Romance Novel Giveaways - Freebies and Giveaways of All Things Romance Romance Novel Giveaways: Perfect Odds by Lashanta Charles šŸ’• Book Tour & Gift Card Giveaway šŸ’• (Contemporary Romance)

Sunday, November 11, 2018

Perfect Odds by Lashanta Charles šŸ’• Book Tour & Gift Card Giveaway šŸ’• (Contemporary Romance)



Calista Brenner refuses to let go of her past. She had her entire life figured outā€¦except, maybe that was only in her mind. Being stood up for her own wedding should be a clue. Regardless, sheā€™s determined to fix this. She just needs a plan and if thereā€™s one thing sheā€™s good at, itā€™s planning. It doesnā€™t matter that sheā€™s a whirlwind of clumsy chaos. All she has to do is stay away from the gorgeously irritating Jayce Cranston and her wedding-her life-will be back on track. Thatā€™s exactly what she wants. Right?

Jayce Cranston has somehow let himself be bamboozled. One minute heā€™s enjoying his quiet existence in his home in the outskirts of Buffalo, NY and the next heā€™s dealing with a beautiful alcoholic and her penchant for trouble. And with his business manager out of the office, he has to actually . . . deal with people. Surprisingly, the little ball of clumsiness is making that task so much easier to handle.

Neither of them could have guessed that Calistaā€™s past would decide it wants to be her future and will stop at nothing to make that a reality. Could she accept that maybe her carefully laid plans werenā€™t as careful as she thought? Will Jayce be able to show her that heā€™s worth a chance and, together, their oddities can be perfect?



This is only my second time flying. Ever. Not surprisingly, itā€™s just as traumatic as the first. My eyes flit from the exit signs to the compartment where the flight attendant said the oxygen masks would deploy from. If this plane goes down I want to know exactly where I need to be. The ā€˜fasten seatbeltā€™ light goes off and a voice says something about cruising altitude. I donā€™t move, fingers gripping the armrests, as I will myself to let go so I can tighten my seat belt. I flex my pelvis and the two centimeters Iā€™m able to move lets me know that I definitely need to tighten it. I shouldnā€™t have that much space, right?
ā€œGood grip youā€™ve got there,ā€ a voice says. An slightly familiar and impossibly gravelly voice.
My head jerks upright, eyes landing on those fathomless, glacial blues again. The first-class area of the plane is spacious, but he still manages to take up more than his fair share of the room. How did I not notice his physique before? A dove gray Henley stretches tight across his broad chest and shoulders. He stares at me, cocking his head to the side, causing a lock of his dark hair to flop across his forehead. His hands are shoved into the pockets of his well-worn black jeans, which encase long and powerful legs. Heā€™s tall, like he has to duck a lot when he moves through certain places. Then again, a man that size probably commands everything and everyone to clear a path when he moves. Like nothing would dare risk standing in his way. I wonder what that feels like.
I try to get a read on what heā€™s thinking, but his face is blank. He just stands there and stares. Borderline creepy, but heā€™s beautiful, so itā€™s acceptable. Kind of. Not really. Just creepy. A bout of turbulence hits and his impressive frame is barely jarred at all while I could swear weā€™re minutes away from crashing into a mountain. Or an ocean. What are we flying over right now?
ā€œYouā€™re scared,ā€ he says.
Iā€™m not sure if heā€™s just making an observation or if heā€™s asking a question, but at this point I want him to go away. I try really hard to tell him that, but it only comes out as a whisper. He frowns and steps closer, leaning forward to hear me better.
ā€œWhat?ā€
ā€œI donā€™t like your eyes,ā€ I blurt. Loudly. I would cover my mouth in hopes of keeping anything else from spewing from it, but with the plane crashing I have to maintain my grip on my seatā€”the cushion is a flotation device. I stare at him in horrified humiliation, waiting for his response. He stares silently for a few seconds then speaks.
ā€œWhy not?ā€
I expected anger or disbelief. His calm is unnerving, but I feel obligated to answer since I basically insulted him. ā€œThereā€™s no warmth to them.ā€
He studies me, but doesnā€™t speak. Finally, he glances around, then leans forward and bares his teeth, the corners of his mouth lifting slightly. I flinch and he quickly steps away.
ā€œWhat the hell was that?ā€ I ask.
ā€œI smiled. Warmth,ā€ he mumbles, his cheeks flushing slightly.
Is he blushing? I stare at him in silence as I consider his words. He didnā€™t get insulted when I said I didnā€™t like his eyes. Instead he tried to make them warmer by . . . smiling? That definitely was not a smile. My niece tends to be grumpy from time to time and when we try to get her to smile, she does this thing where she just shows us her teeth. Like he just did. It occurs to me I donā€™t know his first name.
ā€œIā€™m Calista. You can call me Cali. I would shake your hand, but the plane isnā€™t stable.ā€
The corner of his mouth ticks up just as a flight attendant approaches him. The smirk drops and he watches her. A bright smile flashes on her face, no chipped teeth, and she reaches out to touch his arm as she asks if he needs anything. Her name tag says Tabitha. He shakes his arm free then looks to me for an answer.
ā€œLiquor. Strong liquor. Shots. No ice,ā€ I tell her. Clearly Iā€™ve been reduced to monosyllables.
ā€œWhiskey,ā€ he declares then drops into the vacant seat next to me. The seat Colin should be occupying.
Tabitha runs a hand through her shoulder length, brown hair as her smile falters, but she quickly plasters it back on and nods.
ā€œIs there anything else youā€™d like, sir?ā€
She steps closer to his seat and he leans closer to me. I lean away from him. Why is he even sitting here? He tells her no and after an awkward moment her eyes cut to me. Her lips pucker and she glares at me before turning and moving away. What the hell was that, Tabitha? We watch as she goes to a curtained off section and for a moment Iā€™m plagued by the odd thought that sheā€™ll do something to my drink.
ā€œIā€™m Jayce. Itā€™s stable; youā€™re safe,ā€ he says and places his hand on top of mine.
Itā€™s rough and calloused and exceptionally warm. Most importantly, it actually comforts me. That shouldnā€™t be happening. Red flag. I snatch my hand away, tighten my seatbelt as far as itā€™ll go, then fist my hands in my lap, my nails digging into my palms.



šŸ’• Always double-check the price before you buy šŸ’•

  

  

LaShanta Charles is from South Carolina, but currently lives in Tacoma, WA. She's married, has three tiny humans who constantly mooch off of her, and is active duty in the US Army. She's a homebody who adores SLEEPING, reading (romance, especially RH, paranormal, and sci-fi), eating, white chocolate mochas, SLEEPING, Reese's PB Cups (but only the ones stuffed with Reese's Pieces), and writing. Oh, and she hates spiders; why do they need EIGHT legs?


   


Win a $10 Amazon gift card!



 

14 comments :

PLEASE NOTE: I do not moderate comments, but some go to Spam anyway. Rest assured, I check regularly and will publish non-Spam comments shortly!