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Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Virtual Tour & #Giveaway for Unforgettable by Cindy Skaggs


Welcome to my stop on the Virtual Tour, presented by IndieSage PR, for Unforgettable by Cindy Skaggs.  Please leave a comment or question for Cindy to let her know you stopped by. You may enter her tour wide giveaway by filling out the Rafflecopter form below. You may follow all of the stops on the tour by clicking on the banner above, the more stops you visit, the better your odds of winning.  

UNFORGETTABLE
by Cindy Skaggs
Untouchables #2
Publication Date: December 12, 2016
Genres: Adult, Entangled: Ignite, Romantic Suspense




About the book: 

Vicki Calvetti made it out of the mob—or so she hoped. 

But when the old family hitman, the FBI, the Justice Department, and a smoking hot man from her past crash land on her doorstep, she learns she’s not quite done.

An undercover cop chasing revenge, Blake Reilly gets the shock of his life when Vicki walks back into his life and into his club full of more drug dealers than a pharmaceutical convention.

Catching up doesn’t take long, and their undeniable chemistry is full-speed-ahead until someone ends up dead, putting both their lives at risk unless Vicki can remember the secrets she paid to forget.


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EXCERPT

Chapter One

Vicki Calvetti dug through the bushes looking for the cat she hadn’t wanted to adopt. A branch flicked, smacking her cheek as she bent low to grab the orange ball hiding in the bushes behind her house. The mangy cat rewarded her by scratching the back of her hand.

“You chose me, Fuzzball,” she muttered. “It’s too cold to stay outside today.”

Why did she bother? He’d shown up before the first snow, and she couldn’t turn her back, so she let him inside for one night only. Two months ago. She was now the proud owner of more cat toys than a pet store, and the cat still fought when she tried to protect him from the harsh Colorado winter.

As she walked him to the back deck, he curled under her coat and started to purr. Dangit. His sweet temperament was why she bothered. He was a snuggler. Who’d have thought she would go for a snuggling, purring orange furball? Opening the door a crack, she set him on the kitchen tile. Before he could run, she slammed the door closed. Brushing off loose cat hair, she walked around the outside of the house.

Fuzzball was a door darter. If she went inside with him, she’d turn around and have to fight to keep him inside when she left. Easing through the stark branches of a dormant lilac bush, she pushed into the front yard.

The quaint gingerbread house across the street caught her eye. A Hansel and Gretel cottage, it was decked in more trim than a Christmas tree and had more colors than a rainbow parade. A swing set dominated the winter-dead lawn, surrounded by toys, bikes, and a crazy old man in a flapping black trench coat.

Holy hell.

Fear slithered along her skin like the cold. “Manny.” She whispered his name, stunned to see the mob hit man out of his native New York. He had never been to Colorado, at least as far as she knew. His appearance did not bode well.

Legs braced apart, the killer stood next to the kid’s bike, looking surreal with blue handlebar streamers whipping against him. Shock froze her in place next to her little porch. When he didn’t make a move, she let her gaze slide past him to take in the empty street. Nerves squeezed her heart.

No witnesses. No collateral damage. It was open season, and she was wearing a target.

Vicki had pissed off plenty of people who could afford Manny’s services. The pulse in her neck felt like a beacon, calling Manny to finish her off. When her gaze tracked back to him, her great-uncle Manny nodded from behind dark sunglasses.

What the hell did the nod mean? Prepare to die? Lord, but she hated mobsters,
especially the ones she was related to. He didn’t cross to her, nor did she rush to give the old man a hug. They stared across the street waiting for the other to blink first.

The winter chill numbed her hands before she moved fully into the front yard. A shiver twitched in her shoulders. If the man in black wanted her dead, she’d be dead before the day was through. Being related to him wouldn’t save her. And if she wasn’t dead, she had bigger problems than a geriatric killer for hire. Her life was crumbling faster than a day-old muffin at a second-rate coffee shop.

She crossed in front of her old Victorian home, presenting him her back.

A spot behind her left ear started to itch as she waited for a bullet that didn’t come. She turned, her movements unhurried, but inside, her internal shit-o-meter blared. Not all of the worry had to do with Uncle Manny standing in the street like an angel of death.

His presence on such a gray winter day felt like an omen. She tucked her frigid hands into her pockets and kept walking. A memory tugged at her, a thought she couldn’t quite grasp, but she knew it was tied to Manny. The faster the wheels in her head spun, the more her brain started to hurt.

It had been a pissy morning. The ancient heater in the house barely kept the temperature above freezing and chose the coldest day of the year to die with a loud and messy belch. The repair guy couldn’t get to her house until late afternoon, which meant a wasted and bitter-cold day of waiting—preferably someplace warmer than her house. She needed coffee, not an unexpected visit from the world’s worst great-uncle.

Vicki massaged the tendons climbing the back of her neck. She could obsess on the morning visit from a hit man—which she couldn’t control—or focus on the joy of a cold winter day.

Boots and scarves and lattes, oh my.

She tripped over the sidewalk cracks leading away from her neighborhood. The hills were like ski slopes after a snow, the side streets were frustratingly narrow, parking was a nightmare, and in the summer, tourists clogged the roads like grease in an artery. Despite or because of those imperfections, she loved Manitou. The town had a soul, a history beyond a single generation.

The hills and the winter chill didn’t slow the locals down. A jogger in black pushed past on the way uphill when Vicki made the turn onto the main thoroughfare.

A tickle of awareness skittered up her spine, but it wasn’t the jogger or even Manny causing her heart to race like a drug runner. A tail followed less than a block back.

Not one to give herself away, she maintained a steady pace as she traipsed down the bumpy sidewalk to the business district. Once past a row of restaurants, she slowed to look into the shop windows as if she had nothing better to do on a Friday afternoon.

Knowing Manny wasn’t behind her should have been a relief. It wasn’t. The man-boy on the skateboard skidded to a halt when she paused to look at a display of Native American jewelry. The silver metalwork was distinctive. Any other day and she might sneak inside to wreak havoc on her credit card, but she was more interested in the reflection of the pinhead wearing a backward ball cap and playing it cool on the longboard. Unlike the jogger, this guy didn’t belong.

The torn jeans and grimy concert T-shirt looked like he bought them off a stoner from the park several blocks back, but even the ball cap couldn’t disguise the streamlined haircut. She made him for a Fed the minute he wheeled in behind her. He was too tame and too clean under the borrowed clothes.

Wind fluttered the thick fabric of her maxi skirt. She pulled her jacket closed as she headed to the next shop. The skater paused on the sidewalk, practicing a kick turn until one of the shop owners shooed him along. The stoner wannabe complied without so much as a rude hand gesture, which further identified him.

If the Feds wanted stealth, they’d have to try harder. Victoria Calvetti was the daughter of one of the most feared mob bosses in history. She’d been able to pick up a tail before she’d learned to read.

Strange day for a shadow—not that any day was good for one—but she had thought after her brother’s death the Feds would leave her in peace. A hitch of guilt jumped in her chest. Nick’s death six months ago should have caused grief, as he was her only living brother, but the news of his demise had only brought relief. Nick Calvetti had been evil from the day he was born. As a mob boss, he had ruled with fear and an iron fist. He’d tormented his wife. Nearly gotten his son Eli killed. Manipulated everyone. No one mourned him.

She didn’t have any connections with what remained of her brother’s business associates. She was clean, and the Fed surveillance was a slap to her pride. That the Feds were here the same day as Uncle Manny was one more piece of bad luck in a day too full of that commodity.

She crossed the street, temper rising, and ducked into the coffee shop. The Fed followed her across the street like they were attached with an invisible string. Anger kicked up inside, warmed her blood on the cool day. When would they give up? Well, she could get angry and let her Italian blood show, or she could outclass them. Her father and brother would have opted for the direct approach, which explained their early demise. They were predictable and violent men. Vicki preferred a subtle attack.

She ordered cappuccino and a bagel and chatted with the barista while she waited. George was a mob refugee like her, but they weren’t friends so much as two people who had survived the same hell. “Quiet in here today.”

“You’re running late.” George’s bushy gray brows lifted in silent question. “Most of the regulars headed out already.”

“I had a last-minute client,” she said with a shrug.

“If you had a real job, you’d have a real schedule.”

“I have a real business.” Vicki flicked a piece of lint from her lapel. “As you know.”

“Hypnotherapist?” The old man scoffed, shook his head. “Quackery if you ask me.”

“I didn’t ask.” She had heard her share of snide remarks. Hypnotism wasn’t everyone’s cup of tea. It was, however, her pot of coffee and the thing that got her out of bed every morning. She had a psych degree, but preferred to work with the brain in an unconventional way. Why anyone thought their opinion mattered was beyond her. She let the old man’s prejudices slide. He was old-school, a high-level member of a crime family in Chicago. He’d have thought the same thing if she were a psychologist. Men like him dealt with a problem by killing someone or burying it.

He nodded toward the agent pretending to skateboard out front. “You bring him with you?”

“I have no control over them.” She dismissed the idea with a wave of her hand. “That ridiculous excuse for a tail showed up at my door this morning.”

“And you bring him to mine?” The man running the espresso machine had lived neck-deep in the mob until his son got caught in the cross fire. Dead at twenty-six. The old man had been living off the grid under the name of George Something-or-other ever since.

“They’re not looking for you,” she assured him. She laid a twenty on the counter, shook off the change. She couldn’t afford to alienate the best barista within walking distance of her house.

“The skater isn’t your only problem.” George pulled out a tray and deposited her cappuccino on it. He’d foamed the milk to look like a question mark. Nice. Should she test the cup for arsenic? Next to the cup, he placed a sugar bowl and a spoon, a bagel, and the local newspaper folded in half. He tapped the paper hard enough to rattle the cup. “The grim reaper came to my house before sunrise.”

Manny. Her internal freak-o-meter shot into the red zone. “What did he say?”

George glanced nervously at the window before stabbing the paper again. “He left you a message, to which I will add my own. Do not come back to my shop. I am a peaceful man now. An honest businessman, and I have a grandson to raise. You stay out of my shop until you make peace with the past.”

Good Lord, she thought she had. When she’d helped her sister-in-law escape Nick, Vicki had paid her penance for introducing them in the first place. Helping Sofia escape had required precision planning. Maybe her tactics weren’t honest, but she’d controlled the outcome, made it possible for everyone to move on with Nick dead, but remnants of her former life kept showing up like a bad penny. She’d done nothing to encourage it, except to be born a Calvetti, which was a curse worse than any devised in the Grimms’ dark tales.

“George,” she said with a smile designed to soften men with granite egos. “You know I can’t live without you.” She laid a gentle touch to his shaking hand.

He snapped back. “No more. Finish your paper. Drink your coffee. Leave my shop.”

Well, that went well. Who did George think he was? The things he’d done made Manny look like a juvenile delinquent, yet George had gotten his second chance.

She steamed as she sat at a café table with a prime view of the windows. The Fed was still spinning his skateboard wheels out front. She added three teaspoons of sugar to the cappuccino and stirred away the foam question mark, a perfect metaphor for her day. What the heck was happening to her orderly life? She smeared a thick layer of cream cheese on the bagel before snapping open the newspaper. A clipping of another article floated to the tabletop. Holding the newspaper to hide the clipping, she skimmed the article.

Hypnotist Dead, read the headline.

Fantastic. The sense of dread she’d felt when she saw Manny settled like a noose around her neck. August Trimbath, a Fort Collins hypnotherapist, was murdered Wednesday night, less than thirty-six hours previous.

The accompanying picture showed a pretty blonde with a vibrant smile that didn’t seem the least bit familiar. The death of a random hypnotist wouldn’t have worried her on a normal day. Today was not a normal day. The article was a warning in a twisted Uncle Manny way. The description in the paper sounded like the woman had been tortured prior to death, which came in the form of a bullet to the back of the head. The execution style suggested a professional hit, but who would want to kill a hypnotist, and what did it have to do with Vicki?

Was the murderer Manny? She didn’t want to believe him guilty. Torture wasn’t his style, but maybe he hadn’t set aside enough money for retirement. It wasn’t like a hit man had a pension plan. But if it was Manny, why send the article? She couldn’t remember ever meeting the murder victim, even at a convention, but there had to be a connection.

The itch behind her left ear intensified until she had an overwhelming urge to rub her head and ease the ache growing stronger by the minute.

What had she stumbled into? Manny was sending dead-drop messages, the Feds were following her, and her intuition was screaming. At the bottom of the article, Manny had written an address in a spidery scrawl along with a time. Was the address a place to meet? More likely a trap, but her insatiable need for information was triggered by the clue, something Manny would know. Information had protected her time and again when Nick was alive. Her need to protect herself didn’t die with him. Despite the rush of fear flooding her system like the coffee she was drinking, her curiosity was aroused.

Given her morning, going to the address was a bad idea. Didn’t mean a thing.

The skater was still playing his limited tricks on the sidewalk. George didn’t want trouble, so he let the skater stalk the front window in peace. The scrape of the wheels on concrete grated on her already-taut nerves. Her tightly controlled world was about to implode, and she had no idea who was flipping the switch to bring it all down.

She stuffed the article in her jacket pocket, but the rolling thunder of the skater reminded her the Feds were still watching. The agents assigned were either blind, dumb, or both. 

They had a known hit man in town, whom the skater had blindly passed, and George the former mobster had lived in town a half dozen years, yet they were keeping an eye on her? Well, she thought peevishly, so long as the Feds were paying someone to watch her, they could pay overtime.

The heated coffee shop was as good a place as any to wait. She flicked through the paper after she finished her coffee. Not that she cared much about local news, but all the time the skater spent rolling around the front, the Feds were paying. After wasting enough time, she ordered a coffee to go and a bag of bagels. When she stepped into the dim winter sun, the agent unrolled from his slouch and kicked the board into his hand. 

She walked straight toward him. The look of panic on his clean-shaven face was priceless. His eyes went round and his thin face bloomed with a boyish blush. He certainly looked young enough to be a skateboarder.

How young were they recruiting agents these days? She reached out with a cup of black coffee. Good manners had him reaching to take the cup from her.

“Let me help you out here, Slick. I’m on my way to the post office, so if any of your cohorts are going through my mail, they want to be quick.” She winked and tossed him the bag of bagels. “See if you can keep up.”

He caught the bagels, but the board clattered to the sidewalk. She headed uphill to the post office before he got everything in hand. He followed for a block before an FBI vehicle disguised as a cable company van picked him up. She blew them a kiss as they drove past.

Jerks. She walked off her mad, going faster than her short legs wanted to move. She’d worked up a full head of steam by the time she hit the post office steps. She went in, grabbed her mail, but as she turned to leave, a man in a suit stepped between her and the exit. The panic she’d tried to bank exploded in her blood.

The man was as wide as the door and had the face of a bulldog. “Miss Victoria Calvetti?”

He knew full well who she was. “Yes.” Her voice was steady, but fingernails were scratching a chalkboard in her nervous system. She shivered, a knee-jerk reaction to the shock.

The man pulled a white envelope from his jacket pocket. “You’ve been served.”

She reached out and took it, much like the Fed had taken her coffee. She was too stunned to sputter. What the hell?

The ox in a suit left the small building before Vicki found her voice.

She stood along the wall of post office boxes and slit the end of the envelope. The thick wad of papers summoned her—damn, she hated any word that implied she didn’t have a choice—to testify in an ongoing trial against one or another of her brother’s associates.  The mother of all headaches twitched behind her eye, but she maintained focus and kept her visible reaction subdued. She stuffed the summons into her oversize leather handbag and headed the long way home.

Manitou was adrift in artists and musicians and hole-in-the-wall bars. Marijuana was as much a part of the culture as the mineral springs that attracted people from all over the globe. The old brick buildings housed psychics and tarot readers and crystal shops. She blended in here. No one cared about one more woman wearing gypsy skirts and peasant shirts and bangles up and down her arms.

The last hill to her house climbed straight up a mountain, and she was huffing by the time she reached her short drive. Manny no longer stood across the street. Instead, a young man with long, unwashed hair pounded on her door. The ancient door didn’t give under his abuse.

He wore a thermal shirt and skinny jeans. An angry wave of energy swirled around him. He was a client, but they weren’t scheduled to meet, and by the force of his fists on the old oak, he was not a happy man. She reached into her purse for her key chain, her secret weapon.

“Aaron, I didn’t know we were meeting today.”

He turned, his face mottled red. “What did you do to me?”

“Do?” She gripped a long metal cylinder in a tight fist.

“Everything I smoke tastes like dirt.”

She nearly laughed. “Wasn’t quitting the point?”

“Yes.” He tromped down the stairs like a scarecrow with sticks for limbs. “Are you smiling? What did you do to me?”

“Helped you quit smoking.”

“Fuck that.” He stood trembling in her yard, throwing a fit and using four-letter words most often reserved for family holidays.

Usually, clients were thrilled when hypnosis helped. This guy was a raving lunatic. “Why don’t you come inside? I’ll make tea and we’ll figure out the problem.” If she could get him under, she’d help him calm down so he could explain what had him so upset.

“Stay away from me.” He yanked at a belt loop, pulling his skinny jeans higher on his lean hips. “You’re fired.”

The guy ran down the hill with a vapor of ugly following him. The middle-class kid with shaggy hair and skinny jeans worried her. Why? Because he’d fired her? She couldn’t afford to lose a client, but added to Manny, the Feds, the cranky barista, and the Justice Department summons?

It was like someone had put a hex on her. The jitters turned to full-blown panic that stole her breath. No way was all this bad luck a coincidence.

An ache throbbed at the base of her skull.

She released the tight grip on the key chain and climbed to her porch with shaky legs. The solid oak door from the late 1800s couldn’t be blasted open with dynamite, but when she put the key in the dead bolt, it was already unlocked. Yep, her day was going to get worse before it got better.

The living room had been tossed. Carefully stacked mail was strewn on the solid oak floor. Chairs and dressers were upended. She closed her eyes against the violation.

“Well, damn it all to hell,” she muttered under her breath. What was the point in an FBI tail if someone trashed her house right under their noses? A loud crash echoed from the back. She whispered a curse. Someone was still in the house. Tiptoeing, she stepped around the corner to Fuzzball’s bed, but it was empty. Another crash followed by curses from her bedroom, getting closer, sent her back across the living room. She grabbed her cell phone off the mahogany sideboard and tiptoed out the front. She left the door open so Fuzzball could escape. He was a street cat. He’d be fine. Adrenaline pumped tension through her blood as she rushed to her car.

Maybe she should let Manny kill her and put her out of her misery.

Today wasn’t just a bad day. It was Friday the thirteenth bad.


DON'T MISS THE OTHER BOOKS IN THE UNTOUCHABLES SERIES BY CINDY SKAGGS!


Untouchables, #1.5



About the book: 

Sofia Capri survived life as a mob wife, but living with drop-dead gorgeous FBI agent Logan Stone has its own challenges. Step one? Host his family for Christmas dinner. Rescuing Sofia from her former mob life and saving her kidnapped son was enough to earn Logan a place in her life, but a mysterious phone call before dinner threatens the security he'd give anything to provide. When Sofia's son and Logan's nieces disappear from the festivities, the illusion of a normal Christmas shatters, hurling Sofia back into her nightmares.


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Untouchables, #1

BUY:

About the book:  Action. Romance. Hot heroes. Don't miss Ignite's newest romance... 

She'll do whatever it takes to find her son - Lie. Cheat. Steal. Seduce...

As the former wife of an infamous crime boss, Sofia Capri is untouchable. She exists outside of the law...and outside of the criminal world. When her son is kidnapped, Sofia's desperate to find him. She'll do anything. Lie. Cheat. Steal. Anything but trust. But it's a strikingly handsome FBI agent who's her only chance to get her baby back... Something about Sofia's fiery beauty must be hitting all of his weak spots, because suddenly Mr. Law And Order Logan Stone finds himself bending the rules. When they're implicated in the kidnapping, Logan and Sofia discover a horrifying reality - they have less than 72 hours to find the boy and clear their names. Now the heat is turning up...and time is running out...for everyone.

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ABOUT CINDY SKAGGS



Cindy grew up on stories of mob bosses, horse thieves, cold-blooded killers, and the last honest man. Most of those stories were even true. She has ten siblings, some of whom are older than her mother, has nieces and nephews older than her, and once went to a horse auction with John Wayne. Well, with him in the sense that he was there, and she was also… there. She was the munchkin in line for his autograph with tangled hair and bruised knees that liked to dance on her daddy’s dusty cowboy boots and listen to his tall tales.

With her love of storytelling and heroes, it’s no wonder she turned to books and stories after her father died. She skipped most of the eighth grade to bury herself in books while hidden in her closet, because she was still looking for the perfect story and the last honest man. Her search took her around the world with the Air Force as well as around the world with her education. She’s visited more countries than she can remember, nearly every state in the U.S., and has more degrees than the Tin Man.

As a single mom, she’s still gambling, betting on herself for the first time in her life, turning her lifelong love of storytelling into the one thing she can’t live without: writing. She writes 10,000 words a week in cafes and coffee shops, and some of those 10,000 words are even worth reading. She has an MA in Creative Writing, is working towards her Master of Fine Arts, and has three jobs, two kids, a Pushcart Nomination, more pets than she can possibly handle, and more works in progress than the crew filling potholes after a long Colorado winter.


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