Review
An unbeatable combination of sassy, sexy, bold and pure fun...A Recommended Read -- Missy Andrews, Fallen Angels Reviews
HER LAST TEMPTATION is a great ending to a wonderful line of romance books that will be missed. -- Carolyn Crisher, Romance Reviews Today
Strikingly sensual and subtly emotional, Leslie Kelly's HER LAST TEMPTATION will leave readers smiling through their tears. A keeper. -- Catherine Witmer, Romantic Times
HER LAST TEMPTATION is a great ending to a wonderful line of romance books that will be missed. -- Carolyn Crisher, Romance Reviews Today
Strikingly sensual and subtly emotional, Leslie Kelly's HER LAST TEMPTATION will leave readers smiling through their tears. A keeper. -- Catherine Witmer, Romantic Times
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Sin had just walked into her bar and he was wearing a Grateful Dead T-shirt. Cat Sheehan paused mid sentence, forgetting the conversation shed been having with one of her customers. Forgetting everything. Because holy mother Mary, a man whod instantly set her heart pounding and her pulse racing was standing a few yards away, completely oblivious to her shocked stare. He was tall. Very tall. And he had the kind of presence that immediately drew the attention of every person in the place--at least every female person. Their gazes drifted over because of his size. They stayed because of his looks. A strip of leather kept the mans jet black hair tied at the back of his neck in a short ponytail. A simple thing, that piece of leather, and shed certainly seen men with longish hair and ponytails. But on him, well, the look was...rakish. That was the only word she could think of. Cat liked rakes. Not that shed ever met one for real, but she liked the ones she read about in her pirate romance novels. A pirate. It fit. From the ponytail to the flash of silver glistening on the lobe of one ear to the aura of danger oozing from his body, this man had the pirate thing going on in spades. His classically handsome face was lean, a faint shadow of stubble adding a layer of ruggedness to his strong jaw. His lips briefly widened into a smile as he greeted someone. For a moment, Cat felt very sure the ground had trembled a bit under the power of his smile. Not to mention the mouth, which looked like it had been created for the sole purpose of kissing. His body was a living testament to the beauty of naturebroad at the shoulders, slim at the hips, with long legs covered in tight, faded jeans. His thick arms flexed, muscles bulging under the weight of the sizeable guitar case he was carrying, though he hardly seemed to notice. Lifting it higher, he stepped deftly around tables and chairs, skirting the outstretched legs of the few patrons in the place. He moved gracefully. Cat-like. "Oh, yeah," she murmured. Cat definitely liked. She never took her eyes off him as he approached. Then it sunk in. He was approaching her, Cat Sheehan, the woman standing here with her mouth only slightly less wide-open than her eyes. Blinking, she gave her head a hard shake, then grabbed the nearest cloth she could reach and busied herself by wiping up some spilled beer. "Hey! What are you doing?" Cat barely registered the shrill words from somewhere nearby, because suddenly he was there. A thick, tanned forearm dropped to the surface of the bar, and she couldnt help staring at his fingers. Long fingers. Artistic looking. Perfect for a guitar player. Not to mention a lover. "Wow," the same female voice said, sounding subdued. Swallowing hard, Cat slowly shifted her gaze, surveying his limb from fingertip to elbow, then the ninety degree turn up the thick planes of his arm, the tight hem of the black cotton T-shirt. The broad shoulder. The hollow of his throat. The cords of his neck. Wow, indeed. Then, oh, God, the face. If Helens face had launched a thousand ships to the sea, surely this mans could inspire ten thousand pair of panties to drop to the floor. Her legs wobbled, her knees knocking together loud enough to be heard over the sound of the jackhammer outside. But probably not loud enough to be heard over the pounding of her heart. Ordering herself to calm down, she slowed her breaths, mentally grabbing for control as she assessed the situation. She was facing the most incredible man shed ever seen--the kind of guy women fantasized about meeting for real, instead of on the pages of books or on giant screens in darkened movie theaters. Pure, one-hundred-percent sin. Separating them were only the broad mahogany bar. And Cats own resolution to change her ways and steer clear of sexy, dangerous men. She should have known she didnt have a snowballs chance of keeping that resolution, though, honestly, shed figured she could last a week. But no. Itd been only three days since theyd received the letter from the Historical Society and shed made the stupid promise to herself. Of all the changes in her world since Tuesdayincluding the shockingly abrupt departure of Laine and Tess for far-flung adventuresshed thought the ones shed resolved to make in herself would be the easiest to deal with. Uh, not. A slow grin tilted the corners of the strangers lips up and he leaned closer. As he did so, his dark, intense eyes caught and reflected a reddish glimmer from one of the stained glass light fixtures overhead. Devilish. Dangerous. Off-limits. Or so she tried to tell herself. But she suspected it was no use. Unless the guy had a hideous voice, he was altogether perfect. And since conversation wasnt even on the top ten list of the things shed been picturing doing with this man since the second shed set eyes on him, she suspected it wouldnt matter if he sounded like Roger Rabbit on speed. "I think thats her purse youre using to clean up the spilled beer," he said. Velvet voice. Soft. Husky. As smooth and warm as their very best whiskeythe kind she kept hidden beneath the bar for special customers. She felt every word he spoke on each of the nerve endings in her body. Doomed. The new, reformed Cat Sheehan was utterly doomed.



