KevaD - A Dance with Bogie and Bacall
Hello,
Judith, and thank you very much for hosting me here today.
And
thank you, the readers, for dropping by and seeing what we're up to.
I'm
KevaD, and I write in a variety of genres, from romance to comedy to horror.
"A
Dance with Bogie and Bacall" is an innocent tale of two people stumbling
through life, and the ghost bent on bringing them together.
Blurb:
Radio DJ Scott Kincaid's first caller of
the night is a lady who died forty-nine years ago. The second wants to knock his
head off. And he thought falling in love would be easy.
Maureen
and Frank Johnson shared the kind of romance most people believe only exists in
movies. Until a ballroom fire took Maureen's life.
Franci
Johnson grew up hearing her grandparents' love story a thousand times and
wishes to find the kind of undying love Frank and Maureen had once upon a time.
DJ
Scott Kincaid just wants the ghost following him to go away. But Maureen thinks
the hunky DJ might be just the answer to her granddaughter's dreams.
"A
Dance with Bogie and Bacall" came about purely by accident, or
serendipity. Not really sure which.
I'd
turned on some music while contemplating a love story for the Noble Romance
Publishing Timeless Desire Line. On came Bertie Higgins's Key Largo, and that was all she wrote. Or in my case, that was the
inspiration for what I wrote. I called up the video on Youtube and played it
over, and over, and over, and over… Until my wife begged me to stop. Then I
turned the volume down, hit replay, and continued writing.
In
all fairness, the only similarity between my story and Bertie's song is the
inclusion of Bogie and Bacall. In my story, the duo make a film appearance as
the ghost tries to create a romantic moment sure to bring the two young hearts
of our hero and heroine together. Chalk up another failure, and implement Plan
Q.
However,
"A Dance with Bogie and Bacall" isn't all flowers and candy. Life and
love never is.
Here's
what two readers have said already:
"I adore A Dance with Bogie and Bacall! You owe me a
box of Kleenex!" – author Debbie Vaughan
"Hey, Man, COULD NOT put that book down....Very
good...Loved it.." – reader Margie Snyder Heitz
I hope you will too.
Thanks for stopping by, and be sure to click the logo to
go to your next stop on the tour.
David
Kentner/KevaD
Excerpt:
Frank propped his elbow on the iron
railing at the edge of the dance floor and absently watched yet another
Humphrey Bogart lookalike attired as film noire detective Sam Spade arrogantly
strut across the ballroom, through the forest of faux palm trees and potted
plants with crepe paper leaves. Ribbons of gray tobacco smoke broke and swirled
in his wake. The hard, leather heels of his polished shoes clicked a beat on
the floorboards. At a rickety, corner table barely illuminated under the
flickering flame of a sconce gas lamp, a Rick Blaine copy in the character's
patented white tux and black tie rose from a wooden folding chair and grasped
Sam's extended hand. An obvious Vivian Sternwood Rutledge in full aqua gown
uncharacteristically scurried across the floor until she stood at Sam's side
where she ran her hand over the back of his black suit coat. A glint of a too
long pocket watch gold chain flashed in the dim, orange light. A subtle nod to
Rick's left, and Sam turned his shoulders to take the hand of a seated Nora
Temple resplendently sensuous in a black dress with plunging neckline that
tickled the top of the fleshy V of her very noticeable, ample cleavage.
"You're staring," whispered
Frank's own duplicated Nora into his right ear. "Not that she doesn't have
a lot to stare at."
"She forgot the necklace. When
Lauren Bacall played Nora, she wore a necklace with that dress in Key Largo.
A silver one that clung to the base of her throat and accentuated the graceful
turns of her head. Lauren Bacall isn't only the most beautiful actress to ever
grace the silver screen, she makes the clothing and accoutrements she wears
stunning"—he shifted his gaze and lost himself in his wife's glistening
green eyes—"just like you do."
A quickly raised hand pinched his jaw at
the chin. "Franklin Johnson, you are such a liar." Maureen's glossy
red lips curled at the corners. "But a sweet one." She pushed his
face left. "She's wearing the necklace."
He coughed a hairball of embarrassment.
Oops.
Maureen pulled his face back to hers. In
heels, she stood nearly as tall as he did
and leaned in as if to offer up a kiss
but stopped a heated breath short. "You want to gawk at a woman's chest,
gawk at your wife's."
Frank glanced down. Maureen had captured
the top of her black silk, body-clinging dress between thumb and forefinger
allowing a full view of her diminutive, unclad breasts and perked, pink
nipples.
His groin stirred immediately within his
Rick Blaine white tuxedo trousers. "You hussy," he heaved out in a
thick rasp. "Where is your brassiere? Some new moral descent didn't happen
when we left the 50s behind us." Heat scorched his ears. How had he not
noticed before this? His breath caught. God, she was beautiful.
"Built-in cups just firm enough to
hold me in place." She chuckled at his discomfort and released the cloth,
then slipped her arms beneath his jacket and around his torso. Inching in to
him, she only stopped when the hardened beads atop her bosom pressed through
his shirt and against his chest.
"Mmm," he moaned. Her mouth
found his ear. Little nips tugged at the lobe. He stroked the sides of her body
under the cool silk. The temperature of her skin headed for sweltering, the
silken material warmed. Sweat beaded under his arms and between his thighs. She
pressed into his thickening erection, which snapped to full attention under a
tidal wave of arousal.
He allowed himself the publicly
displayed pleasure of sliding his hands to the top of her buttocks, tracing the
indentation with his little fingers. Nuzzling her soft throat, he whispered,
"I want to make love to you right now. Let's get out of here."
The six-piece band comprised of three
strings, the leader's clarinet, one sax, and a trombone returned from break to
the small stage at the end of the long room, and oozed into a slow, soft
rendition of As Time Goes By. Humphrey Bogarts and Lauren Bacalls of all
sizes, shapes, and costumes materialized from the shadows of the gas lamps
resurrected for this annual event celebrating Bogart's life and death. The
past's mimes took to the dance floor under tiny squares of haunting light from
the mirrored orb of the Harvest Moon Ballroom.
"No." Maureen grabbed his hand
and yanked him into the throng of couples on
the dance floor. "Bogie and Bacall
wouldn't let a night like this go to waste . . . and neither will we." Her
left hand snaked its way to the small of his back, her right took his left in a
pretense of submitting to his "lead." She opted for a closed box
foxtrot with her body trying to merge with his, their steps no more than
foot-length shuffles.
"Besides, you haven't given me my
anniversary orchid yet. Ten years today, Franklin Johnson. And though I love
you more than ever, and have borne you three children, you will give me
my orchid."
All the blood in him fell to his feet.
The room swayed, but not to the music. The mirrored ball spun in a prismatic
dervish. A ghostly orchid, fragile and pulsing its matte colors, swirled in and
out of his vision.
"Frank? Frank! Are you all
right?"
Movement. His. Somehow he moved across
the floor—the orchid just beyond his grasp led the way.
"Sit down." The voice from an
unseen well belonged to Maureen.
He did as instructed.
"I'll get you some water. I'll be
right back."
The orchid hung motionless in the air.
He reached out his open palm. The flower settled onto his skin. A smile parted
his lips. The orchid was as beautiful as Maureen. A faint heat emanated from
the flower's core. He brought the bloom closer. Flames engulfed the petals,
burned his hand. Reflexively he dropped the small ball of fire onto the table
where it disintegrated into black dust and disappeared.
"Drink this."
The chilled rim of a glass touched his
lips. Iced water trickled between them. He gratefully swallowed the mouthful,
filtering out the ice cubes with his teeth, and then gulped down the entire
glassful of water.
"Come on, pal." A man's voice.
Hands under his arms lifted Frank from the chair. "You just need to lie
down a few minutes. A little too much bubbly, eh?"
"Our tenth anniversary,"
Maureen said. "We had some champagne earlier, but I didn't think he'd had
that much. My husband isn't a drinker normally. Only on special
occasions."
Frank flopped his head back, watching
the dark ceiling boards skip past. He tried to count them, but they moved too
quickly as the men on either side of him half carried him from the ballroom.
Then his feet scuffed their way up a stairway and into a small room. A lamp
clicked on. Light under an emerald shade flooded a cluttered desktop. He was
lowered onto a leather couch that squeaked his arrival.
Maureen appeared in front of him and
helped him out of his jacket. She loosened his bowtie and unbuttoned his
collar. Cool air sprinkled his exposed throat.
"I'll have a pitcher of water sent
up. Stay as long as you want. Not the first time a guest needed that couch to
sleep it off." Two shadows stepped through the doorway into the hall.
"He's not drunk," Maureen said
in a huff. She wiped his face with her open hand. "Are you okay, honey?
You scared me there for a minute."
Little by little, Maureen's face came
into focus. Lines of worry wrinkled her brow. Still, the creases somehow looked
damn good on her. Age would meet its match in this gorgeous woman. Frank
grinned. "Yeah. Better now. Just got a little dizzy. I guess I should stay
away from champagne that comes in six-packs. I'm fine. Let's get out of
here." He placed his hands on the cushions and pushed in an attempt to
stand.
Maureen countered with her hands on his
shoulders. "You stay right there, Mister, until I'm sure you're all
right."
He tilted his head and kissed her wrist.
"I'm okay. Honest. Let's go home." Something inside him rolled over.
An urge, a need of some kind. A desire to leave this place.
"We will, Frank." Maureen
guided him downward and placed a throw pillow under his head. "But I want
you to rest for a few minutes. For me? Please?" She lifted his feet onto
the couch. His shoes thumped on the floor. Cool air swarmed over his stocking
feet, delivering a sense of comfort in its rush. Her hands went to his waist.
His belt came undone, then his trousers unbuttoned.
Tension ebbed under Maureen's care.
Wrapped in her love, he was as safe as she
was in his. He swept away the orchid as
a momentary quirk in the thick tobacco smoke. "Too much champagne,
celebration, dancing, and too much confined heat from the packed house crowd.
That's all that happened. Nothing to be concerned with. I'm fine. And I still
want to make love to you."
She arched a brow and ran the tip of her
tongue across her red lips. Subtly moving her hips from side to side, she
gripped the zipper of his pants and slowly tugged it down; each metal link
clicked surrender to Frank's private lap dancer. A not unfamiliar game in their
bedroom. But they certainly weren't in their bedroom. His interest and erection
swelled.
Ten years of marriage, and Maureen could
still turn him on in an instant.
"Are you trying to seduce me,
madam? I am a married man, you know." He waggled his left hand back and
forth. "I have a ring and everything."
Maureen narrowed her eyes, and huskily
whispered, "It's the everything I'm after." She ran a finger
over the cylindrical shape of engorged flesh under his cotton briefs. "Bogie
and Bacall wouldn't waste an opportunity like this."
A grin of desire spread across Frank's
face. "And neither will we."
Comments
drainbamaged.gyzmo at gmail.com
Technical difficulties. Fixed, now back to our scheduled program.
:D
KevaD, I'm thinking your wife should get you some headphones, so the next time you put a single song on endless loop, she doesn't get tired of hearing it.
drainbamaged.gyzmo at gmail.com
Carol L
Lucky4750 (at) aol (dot) com
Gabrielle
meingee@yahoo.com
Kathryn, how you know me so well already.
In truth, I'm a very quiet person. But me silently staring at Judith's avatar probably wouldn't make for stimulating conversation.
Hello Carol and Gabrielle.
Thanks very much for your comments and sticking with the tour.
ainfinger(at)comcast(dot)net
shadowluvs2read(at)gmail(dot)com
desithblone@msn.com
Thank You!! Shadow.
Hello, Desi,
I appreciate your comments very much.
I didn't see you sneak in.
Thank you so much for commenting.
Patricia
panthers.ravens@yahoo.com
I appreciate your comments. Thank you!
Thanks,
Tracey D
Ren,
You know me better than that.
And...
The random comment selector chose Kathryn Merkel as the winner of a $10.00 Noble Romance gift certificate.
Thanks, everyone, for your comments.
luvfuzzzeeefaces at yahoo dot com
We appreciate your dropping by.