Little Black Girl Lost : Book 3 Legal Tender

Literature & Fiction

New Orleans mob boss Napoleon Bentley calls.
Forbidden passion resurfaces.
It’s Christmas Eve.
Johnnie’s all alone.
Hurt.
Vulnerable.

Lucas broke up with her—again—several hours ago when she visited him at Angola Prison. She had loaded the car with delicious food, lots of gifts, and had driven more than 5 hours round trip to make sure he had a memorable Christmas. She had pledged her undying love and allegiance to him. She wanted to make sure he knew she would be waiting for him when the system released him.

But it was over.
For real this time.
No going back.
No getting back together.

Napoleon is saying all the right things—the things Lucas should have been saying. Now that Lucas broke up with her, she’s free to do as she pleases with whomever she pleases. So when she hears Napoleon’s flirtatious baritone on the phone . . . her defenses are no more. It turns out that Marla, Napoleon’s wife, left him, moved back to Chicago, and filed for divorce. They became kindred spirits and decide they deserved a little happiness.

Lonely, and no longer cheating, there’s no reason to resist the ravenous urges dancing in her mind, pulling at her smoldering flesh.

But Billy Logan has other plans for her now that Lucas is out of the way.

Just as Johnnie is about to leave her home to meet Napoleon at the Chic Bel Glades Hotel to douse the consuming fire that raged within, Billy kicks her door in to exact a measure of revenge.

Read Reviews
Show Keith Lee Johnson Some Love

Keith Lee Johnson

Keith Lee Johnson is a United States Air Force veteran, the author of 14 novels, and the former editor of Insight Magazine. He served his country in Texas, Mississippi, Nevada, California, Turkey, and various other places in his four years of active service. He has written in several genres including, suspense/thrillers, drama, historical fiction, and contemporary fiction. His most successful novels are the Little Black Girl Lost stories, seven to date. The journey to publication was an arduous one and began at Robert S. Rogers High School during the Fall semester when his Composition teacher ridiculed him in front of his peers for a poorly written paper. Humiliated, he dropped the class, and no longer pursued education. Two decades later, he entered Owens Community College as it was more cost effective. Upon graduation, he planned to attend a fully accredited local university to get a degree in psychology as he never intended to be an author. That, too, was interrupted by a literature professor who challenged his ability to write a credible story early in the Fall semester. Unlike his high school experience, he accepted the challenge, picked up a pen that very day, and has been writing ever since. His failed past turned into fierce determination. He worked fulltime and was a fulltime student. He went on to graduate with honors and became the commencement speaker for the December graduating class. He lives in Toledo, Ohio.