Kisses Sweeter Than Wine: A Romance
The parents of a happy, blended family with two teenagers, a successful winery in Mendocino County, and a vibrant open-air theater (plus a hot sex life as a couple), Lily and Tom Langdon seem to have re-invented paradise. That is, until Lily’s ex-husband shows up to star in her and Tom’s production of Most Happy Fella . . . and suddenly no one is remotely happy offstage.
1003500615
Kisses Sweeter Than Wine: A Romance
The parents of a happy, blended family with two teenagers, a successful winery in Mendocino County, and a vibrant open-air theater (plus a hot sex life as a couple), Lily and Tom Langdon seem to have re-invented paradise. That is, until Lily’s ex-husband shows up to star in her and Tom’s production of Most Happy Fella . . . and suddenly no one is remotely happy offstage.
4.99 In Stock
Kisses Sweeter Than Wine: A Romance

Kisses Sweeter Than Wine: A Romance

by Jennifer Rose
Kisses Sweeter Than Wine: A Romance

Kisses Sweeter Than Wine: A Romance

by Jennifer Rose

eBook

$4.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

The parents of a happy, blended family with two teenagers, a successful winery in Mendocino County, and a vibrant open-air theater (plus a hot sex life as a couple), Lily and Tom Langdon seem to have re-invented paradise. That is, until Lily’s ex-husband shows up to star in her and Tom’s production of Most Happy Fella . . . and suddenly no one is remotely happy offstage.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781504020473
Publisher: Open Road Distribution
Publication date: 08/18/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 127
File size: 426 KB

About the Author

Nancy Weber’s diverse body of fiction includes The Playgroup, a psychological suspense novel with a medical twist; the slipstream novel Brokenhearted; the metafiction Ad Parnassum; the young adult mini-series Two Turtledoves; and eight romances written under her pseudonym, Jennifer Rose. Her nonfiction book The Life Swap, published in the seventies, recounts her experience exchanging lives—trading habits and jobs and even lovers—with a stranger. Weber has written for the stage as well, adapting the lyrics for the American version of composer Alexander Zhurbin’s Seagull: The Musical.

Weber earned a toque blanche at the French Culinary Institute and ran a catering business, Between Books She Cooks, for a decade. She plays chess, badly, and drinks Irish whiskey. 

Read an Excerpt

Kisses Sweeter Than Wine

A Romance


By Jennifer Rose

OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

Copyright © 1984 Jennifer Rose
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5040-2047-3


CHAPTER 1

Lily Langdon surfaced mistily from an unpleasant dream and sought the comforting warmth of Tom's body. Moving cautiously, not wanting to wake him, she inched her way across the cool sheet and spooned herself against the broad expanse of his chest. She resisted the impulse to wiggle her bottom as she nestled in along his legs, trusting that his arms would reflexively encircle her. They did. A small sigh escaped her lips, and she surrendered to the luxurious sensation of total safety.

Emboldened by the soft, steady whisper of Tom's breath in her hair, Lily dared herself to remember the dark dream. She shuddered as it came back to her with the graphic creepiness of a science fiction movie. A mysterious blue rain had fallen, and the vineyards had grown wildly — so wildly that vines had covered the Langdons' big white farmhouse, choking the sunlight off from the windows, strangling the doors, imprisoning Tom and Lily and the children.

Lily forced herself to take deep breaths, to stay inside the dream. She could open her eyes and end it, or rouse Tom from sleep and ask for comfort; but back in New York, in her actress days, she'd learned a better technique for dealing with nightmares. While one part of her went on remembering, submitting to the crazed cruelty of the vines, another part of her floated free and regarded the dream as a stage play she was watching in an empty theater.

"All right, Lily," half of herself directed from her imaginary fourth-row aisle seat. "You have the power to push back those vines. Just turn on all the lights in the house and the rain will dry up. You can do it. You can do anything."

Quickly light conquered darkness. The vines receded to the fields. Lily the director merged with Lily the actress, and both became Lily the dreamer, the sleeper.

Even with its happy resolution, the nightmare hung around Lily's head until early morning. She was relieved to open her eyes to bright sunshine.

Greater relief came from seeing Tom lying next to her. Seven years of marriage had not dulled the sweet shock of shared nights, shared awakenings. The stronger Lily grew, the more she seemed to need the quiet strength that emanated from her husband.

Even asleep, vulnerable as a child, he looked like a rock and a tower to her. Studying his face, she searched for clues to the inner man — as though to understand his strength would be to possess it for herself. At times she almost resented Tom's sureness. Its very existence was an unspoken challenge. He never sought to dominate her, but rather called on her to meet him as an equal. Though he would offer comfort if she asked for it, he preferred to remind her of her own inner resources.

He would have been proud of the way she had handled her bad dream, she thought as she watched a ray of sunlight make a pathway through the growth of beard on his face. But part of her wished she didn't always have to be so sturdy — her own rock and tower.

A smile flickered briefly across Tom's face, tugging at the sensual fullness of his lower lip. Lily wondered enviously what wonderful dream he was having. Unlike her, he never had nightmares. Whatever demons he encountered, he braved — and vanquished — in total consciousness.

His lips moved again, making Lily ache for a kiss. She adored Tom's mouth. It softened the angular planes of his face, hinting at the deep layer of carnality beneath his work-toughened exterior. On a lesser man, that mouth might have looked too hedonistic. But Tom was all muscle and sinew, with a sun-bronzed, tight-fitting skin covering broad shoulders and a pared-down torso. Looking at him awake or asleep, no one could question his determination to be a great winemaker. Nor could anyone doubt that he had nurtured his vineyards with his own sweat.

Sitting up, Lily let her eyes take in the massed black curls with their dusting of silver; the strong, straight nose; the neck that was a little too thick to look comfortable in a buttoned collar and tie. How typically clever of Tom, she thought, to choose a life in rural northern California, where neckties were almost as scarce as subway trains.

Yes, he was made of heroic stuff, all right — a typically American hero, really, for all his mixed blood and varied influences. Born of an Italian mother and an Irish father, he was as well-versed in English literature as he was in French viniculture. Above all, he was his own man — though he had a great facility for dealing amiably with other, very different, men. He was as respected throughout the Haiku Valley as he was beloved at home.

As Lily sat gazing adoringly, the object of her meditations blinked his olive-green eyes and yawned.

"Hey," he said languorously, reaching for Lily. "What are you doing way up there?" He pulled her unresisting body down and crushed her against him. "I was having the nicest dream about you," he murmured into her raven hair. Pushing back the silken strands from the pale Victorian oval of her face, he added, "Shocking, isn't it? Having hot dreams about my lawfully bedded wife?"

"Better than what I dreamed," Lily said. "Rain."

Instantly Tom laid a finger across her lips. "Don't you dare." Their fifty acres of premium wine grapes were ripening gloriously under the steady summer sun. Rain between now and the September crush could produce rot and cause all sorts of other havoc.

Lily contritely kissed the silencing finger. "Sorry, dearest. Maybe it was a lucky dream, like dreaming about breaking a leg the night before a play opens. Come to think of it, that's probably what I was dreaming."

Tom drew Lily into the circle of his arms and pulled up the sheet and the sampler-pattern quilt for extra coziness. "No jitters, now," he said in the voice that always warned Lily he would brook no weakness. "I'm sure the opening will be a smash. What's more of a natural than Most Happy Fella in a real California vineyard setting?"

"I'll tell you what's more of a natural," Lily began daringly, reaching below the bedclothes with lively fingers. After all their shared hours in bed, she knew exactly what to touch, and how, to bring a musical groan of pleasure rippling from Tom's lips.

"You wanton woman. You little witch. That's just what I was dreaming before I woke up. How did you know?" His hands crisscrossed Lily's body, his possessiveness underscored by a casualness of gesture.

Lily smiled mysteriously, inflaming him. He arched over her, pinioning her wrists, teasing her lips with his stubbly chin. Lily retaliated with impudent little flicks of her tongue. Even with the flavor of sleep still upon him, he was pure nectar to her tastebuds.

"To think you once said you weren't a morning person." Tom kissed her eyelids. "Liar."

"Well, I wasn't," Lily said, "until you gave me reason to be." Nibbling on his neck, she sighed happily. Tom had made her a morning, noon, and night person. He had the power to infuriate her at times, but he never put her to sleep.

"Do we have time —?" he began presciently, only to be interrupted by a rat-a-tat-tat at their door. Sighs of passion gave way to sighs of resignation.

"Room service," a cheery young female voice called out. "Everyone decent?"

"Married couples are always decent, dear," Lily said as she and Tom decorously separated and arranged the bedding.

"I'll remember that." Eighteen-year-old Cleo, the picture of farm-girl radiance in her plaid shirt and jeans, entered with a burdened tray.

"What a wonderful surprise," Lily said to her daughter. "Is it our anniversary, and we forgot?"

"Oh, Tibs and I just both happened to be up early, and we know how you are before an opening. Left to your own devices, you wouldn't eat a thing."

"Except neck of husband," Tom whispered suggestively in Lily's ear, his soft breath teasing the nerverich orifice.

Cleo gave her mother and step-father a raised-eyebrow look. At once sophisticated and highly sensitive, she sometimes seemed to regard Lily and Tom with detached amusement. Having spent half a lifetime with Lily as a single mother, she was still coming to terms with Lily as a married woman. But Lily knew that Cleo loved Tom wholeheartedly and drew great reassurance from the marriage.

"What's on that tray, my pretty?" Tom asked his step-daughter. Lily thought gratefully that he always knew when to clear the air.

"Coffee, orange juice, and blackberry muffins," Cleo answered pertly, transferring the contents of her tray to a small round table in front of the dormer window. She tossed her long, unbound hair as she completed her task. "Don't get panicky, Tom-Tom. Tibs is on his way up with your bacon and eggs. I don't suppose I could persuade you to eat an omelette, Mother?"

"Sure you could — at lunchtime," Lily said.

"Give me another seven years," Tom put in, "and I'll make a breakfast-eater of her yet, Cleo. As it is, she'll probably eat all the muffins if I turn my back. They smell sensational."

Cleo flushed with pleasure, and Lily once again admired his knack with her. The sensitive side of Cleo demanded constant stroking, and Tom knew just how to dole out the praise without ever being phony. She and Cleo were lucky to have him.

"Thanks, sweet girl," Lily said. "This is quite a treat. Now, if you'll just excuse us for a minute, we'll put on our robes and get to the table before the coffee cools."

"I thought married couples were always decent," Cleo said with a suppressed chuckle, leaving the room and quietly closing the door.

Tom pulled Lily to him. "What's so great about decency, anyway? And what's the hurry about the muffins? I want you for breakfast, lady." His lips teased the full paleness of her breasts, then he let his unshaven chin graze her nipples, an act guaranteed to make her arch her back in desire.

"Eggs!" called a musical baritone from outside the door.

"Who wrote this comedy?" Tom asked with a good-natured grumble as he and Lily once again chastely arranged themselves under sheet and quilt. In a louder voice, he invited Tibs to enter.

"Good morning, star," Lily greeted her twenty-year-old stepson. The lanky, tanned Tibs was set to play Joe, the handsome young troublemaker, in Lily's production of Most Happy Fella. "And how did your own breakfast go down?"

"Just fine," Tibs said with a grin. "But will it stay down?" He set his father's bacon and sunny-side eggs on the table.

"Of course it will," Tom boomed. "You're going to be terrific, and you know it."

"That doesn't mean he won't get an attack of nerves," Lily contradicted gently. "Even seasoned pros do. It's nothing to be ashamed of."

Tibs pushed his fingers through his thick, dark hair. Somewhat slighter than his father, he'd inherited his coloring and rich head of hair. He had Tom's purposefulness, too, even if a few lingering adolescent uncertainties sometimes surfaced. Lily counted him as one of her great blessings. Among many other virtues, he gave her a glimpse of the young Tom that she'd been deprived of. Forty now to her thirty-seven, Tom had been thirty-two when they met, and very much fully formed. He laughingly claimed that he'd sprung from the womb with his mind made up about everything, but Lily knew he'd grown and made choices like any other human being. She often wished she'd been present during the creation of the man she so loved.

Tibs left the room, and Lily and Tom wrapped themselves in matching wool- and-cotton plaid robes that had been a Christmas present from their children.

"Well, you did a great job of talking Tibs into being nervous," Tom said with undiluted sarcasm as they sat down at the table.

"Now wait a minute," Lily flared defensively. She took a cooling sip of orange juice. "I just didn't want him thinking he's weak if his stomach tightens up. It's perfectly normal. All that adrenalin being pumped into the system. Every actor experiences it, and some never outgrow it."

"Probably because no one ever encouraged them to outgrow it. Haven't you ever noticed? People take strange delight in each other's weaknesses."

Tom broke a blackberry muffin in two, offering half to Lily. But her stomach was suddenly clenching, and the fragrant bread held no appeal for her.

Of all the days to be at odds with Tom. Swallowing retorts, she tried to think of an amiable way of saying what was on her mind. "You're so understanding with Cleo," she began. "Isn't Tibs entitled to the same consideration? Or does Thomas Olivieri Langdon, Jr., have to be a man of iron, like his father?"

Realizing that she'd been sharper than she'd intended, she held her breath, waiting for Tom to strike back. Instead he grinned and flexed his right bicep in the classic gesture.

"Me man of iron," he said with a grunt. "Son same."

Lily laughed and reached for a muffin. The brief storm between them had dissipated as magically as the rain in her dream, and suddenly she had an appetite. She noted for her internal record that she owed Tom one; he had short- circuited what could easily have escalated into a day-long skirmish. She blanked out the awful memory of some of the fights she and Tom had waged. Sitting here opposite him in their cozy early-New England bedroom, it was easy enough — and infinitely more pleasant — to dwell on what was good and grand in their life.

Consider the children, for beautiful instance. Cleo, her baby, had grown into a vibrant young woman. She loved the natural world and people; and both nature and humankind seemed to return her affection. Lily thought with a brimming heart of how the shy and uncertain Cleo had come to life when Lily and Tom had married, and how Cleo had suddenly had not only a real father and an instant big brother but also all the fertile beauty of Pennyroyal Vineyards. Winemaking was her calling, it seemed. She was working as Tom's apprentice for the summer and had been accepted for the fall term at the prestigious University of California School of Viticulture at Davis.

As for Tibs, Lily knew that no son born of her body could have brought her more joy. Warm, clever, sensitive, he was always ideal company. Since he'd discovered his passion for acting, he and Lily had been closer than ever.

While she was counting her blessings, Lily couldn't leave out the miraculous way in which her work dovetailed with Tom's. At his suggestion, Lily had established the Pennyroyal Theater-in-the-Vineyards. Built onto the tasting room where tourists sampled and bought Tom's vintages, the theater offered a full season of summer stock. For the price of a ticket, theatergoers not only got to see a touring big-name actor or actress along with talented amateur neighbors from the Haiku Valley, but they also got to dine on such delicacies as local salmon and baby lamb, and vegetables from Lily's prize-winning garden. Naturally a Pennyroyal Theater dinner also included the perfect wines.

Last, Lily had to thank the kindly fates for bringing her to Haiku Valley in the heart of Mendocino County. Outside the dormer window she could see the gentle undulations of the hills of northern California — hills that seemed to fold in on themselves, like meringue in a beating bowl, their geometry different from that of any other landscape she knew. In the July sun the hills had been bleached to the pale gold of Rapunzel's hair. Lily had only to walk out behind the white farmhouse to see the promising verdant symmetry of acre upon acre of prime grapes. And underfoot everywhere was wild pennyroyal, with its lovely purple blossoms and its invigorating mint and licorice aroma.

Yet, thanks to a seeming miracle, a mere half hour drive through majestic redwood forests took Lily to a totally different, equally stirring view: the Pacific coast, with its dramatic cliffs rushing down to meet the throbbing blues of the sea. To think that she had once regarded Central Park in New York City as the ultimate in natural beauty!

"Hey, come back," Tom commanded, mopping up egg yolk with a piece of blackberry muffin. "You look as though you're a million miles away."

"Only about twenty miles," Lily said. "I took a quick mental drive up to Little River and Mendocino."

"I hope you remembered to drop off three cases of Chardonnay at Heritage House."

"Sorry, darling. It was strictly a pleasure trip." Lily poured coffee and hot milk into her cup, then sipped the aromatic brew. "So many pleasures this morning," she added.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Kisses Sweeter Than Wine by Jennifer Rose. Copyright © 1984 Jennifer Rose. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews