Monday 27 February 2023

The Beast by Denise Daye Blog Tour + Giveaway!

Hi everyone! I am thrilled to be hosting a spot on the THE BEAST by Denise Daye Blog Tour hosted by Rockstar Book Tours. Check out my post for an exclusive excerpt and make sure to enter the giveaway!

About the Book:

Title: THE BEAST

Author: Denise Daye

Pub. Date: February 28, 2023

Publisher: Timeless Papers

Formats: Paperback, eBook

Pages: 210

Find it: Goodreadshttps://books2read.com/THEBEASTDAYE

He's a cold-blooded killer, devilishly hot and wildly dangerous.

Most people would tell me I'm crazy. Most people would call him a monster and tell me to run. But in the broken world I live in, that's the only sort of man I want.

When he found me in a puddle of blood, at the mercy of my mobster husband's thugs, I was ready to die. I just looked at him with empty eyes, giving him permission to keep walking and never glance back. But instead, he told me to look away and then took care of business. My nails dug into his steel-hard arms as he carried me to his car and declared I was now his.

Of course I knew who my dark knight was.

Andrei f$$$ing Kowtisch.

Feared assassin. Merciless beast. A man who fights fire with fire.

I guess that means it's payback time, because nobody touches Andrei's property. Unless you're the most dangerous mobster on the East Coast who swore to get me back no matter the cost . . .

EXCERPT:

Chapter 1

Andrei

It had been almost two years since my younger sister had made the innocent mistake to fall madly in love with an undercover cop who used her to get to me. I was forced to flee the US or put a bullet in his head, which my sister wouldn’t have taken to kindly, and I loved her, so here I was.

I had mastered a lot of things through running. I learned to be extremely sensitive to my surroundings. Running from federal agents has a way of making you scan a restaurant, moment to moment, even if you’re just sitting there with a steaming plate of sirloin and potatoes. It makes you consider people in a different way, discerning their intentions just by looking at them.

And that’s what I was doing—discerning, studying—as I sat in the elegant hall of a restaurant on 9th Avenue in Durban, South Africa. The gleaming chandelier above me, the delicate tinkling of silver on porcelain, the aroma of bergamot in the air. Classic.

I had tried to maintain a low profile since I stopped saving the world from monsters like me—and by “saving,” I meant assassinating criminals and perverted politicians for money.

I took a deep breath and sipped the scotch in my glass, feeling it burn its way down my throat. Again, I scanned the lobby, probably for the hundredth time since I’d sat down. What a tiresome life this was . . . yet it was the world I was used to.

The restaurant was mostly full except for a few empty tables. No one looked particularly suspicious—not the sour-faced couple wearing matching green jackets, the color of the nation’s flag, nor the older couple who were more interested in their phones than the meal on the table in front of them. They all looked like they were here for standard reasons: the food and for snapping Instagram-worthy pictures of it. But I still stayed alert. You never could tell how far the CIA would go.

I checked my watch. Nine p.m. This was the best time to get out a bit, run around the city, let off some steam. I may have been on the run from the CIA, but I still needed to stretch my legs like anyone else. And their agents were usually less active at night. Lazy bastards, good for me.

Scanning the room again, I watched as a lady entered at the far end of the hall. Her back was turned to me, but I could still sense her elegance in the way her hair was neatly packed in a tight ponytail. And then there was the dress she wore, short, just above the knee . . . no bra. Who was she here to meet?

I scanned the door to see if anyone was with her. She didn’t look like an agent, but you could never be sure. The CIA could trace me down here, I wagered. And if I needed to run, I could run fast.

Despite an empty stomach, my appetite was gone, so I took the napkin from the table, wiped the corners of my mouth, and casually swept my eyes around the room one more time. I nudged the brim of my hat a bit lower over my brow just in case.

“Are you enjoying your meal?”

Annoyed, I swung my eyes up sharply at the waitress who'd sidled silently up behind me. She’d been quiet, and that alone was unnerving. I should have noticed her approach, even as busy as the room was. Unless she was trained . . .

“Yes,” I grumbled, shifting in my seat so she’d get the message.

I glanced at the other side of the room to see where the lady in the ponytail had gone. She was sitting now, her knees elegantly nestled against one another, reading a copy of the Cape Times. Her position seemed odd. Suspicious. Especially since her other hand rested inside her purse without getting anything out. She could be holding onto a weapon. A pocket pistol, most likely. It was the sort of gun that would fit easily in a designer bag like the one she carried. I leaned back against my chair and inhaled deeply.

Surreptitiously, I felt for my pistol right beneath my jacket’s lapel and clicked the safety off. My movements were slow and practiced, and my jacket was bulky enough I knew no one would notice I was carrying.

“So you’re on vacation?” the waitress asked, still standing at my table. “I know the city well. I can . . . you know . . .” she said, inhaling deeply, which caused her already generous chest to swell even more. As if I hadn’t seen her cleavage since the first time I walked into the hall. Slowly, she slipped a finger into her bra, as if she was fishing for something.

There was something strange about her. She was trying too hard or something, but whatever it was, it made me giddy. It was time for me to go.

“Thank you, but I don’t need anything else,” I said, throwing some cash on the table, hoping she’d leave. But she leaned closer instead, putting both hands on the table and staring into my eyes. “Are you sure about that?”

She shifted her shirt so that I could see even more of her full breasts. Enough. I looked away. The only thing I cared about was getting out of the room. Now. Something was off.

I rose suddenly and moved toward the restroom. I budgeted my movements, moving fast but not too fast to alert anyone. By my calculation, if one of these two women was an agent, backup would be well on its way. A few moments more, they might have the building surrounded.

Go, I told myself. Now.

Just before I reached the bathroom, a door on the right side of the lobby started to open and someone stepped out. Nope. Smooth as a cat, I slid into another door before the person noticed me.

It was the kitchen.

“Sorry, this looked like the exit,” I said as a dozen chefs swung their heads toward me, astounded by the interruption.

“What the hell are you doing?” the head chef demanded. I gave him a sheepish smile as if I was confused by it too. Then I walked to the door at the end of the kitchen and tried the handle. It wasn’t locked. I swung it open and started running down the alleyway that opened before me.

The wind was cold on my face as I ran. I didn’t care. I just kept running, not looking back. I wasn’t sure if anyone was following me, but I wasn’t taking any chances. Call it paranoia, I call it the key to my long survival . . .

From time to time, I swung my eyes upwards, scanning the windows for anyone who might be watching to take me out. That’s how I would have done it. Send an agent in to spook the target, then place a sniper up high somewhere to finish up.

A few blocks away from the restaurant, I crossed the road and then turned down another shadowed alley. The light was dim, but I could make out the forms of a few guys leaning idly against the brick wall behind them. I knew they weren’t up to any good; they had that feel about them. But let them try—they’d be in for a little surprise.

They started to shift nervously around me. Hell, the way I was running, why wouldn’t they?

My pace changed into a more relaxed jog until I finally emerged on a busier, livelier street. I stifled my heaving chest as best as I could and started walking, head down, trying to blend in with the natives who were taking their after-dinner strolls.

I’ve had a map of the city in the back of my mind ever since I moved here. Every night, I studied it so I’d never get caught in a dangerous situation without knowing my way out.

I looked back occasionally, scanning the faces around me. A glance into someone’s eyes was enough to know if they wanted me behind bars or if they just saw me as another regular dude with a beard. No matter how trained the agents, they couldn’t help but give themselves away when they spotted a “most wanted” so close to their grasp.

And I wasn’t on that Most Wanted list by coincidence. I was Andrei fucking Kowtisch, the world’s most dangerous assassin who killed for governments and criminals alike—as long as the targets were scumbags like me.

I hurried along, my feet feeling the hardness of the pavement. Heading home wasn’t a quick option, as I’d parked my car some miles from here. I did that a lot: park in a safe location and take a cab so no one could trail me.

Maybe I should just forget about my things in the cabin leave. The woman in the restaurant with the hand in her purse, not moving it once, was more than suspicious. Maybe my place was already bugged. Either way, I could move to a new city, start over with a new identity and a different way of life. I had until morning to figure it out.

I walked around for a while and checked my wristwatch. It was 12: 13 a.m. I could sure as hell walk out this town. My car was not far from here. I could drive throughout the night. The farther I got away from Durban, the better.

I took a left turn and headed down another dark alley, almost feeling safe again, when I heard a cry.

I slowed down as my eyes scanned the walls around me. I had probably stumbled upon something illicit. South African city streets were full of that. Not my business. Keep walking.

Up ahead, I suddenly made out the forms of two men leaning against the wall, holding bottles and puffing cigarette smoke out of their mouths. The cry came again, this time louder and closer, and so desperate that it stopped me in my tracks. It was a woman. I looked back at the men to see if they would do anything, but they looked totally unbothered and didn’t seem to care about the crying woman or me.

The terrible cry echoed again; this time it sounded like the woman was in physical pain.

Shit.

As if my body was not my own, I started to follow the sound of the cries. I couldn’t help myself. Sure, I was a monster, a man who killed men without remorse. But even I had some morals. If someone was raping a woman nearby, what kind of a man would I be to just keep walking?

As I neared the source of the cries, the sound became more desperate and persistent, but I couldn’t tell where precisely the woman was. She could be in any of the apartments above the street or behind any one of the many doors that lined the tight alley. As if the poor girl heard my thoughts, a door in front of me swung upon and a woman in her late twenties bolted out. She lost her footing and fell onto the concrete. Blood was running out of her mouth, forming a small puddle where she landed. I expected her to jump right back up, but instead, she just remained on the floor, crying against the cold of the stone underneath her.

Suddenly she looked up at me. At first, her fear made her stunning green eyes wide, but then she just looked at me in calm nothingness, as if she was giving me permission to just keep walking and let her die here all alone.

God damn it.

I kneeled next to her and hesitated for a moment before I gently tucked a black, sweaty strand of hair that had fallen over her face behind her ear. She just laid there, motionless, her eyes staring at me in one of the emptiest gazes I had ever seen—and I have looked into the eyes of death on more than one occasion.

“Who’s done this to you?” I asked in a calm, low voice. I had no idea why, and maybe it was the way she looked at me asking for nothing when most people would have begged and screamed, but I felt like she was mine now to protect, no matter the cost.

Just then the door swung open and a tall, muscular man stumbled out.

“You bitch can run, I give you that.” The man was an absolute giant, six-seven, maybe taller. A fistfight would not be advisable with a beast like that.

“Piss off, asshole,” he threatened me, pulling out a knife.

I rose to my feet. “You have ten seconds to leave,” I said with a low voice.

“You fucking joking?” the man growled back.

“Ten. Nine.” I started the countdown, but then one look at the woman again changed my mind.

“Ah, fuck that. Look away,” I said to her, stopping my countdown at eight as I pulled out my gun. The look of amusement in the giant’s expression faded from one second to next, just right before I pointed my gun at him and pulled the trigger. The echo of the shot thundered through the alley as the bear of a man dropped to the floor like a lifeless sack of rocks.

I tuned to the woman whose eyes were widened at me in fear and something else I couldn’t make out. I reached down to pick her up. Most women would have screamed for help or wiggled to fight me, but this one didn’t even move one inch.

“Good girl,” I said to her in a low voice. Her nails dug into my arms as I carried her into the direction of my car. “For as long as you’re with me, you do as I say.”

  

About Denise Daye:

Denise is an Amazon best-selling author who graduated with a master’s in Social Work from an ivy league school, the University of Pennsylvania. She has spent many years of her life supporting families and individuals in need of assistance. She has always had a passion for reading and writing, especially steamy romance, but it wasn't until her own baby boy was born that Denise turned her passion into her profession. Whenever Denise is not typing away on one of her books, you can find her caring for her son (a.k.a. one of the toughest jobs in the world), binging Netflix with her beloved husband, or chasing after her puppy (who should technically be an adult dog by now).

Join Denise’s newsletter for romantic FREE books and exclusive material: https://www.timelesspapers.com/newsletter.html 

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Giveaway Details:

1 winner will win a $10 Amazon GC courtesy of Rockstar Book Tours, International.

Ends March 14th, midnight EST.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tour Schedule:

Week One:

2/27/2023

Mythical Books

Excerpt/IG Post

2/27/2023

@dreaminginpages

IG Spotlight

2/28/2023

The Reading Devil

Excerpt

2/28/2023

Writer of Wrongs

Excerpt

2/28/2023

Two Chicks on Books

Excerpt/IG Post

3/1/2023

@reemsreadingspace

TikTok Review/IG Post

3/1/2023

forthenovellovers

Review

3/2/2023

thepaperworlds

Review/IG Post

3/2/2023

@autismreading_mom

IG Review

3/3/2023

The Book Junkie Reads . . .

Excerpt/IG Post

3/3/2023

Booksandmore201

IG Review

Week Two:

3/6/2023

The Book Countess Tours

Excerpt/IG Post

3/6/2023

Books with a Chance

Review/IG Post

3/6/2023

The Momma Spot

Review

3/7/2023

A Bookish Dream

Review/IG Post

3/7/2023

More Books Please blog

Review/IG Post

3/7/2023

One More Exclamation

Review/IG Post

3/8/2023

Review Thick And Thin

Review/IG Post

3/8/2023

@jypsylynn

IG Review

3/8/2023

@Emmiepooh2

IG Review/FB Post

3/9/2023

Brandi Danielle Davis

IG Review/TikTok Post

3/9/2023

@enjoyingbooksagain

IG Review

3/9/2023

Beersbooksandboos

Review/IG Post

3/10/2023

Fall Between the Pages

IG Review/TikTok Post

3/10/2023

Country Mamas With Kids

Review/IG Post






1 comment:

  1. That sounds like it would be good. I love that cover too.

    ReplyDelete