Wednesday, July 25, 2007

SHE CRIES IN THE DARK

Title of Book: She Cries in the Dark
Genre: Contemporary romance
Author: Debi DeSantis
Website: http://www.debidesantis.com/
Publisher: Lulu
Date of Release: March 2007
ISBN: 978-1-4303-1998-6

You can purchase She Cries in the Dark here.

She Cries in the Dark Summary:

Maci Sullivan is beautiful young wife and mother who had everything she could ever want. A loving devoted husband, two happy, healthy twin six year olds, and a wonderful family. But when things seem to be going great, a series of life altering events will take place which leave Maci thrown into a whirlwind of grief and heartache she never thought possible. A nightmare was lurking around every corner that Maci was not able to awake from. After discovering a secret that leaves Maci questioning the life and love she once shared with her husband she finds solace and comfort in the arms of another man. Not able to hide their feelings for one another any longer, the two embark on a journey that will allow two people that have lost so much, the opportunity to once again experience the joy of love and passion.

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Monday, July 23, 2007

THE COMPLETE IDIOT'S GUIDE TO SHORT MEDITATIONS by Susan Gregg

Title of Book: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Short Meditations
Genre: Self Help; Inspiration
Author: Susan Gregg
Website: http://susangregg.com/
Publisher: Alpha (April 3, 2007)
ISBN: 978-1592576142

Buy The Complete Idiot's Guide to Short Meditations here!

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Short Meditations Summary:

The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Short Meditations offers you a variety of simple—yet powerful—mediations designed to improve quality of life by quieting the mind. This book shows you how to feel like you have more time, how to enjoy life more deeply and passionately, and how to handle everyday life without stress.--Step-by-step exercises ease readers into meditation techniques--Includes short meditations that can be done anywhere, anytime--Meditations progressively build, gradually leading toward a deeper connection with the self while working at the reader’s own pace.

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Short Meditations Excerpt:

Work That Mind!

If you join the gym and never go, your body probably won’t change much. If you go to the gym but never lift any weights, there still won’t be much change. But, if you go to the gym regularly and work out vigorously, your body will change. If you hire a personal trainer to help you meet your goals and follow her suggestions, you will progress even faster and you can create the body of your dreams.

This book is your membership to the universal gym of personal growth. If you use the meditations regularly, your life will change. Think of me as your personal coach and follow the suggestions throughout the book so you can create the life of your dreams. Actually, my experience has been that you will create a life beyond your wildest dreams.

The more you practice, the greater the benefits and the easier it will be. Once you learn how to ride a bike, you never forget. Learning to ride the bike does take practice. Using guided meditations also takes a little bit of practice, but the benefits are well worth the effort.

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

YOU ARE MORE THAN ENOUGH: EVERY WOMAN'S GUIDE TO PURPOSE, PASSION, AND POWER by Judi Moreo

Title of Book: You Are More Than Enough: Every Woman's Guide to Purpose, Passion, and Power
Genre: Self Help; Inspiration
Author: Judi Moreo
Website: http://www.judimoreo.com/ http://www.purposepassionpower.com/
Publisher: Stephens Press
Date of Release: 2007
ISBN: 1-932173-72-2

Buy You Are More Than Enough: Every Woman's Guide to Purpose, Passion, and Power here!

You Are More Than Enough: Every Woman's Guide to Purpose, Passion, and Power Summary:

This book is for people who think they should have been more successful by now. It is also for people who want something, but don't know what it is! It will help them find their life purpose, get over any disappointments and discouragements and get headed in the right direction.

This book helps you decide what you want to achieve in order to accomplish that "something more" you know is your destiny. It will help you determine what you can change in order to live a more fulfilling life...a life of purpose, passion, and power.

Throughout this book I share tools and techniques that I used which helped me immensely in my journey to becoming the person I knew I could be. If "You Are More Than Enough" helps even one person have a better life, it will have been worth the time and effort it took to write it.

You Are More Than Enough: Every Woman's Guide to Purpose, Passion, and Power Excerpt:

"If stayng in your comfort zone hasn't brought you the success you want, maybe its time you stepped out of it. When you set goals, you are no longer leaving your future to chance. You are actually choosing to make changes in your life. Be prepared to feel a little uneasy at the prospect of doing things you haven't done before, and give yourself time to adjust to new situations. When we do things we haven't done before or attempt things we've only dreamed of, we often feel fears...fear of getting lost, fear of not knowing what to do, fear of looking stupid, feat that we are not "good enough", fear of rejection and many more. It's natural to feel fear. Identify and understand your fears. Only then will you be able to defeat them."

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

THE GATEKEEPER'S REALM by Elena Dorothy Bowman

Title of Book: The Gatekeeper's Realm
Genre: Romance, Paranormal, Science Fiction
Author: Elena Dorothy Bowman
Website: http://elenadb.home.comcast.net/
Publisher: Write Words, Inc., Cambridge Books
Date of Release: May 31, 2007
ISBN: 1594314519

Buy The Gatekeeper's Realm here!

The Gatekeeper's Realm Summary:

When the guests started disappearing one or two at a time they knew then the house, its uninvited and mysterious guests, held them in their grip.

Believing they were being held captive by the house, to the land surrounding it, and to the bay beyond, they felt they had no choice but to see where it would all lead.

The unnerving feeling of always being watched crept over them; that creepy-hair-rising feeling something, somewhere, monitoring their every move was waiting.

Waiting for what? To catch them off guard, to whisk them away to a place from which would never return?

The Gatekeeper's Realm Excerpt:

Pacing back and forth on the Widow's Walk overlooking the bay and the vast ocean beyond it, Abigail nervously awaited the arrival of her first guests. They were coming by boat — Ethan's boat. Ethan and Tony Harridan, the town's sheriff, a sometimes-permanent resident of the infamous Inn when he wasn't working at his job on the mainland, met their first adventurers at the dock in Caleb's Cove. Once the group had gathered, they were to board the Abigail for a sightseeing cruise along the coastline and the sea-lanes between the various islands to the Inn on Adam's Point — all part of the package.

Knowing it would add an air of mystery to the Inn, formerly known as the foreboding Pierce House, Abigail and Ethan set the stage for their guests by having them approach the house overlooking the bay in a modern day, state-of-the-art, two-masted schooner. It was up to Ethan and Tony to mesmerize them with tales of Abigail's and their own ominous beginnings in the house, and how the Inn came to be. The stories included: the relic of the Royal Knight, the significance of the special Land Grant displayed in a frame on the wall, the haunting strains emanating from an elusive Stradivarius, and the legend surrounding Adam's Point. And, of course, there was the possibility of becoming entangled in a web the Inn might weave. Ethan brushed over the fact that he was the first person who dared sail into the Bay of Death alone. And announced that the guests now had the honor of being the first full ship's complement to break the curse on the bay leading up to the old Pierce House, now officially known as The House On The Bluff.

Abigail smiled inwardly wishing she could see the looks on their faces while held in the grip of the stories. She was afraid her first guests might take one look at the place, even though it was all the publicity said it was, bolt and change their minds once the Abigail dropped anchor. Then Ethan and Tony would have to turn around and take them back to Caleb's Cove, and she would be alone again on Adam's Point. Well, not really.

The brochure assured those who sought a new and different vacation that they would not be disappointed. It trumpeted a vacation hideaway that had no electricity, no running water, pumps only, no central heating system, no phones and no television. It also boasted of fabulously appointed rooms, fireplaces, breathtaking ocean views, swimming, underwater caves, sailing, and a touch of suspense and intrigue.

The beautiful crystal clear bay had a special attraction. For centuries, it was noted, no ships, sail or otherwise, had ventured upon the waters leading to the House On The Bluff, due to the nefarious blot upon it. Since the time of the pirates, the sound had been known as the Bay of Death, not only for the ships who were ensnared within but also for those who sailed aboard them. Now, however, any brave soul who cared to dive beneath the sea, properly attired in protective gear, could take the time to wander among the wreckage of the ships that lay scattered on the bottom of the bay. Ships that had in times past attempted to sail into its waters — that is, if one had a mind to venture forth — at their own peril.

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Monday, July 16, 2007

THE WOMEN OF CAMP SOBINGO by Marilyn Celeste Morris

Title of Book: The Women of Camp Sobingo
Genre: Mainstream, Women's Fiction
Author: Marilyn Celeste Morris
Blog: http://www.thewomenofcampsobingo.blogspot.com/
Publisher: Mardi Gras Publications
Date of Release: June 9, 2007
ISBN: 1-934329-73-8

Buy The Women of Camp Sobingo here!

The Women of Camp Sobingo Summary:

This novel is based on my mother's experiences as an army wife sent to join her husband in Seoul, Korea, in the winter of 1946, where she endured brutal cold, numbing loneliness and a primitive environment despite the US Army's attempts in providing amenities such as housing, commissary, post exchange and a dependents school located in the compound named Camp Sobingo.

She forged friendships with three other women, whose backgrounds are disclosed during the narrative, whom she met on board the USAT General Mayo crossing the stormy Pacific, friendships which sustained her and the other women who shared that life. Bridge was a past time which helped ensure their mutual sanity; despite their friendships, however, one of the women committed suicide in that remote country.At age nine, I had been a silent witness to my mother's enduring strength and wondered for many years why this one woman had chosen to end her life there. From that point, a story formed, exploring each woman's background and the strengths each possessed from childhood to maturity.In The Women of Camp Sobingo, near the close of their tour of duty, the women promised they would hold a reunion twenty-five years later, and they kept their promise. Secrets and sorrows are revealed at that reunion and Trudy Cavanaugh, the lead character who now runs a publishing empire, realizes how assumptions and secrets can cloud one's memories and while she treasures her old friendships, she is at last able to let go of the past.

The Women of Camp Sobingo Excerpt:

Leah-Mary Alice

The Early Years

She was called The Dark Goddess. With her exotic coloring, black hair and dark eyes, Leah Damon was in demand everywhere for modeling jobs. She lunched with the best of society and was a prized decoration at parties. Her face appeared on covers of high fashion magazines and her paycheck enabled her to buy a luxurious apartment overlooking Central Park.
Leah Damon was a success.

Mary Alice Thomason, however, was a constant reminder of what she had once been.
Mary Alice was born in a small town near Tulsa, Oklahoma. From a dark-eyed infant she grew into a wide-eyed precocious child who gracefully avoided that awkward phase which afflicted other girls at puberty.

She sprouted no pimples, had no struggles with unruly hair, had posture or overweight. While her classmates worried about these ailments, the teenager Mary Alice woke one morning in a perfectly developed woman’s body.

Girls hated and envied her while boys fought for her attention. Not one of those males, however, could rightly claim he was “going steady” with Mary Alice Thomason. She remained cool, pleasant and chaste.

There was only one blemish on her childhood. It seemed that as Mary Alice grew, she noticed that her parents were considerably older than those of her friends.

And, where she was dark—haired and brown-eyed, her mother was fair and blue—eyed. When she questioned her mother about this, she received an abrupt answer: “It’s your Black Dutch ancestors. Don’t worry about it.”

And Mary Alice would put any further questions in the back of her mind.

Until she overheard her aunts whispering about “the poor child” and when she inquired, they changed the subject, looking at her with pity in their eyes.

She knew better than to question her mother again, so she simply filed these chance remarks away and laid her differences to her Black Dutch ancestors.

Whoever they were.

Her one constant friend during her growing up years was David Barnes, a neighborhood boy who often studied with her at the table in the Thomason’s warm kitchen. Both sets of parents assumed their children would marry when they were of age, a fact that both David and Mary Alice would have gradually come to accept had it not been for several occurrences during her school years.

One languid summer day, while locusts shrilled from live oak trees, David and Mary Alice, sweat soaked and burned bronze by the searing Oklahoma sun, sought refuge in the Thomason’s barn, where they rejoiced in the end of another school year and their simultaneous passage into the fifth grade.

“I’m gonna be a pilot when I grow up,” David boasted. His chin jutted out and he stuck out his chest as if it were already covered with ribbons.

Mary Alice rolled over on her stomach and contemplated the view from the hayloft.

“You gonna be a nurse?” David prompted, irked by her lack of enthusiasm for his choice of profession. He flopped beside her and stripped off his shirt.

“No, I’m gonna be a model.” She stared at his chest.

“A model? That’s that?”

“It’s like in the movies, only it’s before the main movie starts——the newsreels, where they show the latest styles from New York. The ladies walk around in front of people, wearing long, pretty dresses, and fur coats and joolery. People sit and look at them and go ‘ooh,’ and ‘Ahhhh’, and clap their hands.”

She sat, a dreamy look on her flushed face.

“Bathing suits, too, don’t forget. You’ll have to show almost your whole body, Mary Alice.”
She shrugged. “What’ s wrong with that? You’re showing almost your whole body.”

“A guy can show his chest. A girl’s not supposed to.”

“Oh, phooey! I’ll show you my chest.” She pulled off the light cotton blouse. “See? There’s nothing wrong with it.”

David stared, openmouthed. He had noticed months ago that Mary Alice’s dresses had funny bumps underneath. He reached out and touched the pink nipples.

“You’re not supposed to touch! Only look,” she giggled. Nonetheless, she didn’t remove his hand.
“Touch me, Mary Alice.”

She lightly touched his bare chest. “I can feel your heart beating.”

“I can feel yours, too.”

“Are we doing something wrong, David?”

“Yeah, I think so.”

She frowned. “I don’t think this is what my folks told me not to do. It had somethin’ to do with birds and cows and stuff—”

Below the loft, hens clucked disapprovingly, but the children didn’t hear them. The smells of warm hay and sweat and dust mingled in the still, moist air.

“You wanna see my whole body?” she asked.

He nodded, his hands still on her bumps.

“Well, move.” She wriggled out of her shorts and panties and lay naked before him.

“Now you. It’s your turn.” She smiled lazily at him.

David hastily shed his pants and shorts and lay beside her.

“You’re pretty,” he whispered.

“You’re not looking at my face.”

“More to a girl than just a face, my daddy says. Gotta have a body, too. Mary Alice, I think we’re pretty close to doin’ what grown-ups do——you know——” his face turned crimson and he reached for his trousers.

“We’re not doing anything.” She reached for his hands and put them back on her breasts. See?”

“What in thunder you kids doin’ up there?” Lewis Thomason’s voice boomed from below.

David turned white and threw on his pants; Mary Alice hastily retrieved her clothes and slid them on her bare body.

“David Barnes, your daddy wants you home right away.”

They heard her father’s heavy tread on the ladder, and then his head peered over the ledge.

“What you kids find to do all day up there, anyway?”

“Nothin, Papa.”

“I’m gonna be a pilot, Mr. Thomason,” David said. “Mary Alice says she’s gonna be in the movies.”

“Not the movies, you dumbbell.” She stood and dusted the hay from her rounded bottom. “A model. I told you, a model.”

They followed Lewis down the ladder.

“How you gonna do that? Models are in Hollywood and here you are, stuck in Oklahoma.” David continued.

“Shows you how much you know, smarty. Models are in New York. So I’ll go to New York.”
They rounded the barn where David would take the path to his house. “See you tomorrow?”

Mary A1ice looked at her father, who preceded her towards her house. She shook her head, then said in low tones, “I don’t think so.”

“You comin,’ Mary Alice?” her father called.

“In a minute, Papa.”

They watched Lewis enter the house; the screen door whined and shut with a thud.

“I won’t do it again, honest,” David pleaded. “I know what we did was wrong.”

She looked at him a long minute, then kissed him lightly on the cheek. “I’m not going up there with you again. But I liked it, David,” she laughed as she ran toward the house. “I really did like it!”

The children never spoke of that day again. Mary Alice and David grew up, and then apart, neighbors and schoolmates, but they never forgot how close they had been that one hot summer day.

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Thursday, July 12, 2007

WEEKENDS by Lindy S. Hudis

Title of Book: WEEKENDS
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Author: Lindy S. Hudis
Website: http://directorbabe.tripod.com/
Publisher: LBF Books
Date of Release: January 28, 2006
ISBN: 978-0977308217

BUY WEEKENDS HERE!

WEEKENDS SUMMARY:

An innocent-sounding family reunion at an exclusive California beach resort turns into a weekend of murder, deceit, exposed secrets and unexpected intimate encounters. John Peterson has it all: he is a respected, successful Beverly Hills entertainment lawyer with a loving wife and grown son, the strikingly handsome young film director Joe Peterson. John also has a secret, and he decides to gather his disparate family members at the elegant Hotel Del Moor in picturesque Linda Bella, California for some luxurious fun, togetherness and re-connecting before revealing his secret. Unbeknownst to the family, a brutal serial killer is lurking in the midst of all the wondrous festivities.

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Weekends Excerpt:

CHAPTER 1

The plane touched down at the Santa Barbara airport around ten a.m. During the short flight from LAX, John Peterson contemplated the weekend ahead. He had not seen his younger siblings in ten years, and was looking forward to seeing them and their families. He was also very concerned, because he had bad news to break to all of them. Very bad news, and everybody’s life would be affected. He was nervous as to what the family’s reaction would be. John was a fifty-year-old, extremely successful entertainment lawyer in Beverly Hills. His clients included rich and powerful movie stars, producers, and studio heads - they were the reason for his phenomenal success. He was the kind of man who silenced rooms when he entered them, and would tell another man’s children to be quiet.

Sitting next to John was Joyce Peterson, his wife, age forty-seven. She was born and raised in Los Angeles, and being the daughter of a prominent L.A. heart surgeon, was used to the good life. Her one and only dream was to marry a rich doctor or lawyer, have children, and be a good wife.

Then there was Joe. Joe was the twenty-three year old son of John and Joyce. To say that Joe was good-looking would be the understatement of the year. Joe was beautiful. He looked like a work of art, a Greek god. He had long, blond hair that hung just below his shoulders, and fantastic azure eyes, the color of the California sky itself. His body, although on the thin side, was cut and lean, with pronounced chest, biceps, and a washboard stomach. The facial structure, with its defined jaw and cheekbones, was captivating in its exquisite, masculine beauty. He could easily be a beautiful woman on testosterone.

He, like his mother, was born and raised into wealth in L.A., but his goal was not to become a doctor or a lawyer. He had just graduated from New York University Film School. Although his looks were better suited for being in front of the camera, his dream was to become a movie director. Having inherited his father’s magisterial personality, he simply answered, “Because I don’t like being told what to do.” whenever he was asked why he was not an actor. Through his father’s many industry connections, Joe was not at a loss for employment. He chose, however, to start at the bottom, doing Production Assistant work to get his foot in the door. His father told him it builds character, and advised him to “work for it” rather than have it handed to him. Because he was also very charming, he was meeting and networking with all the right people. The only direction Joe was going was up.

As the plane landed, the family unbuckled their seatbelts, even though the steward had instructed the passengers not to. When the plane came to a complete stop, the family was the first ones off. Joe passed by three flight attendants who gazed at him, with a look on their faces that Joe saw all the time. He smiled and bid them good-bye.

The three hiked through the jet-way into the busy airport, carrying their weekend luggage with them. They took the escalator to the lower level where the car rental stations were. While John was making arrangements for the family to rent at nice, slow sedan, Joe stepped outside. It was a hot Spring morning; a light, cool breeze offered relief from the sweltering heat.

The famous California sunshine shone brightly, reflecting off Joe’s equally golden hair. He squinted his sapphire eyes to look at it, and decided that he was determined to enjoy the insipid family reunion that his father was forcing him to attend. He did not have much in common with his simpleton cousins. Some of them he had not seen in ten years, although his father’s brother, Uncle Stephen, kept in touch with them by phone. It was, of course, just a weekend.

It was now Friday morning, they would be back home by Monday, and not much happens over weekends anyway. He decided that he would just smile and say hello to the many relatives that will be in attendance. At least, he had his own room, hopefully with cable television and an oceanview. Maybe getting away for the weekend on a mini-vacation would do him good, and he could relax a little. An older lady and a pretty, teenage girl walked by, both turning and smiling at him. He smiled back.

At only twenty-three, he was very aware of the amazing power he had over women, and as he got older, it would only get more intense. Females started throwing themselves at him when he was fifteen, and the feeling was more than mutual. He loved women, and would never use his power for cruel or destructive purposes, like many attractive, rich men do. That was not his style. Quite a few of his Beverly Hills buddies teased him for that. “Take the goods and run”, the guys said, and kidded him for being so sensitive.

Joe was not like the other guys, being a romantic, he honestly believed that there was the love of his life out there somewhere. He was determined to find her, but he wanted to win his Oscar first. The sliding glass doors of the airport flew open and John and Joyce hurried out. Joyce was carrying the keys to the Lincoln Continental that would take them to their final destination, the elegant Hotel Del Moor, overlooking the mighty Pacific Ocean. The three climbed inside the automobile, secured their luggage, and took off, with John driving, Joyce up front, and Joe in the back.

The family cruised north along the Pacific Coast Highway, with it’s incredible, palm-tree lined vision of the long, sandy beach that stretched all along the length of the Golden State. While Joyce and John were heatedly discussing who would be there, what to do, and so on, Joe gazed out the window, lost in thought. The enormous ocean and the endless sky met over the horizon, both equally wondrous and awe inspiring. Joe rested his head against the plush back of the seat and just stared at the blueness of the sea, and the swaying palm trees.

He thought about his life and how lucky he was. Being the adored only child of a wealthy L.A. lawyer and a loving mother, not to mention his genetic good fortune, he was thankful the world was at his feet.

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Sunday, July 8, 2007

SILENCED CRY by Marta Stephens

Title of Book: Silenced Cry
Genre: Crime/Mystery
Author: Marta Stephens
Website: http://www.martastephens-author.com/
Publisher: BeWrite Books (UK)
Date of Release: April 23, 2007
ISBN: 978-1-905202-72-0

BUY SILENCED CRY HERE!

SUMMARY:

Homicide detective Sam Harper is torn between guilt and suspicion after his partner is shot and killed in what should have been a routine pick-up for questioning.

The discovery of an infant’s skeletal remains in an abandoned building leads Harper to unearth murky secrets involving those he respects most. His former partner, his revered boss -- even his police hero father are under suspicion if drug-dealing, corruption, rape, and murder. For the first time in his life, Harper must stand alone in a fog of lies where dangerous truths loom forth and the boundaries between pursuer and prey blur. Harper is left to decide how far he must go to hunt down the answers and what will he do when he finds them? Worse, what Harper uncovers leaves him with a sense he can trust no one, not even himself.

EXCERPT:

Chapter 1

The hour-long sessions started at nine in the morning, twice a week, whether narcotics detective, Sam Harper liked it or not. The only good thing about this damp and cold Massachusetts morning was that it marked the midpoint of Harper’s commitment. Internal Affairs had drilled him for three days in a row. Now the police shrink wanted a piece of him. He was sick of her dogged questions. That was his job, to wear the other guy down. Three sessions left, three hours of digging into his past, into the events of that night – that goddamned night.
Neither the mild vanilla scent floating up from a flickering candle on the doctor’s desk nor the subtle gurgle bubbling from a tabletop fountain were doing their job to relax him. Harper rubbed the arms of the leather chair with his thumb as he calculated his next move. He stared at her and finally broke the silence.

“You ever kill a man, Doc?” A subtle twitch of her brow told him he had her attention. “A split second. That’s all it takes, pull the trigger, and whoosh! He’s gone.”

Dr Brannon lowered her gaze and resumed her scribbling. The navy overstuffed chair seemed to swallow her small frame.

“Why did you go there?”

“Mellow was our only link in the case. At least that’s what Gillies thought. He told me every damned thing hinged on getting to Mellow before homicide got their hands on him.”
“And you had reservations?”

Harper looked away as the Chandler Police Department psychiatrist took notes of his crumbling life.

“Does it matter?” His glance swept up to the dark panelled wall behind her desk. Framed certificates hung in an orderly row like crows on a wire. They mapped out her qualification and gave credence to her ego.

He didn’t need her to question his motives or to dig into his past and drag the memories of that night to the surface. They were there, frozen in Harper’s mind – the second he got off his round. He’d never forget the blast or the hammering rain beating against his face. The look of Frank Gillies’ lifeless eyes had scorched itself into his memory. Harper leaned forward and dropped his head. Fists jammed against his eyes as if to rub out the intruding images. He had spun the moment any number of ways, but the outcome never changed.

Brannon crossed her legs. She folded her hands and tapped her fingertips. She watched in silence, waiting to analyze his next thoughts.

“You do realize you don’t go back to work without these sessions.” She picked up the notepad again. The sound of her pen striking twice against its surface made dull impatient clicks. “Look, Detective. No one said this was going to be easy, but you have to open up. You are the only one who can do it.”

Harper didn’t buy her attempt to bring him back into the conversation. He didn’t know if he could, as she said, open up. He pursed his lips and glanced out the window.

"Damned wind’s picking up again, Doc.” He buried his mouth in the L of his thumb and index finger touching the outer corner of his eye. He rose and turned his back to hide the familiar burning that blurred his vision. Apprehension had become his unwelcome companion, a reminder of the failings he refused to accept. Anger crept in. It bubbled and seared holes into his sense of reason.

“Should’ve been me.” He closed his eyes, pinched the bridge of his nose, and cleared his throat. “I was right in Mellow’s line of fire. The damned piece was inches from me.” The thrust of his fist made a hollow sound against his chest. “You don’t get it, do you?”

“Yes, I do. Let’s start there.”

“What’s the point? You know what happened. We’ve been over it a million times. Don’t you get tired of listening to this crap?”

“It’s the only way.”

“We can talk all you want. Won’t change a damned thing. Won’t bring him back.” He dropped back into his chair and swept a hand across the stubble he hadn’t shaved in three days. “What’re you going to do? Tell me to think happy thoughts? Will that do it? Is that going to stop the
dreams?”

“Tell me about them.”

“Not today.” He wrestled between his grief and growing suspicions of Gillies. What really went down five days ago in front of the Roving Dog Saloon? He jabbed a white knuckled fist onto the arm of the chair and looked away. Every sordid detail came rushing back without prodding. “It was past eleven that night when Gillies got the tip that Mellow had violated parole.”

***

“Come on. Gotta go.” Detective Frank Gillies rushed to Harper’s desk and slammed an opened hand against it on his way to the elevator. “The big guy just answered our prayers.”

Harper caught his partner’s grin and his thumbs up gesture. The gray had gone beyond Gillies’ temples to the mass of short locks that covered his head. Harper’s glance dropped to the new spot that had landed on his partner’s tie six hours before from a greasy burger. One of many meals that had settled around Gillies’ middle.

“Let me guess, Stewart Martin’s leaving.” Harper turned to the next page in the file. He prayed every day that Detective Martin would transfer.

“Yeah right. Soon buddy, real soon, but not tonight. Word is Mellow blew a guy’s brains out.” Gillies struggled to slip his arms through the narrow sleeves of his overcoat.

“Wasn’t he just released a couple of days ago?” Harper was unmoved by the news. Mellow was nothing to their case against Jimmy Owens. They were after the supplier, not the low-end dealer. “When was this?”

“Few minutes ago. Over on Calvert near the Trenton overpass. Homicide’s on their way. Come on.” Gillies shook his head. “Will ya put that crap down already?”

Harper turned his head in time to see a bolt of lightning crackle and spark across the eastern sky followed by a quick clap of thunder. He adjusted his sight on the windowpane and the ribbons of rain flowing down the glass. “We don’t need him.”

“He knows where to find Owens.”

“Di Napoli is on it.”

“Di Napoli can’t find his ass with both hands. Move it, Harper!” Gillies rushed toward the fourth floor elevator and jabbed the down button.

Harper glanced at his watch. It was exactly eleven twenty-five p.m. He grabbed his coat off the back of a chair and motioned to Gillies he would meet him downstairs. His partner was a master at spewing out insults. Harper wondered how he had managed to measure up to the man’s expectations when Di Napoli, the eight-year veteran undercover assigned to work with them, couldn’t. He took the steps two at a time and reached the lobby as the elevator doors opened.

“He’s out, what, four days and breaks parole?” Harper pressed Gillies. “It’s a waste of time. The guys in Homicide aren’t going to let us anywhere near him. Hell, you know what they’re like. Bunch of assholes.”

“No shit. That’s why we’re going someplace else.”

“Where?”

“A dive over on Howard and Third. Just got a tip the fucker’s sitting in a booth there right now.”
Harper pulled his coat collar up and looked out the glass doors. The March rains were pounding down for the fourth consecutive day. The odds on staying dry weren’t adding up in his favor. He swept a glance over to Gillies’ and caught a similar sense of hesitation before the two of them made a run for the car.

Another bolt of lightning lit the sky followed closely by a clap of loud thunder.

***
“Harper?” Dr Brannon leaned her head to one side. “Where did you go?” The light of a small Tiffany lamp on the corner of her credenza illuminated the right side of her face.

“Want to let me in on your thoughts? It’s just you and me here,” she said, tapping her pencil on her notepad again.

He threw back his head against the back of the couch and closed his eyes. His left foot dangled over his knee while the restless right tapped on the floor.

“Right. You, me, and that thing.” He motioned toward the tape recorder on the coffee table.
She glanced at her watch. “Cut the crap, Harper. This is your third session and you have been defiant from the very beginning. Let’s get one thing straight. I’m not out to get you, understand? The bad guys are out there.” She pointed toward the door. “You want to fight them, fine. Go ahead. But walk out that door and I’ll make sure you don’t come back.” She stared at him in icy silence. “You don’t have a choice, Detective.”

“The hell I don’t. I risk my life every goddamn day. That’s my choice just as much as it was my duty to follow my partner to the dive that night. I didn’t do anything wrong. And there’s not a damned thing you can do to change it.” Heat rushed to his face.

“Who do you think you are, anyway? All you do is sit in your office and analyze the hell out of us. Where do you get off ordering me around?”

“You have a problem with authority?”

“Just you.”

“Interesting. Let’s get back to what you were thinking a minute ago.”

He hated her self-assurance. He frowned – wished he could run. He glanced at the door then turned to focus his sight on the wet bark of the maple tree in front of the window.

“It’s spitting snow.”

“Damn it, Harper. I’m sworn to secrecy. Nothing you say leaves this room.” She paused for a moment. “I am not going to risk your confidence unless you give me reason to think you are capable of hurting yourself or others.” Again, she waited for a response. “Did you hear me?”

“Guess it’s only rain.” Guilt continued to eat at him. If only he’d shot sooner. If only he had known. If only. The questions outweighed the number of plausible answers. He rose to his feet again and paced.

“No one was supposed to get killed. Not Mellow, sure as hell not Frank.” His fingers sliced through his hair and spiked the blond strands with the random pass of his hand. The knot in the pit of his gut tightened like a vise. The sessions, the job; he had to get through one to have the other. “I just wanted the truth. What the hell was Gillies thinking?”

“He knew the risks,” she said, without taking her eyes from him. “Let’s talk a minute about you. What have you been doing with yourself?”

“What difference does it make?” He knew the drill. Sure, the shrink time was mandated, but he didn’t want to talk about himself and the baggage he had swung over his shoulder.

She remained straight-faced and waiting. There was no way around it that he could see. The doc seemed as determined to make him talk, as he was to remain evasive.

“I finished a fifth of Scotch, and when I was good and drunk, I watched soap operas. Only damned thing I know more depressing than me these days.”

“You do that often?”

“I’m fine. All right? I can handle the booze.”

“How do you know I was asking about the booze?”

She caught him off guard with that remark. How damned stupid was he anyway?
“Do you think you have a problem with it?”

Harper sized her up with a seasoned glance. Her dark green sweater set off the red tones in her hair that curved slightly beneath her chin and framed the curvature of her face. She was easy on the eyes but too damned clinical for his taste. Nothing worse than a scrutinizing shrink to kill the moment. He assumed she was in her thirties, like him, but obviously twice as smart and a lot more obnoxious. Part of him wanted to tell her about Frank Gillies, how he died, and the thoughts that had haunted him since that night. He could still hear Gillies’ voice as they ran out to the car. He fingered the change in his pocket, leaned his forehead against the cool windowpane, and tuned her out.

***

Harper rushed into the car and slammed the door. He wiped his face and secured the straps of his bulletproof vest.

“What’s Mellow doing in a bar?” he asked Gillies. “Is it near the scene?”

“Nah. It’s down in Avondale.” Gillies switched on the siren and cut through traffic. “Hole in the wall place smack in the middle of slum lord row.”

“That’s clear across town. How long ago was the shooting?”

“What do I look like, some fucking information sign?” Gillies growled. “How the hell should I know? Idiots in homicide can figure that one out.”

“You sure your informant has it right this time?”

“What the hell’s with ya and the million fucking questions? All we need to do is talk to the guy about Owens before homicide gets to him.”

“Doesn’t make sense,” said Harper. “Most shooters would run like hell, not stop for a drink. Besides, what makes you think he’s going to talk now when he wouldn’t before?”

“No one accused him of having brains, ya know what I’m saying, college boy? You and me, we’d be out of jobs if little shits like him had any brains.”

“Who called in the shooting?”

“Shit, Harper. Here, let me get my crystal ball out.” Gillies sneered. “That’s Homicide’s problem; I could give a rat’s ass about it.” He shook his head. “All right, look, someone in dispatch called up about the shooting. Thought we’d want to know. That’s all. Just following a lead, all right?”
Harper knew about Gillies’ connections. Not who they were or how he managed them, but that they existed. They didn’t always pan out, but the grin that split Gillies’ face and the urgency in his voice implied this one was a sure thing.

“Seems stupid of Mellow to screw up right after making parole.”

“Yeah, well, like I said, if little shits like him had brains we wouldn’t be here.”

Harper had seen anger take over people’s minds. It shoved them over the edge without saying how far or how hard they would fall. Maybe Mellow hadn’t figured the distance yet.

Gillies turned off the headlights and nosed the unmarked patrol car into position across the street from the Roving Dog Saloon. The deserted street and the rain thumping against the car roof gave a false sense of tranquility.

Harper glanced across the way at the tavern door and the red neon lights shaped like a dog just above it. The dog’s legs and tail appeared to move back and forth making him seem to rove for a good mug of beer. The sign’s light cast an eerie red glow and shimmered off the wet objects beneath it. Harper pulled up his collar, cupped his hands around his mouth, and blew warmth into them.

“What now? You’re sure he’s in there?”

Gillies winced as he watched the windshield wipers slap the water from side to side. “Only one way to find out. It’s your turn, rookie.”

“The hell it is. I ran after the scum in the Capelli case, remember? Chased the guy five blocks through a foot of snow before you cut him off with the car. You can be so damned smug sometimes. You and that stupid grin of yours. This wasn’t even my call.”

“Ah, come on. Rookies aren’t allowed to say no. Besides, you’re younger. What are ya, thirty-one, thirty-two now?”

“Cut the jabs.”

“What? What’d I say?”

“Cut the rookie and college boy bit.”

“I’m just joshing with ya. Don’t go getting sensitive on me, all right?”

“It gets old.” It was almost midnight. Harper was tired and in no mood for Gillies’ mindless humor. “Haven’t been a rookie in years.”

“Is that so?” Gillies chuckled and threw him a playful punch. “All right. Listen. Ya don’t even have to talk to the asshole. Just see if he’s in there. Don’t want him running out the back or nothing and have to chase the little creep in this shit.”

“That’s it, huh?” Harper leaned his head against the window and watched the rain. “It’s not letting up.”

“Go on. It’ll take ya two minutes. We’ll wait him out. Ask him a few questions and go home.”

“Was that a typical surveillance?” asked Brannon. Expressionless eyes studied him from behind a set of silver framed reading glasses.

“No. We always worked together before. That night.” Harper shook his head. “Nothing made sense. One minute we’re just going to talk to the guy. Next thing I know I’ve got two fatalities to answer for and I don’t know what in the hell happened.”

“What do you mean, you don’t know?”

“We didn’t need Mellow to get Owens. Gillies knew it as well as I did. He acted as if we were the only ones on the case. There was a whole team of us including some undercover. But Gillies, he was so bent on going after Mellow that night. It was almost as if …”

“What?”

“He wouldn’t take no for an answer. What the hell was I supposed to do? He was the senior partner. Had to trust his judgment.”

“Did you?”

“That’s what we’re supposed to do, trust each other.” Harper lowered his glance. “That night, after it was over, I checked with dispatch.” He swallowed hard. “There was no shooting reported anywhere on or near the Trenton overpass.”

Watch the book trailer!



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Tuesday, July 3, 2007

THE GHOST MIRROR by Jamieson Wolf


Title of Book: The Ghost Mirror
Genre: Fantasy, Young Adult
Author: Jamieson Wolf
Website: http://www.jamiesonwolf.com/
Publisher: E Treasures Publishing
Date of Release: May '07 (Ebook) July '07(Paperback)
ISBN: 0-9740537-7-5

BUY THE GHOST MIRROR HERE!

SUMMARY:

“You have more Power than you know how to use...”

With these words, Mave Mallory’s life changes forever.

After being neglected by her parents for most of her life, Mave goes to live with her eccentric grandmother: Mona Mallory. An inquisitive child with red hair and black eyes, Mave knows that her Grandmother is a Witch. Mave has always known that she is special too; she can talk to Ghosts.

In her Grandmother’s attic, Mave finds an old Mirror. It’s large and had a gold rim around it. Mave tells her Grandmother about the mirror. Mona, frightened, warns Mave three times: “Please, promise me Mave, do not touch that mirror.” But one night, Mave must break her promise.

It is the whispering that wakes her. Mave wakes to find a blue mist has enveloped the house. The mist is coming from the mirror. Mave watches in terror as one of the Ghosts she has befriended, a girl no older than her, is pulled into the mirror by white, bony hands. Mave steps through the mirror to save her, only to find herself in a place she knows, but doesn’t.

She finds herself in a world where magic is known. Where Magic is shared on the streets. Children practice spells on the street corners and you can buy spells at a corner store. There are cobble stone streets of an older time, though the villagers live in fear. During the day they hide from The Shadows. And during the night it there is strange music, it’s sound humming through the air around her.

People in the town fear her, for she is a child with the black eyes of a Witch

Unknown to Mave, something hunts her. Older than time, Mr. Lavender knows that Mave has arrived. She is the brightest soul that he has felt in one thousand years and the magic pulsing underneath her skin calls to him. He knows that the Last Witch has come, and that he must taste it.

Now Mave must fight for her life on an unknown terrain using Magic she doesn’t understand. Coming to her aid are a few trinkets. One of them a gold locket with a hole through the middle. It shows her what is underneath the magic. What a thing really is.

What she sees through the locket frightens her. Befriended by Euwan Opal, one of the town’s children, she sees that he is not living at all, just a mass of bones, a walking skeleton. Mave fears that Euwan has a dark secret that he is not sharing, despite his coming to her aid. She wonders what that dark secret is.

Mr. Lavender is a hoarder and eater of souls. Nestled inside the Ghost Mirror, a young girl named Cleo and her new companion Amanda watch as a sinister plot unfolds. A Crow is made to find Mave. Cleo and Amanda know that Mave is their only hope to free them from the Ghost Mirror. They hope that the Crow never finds her. But in the end, it is a friend that betrays her.

When Mave is finally put face to face with Mr. Lavender, Mave must lean to use her magic to fight something darker than fear itself. She must learn to reach into her soul, if she has any hope of freeing the souls trapped in the Silver Glass.

And herself.

Excerpt

In the Beginning…

Mr. Lavender looked down at the body that rested at his feet with some trepidation.

The body was that of a young boy, no more than twelve years old. There was a small wound at the back of his head that, even now, oozed blood onto the white tiled floor underneath him. They boy was clothed in shorts and a t-shirt that had been ripped to shreds.

Mr. Lavender made a tut-tut sound and moved around, so he could see the body from another angle. It always helped to get a different perspective on things. He spared a momentary glance at his companion who was standing by the doorway.

The room around them was white, almost blinding. Its cleanliness was in sharp contrast to the rest of the house. All the other rooms were filled with cobwebs and shadow, inches of dust on table tops. Only the bathroom was sparkly white.

Mr. Lavender shuddered slightly at the cleanliness of the bathroom. He preferred the grimier rooms; the ones filled with stacks of old books and papers that littered the floor. He could spend days poring over the papers; stacks of obituaries, old newspapers that detailed events past. Old things were filled with mystery. With magic.

“You found him like this?” Mr. Lavender asked his companion.

The companion, a thin man with dark, greasy hair and a pale face, nodded. “He was here this morning.” The man’s voice was gruff compared to Mr. Lavender’s soft toned voice. “I didn’t touch anything.” The companion was so pale that it looked as if he were going to fade into the whiteness of the walls.

“As well you shouldn’t.” Mr. Lavender said. He moved around the boy again so that he could see the boys’ eyes. They were still open. “Tut, tut.” He whispered. “What are we going to do with you, my little popinjay?” He regarded the boy almost sadly, though his mouth did curve into a small smile. “Well, needs must.” He said simply.

He crouched down closer to the boy. Carefully, he laid the boys’ body on its back, so that his eyes stared skyward. Mr. Lavender opened the boys’ mouth slightly, as if the boy were forming a sound of surprise.

Gently he prodded the boys’ chest with the tips of his fingers. “I am made from more than blood,” Mr. Lavender whispered. “I am filled with spirit strong.”

In response to his words, the air around them became thick, as if time stood still. He watched as whiteness, a soft mist, started to crawl out of the boys’ mouth.

“I am made from more than flesh,” Mr. Lavender continued. “I am filled with bloods pure song.”

The rest of the incantation made the air thicker still. The companion watched as the mist leaving the boys quickened and started to take shape. He watched as Mr. Lavender bend close to the boy and breathed in through his mouth. The mist, slowly at first as if resisting, started to flow into Mr. Lavender’s open mouth.

When the mist was no more, and Mr. Lavender had closed his mouth, the air around them became whole once more.

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