Karen’s Killer Book Bench: CLAY, St. Michael’s Solutions #Steamy #Military #Protector #Romance by T.L. Schaefer

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CLAY
St. Michael’s Solutions
BY T.L. SCHAEFER

BLURB

Injured in a plane crash that ended his career, C-17 loadmaster Clay Andrews just wants to keep his head down and do something that matters to honor his lost comrades. St. Michael’s Solutions gives him the opportunity to do that when Ivy Walker contacts SMS searching for her best friend. She’s everything he’s not, sunny and bright and good. And he wants her like he’s never wanted anything. But she’s his to protect, and until she’s out of harm’s way, it’s hands off.

Ivy takes one look at Clay and immediately pictures long, sweaty nights. How can she make Clay see her as more than a job?

When her friend’s past comes calling, putting Ivy in danger, Clay will risk everything to protect the woman who’s become his world.

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CLAY
St. Michael’s Solutions
BY T.L. SCHAEFER

Excerpt

“How can St. Michael’s Solutions help you, Miss Foster?”

Ivy looked across the café table at the sexiest man she’d ever seen and managed to keep her sigh of appreciation internal. Barely.

Blue eyes assessed her from a face that looked carved from granite, all hard, chiseled lines that would have been better suited to a fashion runway than this off-Strip café three blocks from her home/studio.

She could also see him in one of her paintings. Maybe in a Spartan warrior’s garb, ready for battle. But shirtless. Definitely shirtless.

Hair dark as a raven’s wing brushed against his forehead, but sat precisely where it should at his nape, right at regulation length. His mouth was the most sinful she’d ever seen and made her want things she really, really shouldn’t. Not right now, at least.

Because she wasn’t here for herself, she was here for Katie.

“Thank you for meeting me,” she said, spinning her mug in a nervous circle.

Outside, the Las Vegas heat was beginning to ramp up, promising another scorching July day, but inside the café it was cool and smelled of coffee and vanilla and whipped cream. Of comfort, of familiarity, which she desperately needed right now.

Calling the number on the card that had been passed to her by an old friend of her father’s had been a Hail Mary. She hadn’t expected much but had to try.

She’d done her due diligence, finding one or two oblique mentions of them in online forums, but nothing else. So she’d called, because she had nothing left to lose. Two days later she’d received a text asking for a meeting at her choice of location. And here they were.

“My friend Katie McAlister is missing. Has been for almost a month. The police won’t help because she’s an adult. Say she’s probably met a man and gone off with him.” She shrugged helplessly. “I can see where they’d think that. I checked her apartment and she packed a bag, and there’s no sign of a struggle. But it’s not like her.” Now that she’d started talking the words came out in a torrent. “She’s never ghosted me before, and we’ve known each other since we were little kids. It’s not like her to disappear.”

“What’s her employer say?”

“She’s an independent contractor. Works as an editor and assistant for writers. But none of her regular clients have heard from her lately.”

“Her family?”

She shook her head. “I called and kept it vague, just checking in with them. I didn’t want to worry them. I’ve known them for decades, so the call wasn’t anything out of the ordinary. They have no idea she’s even missing. But they will soon.” And when they did, all hell would break loose.

“Social media?” The SMS operative’s words were short, clipped, and yet were exactly what the cops hadn’t asked.

“Completely silent, which also isn’t like her. I’ve DM’d her accounts in addition to texting and calling.” Katie’s silence to both Ivy and her audience was completely out of character. While her friend wasn’t an influencer, she did have quite a social media following and regularly interacted with authors and readers. The fact she’d stopped posting was ominous. “I also put a post on her pages, more of a general complaint about us not getting together enough. I can’t think of any other way to reach her.”

“When did you last hear from her?”

“Just over three weeks ago. We were supposed to meet for coffee here and she never showed. She’d texted me that morning, reminding me to be here.” Guilt tugged at her. “Sometimes I get wrapped up in a project and lose track of time. She’s always giving me shit about it.”

“What do you do?”

She looked down at her hands, at the remnants of paint in the creases of her knuckles, the lack of polish on nails clipped short. “I’m an artist,” she replied, leaving it at that. The cops had blown her off after meeting her in her studio for their interview. Apparently, her eclectic style and work downtown looked more like tagging to them than art. Never mind that several of her paintings hung in several off-strip, reputable casinos.

Her mind leapt from subject to subject to subject as he let the silence draw out for what seemed like forever.

“What if she did find a man? When we locate her, what will that do to your friendship?”

After such curt, short questions, this was almost a soliloquy. And interesting because he’d thought to ask it. His voice was deep, as dark as his hair, and made her almost shiver in response. But she didn’t because she was here for business of a sort, and she couldn’t be her usual, eccentric self when it came to something this important.

She had to find out what had happened to Katie.

She tilted her head. “She’ll give me shit for getting in her business, then continue what she’s doing, and when she returns, we’ll go out for drinks, and she’ll tell me all about it.” Ivy’s propensity for getting in her friend’s business had been something they’d laughed about since childhood, but especially since Katie moved to Vegas two years ago.

Her companion seemed to mull over her words, giving her a moment to look her fill.

He’d arrived on a sexy-as-hell motorcycle that now leaned on its kickstand in front of the café. The leather jacket he’d worn when he pulled up was draped across the back of the chair in deference to the heat and a wicked-looking matte-black helmet was tucked beneath his seat.

Long, long legs were encased in denim that looked so soft it had to be a crime and a gray short-sleeved Henley showed off toned, tanned arms that reinforced the strong-but-not-bulky impression.

All in all, he was sex on a stick, a somewhat broody looking prime male specimen, and he made everything inside her get all tingly.

About Author T.L. Schaeffer…

TL Schaefer writes mysteries/police procedurals that also have a romance twined throughout. And likely some stuff that goes bump in the night. And every once in awhile, her books are spicy (so look for the heat levels). If you like your heroes in uniform (be they cops, firefighters, or military) and your heroines with a bit of quirk, then wing by her website www.tlschaefer.com or visit her Facebook group, Musings From the Blonde Side at https://www.facebook.com/groups/920052411730859/ where she talks about books, cats and her very own romance hero.

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Links to T.L.’s websites, blogs, books, #ad etc.:

Amazon Kindle: https://amzn.to/42lQ5Kw

Author Website: https://tlschaefer.com/
Happy Reading!
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Special Giveaway:  T.L.  will gift a Kindle copy of CLAY  to one lucky reader who comments on her Karen’s Killer Book Bench. Good luck!

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Thanks, T.L., for sharing your book with us!

Don’t miss the chance to read this book!

9 thoughts on “Karen’s Killer Book Bench: CLAY, St. Michael’s Solutions #Steamy #Military #Protector #Romance by T.L. Schaefer”

  1. You know I’m a sucker for this kind of story… 👍🏻👍🏻

    Thanks, T. L. , for an excellent excerpt and thanks, Karen, for the introduction

  2. Good morning, this sounds and looks like a Great read! Not entering this giveaway as I am not tech savvy and so I dont read ebooks, but Thank you.

  3. Welcome back to Karen’s Killer Book Bench, T.L. I loved the excerpt and my favorite kind of book. I’m intrigued and can’t wait to read it. Thanks for sharing your book with us today!

  4. Thanks for stopping by – I shared the link of FB, so hopefully you get more exposure. The book sounds good for sure.

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