Where did you get the idea for Chasra: The Homecoming?
This book is the second book in the Mac Carter Chronicles. The first book, 2012: The Rising was published by Musa in December 2012. My husband is a sci-fi enthusiast, and he started asking me all kinds of rhetorical questions about the end of the world, specifically, whether the world was going to end on December 21, 2012. As we continued talking, the story took shape, and it blossomed into a trilogy. The final book, Earth: The Return is set for publication on December 5, 2014.
How did you develop your lead characters?
I love to create characters! When I developed Mac Carter, the main character, I tried to think of the least likely person in the world who would be deemed an “ancestor of the gods” and have an important place in the universe. I spent a lot of time interviewing him until he came to life. The supporting characters were easy because I knew they had to balance him out, and with all his flaws, it wasn’t difficult to do.
What drives you to write Science Fiction?
In all honesty, I wasn’t interested in science fiction until my husband sent me down this path. What I find fascinating about science fiction is that you can speculate about the future and be incredibly creative and let your imagination take you to what may seem impossible. I consider my books to be very “light” science fiction, but I am happy to say that I’ve turned several of my friends into serious sci-fi readers! Through this experience, I’ve come to realize that every genre has enjoyable novels. So now I read all genres because I find it interesting to see what other authors are crafting out of essentially the same themes and plots.
Who will survive the war for universal peace?
Mac Carter's life changed forever when he had to defeat evil on Earth.Now, he and his new-found friends are returning to Chasra to fulfill the prophecy that promises a millennium of universal peace. But peace cannot be achieved without war, and Mac finds himself preparing to conquer the malevolent forces of their number one enemy: Tral and its allies. Confronted with powers and technology that are unknown to Chasra, along with internal conflict, Mac and the Great Council must learn to work together to win the war. Can they overcome their differences to outwit the Tralian forces and achieve universal peace?
To read excerpt from books by Joanne Hirase please click a vendor's name Musa Publishing - Amazon
Joanne Hirase is a corporate attorney and an adjunct professor who creates speculative fiction in those few spare moments she scrapes together. She is an avid runner and quilter. Animal rescue is another of her joys because every precious animal deserves a loving, permanent home. Joanne and her husband live in Idaho.
Learn more about Joanne Hirase on her website. Stay connected on Facebook and Twitter.
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Friday, February 20, 2015
Musa Publishing Announcement
Dear Readers,
The rising costs of doing business and reduced sales have hit us extremely hard in spite of our fantastic books and enthusiastic efforts of staff and authors alike. We deeply regret that Musa Publishing will be closing its virtual doors on February 28, 2015.
Until then, our books will be deeply discounted. Feel free to stock up while our store remains open.
Our authors will all be released from their contracts with us. It is our hope that you will seek out books by authors you love, and will support them on social media and in their future publishing endeavors.
From the hearts of all at Musa, we thank you for your loyalty.
Musa Publishing
The rising costs of doing business and reduced sales have hit us extremely hard in spite of our fantastic books and enthusiastic efforts of staff and authors alike. We deeply regret that Musa Publishing will be closing its virtual doors on February 28, 2015.
Until then, our books will be deeply discounted. Feel free to stock up while our store remains open.
Our authors will all be released from their contracts with us. It is our hope that you will seek out books by authors you love, and will support them on social media and in their future publishing endeavors.
From the hearts of all at Musa, we thank you for your loyalty.
Musa Publishing
THREE MINUTES with DANNY ADAMS
Where did you get the idea for LEST CAMELOT FALL?
I'd always been fascinated by the story of Arthur, and mixed with my love of early medieval history, I'd always wondered what happened to the surviving Knights of the Round Table, and the land that had been Camelot itself, after Arthur's death. This wondering became like an earworm I couldn't get rid of after reading Jack Whyte's fantastic Chronicles of Camulod series - which starts out in Late Roman Britain several generations before Arthur and puts a realistic ancient Roman spin on the legend - so I decided just to answer the question myself by writing the novel. Early on in the research I discovered that medieval historians and writers were just as interested in the answer as I was, and told stories about the surviving Knights. Much of that, along with other medieval sources, was the foundation for Lest Camelot Fall.
How did you develop your lead characters?
Almost all of the characters were pre-existing in one form or another. You have the Knights of the Round Table, of course. Others are descended from lesser-known Arthurian characters, like Annowre. In all of those cases I drew from the earliest renditions of the legends, especially Welsh stories. Those stories, for example, gave two Merlins, Lailoken and Emrys, who took the mantle of the Merlin / Meryddin. According to those and other early sources, the characters of Arthur's successor, Constantine, and Constantine's son Urbanus, were historical.
For the lead character, I initially toyed with the idea of centering the book around someone from the legends, or one of the historical figures, for a short while. But then I decided that if I really wanted to have a pivot attached to what what little we know from 6th century Britain, then I should have a character that could allow its history to go in a slightly different way. Next I decided he should be something of an outsider - ingrained in Camelot's culture enough to be familiar with it and the people there to know him, but not so much that he's stuck in the same mire that drove Camelot down. I wanted him to have ties with both the old ways in Britain - Celtic and Roman - and what was becoming the new order, the other kings who had divided up the island. And finally, I wanted him to have some military experience in a leadership role, albeit a small one - in this case, commanding a handful of men in the North Country around and beyond Hadrian's Wall. And so Lucian Aurelianus was born.
What drives you to write historical fiction?
Because I can't build a time machine, and this is the next best thing! I also wonder sometimes if writing is really just an excuse to do research.
Here is a brief introduction to Danny's historical fiction novel.
Millions of people around the world know the legend of King Arthur, but the stories always end with Arthur’s death and never reveal what happened to the surviving Knights of the Round Table—or Camelot itself. Lest Camelot Fall begins with Arthur’s death and tells of the survivors’ struggle to keep Camelot’s flame of freedom burning against the darkness both of Saxon invaders and native British would-be tyrants.
Lucian Aurelianus is a descendant of Roman emperors and British kings alike, as well as being Arthur’s cousin. He receives an urgent summons to Camelot from Merlin only to arrive after the slaughter of the Battle of Camlann, in time to see Arthur’s body taken away to Avalon. Soon afterward Lucian’s brother, Constantine, claims the right to be High King of Britain—and exiles anyone who challenges him, including the surviving Knights. At the same time, the sons of Arthur’s nephew and mortal enemy, Modred, have joined forces with the Saxons, along with soldiers from a reborn Roman Empire with designs on Britain, for a final attack against Camelot.
Lucian decides he must stay to help Merlin and the Knights—and his increasingly despotic brother—if anything of Arthur’s dream is to survive. Ultimately he will do whatever it takes to keep Camelot alive, even when that means challenging the armies of southern Britain, enduring Saxon slavery, and the possibility of taking what is left of Camelot and leaving Britain behind forever.
To read excerpts from books by Danny Adams please click a vendor's name Musa Publishing - Amazon
Danny Adams grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Southwest Virginia. He currently works as a college librarian, though his goal is to write fiction for a living.
He co-authored with Philip Jose Farmer the short novel The City Beyond Play. The book was a nominee for the 2008 British Fantasy Awards in the Best Novella category.
Danny also reviews speculative and independently published fiction for Publishers Weekly, and wrote essays and other such things for Farmerphile, the official Philip Jose Farmer fan magazine. He is a member of the Science Fiction Poetry Association.
Finally, and most important, his favorite person in the world married him on the 26th of May 2002!
Learn more about Danny Adams on his website and LiveJournal.
I'd always been fascinated by the story of Arthur, and mixed with my love of early medieval history, I'd always wondered what happened to the surviving Knights of the Round Table, and the land that had been Camelot itself, after Arthur's death. This wondering became like an earworm I couldn't get rid of after reading Jack Whyte's fantastic Chronicles of Camulod series - which starts out in Late Roman Britain several generations before Arthur and puts a realistic ancient Roman spin on the legend - so I decided just to answer the question myself by writing the novel. Early on in the research I discovered that medieval historians and writers were just as interested in the answer as I was, and told stories about the surviving Knights. Much of that, along with other medieval sources, was the foundation for Lest Camelot Fall.
How did you develop your lead characters?
Almost all of the characters were pre-existing in one form or another. You have the Knights of the Round Table, of course. Others are descended from lesser-known Arthurian characters, like Annowre. In all of those cases I drew from the earliest renditions of the legends, especially Welsh stories. Those stories, for example, gave two Merlins, Lailoken and Emrys, who took the mantle of the Merlin / Meryddin. According to those and other early sources, the characters of Arthur's successor, Constantine, and Constantine's son Urbanus, were historical.
For the lead character, I initially toyed with the idea of centering the book around someone from the legends, or one of the historical figures, for a short while. But then I decided that if I really wanted to have a pivot attached to what what little we know from 6th century Britain, then I should have a character that could allow its history to go in a slightly different way. Next I decided he should be something of an outsider - ingrained in Camelot's culture enough to be familiar with it and the people there to know him, but not so much that he's stuck in the same mire that drove Camelot down. I wanted him to have ties with both the old ways in Britain - Celtic and Roman - and what was becoming the new order, the other kings who had divided up the island. And finally, I wanted him to have some military experience in a leadership role, albeit a small one - in this case, commanding a handful of men in the North Country around and beyond Hadrian's Wall. And so Lucian Aurelianus was born.
What drives you to write historical fiction?
Because I can't build a time machine, and this is the next best thing! I also wonder sometimes if writing is really just an excuse to do research.
Here is a brief introduction to Danny's historical fiction novel.
Millions of people around the world know the legend of King Arthur, but the stories always end with Arthur’s death and never reveal what happened to the surviving Knights of the Round Table—or Camelot itself. Lest Camelot Fall begins with Arthur’s death and tells of the survivors’ struggle to keep Camelot’s flame of freedom burning against the darkness both of Saxon invaders and native British would-be tyrants.
Lucian Aurelianus is a descendant of Roman emperors and British kings alike, as well as being Arthur’s cousin. He receives an urgent summons to Camelot from Merlin only to arrive after the slaughter of the Battle of Camlann, in time to see Arthur’s body taken away to Avalon. Soon afterward Lucian’s brother, Constantine, claims the right to be High King of Britain—and exiles anyone who challenges him, including the surviving Knights. At the same time, the sons of Arthur’s nephew and mortal enemy, Modred, have joined forces with the Saxons, along with soldiers from a reborn Roman Empire with designs on Britain, for a final attack against Camelot.
Lucian decides he must stay to help Merlin and the Knights—and his increasingly despotic brother—if anything of Arthur’s dream is to survive. Ultimately he will do whatever it takes to keep Camelot alive, even when that means challenging the armies of southern Britain, enduring Saxon slavery, and the possibility of taking what is left of Camelot and leaving Britain behind forever.
To read excerpts from books by Danny Adams please click a vendor's name Musa Publishing - Amazon
Danny Adams grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Southwest Virginia. He currently works as a college librarian, though his goal is to write fiction for a living.
He co-authored with Philip Jose Farmer the short novel The City Beyond Play. The book was a nominee for the 2008 British Fantasy Awards in the Best Novella category.
Danny also reviews speculative and independently published fiction for Publishers Weekly, and wrote essays and other such things for Farmerphile, the official Philip Jose Farmer fan magazine. He is a member of the Science Fiction Poetry Association.
Finally, and most important, his favorite person in the world married him on the 26th of May 2002!
Learn more about Danny Adams on his website and LiveJournal.
Thursday, February 19, 2015
THREE MINUTES with VERA JANE COOK
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I wanted to write a family saga about the secrets people keep from one another in families. I wanted to write about the fracture and then the healing.
How did you develop your lead characters?
The secrets they kept is what kept them in action and also in development. The choices they made enabled them to grow.
What drives you to write Southern fiction?
Must be genetic memory, there is no other explanation. I was raised in New York City but I did have a very southern family on my mother’s side. I think in another life I walked among the South Carolina fields of wildflowers and sweeping trees.
Here is a little from my novel. I hope you enjoy it.
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Rose Cassidy's fantasy life is a haunting reminder that she's living a lie. So when she has the opportunity to act on those fantasies, she dives in without any thought to consequences.
Rose's husband, Ryan, has fantasies of his own, and his actions cause unimaginable pain to the very children he tries so hard to protect.
When the happiness each member of the Cassidy family seeks so desperately to find is shattered by shame, guilt, and ultimately murder, they must each face the truth that lies deep within their souls.
To read excerpts from novels by Vera Jane Cook please click a vendor's name Musa Publishing - Amazon - Barnes & Noble
Vera Jane Cook is an award winning author of women's fiction.
Jane, as she is known to family and friends, was born in New York City and grew up amid the eccentricity of her southern and glamorous mother on the Upper West and Upper East Side of Manhattan. An only child, she turned to reading novels at an early age.
She worked in the professional theatre for over a decade. She has appeared in television, regional theatre, film, and off Broadway. Some of her credits have included both classic and original plays at Playwrights Horizons, WPA Theatre, Kennedy Center, Theatre for The New City, Bucks County Playhouse and many others.
Jane received her degree in Communications and graduated Magna Cum Laude. She went on to earn a Masters in Educational Theatre from New York University and took an honorary withdrawal from Actors Equity, SAG and AFTRA.
She worked for The New York Times and presented workshops on using the newspaper in education as a tool for teaching English as a Second Language. She has worked as a Project Manager for the Education department of the New York Daily News, as well as an Education Specialist for Oxford University Press (ESL division) and as an Education Consultant for Scholastic. Jane is presently an account manager for Rally Education in Manhattan.
The author is married and lives on the Upper West side of Manhattan with her spouse and their family of pets.
Learn more about Vera Jane Cook on her website. Stay connected on Twitter.
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
STEP INTO AN EXCITING WORLD
by Chris Pavesic
Where anything can happen. That's Southwatch, a steampunk city divided: the rich live in the luxurious airships of the Aerie, while the poor eke out an existence in the pollution-choked streets below. From one extreme to another, idealistic professors, devious aristocrats, mechanicals and fae all struggle for the future of the city they all share -- or just try to survive.
The Caelimane Operation is the latest story in The Darkside Codex, a series of stand alone books set in Southwatch.
In case you still need some convincing, here's a blurb:
When the Temples to the Goddess north of Southwatch are burned and followers of Dione are murdered, Hierocrat Catherine, a bard of the Caelimane Temple, sets out to find those responsible and to bring them to justice. With only the help of a traveling group of minstrels and a retired fae investigator, Catherine must solve the mystery before more people are killed, but will she succeed when she finds herself pitted against members of her own Temple, rogue members of the Seelie Court, and a seemingly unstoppable army of undead?
And here is how the story begins:
Jackson
“We should turn north, sir,” Corporal Ben Jackson urged as the shadows started to lengthen. “If we hurry, we can be inside the capital city borders by nightfall.”
He glanced up at the surrounding trees, tall oaks for the most part, with a birch or an ash here and there. To the west, where the sky glowed with the departing sun, the branches and leaves were outlined in yellow light like the converse of the unifying dark lead network of stained glass. To someone like Jackson, more accustomed to patrolling fields swept clean from the Dark Cloud devastation that still surrounded the towering city of Southwatch, the sight of so much living vegetation was unnerving.
“Are you afraid of the dark, Corporal?” Lieutenant Reginald Daniels asked with the hint of a smirk.
Jackson did not respond directly to the question. He was experienced enough in the Army to know that no good came from answering an inquiry of this sort. Newly appointed officers like Daniels loved testing their men with these types of abstractions, and Jackson did not want to spend the foreseeable future on night patrol outside the borders of the city when they returned to Southwatch from their current mission.
“Just concerned about the mounts lasting, sir,” Jackson lied. “We’ve been riding hard since we left the garrison, and it’s been a while since I’ve wound the clockwork.” He patted the side of his horse’s neck almost as an afterthought to lend credence to his reply. The mechanical tossed its head in close approximation of a real horse. It neighed, the gentle sound echoing a bit too loudly back from the trees. Somewhere, an animal crashed off though the underbrush, startled by the noise.
“There is no need to be concerned, Corporal. Thalaker’s Mounts are the original all-terrain vehicles.” Daniels smiled at his own humor. He sat a bit straighter in the saddle and brushed a bit of dust from his left sleeve.
Although following the same general pattern, the material in Daniels’s uniform was of higher quality than Jackson’s own—a creation from a tailor that serviced the families in the Aerie. It wouldn’t do to have an aristocrat wearing something that was standard issue, after all. Jackson favored his superior’s outfit with a bitter glance. The cloth and tooled leather were probably worth more than his annual salary.
“And we’ve barely put the mounts to the test,” Daniels continued. “I’m sure the clockwork will hold until tonight.”
“The test, sir?” Jackson asked. He didn’t like the sound of his superior officer’s comment.
“Need to Know, Corporal, but I can guarantee you won’t see the inside of St. Louis tonight. We have other duties.” He spurred his horse down the path. “Quickly, now, before the light deserts us completely.”
Jackson glared at his superior officer’s back, suppressed anger in his eyes. He didn’t believe the “Need to Know” explanation one bit; the commander of the Southwatch Army unit, Lt. Colonel Randall Fitzgerald, wasn’t the sort to send out men on a mission with so little information, or even normally to send them this far outside the borders of Southwatch. Fitzgerald might be a bit lax when it came to some things, but he was not one to put his soldiers’ lives at risk unnecessarily. And this was beginning to feel dangerous. He suspected Daniels was making some sort of a power play and dragging him along for the ride.
This was typical behavior of aristocrats who joined the military, and Daniels came from a family that lived in the Aerie, albeit in one of the lower airships without the best view of the sky. Still, it was a lot higher in the city than a low rank solider like Jackson could ever hope to attain. He doubted if he and his family would ever live above the Dark Cloud, the toxic stew of chemicals, pollution, and dust bisecting the city. But there was nothing to be done for it. The order had been given, and honor bound him to obey.
Ten minutes more of hard riding found them approaching a small, overgrown side road, now no more than ancient double ruts cut into the ground. Daniels swung them onto it, slowing their pace to accommodate the new terrain. The road carried them up and across a rising series of fields like steps. There were many deep breaks of evergreens on the rising slopes at either hand. They finally topped a long ridge where the path split; to the east, the road descended into a dark wood, finding its way among trees that were centuries old.
Daniels dismounted. He checked the position of the sun. “Just enough light left, I think, for a quick reconnaissance. We will continue on by foot from here, Corporal,” he said. “You take point. We are heading for the Temple of Dione at the top of the hill.”
“Do you know what happened here, sir?” he couldn’t help asking.
Daniels paused a moment, staring off into the distance, his face reflective. “This is what we need to determine, Corporal.”
Jackson scanned the area as they approached the ruins. The shadows of the evening were beginning to stretch outward and obscure the small details of the landscape. The ground here was dry and level. The smell of the fire, a mix of charred oak and a sickly sweet odor he couldn’t identify, still lingered in the air. Even their footsteps seemed to fall like stones dropped into water, muffled and dying away in ripples. Then the wind picked up, flattening the grass in the courtyard. A few of the ornamental trees in the yard of the Temple creaked and groaned in chorus, the movement of the leaves and branches making shadows jump and dance across the ground.
A thin trail of blackened grass started about ten yards away from the building and led toward it in a straight line. Daniels knelt next to it and scooped up a handful of earth and ashes. He examined them, lifted them to his face to smell, and then sifted the ashes and dirt through his fingers as the wind bore it away in a puff of dust. “Definitely some sort of an accelerant was used here. Probably splashed over the building and then the arsonist used this as a safety zone to start the blaze.”
“Were there people inside, sir? When it burned?” Jackson didn’t know why he asked; he didn’t think Daniels would even know, and indeed his commanding officer appeared to be ignoring the question. It was just a desire for comfort, perhaps, so he wouldn’t have to envision the worshipers caught in the flames, crying and shrieking to the Goddess for mercy. He shook his head, as if to clear it of the images, and found he was sweating.
Daniels dusted off his hand against the leg of his trouser. “Take a look around the perimeter.”
They had almost crossed the courtyard when the wind shifted, blowing in from the dark forest. The stench was horrific. Jackson covered his mouth, and Daniels was struggling not to gag. It was the fetid reek of carrion.
“Respirator!” Daniels barked, pulling on his own. Jackson fumbled with his protective breathing apparatus, managing to snap it into place after a few frantic seconds. He took a deep breath, grateful for the clear air that flowed into his lungs.
A shadow arose from the dark of the wood. It came at them with startling speed, almost seeming to sprint up the hill. As it drew closer, the last gleams of light fell upon its maggoty-white, glistening skin. Black, gelatinous fluids seeped from pustules that covered its face and arms. It bared its teeth and spat specks of ichor with a burbling growl.
It was the shambling wreck of a human being. It was one of many.
They emerged from the shadow of the forest and charged up the hill en masse, ten…fifteen…twenty… Jackson stopped counting and drew his weapon a scant moment after Daniels barked a command to attack.
They fired their pistols into the advancing horde with no effect.
“Rapiers!” Daniels yelled, throwing his pistol to the ground and drawing his secondary weapon. He activated the electrical field, and sparks flew. Jackson followed suit.
They fought with their backs to each other. Their electro-rapiers flashed in the dim light. Fluids gushed from the undead creatures, the flesh taking on a creamy consistency and turning black where their blades sliced and burned. Pieces of the creatures fell in all directions. Limbs were everywhere, crawling on the ground, unattached fingers squirming. Howling with harsh tones, thrashing in agony, the undead fell at their feet, the bodies still flaying with wild movements.
Daniels fell to his knees, shrieking and covered in blood, overwhelmed by the sheer number of bodies charging him. Cold, fish-white hands rent his limbs. Some were more decomposed than others, bones visible in places as they staggered forward, mouths gaping. The eyes were as dark as the pavement on the lower streets of Southwatch; there was no human thought or feeling in them.
Jackson was panting from the effort. His respirator could barely keep up with the increased breaths. He took one hit, then another. He felt the sting of torn flesh as the undead carved away chunks of his body. He cried out in pain. The sharp white teeth, behind the full lips of blood dripping mouths, clamped together like those of wild beasts. A flash of anger filled him that his body would be taken in bits and pieces by these things to feed them—it was not acceptable. That his living flesh was no more than so much meat to be torn and slashed by their ravenous maws spurred him into a frenzy of unthinking attack. He thrust his rapier forward, overbalanced, and fell to the ground screaming as a dozen maggoty-white bodies swarmed over his fallen frame.
The men’s cries of agony silenced. Soon, only the wet sounds of flesh being torn and dragged could be heard.
You can purchase a copy of The Caelimane Operation here.
And, last, but not least, stay in touch with The Darkside Codex Blog all year round.
Chris Pavesic lives in the Midwestern United States and loves Kona coffee, fairy tales, and all types of speculative fiction. Her stories, “Going Home” and “The World In Front of Me,” have been published in Penumbra EMag. Her first novel with Musa, The Caelimane Operation, will be published in January, 2015. Between writing projects, Chris can most often be found reading, gaming, gardening, working on an endless list of DIY household projects, or hanging out with friends.
Learn more about Chris Pavesic on her blog. Stay connected on Facebook and Twitter.
Where anything can happen. That's Southwatch, a steampunk city divided: the rich live in the luxurious airships of the Aerie, while the poor eke out an existence in the pollution-choked streets below. From one extreme to another, idealistic professors, devious aristocrats, mechanicals and fae all struggle for the future of the city they all share -- or just try to survive.

In case you still need some convincing, here's a blurb:
When the Temples to the Goddess north of Southwatch are burned and followers of Dione are murdered, Hierocrat Catherine, a bard of the Caelimane Temple, sets out to find those responsible and to bring them to justice. With only the help of a traveling group of minstrels and a retired fae investigator, Catherine must solve the mystery before more people are killed, but will she succeed when she finds herself pitted against members of her own Temple, rogue members of the Seelie Court, and a seemingly unstoppable army of undead?
And here is how the story begins:
Jackson
“We should turn north, sir,” Corporal Ben Jackson urged as the shadows started to lengthen. “If we hurry, we can be inside the capital city borders by nightfall.”
He glanced up at the surrounding trees, tall oaks for the most part, with a birch or an ash here and there. To the west, where the sky glowed with the departing sun, the branches and leaves were outlined in yellow light like the converse of the unifying dark lead network of stained glass. To someone like Jackson, more accustomed to patrolling fields swept clean from the Dark Cloud devastation that still surrounded the towering city of Southwatch, the sight of so much living vegetation was unnerving.
“Are you afraid of the dark, Corporal?” Lieutenant Reginald Daniels asked with the hint of a smirk.
Jackson did not respond directly to the question. He was experienced enough in the Army to know that no good came from answering an inquiry of this sort. Newly appointed officers like Daniels loved testing their men with these types of abstractions, and Jackson did not want to spend the foreseeable future on night patrol outside the borders of the city when they returned to Southwatch from their current mission.
“Just concerned about the mounts lasting, sir,” Jackson lied. “We’ve been riding hard since we left the garrison, and it’s been a while since I’ve wound the clockwork.” He patted the side of his horse’s neck almost as an afterthought to lend credence to his reply. The mechanical tossed its head in close approximation of a real horse. It neighed, the gentle sound echoing a bit too loudly back from the trees. Somewhere, an animal crashed off though the underbrush, startled by the noise.
“There is no need to be concerned, Corporal. Thalaker’s Mounts are the original all-terrain vehicles.” Daniels smiled at his own humor. He sat a bit straighter in the saddle and brushed a bit of dust from his left sleeve.
Although following the same general pattern, the material in Daniels’s uniform was of higher quality than Jackson’s own—a creation from a tailor that serviced the families in the Aerie. It wouldn’t do to have an aristocrat wearing something that was standard issue, after all. Jackson favored his superior’s outfit with a bitter glance. The cloth and tooled leather were probably worth more than his annual salary.
“And we’ve barely put the mounts to the test,” Daniels continued. “I’m sure the clockwork will hold until tonight.”
“The test, sir?” Jackson asked. He didn’t like the sound of his superior officer’s comment.
“Need to Know, Corporal, but I can guarantee you won’t see the inside of St. Louis tonight. We have other duties.” He spurred his horse down the path. “Quickly, now, before the light deserts us completely.”
Jackson glared at his superior officer’s back, suppressed anger in his eyes. He didn’t believe the “Need to Know” explanation one bit; the commander of the Southwatch Army unit, Lt. Colonel Randall Fitzgerald, wasn’t the sort to send out men on a mission with so little information, or even normally to send them this far outside the borders of Southwatch. Fitzgerald might be a bit lax when it came to some things, but he was not one to put his soldiers’ lives at risk unnecessarily. And this was beginning to feel dangerous. He suspected Daniels was making some sort of a power play and dragging him along for the ride.
This was typical behavior of aristocrats who joined the military, and Daniels came from a family that lived in the Aerie, albeit in one of the lower airships without the best view of the sky. Still, it was a lot higher in the city than a low rank solider like Jackson could ever hope to attain. He doubted if he and his family would ever live above the Dark Cloud, the toxic stew of chemicals, pollution, and dust bisecting the city. But there was nothing to be done for it. The order had been given, and honor bound him to obey.
Ten minutes more of hard riding found them approaching a small, overgrown side road, now no more than ancient double ruts cut into the ground. Daniels swung them onto it, slowing their pace to accommodate the new terrain. The road carried them up and across a rising series of fields like steps. There were many deep breaks of evergreens on the rising slopes at either hand. They finally topped a long ridge where the path split; to the east, the road descended into a dark wood, finding its way among trees that were centuries old.
Daniels dismounted. He checked the position of the sun. “Just enough light left, I think, for a quick reconnaissance. We will continue on by foot from here, Corporal,” he said. “You take point. We are heading for the Temple of Dione at the top of the hill.”
“Do you know what happened here, sir?” he couldn’t help asking.
Daniels paused a moment, staring off into the distance, his face reflective. “This is what we need to determine, Corporal.”
Jackson scanned the area as they approached the ruins. The shadows of the evening were beginning to stretch outward and obscure the small details of the landscape. The ground here was dry and level. The smell of the fire, a mix of charred oak and a sickly sweet odor he couldn’t identify, still lingered in the air. Even their footsteps seemed to fall like stones dropped into water, muffled and dying away in ripples. Then the wind picked up, flattening the grass in the courtyard. A few of the ornamental trees in the yard of the Temple creaked and groaned in chorus, the movement of the leaves and branches making shadows jump and dance across the ground.
A thin trail of blackened grass started about ten yards away from the building and led toward it in a straight line. Daniels knelt next to it and scooped up a handful of earth and ashes. He examined them, lifted them to his face to smell, and then sifted the ashes and dirt through his fingers as the wind bore it away in a puff of dust. “Definitely some sort of an accelerant was used here. Probably splashed over the building and then the arsonist used this as a safety zone to start the blaze.”
“Were there people inside, sir? When it burned?” Jackson didn’t know why he asked; he didn’t think Daniels would even know, and indeed his commanding officer appeared to be ignoring the question. It was just a desire for comfort, perhaps, so he wouldn’t have to envision the worshipers caught in the flames, crying and shrieking to the Goddess for mercy. He shook his head, as if to clear it of the images, and found he was sweating.
Daniels dusted off his hand against the leg of his trouser. “Take a look around the perimeter.”
They had almost crossed the courtyard when the wind shifted, blowing in from the dark forest. The stench was horrific. Jackson covered his mouth, and Daniels was struggling not to gag. It was the fetid reek of carrion.
“Respirator!” Daniels barked, pulling on his own. Jackson fumbled with his protective breathing apparatus, managing to snap it into place after a few frantic seconds. He took a deep breath, grateful for the clear air that flowed into his lungs.
A shadow arose from the dark of the wood. It came at them with startling speed, almost seeming to sprint up the hill. As it drew closer, the last gleams of light fell upon its maggoty-white, glistening skin. Black, gelatinous fluids seeped from pustules that covered its face and arms. It bared its teeth and spat specks of ichor with a burbling growl.
It was the shambling wreck of a human being. It was one of many.
They emerged from the shadow of the forest and charged up the hill en masse, ten…fifteen…twenty… Jackson stopped counting and drew his weapon a scant moment after Daniels barked a command to attack.
They fired their pistols into the advancing horde with no effect.
“Rapiers!” Daniels yelled, throwing his pistol to the ground and drawing his secondary weapon. He activated the electrical field, and sparks flew. Jackson followed suit.
They fought with their backs to each other. Their electro-rapiers flashed in the dim light. Fluids gushed from the undead creatures, the flesh taking on a creamy consistency and turning black where their blades sliced and burned. Pieces of the creatures fell in all directions. Limbs were everywhere, crawling on the ground, unattached fingers squirming. Howling with harsh tones, thrashing in agony, the undead fell at their feet, the bodies still flaying with wild movements.
Daniels fell to his knees, shrieking and covered in blood, overwhelmed by the sheer number of bodies charging him. Cold, fish-white hands rent his limbs. Some were more decomposed than others, bones visible in places as they staggered forward, mouths gaping. The eyes were as dark as the pavement on the lower streets of Southwatch; there was no human thought or feeling in them.
Jackson was panting from the effort. His respirator could barely keep up with the increased breaths. He took one hit, then another. He felt the sting of torn flesh as the undead carved away chunks of his body. He cried out in pain. The sharp white teeth, behind the full lips of blood dripping mouths, clamped together like those of wild beasts. A flash of anger filled him that his body would be taken in bits and pieces by these things to feed them—it was not acceptable. That his living flesh was no more than so much meat to be torn and slashed by their ravenous maws spurred him into a frenzy of unthinking attack. He thrust his rapier forward, overbalanced, and fell to the ground screaming as a dozen maggoty-white bodies swarmed over his fallen frame.
The men’s cries of agony silenced. Soon, only the wet sounds of flesh being torn and dragged could be heard.
You can purchase a copy of The Caelimane Operation here.
And, last, but not least, stay in touch with The Darkside Codex Blog all year round.
Chris Pavesic lives in the Midwestern United States and loves Kona coffee, fairy tales, and all types of speculative fiction. Her stories, “Going Home” and “The World In Front of Me,” have been published in Penumbra EMag. Her first novel with Musa, The Caelimane Operation, will be published in January, 2015. Between writing projects, Chris can most often be found reading, gaming, gardening, working on an endless list of DIY household projects, or hanging out with friends.
Learn more about Chris Pavesic on her blog. Stay connected on Facebook and Twitter.
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Mouthwatering Goodness
from LV Barat
If you love tangy garlic and lemon, this dish is a must-have!
Baked Lebanese Chicken with Lemon, Garlic, and Potatoes
3 bone-in chicken breasts
5 gold or yellow potatoes, skins left on
2 heads of garlic
4 lemons
Cardamom
Ground Sumac (available at most specialty stores or on Amazon)
Za’atar (available at most specialty stores or on Amazon)
2 tbsp. plus ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
½ tsp. salt
dash of black
Preheat the oven to 400°F
Remove skin from chicken breasts and season with the cardamom, ground sumac and Za’atar. The spices should coat the meat. Dash with salt and pepper.
Cut the potatoes into 1 inch cubes.
Heat 2 tbsp. olive oil in a skillet on medium-high. Fry the chicken breasts for 3 minutes on each side. Set them on a plate.
In the same skillet, fry the potatoes on medium-high for three minutes then turn the heat to medium-low, cover and cook for 7 minutes.
Grease an 8x12 glass or ceramic baking dish.
Place the chicken breasts in the dish first, then the potatoes around them. Cover with tin foil and cook twenty minutes.
While the chicken and potatoes are cooking, peel the garlic and then squeeze the lemons.
Put the lemon juice and garlic in a blender with the remaining olive oil, salt, and pepper. Blend for ten seconds.
Pour the garlic/lemon/olive oil mixture over the chicken and potatoes.
Cover again and cook for another 20 – 25 minutes or until chicken breasts are tender.
This dish is tangy and delicious. Especially mouth-watering for garlic lovers!
While you dinner is cooking relax with this intro to my novel, Eye of the Hawk.
One shapeshifter is worth a thousand armies.
In an epoch long forgotten, a spell was cast around the island of Jaanaar, preventing its people from leaving and anyone from entering. One lone man, a foreign shape-shifter named Hawk, trained by Jaanaarian Druids, is sent beyond this spell through an elemental portal with coded instructions he barely remembers.
EXCERPT
Suddenly the cart jerked to a clumsy stop. A horse whinnied and neighed, followed by a loudly whispered “Whoa, Millena!”
“What is it?” one of the peasants asked.
“Glory be to Luca…” said the other under his breath.
Hawk felt the wagon slightly rock when the two men dismounted. Muffled, surprised gasps and brief, guttural words passed between them.
“Is it someone from Martine?”
“No, I don’t recognize her.”
“What does that symbol mean?”
“I don’t know,” one of them replied. “Well…that is not exactly true. I believe I saw it before or something similar in an old book. If memory serves, it had to do with Linnso.”
“Linnso? That is only a myth.”
“Perhaps. I cannot be sure about the symbol, Rosco. Let’s cut her down and bring her to Sheena, along with our newfound friend.”
“Yes, yes. We have to hurry.”
Lifting his head, Hawk spied the two peasant farmers cutting down a woman’s body hanging from a rope tied to an aspen branch. Her eye sockets were hollow and blackened. The younger of the two men, who appeared to be about thirty with a very muscular physique, held the body in an awkward embrace while the older of the two lay upon a branch and cut away at the rope. A symbol had been carved into the trunk of the tree from which she hung.
Hawk squinted his eyes to focus more intently. The symbol was a circle with an arrow pointing away from it and a line drawn perpendicular to the point as if to stop the arrow. He remembered the symbol stood for Neit, the Corvasan god of war, but he had not seen it used since childhood.
The older peasant succeeded in severing the rope and the young, burly man turned and carried the body toward the cart.
Hawk pretended to be asleep when he approached. The peasant carefully laid the woman’s body beside him, mumbling something about it being such a shame and who would do such a thing. Hawk heard him moving her around and thought he must be taking the rope off her neck.
BUY LINKS Musa Publishing - Amazon
L.V. Barat discovers tales in the most unlikely of places: in the ancient spiritual literature of India, Greece, Scandinavia, Britain and Ireland. An extensive study of the occult in several different cultures led to an awakening of the power of myth in her mind. Myths are woven in the imaginations or collective unconscious of peoples worldwide and the connection to the archetypes can weave tales that inspire!
LV Barat has been writing fiction and non-fiction for twenty years. Epic fantasy is her genre of choice whilst some suspenseful mystery has managed to worm its way into her opus corpus.
She lives in the Rocky Mountains, the spine of North America. An enchanted place of glistening pine needles, massive boulders, jutting gray crags, stealthy red foxes and antlered elk.
Learn more about L V Barat on her website and Goodreads. Stay connected on Facebook and Twitter.
If you love tangy garlic and lemon, this dish is a must-have!
Baked Lebanese Chicken with Lemon, Garlic, and Potatoes
3 bone-in chicken breasts
5 gold or yellow potatoes, skins left on
2 heads of garlic
4 lemons
Cardamom
Ground Sumac (available at most specialty stores or on Amazon)
Za’atar (available at most specialty stores or on Amazon)
2 tbsp. plus ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
½ tsp. salt
dash of black
Preheat the oven to 400°F
Remove skin from chicken breasts and season with the cardamom, ground sumac and Za’atar. The spices should coat the meat. Dash with salt and pepper.
Cut the potatoes into 1 inch cubes.
Heat 2 tbsp. olive oil in a skillet on medium-high. Fry the chicken breasts for 3 minutes on each side. Set them on a plate.
In the same skillet, fry the potatoes on medium-high for three minutes then turn the heat to medium-low, cover and cook for 7 minutes.
Grease an 8x12 glass or ceramic baking dish.
Place the chicken breasts in the dish first, then the potatoes around them. Cover with tin foil and cook twenty minutes.
While the chicken and potatoes are cooking, peel the garlic and then squeeze the lemons.
Put the lemon juice and garlic in a blender with the remaining olive oil, salt, and pepper. Blend for ten seconds.
Pour the garlic/lemon/olive oil mixture over the chicken and potatoes.
Cover again and cook for another 20 – 25 minutes or until chicken breasts are tender.
This dish is tangy and delicious. Especially mouth-watering for garlic lovers!
While you dinner is cooking relax with this intro to my novel, Eye of the Hawk.
One shapeshifter is worth a thousand armies.
In an epoch long forgotten, a spell was cast around the island of Jaanaar, preventing its people from leaving and anyone from entering. One lone man, a foreign shape-shifter named Hawk, trained by Jaanaarian Druids, is sent beyond this spell through an elemental portal with coded instructions he barely remembers.
EXCERPT
Suddenly the cart jerked to a clumsy stop. A horse whinnied and neighed, followed by a loudly whispered “Whoa, Millena!”
“What is it?” one of the peasants asked.
“Glory be to Luca…” said the other under his breath.
Hawk felt the wagon slightly rock when the two men dismounted. Muffled, surprised gasps and brief, guttural words passed between them.
“Is it someone from Martine?”
“No, I don’t recognize her.”
“What does that symbol mean?”
“I don’t know,” one of them replied. “Well…that is not exactly true. I believe I saw it before or something similar in an old book. If memory serves, it had to do with Linnso.”
“Linnso? That is only a myth.”
“Perhaps. I cannot be sure about the symbol, Rosco. Let’s cut her down and bring her to Sheena, along with our newfound friend.”
“Yes, yes. We have to hurry.”
Lifting his head, Hawk spied the two peasant farmers cutting down a woman’s body hanging from a rope tied to an aspen branch. Her eye sockets were hollow and blackened. The younger of the two men, who appeared to be about thirty with a very muscular physique, held the body in an awkward embrace while the older of the two lay upon a branch and cut away at the rope. A symbol had been carved into the trunk of the tree from which she hung.
Hawk squinted his eyes to focus more intently. The symbol was a circle with an arrow pointing away from it and a line drawn perpendicular to the point as if to stop the arrow. He remembered the symbol stood for Neit, the Corvasan god of war, but he had not seen it used since childhood.
The older peasant succeeded in severing the rope and the young, burly man turned and carried the body toward the cart.
Hawk pretended to be asleep when he approached. The peasant carefully laid the woman’s body beside him, mumbling something about it being such a shame and who would do such a thing. Hawk heard him moving her around and thought he must be taking the rope off her neck.
BUY LINKS Musa Publishing - Amazon
L.V. Barat discovers tales in the most unlikely of places: in the ancient spiritual literature of India, Greece, Scandinavia, Britain and Ireland. An extensive study of the occult in several different cultures led to an awakening of the power of myth in her mind. Myths are woven in the imaginations or collective unconscious of peoples worldwide and the connection to the archetypes can weave tales that inspire!
LV Barat has been writing fiction and non-fiction for twenty years. Epic fantasy is her genre of choice whilst some suspenseful mystery has managed to worm its way into her opus corpus.
She lives in the Rocky Mountains, the spine of North America. An enchanted place of glistening pine needles, massive boulders, jutting gray crags, stealthy red foxes and antlered elk.
Learn more about L V Barat on her website and Goodreads. Stay connected on Facebook and Twitter.
Monday, February 16, 2015
Scents and Scentsabilities the Place to Shop
by Leigh Goff
In my novel Disenchanted, sixteen-year-old Sophie’s quirky Aunt Janie runs a shop called Scents and Scentsabilities. The shop is situated in downtown historic Wethersfield, Connecticut and resembles a picturesque Pottery Barn for charmed bath and body products. The products are all made from plants and flowers growing in Janie’s enchanted garden. The list below includes my favorite items I would definitely purchase.
1. Forbidden Passion Potion A potion made with a combination of lemon verbena, valerian, and rose petals. That flower combinations symbolizes ‘lovers uniting’ and Sophie comes across these flowers when she meets Alexavier for the second time. The meeting reveals his dangerous streak and leaves her intrigued.
2. Tulips To Kiss Stick A lipgloss Janie crafted that contains enchanted tulip pollen, which lushifies ones lips. Sophie tries to offer this product to the strange Puritan-looking girl who enters Scents and Scentsabilities in the first scene, but she soon realizes the girl is more interested in giving something enchanted to Sophie.
3. Phyto-Glo Powder An organic powder crafted by Aunt Janie to illuminate one’s complexion when sleepless nights wreak havoc on the face, which happens a lot to Sophie as a ghost from the past haunts her dreams. The powder is guaranteed to erase under eye circles and it also creates a sparkly glow.
4. Forever First Love Lip Balm This lip balm enhances feelings of affection in the other person when applied before a kiss. Sophie opts to not use this shortcut when it comes to love, preferring to take the long and difficult road which makes falling in love with a forbidden ordinary all the more sweet.
5. Waning White Willow A hemorrhoid relieving ointment made from the bark of the white willow, which reduces pain and swelling. Sophie wants to apply the product all over Alexavier’s brother, Zeke, when he becomes thoroughly annoying and tries to come between her and Alexavier. She also enjoys watching her frenemy, Laney, apply a dab to her hand and neck, thinking it’s perfume.
Now which witchy product would you buy? While you're deciding, let me introduce you to my novel.
A forbidden love, a dark curse, an impossible choice.
Orphaned sixteen-year-old Sophie Goodchild is an outcast among the ordinaries and her coven, but not because she’s untalented. Descended from a powerful Wethersfield witch, her spellcasting gift is awkwardly emerging, but that’s the least of her worries. The boy she’s forbidden to fall for, a descendant of the man who condemned her ancestor to hang, carries a dark secret that could destroy them both unless Sophie learns how to tap into the mysterious power of her diamond bloodcharm. Suspenseful, dark, romantic, and brimming with old magic, Disenchanted captures the intrigue of New England’s witchlore.
EXCERPT:
I sat, soaking wet, shaking from the adrenaline. Whoever he was, he rescued me from the would-be thief who bore the symbol of the Leos, a breath-saving nickname I gave Judge Mather’s Law Enforcement Organization. I strained to see, but the rain drops clinging to my long eyelashes blurred my vision. I wiped them away as my heart settled to an even pace.
With his back to me, he watched the thief disappear into the stormy night. He ran his hands through his thick, wavy, wet hair. His broad shoulders relaxed before he turned to offer me assistance. He extended his long arm to help me to my feet. I hesitated for a second, unsure of him, but as he reached for me, our fingers brushed together. A shock of electricity bolted through my hand. I froze as I caught the surprised reaction on his face, telling me he felt it, too. His fingers clasped firmly around mine and, with no effort, he pulled me to my feet. Unsteady, I pressed my hands against his firm muscled chest that showed through the drenched white shirt. A dizzy, swirly sensation swept through my head as if I were on a merry-go-round spinning around at one hundred miles per hour.
He had to be six feet tall.
“Are you okay?” he asked in a smooth British accent. His deep voice vibrated with tension, sending warm chills inside me.
I balanced myself and brushed my wet hair behind my ears, swallowing hard. A British accent that could make a girl melt if the girl didn’t have alarm bells going off in her head. There were no Brits currently living in our small part of Wethersfield, which meant he had to be one of them. My wide eyes flitted around, looking for a clue to make sense of why the statuesque Mather boy with his soaking wet shirt and black tailored pants left the comfort of his father’s manor house to brave the storm.
He stepped closer, breaching the already slim gap between us and forcing my eyes up. The streetlight illuminated his handsome features. His ivory complexion, dappled with raindrops and a shadow of thick stubble, revealed a hint of blush as if it were wintertime and the cold air had plucked at his cheeks.
I followed the perfect straight line of his nose to his brooding, dark eyes full of mystery. His eyes wandered over the details of my face and settled on my own, waiting for me to reply. A warm, wet breeze swirled up from behind him and wrapped his alluring scent around me; clean, floral and woodsy and thoroughly masculine. I inhaled again and again, unable to exhale. With all the plants and flowers I had smelled in my lifetime, he smelled better than any, alone or in combination. I wavered slightly, side to side, feeling dazed. I gulped a mouthful of air, trying not to breathe him in. What was wrong with me? I shook myself out of the stupor.
“Did you know that man?” he asked.
“Did you?” I said in an accusatory tone, but at that moment, I didn’t care about the attacker.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” He drew back like I was crazy for suggesting anything.
He was the enemy. Say something, I thought. “What…what are you doing out here anyway?”
He furrowed his eyebrows inward. “Saving you, obviously.”
I threw my hands on my hips, shocked by the irony. A Mather helping a Greensmith? Hell was freezing over somewhere beneath our feet and every kind of farm animal was sprouting wings to fly. “That’s impossible.”
“And why is that?”
“Because…because you’re a Mather,” I said, not meaning to sound disgusted, but I struggled to contain my feelings. Fact was, the Mathers had Greensmith blood on their hands, as well as my coven’s blood. Through Wethersfield’s history, they were known as witch-hunters and with each generation, they changed only to appear more politically correct, but their intentions remained unchanged.
His eyes tensed at the corners, as if it were possible he didn’t hate me. “And what does that mean?”
BUY LINK
Leigh Goff loves writing young adult fiction with elements of magic and romance because it's also what she liked to read. Born and raised on the East Coast, she now lives in Maryland where she enjoys the area's great history and culture.
Leigh is a graduate of the University of Maryland, University College and a member of the Maryland Writers' Association and Romance Writers of America. She is also an approved artist with the Maryland State Arts Council. Her debut novel, Disenchanted, was inspired by the Wethersfield witches of Connecticut and was released by Musa Publishing in December 2014. Leigh is currently working on her next novel, The Witch's Ring which is set in Annapolis.
Learn more about Leigh Goff on her website and blog. Stay connected on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, and Goodreads.
In my novel Disenchanted, sixteen-year-old Sophie’s quirky Aunt Janie runs a shop called Scents and Scentsabilities. The shop is situated in downtown historic Wethersfield, Connecticut and resembles a picturesque Pottery Barn for charmed bath and body products. The products are all made from plants and flowers growing in Janie’s enchanted garden. The list below includes my favorite items I would definitely purchase.
1. Forbidden Passion Potion A potion made with a combination of lemon verbena, valerian, and rose petals. That flower combinations symbolizes ‘lovers uniting’ and Sophie comes across these flowers when she meets Alexavier for the second time. The meeting reveals his dangerous streak and leaves her intrigued.
2. Tulips To Kiss Stick A lipgloss Janie crafted that contains enchanted tulip pollen, which lushifies ones lips. Sophie tries to offer this product to the strange Puritan-looking girl who enters Scents and Scentsabilities in the first scene, but she soon realizes the girl is more interested in giving something enchanted to Sophie.
3. Phyto-Glo Powder An organic powder crafted by Aunt Janie to illuminate one’s complexion when sleepless nights wreak havoc on the face, which happens a lot to Sophie as a ghost from the past haunts her dreams. The powder is guaranteed to erase under eye circles and it also creates a sparkly glow.
4. Forever First Love Lip Balm This lip balm enhances feelings of affection in the other person when applied before a kiss. Sophie opts to not use this shortcut when it comes to love, preferring to take the long and difficult road which makes falling in love with a forbidden ordinary all the more sweet.
5. Waning White Willow A hemorrhoid relieving ointment made from the bark of the white willow, which reduces pain and swelling. Sophie wants to apply the product all over Alexavier’s brother, Zeke, when he becomes thoroughly annoying and tries to come between her and Alexavier. She also enjoys watching her frenemy, Laney, apply a dab to her hand and neck, thinking it’s perfume.
Now which witchy product would you buy? While you're deciding, let me introduce you to my novel.
A forbidden love, a dark curse, an impossible choice.
Orphaned sixteen-year-old Sophie Goodchild is an outcast among the ordinaries and her coven, but not because she’s untalented. Descended from a powerful Wethersfield witch, her spellcasting gift is awkwardly emerging, but that’s the least of her worries. The boy she’s forbidden to fall for, a descendant of the man who condemned her ancestor to hang, carries a dark secret that could destroy them both unless Sophie learns how to tap into the mysterious power of her diamond bloodcharm. Suspenseful, dark, romantic, and brimming with old magic, Disenchanted captures the intrigue of New England’s witchlore.
EXCERPT:
I sat, soaking wet, shaking from the adrenaline. Whoever he was, he rescued me from the would-be thief who bore the symbol of the Leos, a breath-saving nickname I gave Judge Mather’s Law Enforcement Organization. I strained to see, but the rain drops clinging to my long eyelashes blurred my vision. I wiped them away as my heart settled to an even pace.
With his back to me, he watched the thief disappear into the stormy night. He ran his hands through his thick, wavy, wet hair. His broad shoulders relaxed before he turned to offer me assistance. He extended his long arm to help me to my feet. I hesitated for a second, unsure of him, but as he reached for me, our fingers brushed together. A shock of electricity bolted through my hand. I froze as I caught the surprised reaction on his face, telling me he felt it, too. His fingers clasped firmly around mine and, with no effort, he pulled me to my feet. Unsteady, I pressed my hands against his firm muscled chest that showed through the drenched white shirt. A dizzy, swirly sensation swept through my head as if I were on a merry-go-round spinning around at one hundred miles per hour.
He had to be six feet tall.
“Are you okay?” he asked in a smooth British accent. His deep voice vibrated with tension, sending warm chills inside me.
I balanced myself and brushed my wet hair behind my ears, swallowing hard. A British accent that could make a girl melt if the girl didn’t have alarm bells going off in her head. There were no Brits currently living in our small part of Wethersfield, which meant he had to be one of them. My wide eyes flitted around, looking for a clue to make sense of why the statuesque Mather boy with his soaking wet shirt and black tailored pants left the comfort of his father’s manor house to brave the storm.
He stepped closer, breaching the already slim gap between us and forcing my eyes up. The streetlight illuminated his handsome features. His ivory complexion, dappled with raindrops and a shadow of thick stubble, revealed a hint of blush as if it were wintertime and the cold air had plucked at his cheeks.
I followed the perfect straight line of his nose to his brooding, dark eyes full of mystery. His eyes wandered over the details of my face and settled on my own, waiting for me to reply. A warm, wet breeze swirled up from behind him and wrapped his alluring scent around me; clean, floral and woodsy and thoroughly masculine. I inhaled again and again, unable to exhale. With all the plants and flowers I had smelled in my lifetime, he smelled better than any, alone or in combination. I wavered slightly, side to side, feeling dazed. I gulped a mouthful of air, trying not to breathe him in. What was wrong with me? I shook myself out of the stupor.
“Did you know that man?” he asked.
“Did you?” I said in an accusatory tone, but at that moment, I didn’t care about the attacker.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” He drew back like I was crazy for suggesting anything.
He was the enemy. Say something, I thought. “What…what are you doing out here anyway?”
He furrowed his eyebrows inward. “Saving you, obviously.”
I threw my hands on my hips, shocked by the irony. A Mather helping a Greensmith? Hell was freezing over somewhere beneath our feet and every kind of farm animal was sprouting wings to fly. “That’s impossible.”
“And why is that?”
“Because…because you’re a Mather,” I said, not meaning to sound disgusted, but I struggled to contain my feelings. Fact was, the Mathers had Greensmith blood on their hands, as well as my coven’s blood. Through Wethersfield’s history, they were known as witch-hunters and with each generation, they changed only to appear more politically correct, but their intentions remained unchanged.
His eyes tensed at the corners, as if it were possible he didn’t hate me. “And what does that mean?”
BUY LINK
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Leigh is a graduate of the University of Maryland, University College and a member of the Maryland Writers' Association and Romance Writers of America. She is also an approved artist with the Maryland State Arts Council. Her debut novel, Disenchanted, was inspired by the Wethersfield witches of Connecticut and was released by Musa Publishing in December 2014. Leigh is currently working on her next novel, The Witch's Ring which is set in Annapolis.
Learn more about Leigh Goff on her website and blog. Stay connected on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, and Goodreads.
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