Title: Wild Bells
Series: Tinsel and Spruce Needles, Book Three
Author: Elna Holst
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: December 16, 2019
Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex
Pairing: Female/Female
Length: 14800
Genre: Contemporary, LGBT, holiday, romance, lesbian, disabilities, college student, silversmith
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Synopsis
Lund, Sweden, 1998
Mia Andersson is not a nice person. She
is a sharp, sensational-looking, aloof lawyer-to-be, and the busiest sapphic
player in town. Mia Andersson takes no prisoners, tells no tales, and if you
gave her your number, chances are she won’t call. But this holiday season, at
age twenty-seven, wheels that are out of her control have been set in motion,
and it looks like she might just get caught in the spin.
Excerpt
Wild Bells
Elna Holst © 2019
All Rights Reserved
Lund, Sweden, 1998
Linda Ling was all that. From the moment
Mia had first set eyes on her, at the band’s premiere gig at Blekingska back in
October, she hadn’t been able to not see her: Linda Ling turned up in her
dreams at night, in her thoughts by day, in casual conversation between
classes, in the distance along the streets of late-autumn, early-winter Lund.
She was on posters, in clubs, in the air, and—God help her—in Mia Andersson’s
masturbatory fantasies. The spiky, jet-black hair, the punk-goth pallor, her
slight, androgynous build, the calculated raggedness of her clothing: black
netting, torn edges, charcoal and purple stripes. The ankh tattoo at the nape
of her neck, which Mia had glimpsed, teasingly, only once at the university
library, where she had happened to spot Linda embroiled with a gaggle of
friends-cum-admirers, her hair gathered in a messy I’ve-got-brains-too bun to
mark the occasion. She had a piercing, as well: a stud below her full, pouty
bottom lip, and each and every finger of her hands was adorned with at least
two fancy, industrial-sized silver rings. Her eyes were an intense shade of
violet, which Mia suspected must be the product of tinted contacts, but it
didn’t matter, or rather, it merely added to her attractions—because Linda Ling
was so attractive it was unreal.
And Mia Andersson was not in the habit
of not having got her leg over that already.
True, Linda was four years her junior,
but Mia wasn’t usually squeamish about that sort of thing: she was
twenty-seven, not eighty-three. And she’d bet her favourite, well-worn Ramones
tee Linda Ling wouldn’t mind a slightly older, a lot more experienced lover.
This wasn’t so much bragging as a
statement of facts; Mia Andersson had been a player of, more or less, the
exclusive sapphic variety since she had turned fifteen. She had been sexually
active for well over a decade, and she had turned her fair share of blushing
bi-curious virgins into raging rug munchers. Her gaydar was impeccable. If
there was even the slightest possibility, the most infinitesimal potential of
queer in a girl, Mia brought it out and honed it to glimmering perfection,
before releasing her back out into the wild. Mia Andersson was a dykemaker. It
was just her thing.
There was only one problem—one which,
despite her being closer to her cool thirties than her red-hot twenties, Mia
couldn’t recall ever having run up against before. She was miffed. She was stunted.
She was flabbergasted.
Linda Ling was, to all appearances and
in spite of her heavy, enticing, smouldering andro vibe, completely,
irredeemably, one hundred per cent and counting, straight.
The mere thought caused Mia’s upper lip
to curl in distaste, her hand gripping the neck of her beer bottle
spasmodically. She just couldn’t accept it, and the non-acceptance had turned
into a minor obsession—to the point where Mia Andersson, the Malmö-Lund
region’s busiest lesbian lay, had gone a full thirty days (an entire month!)
without getting any action. Her frustration was verging on palpable. She needed
another drink.
Turning abruptly away from the low stage
where Linda and her band members droned out their latest dour-faced dirge—the
Raven Choir they called themselves, or something along those lines; to be
honest, Mia wouldn’t have given them a second glance, much less paid the price
of a ticket, if it hadn’t been for the fact that their lead singer was, well,
all that—Mia made for the bar. Or, that was the plan; in reality, she ran crotch
first into a froth-tipped pint of lager.
“Oh, for fuck’s—”
Eyes of an indeterminate colour regarded
her, from out of a tan face shaded by the stiff peak of a light-blue football
cap.
“Unexpected move.” The person to whom
these iconoclastic features belonged cocked her head, and a devilish glint came
into those previously oh-so-innocent eyes right before she added: “Bet I got
your knickers wet in record time, though.”
Mia ‘the Dykemaker’ Andersson was at a
loss for words. Slack-jawed with disbelief, she simply stared down at the woman
seated—of course, it had to be, this close to the stage—in a sleek purple
wheelchair, a now half-empty glass of beer in hand. Or half full, depending on
your outlook on life, etc. There was something oddly, disturbingly familiar
about her.
The woman switched her glass over to her
left and held out her right hand.
“Sandra Ling,” she drawled, and
everything came together, all at once, as Mia darted a look back up at Linda,
who was, mercifully, not turned in their direction.
“That’s right,” Sandra nodded as she
shook Mia’s limp hand vigorously. She had some grip on her; that was for sure.
“Twins. I know. I know. It’s not fair; how come I got all the looks and
talent?”
Mia snorted, half in shock, half in
amusement.
“How is that—” She stopped, not really
certain where she was going, what she was saying. Besides, her jeans and—yes,
her underwear, too—really were soaking. In a non-sexual, not comfortable at all
way. “Fuck, I’m wet!”
Sandra sucked her lips in over her
teeth, giving her a frog-like appearance. Kind of—no, not kind of, just cute,
actually.
“Yeah, jokes aside, I’m sorry about
that. I was just about to—well, never mind.”
Mia shuffled her feet. There was a
puddle on the floor, starting to give off that classic old-drunk reek, and she
felt about as fresh and alluring as if she had pissed herself. And here she
was, chatting to a stranger. A girl in a wheelchair. Linda’s sister. Her twin.
“I should go wash off.”
Sandra sat back in her seat, lifting
herself up a little on her forearms. Her torso was—square, almost a perfect
square, there was no other way of putting it.
“I’ll keep a look out for you. When you
get back, I mean. I think I owe you a drink or something. What did you say your
name was?”
“Mia. Mia Andersson. I’m—I’m really
wet.”
Sandra’s lips twisted into the subtlest
smirk Mia could recollect ever having seen, except—well, except when she
happened to catch sight of her own reflection.
She actually, honest-to-God blushed.
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