Month: March 2014

Sneak Peek – “Dream Child”

Sneak Peek – “Dream Child”

I’m thrilled to be participating in the Sneak Peek blog hop (just click HERE to follow a whole bunch of other great indie authors who are giving sneak previews of their work!).

I want to show off a little bit of the third book in the Dream Series, “Dream Child” this morning…

DreamChild

 

This is from the prologue, when our heroine, who’s gotten somewhat used to her ability to step into other people’s dreams, receives a very troubling surprise about her daughter…

Sara looks down, and she’s surprised to see her belly rather than her feet.  She had no idea she would get this big this fast.  It wasn’t like this the last time, with Lizzie, she thinks.  But then, she reminds herself, Lizzie was just one – this time it’s two.

Sara walks into Lizzie’s room, where her daughter is sitting up in her bed, playing with a very old, very ratty stuffed rabbit. 

“Lizzie, honey?  Mommy needs to talk to you,” Sara says, and Lizzie sets Mister Pennington aside and looks up.  Sara sees her own eyes staring at her, something that she wonders if she’ll ever get used to.  She sits down on the bed, pats Lizzie on the head.  “You know your friend Marnie?”  Lizzie continues to look intently at Sara and nods her head up and down several times.  “You know how she has a baby brother?”  Lizzie continues to nod, not breaking eye contact with Sara.  Sara wonders if this was how she was with her mother.

She’s about to continue when someone else walks into Lizzie’s room.  Sara turns, but she knows before she does who she’ll see, and she knows – even though she’s never experienced this side of it before – exactly what’s going on.

Her daughter stands in the doorway, looking at Sara and another version of herself as well.  Sara doesn’t say anything; she doesn’t want to scare Lizzie.  Lizzie looks at herself briefly, but the image of herself seems to hold no interest.  She focuses on Sara, concentrating all her three-year-old attention span on her mother. 

“You’re so big, Mommy!”

 

***

 

Where’s Lizzie?  She was standing in the doorway.  She was – oh, my God.

She was seeing – she was inside – she saw me dreaming.  She’s got it just like I do.

I jump out of bed and I have to hold myself back from running into her room in a panic.  I don’t want to frighten her.  She can’t possibly realize what just happened.  She can’t know what it means.  I take several deep breaths, collect myself as best I can, and then I walk slowly, calmly, into her room.

She’s sitting up on her bed.  She fixes her gaze on me, just like she did in the dream, concentrating on me with all her might.  “Mommy, I had a funny dream.”

“I know you did, honey.  Can you tell me about it?”  I sit next to her, also just like the dream.

“You were big.  Really big.  You sat like now, on the bed.  You were really big.”

I hug her, kiss her forehead.  “That is a funny dream.  But I’m not big, not for real.  It was just a dream.”  I can’t even imagine how I’m going to explain what happened to her.  I’m concentrating on keeping my voice calm and level and soothing, and that takes all my effort.

My mother is watching us from the doorway, and I turn to look up at her.  “Everybody has funny dreams sometimes, honey,” she says soothingly.  She has no idea about funny dreams – in all this time I’ve never told her about mine.  I may have to now, if Lizzie has the same – talent, ability, whatever you want to call it – that I do.  But for now Mom’s oblivious to that.  She coos to Lizzie, “Do you want to try and go back to sleep?”

“No!” Lizzie answers.  So much for that.  “I’m hungry!”

Of course she is.  When is she not?  At least it’s something to think about besides her dream.  I – God, I haven’t thought about it in so long.  I haven’t had the dreams myself in more than four years, not since Dr. Morris and Maureen and all that madness.  Not once.  I never, ever imagined Lizzie having them – I don’t know what I’m going to do.

You can buy the book at Amazon, just by clicking HERE!  And it’s available as a fantastic Audible audiobook, too!  you can hear a ten minute sample, just click below…

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Book Launch – Margie Church and “Deep Enough to Bleed”

Book Launch – Margie Church and “Deep Enough to Bleed”

I’m thrilled to be hosting a stop on Margie Church’s tour for the launch of her new novel, “Deep Enough to Bleed”

First things first, here’s Margie…

Margie Church 3

Margie Church writes erotic romance novels with a strong suspense element, in keeping with her moniker: Romance with SASS (Suspense Angst Seductive Sizzle). Never expect the same thing twice in one of her books. She tackles subjects and conflicts that aren’t typical in romances. Life is complicated. People are, too. Marrying those concepts makes her work fascinating to read. Margie was 2011 GLBT Author of the Year, and her book, Hard as Teak, was named 2011 GLBT Book of the Year at Loves Romances Café. She is well-known for her BDSM erotic romances as well.

Margie lives in Minnesota, is married, and has two children. Some of her passions are music, poetry, walking on moonlit nights, fishing, and making people laugh. She also writes children’s books under the pen name, Margaret Rose.

Keep up with Margie:

Margie’s website: Romance with SASS

Margie’s blog: http://authormargiechurch.wordpress.com/

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/MargaretRChurch

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/MargieChurch

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MargieChurchAuthor

Pinterest:  https://pinterest.com/margiechurch/

 

And here’s the book!

Deep Enough To Bleed by Margie Church - 200

Orphaned on the brink of adulthood, Jolene must make decisions for herself and her younger, disabled brother, Adam. Decisions as painful as the blows they suffered at their father’s hands. Cutting herself is the only thing making Jolene feel something besides misery and worthlessness.

Jolene has never dated, yet quickly recognizes Brendan is a great guy. She wants a serious and intimate relationship, but is scared to trust him with the truth. Will he think she’s a freak if he learns of her secret compulsion? Will hearing about the horrible events from her past make him run?

Buy the book now!

Margie’s Amazon Author page: http://www.amazon.com/Margie-Church/e/B008H7HO4I/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1

Tirgearr Publishing: http://www.tirgearrpublishing.com/authors/Church_Margie/index.htm

 

Contest:  To celebrate the release of Deep Enough to Bleed, Margie is giving away one ebook copy to one lucky person who best answers why they’d read Deep Enough to Bleed.  Just leave your answer in the comments to this post (and be sure to include your email address, so Margie can contact the winner!)

 

And, last but not lesat, I’ve got a great interview with Margie:

 Who is your favorite author?

James Sandford. He is a local author who writes the Prey series. I’ve read most of these police serials. I can’t figure out why I haven’t met him yet!!
How do you describe your writing style?

Swift, to the point. You’ll feel like you’re present in the story.
Use no more than two sentences. Why should we read your book?

Deep Enough to Bleed is extremely well-written, gripping and modern. The lead character is a young woman who triumphs over horrific events and circumstances because she wants to, not because a guy motivates her.
Have any of your characters been modeled after yourself?

Not completely. I think that would be creepy. However, many of my lead characters have a personality trait, habit or behavior of mine. Jolene has my tenacity.
If you could exchange lives with any of your characters for a day which character would you choose and why?

Devon Mercer from Awakening/Avenging Allaire. He’s a rich, handsome and fascinating lawyer.
What books have most influenced your life?

Romances. When I was a teenager, they were an escape to places I couldn’t even imagine. I also developed a love for police serials, crime stories and psychological dramas. My moniker is Romance with SASS – Suspense Angst Seductive Sizzle because of this.
Who should play you in a film of your life?

Meryl Streep

 

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Book Launch! Danielle Rose-West and “Phoenix Rising”

Book Launch! Danielle Rose-West and “Phoenix Rising”

I’m thrilled to be bringing back an old friend who I’ve hosted before.  She’s Danielle Rose-West, and she’s got a brand new novel out: “Phoenix Rising”

Phoenix Rising Cover Version 2 copy 1

How can Fairy Godmothers help their charges find love in the modern world when nobody believes in magic anymore? Simple, they run a dating agency!

Rhys Spencer is determined to prevent his rich father from shutting down the charity he set up for kids in gangs, but he needs the money from a trust fund to do it. However, his grandmother has withheld the funds until he proves himself to be a mature, responsible person. To her mind, that means Rhys being in a serious relationship. Rhys turns to the Fairy Tale Match to find a woman he can use as a fake girlfriend. He will do all it takes to claim the money that will thwart his father’s selfish plans. The feisty woman the agency sets him up with, will not stand in his way.

Taylor Shore has more complications in her life than anyone should have to deal with. Guardian to her two half-siblings since their parents’ deaths, she has her hands full with their constant troublemaking. The last thing she needs is to win the prize in a dating agency competition she never entered. Furious to find her friend entered for her, Taylor is determined to send her prize packing. The guy that turns up to stay with her for three weeks, however, has other plans in mind. Refusing to be ordered from her house, the arrogant man offers her a deal she’d be a fool to refuse.

As Rhys inserts himself into Taylor’s problems, he begins to turn her life around. The angry fireworks between them gives way to a passionate love. Just as they find happiness, a vicious lie told by Taylor’s sister breaks them apart. Flo and Lotta have their work cut out for them to bring Rhys and Taylor back together. Time is against them and tragedy lurks on the horizon. Can Flo and Lotta save the day, or will Rhys and Taylor lose the precious love they have found forever….

You can watch the video book trailer here: http://youtu.be/Tt9CIdTNNNM

And here’s a little about Danielle…

Danielle Rose-West Rose picture

My name is Danielle Rose-West. I live in the United Kingdom with my family and my little dog, who is very much a part of the family. I have always been a dreamer and an incurable romantic with a vivid imagination. When I was a child, I was always reading. If anyone ever went looking for me, they usually found me curled up somewhere with a book! Most times when they spoke to me, I didn’t hear a word they said (my sister never believed me about this, but I honestly never heard her!). I was too wrapped up in the adventures I was reading.

When I was growing up, I wanted to be either an author or a librarian. I never made it as a librarian, but ended up in office work instead. It has taken a long time for me to finally realise my dream to write, but I’m finally here. I now write contemporary romance with a magical or suspenseful twist. I like things that have something a little out of the ordinary about them in both my reading and my writing preferences.

These days I spend most of my time plotting new books and characters as well as enjoying finding out where my characters are going to take me in the story. I don’t always know how everything will develop, sometimes they surprise me. Some of the things that happened in both my books, Wild Fire and Forever You, were unexpected surprises that suddenly hit me while I was writing or quite often when I was awake in the early morning hours. I love it when that happens. The whole book just comes together as if by magic (perhaps Lotta and Flo, my two fairy godmothers, have something to do with it!).

When I’m not writing and plotting, I love to spend time with my husband and family. I love to read, of course, and to watch enjoyable films or TV. I also love walking. It’s great exercise and helps me clear my mind.

My biggest wish is to entertain my readers and leave them with happy hearts at the end of the book and a wistful sigh of romantic bliss. If I achieve that for them, I’m happy!

You can follow Danielle all over the Internets…

Email: danielle.rosewest30@gmail.com

Blog: http://daniellerosewest.blogspot.co.uk/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Danielle-Rose-West/451370021626958

Twitter: https://twitter.com/DRoseWest

Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/daniellerosewes/pins/

Amazon Author Page US: https://www.amazon.com/author/daniellerosewest

Amazon Author Page UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Danielle-Rose-West/e/B00EF5GXSO

AND, last but definitely not least, she’s provided us with an excerpt from her brand-new novel…

Her jaw dropped open and she stared at him disbelievingly. “You can’t be serious. You want me to be a fake girlfriend and lie to your grandmother? Why?”

He folded his arms over his chest. “You didn’t want to tell me why you were hanging from a window earlier, and I don’t want to tell you why I need you to do this.” He gazed at her with one eyebrow cocked. “I’ll stay out of your business if you stay out of mine.”

“It’s hardly the same thing!” she protested. “You expect me to lie for you. I should at least know why. It’s a despicable thing to pull the wool over your own grandmother’s eyes. I knew there had to be some reason why you’d joined a dating agency! It’s because of this, whatever this is, isn’t it?” She didn’t even wait for a reply. “Why am I not surprised?”

Her tone told him she expected nothing less from him. Rhys contemplated her reaction. She was unlikely to help him just because he’d saved her from that fall. He needed to sweeten the deal.

“I tell you what, you do this for me and I’ll not only call us even on the favour front, but I’ll pay you five grand if you pull it off. What do you say?”

She gaped at him and shook her head. “I have to have heard you wrong. Did you say you’d pay me five grand to be your fake girlfriend?”

“I did,” he confirmed, “but only if you are convincing enough that my grandmother believes it.”

Taylor stared into space. He could almost see the wheels whirling round in her head. “I’m not sure how comfortable I am with this. Do you guarantee me that this is nothing untoward? I don’t want to find out that I’ve helped you do something illegal or immoral.”

“You wound me with your lack of trust.” He clasped a hand to his chest.

She snorted. “Like I care. Well?”

“I can guarantee you that nobody will be hurt by this, nor are my reasons immoral or illegal.” He held out a hand. “Do we have an agreement?”

“How do I know that you’ll pay me? I could do everything you ask and then you could simply renege on the deal.” She ignored his hand and cast him a challenging glare.

Taylor obviously had severe trust issues. Rhys could relate. “I will pay you half in good faith, now. You will receive the other half when the task is complete. Sound fair?”

Taylor gazed at him for several moments. Her lips twisted to one side and she chewed on the corner of her mouth. Finally, she held out her hand. “Okay, you have a deal. God knows what I’m getting myself into, but I’ll do it.”

 

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Book Tour – “Uncovering You” by Scarlett Edwards

Book Tour – “Uncovering You” by Scarlett Edwards

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Title – Uncovering You

Author: Scarlett Edwards

Genre – Dark Romance
Release Date – March 27th, 2014
Cover Reveal – February 18th, 2014
Series – first book in series.  Second will be out April 20th, 2014.
Synopsis-
When I wake up in a dark, unfamiliar room, I have no idea what’s waiting for me in the shadows. My imagination conjures up demons of the worst kind.
Reality is much worse:
A collar with no leash. A prison with no walls. And a life stripped of meaning.
 
I am presented with a vile contract and asked to sign. It outlines the terms of my servitude. The only information I have about my captor are the two small letters inked at the bottom:
J.S.
Armed with only my memories, I must do everything I can to avoid becoming ensnared in his twisted mind games. But in the end, it all comes down to one choice:
Resist and die.
Or submit, and sign my life away
GoodReads Link:
Excerpt:
“Lilly.”
Oh God. It’s him. There’s no mistaking that rich, masculine treble.
What’s he doing down here?
“M-Mr. Stonehart,” I stutter, turning. I curse my inability to hide my surprise. He totally caught me off-guard. I have to look up to meet his eyes. Then up some more.
The face that I find is so striking it should belong to a Greek god.
He’s younger than I expected. Late thirties, maybe early forties.
That means he started his company when he was younger than me!
Dark scruff lines his angular cheeks. His jet-black hair is styled in long, natural waves. My fingers itch to run through it.
Totally inappropriate.
He has a prominent nose that might be too big on a less imposing man, but on him, it’s perfect.
In short, he’s a package of the purest masculinity I’ve ever seen.
And then there are his eyes. Oh my God. His eyes. They pierce into me like honing missiles. They are the deepest black I have ever seen. They would be frightening if they weren’t so beautiful. When the light reflects a certain way, you catch a glimpse of the purple underneath.
They are like midnight sapphires. His eyes reveal a cunning intellect. Those eyes do not miss a thing.
Add all that to his towering height, his wide shoulders, his confident-yet-at-ease posture… and Stonehart cuts an intimidating figure.
My gaze darts to his left hand before I can stop it. No ring. He’s unmarried.
He looks down at me, expectantly. His eyes narrow ever so slightly, and I feel like I’m being dissected, measured up, and tucked away in some small corner of his brain. I imagine this is what a gemstone feels like under the magnifying class of the most critical appraiser.
Stonehart clears his throat. I come to with a start, realizing I haven’t said anything in ages. I open my mouth, but the capacity for speech seems like a foreign concept to my brain. “I—”
Somebody bumps into me from behind. I stagger forward. I’m not used to these shoes, so my heel steps the wrong way. My ankle twists under me, and I start to fall.
I don’t fall far. The hand still on my elbow tightens, and Stonehart pulls me into him.
I plaster myself onto the solid steel wall the man has for a body. I catch a scent of his cologne. It’s a deep, musky smell with a hint of charred spruce that is all male. It scrambles my thoughts even more.
“Sorry!” a rushed voice calls out. From the corner of my eye, I see the postman giving a hurried, apologetic wave.
Although the sequence lasts less than a second, it feels like an eternity. Pressed up against him like that, I don’t want to move. I know that I couldn’t have made a worse first impression.
Stonehart eases me off him with a firm yet gentle grip. Our eyes meet. I flush the most vibrant red. His fingers graze my forehead as he brushes a lock of hair out of my face.
Any tenderness I may have imagined vanishes when Stonehart takes out his cell. He long dials a key and growls an order. “Steven. See the delivery boy leaving right now? Have his building pass revoked.”
I gape. Stonehart keeps speaking. “Wait. I thought of one better. Bar his company from accessing the building.” There’s a pause. “For how long? Indefinitely. FedEx can talk to me when they have an improved employee selection program in place.”
The phone call gives me just enough time to compose myself. My heart’s still beating out of my chest. But nobody has to know that.
I speak without thinking. “You’re going to restrict the entire company from serving this building because of that?”
Stonehart humors me with an answer. “A company’s employees are its most important asset. Their behavior reflects the organization as a whole. If FedEx decided that clown is good enough for them, it tells me they’re sloppy. I do not do business with sloppy organizations.”
“What about the other tenants in the building?” I ask. “Won’t that piss them off?”
When I hear myself and realize how improper my question is, my cheeks flame red again.
Stonehart’s eyes darken, as if he cannot believe I asked that question. I open my mouth to apologize for my imprudence, hating the way my professional skills have evaporated into thin air. I’m cut off by a short, barked laugh.
“Miss Ryder.” He sounds amused. “I believe that is the most direct and honest question anybody has dared ask me in weeks.” He takes my elbow again and leads me to the elevators. I have to take two quick steps to match one of his long strides.
“Yes,” he continues. “They will be ‘pissed off.’ But the perk of owning a building—” he hits the elevator call button, “—is that you get to make executive decisions.” He gives me an unreadable glance as the doors open. “That is, at the risk of being questioned by inexperienced interns.”
If that isn’t a loaded remark, I don’t know what is. I flush scarlet red for the third time since I’ve met him. I’ve never had a man throw me so off balance.
The elevator is packed, for which I’m infinitely thankful. The trip up will give me some time to properlycompose myself.
Gratitude turns to panic when the crowd files out, meek as mice, when Stonehart steps in. None of the people waiting in the lobby follow us.
The doors close. I’m alone in here with him. My heart’s beating as fast as a hummingbird’s wings.
He catches me staring. “Impressed?” he asks.
“They know you,” I manage.
His dark eyes flash with amusement. “Astute.”

Chapter One

October 2013. Date unknown.
(Present day)
A faint hiss, like the sound of an angry cat, jars me from my sleep.
I open my eyes to pure blackness. I blink, trying to get my bearings. A vague memory forms in the back of my mind, too far away to reach.
Why can’t I see anything?
My breath hitches. Panic rips through my body as the horrifying answer comes to me:
I’m blind!
I scramble onto hands and knees and desperately claw at the dark, searching for something, anything, for my senses to latch onto.
A dim overhead light comes on.
Relief swells inside.
I plop back on my butt and close my eyes, taking deep breaths to dispel the rush of adrenaline released by my body. When my heart’s not beating quite so fast, I open my eyes again.
The light’s gotten brighter. I look up at the source. It’s far above me, like a dull, miniature sun. It spreads a little sphere around me, maybe ten feet in diameter. Past that, everything is swallowed by darkness.
An irksome memory keeps gnawing at me. But my head is too heavy to remember. I feel… strange. Kind of like I’m hung over, but without the telltale pounding between my ears.
Cautiously, I try to stand. My limbs are slow to react. They feel heavy, too, like they’ve been dipped in wet clay. I steady myself. Only when I’m satisfied that my knees won’t give out, do I strain my ears for that hissing sound again.
It’s coming from somewhere behind me. I turn back—and nearly smash my head on a gleaming white pillar.
What the hell?
The sound is forgotten as I reach out and brush tentative fingers against the pillar’s surface. It’s cool to the touch. Smooth, too. I put my other hand on it. If I had to guess, I’d say it was made of marble. But what is a lone, white marble pillar doing in the middle of this room?
The memory is like a gong going off inside my head. But trying to reach it is like grasping at a smooth, slippery stone at the bottom of an aquarium. Just when I think I have it, it slips through my fingers and falls even farther out of reach.
I walk a slow, measured circle around the pillar. If I tried wrapping my arms around it, I doubt if I could even span half the circumference. Something far in the back of my mind tells me I should be alarmed. I look behind me and frown. By what? A dark room?
No, you idiot. By the reason you’re here!
My eyes widen. The reason I’m here? I don’t… I don’t remember.
I wince and bring one hand to my temple. Why am I having so much trouble remembering?
I gasp as a second gruesome thought hits me. Did I lose my memory? Do I have… amnesia?
I sink down with my back to the pillar. Desperation starts to take over. I hold my head between my knees and close my eyes to focus.
My name is Lilly Ryder. I was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 17th, 1990.
My eyes pop open. Joyous tears form in the corners. I do remember! I take a deep breath and try to keep going.
I was raised by my mom. I do not know my dad…
Suddenly, all my childhood memories come streaming back. Moving around as a kid. Never staying in one place longer than six months. All the cities I’ve lived in. All the apartments my mom and I called home. Even the revolving door of her boyfriends. There was Dave, and Matthew. Tom, and Steve. There was…
I shake my head to stop myself. I don’t doubt my memory anymore. But that still does not explain why I have absolutely no recollection of this place, or how I got here.
I push myself back up. The spotlight above me has gotten progressively brighter. The little enclosure of light doesn’t feel quite so tight anymore. I trail my eyes up the length of the pillar. I can’t see where it ends because of the light. But I can tell it’s tall, at least twenty, maybe twenty-five feet…
There’s also something about its surface that calls out to me. My hands itch to run over the smooth stone. A giggle bubbles up as I picture myself stroking it. The column is quite phallic.
I waver at the unfamiliar thought and have to catch my balance against the beam.
Focus, Lilly! I chide myself.
I have no idea where that thought came from. I have never been overtly sexual.
Nothing feels right. The fog that’s heavy on my mind is starting to lift, but not yet enough for me to understand—or remember—where the hell I am. This place is unfamiliar. I know that much. But right now, I feel almost like a surgery patient whose anesthetic kinked out: fully awake mentally, but completely impaired physically.
I go back to my memories. I can remember high school. I remember college. That’s where I spent the last three years of my life, isn’t it? Yes. Yes, it is.
“Hello?” I call out. My voice echoes into the surrounding gloom. “Is anybody there?”
I wait for an answer. All I get is the hollow repetition of my own voice.
anybody there, there, there…
I spent the last three years in college… but that’s not where I think I am right now. No. I shake my head. I knowthat’s not where I am. My memories are fuzzier the closer I bring them to today. Time feels… skewed. Freshman year’s easy to remember. So is sophomore, and most of junior… but things get weird toward the end.
I… finished junior year, didn’t I? Yes. Yes, I did. And then…
And then I took an internship in distant California for the summer, I remember with another gasp.
Suddenly, my mind is crystal clear. That pressing memory hurtles into view. It’s from yesterday. The last thing I recall, I was alone in a booth at an upscale restaurant. The waiter brought me a glass of wine. I took a few sips, contemplating my future….
Oh, God! Fear wraps a stranglehold around my neck.
The restaurantThe wine.
I’ve been drugged!
I can’t breathe. A suppressing tightness constricts my throat. I feel dizzy, and terrified, and most of all… ashamed.
Holy shit, Lilly, way to look out for yourself! My semi-mad inner dialogue pans with a generous dollop of sarcasm.
I’ve always known about the dangers of sick men preying on unsuspecting girls. I just never thought I’d fall victim to it.
I’ve been on my own since I turned eighteen, after the final falling out with my mother. I’ve always been proud of how well I managed. Even the shabby holes I’ve lived in while saving up college tuition were an improvement over living with her and all her low-life boyfriends. At least there, I had autonomy.
I’ve dealt with landlords selling crack on the side and the junkies they attract. Always, I’ve been known as independent, and strong—maybe offputtingly so. But, those were the character traits I had to develop to have any chance of getting ahead.
And all that lead to what? To this? To letting my guard down for one night and ending up… here?
Wherever “here” is, I think to myself.
The shock of the revelation has subsided a bit. I push off from the pillar. I can figure this out. I take a deep breath and look at my hands and feet. I am not bound. I pick at my clothes. They are the same ones I wore last night.
Do you know what might be lurking in the darkness?
I shove the meddlesome voice down. I don’t need more worries. Not now.
Carefully, I place one foot in front of the other and edge to the outer reaches of the light. The strange hissing noise has gone away. I don’t know when that happened. Maybe it was in my head the entire time.
I strain my eyes, trying to pierce the surrounding darkness. It’s impossible. I reach out with one hand and find nothing but air. This far from the pillar, I can barely see my outstretched hand.
“Hello?” I try again. “Who’s there?”
There’s no answer.
What kind of madman would do something like this? I wonder. What is hidden in the shadows?
Without warning, my imagination starts to run wild. Torture devices? Bondage equipment? Something… worse?
Snap out of it! I tell myself firmly.
I refuse to give in to despair, even if my entire self-preservation mechanism is on high alert. Despair is what whoever brought me here wants me to feel.
I will not succumb to that.
I look down at the floor. It is made of some expensive stone. I kneel down and brush my hand over the large, square tiles. They feel solid. Sturdy. They don’t belong in a dingy basement or a dirty warehouse.
Somehow, that thought strengthens me. Things aren’t quite as bad as they could be.
I stand up and peer into the black. I glance back at the safety of my pillar. If I venture past the light, I can always find my way back.
Go slow, I warn myself. Who knows what might be waiting for me out there?
I’ve seen the horror movies. Just because I don’t get the dungeon vibes here does not mean I’m not in one.
Haltingly, my foot reaches past the edge.
A thousand bright lights flood the room. I gasp and shy back, shielding my eyes on instinct.
After a few seconds, I lower my arm, blinking through the sharp pain that shoots through my head. I can almost groan. Light sensitivity, too?
Then I see the room.
Holy shit.
It’s huge. Massive. It must be at least five thousand square feet of pristine, flat space. I’m smack dab in the middle of it all.
The lights come from embedded ceiling lamps high overhead. Three of the walls, far away from me, are decorated with black and white abstract paintings created in bold brush strokes. The fourth wall is shielded by a heavy red curtain. The entire floor is made of rich, creamy white tiles reminiscent of steamed milk.
The ceiling is so high above me I almost feel like I’m in a cathedral. It’s made of exquisite dark oak beams.
But this is no church.
I do a slow turn. Something about this is all wrong.
So wrong.
Why am I here? What is behind the curtain? Other than the massive pillar and the paintings, there is nothing in the room.
If I’m being kept prisoner, why am I unbound? Why waste so much space on me?
I cup my hands around my mouth and yell.
“HEY! Anybody? Where am I?”
As before, I’m greeted with silence.
I take one more careful look around. If I got in, there must be a way out.
My eyes dart to the curtain.
Behind there.
I start toward it, my bare feet making determined slaps against the cold floor. I’ve not even gone ten paces toward it when I feel a small tug on my ankle.
I stop and look down. I discover a thread, so thin it’s almost translucent, tied loosely around my foot. The other end is attached to the base of the pillar.
I bend down and finger it.
What on earth is this?
The thread looks like it should snap with the smallest amount of force. I wrap my hands around it and tug.
It doesn’t give.
I frown, and apply a little more effort.
This time, it breaks in a clean cut.
I shake my head as I straighten.
Strange.
I half-expected something to happen when I did that. Alarms to blare, the lights to go off, something.
Nothing.
That’s when I notice a small white envelope leaning against the pillar. It’s right where the thread connects. In fact, it blends so well with the marble that I’m sure I would have missed it were it not for the string.
Exploration forgotten for now, I pick up the envelope. Maybe it will give some clue about what the fuck is going on.
It’s made of heavy paper. A wax stamp seals it, imprinted with a two-faced drama mask that I would find unnerving no matter where I saw it.
The only time I saw a wax-sealed envelope was when my ex got tapped by the Spade and Grave at Yale. I can understand the need for antiquity in New Haven. It makes no sense here.
My finger slips under the flap. I carefully ease it open. A foreboding sense of doom swirls around me as I pull the folded letter out.
I stare at it for a long minute. This is all so surreal. It feels like being caught in a bad dream. Once, I play myself right into my captor’s hands.
My natural inclination to resist, to fight back, tells me to tear the paper up without another glance. But that would be madness. The only clue I have to my whereabouts might be contained inside.
My thirst for information gets the better of me. I sit on the floor, cross my legs, and slowly unfold the paper.
It’s handwritten in swift, flowing blue ink. The rows of words make perfect strides across the page. Precision is the first word that comes to mind to describe the owner of the handwriting.
I set the sheet on the floor in front of me, lean forward and begin to read:
Two items require your immediate attention.
 1.   You may spuriously assume you are being held here against your will. Nothing could be farther from the truth. You are a guest. As a guest, you retain full ability to leave my home at any time. The door behind the drapes shall remain open for the duration of your stay. There are no physical barriers to speak of—though I would advise you to read to the end of this letter before making decisions based on a flawed understanding of your situation.
 2.   You may have already noted the new adornment around your neck. If so, well done! I applaud—
Adornment? I stop reading. What adornment?
I bring my hands to my neck. I feel the unfamiliar shape against my skin. Why hadn’t I noticed it before?
I scamper closer to the marble pillar to try to make out my reflection. I can’t see much, but I can make out the “adornment”. There’s a black collar around my throat. I touch it with one hand.
It’s smooth and flat. It’s made of some kind of matted plastic, like the edges of a computer screen. It’s not tight or uncomfortable.
It frightens me. If it warranted a place in the letter, there must be something to it. I need to get it off.
My fingers dart around the edges, seeking the clasp that opens it.
I don’t find one.
The collar is smooth inside and out. It feels like a single piece of plastic. I trail one finger around the rim on the inside, and, finding no discrepancies, do the same on the outside. Again, I feel nothing.
There’s no crack, no edge, nothing to indicate how it was put around my neck.
I jam all my fingers between my skin and the plastic and pull with all my might. The collar flexes ever-so-slightly but doesn’t give.
Dammit! I cry out and try again.
I pull with all the strength God gave me. It’s not enough. I try again, and again, and again.
Nothing.
I realize I’m panting at this point. The exertion has me almost hyperventilating.
I drop my hands. It’s just a stupid, harmless little piece of plastic. Why do I want it off so much?
Because the idea of having anything foreign touch your skin is repulsive.
The voice is right, as always. But what can I do? The collar is bound to be part of the mind game in which I’m an unwitting participant. Reacting the way I just did is probably exactly what my captor wants. He—and I am certain it’s a “he” now, from the wording of the letter—wants me to feel terrified.
I will not give him the pleasure. I return to the letter and continue to read:
…applaud your perspicacity! You should know, however, that it is not an ordinary collar. Contained inside is a small positioning chip and two electrodes. They become activated the moment you stray outside your designated safe zone.
The string around your foot offers a conservative estimation of the distance you may roam past the marble column. Stay close, and you will remain untroubled. I am told that the electric shock the collar provides, while not lethal, can be quite unpleasant.
Holy fuck!
My spine goes absolutely straight and I forget to breathe. Now the collar has meaning. It feels like a live serpent wrapped around my neck.
My eyes are wide as I look down to my foot. The piece of string is still there, but it’s not connected to the one linked to the pillar.
I’d ripped it like a moron.
How far do I dare go? I’ll have to retie the string—unless I find a way to get the collar off my neck, first.
Another thought occurs to me:
Maybe this is a bluff? Does the collar really have an electrode in it? It’s so thin. Where would it draw power from?
I stand up. Assuming the collar is rigged, and the pillar is the center point… but that’s just what he wants me to believe, isn’t it? The letter claims there’s a door behind the drapes. It could be my path to freedom. I would have to be an idiot to stay here without testing the boundary myself.
I can’t trust anything the letter says. But, I can’t give in to despair, either. My only choice is to contest everything that’s thrown at me. If this is supposed to be a battle of the wills, the guy chose the wrong girl to mess with.
I pick up the remainder of the string and hold it in my fist. I square my shoulders to the long, drawn curtain. I hold my head high. My free hand itches to tug at the collar, but I keep it still. If my captor is watching me—which I’m sure he is, because I’m positive there are cameras hidden all around me—I will not give him the satisfaction of seeing me hesitate.
I take a deep breath and start toward the curtained wall. My strides are strong and purposeful. I will not waver. I will not turn back. Fear of a little shock will not keep me from testing the true limits of this prison.
The string goes taut, and I stop.
So far, so good.
It’s the next few steps that will determine everything.
I glance at the floor to mark my position. So, he expects to keep me in an invisible cage, does he? A cage of my own imagination?
Yeah, tough luck.
I drop the string and take one solid step forward.
Nothing happens.
I risk one more.
Nothing happens.
The corner of my lip twitches up in a hint of a smile. I called his bluff. But, I’m not home free yet. The veiled wall is another thirty-odd paces away from me.
I take two more steps forward, and, when nothing happens, start to walk more briskly.
My stroll is cut short by a sharp little zap beneath my left ear.
I tense and wait for more.
Well, color me surprised.
It looks like the collar does have bite, after all. When a second jolt doesn’t come, I can’t stop my smile from becoming a satisfied smirk. I knew the collar couldn’t possible have enough juice to hurt me. Where would the battery go?
Extremely pleased with myself, I venture onward, toward the curtain and its promise of freedom.
The violent torrent of electricity blindsides me. One second I’m on my feet, the next I’m writhing on the floor.
The current pours into me. I thrash about like a grounded fish. Fierce convulsions rock my body. And all I know is pain, pain, pain.
I can feel the source of it, snug around my neck. I’m helpless to fight the onslaught. My head flails about on the ground, throwing hair into my face. A high-pitched squeal sounds in my ears and I desperately hope that pathetic sound is not me.
My eyes roll up and all goes black.
6941559
About the Author
I’m Scarlett Edwards. I wrote my first book as a college sophomore. After six months of edits, it made its debut as Yours to Savor.

 

That was at the start of 2013. I’ve written more books since then. You can find them all here.

 

It’s funny how quickly life changes. I used to think I’d need a degree to get a “Real Job.” Then I wrote a few books, they got somewhat popular, and now I’m living the life as a full-time romance author.

 

Thanks to all my readers for making my dreams come true!

 

Stalker Links

 

Giveaway Details
10 Uncovering You audiobooks
20 – Signed paperbacks of Uncovering You
50 – Digital copies of all of Scarlett’s books (Change of Heart, Change of Heart Part 2, Never Let Go, Yours to Savor, Uncovering You)

 

Blog Tour organized by:
5n4sa0

 

 

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Indie Author Spotlight – Jamie Eubanks and “Hidden Doors, Secret Rooms”

Indie Author Spotlight – Jamie Eubanks and “Hidden Doors, Secret Rooms”

I’ve got another great indie author to introduce to you today – she’s Jamie Eubanks…

JAEubanks

 

“As a child, the family would go on these long cross-country drives. And believe me when I say it can get very boring, in a maddening kind of way, for a young girl to share the backseat of a car with two other children for 8 hours or more, every day, for a couple of weeks. To keep the boredom away, as we drove down the road, I’d stare out through the car window and pick out a house. As I continued to stare at the passing scenery, I’d make up scenarios in my head, invent an entire family to reside in that house, and let my imagination conjure up personalities, conflicts, giving the characters not only a present, but a history, and try to picture what they did with their days, how they lived their lives.

“Writing, to me, is a natural progression of those childhood daydreams that kept me sane during those long trips across country.”

When not working was a writer or licensed private investigator, Jamie can usually be found at the Red Dragon Karate studio in Azusa, CA, and at www.Facebook.com/JAEubanks1

And here’s her book…

Hidden_Doors,_Secret_Cover

 

Jillian Braedon possesses a secret so explosive that she must be silenced. On the run with her five-year-old daughter, stranded in the middle of a blizzard and critically injured, Jill sends little Valerie off into the raging storm alone. The child stumbles onto the property of retired musician-turned-recluse, John Mills, begging for help. John soon finds himself caught up in their torment, and face-to-face with the pursuing covert agents, who will do anything to destroy the secret, and silence everyone involved.
REVIEWS:

Superbly crafted and flawlessly executed, Eubanks doles out both plot and back-story in small doses, expertly keeping readers turning page after page…This is a phenomenal first novel; an excellent read for anyone who loves mystery, and would-be writers who want to learn exactly how it’s done.” – KIRKUS REVIEWS

“This brisk and original cat-and-mouse thriller exceeds expectations
with unpredictable results…
Fans of mysteries and thrillers will find that 

this book exceeds any expectations they may have had going in, primarily
due to its unconventional plot line.” – CLARION REVIEW
Pretty cool, yes?  You can buy it, right now…

 

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Sneak Peek Sunday – “Dream Reunion”

Sneak Peek Sunday – “Dream Reunion”

It’s Sunday, and also Sneak Peek Sunday!  You can follow along with a whole bunch of other great indie authors, all of who are offering up sneak peeks of their books, RIGHT HERE.

But since you’re here, you probably want to see a sneak peek from me.  And I’ve got one for you: this is from the sixth book in the Dream Series, DREAM REUNION…

I knew this day was coming.  I’m actually surprised it took as long as it did.  It’s been nearly three months since I put Lydia Saunders into a coma, and on Monday evening, four nights ago, she died.

I’m officially a killer now, even if no one outside my family knows it, or ever will.  I thought I had made peace with it.  When I confronted her inside of Brian’s dream, she would have killed me if I hadn’t acted.  I did everything I could.  I offered to let her go – to forget about everything she’d already done – if she just agreed to stop interfering in any more dreams.  She refused.  More than that, she would have killed me – by that point, she had already wounded me – if I didn’t shoot back.

I know it was the only choice.  If I hadn’t done it, I’d have been the one in the coma – the one who died.  And she would have had free rein to destroy more lives – including my husband and my children.  I couldn’t let that happen.

Even so, it’s been tearing me up all week.  Brian tried to convince me that the hour of uncontrollable crying followed by two hours of vomiting on Wednesday night was all due to hormones and morning sickness, but he knew better just as well as I did.

Later, he admitted it, and – like always – he said the perfect thing to me. After he helped clean me up and we were lying in bed, he told me, “I hate to see you beating yourself up, but you – you wouldn’t be the woman I love if you didn’t.  You were right, and you saved all of us.  But it still shouldn’t be easy, or something you ever feel good about.  That’s the whole difference between you and her.”  And then he kissed me.

He was right.  I killed another human being.  I can’t ever let myself forget that, no matter what justification I had to do it.  If I do, that’s a big step down the road to becoming Lydia – or something even worse…

You can buy the book on Amazon…right here!

 

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Winter’s Tale – What Could Have Been (part 2)

Winter’s Tale – What Could Have Been (part 2)

Following up on my post a couple of weeks ago about the “Winter’s Tale” movie, and the many things wrong with it, I promised to go into detail as to how I would have done it differently.  As with the previous post, there are spoilers aplenty here (and very little in the way of comprehension if you’re not familiar with the book).

The first thing I have to admit is, I’m going to take liberties with the book, just as the actual film did – but hopefully to better effect. So let’s begin.  First, though, let’s recap our main cast:

Peter Lake – Tom Hiddleston (he was up for the part in the first place, and a much better choice than Colin Farrell)

Beverly Penn – Jessica Brown-Findlay (just as in the actual film)

Pearly Soames – Russell Crowe (again, as in the actual film)

Cecil Woolley/Mr. Cecil Mature – Jonah Hill (it’s kind of a comic role, and Hill fits it physically, too)

Isaac Penn – Anthony Hopkins

The Very Reverend Mootfowl – William Hurt (since I fired him from the role of Isaac Penn that he had in the actual film, it’s only fair – and he’d work better in this role anyway)

Jackson Mead – James Cromwell (he’s got the gravitas to play the role, plus he’s 6’6″, which is helpful considering the description of Mead in the book)

Virginia Gamely – Jennifer Connolly (as in the actual film)

Hardesty Marratta – Bradley Cooper (he’s the Big New Thing in Hollywood, and he can actually act, so why not?)

Sarah Gamely – Kim Novak (she hasn’t acted on screen in 20+ years, but this is fantasy anyway, so let’s go with it.  Besides, she’s only going to be on-screen for two minutes)

Willa Penn – Eva Marie Saint (no reason to recast her from the actual film)

 

We open the film following a ragged man, who we’ll learn a little later is Peter Lake, into a movie theater, in the year 1916 (we’ll have an on-screen title to let the audience know the date).  We get a view of WWI-era New York City as he does so, and then, once he’s inside and seated, the theater’s screen fills up our screen, too, and we see what Peter’s seeing (this comes from the chapter titled “Aceldama”, at the very end of Part One of the novel).  On the movie screen is an almost unbelievable portrait, entitled “The City in the Third Millennium”  It’s a magical view of a futuristic city with buildings stretching above the clouds, tiny lighted vehicles flying to and fro, etc.  It’s clearly New York, and yet it’s also clearly not precisely the New York we know. That image fades, replaced by another image, this one almost apocalyptic, entitled “As the City of the Future Burns”, and that then fades out, into the credits. Over this scene, we have a Voiceover (Eva Marie Saint, although the audience doesn’t yet know who she is) narrating about the Cloud Wall, and the way that it is a physical representation of the invisible connections between past, present and future…

(Why open with this? The movie scene seems like it could be easily dropped, but I think it’s a good way to set up the themes of connections across time, and also to firmly emphasize that this story takes place in a fantastical version of New York. And we’ll revisit The City in the Third Millennium a little later)

We cut to the credits, which play over a short montage of a ship (the City of Justice) coming into New York Harbor.  We see it dock, and a procession of poorly-dressed, half-starved passengers emerge onto an island – heading to be processed for immigration.  We focus in on a young couple with a baby.  In quick, dialogue-less shots, we follow them in, and then back out again to the ship (a title tells us that this is happening in 1880).  Back aboard ship, the couple despairs, until the father kicks in a door and sees a miniature model of the ship.  He takes the model, and turns it into a tiny vessel in which to place their son.  The couple lower their child into the water, in hopes he will find a place in the new world that they cannot enter (we’ll take the dialogue straight from the book as they say goodbye to their son, the baby who will become Peter Lake). This will take up maybe 5 minutes.

(this is a little out of order from the book, but the book itself jumps around with flashbacks and digressions, so I’m not too worried about it)

Now we have another montage – Peter drifts into the Bayonne Marsh, where he’s found by the native Baymen and raised as one of them for his first twelve years (definitely including the brief scene where Peter first learns to use a sword), and culminating in the Baymen sending him away, to Manhattan.  There are more very quick scenes showing his arrival, meeting the spielers and eventually being picked up by the police and brought to Reverend Overweary’s home.

(the book handles this fairly quickly, too.  The one thing I’m dropping is Anarinda – and the sexual content of the scenes with the spielers.  I don’t think we really need it, and considering how old Peter is in these scenes, it would get us an NC-17 rating, so out it goes)

We slow down a bit here, to showcase Peter learning to become a mechanic, and meeting Cecil Woolley and working under the Very Reverend Mootfowl. The montage ends with the failed “audition” with Jackson Mead, followed immediately by Mootfowl’s apparent suicide. This, plus the previous montage, takes up 10-15 minutes or so.

(I think we absolutely need Peter’s training as a mechanic.  And if we’re going to include Jackson Mead later, we need to set him up, as well as Mootfowl.  And it gives us a bit of humor, with Cecil’s disastrous efforts to try and carry out Jackson Mead’s instructions in the audition)

Now Peter and Cecil meet up with Pearly Soames. We keep the scene where they meet and are recruited verbatim from the book, and then another montage as Peter becomes a Short Tail and learns the various arts of burglary and petty crime. It’s not a long sequence, and it leads into the Short Tails meeting in the Cemetery of the Honored Dead, Pearly’s plan to steal a ship full of gold and build his golden room, and Peter’s betrayal of his boss. This is such a fantastic scene, we have to keep it in. We cut straight from the meeting, to the fight on the Bayonne Marsh where Pearly realizes Peter has double-crossed him to protect the Baymen. This takes 20-25 minutes.

(this was a huge failing of the actual film – the Cemetery of the Honored Dead is so cinematic, I can’t believe they didn’t include it.  And it establishes Pearly as very clearly insane, which I think is an important point to bring out.  Yes, he’s a villain, but he’s also got quite a lot going on that’s worth watching)

And now, after 40-50 minutes, we’re back at chapter one, with the Short Tails chasing Peter, and him being rescued by Athansor, the white horse. We quickly move to Peter’s plan to pull off one big robbery and then use the horse to run to ground away from Manhattan, where the urbanified Short Tails generally don’t venture from.

(if at all possible, we keep the Oyster Bar scene, because I love the dialogue between Peter and the lawyer).

This big score, of course, will be the Penn mansion, and we follow the book exactly as Peter meets Beverly Penn. Their courtship follows the book, and they journey to the Penn house upstate in Lake of the Coheeries. We’ll edit a bit there for pacing, but keep the first meeting between Peter and Isaac Penn. Then it’s back to Manhattan. We’ll have the scene at the Penn mansion where Beverly distracts the attention of the Chief of Police from Peter by showing him the new painting in the basement. This, of course, is The City in the Third Millennium from the opening, this time in glorious color. Then we have Peter and Beverly’s argument over whether she’s well enough to go out dancing on New Year’s Eve. Of course, they go, and Beverly’s dancing (just as in the book) transfixes Pearly Soames, who’s there to kill Peter. Beverly dies shortly thereafter, and we go straight from the funeral to a heartbroken and defeated Peter wandering the streets of Manhattan, and finally walking out of the movie theater from the opening scene.  The very next scene is Peter’s confrontation with Pearly on the Brooklyn Bridge, where he and Athansor jump off and vanish into the white Cloud Wall. This all takes 30-40 minutes.

(for the most part, we keep things as they happen in the book.  What do we lose?  Peter’s trip back to the Bayonne Marsh; Jayga the servant and her story to the police; the introduction to Beverly and the Penns, and the optometrist, and some of what happens at Lake of the Coheeries.  Losing that first scene with the Penns is a hard choice, but I kind of like the idea of the audience first meeting Beverly at the same time that Peter does.  And we can move the dialogue about her disease into the boat/sleigh journey up to Lake of the Coheeries.  We also have to lose Peter’s visit to the hospital, and shorten or cut out most of his post-Beverly scenes).

So that’s the first half of the film. We’re somewhere between 70 and 90 minutes, and not quite halfway done.  This is where we have our intermission, and when we return, we’re in the final years of the 20th century.

We open the second half of the film in Lake of the Coheeries, with Virginia Gamely and her mother Sarah.  We see Virginia dream, and in the dream she’s in Manhattan, in the Penn mansion, and a man and a woman are leading her down stairs into the basement to view a painting (the City in the Third Millennium, of course).  Meanwhile, in Manhattan, Hardesty Marratta is also dreaming, and in his dream, the same woman Virginia dreamed about is leading Hardesty and Virginia down the stairs to see the painting, as well.  This is maybe 5-10 minutes.

(this is a change/addition to the book.  I think, sadly, we need to lose Hardesty’s journey across the country and visit to Lake of the Coheeries.  But we sill need his connection to Virginia, and this seems like an efficient way to handle that.  I hate losing Jesse Honey, and the poker game on the train, but we only have so much time to tell the story.  We’re also dropping Praeger de Pinto and giving some of his role to Hardesty).

Back in Lake of the Coheeries, Virginia wakes up, remembers her dream, and knows she needs to go to Manhattan.  She and her baby Martin set off, and we follow her in a montage as she travels on skates and by boat, until she gets to Grand Central Station.  There she meets the woman from her dream, Jessica Penn, and Jessica invites Virginia to join her at dinner with the staff of The Sun.  There she meets Hardesty, who’s the editor in chief, and all the other editors.  We’ll keep this scene as close to the book as possible, but we’ll include Asbury Gunwillow and Christiana in the scene, too

(I don’t want to lose Asbury and Christiana entirely, but we don’t have the time to tell their full story)

From dinner, we follow Virginia, Hardesty and Jessica back to the Penn mansion, where Virginia will stay for the night.  Also at the mansion is the owner of The Sun, Willa Penn, who suggests that Jessica show Virginia and Hardesty the painting in the basement.  That happens exactly as in both Virginia and Hardesty’s dreams.  This, combined with the previous scene, takes 10 minutes or so.

(as noted above, I have no problem with using Willa to replace Harry Penn in the story.  It doesn’t hurt anything and lets us use Eva Marie Saint, so why not?)

We get a montage of Virginia and Hardesty’s romance, 5 minutes or so, including their marriage, the birth of Abby and ending with the 150th anniversary celebration of The Sun, with the reappearance of the Cloud Wall.

Next we jump to later that night, and Peter Lake plummeting from the sky into New York Harbor to be retrieved by a ferry and its crew.  We follow Peter back to shore and then to the hospital, and we keep those scenes as they are in the book, with one addition.  After the red-haired doctor knocks him out, he dreams, first a celestial vision of Beverly, and then a more realistic vision, of a white horse crashing into the sea just as he did, and a young girl – a young Christiana – running into the water to the horse).  Then Peter wakes up, realizes he’s not in 1916 anymore, and sees the modern city for the first time.  This is probably 10 minutes.

(again, I’m using dreams to link characters together.  It’s kind of a cliche, but I don’t see any other way to do it quickly)

At this point, we’re somewhere between 100 and 125 minutes.  With a goal of 185 minutes for our running time, that gives us 60-85 minutes to tell the rest of the story.  Onwards!

We have a few quick shots of Peter’s life after he gets out of the hospital, living on the streets, becoming a derelict.  Then we join the staff of the Sun (including Hardesty, Virginia and Willa Penn) at Petipas, where they’re having a monthly dinner.  They’re interrupted by an encounter with Peter Lake, who’s barely recognizable at this point (exactly as in the book), and then, after he departs, they’re all stunned by the arrival of Jackson Mead’s great ship.  We see him on the bridge, along with Cecil and the Reverend Mootfowl.

 

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Book Launch – “Blood is Thicker” by Suz deMello

Book Launch – “Blood is Thicker” by Suz deMello

Blood is Thicker a short story
(previously Immortal Hunters)

Genre: Paranormal action-adventure.

A century-old vampire, Rama is used to shadows and loneliness.
She uses the name Hestia White and lives in a coastal town working as a private investigator. If some bad guys disappear on her shift, no one cares…until John van Helsing shows up. Bearing the name of the vamps’ greatest foe, he interferes in her case and in her life.

Friend, lover or enemy?

  cover

Buy it here: http://www.ellorascave.com/blood-is-thicker.html

author

Best-selling, award-winning author Suz deMello, a.k.a Sue Swift, has written seventeen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica, comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense, plus a number of short stories and non-fiction articles on writing. A freelance editor, she’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Liquid Silver Books and Ai Press, where she is currently Managing Editor. She also takes private clients.

Her books have been favorably reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus and Booklist, won a contest or two, attained the finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists.

A former trial attorney, her passion is world travel. She’s left the US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas. She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.

–Find her books at http://www.suzdemello.com

–For editing services, email her at suzswift@yahoo.com

–Befriend her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sueswift, and visit her group page at  https://www.facebook.com/redhotauthorscafe

–She tweets her reading picks @ReadThis4fun and @Suzdemello

–Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/suzdemello/

–Goodreads: http://bit.ly/SuzATGoodreads

–Her current blog is http://www.fearlessfastpacedfiction.com

 

 

 

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Book Launch! K.C. Sprayberry and “Evil Eyes”

Book Launch! K.C. Sprayberry and “Evil Eyes”

Evil Eyes Banner

 

I’m happy to be hosting the launch of K.C. Sprayberry’s new novel, “Evil Eyes”

She’s been a guest here before, but I’ll re-introduce her just the same…

me

 

KC Sprayberry started writing young, first as a diarist, and later through an interest in English and creative writing. Her first experience with publication came when she placed third in The Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge contest while in the Air Force, but her dedication to writing came after she had her youngest child, now in his senior year of high school.

Her family lives in Northwest Georgia where she spends her days creating stories about life in the south, and far beyond. More than a dozen of her short stories have appeared in several magazines. Five anthologies feature other short stories. She has three books that are Amazon best sellers: Softly Say Goodbye, Who Am I?, and Mama’s Advice. Her other novels available are: Take Chances, The Ghost Catcher, Family Curse … Times Two, Secret From The Flames, Where U @, The Wrong One, and Grace.

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And here’s the book!

EvilEyes300 cover

 

Will Lisa survive Fred’s evil intent?

Lisa is so ready for a break from the grueling first semester of college. Along with five other friends, she returns to Landry, and hopes to have nothing but fun. Within days, one of the group is the victim of a vindictive stalker, and Lisa herself is now in the man’s sights. No matter what she does, she can’t shake this person.

Fred has a little problem, but he figures he can take care of it himself, if he achieves fame with his folk rock band, Olney-Oak Lane Sounds. Then he happens to see this beautiful woman, who turns out to be just like every other woman he’s met. He takes care of her, and is immediately drawn to Lisa. No one will get between Fred and Lisa, absolutely no one.

On Christmas Eve, Lisa has to fight for her life and sanity after Fred kidnaps her. She turns out to be very different from the other women, in a way he never figured.

You can buy it here:

And you can watch the video book trailer here

Finally, here’s an excerpt to whet your appetite…

The person who sent this is Lisa Andres – a beauty queen, a person who looks like she’ll never laugh at him, a gorgeous girl that he can be proud to sing to at his concerts. He trudges away with Christine’s phone tucked into a pocket. No one will find this lying bitch. She’s nothing. She’s forever gone.

Lisa occupies Fred’s mind now. Lisa is his new girlfriend. Lisa will soon know this.

“No one will stop me from getting to my Lisa.” Fred pulls out the iPhone and stares at her picture. “So beautiful. Beautiful face. Beautiful red hair – like fire. She’s all mine.”

 

 

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