paul ran his hand over his neck as the restroom door closed
behind him. ‘With all due respect, Sir,’ he muttered, ‘I’d rather cut my
throat.’
He glanced at the ceiling, despairing. Someone was having a
laugh. That was for sure.
Paul threw cold water over his face, raked his hair back, and
glanced in the mirror. That worked, he thought, straightening his tie till it
almost strangled him. Disgrace to his uniform was about right. Short had every
right to give him a written.
‘Things can only get better.’ He shrugged dejectedly, plopped
his cap on, and headed for the patrol car, where Mike was already checking his
watch.
‘Back to not shaving, are
we, Davis?’ He eyed Paul accusingly. Paul noted the look. So, Mike had still
got his arse in his hands. C’est la-vie. ‘Got your Bassets?’ he tried.
Mike nodded.
Paul shrugged. He didn’t feel much like talking anyway. Maybe he
should put in for a change of partner? No. Mike couldn’t keep this up forever,
could he? ‘Burger?’ Paul asked hopefully. Surely he wouldn’t pass on McDonalds.
Nothing got in the way of Mike’s stomach.
‘Nah. Appetite’s a bit off lately. We’ve a shout anyway.’
Saved by the bell. Paul shook his head as Mike answered the
call.
‘Responding,’ Mike said tersely. ‘Brilliant. Just what the
doctor ordered. Bloody domestic, wouldn’t you know it.’
‘Great.’
‘Neighbour said the shouting and screaming stopped abruptly.
Could be a bit iffy this one, so make sure you’re on your toes, Paul.’
‘Mike, I’ve got the message! I can do my job. Okay?’
‘You look a bit distracted, that’s all.’
Yes, well, I would. Paul
tensed his grip on the wheel. And
this, I could do without.
****
‘Looks a bit sombre.’ Mike glanced at the weatherworn walls of
what was once a desirable residence.
‘Which neighbour lodged the complaint?’ Paul scanned the area. Closest
was a good hundred yards away. Must have been one hell of an argument.
‘Anonymous, as usual.’ Mike shrugged. ‘You take the front. I’ll
check out the back.’ He hesitated as he climbed out of the patrol car. ‘You
have got your walkie-talkie?’
‘No, Mike. I thought I’d break into a rendition of Sexy Thing if I spotted anything
suspicious.’
‘Just checking,’ Mike said, without a hint of a smile. ‘Helps if
you’re in communication with your partner, doesn’t it?’
Paul smiled despondently. ‘Yeah, right.’
‘We’ll meet back here in five.’ Mike headed off for the side
passage whilst Paul skirted around an abandoned car.
Looked like an ancient Truimph Vitesse. Blimey, this place was
stuck in a time warp. Everything seemed to be a relic from the sixties,
including the furniture. Paul shrugged off a weird feeling of déjà vu as he
peered through the living room window at the ancient sofa, which might have
been the very one he’d crouched scared shitless behind aeons ago, only to be
found.
Always to be found.
Would home ever be a safe place to be, he wondered idly. Then
pulled himself up. Concentrate, Paul, he reminded himself. Keep the mind on the
job.
The doorbell wasn’t likely to be working. Not that whoever might
be inside was likely to answer it. He flapped the letterbox closed and took a
step back to glance up at the bedroom windows, dark inside, like blind eyes,
watching him. A cold shiver snaked its way down Paul’s spine. This place gave
him the creeps.
‘Anything?’ Mike reappeared from the side gate.
‘Nothing,’ Paul replied, still watching the main bedroom window.
Something was bugging him. Assuming the legally-taxed Mini also out front was
roadworthy, someone must be home. So, why so quiet?
Too bloody quiet. ‘Do we go in?’
‘I suppose. You did ring the bell, I take it?’
‘No, Mike. I shouted Avon-Lady
through the letterbox, which is why they’re not
answering the door.’
Was Mike ever going to stop reminding him he’d screwed up? Paul
ran his hand over his neck and turned to the patrol car. ‘I’ll call in,’ he
said quietly, glancing at Mike, who was obviously as keen to divorce him as
Kate was, which was when the unmistakable glint of sun bouncing-off-metal
sliced through his vision. Oh…
Fuck! he thought.
He couldn’t think
much beyond that… other than how much it hurt.
Finding
footprints on the windscreen for her boyfriend’s car as evidence of his
infidelity was worst case scenario for Lee. What would YOURS be? What would you do about it? Witty but NOT too rude suggestions,
please. One name will be randomly
selected from the blogs taking part to receive a copy of Warrant for Love.
Sheryl Browne grew up in Birmingham, UK, where she studied Art & Design. She wears many hats: a partner in her own business, a mother, and a foster parent to disabled dogs. Sheryl has been writing for many years, the road along the way often bumpy. She was therefore thrilled beyond words when Safkhet Publishing loved her writing enough to commission her to write for them.
Sheryl's debut novel, Recipes for Disaster - combining deliciously different and fun recipes with sexilicious romantic comedy, is garnering some fabulous reviews and has been shortlisted for the Innovation in Romantic Fiction Festival of Romance Award. Sheryl has since been offered a further three-book contract under the Safkhet Publishing Soul imprint. Somebody to Love, a romantic comedy centring around a single father’s search for love and his autistic little boy, launched July 1. Warrant for Love, bringing together three couples in a twisting story that resolves perfectly, released August 1 and A Little Bit of Madness releases Valentine’s Day 2012.
Find
out more about Sheryl:
Safkhet
Publishing