Showing posts with label Thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thriller. Show all posts

Thursday, November 21, 2024

#Review - Heist Royale by Kayvion Lewis #YA #Thriller #Suspense

Series:
 Thieves Gambit # 2
Format: Hardcover, 320 pages
Release Date: November 12, 2024
Publisher: 
Nancy Paulsen Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult / Thrillers & Suspense

The high-stakes sequel to Thieves' Gambit, for fans of Jennifer Lynn Barnes and Ally Carter.

It's been six months since the end of the Gambit. Instead of winning an impossible wish, Ross has the threat of her family’s execution hanging over her head. Devroe, the only person Ross thought she could trust, could wish the Quests into oblivion at any time. Shockingly, despite his betrayal, Devroe is still making a play for Ross’s heart as the two work together pulling jobs for the Organization. But Ross has learned her lesson: A Quest can only trust another Quest.

When Ross finds herself at the center of a power struggle within the Organization, she sees her chance to change her fortunes. As a new deadly Gambit develops for control of the criminal underworld, Ross strikes a risky deal to guarantee protection for herself and her family.

In this final clash, Ross will square off against a ruthless opponent who will stop at nothing to seize power, and in their corner will be not only Devroe but his mother, who wants to destroy the Quests at any cost.

The new Gambit takes Ross and her crew into the intoxicating casinos of Monte Carlo and across treacherous snow-covered slopes in Antarctica as Ross competes against Devroe in a fight for her life. Loyalties will be tested, backs stabbed, hearts broken. May the best thief win
.



Heist Royale is the second and apparent final chapter in author Kayvion Lewis's Thieves' Gambit duology. This story will take readers from Rio to New Orleans to Antarctica to Cape Town, South Africa. It's been six months since the end of the Gambit. Instead of winning an impossible wish to save her mother, Rosalyn Quest has the threat of her family’s execution hanging over her head. Devroe, the only person Ross thought she could trust, could wish the Quests into oblivion at any time thanks to his mother who has an axe go grind with Ros's mother.

Shockingly, despite his betrayal, Devroe is still making a play for Ross’s heart as the two work together pulling jobs for the Organization. But Ross has learned her lesson: A Quest can only trust another Quest, even if it is her mother. After a minor abduction in Rio, Ross learns that Count is being challenged by Baron for control of the Organization. To settle the challenge, a Gambit begins to see who will take control of the Organization. Ross sees her chance to change her fortunes. 

All her team, which includes her mother, has to do is win 2 out of 3 extremely difficult challenges. If her team wins, they will be safe from Devroe's wish. If they lose, it's the end of the line.  While Devroe is trying to win for the Baron, and his mother, he also seems to gravitate to making sure that Ros survives. In this final clash, Ross will square off against a ruthless opponent who will stop at nothing to seize power, and in their corner will be not only Devroe but his mother, who wants to destroy the Quests at any cost. 

The new Gambit takes Ross and her crew into the intoxicating casinos of Monte Carlo and across treacherous snow-covered slopes in Antarctica as Ross competes against Devroe in a fight for her life. Loyalties will be tested, backs stabbed, hearts broken. May the best thief winThis book introduces a battle for power within the organization, which causes a compelling escalation in risk. Ross must work with her mother, who she has complicated feelings towards, and two of her closest friends was a thrilling dynamic to see unfold. The ending of the story wraps things up nicely with a nice twist that I didn't see coming, but it was the right direction to take.  


Three

EVEN AT NIGHT, Rio de Janeiro is hot as hell in January. Or maybe it was just because I was fuming.

I don’t know how long I walked. Pointlessly, in fast, stormingsteps, from one snug street into another. I left the posh little area around our hotel and found myself venturing through the vibrantly painted downtown shopping districts, where banners connected the rooftops and vendors sold fresh fruits and travel photographers came to get the most exotic-looking pictures. At least, that would have been the vibe during the daytime. Hours past midnight, the city was slumbering. Trucks were packed up, vendor carts were pushed to the side, and only moonlight lit the streets. I wasn’t totally alone; a few people were also out for past-midnight journeys, but for the most part, it was just me and my thoughts.

And my phone.

Kyung-soon
Hey . . . 
did you know?
IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY??!!

I made a sharp turn onto another street, this one with cobble-stone sidewalks. A two-door car playing a muffled Saint Santi song, ironically, passed slowly. Its wheels crackled over the cobblestone.

Kyung-soon sent a GIF zooming in on some K-pop star under a storm of confetti. There was a caption in Korean, but I wasn’t quite at reading level yet. I’d promised Kyung-​soon I’d learn Korean after the Gambit, and had been, but speaking and reading were two totally different skills.

Smiling, I walked around a middle-aged woman in a smothering wool scarf, waltzing in the opposite direction, who smelledlike the weirdest citrus and savory perfume. I’m aware, lol, I added into the group chat.

Mylo
You can now be tried as an adult in almost every country! 

I turned another corner, and a steady beat of steps turned with me. Curious. I pretended to stretch and glanced over my shoulder. A figure made a quick turn into a doorway. It would’ve looked totally normal if I hadn’t known what it looked like when someone was tailing you.

“What part of ‘leave me alone’ do you not understand?” I spoke loud enough that I knew she could hear me. Not that difficult, since she was only a block behind at most. Mom didn’t come out of her hiding spot. I rolled my eyes and paced even faster in the other direction. Just ignore her. It was a matter of days before Count whisked us away to the next job, and I doubted Count was going to allow anyone to follow us that easily.

It took her six months to find me the first time. Hopefully it’d take her longer the next time around.

Behind me, the steps disappeared. Fat chance of her giving up, though. She probably just trekked back to the hotel to wait me out. Guess I’d be crashing in the lobby if the alternative was dealing with her again.

A man passed me on the sidewalk. That scent again, citrus and meat. It was so distinct. Too weird.

And the same scent I’d whiffed off that woman.

My heart sped as I tucked my phone back into my pocket. I did my fake-stretching trick again, getting a quick glance behind me. The man, casual in plaid shorts and a brown T-shirt, turned onto a branching street.

He was with that woman who passed me earlier—​the one in the scarf. They had to have been in the same place to get that weird scent, but they were dressed in totally different types of clothing. They were trying to look like they hadn’t come from the same place.

It wasn’t Mom. I was being tailed by someone else. At least two people.

Which way had the woman gone? Had she taken a right behind me? And if it wasn’t Mom tailing me from behind, then I still had the pursuer to my back. They’d probably just learned to be quieter after I stupidly called out to them.

One behind. One to the right. And if my instincts were correct, there was probably one other person coming in from the left. They were setting up to intersect me.

Four blocks before the avenue ended.

I kept my steps steady. My chain was begging to be unraveled. But I couldn’t yet. It’d set off whoever was tailing me from behind. Then the chances of me getting the jump on whoever the hell this was would be gone. Three on one, the element of surprise was going to greatly increase my chances of winning this.

The street narrowed. One block, then two passed. The narrow intersection was getting closer. That was where they would do it. I wouldn’t have anywhere to run.

Three blocks. One more.

I pretended to pop my knuckles, using the chance to unclick the ball of my meteor bracelet.

Three steps left.

Two.

One.

That same bizarre scent stuffed the air, this time twice as strong.

Let’s do this.

I stepped onto the corner and immediately ducked and spun out of the way. As expected, the woman with the scarf was there waiting to pull me into what looked like a bear hug. She stumbled, having thrown most of her weight where she thought I was going to be. I grabbed her scarf and yanked hard, pulling her totally off-balance. She crashed to the ground.

Her scarf: The fabric was padded. Thick. Meant to protect her neck.

Protection—​against someone who might be prone to strangling people with her chain? They were prepared for me specifically.

Fast steps crunched over the cobblestone sidewalk. Man with the plaid shorts. I swiped my arm back. The link of my meteor ball unraveled. The weighted ball at the end cracked right into his nose, drawing a splatter of blood. With him distracted, I sent an aggressive kick into his knee. He screamed. A bone cracked, and he dropped to a broken kneel. I sent another kick into his chin, keeling him over.

With two down, for now, I braced to run, but arms tackled me from behind. Hooking a long forearm around my neck, this new attacker pressed a com in his ear with the other hand. “Bring the car!”

Headlights skidded into sight blocks down. A car meant more people. Not good for me.

I tried to buck him off of me to no avail, so instead, I grabbed one of his fingers and twisted it back. It snapped in my grip. He screamed. I grabbed another finger, ready to break it too. This time he pulled his arm away, and that let off enough weight for me to successfully scramble out from under him. Even with his broken finger, he tried to drag me into a stumble, but I sent a palm into his nose, buying me enough time to clamber to my feet.

The car squealed to a stop.

Run.

I meant to set off in the fastest sprint of my life, but a desperate grip wrapped around my ankle. I tripped. The scarf woman dropped a knee into my back. Before I could twist around, a needle pricked my jugular.

I could feel the woman relax on top of me. Whatever she’d injected me with meant the fight was over.

Car doors opened. The woman got up. My limbs were heavy. Drowsiness set in fast.

Well, if I was lucky, this was just another fake kidnapping.




Wednesday, October 30, 2024

#Review - A Forgotten Kill by Isabella Maldonado #Mystery #Thriller

Series: Daniela Vega (#2)
Format: Paperback, 363 pages
Release Date: March 26, 2024
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Mystery / Thriller 

An FBI agent tracks a brilliant serial killer in New York—right back to her own cold-blooded past in a riveting thriller by the Wall Street Journal bestselling author of The Cipher.

FBI Special Agent Daniela “Dani” Vega was seventeen when her mother murdered her father. Ten years after Dani’s own damning eyewitness testimony sealed her mother’s fate, she’s starting to have doubts. What if she got it all wrong?

A veteran NYPD homicide detective agrees to reopen the closed case on one condition—Dani must help him find a serial killer who’s been operating throughout New York City for the past decade. If anyone can decipher his patterns, and his riddles, it’s a trained codebreaker like Dani. The killer knows this too. And his next riddle—and victim—is meant just for her.

For Dani, stopping a killer—and learning what really happened to her father—becomes more personal and more dangerous with each new twist. As secrets of the past are unearthed, the truth could forever change Dani’s life…and the lives of everyone she loves.

A Forgotten Kill, by Isabella Maldonado, is the second installment in the authors Daniel Vega series. This story ends up being more than emotional for Dani. Dani, who is an FBI Special Agent who was trained as an Army Ranger like her father, is called to Bellevue Hospital to visit a particular patient. This patient has not spoken for 10 years. 10 years since, Dani's father was murdered, and her mother was found unable to stand trial for killing him. 

But everything changes when Camila starts speaking via Bible verses. Bible verses that cause Dani to question everything that happened 10 years to the man that was her idol, the man who  was the reason why Dani worked so hard and accomplished so much in the Army before an attack on her unit ended her career. This is kind of hard for me because Dani's father had traumatic brain injury and because of that injury, he ended up being killed. To make matters worse, it was Dani's testimony that helped police focus on her mother. 

Stan Chapman, a veteran NYPD homicide detective out of Fort Apache, agrees to reopen the closed case on one condition—Dani must help him find a serial killer who’s been operating throughout New York City for the past decade. If anyone can decipher his patterns, and his riddles, it’s a trained codebreaker like Dani. The killer knows this too. A killer who may be the most prolific serial killer that Dani now has to track down and stop before she becomes the next victim. 

For Dani, who is still under investigation and on leave for her actions in the first installment to escape a dangerous psychopath, stopping a killer and learning what really happened to her father—becomes more personal and more dangerous with each new twist. As secrets of the past are unearthed, the truth could forever change Dani’s life and the lives of everyone she loves. In the first installment, I was not a fan of Dani's aunt who treated Dani horrifically because she is a lot like her father except the TBI. 

The story skillfully reveals Connor’s backstory and motivations alongside his gruesome acts. A killer who is as devious as he is dangerous. A killer who ends up playing a cat and mouse game with Dani thinking he can outwit her, and thus escape justice. The conclusion of the family background was a bit of a tear-jerker though. I'm very curious to see how Maldonado addresses that in the next installment. I will give Maldonado lots of credit. She walks the walk seeing as she has the experience in law enforcement. 





Friday, October 4, 2024

#Review - Gone Too Far by Debra Webb #Mystery #Suspense #Thriller

Series: Devlin & Falco # 2
Format: Kindle, 382 pages
Release Date: April 27, 2021
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Source: Publisher
Genre: Mystery / Suspense / Thriller

This second entry in USA Today bestselling author Debra Webb’s Devlin & Falco series proves that sometimes the past is best left forgotten.

As veteran detectives of the Birmingham Police Department, Kerri Devlin and Luke Falco have seen it all. So when the city’s new hotshot deputy district attorney turns up dead as part of a double homicide, the partners immediately get to work.

But this is no ordinary case. Devlin and Falco quickly link the murdered DDA to one of their own: former BPD detective Sadie Cross. But Sadie’s fractured memory is yet another puzzle to decipher, as she only recalls bits and pieces of her violent past…a past that may hold clues to the motive behind the murders.

As the group slowly begins to unearth the truth, they soon discover that the more secrets are revealed, the more fatal the consequences.


Gone Too Far, by Debra Webb, is the second installment in the authors Devlin & Falco series. This series is set to the backdrop of Birmingham, Alabama. Key Characters: Major Investigations Division Detective Kerri Devlin and Detective Luke Falco, former BPD detective and now private investigator Sadie Cross, and Devlin's daughter Kerri. I would like to start out by saying this story is very twisted. Devlin and Falco are given the case of two men murdered in a Tobacco shop. One of the men is the new Deputy District Attorney who may have gotten involved in something dangerous.

Meanwhile, 14-year-old Tori finds herself at the center of a bizarre incident when a bully at her school falls down a flight of stairs and ends up dead. Tori becomes a prime suspect because of the machinations of a new student who seems to have the unwavering ability to push innocent girls to do something they never even dreamed of. To make matters worse, not only do the cops make her feel as though she is guilty, and her fellow students think she's guilty, but she's still mourning the loss of her cousin and best friend from the previous installment.

As this is all happening, Sadie's background is finally revealed after it is revealed that she had contact with the dead ADA. Once upon a time, Sadie went undercover to infiltrate the Osorio Mexican drug cartel. She got in so deep, that she fell in love with the son of the Cartel's leader and vanished. Unfortunately for Sadie, she has huge gaps in her memory after ‘losing’ a period of months from her life before being abandoned, injured and emaciated under a railway bridge. She is still trying to work out what exactly happened to her but agrees to help the detectives through her contacts. Now, Sadie has a chance to find out what happened to her thanks Devlin and Falco looking at curious connections to her past.

While Devlin is being forced to the sidelines because of her daughter being investigated by her fellow detectives, it seems things have changed between Devlin and Falco. The duo have gone from Devlin thinking new partner, Falco, will never work out because of their extreme differences to the duo being best friends, excellent work partners and spending the off time together as a little platonic family for Devlin's daughter, Tori. Things are also better between Tori and her mother since last years debacle of wanting to be with her father who has stared a new family.

The author does a good job with the mystery and tying the story together as in fitting pieces of a puzzle together with some surprise components. The story once again asks the question who has all the power and money and who is connected to the Mexican cartel's who are sending dangerous drugs into the country and causing thousands of deaths every year. The time spent with Sadie was worthwhile because now that she know what happened to her, she can move on with her life and become part of her unique relationship with Devlin and Falco.





Thursday, October 3, 2024

#Review - A Killer’s Game by Isabella Maldonado #Thriller #Suspense

Series: Daniela Vega #1
Format: Kindle, 368 pages
Release Date: June 1, 2023
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Mystery / Suspense

An FBI agent with a background in cryptography. A brilliant game maker bent on revenge. A deadly battle of wits and wills. An ingenious thriller from the Wall Street Journal bestselling author of The Cipher.

FBI agent and former military codebreaker Daniela “Dani” Vega witnesses a murder on a Manhattan sidewalk. The victim is chief of staff for a powerful New York senator. The assassin turned informant is Gustavo Toro. His code: hit the target and don’t ask questions. When Dani suspects a complex conspiracy, the only way to take down the mastermind is from the inside, forcing her to partner with Toro. Together they must infiltrate the inner circle at a remote facility.

Except it’s a trap. For all of them.

Locked in a subterranean labyrinth and held captive by an unseen host, Dani, Toro, and others must fight for their lives. Now Dani must stay undercover, unravel a bizarre conspiracy, and survive lethal puzzles. But will Toro be friend or foe? Because in this killer’s game, everything is real: the paranoia, the desperation, and the body count. And only one person can make it out alive.

A Killer's Game, by Isabella Maldonado, is the first installment in the author's Daniela Vega series. FBI Special Agent Daniela Vega works as part of the New York Counter-terrorism Division in New York City. As a former US Army Ranger, she's had elite military training in pattern recognition, crypto analysis, and counterintelligence. On the way to work, Dani witnesses a murder right out in the open. The victim is chief of staff for a powerful New York senator. 

After a brief chase, it turns out that the assassin is a man named Gustavo Toro. His code: hit the target and don’t ask questions. When Dani suspects a complex conspiracy, the only way to take down the mastermind is from the inside, forcing her to partner with Toro. Toro works for a man named Xavier Treadway who just happens to be a retired Colonel. Treadway doesn't exactly trust people, and the next thing you know, Dani, Toro, and others are flying secretly to an unknown location after losing all communication with Dani's boss.

When Dani and the 12 arrive, they learn they are in an underground bunker, and they are about to play the deadliest game they've ever faced because of the machinations of a brilliant game designer with revenge on their mind. Held captive by an unseen host, Dani must fight for her life while trusting Toro not to kill her first. Dani somehow managed to find herself right in the middle of a plot that has been in the works for years. 

A revenge plot to ensure that nobody remains alive. Dani, who is brilliant when it comes to solving difficult games, must stay undercover, unravel a bizarre conspiracy, and survive lethal puzzles. Things between Dani and Toro get even more complicated when “the Nemesis” (the wacko who created the competition and has been sabotaging the players survival) outs Dani as an FBI agent and places a million-dollar bounty on her head. This killer’s game, everything is real: the paranoia, the desperation, and the body count. And only one person can make it out alive. 

This is one of those thrillers that pulls you in and keeps you focused until the final pages. Dani is a strong, intelligent, competent, and yet vulnerable main character who joined the military because of her father who she looked up to. All the secondary characters were believable, from her siblings to her FBI colleagues. As Dani is struggling to survive, her boss and others like Detective Flint, and her brilliant younger brother, are doing whatever they can to find her. This story had me on the edge of my seat wondering what else was coming my way. I am looking forward to the next book in the series to see what's next for Dani and her siblings.





Thursday, September 12, 2024

#Review - A Merciful Truth by Kendra Elliot #Mystery #Thriller

Series: Mercy Kilpatrick # 2
Format: Kindle, 322 pages
Release Date: June 6, 2017
Publisher: Montlake Romance
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Mystery / Thriller

Raised by a family of survivalists, FBI agent Mercy Kilpatrick can take on any challenge—even the hostile reception to her homecoming. But she’s not the only one causing chaos in the rural community of Eagle’s Nest, Oregon. At first believed to be teenage pranks, a series of fires takes a deadly turn with the murder of two sheriff’s deputies. Now, along with Police Chief Truman Daly, Mercy is on the hunt for an arsonist turned killer.

Still shunned by her family and members of the community, Mercy must keep her ear close to the ground to pick up any leads. And it’s not long before she hears rumors of the area’s growing anti government militia movement. If the arsonist is among their ranks, Mercy is determined to smoke the culprit out. But when her investigation uncovers a shocking secret, will this hunt for a madman turn into her own trial by fire?

A Merciful Truth, by Kendra Elliot, is the second installment in the authors Mercy Kilpatrick series. Setting: Eagle's Nest, Oregon, and Bend, Oregon. Key Characters: FBI Special Agent Mercy Kilpatrick who spent the first 18 years of her life being raised by a family of preppers before leaving the family after an attack on her and her sister Rose. Eagle's Nest Sheriff Truman Daly who less than a year ago, nearly lost his job, and quit being a law enforcement officer after failing to save his partner.

As we begin the story, Truman takes point. It seems that someone has been intentionally setting fires to things like cars, storage sheds, and barns. In the last incident, two Deputies are murdered by an unknown assailant, and a body is found near the arson sight. This causes the FBI to get involved, which means that Mercy gets involved. Still shunned by her family and members of the community, except Rose, Pearl, and Kaylie who she agreed to take responsibility for, Mercy must keep her ear close to the ground to pick up any leads. 

And it’s not long before she hears rumors of the area’s growing anti government militia movement. If the arsonist is among their ranks, Mercy is determined to smoke the culprit out. But when her investigation uncovers a shocking secret, will this hunt for a madman turn into her own trial by fire? This time around, the author tells her story through Kaylie's new boyfriend Cade who has taken a job working at site of what appears to be a settlement for those who hate people like Truman, and Mercy.

My thoughts are actually all over the place. I like both Truman and Mercy. I liked how Truman took more of an active role in this story, and I liked how he isn't afraid to show his fears that nearly drove him to quit. I liked how Mercy is struggling to hold on to being someone supportive of Kaylie after her father was murdered. I liked how Mercy is very protective of Rose after what happened to her, especially when people try to make her feel less than she really is. 

Meanwhile, Mercy's brother Owen has some real issues in this book. His hatred towards his sister for her perceived actions in the first book are way over the top, and likely brainwashed by anti-government people.  I still despise Mercy's father, especially at the end when it appears that he knew what was going on but refused to open his mouth. There was a touching moment at the end, but I won't hold my breath that thinks will get any better for Mercy and her father. 





Wednesday, September 11, 2024

#Review - The Lies We Conjure by Sarah Henning #YA #Mystery #Thriller

Series: Standalone
Format: Hardcover, 400 pages
Release Date: September 17, 2024
Publisher: Tor Teen
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult / Fantasy / Contemporary /Thrillers & Suspense / Supernatural

Knives Out meets The Inheritance Games with magic in this standalone supernatural thriller by Sarah Henning: thirteen witches, a locked-room murder, two non-magical sisters trapped in a deadly whodunit.

Ruby and her sister, Wren, are normal, middle-class Colorado high school students working a summer job at the local Renaissance Fest to supplement their meager college savings.

So when an eccentric old lady asks them to impersonate her long-absent grandchildren at a fancy dinner party at the jaw-dropping rate of two grand—each—for a single night… Wren insists it’s a no-brainer. Make some cash, have some fun, do a good deed.

But less than an hour into the evening at the mysterious Hegemony Manor, Ruby is sure she must have lost her mind to have agreed to this.

The hostess is dead, the gates are locked, and a magical curse ensures no one can leave until they solve both her murder and the riddles she left behind—in just three days. Because everyone else at this party is a powerful witch. And if the witches realize Ruby and Wren are imposters? The sisters won’t make it out of Hegemony Manor alive. 


Sarah Henning's The Lies We Conjure is a twisted story that is being compared to Knives Out and The Inheritance Game and I find no fault in either comparison except that the story mostly takes place in a locked manor with those who have magic. While working at a local Renaissance Festival, 17-year-old Ruby and 16-year-old Wren Jourdain are approached by an eccentric older woman named Marsyas Blackgate. The sisters are asked to attend a dinner party with her and in return, they will get paid a nice paycheck if they pretend to be her granddaughters Lavinia and Kaysa Blackgate. The only stipulation is they can't tell anyone.

But less than an hour into the evening at the mysterious Hegemony Manor, Ruby is sure she must have lost her mind to have agreed to this. Their hostess, Ursula Hegemony, the leader of the Elemental Line and High Sorceress, has been murdered, the gates to the Manor are locked, and a magical curse ensures no one can leave until they solve both her murder and the riddles she left behind in just three days.  Because everyone else at this party is a powerful witch. And if the witches realize Ruby and Wren are imposters? The sisters won’t make it out of Hegemony Manor alive. 
 
They’ve unknowingly walked into a sort of witches’ family reunion turned power struggle; everything is at stake, and being found out could have dire consequences. What starts as an innocent invitation to make some quick cash turns into a nightmare that leaves them trapped on an estate with a secret society of witches from 4 families; The Cerises, Starwoods, Blackgates, and Hegemony. Cerises are the blood line, Starwoods are the celestial line, Blackgates are death line, and Hegemony are elemental line. 
 
Now, these sisters will have to do whatever it takes to make sure no one figures out who they really are, and make it out of this deadly game alive. The story is told in the POVs of Ruby, and Auden Hegemony who lives by the motto, "All rumors are assumed to be lies until proven true." Apparently, we can't get away from the serious older sister, and the carefree younger sister who just doesn't understand that trouble they are in even though they made a pack to stay together no matter what. The positive is that even though this is a hold your breath to see what happens next mystery, you will never guess who the villain is until it's right in your face. 



CHAPTER 1

RUBY

SIX DAYS BEFORE

The old woman arrives at the Ye Olde Falafel Shoppe not with an order, but with a question.

“Are you sisters?”

As usual, Wren is manning the register and flirting her way to much bigger tips than I can get, while I fulfill the orders as they slide through the kitchen window of Grand County Renaissance Festival’s most popular (and only) falafel stand.

“Yes, my lady.” Wren smiles at the woman, her festival-mandated British accent sweet in air equally scented with all things fried, excessive sunscreen, and the stink of more than one horse decked out as a knight’s noble steed.

“How old?” the lady presses, lifting huge sunglasses into her cloud of silver hair. Deep set and large, her dark eyes sweep between us, and it’s like she’s checking our features off on a list—tall, pale, brunette, check, check, check. The lunch rush is over, and the moment I slide an extra vat of hummus to a man dressed as fox Robin Hood—tail and all—and he disappears with a tip of his cap, we’re alone. No customers stack up behind her as she continues to peer at us instead of choosing off the menu printed on a medieval “parchment” hanging behind Wren. “Sixteen? Seventeen? Irish twins?”

“Yes, my lady,” Wren answers again, jabbing a thumb in my direction. She announces in her perfectly posh accent, “Ruby’s older, but don’t let the age gap fool you, I’m the brains of this operation.”

The woman chuckles, her attention lingering on our faces with building excitement. I can’t explain why but my gut tightens.

“Their accents are just like yours. Tepidly British and put on for an occasion,” she says mostly to herself before turning to me and ordering, “Let me hear yours.”

For some reason it feels impossible to tell how old our nosy customer actually is—she could be sixty or pushing a hundred. Either way, I realize I’ve seen her before. I’ve served her before. At least two weeks in a row.

I gesture at the menu, and prod in my fake accent, which is way less impressive than Wren’s, “Is there anything I can get you? You ordered the number two with jalapeños last week, didn’t you?”

Wren mutters “Pushy” under her breath. Yet rather than answer my question or agree with my sister’s assessment, the old woman’s obvious elation only grows—her heart-shaped face expanding and elongating in such a way that it resembles an exclamation point.

“Good.”

She then precedes to plant her elbows on the counter and gesture for us to lean in close.

Wren, happily coasting on her four semesters in high school improv class, does so without hesitation, but I must admit to being a little less enthusiastic. The only reason I’m slinging falafel in a wench outfit is because I need more money for my pitiful college fund, and this is far outside the parameters of what we’re paid to do. Not to mention this is the last weekend of the Ren Fest and we literally have five hours left on the job. Our customer ignores my frown, and greets our combined attention with an eager smile outlined in matte maroon lipstick.

“Girls, my name is Marsyas Blackgate. I’d like to hire each of you to pretend to be my granddaughters at a dinner party at Hegemony Manor—do you know it? It’s just outside of Wood Rose.”

Wren’s eyes nearly pop out of her head. “The Hegemony Manor? Of course we know it! Gothic perfection on the hill, with the turrets and the windows and the Wednesday Addams moodiness. Our mom just loved it.”

My breath hitches at the mention of Mom. She did love that place. There’s no way this woman—Marsyas?—could know that, but something unsettling plops in my gut.

Beyond the old woman’s rounded shoulders is a steady stream of humanity wandering by, gnawing on massive turkey legs, crinkling maps, and brandishing kiddie-sized wooden swords. Not a single Ren Fest guest is looking our way. I drop both my hideous accent and my voice. “You want us to impersonate your granddaughters? May I ask why?”

She blinks as if it’s obvious. “You look just like them.”

“But we aren’t them.”

Marsyas straightens and, with a dignified sniff, draws a photograph from somewhere beneath the voluminous fabric of her black caftan. In it, she beams at the camera, bracketed by two tall, pale brunettes. Their heads are smooshed together, the iconic pyramid of the Louvre in the background.

I have to admit, we do look like them.

“My girls live abroad with their mother. I miss them dearly and though they miss me, they haven’t been back stateside in a decade. I’m invited every year to a special dinner party at Hegemony Manor, and every year the other families expect to see Lavinia and Kaysa. Every year they’re disappointed, and I’m disappointed too.”

Marsyas’s chin wobbles, her dark eyes shine, and suddenly she looks like she might be a thousand years old. If it’s an act, her improv lessons have been far more extensive than Wren’s. “This year, I want to show off my girls.”

Wren immediately claws at my hand, her expression pleading. I know my sister just wants to help, even if it’s some next-level psychological bullshit that this woman is propositioning us to pretend to be her living, breathing granddaughters for a night so that her friends will think that they love her enough to cross the Atlantic.

“I—” I start. That tremor of unease in my gut is now a 5.0 on the Richter scale.

But before I can put that into words enough to pull Wren aside to discuss it, Marsyas lays out twenty one-hundred-dollar bills on the counter.

“I’ll give you each a thousand up front and another thousand after dinner.” Her gaze sweeps between the pair of us, that spark returning. “I’m sure you will find that reasonable.”

My jaw drops.

That is more money than we’ve earned—combined—in our six-weekend run at the Ren Fest.

More than I alone earn in a month at my part-time job as a bookseller at Agatha’s Apothecary & Paperback Emporium.




Monday, August 26, 2024

#Review - Avenger of Blood by S. M. Reeve #Thriller #Suspense

Series: Anna Croix # 1
Format: Kindle, 368 pages
Release Date: February 28, 2023
Publisher: S.M. Reeve
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Thriller / Suspense

How do you go from poster child of All-American-Girl-Next-Door to Calculating-Killer-on-a-Murderous-Rampage? Try discovering a houseful of your family's bloody corpses.

Anna Croix's life was perfect, until suddenly it wasn't.

Amazing family? Check. Doting Fiancé? Check. The career she's always wanted? Almost check. And then there was nothing ...

Nothing but a gaping hole longing to be filled. Question is, does she fill it with peace and acceptance or bitterness and a burning drive for revenge?

The latter, of course. Because it's not every day your entire family gets slaughtered.

But first, she needs to know why ... and by whom.

Then there's the issue of finding them and what to do once she has.

Will she really be able to commit murder?

Most definitely.

Not a problem.

Her problem is knowing when to stop.

Avenger of Blood is the first installment in author S.M. Reeve's Anna Croix series. Anna is finishing up her rotation heading home to visit her parents. She's got everything going for her. She's got a gorgeous fiance, and her family is looking forward to a fun weekend, especially the massive diamond engagement ring Cole recently gave her when he proposed. She's so excited to visit her Mom, Dad, and brother Eric that she's devastated to discover that her entire family has been murdered. 

When the police find her, she's near catatonic and admitted to a mental health facility by her family friend Wesley Harrison. After a few months there, Anna tires of her drugged stupor, and decides to take matters into her own hands because the police are getting nowhere, and the only thing that matters to her now is hunting down everyone responsible and seeking revenge. Once she actually finds those responsible, she has to decide their fate. Can she commit murder? Turns out she can indeed. Her new issue is how to stop committing murder.

Over the next 2 years, Anna becomes proficient in fire arms, sets up her ninja style obstacle course from scratch on her 150 acres in deliverance country, gets instruction in close contact fighting, fixes up her off-grid ramshackle barn to make it into a comfortable living space, collates information about the potential killers of her family, all on her own with no outside help in the 2 years since the murders took place. Along the way she picks up a side kick, Spike, who may not be as clueless as she thinks he is. If you go to the author's website you will get the free short story of Spike's Point of View.

At the end of this book there are enough questions waiting to be answered in the next books, such as what is the story with Cole, Anna's fiancé at the time of the murders, what is the story with Aiden, the detective who wants to date her even if he thinks she is somehow involved, how will Anna and Spike's relationship change, what makes Spike tick OR has this whole book been just a hallucination inside Anna's head while she is in the facility for her mental break down.

*Thoughts* It is important to note that Anna has a medical degree and uses it to send an ultimate message in a truly shocking and macabre way to her family’s murderer, but does she go too far? The reader understands Anna’s intense need for revenge however; she becomes entirely brutal and sadistic. It’s graphic, chilling, and disturbing all at the same time. This was literally sold as a thriller tale of vigilante justice, questioning revenge vs redemption, vengeance vs vindication, and choice vs consequences. 

Can someone who goes down a road of bloodshed have the capability of coming back from the edge of being a sociopathic serial? In the years that I have been reviewing, one of the things that I have tried not to complain about is editing errors as they do happen. Unfortunately, I could have dropped this rating down to 2 1/2 Gizmos because there are points where Anna suddenly becomes a woman named Jules, but this doesn't make any sense to the reader because we all know that she is Anna, and so do certain villains, as well as the above named Aiden who knew her when she was suffering from losing her family.




Friday, August 23, 2024

#Review - Trust No One by Debra Webb #Suspense #Thriller

Series: Devlin & Falco # 1
Format: Kindle, 427 pages
Release Date: August 1, 2020
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Source: Amazon Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Suspense / Thriller

 A double homicide and a missing woman lead a detective to unearth disturbing secrets in this gripping thriller from USA Today bestselling author Debra Webb.

It’s the worst possible time for Detective Kerri Devlin to be involved in an all-consuming double-homicide case. She’s locked in a bitter struggle with her ex-husband and teenage daughter, and her reckless new partner is anything but trustworthy.

Still, she has a job to do: there’s a killer at large, and a pregnant woman has gone missing. Once Devlin and her partner get to work, they quickly unearth secrets involving Birmingham’s most esteemed citizens. Each new layer of the investigation brings Devlin closer to the killer and the missing woman, who starts looking more like a suspect than a victim.

But just as answers come into view, the case twists, expands, and slithers into Devlin’s personal life. There’s a much more sinister game at work, one she doesn’t even know she’s playing—and she must unravel the truth once and for all to stop the killer before she loses everything.


Debra Webb's Trust No One is the first installment in the authors Devlin and Falco series. Devlin is Detective Kerri Devlin of the Birmingham, Alabama Police Departments Major Investigations Division. Falco is Detective Luke Falco who becomes Kerri's new partner after spending years undercover and nearly losing everything. This story takes place over the course of 10 days. On Day 1, Kerri and Falco are called to the scene of a double homicide. 

The victims are Ben Abbott, and Jacqueline Rollins. Ben is something of a software guru which makes this murder even more ominous. The wife, Sela Abbott is not only missing, but she is pregnant. She is also a prime suspect in the murder of her husband and mother. It’s the worst possible time for Detective Devlin to be involved in an all-consuming double-homicide case. She’s locked in a bitter struggle with her ex-husband who not only cheated on her, but now wants full custody of her teenage daughter.

To make things worse, she's saddled with training a new partner who she has no clue what his past was, or what his qualifications are that brought him to the Division. Still, with Sela missing, she has a job to do. There is a killer, or killers lose, and every day that Sela is missing means that there is less likely she will be found in time. Devlin and her partner get to work, they quickly unearth secrets involving Birmingham’s most esteemed citizens. Each new layer of the investigation brings Devlin closer to the killer and the missing woman, who starts looking more like a suspect than a victim.

The author uses Sela to tell part of her story which makes this story even more twisted. The more you discover from Devlin and Falco, Sela adds an even more sinister game at work which really centers on getting revenge for something that happened 15 years ago. And, if though it appears that Sela is trying to lead Devlin to the truth about everything, Devlin & Falco are facing obstacles because of who the suspects are in the case. You can't just walk up to men whose families founded the city and demand that they cooperate. 

Readers should be prepared to be blown out of the water right from chapter one as Kerri is forced to make a choice which may or may not have lasting implications to keeping her job in the future. Everyone Devlin & Falco question is of the entitled class and seems to be holding back information. And as soon as they find a person of interest with something to tell them, that person ends up dead too. It feels like someone is ‘cleaning up’ but who and why? Devlin and Falco are an interesting partnership, one straight-laced and the other just emerging from years undercover, but their personalities play well off of each other, strengths to weaknesses. With new partners, it takes a while to get used to how the other does things and in this case, they tend to make a pretty solid team. Downside? The story gets a bit convoluted at times, and at times the story does drag on too long. In fact, I thought the story could have been wrapped up 50 pages sooner.