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Bedding the Beast

For the Heart of Daria

For the Love of Rigah

Once a Thief

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Tales from the Temple

 

Bedding the Beast

Beauty meets a very kinky Beast...

A mail order bride, Mariana comes to America with little more than determination and her pretty face. But the man who bought her doesn't seem to want her—until he sees her naked. She can't resist his passion, but will he throw her out when he's done with her?

John asked Mariana's parents to return his money; he never expected a beauty like Mariana to appear on his doorstep. The passion she shows him in the dark of night can't possibly be for real. Yet the more he pushes her into outrageous, perverse acts, the more she encourages him to go one step further. He does things to Mariana that he's never even dared to try with a prostitute, and she begs for still more.

Their lovemaking is amazing, but Mariana wants more than passion—she wants the love hidden beneath John's bitter scars. When a ghostly presence in the house tries to drive her away, she has to fight for her right to stay in John's home...and to continue bedding the beast.

Reviews...

"Ms. DeSalvo has written a delightful novel of two complete strangers who find love in the end."

—Patricia McGrew, The Road to Romance

"Doreen DeSalvo writes a sad but lovely story of the two adversaries who come to care for one another and find a way to communicate both in the bedroom and out. A recommended read!"

—Claudia McRay, Romance Junkies

"A touching historical erotic romance novella that brings forth some of the struggles that immigrants had to face in turn of the century America."

—Mireya Orsini, Just Erotic Romance Reviews

"...a delightful tale of two strangers who find love with each other."

—Denise Powers, Sensual Romance

Excerpt...

© 2007 by Doreen DeSalvo.

His bowl was still steaming on the table. Might as well finish his meal while they talked. He sat down and lifted a spoonful of stew to his mouth. "Did you bring money for me?"

She looked confused. Ah, he'd spoken in English. Before he could repeat the question in Italian, she spoke.

"My parents received a letter from you," she said in Italian. "You wrote that Francesca had died."

"Six months ago," he answered. "Why are you here?"

She squared her shoulders. "I'm here to take my sister's place."

God, no. He'd asked Francesca's parents to send him some of his money back. Francesca had died so soon after their marriage, it hardly seemed fair that her parents kept the full amount he'd paid for her. And he needed money. "I don't need another wife."

She looked surprised. "You have married again?"

He scowled. "No. But I don't want a wife."

"But…you paid my parents for a wife."

Yes, he had. A wife to help him on the farm, a wife to give him children, a wife to warm his bed. None of those things were worth the price he'd paid—and not just the price of the lire her greedy father had taken. "One wife was enough. I did not ask your parents to send me another."

"But they owe you a wife," she said. Her gaze was fixed on his bowl. Was she merely avoiding looking at his face? He saw her throat move in a swallowing motion. No, she was hungry. And he only had enough stew for his own lunch.

Well, he could share a little with her. She looked thin; she probably wouldn't eat much. He stuck the fork in his half-finished bowl, stood, and handed it to her. "Eat."

He grabbed another bowl from the shelves over the sink, then went to the simmering pot on the stove and spooned out more for himself. When he turned to the table again, she was already sitting, and eating her way through the stew like she hadn't had a meal all day. A small moan escaped her, a sound of pure pleasure.

She'd pushed off her coat and tossed it onto the back of her chair. Her shoulders were thin and bony, her neck long and narrow. Too skinny. He'd never cared for skinny women.

John sat across from her and ate a few bites of food, studying her covertly as he kept his face down. Her dress was patched and much mended, little more than a rag. Her father had talked of sending his sons to school. He must not have spent any of John's money on his daughters.

Her dress stretched tight across her bosom, as if she'd been wearing it since before she'd fully grown. Her breasts were small. Too small. Probably not even enough to fill his hands.

If he married her, he could cup those small breasts in his hands. Fondle them. Kiss them.

No. There was no place in his life for a wife. When he wanted a woman, he'd spend a few coins on a whore in town. He couldn't afford the money, but at least a whore knew better than to cringe at the sight of a man's face when he covered her. A whore knew to keep her eyes closed, and pretend he pleased her.

Perhaps this girl—Mariana—had family in America. People she could live with. "Who brought you here? The people passing in that wagon?"

She stared at him blankly. Ah, he'd spoken in English again. He repeated it in Italian.

"Your neighbor," she said. "Kathleen…McNeil? She passed me on the road, and gave me a ride."

No help there. He couldn't expect a widow with two boys to take in a stranger. "Where have you been staying?"

"I was in New York until two days ago. In that prison place."

"Ellis Island?"

"Yes."

Right off the boat, she had come to him. She'd expected him to let her stay. Too bad for her. "Do you know anyone in America? Anyone other than me?"

"No." She looked up from the bowl, and her chin lifted a notch. "I can find somewhere else to go, if you don't want me."

Which meant she had nowhere else to go. He recognized foolish pride when he saw it. "Do you want me?" he demanded.

She gave a small start, but didn't look away. Her eyes were a vivid blue, and they gazed at him solemnly, as though she didn't see his scar. "Why do you care what I want?"

He shrugged and ate more, avoiding her gaze. "I don't care."

"I want to honor my father's debt to you," she said.

Not an answer at all. Like most poor girls, she had no choice about her own future.

He deliberately looked at his narrow bed, less than four feet away from her chair. And then he looked back at her and scowled, determined to show her his worst. "Now that you have seen me, you have no fear about being my wife? You have no fear about sharing my bed?"

Her gaze steady, she gave an indifferent shrug. "After the long journey to come to America, and spending a month in that prison, I have little fear left in me."

He could well believe it. Ellis Island had been hell for a strong man like him—how much worse had it been for a young girl, alone, who barely spoke any English? She couldn't be more than twenty. At twenty-eight, he felt decades older.

She stopped eating for a moment and focused that solemn blue gaze on his eyes. "I will be a good wife to you, Giovanni."

He frowned. "I've told you, I don't need a wife."

His bowl was empty. He rose, but she quickly stood and took it from him. "May I bring you more?"

Why not let her serve him? He nodded.

She turned to the stove, giving him a view of her backside. At least one part of her body wasn't too thin. Her waist was narrow, but her hips were generous, her bottom well-rounded. Very well-rounded. As she spooned stew into his bowl, that alluring ass rocked back and forth with the rhythm of her arm. His cock stirred.

If he married her, he could bed her.

Cover her.

Fuck her.

He knew many English words for the sex act. And looking at this skinny woman's ass made him think of all of them.

God, no. Women were trouble. Wives were trouble.

Perhaps it would be different this time. Now he knew the dangers. And now he knew how to pleasure a woman. This bony little woman, this small-chested girl with the surprisingly generous ass, could help him practice his hard-won knowledge.

Even a skinny woman could ease a man's needs. That was one chore she could do for him. She looked too weak to do anything else.

She turned back to the table. When she caught his gaze, she stopped abruptly. His lustful thoughts must have shown in his eyes, on his face. But he saw no revulsion in her expression. None at all. She smiled...a slow, warm smile. An inviting smile. A flirtatious smile.

Hell, other men must have looked at her this way. Even ugly men like him. And she must have encouraged them with that sultry smile.

What kind of innocent girl looked at a man like that? Like she wanted to climb into his narrow bed with him now, right now, in the light of day? Perhaps she wasn't an innocent. Perhaps her damned father had foisted a ruined daughter off on him.

She dropped her gaze, and sat down at the table. She pushed the bowl toward him, then went back to eating her own food, as if she hadn't just looked at him like he was a more tempting meal than the beef stew. No, an innocent woman would never give such a look to an ugly man like him. She was trying to persuade him to let her stay. Working her wiles on him. The few wiles that a scrawny woman like her had available to her.

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