Title: Outcast
Author: Denise Jaden
Genre: YA Contemporary (with romantic suspense elements)
Publication Date: April 20th, 2018
Hosted by: Lady Amberâs Reviews & PR
Blurb:
Sheâs not crazy.
Kass Bateman may be a lot of things, but she swears she's not crazyâeven when she wakes up strapped to a wheelchair in a psychiatric hospital and can't remember how she got there.
When Kass's family members go missing one by one, she enlists the smartest guy she knows to help find them. Unfortunately for her, underneath his brains and indifference are some dark secrets and a whole lot of distracting sexy.
Can Kass keep her head together long enough to rescue her family members from their captorsâthe truly dangerous and crazy ones?
Gritty, steamy, and rife with secrecy, Outcast is the first book in a new upper YA/NA crossover series for fans of Gayle Forman and Rainbow Rowell.
Author Links:
Amazon: http://amzn.to/2Ge6uID
Twitter: https://twitter.com/denisejaden
Website: https://www.denisejaden.com/
Buy Links:
Outcast: http://amzn.to/2Gikqlf
Pusher: https://amzn.to/2JJh8p7
Runner (Pre-Order): https://amzn.to/2IiU2Z7
His lips kiss me back, angrily. Heâs so forceful, it hurts my mouth, but I wonât stop, and I slide my tongue through his lips to shock him. His mouth opens and his tongue reaches for mine, reaches past mine, and I donât know if itâs angry orâ¦hungry.
I fight for my balance. My hand is still on the back of his head and I grip the ends of his short hair. He moves toward me until Iâm backed into the trunk of the nearest tree. The bark scratches through my cotton shirt, but I can barely feel it. The heat of his chest against mine is extraordinaryâhis hips shift against mine, his lips and tongue and whole face devour my mouth, my face, my ear, my neck.
And the worst part? I donât want him to stop. I desperately donât want him to stop.
But I need control here.
My free hand slides around his waist, gripping his shirt. Both of his hands reach into my hair. He grasps it at the roots and lets out a breathy groan as he turns his face to a new angle on my neck. Heâs done this before. Heâs probably done this many times before. The whole length of his body pushes me harder against the bark of the tree. Itâs all I can do to keep breathing, to not slide my hands all over him. I ball my fist behind his head and notice how totally still Iâve become. Heâs devouring me and I canât stop him. Iâm his paralyzed prey, and it freaks the shit out of me.
All at once, I pull back, put all my power behind my right arm, and knock my fist into the side of his jaw. Being so close, I hardly have any force behind it, but it still hurts like hell and I shake out my hand angrily.
âWhat the hell was that?â he says, stumbling back from me, and then leaning forward and cupping his jaw. He clears his throat harshly.
In that second one thing is clear: He still has complete control over himself. Heâs not caught up in this at all, though, by the looks of things, I at least put him in a little bit of pain.
He tilts his head up so we can look at each other. Except he doesnât look at me, and I wonder if thatâs another power move. He scowls, looking into the distance like heâs thinking it over and his hand moves from his jaw to his lips. He clears his throat again. It occurs to me maybe that wasnât his first beer. Maybe heâs messed up. Did he even know what he was doing or how he was talking to me? What do they call itâliquid courage?
Welcome back, Control. Sorry I let you go for a few minutes there, but it wonât happen again.
Eliâs eyes widen, and at first I think Iâve said the words out loud. But his hand moves down to his throat, grips around it, and something looks wrong.
âI didnât hit you that hard,â I say.
He clears his throat yet again and grips harder like heâs choking.
âAre youâ¦OK?â Itâs not like Iâve done a whole lot of drinking or drugs, and Iâve certainly never ODâd or anything, but the dude wasnât even slurring. I look from side to side, and no one is within yelling distance, especially over the loud music.
Eliâs free hand fumbles to his belt, to that navy blue pencil case. I stand there looking at it. If he wants to show me what kind of drugs heâs on, I still wonât know how to help him.
He fumbles with the zipper, and finally it rips open and a cylinder of some sort springs out into the overgrown grass and oak leaves. He falls to his knees and rummages frantically with his hands.
âWhat? What do you need?â I yell at him.
He whimpers and says something I canât hear. I drop down to get closer. âNuts. Peanuts,â he chokes out, and I can still taste the remnant of my peanut butter cup in the back of my teeth.
I stare at him and all of a sudden the pieces click into place.
No way. Nobodyâs this allergic to peanuts. Are they?
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