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Light Her Fire
Light Her Fire
Light Her Fire
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Light Her Fire

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Good girl Melody Merritt is ready to be bad. Fresh out of an unsatisfying ten-year engagement to the town golden boy, she's determined to make up for lost time. And who better to burn her sterling reputation to the ground than Bluelick's sinfully sexy new fire chief whose wicked gaze promises complete and utter domination? Yes, please.

Corrupting the prim and proper Little Miss Bluelick is the most action Josh Bradley's seen since he transferred from Cincinnati to fast-track his career. He won't let anything or anyone—not even the delectable Melody Merritt—trap him in this Kentucky-fried Mayberry, but when their searing chemistry yields an unexpected result, he realizes he's started a blaze that's completely beyond his control…

Each book in the Private Pleasures series is STANDALONE:
* Private Practice
* Light Her Fire
* Falling for the Enemy
* Wet and Reckless
* Undercover Engagement

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 20, 2014
ISBN9781633750777
Author

Samanthe Beck

USA Today bestselling author Samanthe Beck lives in Malibu, California with her husband, their turbo-son, and two furry ninjas named Kitty and Frosty. When not writing fun, sexy, contemporary romances or lazing on her beach towel with her face snuggled to her Kindle, she searches for the perfect ten dollar cabernet to pair with Ambien. Connect with Sam via her website at www.samanthebeck.com to check her progress on that never-ending quest, or to get the latest on her upcoming books.

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Rating: 4.229166666666667 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Two words - Sizzling Hot!! Samanthe Beck has out done herself with this one. I thoroughly enjoyed Melody and Josh's story and the sexual chemistry was jumping off the page. I might have enjoyed a bit more on the emotional side of the story but all in all this is a winner. I highly recommend it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I was in the mood for a feel good romance, and I found just that with this book. Melody is coming off of a very long engagement and now wants to start anew. She is known as a good girl and doesn't mind trying to change that rep a bit. But I like that she doesn't go all slutty looking for a new guy. She is still herself, she just tries to be perhaps a little more daring than she originally would be when going back on the dating scene. She takes things a bit cautiously, but she does ultimately go for it. And I like her because of that. She's a great character.Josh is kind of your typical handsome bachelor. So naturally he is cocky and blunt and all. He also knows what he's got and knows women want it. So he only really expects sex from them. Until he meets her. Then everything begins. Plenty of mystery, secrets, and a bit of a suspenseful ending make for a great story. And of course all those sexy times make you need your own fire fighter to put out that fire. Overall I enjoyed going through Melody and Josh's relationship from start to finish. Definitely a recommended read.This was my first Samanthe Beck book, but I was so thoroughly entertained with reading this that it will not be my last.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie TalesQuick & Dirty: Sexy and steamy novel with two very adventurous adults. Light Her Fire is a little predictable but the story itself is heartwarming and playful.Opening Sentence: You’ve hit a new low when the chance to eye-fuck Melody Merritt in Boone’s Market is what passes for excitement in your life.The Review:Light Her Fire is a fun, sexy novel about Melody Merrritt and Josh Bradley. It is the second novel in the Private Pleasures series. Melody is a small town girl and she loves her little town of Bluelick. She also really likes the new fire chief in town. Josh is an ambitious firefighter and he really wants to work his way up the ladder *pun intended* by accepting the job as fire chief, hoping that it will lead to a job as fire chief in a bigger city.Melody has just come off a ten-year engagement and of course is looking for a fun fling, not anything serious. She sees that Josh has eyes for her and so she decides to do something about it. Plus, it helps that he is great on the eyes too. Josh is impressed the blue eyed beauty just walks up to him boldly and asks him out but he is a little worried she is too good for his bad boy ways. He doesn’t have to worry much, Melody is tired of being the good girl so their initial fling happens really quick. A very funny interruption ensues and because of this Josh decides he wants to take Melody on a real date before they get to the fun stuff.Melody and Josh have some really hot sex and foreplay. A lot of it happens in public. The sex on her front porch could only happen in a small town but since she lives in a neighborhood I don’t see how no one was at least looking out a window even if they weren’t driving by. They definitely seem to like the high of possibly getting caught.Josh is a bad boy and he really likes his sex. He never hides his past from Melody but since he isn’t from her town, she doesn’t have previous knowledge of it. Josh definitely has an arrogance to his character but it is tied into his ambitions. He knows what he wants and he gets it. Even with his arrogance I really liked Josh, he didn’t lie about himself or what he wants from Melody.Melody has always planned for her future with her high school sweetheart but when that didn’t pan out, she decides that she must do something for herself now. Her last ten years were wasted so a fling with Josh will help her do some of the things that she has missed out on. She is a fun girl and entirely devoted to her friends and family. I really enjoyed her bold and sexy way of asking out Josh.One thing that is brought up a couple times by Melody’s friend is that in a relationship she must compromise but Melody never once gives in. That was a little frustrating but I understand that she did ten years of compromising with her previous relationship but she couldn’t even budge with Josh just a little bit.The actual plot of the story was a little predictable and not entirely surprising. I don’t want to spoil anything but its not hard to figure out what will eventually happen because of one sexual encounter and the fact that Josh is a firefighter. Once again the sex was incredibly hot, but it kind of fizzles out for the last quarter of the book. I guess there were too many life altering choices happening for the characters to even think about sex.I haven’t had the privilege of reading Private Practice yet, which is the first book in this series, but with the hilarious glimpses of the main characters during this book really have me wanting to pick up this book too.Overall, it was a steamy, quick read. I really enjoyed this world and the interactions of the townsfolk in this tiny town. I will return to this series, especially if the next book is about Melody’s friend and “Wolverine”.Notable Scene:The sight greeting him on the other side of the open doorframe left him worse for wear in a whole different way. Melody stood there, blond hair tumbling down her shoulders in smooth waves. Her blue eyes danced with pleasure and something else he could only define as excitement. She’d wrapped her traffic-stopping body in one of those little sundresses that looked about as substantial as a butterfly’s wing and made a man thank God for eighty-degree heat and 90 percent humidity. The dress wasn’t particularly tight or short—the women he’d dated in Cincinnati routinely wore outfits consisting of half the fabric—but on her it was straight-up sexy. The pale pink shade should have looked innocent, like ballet slippers or cotton candy. But it wasn’t. Not on her.The color made him think of her skin. The soft, hidden expanses not kissed by the sun. His mind filled with memories of her round, full breasts, her smooth, flat stomach…the peach-like curve of her ass. Raspberry-red high-heeled sandals strapped to her feet only intensified the effect by highlighting her slender calves and reminding him of another pink destination at the other end of those amazing legs.He forced his eyes back up and stopped at her face. Her smile washed over him, and for the first time in weeks, the restless, hemmed-in feeling he’d gotten used to since moving to Kentucky backed off.FTC Advisory: Entangled: Brazen provided me with a copy of Light Her Fire. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.

Book preview

Light Her Fire - Samanthe Beck

Table of Contents

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Epilogue

Acknowledgments

About the Author

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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2014 by Samanthe Beck. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

Entangled Publishing, LLC

10940 S Parker Rd

Suite 327

Parker, CO 80134

rights@entangledpublishing.com

Brazen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

Edited by Heather Howland and Sue Winegardner

Cover design by LJ Anderson/Mayhem Cover Creations

Cover photography by 1greyday/Deposit Photos

ISBN 978-1-63375-077-7

Manufactured in the United States of America

First Edition October 2014

Dear Reader,

Thank you for supporting a small publisher! Entangled prides itself on bringing you the highest quality romance you’ve come to expect, and we couldn’t do it without your continued support. We love romance, and we hope this book leaves you with a smile on your face and joy in your heart.

xoxo

Liz Pelletier, Publisher

To everyone who asked, What about Josh and Melody?!

Chapter One

You’ve hit a new low when the chance to eye-fuck Melody Merritt in Boone’s Market is what passes for excitement in your life.

Josh Bradley almost groaned out loud as he watched Melody run slim, busy fingers over every single cucumber in the Five for $5 bin. He dumped a bag of apples into his cart without tearing his attention from those nimble hands, which were currently stroking one cucumber so thoroughly he was going to have a bystander orgasm right there between the Galas and the Granny Smiths.

If the guys in Cincinnati could see you now, they’d be laughing their asses off.

Right. Moving to sleepy Bluelick, Kentucky, to become fire chief had been a mistake—though watching Miss Bluelick chew her lip and fondle cucumbers almost made the career blunder worthwhile. Almost. But the last three months had proved one thing beyond a shadow of a doubt—he was a city boy. He needed action. Something in short supply in Bluelick, notwithstanding what was happening in his pants at the moment thanks to Melody.

He picked out a bunch of bananas and added them to his cart. Ironically, his appetite for action—and a fair dose of ambition—were what had pulled him to this Kentucky-fried Mayberry in the first place. He’d stalled out in the Cincinnati Fire Department as an assistant chief with no chance of advancement until the chief retired, which the man showed no sign of doing. Chief Warren had told him to be patient, get more years under his belt, and when the time was right, Josh would be ready.

Frustration tightened his jaw. As much as he valued his mentor’s advice, marking time solely for the sake of marking time wasn’t his strong suit. He’d learned early a person’s tenure on this earth could be short. He had goals to achieve, a legacy to honor, and saw no point in dicking around. When he’d learned about the opening in Bluelick, he’d traded the status quo in the city for the opportunity to parlay the chief’s gig in Bluelick to the same role in a larger department, and ultimately, build the kind of career his father had aimed for—one that would make his father proud.

The squeak of cart wheels brought him back to the present. A little old lady rolled by. His eyes cut back to Melody. She was a head-turner by any standard…a tall, refined, southern Grace Kelly. He’d dubbed her Miss Bluelick because she practically personified the place with her deep-rooted family tree and small-town sensibilities. The starched white blouse and flow-y yellow skirt she wore said, Mind your manners. Manners he didn’t possess.

Not your type, he reminded himself. You don’t do good girls.

He’d heard the rumors. Rumors about how her former fiancé spent a few years in New York and DC, getting his law degree and a bunch of other letters after his name. The man had also apparently picked up some big city tastes, sexually speaking, which the prim and proper Bluelick belle didn’t care to indulge.

Josh’s tastes didn’t tend toward prim and proper, either, but every once in a while he caught a glimpse of something less than proper sparkling in her mountain lake eyes. Like now. She stood on the opposite side of the produce section, staring at him with an expression that had his cock doing its best impression of a tower ladder. She blinked, as if suddenly realizing he was staring back, and looked away.

Pathetic. You’re in a grocery store fantasizing about corrupting Miss Bluelick. Then again, who could blame him? What red-blooded man with a pulse wouldn’t have a little cucumber envy right now?

He scowled. The degree of his attraction pissed him off. He wasn’t looking to get tied down, but even if he was, no way was he getting tied down in Mayberry. He planned to serve his time—a year, max—and then move on. Preferably to someplace that didn’t inspire early retirement jokes from the assholes in his old department.

No. Melody wasn’t his type. And even if she were, he should steer clear of her. But a part of him wanted to see just how deep all the Southern propriety really ran…

Melody Ann Merritt, get a hold of yourself. Nobody moans in the middle of Boone’s Market, no matter how firm the cucumbers are.

She couldn’t blame the cucumbers for the sudden urge to flee to the frozen foods section to cool down. She could—and did—blame Fire Chief Bradley for standing over there by the heirloom tomatoes, sending her looks designed to make a Sunday school teacher fan herself.

It wasn’t the first time, either. She wasn’t blind, for God’s sake, but even if she was, she’d have noticed him eyeing her whenever their paths crossed. Every female past puberty in Bluelick sat up and took notice the day Josh Bradley hit their tiny town.

She risked a glance at him while he hefted a sack of potatoes, and swallowed at the sight of rock-hard muscles bunching and flexing under his dark blue uniform shirt and matching utility pants as he bent over to stow the potatoes on the rack under his cart. Her libido took a quick, unapproved inventory—long legs, strong thighs that strained the seams of his pants just a little when he crouched, and a positively awe-inspiring butt she had an insane urge to sink her teeth into.

The upper half of him was just as good. Good enough to have some of the women in town contemplating torching their own kitchens, and feigning loss of consciousness to get a ride on his broad shoulders. His sandy-blond hair looked like he’d shoved his fingers through it, as always, and made her want to do the same, to see if it felt as thick and soft as it appeared. His eyes were the shade of wild Kentucky bluegrass.

His eyes…shoot, he was watching her now—giving her a long, blatantly appraising stare—while she ogled him. She jerked her gaze away and concentrated on bagging her cucumbers. Silly to pretend she didn’t see him. Boone’s Market wasn’t exactly the Mall of America. Only a couple of bins of produce separated them. Plus, it’s not like she could pretend she didn’t recognize him. In a town this size folks recognized each other.

She’d spoken to him before. Twice, actually. People considered her the poster girl for Bluelick, and she always made a point to be friendly. Okay, maybe she’d attempted to be more than friendly when they’d talked, but even ten years out of practice, she’d picked up on his interest. No. Scratch that. Interest was far too civilized a word. Stumbling into his tractor-beam gaze had been like getting sucked into a vortex of fuck-lust. She’d never experienced anything like it outside a Nature Channel documentary. The looks he sent her warned there would be no respectful wooing—only a short, ruthless chase, her inevitable surrender, and then…please God…complete and utter domination.

But he’d never made a move.

She risked another glance at him from under her lashes. Yep. There was the look.

A feather of temptation tickled down her spine. Not smart. Prudence and propriety dictated that a girl who’d just ended a ten-year engagement to her high school sweetheart wait a decent amount of time before letting some strapping male animal with overactive pheromones haul her off and have his way with her. Unfortunately, prudence and propriety couldn’t help her pass another lonely night. Decency couldn’t stave off the frustration of sitting on a shelf for over a decade, cherished, but mostly untouched.

She lifted her chin and dropped the cucumbers into her basket with a thump. Well, she was officially off the shelf now and, dang it all to hell and back, she wanted to be touched. Used, for once, instead of simply admired from a distance. Was that so wrong? She lifted her chin, ready to risk her reputation to get what she wanted. It was now or—

Hello, dear. How’s your mama doing? And those pretty girls of yours?

Ms. Van Hendler’s raspy voice derailed her train of thought. Melody turned to the tiny blue-haired woman. Ms. V was eighty if she was a day, and prone to confusion. Right now she was confusing Melody for her younger sister, Belinda.

Belinda, who, growing up, had always insisted she was never getting married, and never, ever birthing a bunch of babies. Belinda, who now lived happily ever after in a suburb off the double A, with her husband of six years and their three daughters. Melody didn’t bother correcting Ms. V. She smiled. They’re all good, Ms. Van Hendler. Thank you for asking.

That’s nice to hear. And what about your sister? I heard Roger broke off their engagement. She must be devastated, poor girl, waiting patiently all that time for him to finish his education, only to end up alone.

A vise tightened around her temples. She resisted an urge to massage them. Melody’s absolutely fine. The breakup was mutual.

Of course. Of course. Very brave of her. She must be almost thirty—

Twenty-eight. She just turned twenty-eight.

Oh, well, that’s a relief. She’s still got some time. And anyway, it’s different nowadays, isn’t it? Back in my day, if a girl wasn’t married by thirty, she might as well clean out her hope chest.

Times have changed, Melody agreed, and tried not to roll her eyes.

"Indeed. Not that we’ll give up hope for Melody, no matter how long it takes. She was always a pretty girl. Always a good girl, too—never a whisper of scandalous behavior out of that one. I’m sure some lucky man, somewhere, will scoop her up. When you see her next, please tell her I said hello, and wish her well for me."

Consider it done, Ms. Van Hendler, she managed through a stiff smile as Ms. V tottered away toward the pet supplies aisle, grinding all plans of sweet seduction under her squeaky cart wheels.

All for the best. Melody let her smile fall, along with her courage. Ms. V’s comments knocked some sense into her. She might not have a fiancé anymore, or any immediate prospect of marriage, babies, and the happy ever after she’d always envisioned, but she had one thing left—her reputation. An asset she’d been on the verge of sacrificing for a cheap, meaningless encounter. Enticing as it was to envision boldly approaching Josh and telling him she had an urgent need for his big, powerful hose…or whatever—hitting on a near-stranger was not her strong suit—she couldn’t. She was a good girl. People respected that about her. She probably didn’t have it in her, anyway.

A sterling reputation would continue to shine after the glow of youth dimmed and looks faded. She wandered blindly over to the next produce display and ended up staring at a bin of prunes. Each one stared back at her like a dark, wrinkly omen, silently mocking her sterling reputation. Oh, God. Was this how the entire town saw her? A dried-up old maid at twenty-eight. How had it come to this?

Because you spent ten years sacrificing and compromising and focusing on the future while Roger went away to school. All that time she’d been patiently sitting on her shelf here in Bluelick, waiting. Oh, sure, she’d gotten her associate’s degree in office management at the junior college, but mostly she’d been marking time until he moved home and they started their real life.

The whole sad situation wasn’t completely Roger’s fault. For years she’d sensed things were…off, but she’d believed him every time he’d looked at her with earnest eyes and put his lack of passion down to the stress of school, or the pressure of his clerkship, or some other outside factor. Hell, he’d convinced himself. Convincing her had probably taken a lot less effort, because she’d wanted to be convinced. They’d bought into a sweet, idyllic vision of a future together—wanted it with all their hearts—to the point she’d ignored some important messages from her head.

Knowing they shared the blame didn’t make it any less depressing to realize the girl her senior class had voted Most Likely to Be Married With Children was now just two short years from the big three-oh, unmarried, childless, and damn near a virgin. And if she thought about that pitiful truth one more second, she would likely burst into tears.

You don’t have to be a good girl anymore. You’re free, single, and well over the age of consent. Get some thrills out of life while you’re still young enough to enjoy them, unless you’re ready to accept exchanging gossip with old Ms. V in the aisle at Boone’s Market as the highlight of your day.

She eyed Josh. He stood with his profile to her, testing the melons. Her skin tightened, watching him heft the smooth, pale globes in his wide-palmed hands. Maybe she made a sound, or maybe he simply sensed her attention, because he straightened and turned toward her. Their gazes collided. He froze, seemingly caught off guard for once, a melon cupped securely in each hand. Heat rushed to her face and her chest started to tingle. She could think of a better use for those hands. And so could he, she suspected.

You have ten years to make up for, starting now.

Before she knew quite what she planned to do, Melody marched over, planted herself in front of his cart, and looked him square in the eye. You ready to make your move, Chief, or are you just going to stare all night?

Chapter Two

Christ, she tempted him right past reason, with her heaving chest, flushed cheeks, and blue eyes blazing with challenge.

You don’t do good girls, he reminded himself again.

Maybe some blunt honesty on his part would scare her off. He set the melons in his cart and folded his arms across his chest. I’m always ready, Miss Merritt, but from what I’ve heard, you’re not into my moves. I’m one of those big-city sinners that girls like you are taught to beware of.

Those blue eyes widened, but then a barely perceptible smile pulled at the corners of her mouth. He immediately imagined those expressive lips forming his name as he filled her, and suppressed a groan.

Call me Melody. And I hate to break it to you, Chief, but you can’t believe everything you hear. She moved around the cart and sidled closer, brushing his arm as she did. Her smile turned wicked. She leaned past him and plucked a grape from a bin behind him. I’m not such a good girl when you get right down to it. You’d be surprised what I’m into. Dangling the ripe purple fruit by its thin stem, she brought it to her mouth and slowly closed her lips over the stolen treat. A second later she handed him the stem.

Their fingers touched when he took it, and his heart rate kicked up a notch. Apparently he couldn’t believe everything he’d heard about little Miss Bluelick. It might qualify as the stupidest thing he’d done since accepting the job here in the first place, but damn if he could resist seeing how far she’d take things. Call me Josh. Are you thinking you’ll surprise me, Melody? You won’t. I don’t surprise easily. Keep smiling at me like that, though, and I’m liable to commit at least three sins with your mouth alone. You’ll have to make a special trip to church once I’m done with you.

Really, Josh? she said his name slowly, then deliberately flashed him a wider smile and leaned closer. Are you thinking you’ll scare me off? You won’t. And if I’m going to make a trip to church, these sins you have in mind better involve my whole body.

He cocked an eyebrow. He had no clue what had gotten into Miss Bluelick tonight, but she turned a shopping trip into a roller-coaster ride. First, she hit him with the naked, hungry, completely uncensored gaze. The longing he’d sensed behind her eyes had made him fantasize about giving her every damn thing she was silently asking for, even as his better judgment warned him away. Then her chat with the old lady had sucked the fire right out of her. He could have sworn she’d been about to wheel her cart away and leave him alone with his better judgment and his aching balls. Now she’d surprised him again—and he really didn’t surprise easily—with her deliberate seduction. Determination and a hint of something else blazed in her eyes, and his better judgment was slowly going down in flames.

There’s nothing I’d like better than to give you a reason to go to church. But I left a couple of guys at the firehouse with one Gatorade and a couple of energy bars between them. He tipped his head toward his cart. I’ve got to drop this stuff at the station before they riot for food.

She batted her long eyelashes and ran her fingertip along the flap of his chest pocket. You know, I’ve never been to the firehouse before.

His dick twitched as he imagined that finger trailing along the center of his chest, down his abdomen, and into his pants. It’s a historic landmark, not to mention an impressive structure.

Hmm. The soft noise hummed in his ear, making him wonder what other noises she might make for him, given the right inspiration. Why don’t you invite me for a hands-on, behind-the-scenes tour of your impressive…structure?

Her suggestion pushed him past the point of reason. A man could only withstand so much. Her mouth hovered close to his, her lips as full and ripe as the cherries on special this week. He grabbed her basket and dropped it into his cart. Come on.

They were checked out and standing in the parking lot in record time. He hit the button on his key and unlocked his Yukon. Hop in. I’ll give you a ride back to your car once we’ve completed our…tour.

She hung back and chewed her lip, then shook her head. No. I’ll follow in my car. After giving me such extensive access and satisfying all my raging…curiosity…you’ll be exhausted. There’s no need to drag you back here to drop me off when I’m perfectly capable of driving.

A part of him felt duty-bound to debate the exhausted part, but he shrugged instead. She wanted the ability to

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