by Megan Crane
Series: Deacons of Bourbon Street #1
Pub. Date: Aug. 4, 2015
Publisher: Loveswept
Pages: 197
Format: eARC
Source: Netgalley
My Rating:
Sultry Scale:
Meet the Deacons of Bourbon Street, bad boy bikers who are hell on wheels—and heaven between the sheets. Megan Crane revs up an irresistible new series co-written with Rachael Johns, Jackie Ashenden, and Maisey Yates.
Sean “Ajax” Harding’s oaths are inked into his skin. Once second-in-command of the Deacons of Bourbon Street motorcycle club, he left New Orleans to protect the brotherhood, and only the death of his beloved mentor, Priest Lombard, could lure him back. Walking into the old hangout gives him a familiar thrill—especially when he gets an eyeful of the bar’s delectable new owner. A wild ride with her is just the welcome Ajax needs. Then he realizes that she’s Priest’s daughter, all grown up and totally off limits.
Sean “Ajax” Harding’s oaths are inked into his skin. Once second-in-command of the Deacons of Bourbon Street motorcycle club, he left New Orleans to protect the brotherhood, and only the death of his beloved mentor, Priest Lombard, could lure him back. Walking into the old hangout gives him a familiar thrill—especially when he gets an eyeful of the bar’s delectable new owner. A wild ride with her is just the welcome Ajax needs. Then he realizes that she’s Priest’s daughter, all grown up and totally off limits.
Sophie Lombard loved her father, not his lifestyle. She’s done with bikers . . . until Ajax roars into town—arrogant, tough, and sexy as ever. And although he treats her like the Catholic schoolgirl he once knew, Sophie’s daydreams tend to revolve around sin. With the very real possibility of heartbreak looming, Sophie knows better than to get too close to an outlaw. But every touch from Ajax is steamier than the Louisiana bayou—and heat like this may just be worth getting burned.
I'm a sucker for a book set in New Orleans now that I call the city home. And I think the raw, gritty, dirty, debauched undertones of this story fit perfectly with the setting. It almost made me want to walk out of my office and find a dingy biker bar on Bourbon. I said almost - I can't quite bring myself to wade through the drunk tourists and gutter punks when the heat index is 108 with 98% humidity. I wouldn't even be shocked to find a girl (or boy) strutting down the street in gold hot pants and pasties.
She was broken and she was beautiful, his high class Creole whore of a hometown. Creeping vines and streetcar poetry, cracks in the sidewalks and zydeco in the thick air. This was home.
Dangerous men are a bit of a fantasy for me... even more so now that they are forbidden fruit due to my job. So Sean/Ajax fell in line with my dirty little secret, and his description allowed me to picture Charlie Hunnam while I read. That being said, sometimes I felt like popping him in the head and yelling "STOP BEING SUCH A D-BAG A$$HOLE!" Even the hot dirty sex couldn't make up for his attitude EVERY time. Also, I didn't much care for his road name. Ajax. How'd he get that name? And why doesn't he like to be called Sean? I would have liked a little more background info.
A battered, dark gold, finely-honed machine of a man, and he was grinning at her like he already had her pants at her knees and her ass over the nearest table.
Sophie was a pretty good female lead. She didn't annoy me, this stoic woman who had been raised by a biker dad but always kept on the outskirts of the club. I identified with her struggle to keep her emotions in check, even if I didn't understand her need to parade through the Quarter nearly naked. Sophie did have an issue with wanting to be claimed/wanted, so it made her willing to forgive Ajax's gruff ways a little too readily. But she also stood up to him and gave the sass, even if that was just to goad him into a few orgasms.
She was a lick of sweet sugar on a sweaty Louisiana afternoon...
Overall, this was a quick steamy erotic read that I enjoyed. I would have liked a little more plot development and backstory... but I found the abundance of smut hot and entertaining, so I know my hormones must be in flux because I didn't skip over any of that raunchy sexytime. (TMI - you're welcome.)
You're not surprised I'm terrible. You're surprised that you like it.I received an advanced copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
FOLLOW TOUR |
About the Author
Megan Crane is a New Jersey native who had great
plans to star on Broadway, preferably in Evita, just like Patti LuPone. Sadly,
her inability to wow audiences with her singing voice required a back-up plan.
Accordingly, she graduated from Vassar College and got her MA and PhD in
literature from the University of York in England. She wrote her doctoral
dissertation on AIDS literature, mostly so she could wallow in her obsession
with the remarkable multimedia artist David Wojnarowicz and her idol, the
bitter and hilarious David Feinberg. After many years in the rain and subject
to the whim of seasons, she followed the sun to Los Angeles, where she lives
with too many pets and an artist named Jeff. She is still plotting her Broadway
debut.
Author Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads
Author Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads
Excerpt
The demon incarnate laughed.
He
lounged there at her bar
like it was his, far too beautiful and much too dangerous, like he was still
her father’s favorite weapon and it was still ten years ago, when that might
have mattered.
And he
laughed.
Like
Sophie was still a little girl, beholden to the lawless whims and half-assed
schemes of men like him, battered and rough and wild straight through, unfit
for society and unwilling to change even a goddamned inch. No matter who it
hurt.
He was
just like her father. But her father was dead and Ajax didn’t belong here. Not
anymore.
Her father. Grief and loss and that familiar, hopeless fury lashed at
her like the business edge of a Louisiana rainstorm, but she beat it back. Not
here. Not now.
Lombards
kept their tears to themselves. No matter what that cost them. And it didn’t
matter that Sophie was tired of paying that particular tax, too. She was still
a Lombard. Her father had depended on her. The more he’d retreated into his
back room office these last few years, the more he’d left the bar and
everything else in her hands, the more she’d showed him she could live up to
his notion of what it meant to be a Lombard even if she hadn’t been a member of
his club of assholes and degenerates.
She’d
been more than that. She’d been his blood.
I’ll always take care of you, he’d told her a million times,
especially when he’d been drunk. You’re my blood, angel.
Sophie
thought that meant more than a gang tattoo and a few Harleys. It had to her.
She kept telling herself it had to him, too.
But
then Ajax stopped laughing, and that was worse.
“You
should mind your fucking manners, Sophie,” he said, quietly. Much too quietly.
To
someone who didn’t know him, he probably sounded about as friendly as a huge, built, flint-eyed guy with that many
tattoos and that particular way of carrying himself—like a threat on a very
short leash—could sound.
Sophie
knew better, and not only because she could see the impossible blue of his
eyes.
“Or
what?” she asked, making herself sound as bored as possible.
Behind
the bar, poor Danielle was staring at her as if Sophie had lost her mind. Maybe she had. Maybe that was what this thing inside of her was.
It had
started when the police had turned up yesterday to tell her the news. That
finally, impossibly, Theodore
“Priest” Lombard, legendary president of the Deacons of Bourbon Street
motorcycle club and Sophie’s only family in the world, had taken one fast turn
too many on his beloved Harley. It had fused into the crazy urge she’d had to
wander the Quarter dressed like this, hiding her grief and her loss and her
urge to lie down in the fetal position somewhere and never get up again in
plain, gold pastie-ed sight.
And
then Ajax had rolled into the Priory like he’d never been away. The gritty old
bar was the only thing she had left of her father and the only thing that was
really hers anyway after all
these years of running it by herself. And here came Ajax with all of that old
biker shit clinging to that ruthless body of his and so much like her father it
hurt Sophie to look at him—and that thing inside
her had simply . . . imploded.
If she
stopped running her mouth, she didn’t know what would become of her.
Maybe
she’d die, too.
She
could feel Ajax’s gaze on her like a touch, a little bit dirty and very, very
thorough, and she was
fiercely glad she was practically naked. Men were simple and bikers were even
more elemental than that. He’d be a lot more likely to look at her exposed skin
than the pulse she could feel doing backflips and assorted acrobatics in her
neck and her wrists and deep between her legs. It would give her away in an
instant if he could jerk his attention away from her tits, but why would a guy
like Ajax do a thing like that?
But
even as she thought that, his gaze was on hers again. Hard and shrewd, and she
felt a little chill of something too much like foreboding creep down her
exposed spine.
“Or I
might lose my patience with you, little girl. You want to see what happens
then, say the word.”
She’d
lost her father and she’d loved that man, for all that he’d been infuriating,
hypocritical, secretive, and wholly incapable of grasping that she was a grown
woman who didn’t need his permission to do as she pleased. It was beside the
point that she’d wanted his approval anyway. That she’d tried to take the place
of all his lost brothers over the years, as if running this bar better than he
ever had could bridge that gap. Still, she’d thought she’d done it. He’d even
thanked her, in his typically gruff way. This place would sink without
you, he’d told her,
one whiskey-infused evening when he’d been feeling uncharacteristically
emotional. Maybe I would, too.
And it
had been one thing to put up with biker caveman bullshit from the man who’d
raised her all on his own. She wasn’t taking it from anyone else. Not even if
the anyone else in
question looked like her hottest fantasies made flesh and sent straight to the
French Quarter to test her resolve.
But
that was between her and her vibrator.
“And
that means what, exactly?” she asked Ajax, not bothering to hide her disdain.
Or maybe that was her temper. It was hard to tell the difference today, or
separate that out from the grief for her father like a live wire burning hot in
her belly besides. “You going to shout a lot and act real scary and then run
away from home for ten years? Oh, wait. You already did that.”
No comments:
Post a Comment