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New Release: Reclaim My Heart by Donna Fasano

Awarding winning author, Donna Fasano, has a new romance novel out this week!

Sixteen years ago, Tyne Whitlock cut all ties to her past and left town under the shameful shadow of a teenage pregnancy. Now her fifteen-year-old son is in trouble with the law and she is desperate for help. But reaching out to high-powered attorney Lucas Silver Hawk will tear open the heart-wrenching past in ways Tyne never imagined.

Forced to return to the Delaware Indian community where Lucas was raised, Tyne and Lucas are tempted by the heated passion that consumed them as teens. Tyne rediscovers all the reasons she found this man irresistible, but there are scandalous secrets waiting to be revealed, disgraceful choices made in the past that cannot be denied. Love is a powerful force that could heal them both—if the truth doesn’t rip them apart.

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Amazon: Reclaim My Heart

Author Bio:

Donna Fasano is a three time winner of the HOLT Medallion, a CataRomance Reviewers Choice Award winner for Best Single Title, a Desert Rose Golden Quill Award finalist, and a Golden Heart finalist. Her books have sold over 3.6 million copies worldwide and have been published in nearly two dozen languages. Her books have made the Kindle Top 100 Paid List numerous times, climbing as high as #17.

What others are saying about Donna’s books:

“…complex, funny, and realistic…” ~Wilmington News Journal

“Excellent!” ~Bookreview.com

“Could not help myself from reading excerpts to my husband and friends. This book is well written, the characters are real, everyday folks. It is very easy to identify with them. Donna Fasano is a talented author.” ~Elizabeth M. Caldwell on Amazon

“…a fast paced riotous look at family life today. Donna Fasano is right on target!” ~Donna Zapf, SingleTitles.com

Why I Write Romance Novels

By Donna Fasano

I can’t tell you how many times over the course of my 20-plus year career as a published romance author I have been asked, “When are you going to write a real book? You know, a [insert genre of choice: mystery, historical, thriller, etc].” So I’d like to take this opportunity to tell readers why I write romance novels.

I suffered a lot of tragedy while I was growing up, the worst of which was the death of my mother just as I was entering my teens. I felt as though I went from 13 to 35 overnight, and when my friends were off having fun, I was cooking and cleaning and helping my little brother with his homework. Romance novels were an escape for me. The Wolf and the Dove, The Far Pavilions, Whitney My Love, Rebecca, The Thorne Birds… if the book featured one man and one woman falling in love, I read it! Romance novels offered me hope for a happy future filled with love (hokey, maybe, but I was a naïve teen). As a young wife and mother, I discovered Silhouette Romance Novels. These books were short and sweet and uplifting. Each and every story put a smile on my face, and the happily-ever-after endings always boosted my spirits. Are romance novels real? No. Does every real-life relationship end in HEA? Of course not. But if I wanted doom and gloom, I’d watch the evening news.

As an author, I can’t think of a better way to use my talent than to bring pure enjoyment to my readers. I tell people that I write cotton candy for the mind. Think about that. When you were a kid and you put a small cloud of that wispy confection on your tongue, what did you do? You smiled. And maybe you even laughed. That’s the reaction I’m going for with my short, upbeat stories. That’s why I write romance novels. So if you’re looking to get lost for a few hours in a fun, cheery story, I hope you’ll try one of my books.

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HBS Author’s Spotlight — It’s me!

Carol Davis Luce – HBS Author’s Spotlight

Today our blog puts the Spotlight on Author Carol Davis Luce. She is the known as the NightWriter for her series of “Night” mystery novels starting with Night Stalker.

Author Genre: Mystery & Thrillers, Romance, Literature & Fiction

 Read about me, my ‘night’ novels, and the infamous psycho kitty. 
Click here to read interviewHBS Author Spotlight

First time on sale. This is the last day my coming-of-age novel, AWAKENING: Secrets of a Brown Eyed Girl, will be on sale for .99¢! Looking for an instant Mother’s Day gift?

Amazon.com

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Travel piece by guest author, Alonna Shaw.

My Writer’s Bucket List: Travel-Writing Wings On!

I’m spreading my writer-ly wings. Here is my first travel writing piece! 
Point Reyes National Seashore is one of my favorite places and has captured a piece of my heart. I’m so glad I can share a little about this area just north of San Francisco, California. Somehow a little bit of spooky seems to get into my writing. That’s what happens when kids read Edgar Allan Poe… possibly too young.

Check out my article at MyDestination.com!
Alonna Shaw, Point Reyes National Seashore, California, USA

http://www.mydestination.com/travel-articles/721867/point-reyes-national-seashore

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Guest Author for this week is Alonna Shaw

My guest author for this week is Alonna Shaw:

an inspirational woman with many talents. 

Thank you Alonna Shaw (model, actress, artist, editor, and now author), for letting me pick a little piece of your brain.

Her debut novel is inspirational, magical, and beautifully written. It’ll make you laugh, cry, think, and get the warm fuzzies.  

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1.      Eleven Sundays is your debut novel, what inspired you to write about this heartwarming story of love, loss, and redemption?

I was chatting with my mom about my fortune telling, albino great-grandmother when one of those prickly “chills” moments came over me. I knew something had registered, but it was sometime later that I realized the souplady character had been knocking at my writer-ly door. The other reason that got the Eleven Sundays ball rolling was my complete lack of being able to deal with loss—and I wanted to explore this.

2. How did you come up with the title?

You know that time right before you drop off to sleep?

I liked how Graham Nash of “Crosby, Stills, and Nash” described it in a HuffPost piece: “As with songwriting, that space just before you fall to sleep (what David Crosby calls ‘When the elves take over the workshop’) is most informative and often leads to the creation of a song.”

Well, I’ve trained myself to listen and make notes no matter how much I want to keep my eyes closed and tuck deeper into the covers. I don’t remember if it was a Sunday night or not, but I distinctly heard inside my head the words “Eleven Sundays.” I knew it was my title and my structure. It was a defining moment for my story and my novel.

3.      Is there a message in Eleven Sundays that you want readers to grasp?

I think everyone can identify with hitting those “life speed bumps.”  My characters are faced with evolving through those challenges by understanding themselves and taking risks.


4.
 Are experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?

My experiences with risk do inform my writing. I certainly have plenty of “life speed bumps” to draw from, but what I wanted to do was create characters separate from myself so I could allow them to react in ways I haven’t or couldn’t.

5. Are the names of the characters in your novel important?

That’s such a funny question to me. When I write I don’t even like to give characters names. I’ll refer to them as “him” or “her,” sometimes “character A, B, C, etc.” At some point in the writing the characters evolve and are no longer nameless.

If so, why? I was particularly intrigued by the cat (Brownbunnykitty),

The cat character was soft and brown like a bunny, so no name, instead a description. I wanted to slip in some subtle animal behavior since that is a subject I’m quite passionate about. The cat character is symbolic of acceptance. Sometimes animals know us better (at a core level) than we know ourselves.

and one boy’s name (Newt).

I have a family member who we refer to as “Lizard.” I wanted to find something like that for the youngest of the boys. Aliens, the movie came to mind, in it the little girl was called Newt. I have an affinity for the inception of science… so Isaac Newton was another influence.

 And of course, the Souplady.

She’s one of those people in the neighborhood who gets a nickname based on what they do.

 6. With your acting background aside, have you ever read or seen yourself in a book or a movie?

Back in the 90s I really wanted to play the part of Rowan in Anne Rice’s The Witching Hour. Instead—as an exercise—my writing partner and I adapted that book and part of the sequel Lasher into a screenplay. Talk about dedication, we worked full-time on it. Those were two really long novels.

7. Was there anything you found particularly challenging in the writing of Eleven Sundays? What was the hardest part to write?

Once I had gathered four notebooks full of scenes, character background, and other notes the idea of writing a novel wasn’t as daunting. Sitting down at the computer became an activity of going through my to-do list. I put these notebook puzzle pieces together and had a reasonable sh**ty first draft.

Going into the next draft, when I’d come to a place that said “write a scene that…”—those were the challenging “Uff-dah” moments What does this mean?—as my Norwegian grandmother would say.

8. Did you learn anything about yourself from writing this book?

Yes.

  • ·         I could actually complete a story on my own.
  • ·         I could let go of my fear of structure. Structure is a friend, not the enemy.
  • ·         Method acting wasn’t a waste of my time. The exercises I practiced in the past to develop characters as an actor, now help when fleshing out characters.

9. If you had to do it all over again, would you change anything in your debut novel?

No, not in the novel. I would’ve put more marketing stuff into place before releasing it, but life was just too busy. My husband is helping me and we are slowly rolling some out now.

10. What was your favorite chapter (or part) to write and why?

I loved watching the boys as they evolved throughout the story.

Also, the last chunk of the book came to me first, hooked my heart, and was at the same time my favorite and most difficult part to work on because it stirred up too much emotion for me.

11. Are there certain characters you’d like to go back to. A sequel or spin-off?

Eleven Sundays is Annie’s story, so the sequel deals with the next chapters of her life.

12. Who designed the cover for Eleven Sundays?

I used a photo I took of some abandoned shoes out on Limantour Beach in Point Reyes National Seashore. Then my husband helped me with titling since I haven’t learned Photoshop—yet.

13. You were recently featured in your hometown newspaper, how much impact does your childhood have on your writing then and now?

A lot. Thanks Mom! She taught me that dreams could come true if you work hard (be careful what you wish for). And growing up in small towns allowed my imagination to bloom.

14. When you were a child, what did you want to be when you “grew up”?

A jockey, then one of Jacques Cousteau’s marine biologists, then a photo-journalist, then an attorney (because they get to read lots of books).

15. If you couldn’t be an author, what would your ideal career be?

Boy, I’d be screwed since this is the career that came after the others (model, actress). I’d love to be an illustrator for children’s books. I’m an old-school paper and canvas artist.

Or a film director—there’s something to being in charge of the bigger picture and being social. Writers are in charge of the bigger picture but the work tends to be solitary.

16. If you could live inside the world of a book, which book would you choose?

As much as I love Edward Gorey, not his. I do kind of feel like Horton and a Who frequently.

17. Give your readers a couple of fun facts that they may not already know about you.

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I had a paper route as a kid—on pony back. My version of the Pony Express.

To conquer my fear of heights I climbed to the top of the Hong Kong Conrad Hotel (61 floors) and looked over the edge—it didn’t work.

18. What makes you laugh and/or cry?

Beauty, kindness—in the good way.

Animal cruelty hurts my heart.

19. Is there anything that you would like to say to your readers?

I appreciate any support to spread the word about Eleven Sundays. I love hearing from readers, connecting helps to balance the isolated life of a writer. I’m also branching out to travel writing with MyDestination.com. Their interview about me is here  MyDestination

My first piece on The Point Reyes National Seashore goes live on May 8thPoint Reyes National Seashore

I’m a member of Indie Writers For Hurricane Sandy Recovery. We get books to schools and libraries damaged by the hurricane or other disasters such as fire. If you know of a school in need contact: Authors for Hurricane Sandy Libraries

Oh, you have one more question? Okay—which is my favorite of your books? Well, you are putting me on the spot… I love them all, but IF I have to chose: Night Passage and Awakenings: Secrets of a Brown Eyed Girl.

😉

Thanks so much for having me on your NightWriter blog.

Blog: Alonna’s blog

Buy Eleven Sundays at:

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Super Sale! 2 Days Only!

.99¢ Newly Released Boxed Set .99¢

NIGHT TRILOGY–Three Night Novels

2 Days only — April 27 & 28

Amazon.com $7.99 value

Click here to go to Amazon http://www.amazon.com/NIGHT-TRILOGY-Three-Novels-ebook/dp/B00CDTEISQ/ref=sr_1_11?ie=UTF8&qid=1367008900&sr=8-11&keywords=Carol+Davis+Luce

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Read Alonna Shaw’s interview with Carol Davis Luce

 http://www.alonnashaw.com/2013/04/interview-with-carol-davis-luce-boxing.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AlonnaShaw+%28Alonna+Shaw%29

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NEWLY RELEASED BOXED SET: NIGHT TRILOGY — Three Night Novels by Carol Davis Luce

For the first time in one volume, three of the ‘night’ novels by Night Writer, Carol Davis Luce. The ‘night’ books are standalone thrillers that go bump in the night.

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Over 48 Five-Star Reviews. This volume contains two Amazon bestselling novels, and the newest release.

Link to Amazon:

http://www.amazon.com/NIGHT-TRILOGY-Three-Novels-ebook/dp/B00CDTEISQ/ref=sr_1_13?ie=UTF8&qid=1366480657&sr=8-13&keywords=Carol+Davis+Luce

NIGHT STALKER:

Things were looking up for Alexandra Carlson. With her divorce behind her and the mysterious death of her father fading in her memory, she was moving on. Then things began to happen. Anonymous phone calls full of heavy breathing. A broken tree branch outside her bedroom window. Her cat gone without a trace. A moving shadow above the skylight. Surely it was all her imagination…

Then one day she picked up the phone. In the background she could hear a scratchy record—an old song that brought dark memories out of the shadows. That night something woke Alexandra out of a sound sleep. This time, the heavy breathing wasn’t coming from the telephone. Someone was in house with her. And she was at his mercy.

NIGHT GAME:

4 weeks in the Top 100 Best Sellers in Kindle Store.

The exclusive King’s Club resort casino is a glittering playground for gamblers with everything to gain…and the hunting ground for a shadowy killer with nothing to lose. So far, the odds are in his favor. Until casino owner Jay King places his bets on a beautiful private investigator. . .

Kasey Atwood is an expert at undercover surveillance, and no stranger to this dazzling world of high stakes and low morals. Her attraction to the sensual, enigmatic King is immediate—and incendiary. As their love affair heats up, she becomes a pawn in a dangerously seductive game of passion and revenge. Then more innocent blood is shed, and Kasey knows she can’t afford to make one false move. At risk is nothing less than her heart—and her life. . .

NIGHT WIDOW:

Murder. Mayhem. Madness. . .

“NIGHT WIDOW has all the ingredients of a first-class thriller: a reclusive former movie star, a strong and capable heroine, and a story that twists and turns like Mulholland Drive. Nothing is as it seems in this present day story of Old Hollywood, obsession, and murder. As Luce delves deeper into the life of fading film star Sybil Squire, the stakes escalate to a stunning climax.”
–J. Carson Black, author of DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN

“A Twisty Mystery. Enthralling…well written…the twists keep coming.”
–The Book Keeper

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“Just one more chapter…” I dream about keeping readers awake all night.

COMING SOON: NIGHT TRILOGY. A BOXED SET INCLUDING NIGHT STALKER, NIGHT GAME and NIGHT WIDOW.

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5.0 out of 5 stars*****A gripping suspense story, from start to finish., April 1, 2013
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This review is from: Night Stalker (Kindle Edition)

This fast-paced suspense novel was totally engrossing with its story of an unknown intruder watching and threatening the central character in her own home. A strong storyline is supported by good writing that provides both visual descriptions and realistic action featuring a likable central character plagued by bad memories and the current terrors inflicted by an unknown adversary. Once I had started, I simply could not stop reading until I had finished the book – as a result I had very little sleep last night. Every time I turned off my kindle and tried to go to sleep, I kept wondering what would happen to Alex next – and on went the kindle again for “just one more chapter”. Five hours later it was morning and I was finishing the book with its final, exciting and unforeseen conclusion. This is the second book that I have read by this author and she is fast becoming a favourite of mine in the mystery and suspense novel genre.

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Guest Author, Indie Chicks Writer and friend,Tonya Kappes. Welcome Tonya!

Who wants a Fairy God Cat?

I do! I do! What could be more purrrfect than to have a Fairy God Cat? There’s only one thing cooler than a cat, and that’s a cat with magical powers.  Check out the 3rd in The Magical Cures Mystery Series, A Charming Wish. It’s kittielicious!

 

Image of Tonya Kappes

Tonya is an Amazon Movers and Shakers, and International bestselling author. She writes humorous cozy mystery and women’s fiction that involves quirky characters in quirky situations.

Splitsville.com, the first novel in the Olivia Davis Mystery Series, is a double finalist in the Next Generation Indie Book Awards in the Mystery and Humorous Categories.

Carpe Bead ‘em is a finalist in Amazon’s eFestival of Words in the Women’s Fiction Category.

When not being the princess, queen, and jester of her family of three teenage boys, an adoring husband, and three fury kids, she travels to various writing groups as guest speaker on “How to Market and Promote Your Novels Effectively,” where she is known as a marketing guru.

Become a member of Tonya’s STREET TEAM! It’s a gathering place of readers who love Tonya Kappes novels and Tonya gives away monthly prizes! To sign up for Tonya’s STREET TEAM, newsletter, view book trailer, and upcoming news, check out Tonya’s website, Tonyakappes.com.

And be sure to stalk her on Facebook and Twitter!

Life was good. I mean real good until Isadora Solstice decided to stick her nose into my business. Granted, she was the one responsible for picking me to be June Heal’s Fairy God Cat.

Yes, you read that right. FAIRY GOD CAT. Being a Fairy wasn’t just for cute little winged creators, though I am a very cute white, male cat.

After all, it wasn’t that hard to find a place in June Heal’s heart on her tenth birthday. I knew she had always wanted a charm bracelet because it was very well known that she prayed every night for one. I made sure that I had snuck a charm from the shop Bellatrix Baubles, in the magical town of Whispering Falls, before I showed up on June’s front door step with a cute turtle charm dangling from my tattered collar.

It took a lot of rolling around in sticks and muddy water to get that collar to look all ratty. But I had to get in June’s heart somehow, in order to protect her from evil spiritualist that would do anything to have her powerful gift. After all, my name wasn’t Mr. Prince Charming for nothing!

Little did I realize, she was going to have a place in my heart. I was there to do a job. . .protect. . .not LOVE.

Like I said, life was good. June had taken over her mom’s homeopathic cure shop at the local flea market, A DOSE OF DARLA. She had just started honing her spiritual gift of knowing how to cure what A Dose of Darla client’s really had. They might think they had heartburn and wanted June to make a homeopathic cure for it, but in reality June knew they were suffering from a broken heart. With a few “special” ingredients, June healed the client and A Dose of Darla took off.

That was until Izzy showed up realizing that June had her late father’s spiritual gift and she made June a deal to move to Whispering Falls to open her own shop. That was when June found out that she wasn’t a “typical” person and I wasn’t just a stray cat.

We moved. And life hasn’t settled down since. I’m having to keep June safe at each stage of her life by adding protection charms to her bracelet. Plus her budding romance with Whispering Falls’ sheriff Oscar Park, leaving her little time to give me a good scratch. Not to mention Madame Torres, June’s snarky crystal ball was high-maintenance and requires a lot of June’s free time.

But it was all up to me to help keep June safe and out of trouble, even when villagers show up dead with June’s prints all over the evidence.

Sometimes I wish for those long days back in Locust Grove where I could smack around cicadas all day and warm my belly in the beating sun.

http://www.amazon.com/Charming-Magical-Mystery-Series-ebook/dp/B00BSRYYH4/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1365292444&sr=1-1&keywords=a+charming+wish

Get to know Mr. Prince Charming and the magical gang of Whispering Falls in THE MAGICAL CURES MYSTERY SERIES. A Charming Crime is the first novel in this fun series, followed up by A Charming Cure. And the fun doesn’t stop there. A Charming Potion is a holiday short story. The third novel in the series, A Charming Wish released on March 14th.

For more of Tonya Kappes novels, be sure to check out any online book seller for ebooks and print.

Check out Tonya’s website, Tonyakappes.com,to join her newsletter, view book trailer, and upcoming news.

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New Novel Release — Cut and Run by Traci Hohenstein

Read an excerpt of Cut and Run by Traci Hohenstein

Traci Hohenstein in Indie Chicks Cafe
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TRACI HOHENSTEIN
CUT & RUN excerpt

Matthew O’Malley’s Story
Helping people get out of jail has always been a part of my life, just like stepping over the drunks on Bourbon Street. My grandfather started O’Malley Bail Bonds in 1943. By the early sixties, my father was at the helm. I couldn’t have been more than seven when he first started taking me to work with him everySaturday. I’d wait on those wooden benches at the courthouse, watching as he bailed out the most hardened criminals in the city. By the time I was a teenager, I knew every crook in the city of New Orleans. And they knew me and my family. Late-night phone calls from drunk drivers, domestic abusers, and murderers were the norm for us. So it was only natural that when I graduated from Louisiana State University—with a degree in business management—I officially joined the family business. Little did Iknow that I would one day find myself on the wrong side of the law, and need someone to bail me out.

I had to give my grandfather credit. He had set up shop in the right place. For decades, New Orleans ranked among the top five cities in the United States for murders per capita. That meant we had more work than we could handle. Then Hurricane Katrina came along in 2005. After the notorious storm, business slowed quite a bit. Most of our clientele moved on to greener pastures in Texas, northern Louisiana, and other states along the Gulf Coast. I took advantage of that lull and started getting more involved in my children’s school and extracurricular activities.
I became the soccer coach for my son’s team, the Red Devils. Patrick was eleven and a star soccer player. He loved playing goalie—a position that was perfect for his tenacious personality. With his fierce blue eyes and dark wavy hair, Patrick was the spitting image of me when I was his age.

He’d learned plenty from his older sister, Mary Katherine, who was also a star soccer player. She was thirteen and held her team’s record for most goals scored in a single season. Mary Kate, as we called her, had her mom’s beautiful blonde hair and green eyes. But she had my street-smart attitude and tough-as-nails exterior. Even though she was becoming a teenager, an age that most dads feared, I didn’t worry about her. I knew she could handle herself when it came to boys and their hormonal urges. She’d already been sent home from school twice for beating up a boy who’d just looked at her the wrong way.

My wife, Erin, was a stay-at-home mother as well as an artist. When the kids were at school, she painted watercolors that she put on consignment in local art galleries and a few select upscale restaurants and cafés. I’d always supported her creative side, until it put our marriage in jeopardy. I knew I’d have to confront her eventually, but I couldn’t stomach it yet. Instead, I kept busy with the family business and took on more responsibility in our kids’ lives to avoid her.

Going through the motions helped me sustain a sense that life was normal, which was why our Wednesday night family ritual seemed more important than ever. We hadn’t deviated from it for nearly a year. I’d leave work early and head home to change into shorts and a Red Devils jersey. Then I’d load up the family SUV to make the short drive to the soccer fields at the city park. From four to six, the kids had soccer practice. Afterwards, we’d head home, and while Erin helped the kids with homework, I’d grill steaks on the back deck. My older brother Chris, who was also my business partner, would come over with his wife, and we would all eat dinner together. Every Wednesday night, without fail, this was our thing. At least, it was until one Wednesday, when everything changed. Instead of getting ready to leave for practice, I found Erin lying down in our bedroom with a washcloth covering her forehead.

“Hey, what’s going on?” I asked quietly.

“Headache. Not sure if I feel like going to soccer practice tonight.”

“Did you take anything?” I asked her, growing concerned. With the exception of morning sickness, which she’d had with both pregnancies, Erin was never sick. It crossed my mind she could be pregnant, but then I dismissed the idea. This was the person I teasingly called superwoman because she never missed any activity the kids were involved in. I loved her. No matter the skeletons she was keeping in her closet.
The lights were off and the blinds were closed tightly. Only a sliver of light snuck in from the adjoining bathroom. I fumbled around the nightstand to turn on the lamp.
She moaned when the light came on.

“Just some aspirin. Turn the light off, please. Give me a few minutes and I’ll get ready.”

I left the room to check on the kids. Mary Kate was in her room, lying on the bed and listening to her iPod. She was already dressed in her practice clothes. She looked up, smiled at me, and gave a small wave. I pointed to my watch and put up my hands.

“Ten minutes,” I mouthed to her. She gave me a thumbs-up sign, closed her eyes, and went back to listening to her tunes.

Patrick was in the study playing on the computer. I could hear the ping-ping sound of some game he was engrossed in. He looked so grown up behind my battered oak desk.

“Hi, Dad. Mom’s sick,” Patrick said in his squeaky voice. Not quite boy, not quite man.

He was going through that horrible stage of adolescence that I remembered only too well.

“Just a headache, son. She’ll be fine. What are you doing?”

“Playing Warcraft. I’ve leveled up again,” Patrick said, his attention back on the screen.

“Nice.” I looked through the mail Erin had put on my desk. It seemed amazing that she was still capable of taking care of the details like this, sorting the mail and paying the bills and keeping a grocery list. I guessed she was working as hard as I was at keeping up a normal facade. “Ten minutes and we’re out of here.”

“Okay, Dad.”

I went through my usual routine of getting everything ready for practice, putting the situation with Erin at the back of my mind. I grabbed some oranges from the fridge, tossed them into a container, and carried them outside. In our detached garage, I pulled a bag of ice from the deep freezer. I poured filtered water into the lime-green ten-gallon portable cooler and then loaded everything up in the back of our Dodge Durango.

We lived just one street off St. Charles Avenue, in the heart of the Garden District. When my father died, he willed the house to my brother and me. My mother had died some twenty years earlier, of multiple sclerosis. My brother Chris, who liked to be as far away as possible from the daily grind of New Orleans, liked living in the suburbs of Metairie. So I bought out his share of the family home, spent some dough renovating the hundred-year-old Victorian mansion, and moved my family in. The imposing main house was four thousand square feet and situated on a prominent corner lot facing Valmont Street. We had a large pool, a hot tub, and an outdoor kitchen that were well used. The garage faced a corner street, and we’d put in an apartment above it to serve as my wife’s art studio.

Just as I closed the hatch of the Durango, I turned around and came face-to-face with a stranger. I jumped back and banged my elbow. A tall black man stood before me, his clothes soiled and torn and his posture stooped, although his frame still appeared strong and muscular.

“Mister, can ya help me out?”

I was used to homeless people asking for handouts around the French Quarter, but it had never happened in my own backyard. I looked at the gate and saw it was standing wide open. I had forgotten to lock it when I came home. Even though I felt we lived in a relatively low-crime area of the Garden District, we always locked the driveway gate as well as all the doors and windows to the house and apartment. We also had an alarm system in the main house, but like most people, we usually forgot to set it when we were home.

My heart began to slow to a normal pace as I reached into my front pocket. “What’s your name?” I asked the gentleman.

“Moses.” When he spoke, I could see perfect, straight, white teeth which looked out of place with the rest of him. He wore a filthy trench coat, even though it was almost eighty degrees outside. His shoes were caked with mud, and his fingernails were long and had dirt underneath them. But those teeth were sparkly white and straighter than mine ever could be.

I handed Moses a twenty-dollar bill.

“Thank you and God bless.” I watched as Moses walked through the gate and disappeared. I started to follow him to lock the gate, but something stopped me. I looked up at the second-story window and saw my wife peeking out through the blinds. She quickly shut them. As I stared at the window, I tried to shake off my uneasy feeling.

I headed back inside. “Time to go!” I yelled from the kitchen. I heard the kids bounding down the stairs. When they reached the kitchen, I instructed them to get in the truck and wait for me.

When I walked into the family room, Erin had her back to me and was rooting around in her purse. She was dressed in khaki shorts and a white T-shirt.

“You don’t have to come if you’re not feeling well,” I told her.

When she turned around, I saw that she was wearing dark sunglasses. She had a smile on her face. The one where her lips were tightly shut and the corners of her mouth were struggling to maintain an upward battle. I instantly recognized that kind of smile. It was usually reserved for when she was trying to act like everything was okay, but she was mad or upset. I usually ran the other way when I saw that smile. But now I just wanted her to come out with it so we could go back to being honest with each other.

“Is there anything you want to tell me?”

“I’m fine.” Erin slung her purse over her shoulder. “Who was that man?”

“Just some homeless guy.”

Erin raised her left eyebrow. “You didn’t give him money, did you?”

I shrugged.

She shook her head and walked toward the back door.

This is how we communicated lately. With body language instead of honest words. Sometimes I felt more like her child than her husband.

“You sure you’re okay?” I called after her. She still looked a little pale, and it worried me.

“Yeah, of course.”

I felt my concern ease a little. It seemed she wanted to pretend things were normal as much as I did.

“I need to drop off a painting with someone at Antoine’s on the way home if we have time.”

“Do you need me to grab it from the studio?”

“I can get it.”

Fifteen minutes later, we were on our way to the city park. As we drove down St. Charles Avenue, I looked for Moses, but didn’t see him. I thought about his white smile and unusual name.

Practice went well, as usual. But the whole time, I couldn’t get Moses out of my mind. The more I thought about him, the more I was sure that I knew him from somewhere. I didn’t think he was a past client, but O’Malley Bail Bonds had helped thousands of people and I couldn’t remember all of them. We had what my brother termed “frequent flyers”—those people who we’d bail out of jail on a monthly basis—and I was pretty sure Moses was not one of those.

On the ride home, my brother Chris called to see if we needed anything from the store. “Baking potatoes,” I told him after consulting with Erin. I let Chris know that we’d be running a few minutes late since Erin needed to drop off a painting to a client..

After stopping at a gas station to fill up the Durango, we headed for the French Quarter. Antoine’s was a popular French Creole restaurant for tourists and locals alike.. I knew Erin was excited to finally get her artwork displayed there. As we were on the outskirts of the Quarter, I heard a thump come from the back of the truck and felt the vehicle become suddenly unsteady on the road.

“Damn. I think we have a flat.” I pulled the Durango over in an empty parking lot that faced the area known as the Riverwalk. “Stay here, I’ll check it out.”

I got out and inspected the rear tires. As I’d suspected, the left rear tire was flat, and I could see a gaping hole in it.

How the hell did that happen? I thought to myself. Just as I was getting up, I felt a hand on my shoulder. For the second time in the space of a couple of hours, my heart thumped loudly in my chest and an uneasy feeling washed over me and made the hair stand up on the back of my neck.

I slowly turned and came face-to-face with the figure standing behind me. “What the hell are you doing here?”

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“Just one more chapter…” I dream about keeping readers awake all night.

COMING SOON: NIGHT TRILOGY. A BOXED SET INCLUDING NIGHT STALKER, NIGHT GAME and NIGHT WIDOW.

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5.0 out of 5 stars*****A gripping suspense story, from start to finish., April 1, 2013
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This review is from: Night Stalker (Kindle Edition)

This fast-paced suspense novel was totally engrossing with its story of an unknown intruder watching and threatening the central character in her own home. A strong storyline is supported by good writing that provides both visual descriptions and realistic action featuring a likable central character plagued by bad memories and the current terrors inflicted by an unknown adversary. Once I had started, I simply could not stop reading until I had finished the book – as a result I had very little sleep last night. Every time I turned off my kindle and tried to go to sleep, I kept wondering what would happen to Alex next – and on went the kindle again for “just one more chapter”. Five hours later it was morning and I was finishing the book with its final, exciting and unforeseen conclusion. This is the second book that I have read by this author and she is fast becoming a favourite of mine in the mystery and suspense novel genre.

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