The Becoming by Nora Roberts -Review & Excerpt

The Becoming by Nora Roberts – Review & Excerpt

 

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Description:
The world of magick and the world of man have long been estranged from one another. But some can walk between the two–including Breen Siobhan Kelly. She has just returned to Talamh, with her friend, Marco, who’s dazzled and disoriented by this realm–a place filled with dragons and faeries and mermaids (but no WiFi, to his chagrin). In Talamh, Breen is not the ordinary young schoolteacher he knew her as. Here she is learning to embrace the powers of her true identity. Marco is welcomed kindly by her people–and by Keegan, leader of the Fey. Keegan has trained Breen as a warrior, and his yearning for her has grown along with his admiration of her strength and skills.

But one member of Breen’s bloodline is not there to embrace her. Her grandfather, the outcast god Odran, plots to destroy Talamh–and now all must unite to defeat his dark forces. There will be losses and sorrows, betrayal and bloodshed. But through it, Breen Siobhan Kelly will take the next step on the journey to becoming all that she was born to be

 

 

Review:

The Becoming by Nora Roberts is the 2nd book in her The Dragon Heart Legacy series. I loved the first book (The Awakening) in this series, and could not wait to read The Becoming.  Needless to say, I also loved this book, which is the norm as Nora always creates such wonderful trilogies.

Breen Siobhan Kelly, our heroine, returns to Talamh, where she was needed and is destined to be, especially loving the beautiful incredible land and family/friends she knew when she was a young child, only to be taken away by her mother.  She knows she needs to train more, as well as learn how to use her magic, and stand up to fight the evil god, Odran and save Talamh and the Fey.  Breen didn’t plan on her friend, Marco jumping into the portal with her, but everyone in Talamh welcomes him; even though he is dazzled by the magical place filled with filled with magic, fairies, witches, dragons, elves and weres.

Breen is happy to return to her family and friends, and it was great to see them all again; Keegan, Nan, Bollocks, Morena, Harken, Aisling, and I loved Tarryn (Keegan’s Mother). The slow build romance between Breen and Keegan is very promising, but both are determined to stay focus on her training to be ready to face the challenge of the dark forces facing them.  Keegan pushes Breen to the max in learning to fight as a warrior, but it is Nan (her grandmother) who teaches her how to build her skills magically; with each passing day, as well as separate threats against her, Breen’s powers grow.

What follows is exciting, action filled adventure that kept my attention throughout, unable to put the book down.  I loved watching Breen learn how to use her enhanced magical powers, as well as learn more from Tarryn; not to mention Keegan pushing her to the max.  Breen was such a great heroine, stepping in a few times using her escalated powers to save the day, especially standing up to the evil villain (Odran). I also loved how Breen continues to use her private time writing children’s books centering on Bollocks, as well as doing an adult novel. Of course, I loved loved Bollocks, who was also one of my favorites. 

The Becoming was another fantastic story, so very well done by Nora Roberts.  I love the world of Talamah, with so many wonderful secondary characters, and a fantastic heroine. I will not give spoilers, as you need to read this book from start to finish, but if you have not read The Awakening, then please start there.  I loved everything about this book, as I devoured it from start to finish, and look forward to the next book.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

Prologue

In the long ago, the worlds of gods and men and Fey coexisted. Through times of peace, through times of war, in times of plenty, in times of loss, the worlds mingled freely. As the wheel of time turned, there came those who pushed aside the old gods for the gods of greed, for the lust of dominion over the land and the sea, for the glory of what some deemed progress. In the dung hill of greed and lust and glory, fear and hatred bloomed. Some gods grew angry at the lessening of respect and homage, and some turned anger into a craving to possess and to destroy. More, wiser and more temperate, saw the wheel turn as it must and cast out those who used their great powers to murder and enslave. As the worlds of man turned the gods into things of myth, those who called themselves holy persecuted any who chose to worship in the old ways. Such acts, once as common as wildflowers in a meadow, brought torture and an ugly death. Soon, the fear and hatred aimed its brittle fingers toward the Fey. The Wise, once revered for their powers, became twisted into creatures of evil, as were the Sidhe who no longer dared spread their wings for fear of a hunter’s arrow. Weres became cursed monsters who devoured human flesh, and Mers the sirens who lured simple seafarers to their deaths. With fear and hatred, persecutions raged over the worlds, pitting man against man, Fey against Fey, man against Fey in a bloody, brutal time fueled by those who claimed they stood on holy ground. So in the world of Talamh, and others, there came a time of choice. The leader of Talamh offered the Fey, all of its tribes, this choice. To turn from the old ways and follow the rules and laws of man, or to preserve their laws, their magicks by closing off from other worlds. The Fey chose magicks. In the end, after the windy and righteous debates such matters demanded, the taoiseach and the council found compromise. New laws were written. All were encouraged to travel to other worlds, to learn of them, to sample them. Any who chose to make their home outside Talamh must follow the laws of that world, and but one unbreakable law of Talamh. Magicks must never be used to harm another but to save a life. And even then, such action demanded a return to Talamh and judgment on the justice of their actions. So, for generation upon generation, Talamh held peace within its borders. Some left for other worlds; others brought mates from those worlds to settle in Talamh. Crops grew in the green fields, trolls mined the deep caves, game roamed the thick woods, and the two moons shined over the hills and the seas. But such peaceful worlds, such green and rich land, plants hunger in dark hearts. In time, with vengeful purpose, a cast-out god slid through the worlds into Talamh. He won the heart of the young taoiseach who saw him as he willed her to see him. Handsome and good and loving. They made a child, as it was the child he wanted. A child in whom ran the blood of the taoiseach, of the Wise with more than a dollop of the Sidhe, and with his, blood of a god. Each night, as the mother slept an enchanted sleep, the dark god drank power from the babe, consuming what it was to add to his own. But the mother woke, saw the god for what he was. She saved her son, and led Talamh in a great battle to cast out the fallen god. Once this was done, and portals charmed against him and any who followed him, she gave up her staff, threw the sword of the taoiseach back into the Lake of Truth for another to lift, for another to lead. She raised her son, and when his time came round, as the wheel decreed, he raised the sword from the waters of the lake to take his place as leader of the Fey. And, a wise leader, he held the peace season by season, year by year. On his travels he met a human woman, and they loved. He brought her to his world, to his people, to the farm that was his and his mother’s and her family’s before her, and theirs before. They knew joy, a joy that grew when they made a child. For three years, the child knew nothing but love and wonder and the peace her father held as firmly as he held her hand. Such a prize was she, this girl child, the only one known who carried the blood of the Wise, the Sidhe, the gods, and the human. The dark god came for her, using the twisted powers of a turned witch to breach the portal. He caged her in glass, deep in the pale green waters of the river where he plotted to keep her, letting her powers grow a bit longer. No babe this time he would have to sip from, but one he could, when ripe, gulp whole. Yet she already held more power than he knew. More than she knew. Her cries reached beyond the portal, into Talamh. Her anger broke through the conjured glass, drove the god back even as the Fey, led by her father, her grandmother, raged into battle. Even with the child safe, the god’s castle destroyed, and the portal protections reinforced, the girl’s mother could not, would not rest. She demanded they return to the world of man, without magick she now viewed as evil, and keep their daughter there without memory of the world of her birth. Torn between love and duty, the taoiseach lived in both worlds, making a home as best he could for his daughter, returning to Talamh to lead, and in leading to keep his world and his child safe. The marriage could not survive it, and as the wheel turned, neither did the taoiseach survive his next battle, as his father murdered him. While the girl grew, believing her father had left her, never knowing what she had inside her, raised by a mother whose fear pushed her to demand the daughter think herself less and less, another young boy raised the sword from the lake. So they grew in their worlds from girl to woman, from boy to man. She, unhappy, did as she was bid. He, determined, guarded the peace. In Talamh, they waited, knowing the god threatened all worlds. He would again seek the blood of his blood, and the wheel would turn so the time would come when the Talamhish could no longer stop him. She, the bridge between worlds, must return and awaken, must become, and must choose to give all, risk all to help destroy the god. When she came to Talamh, innocent of all that had come before, she had only begun a journey into herself. Led there by a grandmother’s open heart, she learned, she grieved, she embraced. And awakened. Like her father, she had love and duty in two worlds. That love and duty drew her back to the world where she’d been raised, but with a promise to return. With her heart torn, she prepared to leave what she had known and risk all she was. On the knife’s edge, with the taoiseach and Talamh waiting, she shared all with the brother of her heart, a friend like no other. As she stepped into the portal, he, as true as ever was, leaped with her. Caught between worlds, between loves, between duties, she began her journey into becoming. Chapter One With the wind whipping a gale in the portal, Breen felt her grip on Marco’s hand start to slip. She couldn’t see, as the light had gone bright and blinding. She couldn’t hear through the roar of that wind. As if tossed by the gale, she tumbled, with Keegan’s hand a vise grip on hers, and her desperate fingers barely clinging to Marco’s. Then, like a switch flipped, she fell. The air went cool and damp, the light snapped off, and the wind died. She landed hard enough to rattle bones. On a dirt road, she realized, wet from the soft rain still falling. And in the rain, she smelled Talamh. Breathless, she rolled to hunker over Marco. He sprawled, limp and still, with eyes wide and shocked. “Are you okay? Let me see. Marco, you idiot!” Searching, she ran her hands over him. “Nothing’s broken.” Now she stroked her hand over Marco’s face as she whipped her head around to snarl at Keegan. “What the hell was that? Even the first time I came through, it wasn’t like that.” He shoved his hand through his hair. “I didn’t account for the extra passenger. Or all your bloody luggage. And still I got us back, didn’t I?” “What the actual fuck?” As Marco stirred, she turned back to him. “Don’t try to get up yet. You’re going to be dizzy and shaky, but you’re okay.” He just stared at her, his brown eyes huge and glassy with shock. “Did all this crazy make you a doctor, too?” “Not exactly. Just catch your breath. What the hell do we do now?” she shot at Keegan. “Get out of the fecking rain to start.” He pushed to his feet, a tall, irritated man with dark hair curling in the damp. “I aimed to bring us back in the dooryard of the farmhouse.” He gestured. “And wasn’t far off considering what came with us.” She could see the stone house now, the silhouette of it a few yards away and across the road. “Marco isn’t a what.” Keegan just strode over, crouched down. “All right now, brother, sit yourself up. Take it slow.” “My laptop!” When Breen spotted it on the road, she scrambled up, sprinted over to grab the case. “Well now, she will have her priorities.” In the road, in the rain, she clutched it to her. “This is as important to me as your sword is to you.” “If it got banged up, you’ll fix it. That’s the way,” he said to Marco, “slow and easy.” The way he spoke to Marco—slow and easy—reminded Breen that Keegan could be kind. When he wanted to be. She strapped on the laptop case cross-body, hurried back to them. “You’re going to feel dizzy and weird. The first time I came through I fainted.” “Guys don’t faint.” But Marco dropped his spinning head to his updrawn knees. “We can pass out, we can get knocked out, but we don’t faint.” “That’s the way,” Keegan said cheerfully. “Let’s get you on your feet. We could use a hand here, Breen.” “Just let me get my suitcase.” “Women, by the gods!” Keegan whipped out a hand, and the suitcase vanished. “Where did it go?” Marco’s voice hitched, this time his eyes rolled. “Where’d it go?” “Not to worry, it’s all fine. Up you come now. Lean on me, and we’ll get you there.” “I can’t feel my knees. Are they here?” “Right where they should be.” Breen hurried over to wrap an arm around Marco from the other side. “It’s okay. You’re okay. It’s not far, see? We’re going right there.” He managed a few shaky steps. “Men don’t faint, but they do puke. I might.” Breen pressed a hand to his stomach, pulled out some of the churning. It made her feel a little queasy, but she told herself she’d handle it. “Better?” “Yeah, I guess. I think I’m having a really weird dream. Breen has weird dreams,” he told Keegan in a voice that sounded a little drunk. “Scary weird sometimes. This one’s just weird.” Keegan flicked a hand, and the gate of the dooryard swung open. “Like that kind of weird. Smells good anyway. Like Ireland. Right, Breen?” “Yes, but it’s not.” “That would be way weird if we’re standing in our apartment in Philly one minute and going splat on a road in Ireland the next. ‘Beam me up, Scotty’ time.” “Those are good stories.” Keegan flicked the door open. “Here we are now. You’ll have a lie down on the divan here.” “Lying down’s good. Hey, Breen, there’s your suitcase. It’s real homey in here. Old-timey homey. It’s nice. Oh, thank Christ,” he said when they laid him down on the couch. “I didn’t faint, see. Didn’t puke either. Yet”

From The Becoming, by Nora Roberts. Copyright (c) 2021 by the author, and reprinted with permission of St. Martin’s Publishing Group

 

 

 

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Holly Jolly Cowboy by Jessica Clare-Review & Excerpt

Holly Jolly Cowboy (The Wyoming Cowboy 7) by Jessica Clare-Review & Excerpt

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date October 26, 2021.

Local waitress Holly Dawson needs a better paying job to cover her sister’s college tuition. Given that it’s Christmas and she’s broke as a joke, she’s feeling pretty bah-humbug. New jobs are hard to come by in a town as small as Painted Barrel, especially as the town dropout.

When Holly’s offered a job at the Flat C Ranch to clean and cook for the cowboys that work there, it seems like a dream come true…except for one thing. Her nemesis, the incredibly handsome (and annoyingly arrogant) Adam Calhoun works there. It doesn’t matter that he loves dogs more than people, or that he’s a war veteran. No Christmas spirit can save that particular grinch.

When the rest of the ranch hands go out of town for the holidays, Holly and Adam will be forced to work closely together. No sweat. Holly can deal with Adam. And if she doesn’t kill him first, she just might fall in love.

••••••

REVIEW:HOLLY JOLLY COWBOY is the seventh instalment in Jessica Clare’s contemporary, adult THE WYOMING COWBOY, erotic, cowboy, romance series. This is waitress/baker Holly Dawson, and rancher Adam Calhoun’s story line. HOLLY JOLLY COWBOY can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the previous story lines is revealed where necessary.

Told from dual third person perspectives (Holly and Adam) HOLLY JOLLY COWBOY follows the enemies to lovers relationship between waitress/baker Holly Dawson, and rancher Adam Calhoun. For months, Adam Calhoun and some of the local ranchers have visited the café where Holly works but for some reason Adam has takes an immediate dislike towards our story line heroine, and continues to humiliate her at every chance he gets. When Holly is offered a job to cook for the cowboys at a local ranch, our heroine jumps at the chance only to come face to face with her nemesis Adam Calhoun. Refusing to bow to Adam’s games, Holly one-ups Adam only to become the focus of the ultimate failure and betrayal. What ensues is the building romance and relationship between Holly and Adam, and the potential fall-out when Adam reveals the source of Holly’s mortification leaving a stunned and heart broken heroine in its’ wake.

Holly Dawson had to give up her dreams with the death of her parents, leaving Holly to raise her younger sister by herself. Working two jobs to pay for her sister’s education, Holly is hoping to one day open her own café or bakery but struggles in the aftermath of a humiliating failure. The only bright spot is her relationship with Adam which has turned friendly and sexual, a relationship that is about to royally implode. Adam Calhoun has disliked Holly Dawson from the moment they met believing our heroine is a phony and a fraud but Adam has no idea as to the extent of Holly’s need to thrive, and in this, Adam continues to push at Holly every chance he gets. Arrogant and infuriated, Adam crosses a line from which Holly may never step back.

The relationship between Adam and Holly begins acrimoniously as Adam spends months embarrassing Holly at her place of work but Holly refuses to break every time. Holly is a generous, hard working heroine who must do battle with the local bully, a bully who has set his sites on our story line heroine. Holly doesn’t understand what she did to make Adam hate the very ground upon which she walks, and with it, Holly must walk the walk in order to survive. Working at the ranch, Holly must face Adam on a daily basis but never expected to fall for the man that is about to destroy her dreams. The $ex scenes are passionate without the use of over the top, sexually graphic language and text.

The secondary and supporting characters include several ranch owners Sage Cooper and Jason Clements ( A Cowboy Under The Mistletoe 3), Becca Loftis (The Cowboy Meets His Match 4), Caleb Watson (Her Christmas Cowboy 5), as well as Holly’s younger sister Polly, and a cameo by Adam’s brother Mike.

HOLLY JOLLY COWBOY is a story of betrayal and vengeance, misunderstanding and heart break, forgiveness and love. The character driven premise is captivating and engaging; the romance is affectionate and tender; the characters are strong-willed, independent and determined.

Reading Order and Previous Reviews
All I Want for Christmas is a Cowboy
The Cowboy and His baby
A Cowboy Under the Mistletoe
The Cowboy Meets His Match
Her Christmas Cowboy
The Bachelor Cowboy

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

 

HOLLY JOLLY COWBOY by Jessica Clare
Berkley Mass Market Original | On sale October 26th, 2021
ExcerptAdam Calhoun did his best to ignore their waitress as he took off his hat and hung it on a peg near the door. It was clear she loathed him and was pretending for the tip. He hated that sort of thing, and it just made him want to stiff her even more. She was so obvious about it, too, her smile fake and sweet as she poured cups of coffee and took orders. She didn’t even glance at him as she took his down, just focused on her pad as she wrote. She had plenty of smiles for Carson and Jason, though, which just irked him.It wasn’t that he was ugly. Most women thought he was nice-looking. Adam was just vain enough to know that he had a good smile and a decent personality, and that usually let him get the attention of most women he flirted with. Most. Because waitress Holly was probably the prettiest thing in this town-and several others around-and yet she couldn’t stand him. He drained his coffee cup while the others ordered and then held it in the air, a silent request for more.

Her eyes flashed with anger momentarily, and it was quickly covered up by that fake smile again. “Be right back.”

She hustled off, her round bottom shaking with every step, and okay, he was red-blooded male enough to watch.

“Now you’re just baiting her,” Jason commented, sipping his own cup.

Maybe he was. There was something about Holly that drove him absolutely up a wall. Maybe it was that she was always all smiles, even when she clearly didn’t feel like it. Her clothes were a little tighter than they probably should have been, her festive red sweater practically painted on her lush figure, and her jeans showing off her curves. Her dark brown hair was pulled up into a bouncy long ponytail atop her head and fastened with a big, garish Christmas bow. She looked festive and flirty and it irked him.

Maybe it was that the first time he’d come in, she’d flirted up a storm with him and so he’d tipped well. He’d even come back later that night, after thinking about her all afternoon, only to see her flirting with another customer like she’d done with him, and he’d realized it was all for tips. It made him angry. Made him feel stupid. So he’d left a dollar.

He’d left a dollar ever since, too. Just to make a statement.

He had a dollar sitting in his wallet today, waiting for the opportunity to poke at her again.

Holly brought back the coffee, taking his mug with a cool expression and filling it quickly. “Separate checks today, boys?”

Jason raised a finger before Adam could answer. “One check. I’m paying for lunch today.”

“In that case, make my sandwich a double,” Adam drawled. “Didn’t know it was free.”

The waitress’s demeanor brightened. “Well, aren’t you sweet, Jason Clements.” She winked at him. “You want me to pack up a sandwich for your lovely wife, too? The bread’s nice and fresh and I can make hers with extra pickles, just as she likes.”

Jason nodded. “That’s a great idea. Thanks.”

“I’ll have it ready by the time you leave.” She touched Carson’s shoulder, then leaned over him to pour his coffee, and Adam found himself staring at her tits. She wasn’t shoving them in anyone’s face but . . . how did she expect a man to concentrate when she wore a sweater like that? Ridiculous. She patted Carson’s shoulder again, then turned and left, swanning her way to another table full of men. A moment later, her bright laughter floated through the saloon, and it made him grit his teeth.

 


 

Jessica Clare is the pen name for Jill Myles.

Jill Myles has been an incurable romantic since childhood. She reads all the ‘naughty parts’ of books first, looks for a dirty joke in just about everything, and thinks to this day that the Little House on the Prairie books should have been steamier.

After devouring hundreds of paperback romances, mythology books, and archaeological tomes, she decided to write a few books of her own – stories with a wild adventure, sharp banter, and lots of super-sexy situations. She prefers her heroes alpha and half-dressed, her heroines witty, and she loves nothing more than watching them overcome adversity to fall into bed together.

Website: http://jillmyles.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorJessicaClare?directed_target_id=0
Twitter: https://twitter.com/_JessicaClare
Goodreads: http://tinyurl.com/q4272wf

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Celebration at Christmas Cove by Carrie Jansen – Excerpt & Review

Celebration at Christmas Cove by Carrie Jansen – Excerpt & Review

 

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Description:
Travel magazine writer Celeste Bell is in a terrible mood. Not only was her flight to the Caribbean diverted to a Massachusetts island, now it looks like she’ll have to spend Christmas there. Single and still mourning the loss of her mother a year earlier, Celeste is desperate to avoid any emotional entanglements and all holiday festivities. She just doesn’t feel like celebrating.

But that’s exactly what community center director Nathan White and his young daughter, Abigail, want to do. Nathan is entirely focused on making sure that his daughter has a happy Christmas, especially with the knowledge that if he can’t raise money for the community center soon, it will close and they’ll have to leave the island. When he meets Celeste, Nathan begins to feel a connection and wonders if he’s brave enough to risk his heart once more.

Thawing their frozen hearts and saving the community center will require a Christmas miracle. But ’tis the season….

 

 

Review:

Celebration at Christmas Cove by Carrie Jansen is the first book in her A Sea Spray Island Romance Holiday novel.

Celeste Bell, our heroine, is flying to the Caribbean for business, even though it is close to Christmas.  Celest lost her mother a year ago, and has been a workaholic, keeping herself busy; and not caring to celebrate the holiday.   Celeste is a travel writer for a magazine, and since she doesn’t care, she accepts an assignment from her abusive boss, as she hopes for a promotion.  Her flight is diverted to a small island in Massachusetts.

Nathan White, our hero, is on his way back home to Sea Spray Island, after failing to get funding for the town’s Community Center.  Nathan is a single dad, having lost his wife a few years ago, and has a wonderful teenage daughter, Abigail. Nathan meets Celeste, and though she stubbornly wants to get another flight to the Caribbean, he tries to tell her she is stuck on the island for a day or two.  He brings her to his sister’s inn for her to stay until things open up. 

Nathan is determined to try to find funding elsewhere, in order to be able to stay on Sea Spray Island, and keep the community running.  He felt a connection to Celeste, but at first she was only pushing to leave the island, despite the terrible storms, which was a bit irritating.   I loved the many people on the Island, who were fantastic and fun; Carol (Nathan’s sister, who owns the Inn); Abigail (who was terrific and wanted to keep Celeste in town); Patty (the airport attendant, who was a riot); Arthur (also staying at the Inn, who tried to help Celeste fight her abusive boss). 

What follows is an entertaining and engaging story line, with some wonderful characters, and enjoyable Christmas events in the town. At first, I found Celeste annoying, than even Nathan also started to be irritating, so this was a slow burn romance that took a bit longer for the couple to finally come together. Celebration at Christmas Cove was a fun story, very well written by Carrie Jansen.  If you enjoy a Christmas feel throughout the book, with cute decorations/events, funny sweaters and cozy socks, then you should read Celebration at Christmas Cove.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

Monday—December 19

“You’re bumping me?” As a writer for an elite travel magazine, Celeste Bell had virtually flown around the world over the course of the past seven years and she’d never been bumped from a flight. She knew it was bound to happen sooner or later; she just didn’t want it happening now.
“We paged you three times, but since you weren’t at the gate for initial boarding, we assigned the seat to another passenger,” the agent explained.
Celeste wasn’t at the gate because she’d had to bring her luggage to the ticket counter after changing out of the ugly sweater she’d worn to her office holiday party earlier that day. This season, she’d been avoiding Christmas festivities like the flu, but since participation was mandatory, she reluctantly donned the most hideous apparel she could find: a fluffy, white sweater with a cartoonish fir tree emblazoned across the front. The tree was crowned with a blinking LED-powered star, and a dozen miniature, multicolored sleigh bells were strung from its boughs with silver tinsel. The sweater bore an uncanny resemblance to a yuletide craft Celeste had made in first grade from a paper plate, cotton balls, glitter and various geometric shapes cut from red, green and yellow felt. Oh, the things she did for the sake of her career.
“I get it. Symbolism,” Brad, the college intern, remarked. Holding a plastic cup of eggnog in one hand and a chocolate mint brownie in the other, he gestured toward her midsection with his chin. “You chose that sweater because your last name’s Bell, right?”
The bells were actually Celeste’s least favorite part of the sweater, which was saying a lot. Whenever she walked from her cubicle to her boss’s office or to the break room and back again, their jingling made her feel like a Clydesdale horse—it didn’t help that she’d gathered her long, thick blond hair into a high ponytail—and drew increasingly annoyed looks from her coworkers over the course of the day.
She intended to switch wardrobes before a colleague drove her to Logan International Airport, but at the last minute, the magazine’s editor in chief, Philip Carrington, tasked Celeste with proofreading Brad’s post about the Boston Harbor Holiday Cruise. And by proofreading Philip meant rewriting. Brad’s draft was so poorly structured, it took Celeste half an hour to reword it, and by that time her coworker was threatening to leave without her.
When she arrived at the airport, Celeste wheeled her luggage into the restroom so she could change. She removed her heavy winter coat, scarf and gloves, and she stuffed them into her suitcase, along with her socks and shoes. Then, she opened her smaller carry-on and checked to make sure she had a travel blanket with her before adroitly exchanging her slacks and ugly sweater for a casual slate-blue swing dress and crochet cardigan. Finally, she slid her feet into a pair of canvas sneakers. Celeste intended to be ready for the tropical Caribbean temps the moment she stepped off the plane.
But first she’d have to step onto the plane.
“Are you sure there aren’t any seats left?” It was an inane question, and Celeste could hear the whine of desperation in her own voice.
“I can book you on the eleven-thirty-six flight tomorrow morning. Of course, we’ll compensate you for the inconvenience, as well.”
Tomorrow was December 20. Technically, Celeste didn’t need to be in the Caribbean until first light on December 23. That’s when the Christmas carnival—or simply carnival, as it was called—for the particular island she was visiting kicked off a daybreak street party known as j’ouvert. The trip was a mix of business and pleasure; after taking a couple days to enjoy a much-needed break, Celeste would spend December 23, 24 and 25 attending carnival and describing its highlights in a Christmas Day post on the magazine’s blog. That meant if she didn’t leave Boston until almost noon tomorrow, she’d squander nearly a full day of vacation. Even so, Celeste cared less about that than she did about the weather forecast, which warned that a nor’easter was brewing. If it followed its projected course, the storm could pack a wallop in terms of snow accumulation, and who knew how that might affect air travel for the next few days. She couldn’t risk it.
“Would you check for flights on other airlines, please?”
The agent’s fingernails clicked against the keyboard, her expression impassive. After what felt like an eon, she said, “If we hurry, I can book a seat for you on a flight with our partner airline, IslandSky. There would be a brief layover on Sea Spray Island—”
“I’ll take it,” Celeste said as the woman continued to speak.
“—then you’d continue to New York City and from there you’d fly nonstop—”
“Yes, thank you, that’s what I want to do.” Celeste didn’t care about the small print, she just needed to get on that flight.
A few more minutes of keyboard clicking and then Celeste was off and running, dodging fellow travelers and circumventing airport vendors as she darted toward Terminal C with her carry-on bag in tow, the sweater inside it jingling all the way. As she ran, she recognized it wasn’t really the need for an extra day of relaxation that spurred her on. Nor was it solely that she’d made a professional commitment to cover the carnival. No, what really urged Celeste forward was the fear that if she didn’t leave now, right now, it would be too late and then there’d be no escaping for Christmas.
And escaping was her primary purpose in volunteering to immerse herself in a Caribbean carnival while all of her coworkers were celebrating Christmas with their families. From the rollicking parades and music, to the lively dancing, vibrant costumes and mouthwatering food, the carnival wasn’t likely to evoke memories of the calm and cozy but joyful Christmases that Celeste used to celebrate. On the contrary, going to the Caribbean would keep her from thinking about how it had been just over a year since her mother passed away. And it would take her mind off the fact that she was still lonely. Still alone.
Just thinking about not thinking about it made her lungs contract.
Or maybe it was the exertion of tearing through an overly dry, hot and crowded airport trailing an unwieldy piece of luggage in her wake. As fit as she was, by the time Celeste arrived at her gate she was gasping. Light-headed, she hardly registered that the descending ramp the agent directed her to follow led outside to ground level where the plane awaited her on the tarmac.
Celeste skidded to a standstill. The realization hit her like a gelid gust of air: it’s a prop plane. When it came to prop planes or Christmas festivities, it was almost a toss-up as to which distressed her more. Almost but not quite. Pressing her dress flat against her legs so it wouldn’t fly up in the wind, Celeste numbly soldiered forward, the end of her ponytail lashing sideways at her face.
She climbed the four ladder-like steps and entered the dimly lit interior where a flight attendant—or was he the copilot?—reached to take her carry-on for stowing while simultaneously issuing safety instructions. Overcome with either regret or relief, Celeste plunked herself into the seat closest to the door, fastened the buckle around her waist and closed her eyes. She was finally on her way.

From CELEBRATION AT CHRISTMAS COVE published by arrangement with Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © 2021 by Carrie Jansen.

 

 

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RECLAIMED by Madeleine Roux-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

RECLAIMED by Madeleine Roux-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date August 17, 2021

In this claustrophobic science fiction thriller, a woman begins to doubt her own sanity and reality itself when she undergoes a dangerous experiment.

The Ganymede compound is a fresh start. At least that’s what Senna tells herself when she arrives to take part in a cutting-edge scientific treatment, where participants have traumatic memories erased.

And Senna has reasons for wanting to escape her past.

But almost as soon as the treatment begins, Senna finds more than just her traumatic memories disappearing. She hardly recognizes her new life or herself. Even though the symptoms for the process might justify the cure, Senna knows that something isn’t right. As her symptoms worsen, Senna will need to band together with the other participants to unravel the mystery of her present, and save her future.

•••••••

REVIEW:RECLAIMED by Madeleine Roux is a futuristic, sci-fi, dystopian story line focusing on three humans who have suffered extraordinary personal tragedies, and have been offered a once in a lifetime chance to erase the specific memories from their pasts.

Told from several third person perspectives including Senna, Zurri and Han, RECLAIMED is set in the middle of the twenty-third century, when space travel, AI servitors, VIT, and VR are the norm. Wealthy entrepreneur and self-proclaimed genius Paxton Dunn has set up an experimental lab, at the Ganymede compound, on one of the moons of Jupiter, and has contacted our three leading characters for his inaugural test subjects and specific memory erasure. All three subjects have suffered through horrific experiences, and Paxton has targeted each for who they are, and what they know but the ‘treatment’ sessions begin to reveal that something is not quite right with Paxton and his crew, and the subjects begin to lose a little more of themselves with each progressive session.

Senna is a young woman who has spent most of her life controlled by a charismatic leader, a leader who dominated and restricted every aspect of her life but like many of his type, the need for power and control outweighed the safety of his followers, and in the end Senna is the only one to survive. Loneliness and innocence ooze through her broken façade.

Zurri is a super model with an ego to match but a stalker demanded Zurri’s attention. A televised promotion for Zurri’s new line of cosmetics ensured the world watched as her stalker appealed his final challenge. No amount of facial cream will heal the pain or memories of what happened and why.

Han is a fourteen year old, computer IT wizard, but he too, lost everything to a man man whose need to control destroyed many lives. On the fast track to genius, Han may become Paxton’s protégé, but a protégé that is about to take down a man he once considered his hero.

Madeleine Roux pulls the reader into a story of what ifs and hows? What if someone or something could erase the bad memories leaving only the good ones intact? …but therein lies the problem when memories are erased, what is left behind is a gaping ‘black hole’ of nothing, and in its’ place is darkness and pain. As our three ‘test subjects’ begin to breakdown both physically and emotionally, each will come to realize that their lives are no longer under their control.

RECLAIMED is a thought-provoking and aptly cautionary tale of desperation and loneliness, power and obsession, arrogance and egomania, suffering and pain. The premise is twisted and haunting, complex yet equally easy to read.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

Excerpt kindly provided by the publisher

RECLAIMED by Madeleine Roux
Ace Trade Paperback Original | On sale August 17, 2021
Excerpt
More than anything else Senna remembered the bitter silence. At some point during the night, everyone around her on the ship stopped breathing. The soft, human sounds of sleep had mixed with the reverberation of space outside the passenger craft, a lullaby of organic white noise that helped her drift to sleep, but once it was gone, the absence was far louder. Unmistakable.
It was like how she imagined the dead of winter, still and adrift, though Senna had never experienced a true winter herself. Her entire life had been lived in outer space and, more than that, in almost total confinement.
She had taken a pill and gone to sleep surrounded by life, then woke among the dead. Senna had rolled over, tossing restlessly, and felt her hand brush something cold and almost rubbery on the sleeping mat next to hers. Startled by the sensation, she jerked awake, and under the reddish glow of the emergency lights above, she found herself staring down into the open, glazed eyes of her best friend, Mina. The blood trickling from between Mina’s full lips was as crimson as the emergency lights blinking overhead.
Senna gasped, and it was the only sound in the entire ship.
Oh my God. They’re all dead.
“You can’t leave me,” she whispered to Mina. The fear made her tremble; the shock made her grab Mina by the shoulders and shake. Her bones were thin and birdlike, and her head swiveled back and forth as Senna tried to rouse her. Nothing.
A door opened across the room, and Senna whirled to face it, torn between the sudden knowledge that she was alone and now the worse fear that she wasn’t, that whoever was responsible for all this death was still alive and with her. That she was next.
“Senna,” she heard him say. “I didn’t know you were awake.”
Why was she the only one left alive? And why wasn’t he surprised by it? She didn’t know what to say. What could she say?
They’re all dead, every last one of them, except for you and me.
“Hello? Lady? Earth to blondie.”
She blinked, hard, gazing around not at the interior of a doomed passenger craft, but at an impatient barista glaring down into her face. Grabbing her chest, Senna nodded and waved at him, but the memory took its time fading away. One year ago. It still felt like she was living inside that moment, crushed on all sides by it.
I didn’t know you were awake, Preece had said. To her, it still felt like she was deep, deep asleep. Dragged under.
“S-Sorry,” Senna stammered. She hadn’t been outside Marin’s apartment in weeks. The neon haze of Tokyo Bliss Station hurt her eyes. A halo lingered around the barista’s head, the self-driving coffee cart lit with an amber glow. “How much is it?”
“Ten for the drink,” the barista replied. He was tall and thin, tattooed from the collar of his shirt and apron to his mouth. A series of scrollwork arrows pointed to the ring glinting in his lip. “Three for the cup.”
Senna frowned up at him. “Three? Really?”
Rolling his eyes, he shrugged and handed her the mottled brown cup, frothy yellow liquid steaming inside. “Fine, no charge for the cup. Bring something reusable next time, okay? Anything else I can get you?”
Senna stared down into the drink, the familiar color and smell threatening to bring another wave of painful nostalgia.
Anything else, she mused. A new brain? A tranquilizer?
“No,” Senna told the young man. “No, I’m . . . That’s all.”
“Just remember the cup thing,” he muttered, tapping the scanner on the coffee cart counter, waiting for Senna to hold up her wrist and flash the VIT monitor that ought to be there. But Senna still didn’t have one. The barista noticed, the specter of his shaved-off brows looming low over his eyes.
“She will.” Marin to the rescue. “She’ll remember for next time. And I’ll take a sweet drip.”
The barista sighed. “Line jumpers pay double for their cups.”
“Fine.”
Marin, petite and dressed in pristine white patent leather, with a glossy black curtain of hair, leaned across Senna and swiped her own wrist monitor across the scanner. The machine dinged cheerfully, transaction complete. She glared at the thing toiling away behind the barista. AI Servitors, working husks of robots skinned with a kind of human latex mask over a carbon skeleton, were ubiquitous laborers across the stations, on the colonies and on science vessels.
“You know SecDiv is going to roll out lifelike versions of those things soon? With human fucking faces and skin and everything? I guess the regular peacekeeping bots aren’t intimidating enough or something,” said Marin in a disgusted undertone. She shuddered. “So creepy.”
“Will we be able to tell the difference?” Senna asked, more amazed than afraid.
“I’ve seen this dystopian vid, and the answer is no.”
As soon as the coffee arrived, Marin tugged Senna away from the cart quickly, back toward the carbon-black folding chairs and tables clustered on the promenade. The glitzier upper levels of the station rotated above them, rings that rose to impossible heights-financial districts and fashion houses, arcade blocks, cosmetic surgery clinics, augmented-reality parlors and universities . . . Down on their level, close to the bottom of the station and Hydroponica, nothing could be done to control the heat. The food and water operations needed the cooling systems, not the impoverished districts hovering just above them.
So Senna drank her haldi ka doodh in the swelter, accustomed to it. The hot turmeric milk almost scorched her mouth as she took a sip.
“I don’t know how you can drink that stuff,” Marin murmured.
“It’s good,” said Senna, shrugging.
“Blegh. Anyway, sorry I’m late.”
Senna sat across from her at one of the empty tables. The lunch rush crowd swarmed around them in the plaza, drawn to the coffee cart for their midday blast of caffeine. Behind them, six lanes of self-driving cars and a passenger tram funneled workers back toward the main bank of elevators at the center of the district, elevators that ran the full height of the station.
“Don’t worry about it,” Senna said, waving off her apology while swatting at the vapor rising from her milk. She liked the slightly grassy taste of the drink. It made her wonder if it was the kind of earthy smell one experienced during a real Earth summer.
“I do worry,” Marin replied, drinking her coffee. Her nose wrinkled. “Shit. They forgot my Zucros.”
“I can wait.”
“No, I shouldn’t leave you alone again.”
Senna ran her thumb lightly around the softening edge of her disposable cup. She felt stupid and small and unmanageable when Marin said things like that. But Senna also knew she had earned being babied.

New York Times Bestselling Author of the ASYLUM series, Allison Hewitt Is Trapped, Sadie Walker Is Stranded and the upcoming House of Furies series.

MADELEINE ROUX received her BA in Creative Writing and Acting from Beloit College in 2008. In the spring of 2009, Madeleine completed an Honors Term at Beloit College, proposing, writing and presenting a full-length historical fiction novel. Shortly after, she began the experimental fiction blog Allison Hewitt Is Trapped. Allison Hewitt Is Trapped quickly spread throughout the blogosphere, bringing a unique serial fiction experience to readers.

Born in Minnesota, she now lives and works in Seattle, Washington.

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Have You Seen Me? by Alexandrea Weis-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

Have You Seen Me? (Waverly Prep 1) by Alexandrea Weis-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

 

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date August 27, 2021

Lindsey Gillett is missing.

And she’s not the first girl at Waverly High to vanish without a trace.

To help cope with the tragedy, new history teacher Aubrey LaRoux organizes a student investigation team. But when the project’s key members start turning up dead across campus, Aubrey suspects there’s more going on than anyone is willing to admit.

The murdered students all had something in common with Lindsey. They shared a secret. And what they uncovered could threaten the future of the historic school.

At Waverly High, someone wants to keep the past buried—and you don’t want to get in their way.

•••••••

REVIEW:HAVE YOU SEEN ME? by Alexandrea Weis is a contemporary, young adult, mystery/murder thriller focusing on the investigation and search for a number of missing girls who attended Waverly Prepatory school in Louisiana.

Told from several third person perspectives including former student turned history teacher Aubrey LaRoux, HAVE YOU SEEN ME? follows the search for the truth. Upon her arrival, two months into the new school year, history teacher Aubrey LaRoux discovers a young female student is missing, the step-sister of another young woman who went missing ten years earlier, when Aubrey was a student attending Waverly High. Aubrey is about to find herself the target of a number of students believing she is the guilty party, a target that is about to become involved in the search for the truth. As the missing and dead begin to pile up, Aubrey and several of her first period students, begin an investigation of their own, only to find themselves disappearing, one student at a time.

HAVE YOU SEEN ME? reads like a Nancy Drew/Hardy Boys murder mystery with overtones of teenage slasher movies including Scream and I Know What You Did Last Summer. As per the requisite plot points, the teens and their teacher begin to uncover the clues, and the long buried secrets of Waverly High, but the TSTL attitudes threatens everyone involved. One by one, each of the students involved in the investigation disappears and die, leaving Aubrey and one final student to uncover the truth.

We are introduced to sheriff Mason Dubois, Headmistress Sara Probst, groundskeeper Mr. Samuel, as well as a number of students including Lindsey Gillett.

HAVE YOU SEEN ME? is a haunting story of power, control, betrayal and vengeance; a suspenseful tale of secrets, lies, and obsession dating back close to twenty-five years. The premise is edgy but predictable; the characters are inquisitive, energetic and impassioned. HAVE YOU SEEN ME? ends on a bit of a cliff hanger-you have been warned.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

Tall stalks whipped against Lindsey’s legs as she ran. Her ragged breath broke through the silence of the dark, isolated field. She put everything she had into maneuvering through the deep weeds. Her chest burned, but an icy dread kept her desperate to outrun the beam of light following her.
Exhausted, Lindsey paused and kneeled by a thicket of grass, hoping to remain out of sight. But then a flashlight locked on her position. She startled and stumbled backward, tripping over something.
Falling to the boggy ground, weeds slapped her face, and her leg scraped against a sharp object.
Son of a …
Lindsey grabbed her leg but kept silent as a sting flared above her ankle. When she reached down, the spot was wet to the touch.
Blood. Crap. That will leave a trail.
She discovered the cause of her fall—a marker built of stone.
Lindsey had heard stories about the famous battlefield and the single marker left to remember the fallen soldiers.
“Where are you going to run, Lindsey?”
The nondescript, guttural voice seemed to surround her.
Lindsey hurried to get up while scouring the trees. She judged the distance it would take her to get lost in their shadows.
She surveyed the endless acres of grass. There was nowhere else to go.
A tickle raced across her neck, awakening an intense dread. The locket she kept close—the one containing pictures of her and Marjorie—had slipped off.
Not my locket!
She wanted to search the grass for the prized memento, but there was no time. The rays of the flashlight found her.
Lindsey summoned her courage, determined to lose her tormentor.
The hurried whoosh of trampled weeds drew closer.
Lindsey cursed. She took off, dashing for the trees, not looking back. She ran into pockets of thick mud and her legs tired as she struggled.
A ray of moonlight broke through the clouds. Lindsey examined the outline of the land. The grass thinned before the line of trees.
She kept going, and when she broached the trees, relief rolled through her.
Branches scratched her face. The sting they left brought tears to her eyes, but she pushed on.
Almost there.
The pine needles crunched beneath her feet, alerting her pursuer to where she was.
Then another sound rose in the air—churning water. The bend in the fast-moving Bayou Teche was ahead. She lunged for the end of the tree line.
Around her was more tall grass, and then ahead, piers poked out of the swirling waterway.
A dark structure appeared on her left. Rising against the night sky, its craggy outline hinted at crumbled walls and a collapsed roof. A smokestack rose like a column into the dark sky.
Lindsey ran, glimpsing trash piles and abandoned machinery around the site of the old sugar mill.
A darting orb of light swept past her.
She charged toward the river’s edge.
The piers got closer, and she spotted the remains of the old dock, its rotting planks poking out along the shoreline.
Lindsey closed in on the water, knowing she had no place else to go.
A light behind her danced along the water’s surface, heightening her fear.
The riverbank came up quickly. Lindsey paused on the edge, staring into the churning current at the river’s bend.
She looked back over her shoulder. “I’ll see you in hell.”
Lindsey dove into the swirling currents. The cold shocked her just as an undertow pulled her down. She fought to get to the surface. Panic ate up her oxygen as she kicked hard, but she wasn’t gaining any ground.
Darkness closed around her, engulfing Lindsey in blinding terror.

Alexandrea Weis is graciously offering an ebook copy of HAVE YOU SEEN ME? to TWO (2) lucky commenters at The Reading Cafe.

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The Railway Countess by Julia Justiss-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

The Railway Countess (Heirs in Waiting 2) by Julia Justiss-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

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ABOUT THE BOOK:Release Date June

She didn’t want to marry

Least of all a Viscount!

Marcella Cranmore wants to avoid marriage and continue using her mathematical expertise to help her railway engineer father—but her mother insists on her having a season. At her first ball, Marcella’s relieved to see someone she knows, railway investor Crispin D’Aubignon. Conversing with the viscount is safe, for she’s as off-limits to him as he is to her…except that is only increasing the fascination!

Heirs in Waiting

One day these Oxford gentlemen will inherit estates, titles and wealth.

But for now, they’re forging their own paths in life…and love!

•••••••

REVIEW: Marcella doesn’t want, or need a husband thank you! Marriage will put an end to her passion of helping her father build and design trains. But promising her mother and grandfather to attend a season in London, is becoming a frightful bore! Why can’t she allowed to work in the field she loves? Oh yes, that’s right, she’s a woman! And women were for decoration and procreation only! To be seen and not heard! Not for Marcella, she wants a partnership or nothing.

Crispin is sick of his father wanting him to marry for money! Avoiding him at all costs is becoming rather tiresome! But if he doesn’t then his poor mother has to face her husband’s wrath! He likes to earn his money the honest way, to work for it! Whereas his father wants to inherit or for his son to get a dowry for his new wife!

So when they meet each other, an alliance is formed, a front will be provided for both parties. And when it’s all done, no one will be hurt, and everyone else will be none the wiser…..

In theory it sounds like a great plan, but neither expect to grow fond of one another. Neither expected more from this arrangement, but it does. So can Crispin woo the lovely young Marcella? And will she believe he wants her for her brain and not the dowry that comes with marriage? And if this other suitor puts his claim out there, who will Marcella choose?

I’ve read book one in this series. But it’s not necessary to read in order.

It’s a sweet romance, so if your looking for smut, you won’t find it here. What you will find is a beautifully written story. With a strong female character and a hero who is willing to listen and be a modern man, rather than a chest thumping Neanderthal!

There is humour and quick wit. A rival for the fair Marcella’s hand, and parents that want what’s best for their children (even if the children don’t want it!)

I did like the scene where Marcella dresses as a man (unheard of in those days) but Crispin is having a hard time focusing on the task at hand ?

I also liked that Marcella had a brain and it was being utilised by her father. He saw her potential and nurtured it.

Click HERE for Julie’s review of book one THE BLUESTOCKING DUCHESS

?Reviewed by Julie B

Copy supplied for review

Bristol, England, March 1834

“If it can be done, it will certainly be a magnificent achievement,” Crispin D’Aubignon, Viscount Dellamont, murmured to himself as he stood reviewing his notes outside the office of Richard Cranmore, the engineer surveying the final leg of the proposed Great Western Railway.
With the substantial return he’d earned on his investment in the Liverpool & Manchester, he was always looking for other promising railway ventures. If he received the answers he anticipated from the engineering assistant he would be consulting in just a few moments, he’d be ready to sink some money into this new scheme.
Review completed, he walked in to find the bare outer office deserted. Not surprising, since the firm’s main headquarters was back in London and this suite of rooms had been rented only for the duration of the local survey. But the front door had been left unlocked, which indicated there should be someone on the premises.
Proceeding toward the inner office, he called out, “Hello! Is anyone here?”
He’d been about to add his name and the reason for his visit when he reached the doorway and stopped short.
Seated behind the desk of the inner office was a woman. Not just a woman, he realized as she looked up at him inquiringly, but a young and very attractive one.
Though her gown wasn’t as outlandishly elaborate as those in the first stare of fashion, he recognized the material as expensive and the cut and fit as expert. Glossy dark hair with glimmers of auburn glistened from the elaborate arrangement of curls pinned to her head, and the eyes turned up to him were a beautiful green, framed by long dark lashes. The pale skin of her face looked petal-soft, her nose aquiline and lovely. Lush lips and a temptingly curved figure produced an immediate jump in his pulse and a prickling awareness in the rest of his body.
No gently-born woman worked, and offices employed only male clerks. So what sort of woman could she be? The chere-amie of one of the engineers?
Before he could settle his rattled brain and produce speech, she said, “Can I help you?”
A little embarrassed to have been caught frankly staring at her, Crispin stammered, “V-viscount Dellamont. I’m here to consult with a Mr. Gilling?”
Surprise widened her eyes. “Lord Dellamont? Excuse me, but I was expecting someone…older. Most potential investors are,” she explained. “Austin—Mr. Gilling—should arrive shortly. Indeed, when I heard someone walk in, I thought it was him.”
She rose from behind the desk, her tiny waist emphasized by the wideness of her skirts. Though she was rather tall for a woman, the top of her head should just about reach his chin, Crispin thought. He could wrap both arms almost completely around that small frame, if he were to embrace her.
And ah, would he like to embrace her! Just who was this enticingly lovely woman?
“If you’d step back into the front room, you can wait there,” she was saying. “I apologize that our reception area is so…bare. Not expecting to be in Bristol long or to be receiving investors or clients here, my father didn’t consider it worth renting the quantity of furniture and comforts we have at the London office. Would you like a cup of tea? I can send Father’s assistant to the shop at the corner.”
“No, thank you.” Though the girl made a “shooing” motion, directing him toward the outer room, Crispin lingered, compelled to find out more about this lovely creature.
Then the significance of what she’d just said registered. “Your father?” he repeated. “You are…Richard Cranmore’s daughter?”
“Yes. Since there is no one to perform proper introductions, I’ll introduce myself. Marcella Cranmore, my lord.” She gave him a curtsey that was long on grace and exaggerated deference.
If she were truly the respected engineer’s unmarried daughter, that would make her a member of the rising merchant elite—who were known for their straight-laced morals. No chance of a casual, pleasurable encounter with a woman of that background, regrettably. The price of getting to know this young woman better would be marriage—which should prompt him to terminate the conversation immediately.
Just then, the outer door opened and a young man of about his own age bustled in. “Ah, Austin, there you are,” the young woman said, gifting the newcomer with a dazzling smile.
The engineer returned a fond one of his own. After sparing Crispin only a cursory glance, he said, “Sorry I’m late, Marcella. Some problems with the equipment at the site—it’s rather hard to access. But your father was insistent that I return as soon as possible, since he was expecting a visit by some fancy nob who’s already dropped a pile of blunt buying shares in other railroad ventures.”
The lady’s smile wavered. “Viscount Dellamont?”
“Yes, that was the name.”
She inclined her head toward Crispin. “He’s already arrived.”
Gilling turned toward him, as if seeing him for the first time. “Lord Dellamont?”
“I have that honor,” Crispin said drily.
Though the young man’s face colored, he gave Crispin a quick bow. “Pleased to meet you, my lord. Austin Gilling, Mr. Cranmore’s assistant chief engineer. No offense meant, I assure you.”
“None taken.”
“If you would be gracious enough to wait a few minutes longer, I need to have Miss Cranmore record some of the measurements we’ve just taken. After that, I will be happy to answer any questions you might have.”
“Let me send for that tea, my lord. We’ll make you as comfortable as possible while you wait, and then Mr. Gilling will give you his full attention,” Miss Cranmore said, giving him a placating smile—as if he were a querulous child who needed soothing.
“If Mr. Gilling is going to be giving you pertinent figures about the approach slope, I’d like to sit in on the discussion.”
“The figures are of a highly technical nature. We wouldn’t want to waste your valuable time, boring you with mathematical details,” she replied.
“Whose significance I couldn’t possibly comprehend?” he suggested, not sure whether he was more amused or offended by her treating him like a rich, self-important, clueless dolt.
Her overly-gracious demeanor slipped a bit. “Are you a trained engineer then, my lord?” she asked with some asperity.
“No. But since I have, er, ‘dropped a good deal of blunt’ in several other railway ventures, I’ve made it my business to become more acquainted with some of the technical issues involved with constructing them.”
“I really can’t see why—“ Gilling began, but Miss Cranmore waved a hand, motioning him to silence.
“If it would please you to know the figures, you are certainly quite welcome to listen. We have no objection to our investors becoming more knowledgeable about the technical aspects of our engineering projects. It can only increase their appreciation and admiration for the work my father’s engineers accomplish.”
Giving Gilling a warning look, as if to remind him he was dealing with an investor whose plump pockets they needed to fund the project that would pay his salary, she said, “Do step back into the office, then. Mr. Gilling, will you bring another chair? And please let me send Timmons for that tea, my lord.”
“If you wish to have some,” Crispin said, curious about what was going to happen next.
And even more curious about why the daughter of a successful, well-known engineer would be sitting at a desk in his temporary office. Her father, he knew, had made a comfortable fortune building railroads and bridges. Even were it not highly unusual to have a female clerk in their office, the family was certainly well enough off that his daughter need do nothing more taxing than help her mother run the household, visit friends, and spend her father’s blunt on clothes and fripperies while her parents lined up prospective suitors.
The tea order dispatched to the assistant who ducked in when Miss Cranmore called him and an extra chair brought by Gilling to the desk, Miss Cranmore resumed her seat behind it, Gilling taking the one he pulled up beside her. While she extracted a notebook from the desk drawer, the engineer pulled a pad from his waistcoat pocket. Once she had taken out her nib pen and opened the inkwell lid, she nodded to Gilling.
“Have you and Father finished all the measurements of the slope leading up from the river?” she asked.
“We have one more section to complete—the slope is rather steep there, so the work goes slowly. We’re having to break the hundred-foot segments into many smaller increments for the forward tape man to be able to keep it level at his chest. Are you ready for the numbers?”
She dipped her nib in the ink. “Ready.”
For the next few minutes, Gilling read off a list of lengths while Miss Cranmore copied them into her log book.
“That’s all I have for now,” Gilling said. “After I speak with Lord Dellamont, I’ll head back out to rejoin Mr. Cranmore. We hope to finish the rest of the measurements today and then can begin figuring the angles necessary to construct the grade.”
The assistant arrived with tea, Miss Cranmore pouring while Gilling put away his notebook. “So, my lord, what would you like to know?” he asked.
“The countryside immediately outside London is flat enough, but as one journeys westward, especially after Chippenham, the land becomes increasingly hilly, with several rivers and a canal to cross. How do the engineers propose to deal with these?”
Gilling angled a look at him. “You are familiar with the terrain?”
“I’m not a professional surveyor, of course, but before investing in any venture, I prefer to ride the route myself. Evaluating the difficulties it may pose and therefore the chances of it being successfully completed. I have to admit, when I first looked it over, I was rather skeptical.”
“And are you still skeptical?” Miss Cranmore asked.
“That’s why I wanted to talk with Mr. Gilling.”
“The route is challenging,” Gilling admitted. “The stations at both Temple Meads and Bath will be elevated and require the construction of viaducts. In addition to bridges crossing smaller waterways, there will be a major bridge to carry the track over the River Avon. The Kennet and Avon canal will have to be diverted, and one major tunnel constructed through Box Hill outside Corsham, on the highest point of the route.”
“Which, I understand, will be the longest tunnel ever attempted?” Crispin said.
“True. But the engineer in overall charge of the project, Mr. Brunel, worked on tunnels with his father, also a superior engineer. No one in England has more experience.”
“How steep will the gradient be?”
“For the majority of the line, no more than 1 in 1000. The Box Hill tunnel will be steeper, of course, but manageable.”
“What about the stone underlying the tunnel? Will it be able to support having so long a cavern carved out of it?”
“Mr. Brunel believes so. He intends to sink shafts along the route to examine the geology of the rock, of course, before the construction begins.”
“How about curves going up and down the grades?”
“No angles more acute than ten degrees, except perhaps in steeper areas where switchbacks will be necessary. But the engine’s speed will be slow enough in those instances not to pose a danger.”
Crispin nodded, the majority of his concerns alleviated. “I think that answers most of my questions.” He ought to head out himself, but he couldn’t quite master his desire to chat further with the intriguingly accomplished Miss Cranmore.
Giving in to that impulse, he said, “I know you’re anxious to get back and complete your work, Mr. Gilling, so don’t let me keep you any longer.”
Gilling nodded back. “The Great Western will be a boon for its investors, I assure you, Lord Dellamont. Mr. Brunel intends to create not only a direct link between London and Bristol, but by constructing of a fleet of fast, transatlantic iron ships, to New York as well.”
If Brunel were successful in doing all of that, an investor’s return on this venture could be huge, Crispin thought. “Thank you, Mr. Gilling. I shall keep it all in mind.”
“Will you be back in the office later, Mr. Gilling?” Miss Cranmore asked as the engineer put his tea cup back on the tray and then rose from his chair.
“I don’t know. It depends on how long the final measurements take.” Dragging his chair back against the wall, he added, “Your father said not to wait here for him, that he’d meet you back at your lodgings.”
“Perhaps you will join us for dinner, then?” she suggested, giving the engineer another of her lovely smiles.
“I would like that,” he replied, returning another smile of his own. “But I’ll need to make calculations on the data we collected today so I can recommend to your father the best way to proceed along the final approach while keeping the angle of rise within acceptable limits.”
“Father and I will be working on the figures as well. We could compare notes,” Miss Cranmore said.
He nodded—as if it were a common occurrence to have a lady figuring angles and slopes. “Thank you for the invitation. I shall certainly join you if I can.” Turning to Crispin with a bow, he said, “Thank you for coming by, Lord Dellamont. Mr. Cranmore is gratified by your interest in our project, as I’m sure Mr. Brunel will be also. My lord, Miss Cranmore.”
Giving them another bow, the engineer walked out. Miss Cranmore, Crispin noted, followed the engineer’s progress out of the office with a wistful look on her face.
Crispin found himself unaccountably annoyed—and a little bit jealous—of the engineer for the favor with which he was treated by this lovely young woman. Which made no sense. They were in no way competing for Miss Cranmore’s attentions. After this one meeting, he would never see her again.
But because of that fact, he meant to take advantage of this opportunity to find out what inspired a girl of her beauty to spend her evening solving geometric equations with her father.
“You needn’t rush, my lord,” she said, at last turning her attention back to him. “Please, finish your tea.”
“Thank you, I shall.”
“You seem…rather well versed in angles and gradients. Have you studied them?”
Crispin smiled. “My classics education at Oxford didn’t prepare me to evaluate the nuts and bolts of technological advances like railway engines—but they fascinate me. I’m convinced the new industrial age represents the future of wealth and economic expansion, and railways the future of transportation.”
“And so you are eager to invest in them.”
“I was fortunate enough to have a great aunt who left me a small bequest. After I left university, I travelled to the north to investigate the companies beginning the transition from using horse-drawn vehicles on rails to harnessing the new steam engines designed by Mr. Stephenson for the Stockton and Darlington. My modest investments in that and several similar ventures were rewarded. So I now follow rather closely the bills introduced into Parliament for the construction of new lines, riding the countryside myself to evaluate the proposed routes.”
“I have to admit, you seem much more knowledgeable than most of our aristocratic investors.” Her face coloring a little, she added, “I’m afraid I may have been…rather too dismissive upon first meeting you.”
“Thinking I was a useless fribble with more money than comprehension?”
“A dandy, anyway,” she added, her flush deepening. “If I gave the impression that my opinion of you was derogatory, I do apologize.”
Crispin suppressed a smile. She’d made it rather obvious that was indeed her opinion of him, but he wouldn’t embarrass her further by pointing that out—and risk having her speedily dismiss him. Because he was even more curious about her now than he’d been upon first meeting her, and wanted to know more.
For how long would he be able to lure her into talking with him?

 

Award-winning historical romance author Julia Justiss has written more than thirty-five novels and novellas set in the English Regency and the Texas Hill Country.

A voracious reader who began jotting down plot ideas for Nancy Drew novels in her third grade spiral, Julia has published poetry and worked as a business journalist.

She and her husband live in East Texas, where she continues to craft the stories she loves. Check her website for details about her books, chat with her on social media, and follow her on Bookbub and Amazon to receive notices about her latest releases. For special subscriber giveaways, discounted books, character sketches and more, sign up for her newsletter at:

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Claimed (Lair of the Wolven 1) by JR Ward-Review & Giveaway

Claimed (Lair of the Wolven 1) by JR Ward-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

 

CLAIMED
Lair of the Wolven 1
by JR Ward
Release Date: July 27, 2021
Genre: adult, contemporary, paranormal, romance

 

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 27, 2021

A heart-pounding new series set in the Black Dagger Brotherhood world, with a scientist fighting to save the timber wolves—and getting caught in a deadly trap herself…

Lydia Susi is passionate about protecting wolves in their natural habitat. When a hotel chain develops a tract of land next to the preserve, Lydia is one of the most vocal opponents of the project—and becomes a target.

One night, a shadowy figure threatens Lydia’s life in the forest, and a new hire at the Wolf Study Project comes from out of nowhere to save her. Daniel Joseph is both mysterious, and someone she intrinsically wants to trust. But is he hiding something?

As the stakes get higher, and one of Lydia’s colleagues is murdered, she must decide how far she will go to protect the wolves. Then a shocking revelation about Daniel challenges Lydia’s reality in ways she could never have predicted. Some fates demand courage, others require even more, with no guarantees. Is she destined to have true love… or will a soul-shattering loss ruin her forever?

••••••••

REVIEW:CLAIMED is the first instalment in JR Ward’s contemporary, adult LAIR OF THE WOLVEN paranormal, urban fantasy series-a spin off set in the author’s Black Dagger Brotherhood world. This is drifter/handyman Daniel Joseph, and scientist/wolf behaviorist Lydia Susi’s storyline. CLAIMED can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the BDB series is revealed where necessary.

NOTE: The Wolven are first introduced in JR Ward’s LOVER UNLEASHED, and first appear in THE JACKAL.

Told from third person perspective following two intersecting paths CLAIMED focuses on the search for the truth. Someone is poisoning the wolves at the wolf reserve in and around Walters, Upstate New York, and scientist Lydia Susi is desperate to uncover the truth. With the construction of a new hotel on the edge of the wolf preserve, Lydia is determined to prove the people responsible are the same people connected to the chain of hotels. Daniel Joseph, a new handyman at the Wolf Study Project (WSP) has caught the attention of our story line heroine but someone else has targeted our heroine in the process. As the number of bodies connected to the WSP begin to pile up, Lydia is determined to prove the guilty party is part of the hotel chain, and responsible for poisoning the animals she loves. What ensues is the slow building romance and relationship between Daniel and Lydia, and the fall-out as something more sinister is working behind the scenes to take down our story line couple, and the wolves in the Wolf Study Project.

Meanwhile, Xhex, beloved shellan of the Black Dagger Brother John Matthew begins to relive the nightmares of her time at the Sympath colony, a time that is about to come full-circle. Unable to get a straight answer from her brother, she is sent on a mission that will bring her up close and personal with an experiment she thought was long forgotten. JM, Blay, Rehvenge and Vishous make a cameo appearance

CLAIMED is a slow building and twisted story of secrets and lies; of power and control; of specieism, experiments, betrayal and mistrust. JR Ward pulls the reader into an imaginative and dramatic tale of intrigue, murder, and the supernatural. The romance takes a back seat to the story line premise as the author will not be focusing on one couple per book but a continuing saga of events. CLAIMED ends on a cliff hanger-you have been warned.

Copy supplied by the publisher

Reviewed by Sandy


Excerpt provided by Simon and Schuster

 

CLAIMED
Chapter 1Town of Walters, est. 1834
Upstate New YorkLydia Susi’s Destiny came for her in the veil, on a random Thursday in the early spring.
As she ran along the wooded trail, two miles into a loop that would take her through the preserve’s northeastern acreage, she was measuring the glowing line that topped the contours of the mountains. Soon, the stripe would expand to an aura, and after that, the sun would accept the handoff from the moon, and day would arrive.
Her grandfather had always told her there were two twilights, two gloamings, and if you wanted to find your past, you went into the pines in the evening as the sun went down. If you wanted your future to come to you, you went alone into the forest in the veil, during that sacred transition of night into morning. There, he’d told her, when the distinction between that which ruled the light and that which held domain over the dark was at its narrowest, when the moon and the sun reached for each other before the rotations of their orbits tore them asunder, there was when the mortal could brush up against the infinite and seek answers, direction, guidance.
Of course, that did not mean you got good news. Or what you wanted.
But life was not an à la carte buffet where you could choose everything that went on your plate—another words-of-wisdom from a man who had lived to be 101 years old still smoking a pipe and drinking a glass of sima after his dinner year round.
Why limit spring to just Vappu? he’d said.
Lydia had never believed in his superstitions. She was a researcher, a scientist, and the kinds of things that her isoisa had gone on about did not fit in with that Ph.D. in biology she’d bought on layaway from the federal government and was still paying off.
So no, she was not out looking for any prognosti-cation from the universe this morning. She was get-ting her workout done before she headed into her office at the Wolf Study Project. With the way things had been going lately, she was going to blink and it would be seven at night. Short-staffed and under-funded, everything was a fight for resources at WSP, and by the time she locked things up every evening, she was exhausted. So Carpe Cardio was her motto and why she was out in this misty darkness—
Lydia let her stride peter to a halt.
Her breath pumped in clouds that captured and held the moonlight, and as a breeze came across the trail, her body did the same with the chill, grabbing it out of the air and bringing it in under her wind-breaker.
As she shivered, she looked behind herself. The trail she was on was the widest one in the preserve, a highway rather than a street, but she couldn’t see much into the trees. Pines crowded up close to the shoulders of the packed path, and the fog wafting through the craggy trunks and fluffy boughs obscured the forest even more.
In a quick calculation, she figured she was a good three miles from any other human, two miles from her car at the trailhead’s parking area, and a hundred yards from what had caught her attention.
There, up ahead, something was close to the ground, moving.
Fight or flight, Lydia, she thought. What’s it going to be.
She reached around to the small of her back. There were two cylinders mounted on the strap of her fanny pack, and she left the Mace where it was. Clicking on her flashlight and bringing it forward, she swung the beam in a wide arc—
The eyes flashed over on the left, a set of retinas flaring the light back at her as pinpoints. The stare was about three feet from the ground and the pupils were set close together, as predators’ were.
Lydia looked around again.
“I’m not going to bother you,” she said. But like the gray wolf spoke English?
The growl was soft. And then came the rustling. The animal was prowling toward her.
“Oh, shit.”
Except . . .
Lydia kept the beam down on the fallen pine needles as she, too, walked forward. Something was wrong with the wolf, its gait wobbly and uneven. Yet the spirit of the hunter remained undeterred—and she was identified as its target.
She was about twenty feet away when she got a sense of the fully mature male. He was filled out, at a healthy weight of about a hundred and thirty pounds, and his mottled white, gray, and brown fur was thick and lush, especially at the tail. But his head was hanging at a bad angle, and he was dragging his back paws as he continued to close the distance between them.
It was obvious when the wolf was going to collapse. Though his head remained forward, his body listed to the side, his will staying strong even as his rear legs, and then his forelegs, gave out.
He landed on the soft bed of pine needles on his side, and the struggle was immediate, useless paws batting at thin air and ground cover. As Lydia drew a little closer to him, he snarled, flashing long white fangs, his golden eyes narrowing.
“Shh . . .” she said as she kneeled down.
Her hand shook as she got out her cell phone. As she called a number from her favorites, she tried to keep her breathing steady.
In the flashlight’s beam, she could see the grayness of those gums. The wolf was dying—and she knew why.
“God damn it, pick up, pick up—” Her words ma-chine gun’d from her mouth. “Rick? Wake up, I’ve got another one. On the main trail—what? Yes, it’s the same—enough with the talking, get your ass out of bed. I’m on the loop, about two miles into the—huh? Yes, bring everything, and hurry.”
She cut the connection as her voice gave out.
Letting herself fall back to a sit, she stared into those beautiful eyes and tried to project love, acceptance, gentleness . . . compassion. And something got through, the majestic male’s muzzle relaxing, its paws falling still, his flank rising and falling in a shuddering breath.
Or maybe it was dying right now.
“Help is coming,” she said hoarsely to the animal.


 

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J.R. Ward is the author of more than thirty novels, including those in her #1 New York Times bestselling Black Dagger Brotherhood series. There are more than fifteen million copies of her novels in print worldwide, and they have been published in twenty-six different countries around the world. She lives in the South with her family.

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JR Ward’s publisher (Simon and Schuster) is offering a paper copy of CLAIMED  to ONE (1) lucky commenter at The Reading Cafe.

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Ravishing Camille by Cerise DeLand-Review & Excerpt

Ravishing Camille (Those Notorious Americans 5) by Cerise DeLand-Review & Excerpt

ebook ONLY 99¢ USD Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Apple

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date June 11, 2021

She’d wanted him for years…and denied she cared.
As a step-brother, he’d loved her.
But she’s older now and even more delectable. Should he walk away? Can he?Pierce Hanniford returns to England after tripling his fortune in China. He’s come for business. Not pleasure. And definitely not for love.
Camille Bereston decided years ago that Pierce was not for her. He’s her step-brother, famous, restless, a savvy Shanghai taipan and a menace…to her heart.
She has ambitions to marry. Funny that none of her candidates seems good enough.
Yet Camille excites him as no woman ever has and he must have her, no matter the cost.
But should she take an older, experienced rogue as her lover…and should she claim him forever as her only love?

••••••

REVIEW: Camille has loved Pierce ever since she was a little girl, that childish love grew into an adult love, but he’s her stepbrother, so he’s never really looked at her that way. So she’s put away her crush and is going to find herself a husband, then maybe she can love her stepbrother in the familial way.
But now he’s coming back to visit, Camille is now torn, her heart only wants him, but how can she make him see her an adult and not the annoying little girl he left behind?

Pierce knows the reason he came home, it’s to take some of the burden from his father. He set out to prove himself, and he did it, but it’s time to come home.
Owning companies and sourcing supplies has lead him on a few merry adventures, but it’s time to possibly settle down…..He’s missed Camille so much, watching her grow his feelings went from brotherly to something else. But what can he offer her? Yes he has money, but he’s so much older than her, she needs a younger husband to care and protect her. But watching the fops buzz around her only annoys him, he’s going to make Camille his!

Camille was such a fun character, being a novelist in this period couldn’t have been easy, but she writes romance and makes a little warning from it.
She has a few friends and a loving family, but does Camille really know what she wants, or has she just written too many romances and believes what she’s written?

Pierce is your typical rogue charmer, seen the world, has had a good time whilst doing it. But I liked his character, he was a caring individual that sought to help his father and family. Reading his mixed emotions was good, usually the hero wants nothing to do with the “troublesome woman” until she proves her worth.

I did like the banter between Camille and Pierce, it had a sense of fun about it. Even when they were throwing hurtful words at one another it felt like they cared too much to be really mean! Fighting their attraction through banter came across as foreplay ?and some moments did make me chuckle.

It’s easily read in an afternoon. Can also easily be read without reading the other books in this series.

Copy supplied for review.

Reviewed by Julie B ?

Southhampton Docks, England
July 31, 1888

“T
his time will be different.” Camille Bereston vowed as she watched Pierce Hanniford stride down the gangplank of the newest of the Hanniford family steamers, the Manchu Empress. Her rebellious heart hammered, silly thing. Her strapping step-brother was just a friend. Always had been. “We won’t torment each other any longer.”
Her step-father Killian Hanniford, who stood beside her, lifted a distinct black brow at her declaration. “The two of you have always understood each other far better than many people ever do. If you change, how will we know that you still care?”
Smiling, she tipped her head and viewed her dashing step-father. Pierce was the younger version of his sire, quick and decisive. Both men knew her too well. And she had always been eager to cover her attraction to Pierce. Today, she’d do it with a nod toward reason. “We’re older, Papa. We should know better than to tease each other to hissy fits.”
“Is that what you did?” He tossed away her observation, seemingly unconcerned as he examined his oldest child who returned from China this morning after two years.
How long Pierce would remain in England was the routine question. But this time, he’d written to his father that he intended to stay longer than he usually did. He had many problems to solve, he declared, with his partners in Europe. Running part of his father’s shipping company operating in the Pacific plus his own world-wide empire was a huge challenge. Plus for the past six years, he also owned half of the import-export company originally begun by his brother-in-law, Lord Victor Cole. Killian had mentioned at dinner last night to Camille and to her mother, who was his second wife, that he was pleased Pierce questioned his perpetual journeys around the world. Perhaps he’d even find a woman he loved and begin a family of his own. “At thirty-seven, he’s more than old enough.”
“And wealthy enough,” added her mother. “I doubt he need travel so often. He’s built his staff carefully for years. You have taught him well, my darling.”
Camille clasped her hands together and, much as she wished not to show it, she bristled with anticipation. As a young girl of fifteen, she had become infatuated with her older, debonair step-brother Pierce. She sighed, knowing she would admire him now anew.
Why not? Pierce Hanniford had always displayed ambition equal to his accomplished father’s and today his wealth equalled it. His education had come, not at colleges, but in the rough and tumble of the world of business and finance. And with his father’s advice he had built his own empire. He owned copper and iron plants worldwide. His steel mills produced hundreds of tons, bought by governments and private companies. Ships, railroads and towering new buildings were made of Hanniford girders, pipes and electrical wiring. He was quoted in board rooms and newspapers. He was shrewd, accomplished, careful—and a millionaire. That he was also a bachelor meant he was a worthy catch for any ambitious woman.
Camille knew a few Englishwomen who’d read headlines of his arrival and planned to enchant him. Naive creatures. Pierce was not easily enamored. A man with such worldly experience did not tolerate simpering debutants or bold demimondes. He preferred a more refined approach. Usually his own toward a lady. Never the other way round. And Camille loved that about him. Erudite, sophisticated Pierce.
He waved to them, his smile broad, his silver gaze sweeping from his father to her…and holding.
She gulped…and waved back.
He was quite irresistible. As ever. Damn her soul to admit it. But she saw the ladies on the wharf who noticed him and whispered. His Black Irish good looks had always drawn more eyes to him than hers alone. He merited the regard, too. What woman would not swoon at his ink-black hair that blew in the breeze or his bronze complexion and ruddy cheeks that spoke of his robust health?
To say nothing of his wealth that shown like a beacon in the midday sun. In the precisely cut pearl grey suit, the aquamarine satin waistcoat, the straw bowler he carried in his hands, he was the epitome of a man of the world. Even if his walk were not one that said he bestrode the earth like Goliath, even if his shoulders were not broad as heaven, nor his height regal, or his hair a thick shock of glistening ebony, he could intimidate any man in his path. He was a quiet, deliberate man. Never prone to impulse. All those qualities caused most women to gape at his masculine savoir faire while his smile could lure them like lemmings to lust.
But not me.
No longer me.
He grinned at her, proving her point. Her knees did not go weak. Her blood did not rush. If her entire body swayed toward him, swooping her up like iron fragments to a magnet, she dared not admit it.
This time will be different.
Pierce took the last few yards of the gangway and rushed to embrace both his father and her at once. His arm crushed her close. Her broad-brimmed hat tipped and destroyed her carefully arranged chignon. Her breasts tingled at his embrace. Her fingers clutched his lapels. And her heart picked up a primitive tattoo. And in the next second, he kissed her cheek. His lips were firm, as ever before, warm as always. Yet his affection held a chill that two years away had created.
Surprise crept up her spine. She soothed it with logic that he was not for her, never had been. Plus she had suitors now. If she were so inclined to encourage them.
“Sir!” Pierce beamed at his father. “I am so happy to see you so well!”
“And you!” Killian clapped him on the back.
“And look at you!” Pierce tipped up her chin with two fingers. His examination with those silver eyes destroyed her firm resolve. “My God. You grow more stunning every year.”
Then to her expectation and silly disappointment, he pecked her on both cheeks and pushed her to arms’ length. Slowly he inspected her with the brotherly admiration that proved his usual approach to his little step-sister.
She set her jaw and flashed her eyes at him, determined to show him her independence from his charms. “And you, dear sir, breathe every inch the accomplished man of the world.”
After all, she had no intentions of shilly-shallying. She needed their relationship to develop differently from the past. At twenty-four, she was considered past her prime, on the shelf, too. But she didn’t care for others’ definition of her. No. She wanted things. Things she could not buy with her small but satisfying income. She wanted to make a difference in the world, for women especially. Women who had no wealthy family, no education, no hope of a life that was not drudgery from dawn to dusk. And for. herself? Yes, she had ambitions too. She wanted affection, a man of her own, a husband at the most, a faithful and inventive lover at the least.
That she had wanted that from this man from age fifteen was a fantasy, nourished by her irrepressible romantic illusions and her penchant for happy endings. Even her family experience with all of her relatives in marriages founded on love and devotion conspired against her hope that Pierce might one day be hers. Still, even today, as old and wise as she was, she stood here under his spell, absorbing his approval, his praise, as if she were that young girl. Yes, she still wanted him. Elusive as he was. Savagely masculine as no other. Fiercely independent as only a Hanniford male could be.
“Hmm,” he said with a twinkle in those magnificent iridescent eyes of his. “And you, my dear, look like the successful author in your finery and your devil-may-care appeal.”
“Ah. Do not flatter me too much, Hanniford.” She pressed the flat of her hand to his chest where she was intrigued to feel his heart beat quickly. “We don’t want the world to think you’d be taken in by ruffles and lace.”
He put his arm around her waist and pulled her to his side. But he glanced at his father. “I see while I’ve been gone you’ve taught her no diplomacy.”
“Aye, we try!” Killian sighed, an Irish rogue’s twinkle in his eyes, his brogue heavy in his words. “Our girl is too headstrong to be swayed by appeals to the ordinary.”
Camille stepped away from Pierce’s hold and shot open her parasol. “You two must learn to be more kind to a poor spinster who must make her way in the world.”
The two men feigned horror.
Pierce curled her arm in his. “Give over, my sweet, you are too delicious to leave alone.”
I dare not believe that. She’d rid herself of that delusion years ago. Ba! To him, she was a pest, worthy of teasing and easily left alone! “We’ll see how long you have that view of me, sir.”
He patted her hand. “I’ll have a long time, this time.”
She had to ask, had to know how long he’d remain in her sights, disrupting her life and fooling with her intentions. “How long do you stay?”
He scanned the horizon. “I haven’t decided yet.”
That made her wary. She had plans for her life that did not include focusing on him each day.
“I might just stay put this time.”
“In London?” Hope warred with sanity that he might remain close. Little good his proximity would do her, god help her.
He inhaled and pursed his magnificent lips. “There. Paris. New York. I’ve not been seen in any of those offices for more than three years. I must. I should.” Examining him, she found only mirth and good intentions.
Relief swept through her. She hated that it did. He had to leave. Would leave. He always did. Besides, she could count two probable suitors she could prefer and for good reasons, too. Both were stable, endearing. Neither liked to travel farther than Paris or Biarritz.
Killian scanned the dock. “Pierce, have you no valet?”
“No, sir. He became ill as we docked in Hong Kong and I left him there to recover. He’ll return home to Shanghai. I got on well enough without him. We trained the ship’s staff well in such services. I was fine.”
“So then your luggage, Pierce? How many pieces have you?”
“Four,” he told his father.
“Give me the tickets and I’ll arrange it.”
Pierce took them from his inside coat pocket and handed them over. “Two trunks in the hold. Two suitcases in my stateroom.”
Killian hailed a porter and gave him the tickets. “We are the silver grey coach marked with an H in the far alley. Bring them all to us.”
As Killian paid the porter, Pierce faced her with a dour expression. “I’m really very happy to see you, Camille. Glad you came. Very glad. I want so much to resume our friendship.”
Ah, yes. Friends. That was only what they were. “Unique wasn’t it?”
“Always.” He lifted a hand as if he meant to touch her face. But he paused midway. When they’d first met, he’d made a habit of tapping the end of her nose.
She arched her brows and lured him. “Go on!”
He laughed. “You’re older.”
“As are you. But do it!” She egged him on. “You won’t be happy until you do!”
“You’re quite smashing and my dear friend!” he said and touched her.
Like old brandy, this sparring between them filled her with happiness and a longing for more. She had to divert herself with some gay foolishness.
“Dear sir,” she teased him, “I am the official welcoming party and I’m thrilled to be here.” She tugged at her gloves, ignoring her urge to push up on her toes, kiss him and demonstrate how this more mature woman did not define friendship.
But Pierce leaned down, one of his hands on her shoulder. A foot taller than she, he’d always seemed enormous to her. Enormously protective. Excessively brotherly. Impossibly indifferent. “You look like a wise old owl to me.”
She shivered in a dramatic rejection. “Wise and old. Hmmm. Yes. Next year, by society’s rules, I shall officially become a spinster. But I am not decrepit yet!”
“God help us, a spinster? Aren’t we done with that idea yet?”
“You have not been away that long, my brother. We’re not even done with royal debuts and dowries, either.”
“A disaster,” he mourned.
“Tell me!”
“I hope you never lose your insights into society’s foibles.”
“Never. It’s fodder for my novels.” She wrote romances that scared and seared and delighted her female readership. “My readers exclaim over my heroines. How hard they must fight to keep their integrity.” And their lovers.
“And your heroes?”
“Ah!” She lifted a finger in the air. “How devilish, how reclusive. How secretive.”
He threw back his head to chuckle over that. “Dear God. Do you paint them all like that?”
She grinned at him. You are my every brooding hero. “Each and every one.”
“Oh Camille!” He hugged her to his side again and her body burned wherever his touched. “I was right to come home. I needed to laugh with you. With all of you,” Pierce added as Killian made his way toward them, his work ordering luggage done.
So there it was. Pierce’s assessment of her. The inherent insult sparked her disappointment.
After all, she was worth more to anyone than simply someone to laugh with. Much more.

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