It’s hard to believe that next week, my third book in the Phantom series will be released. I’ve got to be honest and up front with my readers here–this book is going to be hard to find. The publisher did not print many copies and I’m not sure what bookstores have ordered, so it’s a good bet you’re not going to find this book at Walmart or on the new release table in Borders or Barnes & Noble. As much as I hate to say this, my readers are going to have to work to get this book–ie, ordering it online or calling their bookstore and asking them to bring in a copy specifically for them. I’m sorry. This is totally beyond my control. Authors have no say in these decisions and I hope that those of you who read and enjoyed PHANTOM PLEASURES and PHANTOM’S TOUCH will go the extra mile to find the third book, KISS OF THE PHANTOM.
I promise it will be worth it.
I honestly believe that KISS is the best of the three books. I love the characters, the plot, the pacing, the sex, the way the book surprised me when I was writing it. The book was an absolute joy to work on and that’s a rare and treasured happenstance. For those of you who didn’t read the first two books, I think you can catch on pretty quickly. But just in case…I’m giving away signed copies of PLEASURES and TOUCH to US residents who comment today. (I’ll also ship to Canada.)
Here’s an excerpt. If you know about the first two books, you’ll know that the premise of the series is that several brothers were captured by a Gypsy curse and their souls locked inside of various objects associated with a dark sorcerer, Lord Rogan. Mariah Hunter, my heroine, has just stolen a stone embedded with a fire opal from a reportedly haunted forest in Germany and had a strange experience when the stone seemed to keep her from falling to her death. She’s on the run from several people when she finds her way onto a plane headed back to the States. That’s where this scene starts…
Mariah settled into her spacious first-class seat and pulled her fedora down over her eyes. The smell of leather and sweat on the inside band assailed her nostrils, and she couldn’t suppress a chuckle. How ironic that Ben Rousseau had given her this very hat.
He’d meant the gift as a joke. Called her a female Indiana Jones after she’d flown them to safety following a narrow escape from a Bedouin sheikh who didn’t appreciate their liberating a valuable scimitar that had been in his family for twelve generations.
Tonight, she’d proved yet again that she could get out of a tight spot without so much as a whip. She’d upgraded to the best seat on the plane without turning out as much as a quarter. A great trick, since that was about as much cash as she had left. She’d need to restock her wallet as soon as she got home.
Not that she had all that much cash left in Texas, but she always kept a few stashes in various locations around Austin in case she had to make a quick getaway. Escaping Europe hadn’t been easy, but she’d managed. Now she had fifteen hours to relax.
Maybe fifteen hours to wonder how the hell she’d managed to get this far.
The incident on the cliff haunted her, but she’d pushed the event out of her mind. She supposed there might be a logical explanation, but Ben’s words in the clearing rang loudly in her mind.
Magic.
Black magic.
Black magic that had saved her life.
Black magic that just might get her out of trouble, once she figured out how to harness it.
She cursed, shifted in her seat, double-checked her seat belt and waited for the Boeing 777-200LR to power up. For years, her competitors had called her insane for the risks she took. Now, finally catching her breath after the narrow escape from Valoren, she wondered if they might have been right. Not only had this been a particularly dangerous dig, but since she’d picked up that ruddy stone, something had changed inside her. Or around her. Had she really flown off the face of a mountain and lived to tell the tale? The whole incident was whacked.
And yet, she’d barely looked at the rock since her escape from the woods. She didn’t want to take any chances. When she was safe at her place in Texas, she’d examine it closely and find a way to determine what price it might fetch. If she got home. There was a very good chance that either Hector Velez, the Mayan collector, or Ben Rousseau would be waiting for her at the airport. If they hadn’t already found her here.
She lifted her hat and took a look around the cabin. No one in first class looked the least bit interested in her. The man in the aisle next to her window seat had a U-shaped pillow tucked around his bulky neck, noise-blocking headphones strapped around his ears and a black satin eye mask blocking out any light. His breathing indicated he was already fast asleep, and they hadn’t even pulled away from the gate.
Still, Mariah couldn’t help but shift closer to the window. With Velez after her for his lost coins and Ben Rousseau likely in pursuit to recover the stone, she couldn’t afford to trust any situation. But her best bet for now was to get some rest. Rejuvenate her body and her brain.
After about twenty minutes and two gratis single-malt scotches, however, she realized that relaxation simply wasn’t possible. A heat centered in the pit of her stomach kept her awake. Antsy. She shifted, displacing the bag she’d kept clutched in her lap since she’d boarded. After nearly killing herself to retrieve the stone, there was no way in hell she was going to chuck it into the overhead compartment.
“Ma’am, may I take your bag?”
Mariah lifted the brim of her hat. This was a different flight attendant. Not the one who’d asked her the same question first upon boarding and the second time about ten minutes ago, when she’d delivered her second drink.
“No,” she replied. “Where’s Lisa?”
The flight attendant’s seemingly permanent smile did not falter. “You have to store it at your feet, then, until after takeoff. If there’s anything I can get you, please don’t hesitate to—”
Mariah cut off the rest of the practiced platitude by complying and then lowering her hat. She was rarely rude by accident, having been raised by a woman who considered bad manners to be an abomination only slightly above a lack of education or a misguided fashion sense. On the other hand, her father would have agreed that simply covering her eyes with her hat was a perfectly acceptable way to tell someone that you had no interest in what they had to say. Lord knew the man had done the same thing to her more times than she could count.
With an audible sniff, the flight attendant moved away. Mariah figured she wouldn’t be getting another scotch anytime soon, but that was probably for the best. She wasn’t much of a drinker anymore. First, her tastes traveled to the expensive, and second, she’d come to value a clear head. Maybe if she’d laid off the hooch in her misspent youth, she might never have fallen for Ben Rousseau’s cool gray eyes and silver tongue in the first place.
Just after takeoff, Mariah reclaimed her bag from beneath the seat, surprised by the flare of heat against her lap. She tore off her hat, then dug into the bag to see if the stone was really increasing in temperature. This was the second time the stone had grown hotter—the first time was immediately after she’d nearly fallen to her death. As a pilot herself, she realized that any incendiary device on a plane wasn’t a good thing, though the rock had passed through security at the airport without garnering so much as a sideways glance from the screeners. It was, after all, just a rock.
Once her hand closed around a cool stone, she blew out a relieved breath. Flying commercial, even in first class, wasn’t her preferred mode of travel. She’d practically been born in the pilot’s chair, and she didn’t like handing over the yoke of her avionic destiny to some unknown flyer who might or might not have gotten a decent night’s sleep before embarking on a transatlantic flight. Still, she supposed she should at least find a way to rest while she could.
The scotch finally reached her bloodstream and, after a yawn, she retrieved her hat, settled it over her eyes and pushed back her seat. With her hand still clutched around the stone inside the bag, she fell asleep.
And then, just as quickly, awoke.
The sound of the plane engine had stopped.
She threw off her hat and slid up the window shade. They were still flying. Soft, cottony clouds, shining silver under the rays of a full moon, streamed beneath them. Mariah yawned, determined to alleviate the pressure in her ears that was blocking out all noise, but it did not work.
Silence pressed in on her, and when she turned to look at her seatmate, she jumped back, slamming against the window beside her.
The man beside her was no longer hefty and cocooned. Instead, it was Ben.
“You can’t have it,” she argued. “I found it first.”
Ben smirked, but did not answer. He reached out to touch her face, but she slapped his hand away. He’d lost the privilege of touching her a long time ago.
The moment her palm made contact with his skin, he changed. Morphed. His complexion darkened. His hair deepened to the same blue-black as polished ebony and then lengthened until it covered his shoulders. Only his eyes remained similar—but where they were once light gray, they were now the color of a silvery, moonlit sky.
“Who are you?” she asked, though her voice bounced around in her head as if there was nothing to absorb the sound except her skull.
He did not answer. He simply stared at her with an intensity that made her want to cover herself. She still had clothes on, but felt entirely naked to his gaze. And her arms wouldn’t move. Or her legs. She could not turn her head. The seat belt suddenly tugged tight against her midsection, and her blouse pulled across her chest.
“If you work for Velez, I don’t have the money. But I’ll get it. Soon. I have this—”
His quizzical expression cut off her explanation. He had no idea what she was talking about, and yet he stared at her with a curiosity that, though not threatening, chilled her to the bone. Again, the sensation of being completely exposed washed over her. It was as if he were looking inside her—as if his stare could penetrate not only her clothes, but her very skin.
“Tell me who you are,” she demanded.
He shifted nearer, and the unmistakable scent of the forest assailed her. Not just any forest, but the one she’d escaped at Valoren. The sweet aroma of pine, the deep, loamy fragrance of soil, and the musky essence of man struck her hard. He said nothing, but stared at her intently, starting at the top of her head and then sweeping downward. Each trailing of his gaze over her body ignited a sexual awareness she did not want to feel. She’d never seen this man before. He had no right to examine her so … intimately.
But she could do nothing to fight him off.
“Please,” she begged, thrown into unknown territory by her utter helplessness. He rewarded her weakness with a smile and then lowered his mouth over hers in a kiss that defied everything she’d ever known about kisses.
He was gentle, but not shy. Exploratory, but not inexperienced. His mouth tasted of dry red wine and some exotic fruit—like plum or currant. His lips were warm and his breath intoxicating. She couldn’t fight the instinctual pull to wrap her arms around his shoulders and feel the sinews of his muscles through his shirt, but the moment she could move again, she woke with a start.
“What the–?”
This time when Mariah ripped off her hat, it sailed all the way to the galley. The flight attendant coming around the corner with a tray full of mimosas screamed, then doused herself and the passengers in the front rows with orange juice and champagne. The man beside Mariah, no longer the dark stranger or Ben but again the hefty, world-weary traveler, stared at her as if she’d sprouted a second head.
“Such language,” he muttered, and then returned to buttering his bagel.
Mariah muttered an apology, then sank back into her seat. She’d been dreaming. Only dreaming. But it had felt so real. If she didn’t know she was persona non grata with the airplane crew at this moment, she would have ordered enough scotch to keep her occupied until landing. Instead, she gripped the bag tighter, squelching a yelp at the heat of the stone within.
She didn’t know what the hell she’d found in Germany, but she now knew one thing beyond a shadow of a doubt—at the first opportunity, she was getting rid of it. And the sooner the better.


By all reports, Julie Leto was a sweet child once, somewhat shy, preferring to play quietly in her room making up stories. However, being raised with three brothers in a loud, primarily Italian household did have its influences and Julie discovered her inner tough girl. That’s probably why most of her heroines kick serious butt. Writing sassy heroines has worked out, as she’s sold over forty books to four publishers featuring strong, confident women. Julie lives in Florida with her daughter, a spoiled dachshund, a haughty lynx-point Siamese and a wide range of relatives all within driving distance.
Destiny
Dirty Little Secrets
Through The Night
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Great excerpt! Love it!
So sorry about the print run, Julie.
We have sunshine back today after several days of rain. I’m not complaining however because we can always use the moisture.
Have a great day all,
Cher
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I’ll have to place my order with B&N today. I can’t wait to read Kiss of the Phantom!
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Can’t wait to read all of it
anna
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Can’t wait to read the rest. I’m going to amazon now to preorder!!
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Ack!
That’s just…
to the publisher.
That said, I’m off to order mine now! Loyal Julie fans will show them the error of their ways!
And that excerpt was
I need a
to cool off before I finish
SOMETHING WICKED.
Yes, I’m in emoticon lurve. I finished the expanded draft of the WIP and I’m done but for the final polishing.
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Your books are always worth it, Julie! I can’t wait to read this!
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Julie,
I love your creative mind and writing style. I don’t have book 1 or 2 yet since its on my list of to be bought soon. How is everyone’s hump day?
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The first two books were so good that I can’t wait to read this one. I will definitely make an effort to find it. The Border’s closest to me usually has your books. Hopefully, they won’t let me down. If they don’t have it maybe I will find it on my trip as I usually stop at the Border’s in Eureka, CA & I am going that direction. Maybe sales will be good enough for them to print more.
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According to Borders.com it says available online only.
that means I will need to find other stuff to order or pick it up at the store. I hate to pay shipping. LOL
I am not going to read the excerpt. I still have to read Touch. I enjoyed the first one so much, that I wanted to wait to have #3 to read when I finished with 2. I tend to do that- hold on until and entire series is done, then read them all. I like instant gratification, even if I have to wait for it.
I’m a little screwy, I know.
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Hi Julie,
I enjoyed reading “Phantom Pleasures’ but haven’t had a chance to read “Phantom’s Touch” (can’t find it at my library).
Love the excerpt, wow that was hot!
Congrats on the upcoming release of “Kiss of the Phantom”.
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Don’t worry, Julie. We will find the book!
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Oh, I am ready for more.
I just came back from Border’s and Julie’s book is on the shelves.
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I hurried on over to check Fictionwise and found I will be able to get it there! Thank goodness!!!!
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I just placed my order with B&N and it says it will ship tomorrow. Hopefully I’ll get my book by Friday, but most likely I’ll have to wait until Monday.
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Great excerpt. Congrats on the upcoming release, Julie.
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Can’t wait to read all of it!
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That was interesting and quite a teaser. Too bad your publisher has restricted distribution. Those who find it will be well rewarded. I need to find the first two in this series. Do like to read books in order.
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VERY NCIE hot cover. please count me in
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Great excerpt, Julie! Thanks for letting us know to make sure to preorder our copies now! What a bummer about the print run! Hope you’ve got some fun plans this coming week to celebrate the release!
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Great excerpt – congratulations on the upcoming release!
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Thanks everyone…especially those who have bought or ordered the book! I’ll announce the winner of the two books on Sunday with our regular Friday winner…give some of the West Coasters a little extra time to enter.
I really appreciate all the support. I can’t tell you how much comments like those above that say how much they enjoyed the book mean to me. To any author, for that matter. You guys have utterly made my day.
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Thanks for the excerpt, Julie, love this series.