Thursday, May 30, 2024

Review: An Enchanting Case of Spirits by Melissa Holtz

An Enchanting Case of Sprits is the debut novel of Melissa Holtz! 

I was completely enthralled by this magical mystery tour of ghostly gasps, spooky spirits, and mystical mayhem! 

Don't sleep on this one! Grab your copy today!



About the Book

When a fortieth birthday celebration leads to a ghostly visitor, four friends find themselves navigating surprising mysteries and spiritual hijinks, in this clever debut from Melissa Holtz.

Alyssa Mann isn’t adventurous, not since her husband died and she found herself the single mom of a teenage daughter. But there’s no way to avoid celebrating the big 4-0, so when her best friends drag her out for drinks and a tarot reading, she throws caution to the wind and decides to see what the spirits have to say. It’s all fun and games, until she wakes up the next morning with a wicked hangover—and a ghost perched on the edge of her bed.

Sheer panic sends her running to get help from Nick West, the (very attractive) detective who lives next door. When he finds no one inside, Alyssa has to accept that she really did see a ghost. As the dearly departed keep appearing, Alyssa and her friends do their best to learn how to control her newfound power. Trading insults with ghosts, tracking down family heirlooms, and getting closer to the skeptical but helpful Nick is more fun than Alyssa imagined. But when looking into one ghost’s past reveals unexpected—and unwelcome—facts about Alyssa’s late husband’s death, she discovers she just may be in over her head.






Excerpt

 

1

Five of Cups

Another spoonful will dull the painful truth.My youth is gone.

A carton of ice cream is gripped between my legs like my life depends on it not slipping from my clutches. A cool autumn breeze flits through the open window next to my whitewashed sleigh bed, and I shiver as it races up my exposed arms.

I consider closing said window but refrain, too comfy to move from under the heavy down comforter and matching gray sheets I'm currently curled beneath.

My lips wrap around a tarnished silver spoon-a wedding present from my mother-and a chill settles over me. Whether from the draft or cold dessert, I'm not sure, and I couldn't care less either way.

Less than nine hours remain of my fortieth birthday, and I'm alone, eating my ice cream as though it's my last supper.

My eyes are fixed on the harvest-yellow walls, a color I adored once upon a time but now resent because I'm no longer the carefree wife and mother who chose that cheerful shade.

Birthdays come and go, and the next may not be promised, but it's just a day. Tomorrow, all the calls and messages will stop. I'll be one year closer to my own death, with nothing but wrinkles and cellulite to keep me company.

Dramatic much?

My phone chimes from the nightstand and I ignore it. It's been going off all day with messages commemorating a day I'd rather skip from family and friends who know this yet refuse to oblige me.

Almost immediately, the phone rings, and I know that either I answer or risk a wellness check from the police, courtesy of my well-meaning friends. There's no doubt it's Lanie or Nina on the other end of this call. Both of my best friends are dogs with a bone, and neither will stop until I shut off the phone or scream down the line that I'm alive.

Sighing, I grab the black smartphone and push accept.

"I'm breathing. You can stop calling," I drone, sounding pathetic even to my own ears.

"Well, that's a relief." Lanie's dry tone just barely hides the irritation she works so hard to conceal. "I thought you'd managed to drown yourself in Chocolate Salted Fudge Truffle or that nasty riesling you adore." I hear Lanie's deep breath before she continues. "Alyssa, you can't hide from your birthday."

"But I'm going to give it my best try," I say, eyeing the now-empty ice cream container with contempt, sending a thanks up to the gods that she didn't attempt a video chat. If Lanie Anderson saw my current condition, she'd stage a full-on intervention.

All traces of irritation and worry vanish when she says, "Ava called."

I groan, silently cursing my far-too-perceptive daughter for calling my overprotective best friend. This wouldn't be the first time. In fact, it seems to be happening far more often than reasonable.

I know Ava doesn't want me to be alone today, but I don't want her worrying when she should be focusing on studying for her exams. She's a little over an hour away at a prestigious boarding school for the arts, and if it were her choice, she'd give up her dreams and come back home.

"She shouldn't have done that. I told her I was fine."

"She doesn't think you are, Ally. You haven't left your house for more than a grocery run this week. It's your fortieth birthday and you aren't celebrating, when we all know that birthdays are a big production with you."

"I left my house," I say indignantly, blowing a wayward piece of hair out of my eyes.

"Don't be cranky. It's unbecoming of a woman in her prime." Her teasing lilt is meant to make me laugh, but I don't.

"I'm not cranky and I'm not in my prime."

"Sure you are!" she says far too cheerfully when moments ago it was all doom and gloom. "Forty is a prime number."

"It's not."

"It isn't? Hmm . . ." she murmurs, and I can see her clearly in my head, full lips pursed and one perfectly microbladed eyebrow cocked in contemplation. "Well, I guess you're right. Nothing prime about forty."

"I hate you."

"You don't," she practically purrs.

She's right. I cherish our friendship. Even more for her part in picking me up off the floor on numerous occasions over the last two years. Lanie has been a constant friend. One who hasn't allowed all of me to break into the million tiny pieces it wants to. A fate my poor heart didn't escape.

Two years ago, my soul was crushed, and it wasn't with one hard knock to my front door.

The harsh reality is that I was sitting next to my husband Garrett the day he died. My head hit the side window, and the last thing I remember is a bright light and the color red. For over a year, I relived the accident nightly. I didn't have dreams; it was always the same nightmare. One I couldn't wake up from.

Garrett died. I survived. And that truth has haunted me for a long time.

My eyes catch on Garrett's ashes, which sit in a generic, unmarked container on top of my dresser. Too clichΓ© for a life as beautiful as ours had been.

A tear slips down my cheeks unbidden, and I swipe it away.

Not today, Satan.

My current grief is brought to you by my birth. I only have room for one trauma at a time.

"Earth to Ally," Lanie sings through the phone.

I shake my head, clearing my mind. "What did you say?"

"It's your birthday, and it's Thursday wine night. I know you said you didn't want to celebrate, but you must. Nina and I are headed out, and you're coming."

I chance a glance into the floor-length mirror resting against my wall and grimace. My wavy strawberry-blond hair is matted at the crown of my head, and I have dark circles underneath my bloodshot eyes. The entirety of my face is blotchy and swollen, a byproduct of crying.

I'm a hideous beast today.

"No, thank you."

My spoon scrapes the bottom of the empty ice cream carton, and the tears stream briskly down my cheeks.

It's been two years and I know this breakdown isn't about him. It's about a number. Forty always sounded ancient and here I am living it and feeling every ache and pain that decided to start on this very day.

How convenient.

"I . . . I'll be . . . fine," I cry. "I'm just so . . . ugly." The wail that accompanies that last part resembles that of a dying animal, and I'm sure Lanie is beyond concerned about my mental state.

"You're not, babe. You need us." The tenderness she uses is so unlike her.

She's my bossy, no-nonsense friend, who's more likely to slap the sense back into me than to allow the moping.

"As much as I don't want to be the overbearing friend on your day, this isn't a situation that I'm going to back down from. I'm coming to you."

"No, I-"

It's no use. The line is dead, and I know without a doubt that Lanie and Nina will be here at some point regardless of any protest on my part.

Forty wasn't supposed to look like this. I'd had every intention of marching out of my thirties with my head held high, ass tight and no lines to be found from the corners of my eyes to my hairline, seventeen years into a blissful marriage.

Exactly none of those things are my reality.

I have tracks deeper than an off-road path lining my forehead and a scar that runs from my temple to the corner of my right eye, a permanent reminder of all I've lost.

Lanie is right. I'm wasting away in this room.

If Garrett were here, he'd tell me to pull myself together, get dressed, and plan on a headache in the morning. But he's not here, so I'll eat my ice cream and feel sorry for myself until the birthday hijackers I call friends arrive.


At five o’clock on the dot, I hear the key turning in the lock in the door. I gave spares to both Lanie and Nina in case of emergencies. Apparently, my breakdown earlier constitutes an emergency.

Seated in a dark corner of the living room, with a clear view of the front door, I watch Lanie pop her head inside. The sun has long set, and darkness blankets the room, shielding me from her view.

"Alyssa?" she calls out, as though she cares about my privacy. "We're coming in."

Lanie flips a switch, and the overhead lights beam down around us. Lanie's brown eyes are wide, one black-and-white-Converse-covered foot still in the door as if she fears what she'll find. I'd laugh if I wasn't having too much fun watching these two tiptoe around like some ghost is about to pop out at them.

Nina's head peeks around Lanie's body, her blond hair hanging loosely over one shoulder, and our eyes lock. My lips tip up in amusement.

"Hi, love," Nina says, pushing Lanie through the door when she sees me sitting in my comfy chair.

I raise my hand and wave, not wanting to speak for fear I'll start laughing and pee myself, which has been a danger ever since giving birth. Yet another less-than-sexy problem I deal with on the regular.

"I'm glad to see you're not in your bed," she says, sitting down on the arm of my chair and pulling me into a hug.

Nina is a high school counselor and very adept at handling grief, which is a real pain in the ass for someone who's trying to avoid talking about her feelings. "How you doing?" she asks, backing up and looking me over, her gaze lingering a little too long.

If they see that I've managed to pull myself together, they'll insist on birthday shenanigans, and I'm not quite fond of that idea.

I showered, hoping to wash away the remnants of my earlier wallowing, but it was no use. My pale complexion can't hide the stubborn splotches of distress, even with a Sephora's worth of makeup plastered over my face.

"I'm struggling."

A complete exaggeration.

My head lowers, shaking back and forth, playing up the misery card. Based on how her eyes are narrowed in on mine, she knows better. I've managed to fake it till I make it before, but tonight, I'm failing.

"We know better, Ally," Lanie cuts in, walking toward her typical spot on the outdated ottoman, complete with a gaudy floral print. It's a hand-me-down from my mother, which is about the only thing that woman has ever given up to me. "You're trying to avoid a celebration for the big four-oh, and we are not here for it. You and I both know you'll regret it eventually."

Lanie gets comfortable, stretching her long, lean legs out on the couch as Nina takes a seat on the floor at my feet.

"She's right, Alyssa. This happened on your thirtieth and you still to this day whine about not throwing a party."

"We promised we'd never let you do that again. So pull up your big girl panties and embrace your midlife hotness." Lanie says, earning a stern glare from Nina.

Nina springs back up, putting her arm around my shoulder. She pulls me into her embrace again. "Don't listen to her. We all know she's about as comforting as sitting on a cactus."

The most unladylike snort rips through me.

Lanie's mouth opens and then closes like a fish out of water. "I didn't say anything bad."

Nina rolls her eyes, turning her focus back on me.

"I know you're struggling, love. We won't push you into going out if that's not what you want," Nina coos, hand running down my untamed hair soothingly.

I look up into Nina's ice-blue eyes, framed by the longest non-manufactured eyelashes I've ever seen, determined to change the subject.

"Have I gained weight?"

She nods and Lanie gasps.

"Nina Joy Dunbar, what the hell's the matter with you?" Lanie's high-pitched squeal is enough to pull a smile from me. I try to smash my lips together to contain my laughter, but it's no use. A fit of pre-teen giggles escapes me.

Nina's eyes widen as her head bounces back and forth between us. "Huh? What did I say?"

Lanie rolls her eyes this time. "Pay attention. You're not typically the space cadet."

Nina ignores her, gaze settling on me. "I'm sorry, love. I'm . . . distracted."

I want to ask her why, but she forges ahead, beating me to the punch.

"My mother called. She wants to come to town for the holidays."

Nina isn't distracted, she's distressed, and I can't blame her. Samantha Woods is equal parts obnoxious and terrifying.

"Why?" Lanie says, parroting my thoughts.

"I'm sure she needs more money." Nina sighs, picking at her fingernails. "She had a botched cosmetic surgery and is tapped out of funds to fix it."

"Oh, please. The woman is fake from her head to her toes. What more can she need?" Lanie practically spits the words. None of us are fond of Nina's mother, but Lanie in particular despises the woman.

"This time it's true. I heard it myself via an unwanted video call."

My eyes narrow. "You heard it? What, pray tell, does that mean?"

Nina's lip tips up. "She went back to get bigger implants and now her boobs squeak." She waggles her eyebrows, grinning so widely her brilliant white teeth are on full display.

"Squeak?" Lanie asks. "Like a rubber duck?"

Nina's head bobs. "Let's just say that the neighborhood dogs follow her around. And I am not exaggerating."

We all burst into laughter. Of all the people for something like that to happen to, the universe got it right this time.

Lanie wipes under her eyes. "Don't you dare help her fix that. Let her suffer in squeaking until she finds Husband Number Six to pay for it."

I take a good hard look at my friends, recognizing how lucky I truly am, despite the hardships I've endured. Having Lanie and Nina by my side today is something I've rejected, but, man, am I glad they didn't listen.

"I needed this. You two being here," I explain, and Nina offers me a wide smile. "No matter what I said, I'm glad you ignored it."

"If I'd known my stories would make you laugh like this, I would've been here sooner." Nina frowns as she rubs her chest. "I'm sorry I waited so long to barge in, Alyssa."

I wipe under my nose, grunting. "I ate a carton of ice cream and chugged half a bottle of wine. I was fine. Wonderful, even."

Excerpted from An Enchanting Case of Spirits by Melissa Holtz. Copyright © 2024 by Melissa Holtz. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


My Review


What to expect when reading An Enchanting Case of Spirits:

πŸ‘» Nail-biting mysteries

πŸ‘» Grief and life after love 

πŸ‘» Powerful and engaging storylines

πŸ‘» Smokin’ HOT silver fox detective 

πŸ‘» Danger, suspense, whodunit 

πŸ‘» Spirits, ghosts, and poltergeists, oh MY! 

πŸ‘» The spirit realm and what (if anything) comes after death

πŸ‘» The importance of having a core group of friends

πŸ‘» Witty dialogue, laugh-out-loud funny, and irreverent humor

This story ran the gamut of my emotions and had me laughing, giving me goosebumps, and brought me to tears. I love that the characters are more around my age range. They are lovingly and beautifully created and easily relatable. The storyline is brilliant and the ending left me with more questions than answers. I need more stories with these friends and all the quirky citizens of this quaint New England town.

Read the book in one day. It was so good I couldn’t put it down! Highly recommend it!

FTC Disclaimer: I voluntarily read a copy of the book generously provided by the publisher via Net Galley in exchange for an honest review. This in no way influences my thoughts or feelings about the book or the content of my review.


Purchase Links

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Apple Books

Kobo | Google Play | Penguin Random House


About the Author


Melissa Holtz is a former publicist and marketing expert in the romance genre. Now in an advisory role to several bestselling authors, she consults on industry marketing trends. An Enchanting Case of Spirits is her debut novel. Melissa also writes Romantasy under the pen name, Melissa Winters. You can learn more about both Melissas by visiting her website: melissaholtz.com/homepage

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Review: Crossing the Line by P.A. DePaul

Crossing The Line is Book #3 in P.A.'s SBG Romantic Suspense series.

This book is a long time coming and I am so excited to read about Romeo and Magician.

These two have been dancing around one another since the beginning of the series and now we get to find out if they've got what it takes to make it, or if they're better off as teammates. 

Grab your copy today!



About the Book

Best friends and partners through high-stakes missions . . . Yet the biggest risk they’ll take is falling in love.

Eight months ago, black ops operative, Magician, infiltrated a sex-slave ring. Little did she realize the mission would not only change her life forever but kick off a series of events no one saw coming.

Romeo still can’t wipe the image of Magician’s battered body nearly dying in his arms. Since then, one-night stands have lost their appeal. Now, his best friend and partner stars in fantasies he has no business envisioning.

When a pro-American Oil lobbyist and a Saudi Arabian Oil Sheikh—two natural enemies—join forces to destroy new legislation allowing America to gain independence from foreign oil, they utilize bombings to throw the country into chaos.

Magician’s intuition knows there’s a connection between the two, but she’s forbidden to investigate since she has no evidence. Romeo doesn’t think twice about defying orders and remains by Magician’s side. He was sidelined once and Magician paid a horrific price, he will not let anyone hurt her again. Their investigation takes them across the globe, jeopardizing their careers and lives.

But nothing is riskier than gambling their friendship to find love…





My Review

Crossing the Line is a full-throttle intense ride of subterfuge and sexy times!

The slow-burning chemistry Romeo and Magician have had throughout the series finally explodes into a fiery, all-consuming passion that leaves destruction in its wake. No one gets out unscathed. I blushed furiously several times while reading and couldn’t put the book down.

The suspense of the story is exciting and full of surprises. Romeo and Magician’s relationship upsets Delta Squad’s applecart. . . and there are consequences. I sat flabbergasted as the author wrung my insides out with her intense plot twists and turns, leaving me a ruined shell of a reader, in the best way.

P.A. DePaul leaves nothing on the table in Crossing the Line. Amazing! I can’t wait for the next book!

FTC Disclaimer: I voluntarily read a copy of the book generously provided by the publisher via Net Galley in exchange for an honest review. This in no way influences my thoughts or feelings about the book or the content of my review.


Purchase Links

Author's Website Shop | Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Apple Books | Kobo | Google Play


About the Author



P. A. DePaul is a Publishers Weekly Bestselling and award-winning author.

Her books are full of action, suspense, and romance.

As a hybrid author, she has books traditionally and independently published. Her traditional publishers include Berkley, a Penguin Random House imprint, and Harlequin Books.

P.A. DePaul loves connecting with readers! You can find her on these social media and book sites:

Facebook | Instagram | TikTok

Lemon8 | Goodreads | Amazon | BookBub


Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Release Day Review: Barbarian's Taming by Ruby Dixon

 Happy Release Day Ruby Dixon!

Barbarian's Taming is Book #8 in Ruby's Ice Planet Barbarians series and the latest special edition release through Berkley Romance!

Grab your copy today!




About the Book

The next novel in the Ice Planet Barbarians series, an international publishing phenomenon—now in a special print edition with an exclusive bonus epilogue!

There are a million reasons why Hassen and Maddie shouldn’t work, but despite it all, they find themselves unable to resist each other…

As a newcomer to the alien tribe, I’ve struggled to find my place. It might be because I’m a tad headstrong at times. And yes, I might have thrown a few things at people’s heads. But I had a good reason to pitch a fit—my shy sister was stolen away right under my nose. Of course, now she’s back and mated. Everyone’s happy…except me.

I need…affection. Attention.

Okay, I’m lonely. Really lonely.

Strangely enough, the only person that I think understands what I’m going through is the same blue-skinned brute that stole my sister. It’s wrong to hook up with him, even as a mindless fling.

Except…I’m not so good with the whole “rules” thing. And he’s not so great with the “fling” thing. But maybe there’s a chance for us.




Excerpt

 

What Has Gone Before

Aliens are real, and they're aware of Earth. Fifteen human women have been abducted by aliens referred to as "Little Green Men." Some are kept in stasis tubes, and some are kept in a pen inside a spaceship, all waiting for sale on an extraterrestrial black market. While the captive humans staged a breakout, the aliens had ship trouble and dumped their living cargo on the nearest inhabitable planet. It is a wintry, desolate place, dubbed Not-Hoth by the survivors.

On Not-Hoth, the human women discover that they are not the only species to be abandoned. The sa-khui, a tribe of massive, horned blue aliens, live in the icy caves. They hunt and forage and live as barbarians, descendants of a long-ago people who have learned to adapt to the harsh world. The most crucial of adaptations? That of the khui, a symbiotic life-form that lives inside the host and ensures its well-being. Every creature of Not-Hoth has a khui, and those without will die within a week, sickened by the air itself. Rescued by the sa-khui, the surviving human women take on a khui symbiont, forever leaving behind any hopes of returning to Earth.The khui has an unusual side effect on its host: if a compatible pairing is found, the khui will begin to vibrate a song in each host's chest. This is called resonance and is greatly prized by the sa-khui. Only with resonance are the sa-khui able to propagate their species. The sa-khui, whose numbers are dwindling due to a lack of females in their tribe, are overjoyed when several males begin to resonate to human females, thus ensuring the bonding of both peoples and the life of the newly integrated tribe. A male sa-khui is fiercely devoted to his mate.

The humans have now been on the ice planet for over a year and a half, and most have adapted to tribal life. New babies are being born of human and sa-khui pairings, and the tribe stirs with life once more. The last of the human castaways resonate, and the remaining men despair of ever having a mate. Josie, who ran from her resonance to Haeden, stumbles across the wreckage of the spaceship that Kira destroyed and discovers the unthinkable: two more human women are trapped in stasis there. Josie and Haeden return to tell the rest of the tribe, and a rescue party is sent out to retrieve the new women. Sisters Lila and Maddie cause issues amongst the tribe's hunters the moment the women arrive. Hassen steals Lila in an attempt to force resonance, only for Lila to run away from him. She's rescued by Rokan, who resonates to her, and they make their way back to the tribe.

Meanwhile, Hassen is exiled and Maddie remains angry that Lila was taken in the first place.

This is where our story picks up.

Chapter One

Maddie

It's weird when you don't fit in.
I thought that once I hit adulthood, I'd be all done with feeling like an outcast. That once I got past those awful high school years when I felt like the round peg in the square hole, it'd all just be a bad memory. That someday I could look back and laugh at how much it bothered me to be the weirdo on the outskirts.

Sitting here in a cave at a party for my sister, surrounded by aliens, I feel like I'm reliving my high school years all over again. It's pretty garbage, I have to admit. I wasn't popular then, being fat and opinionated. These aliens don't care if I'm fat or if I have a big mouth, and yet I'm still on the outskirts.

It's weird.

Someone dances past me, laughing. His tail smacks against my arm and then he spills a bit of his drink on the stone floor in front of me. Lovely. I absently swipe a bit of my tunic on the spilled alcohol because I don't want someone slipping on it in front of me while I sit and hold down a cushion in the corner of the room by myself.

It's not that people are unfriendly. Heck, it's not even that I'd have to sit alone if I didn't want to. It's that I'm really not sure where I stand with any of these people. I stare out at the celebrating tribe, not paying attention to the people who dance past with a skin of sah-sah, or the woman who pulls her top down to breastfeed not one but two blue babies. I ignore the exclamations over the fruit that they've managed to savor all damn night, and I sure as shit ignore when they start singing again.

Everyone's so damn happy. Everyone but me.

Me? I'm struggling.

In the space of the last month or so, my world has been upended. I went to sleep one night and woke up in the arms of blue space aliens on a frozen planet. Apparently I was kidnapped by bad aliens in my sleep. Apparently they took my sister, too. Apparently we were also stuck in sleep pods for over a year and a half and missed out on the bad guys being shot down.

It seems we slept through a lot.

Even if I thought it was all too strange to be believed at first, it didn't take long to realize this shit was legit. There are two suns, two moons, and endless frost and snow. The people here are blue, covered in a downy fuzz, and act like a blizzard is a nice spring rainstorm. Oh, and the parasites. I don't even want to think about the parasites, especially not the one living inside me now, helping me "adapt" to this alien world.

My sister is thriving, though.

It's strange. Lila's always been a shy introvert and even more of an outcast than me. She was born deaf, and though she got cochlear implants at age twelve and no longer needed me to speak up for her when lipreading was too tricky, I've always felt the need to protect her and care for her. But here? We've been separated and she's been killing it. Lila is usually the lonely, lost one and I'm the bold, outgoing one. I have to be because that's how you Get Shit Done.

Except Lila's doing fine on her own and now I'm just kind of . . . lost. I'm the single human that doesn't have a mate. I don't know the others. They're all pregnant or getting pregnant or juggling babies already and I'm sitting here, twiddling my thumbs with my vacancy sign over my vagina.

Not that I want a baby, mind you. Or a mate. But it feels weird to be the only chick who's not hooked up in this place. Even my sister's lovey-dovey with an alien and mated.

She's happy here despite all the snow and ice and man-eating creatures and lack of toilets. She wants to stay (not that we have a choice).

And me?

I'm just kind of here.

Alone.

I rub at the wet spot on the stone floor while one of the humans-Georgie? Megan? I don't know which one-whips out a boob and starts breastfeeding her child mid-conversation with an alien lady. Lila's not attending the party any longer; she ran off to her cave with her alien guy to go make babies with him. Literally. She's literally going to make babies with him. It's something I'm still struggling to wrap my brain around. It seems that if my chest-cootie wakes up and starts purring, it picks a man I should make babies with.

I'm pretty glad mine is deciding to be mute.

Lila's thrilled to be "resonating," though. Of course she is-now she's one of the baby-crazy crowd of human women who've settled in with the aliens. Now she fits in even more, though she wasn't exactly having a tough time with that. She's mated to a popular guy. She showed up with fruit. She's taken to all the daily life tasks like they're a joy for her. Got a fire that you need made? Lila can do it. Skin a kill? Lila's right there. Make dinner? Arrows? Fucking slings or snowshoes or bear traps or whatever else these Grizzly Adams wannabes can come up with? Lila can do it. She can survive just fine because she's been learning how to be like them.

And they love her for it, too. The tribespeople have been learning sign language to speak to Lila and to make her feel welcome. I'm glad they've accepted her so readily, but it also makes me jealous . . . which makes me a terrible sister.

Everyone in the tribe adores her and they can barely tolerate me. I'm like a stinky fart that's lingering in the cave and everyone tries to ignore.

Not that I can blame them for treating me like a turd-I wasn't exactly Miss Pleasant to be around while my sister was gone. I was frantic with worry about her after she was stolen, and when they wouldn't let me go after her? I was kind of not nice about it.

Okay, I was a bit of an ass.

Well, more than just a bit.

But I was worried about seemingly fragile Lila on this hostile, cold planet. So I took it out on everyone else. I might have picked a few fights and dragged my feet, and okay, I threw a few things at people's heads. So what? Anyone else would have done the same if they were in my shoes, uncertain about the fate of their baby sister.

They don't understand what it's like to be so alone, even in a sea of people.

Everyone here's part of a family. There are happy women with babies, and men utterly devoted to their ladies. As I look over, the chief-Vektal-is tossing his baby daughter into the air and giving her exaggerated kisses just to make Talie laugh. And boy, does that baby laugh. It'd be adorable if it didn't make me feel so sour inside. He's got a wife and a baby. All of the humans here have someone.

I have Lila. Like I have in the past, I'm ready to shield her from the world's harms and interpret for her when someone doesn't know sign language.

Except my sister doesn't need me anymore.

Scared, timid little Lila has returned utterly confident in herself and in love with Rokan.

That leaves me . . . well, it leaves me sitting here by myself on a mat, mopping up someone else's spilled drink.

I sigh and stare out at the entrance of the cave, feeling alone and yet trapped at the same time. I don't fit in with these people, but I also don't have the option to find other people. There are no other people.

Sometimes I wonder what would happen if I just up and left. Would they hunt me down like they hunted for Lila? Or would they be all "good riddance" and not care because I've been a bitch?

I scowl into the shadows of the cave's entrance. It would be so easy to get up and just walk out while everyone's drunk and partying. But even as I stare, glowing blue eyes blink back at me, and a big, bulky form emerges from the shadows of the cave entrance, spear in one hand, a dead animal in the other. It's a hunter, returning from a late-night jaunt out into the snow.

And not just any hunter.

It's Hassen. The bastard that stole my sister. The one that decided he wanted a mate so much he'd just up and fucking steal her.

Him? He can kiss my fat ass.

Though the look he's giving me right now? That tells me he'd enjoy that far too much. That he'd do more than just kiss it if I bared it for his inspection.

And for some reason, I find myself prickling with arousal at the thought of Hassen folding his big body down to give my plump ass a kiss. Which is all kinds of wrong. He's exiled. He's a dick. He wanted my sister. None of these put him on the "Ice Planet's Most Desirable Bachelors" list.

As I glare at him, his mouth twists into a fang-bearing smile.

I jerk my gaze back around to the fire, scowling. Totally not gonna keep picturing him with his mouth on my ass. Biting one of my rounded cheeks. Dragging his fingers over my body and exploring the fact that I have no tail . . .

I give my cheek a hard slap to bring me back to reality.

Nearby, Farli gives me a startled look. "Are you all right?"

"Just distracted," I tell her. Farli's a good kid, and the closest thing I have to a buddy here, for all that she's, like, fifteen years old. Right now? She's my ride or die, because, well, I don't have anyone else. Even my sister, Lila, is off in a corner somewhere, making out with her new hubby. I can't even be mad about that-she's so happy and she is such a wonderful person that she deserves every bit of joy. I'm thrilled for her.

I'm a little jealous of her radiant happiness, sure, but still thrilled for her.

I'm just a selfish jerk of a sister who doesn't know what to do with herself when she's not needed anymore and suddenly finds herself with no friends. Funny how I always thought I didn't need friends. Funny how being stranded on an ice planet can totally change your perspective on things like that. In a small community like this, not playing by the rules gets you left behind.

Hassen knows all about that.

I peek over my shoulder back at the cave entrance again. Just in case Hassen is still there. But he's not, and I ignore the little stab of disappointment I feel.

The last thing I need is to get involved with the bad boy of the ice planet.

Hassen

It is a cold night for me.

The laughter coming from within the tribal cave spills out into the snow, and I can smell the burning meat cooking for the humans. Someone is singing, and I hear Warrek banging away at his drum. They are all good sounds, happy sounds. My people are light and carefree and full of joy.

That joy does not extend to me.

I stand alone in the snow on a nearby ridge, a fresh-killed quill-beast in hand. And I am torn, because I do not know if I should ignore the punishment the chief has given me and join the celebration, or if I should turn around and leave.

I am exiled. I am nothing to my people now. I did not think I would care, but . . . I do. Their scorn hurts me.

Excerpted from Barbarian's Taming by Ruby Dixon. Copyright © 2024 by Ruby Dixon. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


My Review

In the last book–Barbarian’s Touch–Hassen is left exiled after kidnapping the new human Lila and trying to force resonance (the mating instinct). Lila’s mate was not Hassen, but there are rules in the tribe to prevent this sort of thing from happening and he broke them. So now Hassen must pay the price. This price however, is almost too high.

You see, Hassen lost all of his family members in the khui sickness several years back. All he wants is a mate and family to love and care for. Hassen’s loneliness is too much to bear and in a state of desperation, he does the unthinkable. And taking away the rest of the tribe from Hassen as punishment just exacerbates his loneliness and despair.

Maddie is the second new human in Not-Hoth and older sister of Lila. She’s furious with Hassen for his actions and glad he’s gone.  Well, sort of. Maddie is feeling lost and out of place here in this strange new world. Now that her sister is mated and doesn’t need her help anymore, she’s feeling lonely too. Maddie didn’t make a great first impression on the tribe with the events transpiring with her sister and Hassen, which leaves her friendless and bereft.

As days go by, Maddie starts to realize that she sees in Hassen a kindred spirit. Both lonely and desperate, Maddie befriends Hassen. Yes, it’s complicated. Yes, he kidnapped her sister and yes, he’s in exile. But there’s just something about him. Could be his die hard dedication to the tribe, out-hunting all the hunters. Could be his penetrating stare that makes Maddie all tingly. Or it could be that magic blue baseball bat in his loincloth 😏

Barbarian’s Taming is a great story with a relatable storyline. I enjoyed the colorful way in which Ms. Dixon addressed Hassen and Maddie’s struggles in the book. There’s also some pretty intense surprises and a whole lot of hot barbarian loving. Definitely recommend this and the entire series!

FTC Disclaimer: I voluntarily read a copy of the book generously provided by the publisher via Net Galley in exchange for an honest review. This in no way influences my thoughts or feelings about the book or the content of my review.


Purchase Links

Penguin Random House


About the Author



Ruby Dixon is an author of all things science fiction romance. She is a Sagittarius and a Reylo shipper, and loves farming sims (but not actual housework). She lives in the South with her husband and a couple of goofy cats, and can’t think of anything else to put in her biography. Truly, she is boring. Learn more at rubydixon.com

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Release Day Spotlight & Review: Summer Nights and Meteorites by Hannah Reynolds


Hannah Reynolds returns to Nantucket with SUMMER NIGHTS AND METEORITES (G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers), a sweet romance featuring a girl who swears off dating for the summer until she meets the boy who, despite her best efforts, just might make her break that mold.


SUMMER NIGHTS AND METEORITES by Hannah Reynolds
G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers
On Sale May 21, 2024 | ISBN: 9780593617328 | Ages 12 and up | $19.99



About the Book

From the two-time Sydney Taylor Honor author comes another sweet Nantucket-set summer romance, perfect for fans of Rachel Lynn Solomon and K.L. Walther.

Jordan Edelman’s messy dating days are over. After a few too many broken hearts, and a father who worries a bit too much, she’s sworn off boys—at least for the summer. And since she’ll be tagging along on her father’s research trip to Nantucket, she doesn’t think it’ll be too hard to stick to her resolution.

But hooking up with the cute boy on the ferry doesn’t count, right? At least, not until that cute boy turns out to be Ethan Barbanel. As in, her father’s longtime research assistant Ethan Barbanel, the boy Jordan has hated from afar for years. And to make matters worse, Jordan might actually be falling for him. 

As if that didn’t complicate her life enough, Jordan’s new summer job with a local astronomer turns up a centuries-old mystery surrounding Gibson’s Comet—and as she dives into her research, what she learns just might put her growing relationship with Ethan in jeopardy.






Excerpt

 

My therapist told me recently that instead of making lists about things I hated (Ethan Barbanel, Benjamin Franklin, death, entropy), I should make lists about things I loved, or even liked, or, at the very least, could appreciate in the moment.

And so: I liked the seventy-­five-­degree June day. I appreciated the cup of Dunkin’ in my hand. I liked all the fishing boats filling the port of Hyannis.

Dad loves boats. He took me to harbor after harbor every time we visited the Cape, explaining the difference between sloops and bowriders, daydreaming out loud about the kind we’d get if we were the kind of people who could afford boats, as opposed to a widowed historian and his seventeen-­year-­old daughter. And while I liked looking at the small craft, I couldn’t really picture myself sailing down the Charles River. Maybe because most of those people dressed a little differently from my normal all-­black outfits and combat boots. However, people underestimated the greatness of combat boots,which went on my list of things I appreciated (specifically, their arch support). I’d taken the CapeFlyer from Boston to Hyannis, and good shoes were crucial as I hauled my two suitcases from the train station to the harbor. I maneuvered my load down the sidewalk edging Hyannis’s port, passing men loading giant cages onto a weathered fishing vessel next to elegant catamarans.

When I neared shouting distance of the ferry building, I dropped into one of the many Adirondack chairs lining the green. Forty minutes until my ferry left, and it hadn’t arrived yet, either, though people already waited by the dock. I closed my eyes and leaned my head back, trying to let the sunshine and lapping water soothe me. How bad could this summer be? Most people would be thrilled to spend three months on Nantucket.

When I opened my eyes a few minutes later, a boy sat in the chair closest to me, eating pizza out of a box. Broad shoulders, aquiline nose, and an easy confidence in the way he took up space. Too good-­looking and exactly my type. I’d dated guys with his same rangy frame and smiling eyes before, and they’d been all flirtation and flattery right up until they dumped me.

Two women walked by dressed in capris and light blouses. They paused in front of the boy. One, wearing a wide-­brimmed straw hat and bedazzled sandals, made an exaggerated expression of awe.

“Is that a salad on your pizza?”

I glanced at the pizza. There did, in fact, appear to be a pile of arugula on top.

The boy in the chair, too, contemplated the pizza and the green leaves. “Sure seems to be.”

The women both laughed. “What is that, arugula?”

“Yup.”

“I love arugula on pizza,” the second woman said. “Makes me feel so healthy. Where did you get it?”

I tuned out the rest because, honestly, how much could one listen to a conversation about arugula on pizza, attractive boy notwithstanding?

Yet not five minutes after the women walked on—­seriously, the chair boy had probably only eaten two bites—­another woman paused before him.

“Isn’t that a good-­looking pizza!”

I stared at her, astonished. I knew Hyannis was an hour and a half outside the city—a small seaside town on Cape Cod—but did people seriously talk to strangers here? About pizza? Not that pizza wasn’t a worthy topic of conversation, but you couldn’t pay me to talk to a stranger.

Well. Okay. I’d talk to a stranger who looked like Chair Boy.

Still, did all these women seriously consider this boy hot enough to strike up a conversation? Chair Boy was around my age. If not jailbait, close to it.

Maybe people were being friendly and I was ridiculously standoffish.

Beyond Chair Boy, a large, multistory ferry cruised into place. My ferry. Probably my neighbor’s ferry, too. I snuck another glance at him, our eyes briefly meeting before I tore mine away and focused on my phone. God, he really was my type, with an extra hint of confidence and arrogance in the way he lounged. Come to think of it, I usually would strike up a conversation with someone who looked like him. But I wasn’t going to, not today, not anymore. It’d occurred to me recently, given the stream of guys I’d hooked up with who made me feel like shit afterward, that I was the common factor. I selected boys who never wanted anything to do with me long-­term. My selection criteria needed to be severely recalibrated.

So I wasn’t going to engage with the kind of boys I usually engaged with anymore. I wasn’t going to date or hook up with anyone this summer. I wasn’t.

I glanced over again and found him glancing at me.

And my mouth parted, and I started to say, You’re basically a walking advertisement for that pizza place, aren’t you? Only the grace of yet another person pausing to greet Chair Boy saved me from myself, this time an older man who apparently actually knew the guy. Not one to look a gift horse in the mouth, I headed for the ferry, checked my luggage, and got in line for the Grey Lady IV.

My shoulders slowly climbed toward my ears as I took in the passengers around me. I’d known the summering-­on-­Nantucket aesthetic would be different from mine, but I hadn’t expected to feel quite so out of place. Everyone seemed to have received the same memo about their outfits: faded blues and salmon pink, men in Sperrys, and more women with blond hair than allotted by nature. No one else wore mostly black. Which, fine. Most people at school didn’t, either. But I’d never felt uncomfortable dressed in black lace or fishnet tights before; I’d felt stylish. Interesting. Edgy.

It felt different wearing my clothes in a sea of beige and pearls.

I’d picked my outfit carefully this morning because I was dressing for Ethan Barbanel, who I hated, who I’d never met. I’d wanted armor, so I chose an outfit my friends said made me look both hot and badass, and which made me feel untouchable. A black top to highlight my red-­and-­black tartan skirt (Alice + Olivia, thrifted for twenty dollars at the Garment District). My trusty combat boots, dangly black earrings, and cat-­eye eyeliner.

A bored crew member scanned my ticket’s QR code and I boarded the ship, winding my way up several staircases until I reached the top outdoor deck. Somehow I’d chosen the slowest line, but plenty of seats were still open. Including one by the rail, where Chair Boy sat, having miraculously arrived before me.

Don’t do it, I told myself. Nope. Don’t. You’re done with hot, bro-­y boys. They’re bad news bears.

I did it. I took the seat on the other side of the aisle from him, also facing the water. But I didn’t look at him as the ship pulled out from the dock, Hyannis’s harbor falling away behind us. At least I had that much control.

An announcement came on about rules and regulations. To my right, women in tank tops with Greek letters poured White Claws into thermoses; boys in ACK baseball caps ate slimy-­looking ham sandwiches. I noticed my shoulders had drawn up again, high and tight, and forcibly relaxed them. I wasn’t being shipped off to Forks or anything, forced to handle pewter skies and brooding vampires. Plenty of people would give an arm and a leg to visit Nantucket.

Across the aisle, Chair Boy laughed.

A loud laugh. A look at me laugh.

I steadfastly did not look at him. I might have chosen my seat precisely to put myself in this position, but surely I had some willpower left? Surely I could keep myself from sliding down a slippery slope proven, time and again, to leave me feeling bad about myself.

He laughed once more.

I couldn’t help it. I couldn’t. I glanced over inquisitively. Our gazes collided.

Excerpted from Summer Nights and Meteorites by Hannah Reynolds. Copyright © 2024 by Hannah Reynolds. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


My Review

A delightful read.

This is my first Hannah Reynolds book and I wasn’t sure what to expect. It’s categorized as a Young Adult Romance but it’s so much more. It’s about a fragile relationship between a widowed father and his teenage daughter. It’s about the joy of discovery and of learning. It’s about love and the cost that love exacts. And it’s about the beauty of science. 

Jordan is a likable character with a deep well of inner strength and is easily relatable. Ethan is full of surprises and I can’t wait for readers to discover them all. The secondary characters were essential to the story and made it fuller. Astronomy painted a beautiful backdrop and made the story that much better. The storyline was well thought out, purposefully arranged and entertaining.

I really enjoyed the book and I hope you do too.

FTC Disclaimer: I voluntarily read a copy of the book generously provided by the publisher via Net Galley in exchange for an honest review. This in no way influences my thoughts or feelings about the book or the content of my review.


Purchase Links

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Apple Books

Kobo | Google Play | Penguin Random House


About the Author



Hannah Reynolds grew up outside of Boston, where she spent most of her childhood and teenage years recommending books to friends, working at a bookstore, and making chocolate desserts. She received her BA in creative writing and archaeology from Ithaca College, which meant she never needed to stop telling romantic stories or playing in the dirt. After living in San Francisco, New York, and Paris, she came back to Massachusetts and now lives in Cambridge. Learn more at hannahreynolds.net

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Release Day Spotlight: Rising Sun (Eleven Kingdoms #1) by Donna Grant

 Happy Release Day Donna Grant

Rising Sun is the first book in a brand new series!

Get your copy today!


About the Book

New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Donna Grant introduces a wickedly seductive new series with a ruthless, jaded elf and a bewitching human hiding a powerful secret—unlikely soulmates whose passion will test the boundaries of life and death.

Nothing could make Yasmin return to Shaldorn, the place of nightmares. But when she’s caught stealing, she’s given an ultimatum: take Ravi over the Dangerous Peaks to the stronghold or face imprisonment.

She has no choice but to agree, though she intends to escape the elf as soon as she reaches the mountains. Yet, as they battle nature itself, the two enemies find common ground—and an all-consuming passion.

Can they prevail in their dangerous heist, or be torn apart by betrayal?




Purchase Links

✦SIGNED PRINT→ https://dgrant.co/3upXfAq

✦Amazon→ https://amzn.to/3wcdTUS

✦BN→ https://dgrant.co/3Ulc1kG

✦Kindle→ https://amzn.to/3EZH2Uj

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✦Google→ https://dgrant.co/3RJmWn9

✦Audible→ https://dgrant.co/3TZyS6r

✦Tantor→ https://dgrant.co/49jGoxz

✦Audiobooks→ https://dgrant.co/3vocD0M

✦Nook Audio→ https://dgrant.co/3vrhBKa

✦Kobo Audio → https://dgrant.co/3VFX7be


About the Author


Release Blitz: Love Hazard by Rachel Van Dyken

Hating the guy across the street should never lead to camping, bears, and kissing.

Love Hazard, an all-new steamy novella set in The Bet world from New York Times bestselling author Rachel Van Dyken is now live!


Book Blurb

When hate leads to love next door…

My dad is protective. Scratch that. He’s like the person who would grab a chair, place it on the lawn, and watch me walk across the street just to deliver an apple. So, when a bet between the rude, good-looking guy across the way becomes a full-on battle, it turns into absolute chaos.

He says my degree is useless and that I’m a rich, spoiled princess.

I say he’s an idiot who only knows how to fix motorcycles and is incapable of having a clean-shaven face.

He gives me a tiara. Thanks.

I buy him a razor. Perfect.

He follows that up with a book… Like. I. Can’t. Read.

I then give him soap—explanation easy there.

The following day, I receive a pink princess blanket that I may or may not have burned and tossed on his front doorstep, not realizing his dad is a cop. Now, both dads want the war to stop between us, forcing us to go on a camping trip to bury the hatchet—which I’m convinced he actually brought.

He’s a hazard to my health.

But it’s only a weekend. I honestly don’t know if we’ll make it out alive, but the dads are tired of it all. Regardless, I’ll come out, and prove I'm not the princess he thinks I am.

Maybe he’ll end up lost in the woods—one can only hope. One thing’s for sure. I will never, ever fall for him.

Ever.

A bet with the boy next door? Challenge accepted. I’ll be waiting for my trophy at the

finish line.


Grab your copy today, exclusively on Amazon!

Amazon: https://amzn.to/3ueMAbf

Amazon Worldwide: https://mybook.to/lovehazard

Amazon Print: https://amzn.to/3Sz2w1W


Add Love Hazard to Goodreads: https://bit.ly/48N7E82


Keep reading for a look inside Love Hazard!

 

Grin smug, I was maybe a foot from the Jeep when I heard a crack and looked down.

A branch.

A branch under my foot.

Slowly, I looked over my right shoulder.

Hell was waiting for me there.
With a yell, I grabbed the driver’s side door and jerked it open, then started the Jeep and hit the accelerator with a bear close behind me.

“Ahhhhh!” Hazel screamed as she got thrown across the back seat. “I’m not buckled in.”

“But you are alive.” I took a turn, then another, then went up onto the highway and headed toward the small town of Canon Beach. “You’re alive.”

I was damn near hyperventilating when she crawled into the front seat, buckled up, and turned to me, her brown eyes twinkling. “Naked and Afraid has nothing on us.”

“Well,” I joked, “at least the afraid part. We didn’t have to get naked.”

The air thickened.

Shit.

Again, I did it to myself.

“I guess.” Her voice was quiet. “There are no rules in nature, anyway.”

Vague.

I wanted to ask her what she meant, and then I wanted to analyze and digest every part of the sentence.

My grip tightened on the steering wheel. “We’ll just find a hotel.”

Yes, because that would fix every ounce of sexual tension—forced proximity, a comfy bed, bathrobes, and adrenaline.

Sure.

Oh, the lies we tell ourselves.







For more information about Rachel Van Dyken, visit her website:

https://rachelvandykenauthor.com/


For More Information about 1001 Dark Nights

Website | Facebook | Instagram | TikTok



**Every 1001 Dark Nights novella is a standalone story. For new readers, it’s an introduction to an author’s world. And for fans, it’s a bonus book in the author’s series. We hope you'll enjoy each one as much as we do.**

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Blog Tour: People in Glass Houses by Jayne Castle

New York Times bestselling author Jayne Ann Krentz, writing as Jayne Castle, returns to the alien yet eerily familiar world of Harmony in PEOPLE IN GLASS HOUSES (Ghost Hunters #16), another heart-pounding futuristic romantic suspense novel perfect for fans of J.D. Robb and Christine Feehan.

Returning to the future-set earth colony Harmony with a brand new set of compelling characters and winning combination of electrifying adventure and sizzling romantic tension, this seventeenth installment of Castle’s beloved series follows a disgraced explorer whose crew vanished in a failed expedition and a woman desperate to locate her missing sister, one of the crew members.

Get your copy today!



About the Book

Two people desperate for answers wade through smoke and mirrors within the alien world of Harmony in this new novel by New York Times bestselling author Jayne Castle.

His name is Joshua Knight. Once a respected explorer, the press now calls him the Tarnished Knight. He took the fall for a disaster in the Underworld that destroyed his career. The devastating event occurred in the newly discovered sector known as Glass House—a maze of crystal that is rumored to conceal powerful Alien antiquities. The rest of the Hollister Expedition team disappeared and are presumed dead.

Whatever happened down in the tunnels scrambled Josh’s psychic senses and his memories, but he’s determined to uncover the truth. Labeled delusional and paranoid, he retreats to an abandoned mansion in the desert, a house filled with mirrors. Now a recluse, Josh spends his days trying to discover the secrets in the looking glasses that cover the walls. He knows he is running out of time.

Talented, ambitious crystal artist Molly Griffin is shocked to learn that the Tarnished Knight has been located. She drops everything and heads for the mansion to find Josh, confident she can help him regain control of his shattered senses. She has no choice—he is the key to finding her sister, Leona, a member of the vanished expedition team. Josh reluctantly allows her to stay one night but there are two rules: she must not go down into the basement, and she must not uncover the mirrors that have been draped.

But her only hope for finding her sister is to break the rules…





Excerpt

 

Chapter One

The past . . .

"Higher," Molly shouted, thrilling to the reckless sense of freedom she got on the swings. "I can almost see the sign."Leona obliged, pushing harder on the playground swing. The billboard on the other side of the brick wall came into view. It had been erected a few months earlier and had not yet had time to fade in the desert sun. griffin investigations. want answers? we'll get them for you. call now. no waiting. Beneath the words was a phone number printed in giant red letters. Molly and Leona had both spent so much time on the swings they had memorized it.

Molly's full name was Molly No Middle Initial No Last Name. She was six and a half years old. Her sister's name was Leona No Middle Initial No Last Name. Leona was also six and a half years old. Ms. Inskip, the director of the Inskip School for Orphan Girls, had explained that although they had been left on the doorstep of the school together when they were infants, Molly and Leona were not biological sisters. Molly and Leona had decided to ignore her. After a while Ms. Inskip had given up trying to explain the facts of DNA.

A few months earlier, Molly had found a couple small chunks of untuned amber in the orphanage garden. During arts and crafts class, she and Leona had figured out how to tie lengths of ribbon around the amber to create necklaces. They wore the pendants night and day, symbols of their sisterhood.

Molly and Leona had grown up together within the confines of the school. It was not a bad place like the orphanages in some of the stories they read. Ms. Inskip was stern but not mean. For the most part she hired trained, caring teachers and staff.

As the years went by, Molly and Leona had watched as the other girls who wound up in the orphanage were adopted. But no one had ever wanted the sisters with no last names. Ms. Inskip had told them that they were very special and that someday special parents would come to adopt them. They had stopped believing her.

"Can you see it yet?" Leona demanded, giving the swing another strong shove.

"'Want answers?'" Molly sang out. "'We'll get them for you. Call now. No waiting.'" She rattled off the phone number.

"My turn," Leona announced.

Molly wanted to argue, but there were rules. They had agreed that when the sign came into view it was time to take turns on the swing. Besides, Ms. Inskip would soon call them back inside. The director believed in an orderly routine. She claimed it was the best way to ensure that the orphaned girls in her care developed what she called the life skills needed to take their place as respectable, responsible adults in society.

What Molly and Leona were gradually figuring out was that becoming a respectable, responsible adult in a society in which family and family connections were everything was not easy for orphans-and even more difficult for those whose last name was No Last Name.

A complete absence of basic personal information-no birth certificates, no sad notes from desperate unwed mothers, no ancestry records-was an extremely rare circumstance, but Ms. Inskip insisted that was the case for Molly and Leona.

Molly reluctantly jumped off the swing. Leona took her place.

"Make it go really high," Leona ordered. She was inclined to tell others what to do and how to do it whether or not they wanted the instructions.

Molly pushed until Leona was flying high enough to read the Griffin Investigations sign. She was about to demand another turn on the swings when a man's arm wrapped around her from behind, squeezing her so hard she couldn't breathe. A big hand clamped across her mouth. Remembering Ms. Inskip's rules for dealing with Stranger Danger, she struggled wildly. But in the next instant she felt a sharp sting on her upper shoulder. She got dizzy.

She was dimly aware that the stranger was carrying her out through the open gate. She wondered briefly how he had managed to steal the key from Ms. Inskip, and then she fell into darkness.

The last thing she heard before she went unconscious was Leona's scream.

Chapter Two

The past . . .

She woke up in a radiant green chamber. There was a high, arched doorway but no windows. She was a fan of the rez-screen series Jake Carlisle, Underworld Explorer, so she recognized the setting immediately. She was in the maze of ancient underground tunnels that crisscrossed the planet.

Two metal tables sat in the center of the room. There were a notebook and a small pile of yellow crystals on one of the tables. The other table was covered with glass tubes and jars, some of which contained strangely colored liquids. The items reminded Molly of a scene in the video Ms. Inskip had made the girls watch the previous week, Do I Want to Be a Scientist When I Grow Up? She remembered that chambers like the one she was in were called laboratories.

Leona had been fascinated with the video. Molly had been bored.

At the thought of Leona, she reached up to take comfort from the amber pendant. But it was gone. She realized she must have lost it in the struggle with the stranger.

Out of nowhere, terror swept over her, closing her throat and making it almost impossible to breathe. There was no sign of the man who had taken her, but she was sure he was not far away. She was afraid to move, because every instinct warned her that doing so might draw his attention.

After a while she realized she could not stay motionless forever. She had to pee and then she had to escape. She scrambled to her feet, never taking her eyes off the doorway. When the stranger did not appear, she started to move out into the hall to search for a bathroom.

Without warning the doorway began to shiver with shadows. Another wave of fear lanced through her. Somehow she knew she must not touch the strange darkness that whispered in the opening.

Unable to come up with an alternative, she retreated to a corner to take care of the immediate problem.

When she was finished, she went back to the doorway again, hoping the scary shadows were gone. She was not sure what she would do if she did get out of the horrible chamber. Like every other kid on Harmony, she and the girls at the orphanage had been warned repeatedly about the risks of going down into the maze of ancient green quartz tunnels that crisscrossed the planet. Children who went into the Underworld alone never returned to the surface, according to Ms. Inskip. But anything was better than staying in the laboratory waiting for the stranger to come back.

She moved as cautiously as she could, trying to sneak up on the shadows, but when she was a couple of steps away, they flared in the doorway, blocking her path.

She looked around the small space. There was nowhere to hide. She stood in the center of the room, tears leaking from her eyes, unable to think of anything else to do.

She cried until she could not cry any more and then she hunkered down against a wall, drew up her knees, and hugged her legs close, trying to make herself as small as possible.

She had no idea how much time passed before the first dust bunny showed up in the doorway. He stood on his hind paws and chortled. He looked just like the pictures of Newton, the Clever Dust Bunny, the hero of her favorite series of children's books. He was a scruffy ball of gray fur with two small ears and six paws. He watched her with his bright blue eyes. She knew he had a second set that he used for hunting, but they were closed.

It was such a relief to see a nonthreatening creature that she almost cried again.

"Hi," she whispered.

The dust bunny fluttered through the doorway, unconcerned about the dark shadows, and halted in front of her. She patted him gently on top of his furry head.

"You should leave before the stranger comes," Molly said. "He'll probably hurt you."

The dust bunny made encouraging noises and zipped back and forth between her and the doorway. She shook her head.

"I can't leave," she said. "The shadows won't let me."

The dust bunny abandoned the attempt to coax her out of the chamber. He gave a farewell chortle and disappeared out into the hall. She wanted to cry again but she couldn't. It was as if she could not feel anything at all now.

After a while she went to the table that held the yellow crystals. Curious, she picked one up. It felt good in her hand. She dropped it into the pocket of her blue Inskip School uniform. Then she chose a second stone for Leona and put it in her other pocket.

The dust bunny returned some time later. At first she thought she was dreaming. In her many lectures on the risks of wandering into the tunnels, Ms. Inskip had talked about something called hallucinations. She had explained that they were among the many terrible things that happened to little girls who took a notion to explore the Underworld. She had explained that experiencing hallucinations was a lot like falling into a bad dream while you were awake.

The dust bunny chortled and bustled through the doorway, once again ignoring the shadows. Molly decided she did not care if he was a hallucination.

"Thanks for coming back," she whispered. "I'm glad to see you again, but it isn't safe here. You should go."

The dust bunny ignored the advice and bounced a little, clearly excited about something. She picked him up and hugged him close, taking comfort from his furry presence. But he immediately wriggled free and fluttered back toward the doorway. He chortled down the hallway.

A moment later she realized he had not returned alone. A half dozen dust bunnies scampered through the doorway and chortled at the sight of her. It was as if they had just played a game and won. They were beside themselves with glee.

Before Molly could understand what was going on, two women appeared in the opening. They had flamers in their hands and knives on their belts. Both wore small day packs, the kind adults carried when they went into the Underworld, but aside from the weapons and the packs, neither of them was dressed like Jake Carlisle, Underworld Explorer.

The shorter one had shoulder-length, silver-blond hair. She wore tight faded jeans, a crisp white shirt, a wide leather belt studded with amber, and boots. The taller woman had on a blue pantsuit and low-heeled dress shoes. There was a pretty scarf around her throat. Her dark hair was pinned up in a knot.

Both women wore matching wedding rings.

"Told you the dust bunnies were not playing a game," the one with blond hair said. "Hang on while I de-rez the shadow trap."

A moment later the strange darkness that had barred the doorway disappeared. The dust bunnies chortled approval.

Molly gazed at the two women. A part of her was thrilled, but she was also worried about hallucinations. "Are you angels?"

The one with blond hair chuckled as she strode through the opening. "Sorry, no. Charlotte and I were out partying at a bar the night the angel recruiter came around looking for talent."

"What?" Molly said.
"Never mind, honey," Charlotte said. "Eugenie here likes to make dumbass jokes at inappropriate times."

"Ms. Inskip doesn't like it if we say dumbass," Molly said.

"Screw Ms. Inskip," Eugenie said cheerfully. She surveyed the room. "On second thought, forget that idea. What the hell is this place?"

"It's a laboratory," Molly announced. "I saw one in the career video."

"Good observation," Charlotte said.

She went to the smaller table and scooped up the notebook.

"Here's the deal, kid," Eugenie said. "We're no angels but we're the next best thing. We're the team from Griffin Investigations."

Molly was dazzled. "'Want answers? We'll get them for you,'" she recited. "'Call now. No waiting.'"

Charlotte glanced at Eugenie. "And you said those signs were a waste of money." She turned back to Molly. "Your sister, Leona, called us. When we showed up at the Inskip School, she told us what had happened and gave us your necklace. Helen Inskip claimed you'd been adopted, but we didn't believe her for a second, did we, Eugenie?"

"Nope." Eugenie snorted. "It was pretty clear Inskip was lying. But we'll let the authorities deal with her. Right now our job is to get out of here."

The dust bunnies chortled and took off through the doorway.

"I guess they figured their work here was done," Charlotte said.

"Ours isn't," Eugenie said. "You take Molly. I'll handle security."

"Right." Charlotte stuffed the notebook into her pack. Flamer in one hand, she extended the other hand to Molly. "Ready to leave?"

"Yes, please," Molly said.

When Charlotte's fingers closed around her small hand, she knew everything was going to be all right. Eugenie went out into the hall, checked both ways, and then beckoned.

"All clear," she announced.

Molly was so happy to be out of the green chamber she almost cried again. But she managed to avoid embarrassing herself in front of the brave team from Griffin Investigations.

Eugenie led the way. When they reached an intersection, she motioned Charlotte and Molly to wait.

She moved out into the intersection.

"Well, shit," she said.

Molly started to say that Ms. Inskip did not approve of the word shit, but there was not time, because Eugenie was diving back into the corridor where Charlotte and Molly waited. A bolt of fire flashed in the intersection. Thanks to two seasons of Jake Carlisle, Underworld Explorer, Molly knew that she had just seen a blast from a flamer.

"How many?" Charlotte asked.

"I only saw one. Not a pro. Bad beard. Bad hair. Bad glasses. He's wearing a white lab coat."

"That fits with the lab stuff we just saw," Charlotte said. "He may have security working with him."

"I don't think so. Pros would have done a better job of guarding the kid."

An outraged male voice thundered in the other hallway.

"You can't take the child. She is a subject in a very important research project. She will be returned to the school unharmed when I have completed the exam."

"This case just keeps getting weirder and weirder," Charlotte said.

"The situation seems pretty straightforward to me." Eugenie crouched at the entrance to the intersection and raised her voice. "You're guilty of kidnapping. There are witnesses. I'm making a citizen's arrest."

Excerpted from People in Glass Houses by Jayne Castle. Copyright © 2024 by Jayne Castle. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


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About the Author


Jayne Castle, the author of Sweetwater and the Witch, Guild Boss, Illusion Town, Siren's Call, The Hot Zone, Deception Cove, and more, is a pseudonym for Jayne Ann Krentz, the author of more than fifty New York Times bestsellers. She writes contemporary romantic suspense novels under the Krentz name, as well as historical novels under the pseudonym Amanda Quick. Learn more online at www.jayneannkrentz.com.