Hi, everyone!
I hope you had a great week
and are enjoying your weekend.
In today's snippet, Bob is finally home and is using the
leather paddle on Marigold.
I hope you like it!
By the way, don't forget to stop by and visit all the other blogs.
The list is below.
Enjoy.
I hit her
again, just as hard, and there’s another welt in the shape of a heart. I decide to tip her forward so I can get to
her sit spot and leave welts there, too.
That done, I move on to her thighs and give them twin heart shapes.
“Yes, Bobby.”
"Fine. Here we go.”
“One Mississippi,” she groans, lifting her head off the pillow. “Oh! Two Mississippi. Three Mississippi.”
“One Mississippi,” she groans, lifting her head off the pillow. “Oh! Two Mississippi. Three Mississippi.”
We continue like this until she
reaches thirty, but she’s very red and sore by then and having a hard time counting
out loud.
Blurb:
When college student Marigold Cavendish meets Major League manager Bob Heath at her best friend Miranda’s engagement party, the two hit it off immediately. But with a twenty-five-year age difference between them, trouble brews. Between Marigold’s parents and Bob’s grown daughter, their relationship has very large hurdles to clear.
The more time the couple spends together, the more confident they are that their love is right, and they’re able to ignore the negative influences surrounding them. Things go smoothly for a while, and then Bob asks Marigold to marry him. What should be a happy and exciting time slowly turns into something far from that.
Bob and Marigold discover their relationship can survive the long distance necessary when Bob must travel with his team, but can it survive the negative influence of family or their own insecurities? Are they strong enough individually to become stronger still as a couple and ride out the storm? Or is their relationship doomed?
The more time the couple spends together, the more confident they are that their love is right, and they’re able to ignore the negative influences surrounding them. Things go smoothly for a while, and then Bob asks Marigold to marry him. What should be a happy and exciting time slowly turns into something far from that.
Bob and Marigold discover their relationship can survive the long distance necessary when Bob must travel with his team, but can it survive the negative influence of family or their own insecurities? Are they strong enough individually to become stronger still as a couple and ride out the storm? Or is their relationship doomed?
Counting aloud is the hardest thing ever!
ReplyDeleteCounting is a punishment, and I can totally understand why she'd be having difficulty after thirty. If someone was taking a heart shaped paddle to my butt, I'd probably have trouble after ten. She's doing well.
ReplyDeleteI'd be yelling out loud by then, too! Fabulous snippet! :)
ReplyDelete'having a hard time counting out loud' LOL! I bet. Great snippet.
ReplyDelete