Don’t Look Down – Suzanne Enoch Free Audiobook
Description
Written by
Read by Samantha Cook
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged
Samantha Jellicoe Series, Book 2
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Released: Apr 30, 2019
Length: 10hrs
The heat is on in Palm Beach-and Rick and Samantha are sizzling.
Samantha Jellicoe is no ordinary thief. At least, not anymore. She promised her significant other, British billionaire Rick Addison, that she’d retire from her life of crime. So no more midnight break-ins…no more scaling estate walls…no more dangling from the ceiling. From here on in, it’s intimate dinners with Rick in posh Palm Beach followed by rock-your-world sex.
Who’d have thought that doing the right thing would turn out to be more deadly than her former life of crime? When the first client of her new security business is murdered, Sam is determined to find the killer. Now if only she can manage to stay out of jail, resist her former “associate’s” lucrative job offers, and keep Rick from sticking his nose into her business, she might just manage to stay alive. Because trouble isn’t just walking — it’s running — to catch up with her.
November 14, 2005
Playful love scenes and a large dose of humor lift Enoch’s second novel to star gorgeous 33-year-old Richard Addison, a British billionaire, and stunning 24-year-old Samantha Jellicoe, a former thief (after Flirting with Danger). While Rick tries to prove to Samantha that settling down with him won’t destroy her sense of self, he works to keep her out of trouble with the police after Sam’s first client in her new security business is murdered. Besides trying to solve the murder, Sam must deal with her internal conflicts about loving Rick and, in a lighter vein, her ex-crook business partner’s grousing about going straight. Some readers may have a problem with the story’s unreality, which is heightened by the immorality of most of the wealthy portrayed in the Palm Beach, Fla., setting. Contemporary romance-land offers up as many billionaires these days as the ridiculous number of dukes cluttering English historicals. Still, Enoch deserves credit for having a couple go through a second book with their sexual chemistry intact.
Publishers Weekly