To the Edge
At the Brink,#2
by Anna del Mar
Date of
Publication: November 14th 2016
Publisher: Carina
Press
Cover Artist: Carina
Press
Genre: Erotic Romance
To learn about kink, she had to learn
the ropes. Yet she never expected to be so compromised she'd need rescuing. And
by him. The first man she'd ever loved. The former navy SEAL who'd broken her
heart.
Excerpts
for To the Edge by Anna del Mar
Meet Clara Luz from Anna del Mar’s To the Edge
First
Chapter Reveal
I’m thrilled to introduce my newest release, To the Edge,
to all of you readers of erotic romance who visit this awesome blog. To the Edge is the story of Noah Blake and Clara Luz, a couple who stole my heart
and imagination in this second chance love story. In a nutshell: To learn about kink, Clara had to learn the
ropes. Yet she never expected to be so compromised she'd need rescuing. And by
him. Noah Blake. The first man she'd ever loved. The former navy SEAL who'd
broken her heart.
You all may remember that I write
stories about strong heroines struggling to find their place in the world and
the brave, sexy, kickass heroes who will fight to protect them with all they’ve
got. Some of my stories are romantic suspense, like The Asset and The Stranger. Some are
erotic romances, like At the Brink. If you
liked At the Brink, you will love To
the Edge. Honestly? It is the sexiest,
kinkiest, erotic romance I’ve written to date. Today, I’m delighted to share
the complete first chapter of To the Edge and introduce you to Clara Luz, who is caught in a very compromising
position from the get go.
So, as always, proceed at your own
discretion and above all…enjoy.
AdM
***
Chapter One
Clara
My first attempt
at submission went from failure to disaster in a whiff. An odd scent teased my
nose and rattled my nerves. A prickle of uneasiness crept up my spine. I craned
my neck, trying to figure out where the smell was coming from, but I couldn’t
see much beyond the narrow slits of my sequined velvet mask.
Note to blog: velvet masks may shield, tease and entice, but
visibility sucks.
I heard a small
sound, a swish maybe? It came from my right somewhere, from the hallway that
led to the powder room. I tried twisting my body around in the cage, but I
could barely move. My arms were fastened above my head and my ankles were
strapped to the bars near the floor. I sniffed the air again. The smell seemed
fainter. Maybe it was my imagination, trying to shock some common sense into me
and put an end to today’s little experiment.
I was alone in
the old house. My companion had left twenty minutes ago, to find himself some
coffee in town, he’d said. He’d left me cuffed in the cage so that I could
reflect on my irreverent conduct. Right. Good luck with that, buddy. The truth
was that he probably needed the caffeine boost in order to tackle a handful
like me.
I let out a
little groan. Sure, this was crazy, no two ways about it. Reckless my mother
would say, risky and not exactly consistent with my usually sane behavior. But
honestly? I had suppressed my life for others’ sake long enough.
But this? A
seditious little voice nagged in the back of my mind. I tried to quiet it down,
but maybe, just maybe, I’d pushed the edge a little too hard on this one. God,
the things I did in the name of freedom.
The tight leather
corset dug into my ribs. My arms ached. My legs were tired and my feet were
beginning to cramp in the impossibly high heels.
Note to blog: kink garb isn’t exactly comfy.
Good God. I was
actually going through with this. Me. Clara Luz. Attempting something so far
out of my comfort zone, not to mention my family’s much-touted moral rectitude.
I slumped in my bonds. Was I really so freaking desperate?
A week and a half
ago, Annette Collins, the legendary editor of RelevantSex.com, had presented me
with a unique proposition. Annette had been my advisor in grad school and as
such, the only person who knew about my online adventures. From the beginning,
she’d followed sextattle.com, the sex and romance blog I published—anonymously,
of course.
It wasn’t as if I
was particularly versed or gifted in these oh so very fascinating subjects. On
the contrary. My relationship IQ measured pretty low on the success scale. But
the blog wasn’t so much an advice column as it was a forum. Discussion
questions came in through an unfiltered inbox, I posted them under different
categories and people talked about them. I was good at research, so I mostly
shared facts and links to helpful resources. I followed the old adage: those
who can’t do, teach. Or, in my case, share online.
Initially, the
blog had been an experiment, a grad school project that went unexpectedly
viral. But after graduation, the blog transformed into a labor of love, a means
to connect with people and the only possible way in which I could pursue my own
journey, separate from that of my illustrious mother. These days the blog had a
very respectable reach, solid advertising revenues and an expanding market that
had caught Annette’s eye. She’d made me an excellent offer to merge my blog
with RelevantSex.com.
The catch?
Annette wanted a
trial run, a main feature to woo the editorial board and test my range, a
fresh, raw take on the topic of sex and submission, a personal account of my
first exploration of kink to tantalize her readers.
“It’s a
fascinating subject,” she’d said during our meeting at LeMond’s Cafe in Adams
Morgan. “Look at the movies. Look at the novels. The public is fascinated by
kink, domination and submission. Your readers will be too. An exploration is
totally relevant.”
“Then why don’t
you assign someone who’s already on staff at RelevantSex.com?” I didn’t have
any wisdom to share on the topic, zero, zip, nada. “Or better yet, why don’t
you tackle it?”
“Because I might
be biased on the subject.” She fastened her glimmering green eyes on my face.
“Whereas you, my dear, are sure to bring a fresh perspective to our readers.”
Her naughty smile
activated my Spidey senses and ignited my blush. I wasn’t a prude by any means,
but kink? Yep, I’d bring a fresh perspective for sure. As to Annette, any
lingering questions I may have had about the extent of her personal kink
exposure were fully answered when she plunked down a long, comprehensive list
of potential interview sources and references on the table.
Holy crap. I had
a mental image of the sober pearl-decked Annette, dressed in black leather,
whip in hand, red curls cascading down her back. I forced my mouth to close.
Annette’s project
was intriguing but, given my leadership role at the Luz Foundation and my
mother’s high profile, it was also dangerous to me, personally and
professionally. I tried to err on the side of caution. “I might not be the
right person for this one.”
“Nonsense.” She
reached over the table and, after tucking a strand of my bangs behind my ear,
trailed her fingers down my chin. “You are perfect.”
I had to shake
off the shock. Had Annette just made a pass at me? No way. My overactive
imagination was busy at work, again. Annette was a consummate professional and
she’d been a mentor to me for many years. She was just trying to reassure me,
something I needed, because I was torn. My brain twirled like a coin in the
air, and I had no clue which one of my faces would come up at landing: dutiful
Clara or her surly, rebellious twin?
“Come on, Clara.”
Annette clasped her hands together and grinned. “Say yes. Please?”
Something about
the idea of exploring sex’s kinky underworld had me shivering inside. I was
curious and Annette was right. Her readers would eat it up. My readers would
like it too. Most importantly, Annette’s proposal offered me an opportunity to
reach the one thing I’d spent my entire adult life trying to achieve: freedom.
The possibility of doing what I loved on my own terms and the chance to finally
cut the ties that bound me to the family trust.
I couldn’t say no
to freedom. I couldn’t say no to Annette or to the sense of excitement growing
in me. I took a deep breath and met Annette’s emerald stare. She gave me an
encouraging nod. What the heck. I’d been wavering on the edge of this cliff for
a while, but on that hot and humid September day, I jumped.
“I’ll do it.”
Now, almost a
week and a half later, as I teetered on the balls of my feet, nearly hanging
from the cuffs, the irony wasn’t lost on me. To cut the old ties, I’d had to
accept some very real bonds. In my search for freedom, I’d stepped into a cage.
I let out a
nervous giggle. It echoed in the empty house. Some would think I was
exaggerating the scope of my predicament. They didn’t know my mother. Senator
Margaret Luz had made sure to cut off all my avenues of escape as I grew up.
After I finished grad school, nobody in DC would give me a job without her
express consent. Instead of working for myself as I’d planned, she’d
strong-armed me to work for her charity foundation.
As her only
offspring, I was more of a prop than a person. Beyond birthing me, she’d
designed me, selected the best genetic material she could buy from an
impressive catalogue of sperm donors in order to create the perfect daughter.
Sure, I owed her my existence, but my chances of meeting her high expectations
had been zero from the start.
Of course, she
didn’t know about my blog. She’d kill me if she did. She’d kill the blog too,
and bury it forever. But Annette had gone where no one else had dared and
offered me a unique opportunity. If this worked, it would be well worth the
effort. I straightened my back. I wasn’t a Luz for nothing. I’d make it work.
I tested the
cuffs and puffed. Where the hell was Mark Walker? My test Dom for the day was
taking his sweet time getting his damn coffee. I gritted my teeth and groaned.
Patience had never been my strong suit. Once I made my decision and committed
to the venture, I’d considered the risks and, in true Luz fashion, planned and
obsessed over every step.
I wasn’t an
idiot, so I’d started by vetting Mark Walker thoroughly. Even though he’d come
highly recommended by Annette, I’d commissioned a background investigation from
one of Washington’s premier security firms. Yep, that was me, all right, ever
the overachiever. Mark passed with flying colors, a model citizen in every way,
requirement number one. A little adventure was exciting, but a sadist or a
serial killer had no place in my risk assessment matrix.
To protect myself
and my name, I’d also had Mark sign RelevantSex.com’s ironclad confidentiality
agreement. Then I’d scheduled a preliminary meeting to make sure we were both
on the same page. Our deal was kink 101, a limited intro to the BD part of
BDSM, no intercourse or pain. Safety first.
I’d taken equal
care when selecting the location for this meeting. The house where we used to
summer when I was young was located smack in the middle of Avalon, an island in
the Chesapeake Bay. The property was surrounded by a wildlife refuge on all
sides. I’d inherited the Victorian beauty from my grandfather, who’d been
senator before my mother.
I’d always felt
safe here. The house held some of the best memories of my life. It was out of
the way, accessible only by ferry, remote, secluded and most importantly, way
outside of my mother’s radar, a fact that started to feel a lot like a
liability when the odd scent tickled my nostrils again.
This time around,
I recognized the smell. Smoke. My heart tripped. Alarm crawled up my spine like
a bunch of daddy longlegs. I tugged on the cuffs. They clanged on the bars, but
they didn’t give. I craned my neck and, peering through the mask’s narrow
slits, caught a glimpse of white wisps trickling from the hallway into the
living room.
Oh my God. Smoke.
A fire? No way. The house hadn’t been used in years. Mark and I were the only
ones here and we’d done nothing that could possibly start a fire. Right?
Wrong.
I had a memory of
Mark Walker as he stepped out of the bathroom holding the lit candle he’d used
to introduce me to a little wax-on-ass play earlier today. Lit candle. Matches.
Wicker wastebasket.
Holy shit.
My belly turned
to ice. The key. Where the heck had Mark put the cuffs’ key? In his front shirt
pocket, I remembered him teasing me with the act. Crap. I tugged on the cuffs.
The cage rattled, my wrists smarted and yet the cuffs held. Where on earth was
Mark Walker when you needed him?
I looked around
the room, growing more alarmed by the moment. The wrist cuffs wouldn’t budge,
but maybe if I freed my feet I could lift my knees and use my weight to bust
the chain that connected the cuffs. I kicked off my right shoe, pointed my toes
and contorted my foot, choking down gulps of panic. This was going to take some
doing.
A fire. A
freaking fire. I railed at a God who amused himself with stuff like this. Keep your head. Use your wits. Don’t panic.
It would’ve been the Luz motto, if we’d had one of those. I ignored the terror
squeezing my throat and kept working on the ankle strap. Success. My right foot
came free. I started to work on the left strap right away. If I could only do
the same with my wrists...
The sound of
crackling echoed from the hallway, a low, husky growl. Holy Mary. Maybe I was
having a nightmare. I really wanted to pinch myself awake. But there was the
small problem of the cuffs. I was not going to die today.
My left foot came
free. Hallelujah. I didn’t waste any time. I flexed my legs, pulled on the
cuffs and, curling my knees into my stomach, added my weight. The chain didn’t
break. I kept at it, but I needed plan B. I tried screaming for help, but the
gag in my mouth muffled my cries and the screech that pierced my ears sounded
more like a yowling she-cat.
Note to blog: gags are a pain in the ass.
And who the hell
was going to hear me anyway? Avalon’s population amounted to 727 souls who
lived mostly on the bay, ten miles down the gravel road. The cabin was
surrounded by the Luz wildlife refuge, my grandfather’s doing. I was in so much
trouble.
What would my
mother say if they found me out here, burned to a crisp, shackled in a cage?
Her embarrassment, not to mention her rage, would probably far exceed her
grief. The newspapers. Social media. The scandal. I wiped the image from my
mind and concentrated on the cuffs. I wasn’t going to burn, wasn’t willing to
die, not yet, not this way.
A voice caught my
attention. A call came from the outside. A call? I squealed back in reply.
Within moments, the back doors exploded off the hinges. A man broke through,
angled forward like a linebacker, tall and broad-shouldered. His run came to an
abrupt halt in the middle of the living room. He took in the scene and quickly
assessed the situation like a man who was used to danger.
The look of
competence in his stare restored my hope for a longer life. Thank you, God! I
would’ve whooped with elation if I could. His eyes widened with surprise when
he registered the cage—and probably my attire—but he didn’t hesitate as he
rushed over.
“Hang on,” he
said as he unlatched the cage’s door. “What the hell is going on?”
I craned my neck
to follow his progress, mumbling frantic gibberish through the gag. Something
about him was familiar, the wide cheekbones, the straight angle at the jaw, the
eyes, black, soulful and deep. My heart jerked to a sudden stop. I did a double
take. No way. It couldn’t be. I stole another look at him. My elation turned to
shock. Was I losing my mind? I rose on my toes, lifted my face to the heels of
my hands and managed to knuckle my eyes. Maybe I was delusional. Maybe he was a
ghost. Maybe I was suffering from oxygen deprivation, even though the smoke
didn’t look nearly that bad. I blinked several times to clear my vision. It
couldn’t be, shouldn’t be, and yet, when I looked again, there he was, the same
man, the face I remembered so well.
A rush of blood
heated my face. No. Oh, no. Never in my wildest dreams had I expected to find
him here, now. Of all the people in the universe, he would’ve been the last I
wanted to see me in my current state. How could this be?
His appearance
weakened my knees and demolished my fortitude. My rescuer, the one person who’d
heard my cries and who could potentially get me out, was also the same man
who’d almost destroyed me once. He might not be able to recognize me yet, but I
sure recognized him. The last time I’d seen him was right here, in this house,
an hour before he broke my heart. It was him. The first man I ever loved.
Noah Blake.
Buy Links:
Author Info
Amazon bestselling author Anna del Mar writes
hot, smart romances that soothe the soul, challenge the mind, and satisfy the
heart. Her stories are about strong heroines struggling to find their place in
the world and the brave, sexy, kickass, military heroes who defy their limits
to protect the women they love. She’s the author of The Asset, The Stranger, At
the Brink and her newest erotic romance, To the Edge. Anna enjoys traveling,
hiking, skiing, and the sea. Writing is her addiction, her drug of choice, and
what she wants to do all the time. The extraordinary men and women she met
during her years as a Navy wife inspire the fabulous heroes and heroines at the
center of her stories. When she stays put—which doesn’t happen very often—she
lives in Florida with her indulgent husband and two very opinionated cats.
Author Links:
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