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Sunday, October 7, 2018

End of Innocence by Romana Drew


End
of Innocence
by
Romana Drew

Genre:
SciFi

Lenea's
brother spends every clear night pointing a telescope at the same
stars. When she confronts him, he lets her look through the
telescope. A small sliver speck changes course, slows, and merges
with a larger silvery spot. 



In that brief moment, her
life changes. Her brother spies on space aliens! Soon she learns the
aliens have a settlement in the Kenned Valley, and that her boyfriend
monitors their communications.




Then
he disappears. 



What do they want, and can her world survive?







Just
before he has to give up and go home broke, Captain Seddry finds the
perfect world. It is rich in ore, has a breathable atmosphere, and it
even has a reasonable climate — an ideal place for a new Langon
colony. The fuzzy natives won't be a problem. They don't have any
large weapons or even airplanes, making them too primitive to ever
find the mining colony hidden away in an isolated valley. Or so he
thinks.





Excerpt:

The concert featured students from local schools. Kefan sang the first song and the last. After the final curtain closed, he changed and ran outside to meet Lenea.
She stood staring up at the wall of vid screens next to the theater marquee. The screens flashed static eventually resolving into a picture of the theater stage where Kefan and the band waited to perform. A moment later the music blared, loud and garbled.
A crowd had gathered.
“This is the first outside test,” Kefan shouted over the din. “We—”
The sound system screeched, and everyone jumped, grabbing their ears. After a moment's silence punctuated by sighs of relief, the music came on clear, and Kefan's beautiful voice soared over the crowd.
Occasionally one of the screens became too blue or green as the technician made final adjustments, but by the end of the first song, it was almost like sitting in the theater.
More people wandered to the array as they were treated to the morning's performance for free.
Kefan's cheeks warmed as people pointed to the screen, marveling at the size of the images.
He put his arm around Lenea's waist. “I've never seen a picture of myself that big before. Do I really look like that?”
Lenea still gawked at the display, a lunch basket in one hand, and her mouth and eyes opened wide. “You did it, both the display and the singing.” She squeezed his hand.
His dream of a vid array had come true, and everyone was impressed, but time with Lenea was precious. Soon, someone would want him to do something, so he led her backstage.
Lenea was so pretty. Her baggy, gray overalls made her look like a little farm girl, but her dark blue eyes and the little speckles on her rich golden face made her the most beautiful woman in the world.
She held the basket out. “I brought lunch.”
They hid in a practice room. The one tiny bench forced him to sit right beside her, so close his fur tingled. She ate and chatted about how much she sold and what silly things her brother did.
He slipped his arm around her shoulders, leaned over, and kissed her cheek. The aroma of summer rain greeted him. Her soft fur made his whole body quiver.
She turned her blue eyes toward him, and he kissed her lips.
The door opened. Kefan's drink landed on the floor, splattering sapper juice everywhere. His father glared, while the music director stared at the green stain spreading across the floor. Kefan's heart raced as he searched for an escape route. Lenea giggled, putting her hand on his knee.
Jafar folded his arms. “There you are. You should come back and rest, Kefan. Music comes first.”
The music director looked up from the mess on the floor. “Kefan, you need to be in full voice for the Midnight Song. You can't do that if you're tired. Please rest. I'll get something to clean this up.” He hurried down the hall.
“Let's go.” Jafar reached for his arm.
Kefan opened his mouth to argue, but Lenea put her finger on his lips. “Rest. I want to be proud of you. I'll meet you after the Midnight Celebration.” She glanced at Kefan's father. “If it's all right with you, Mr. Bennett.”
How could she be calm? Kefan's jaw tightened as his eyes focused on his father's face.
Jafar closed his hand on Kefan's elbow. “Kefan will return to our cabin immediately after his performance.”
Kefan faced his father, freeing his elbow. “After I sing tonight, I'm doing what I want. I've done nothing but work since I got here.”


Marggit Wesjem paused outside the door of student study room 317. This meeting couldn't possibly be of any interest to her. Monloe Gemmel had nothing to do with military history, ancient languages, or covert communications. But he was a professor at Varhaad University, so she did him the courtesy of attending this meeting about Summer Festival. She had lost interest in that event long ago.
Monloe welcomed her and Froley Liwans, an astronomer, into the room. He inserted a cassette into a portable projector sitting in the middle of the study table and projected a vid of a meteor on the screen.
Marggit's pocket radio buzzed. It was the continental director's assistant asking about her quarterly reports. Although no longer on active duty, she did have some covert responsibilities for which she was required to make quarterly reports even though nothing what so ever had happened to require her attention. She turned her back, keeping her voice low.
Monloe said something about alien ships and spread several photographs across the table.
Marggit glanced at the vid, which showed a juvenile science fiction story of a fake spaceship landing in a valley full of nondescript gray buildings. The vid zoomed in on two dark beings with bald faces and fur around the back of their heads. Their long, thin faces and necks, furless arms, and wide pinkish teeth looked real, too real. They were not hand-drawn characters, or puppets, or any of the other techniques the vid companies used to create fiction stories. No amount of makeup could make any Hocalie look like that. The view panned to show a massive vertical bulge in a sheer rock wall, Kessler's Column in the Kenned Valley. She had trained there in her youth.
Marggit dropped the radio. “They are real.” Her voice stuttered as the world spun around her.
Froley gasped. “It can't be, all the theories of time and space gone to hell. Aliens came here.” His voice went up in pitch. “Why tell us? You need to tell the police, or the government, or someone.”
Marggit stood, and then sat again as her legs threatened to give out. She set her jaw, willing her body to relax. It had been many years since her days as a spy forced her to keep control of her emotions. She glanced at Froley and then at Monloe. They truly believed these were invading aliens.
Monloe opened his mouth, but Marggit put her hands on the table, pushing herself into a standing position. The chair squeaked on the floor. “No!” She had to keep control of this information.
Their eyes went to her.
Monloe looked up. “Um, I am concerned about—”
Marggit interrupted. “You must not tell the government—the politicians.” Her eyes drilled into Monloe. “If this is fake . . .”
“No. Not fake.” Monloe's voice trailed off.
Marggit's stomach churned as she rummaged through the photographs. “This doesn't appear to be a military invasion, but they have considerable technology. We don't want curiosity seekers blundering in and making a mess of it.”
Froley's voice shook. “We can't discover an invasion of space aliens and keep it from the government.” His eyes opened wide. “Or everyone else.”
Marggit closed her eyes for a moment leaning forward. “I'm not quite as retired as I pretend. I'll make the necessary notifications.”
“If I understand your position, telling you is telling the government, at least the part that might know what to do,” Monloe said.
Marggit gave a slight nod. “I used to be a covert operative and cipher expert, which is a lot more boring than it sounds. I wanted to change careers, but according to the military, I knew too many secrets, so I had to stay on the payroll. They gave me the job no one wanted.” She took a deep breath. “I evaluate unexplained phenomena, weird sightings, ghosts, strange lights in the sky, and,” she grinned, “reports of invaders from space.”


He followed his family to the big amphitheater. They arrived late, and the only seats left were in the far back. The people on the stage looked like toys. Lannes put his head near Lenea's. “Psst, this is boring.”
“Duh, it would be better if Kefan were singing.”
“Only for you,” Lannes rolled his eyes. “I gotta pee.” He worked his way to the furthest restroom then sauntered back, keeping his eyes on the sky. Both moons hung in different parts of the sky almost full, obliterating all but the brightest stars.
A blue-white streak appeared high in the northwest and sped downward. It slowed, changed to fiery red, and dropped behind the hills. His heart pounded waiting for an explosion that never came. He spun all around searching the sky and the people. The moons hadn't moved, and all the people faced the stage as if nothing had happened.


Lenea pushed her way through the people to the door backstage.
She peeked into the green room. Kefan, dressed in light blue and white, stood in front of two men and two women in flowing purple robes. The director waved his baton, and the singers chanted aah aah aah up a third each time and back down.
She wanted to wish him luck but didn't dare interrupt. If she left, he'd never know she had come. Caution gave way. She ran to Kefan, kissed him on the lips, and sprinted off.
Giggles followed her out the door.


Inside a room as large as the Festival theater, thick, black cables extended from the back of three green, metal structures, each twice as tall as Kefan. The cable went through the wall, up the side of the building, and across to the power distribution center. These machines needed a lot of power even though they didn't have any apparent purpose.
A control panel stood at one end of each machine. A square, green button filled the upper right corner, a round, black button the upper left. Below the buttons, there was a row of four black rectangles with a knob under each. They might display something when working.
Kefan twisted each knob both directions, leaving it in its original position. He pushed the black button. So far, this machine remained as inert as every other machine in the place. He pushed the green button.
A high whine, several ear-splitting thumps, and a sudden gust of wind ripped through the room. By the time the machine settled into a steady rhythmic roar, everyone inside had run outside toward the hills.
A thin plume of bluish smoke rose from the roof of the building, and a hum settled over the valley.
The lights came on.
After a rush of excited conversation, everyone tiptoed back into the factory. They crept up to the machine and walked around it. It made a frightening amount of noise, a slight breeze, and vibrated. Kefan reached out and pushed the black button. The machine sputtered to a stop. The lights went out.


The two aliens, one dressed in green and the other in maroon, were further away now, ambling along the road. He tiptoed across the road again, snuck down to the river, and ran closer to them, wishing he had a vid recorder.
Lannes couldn't stop his heart from pounding, nor could he stand still. He stepped back on the road some distance behind the aliens and walked after them. They didn't look back or change pace. Lannes stopped. Maybe approaching these creatures alone wasn't safe. He dismissed the fear, walking faster until they turned to face him. This was too exciting to pass up.
He tried to keep the grin off his face. They stared at him. He glanced toward the river, then up, way up, into their dark, shiny faces. They were too big to follow the game path under the thorny brambles. He had an escape route.
“The man comes falling not,” the taller one said.
“What?” Lannes tried to stop the giddy laughter building inside his chest.
The other alien looked down at him. “Can you for road not.”
A rush of heat made his coat too warm. “What about the road?”
What did it say?” the shorter one said in the alien language, and Lannes understood him.
The taller one faced to the shorter one. “Try again.”
Lannes guessed the meaning correctly and waited while the taller alien composed a sentence.
“Who the what are stars.”
He didn't want to sound flippant, but what else could he say. “I don't know. Who the what are stars?” Lannes giggled. “Who the what are you?” Although they were big, they didn't appear threatening. Nor were they surprised to see him.
The shorter alien bent his head down, staring at Lannes. “The what who are.”
“Oh,” Lannes grinned. “This's fun. My name's Lannes. What's your name?”
The shorter one squinted at him. “What the are?”
Lannes brought his thumb to his chest. “Lannes. My name's Lannes. What's your name?”
What does Nanlas mean?” the shorter alien asked.
Lannes wanted to say, “My name's pronounced Lannes,” but didn't want the aliens to know he understood them. He wished they would talk in their language. It was easier to understand than this mangled version of Cadorie.
The shorter alien reached his hand toward Lannes' chest. “Take him back to the ship.
Lannes leaped down the embankment, sprinted under the bramble bushes, and didn't stop until he cleared the top of a distant hill.


“Why can't you see they are two halves of the same thing? If Kefan succeeds with his vid project, your translation problems will be solved,” Jeke said. “Surely you must understand why, Kefan?”
Kefan shook his head. Sometimes, that man didn't make sense.
Monloe's shoulders slumped. “Funding will be expensive and hard to justify.”
Jeke spun around, glaring at each of them. He nearly dislodged a bunch of wires, and Kefan jumped to the rescue.
“Don't see how important this is?” Jeke extended his arm toward Kefan's vid, now displaying two boxes of static and a line of random letters across the bottom of the screen. “Just think of where it will go.”
Monloe pursed his lips.
Jeke stepped in front of Kefan. “You want to move parts of vid images around. You want to tell your machine to move some dots between specific coordinates, or from one vid to another, for a specified duration of time. You do that now by changing dozens of switches and turning an equal number of knobs. Hit and miss until you get it right. To do something sophisticated you'll require thousands of switches and knobs.”
Jeke did understand better than anyone else what he wanted to do.
“Right,” Jeke continued. “You want to control the machine with words, which are remembered, corrected, and replicated.”
Kefan nodded with a smile. “The corrected words can be sent to a typewriter.”
Marggit faced him. “Machines can't understand words.”
“Kefan made the machine read vids of alien script, why can't it read words?” Jeke asked.
“It doesn't read the script. It finds patterns in strings of characters.” Kefan's smile faded.
Jeke stared at each person for a moment before speaking. “What do you think written language is, if not patterns in strings of characters?” He paused and scanned the room, stopping at Kefan. “Don't you want to type your commands and see those commands on the screen, so you can correct mistakes before you tell the typewriter to do something?”
“I don't know how to do that.”
“Of course you don't, you're not a mathematician or a cipher expert. You can't write or break a code.”
Jeke stared right into Monloe's eyes, “Now, do you understand why he must have a separate lab, and a few handpicked assistants?”
“It's a lot of expense for a code-breaking machine,” Marggit said.
“Do you understand, Kefan?”
This was an extension of Lenea's idea of correcting text before printing it. Kefan swallowed. “It could do math.” An icy chill ran through his bones.
“And?” Jeke scowled at Kefan.
“It could control other machines, not just typewriters.”
“Do you think those aliens plot courses through interstellar space with paper and pencil, or control their ships with thousands of switches and knobs?” Jeke turned and walked toward the door.
“Where are you going?” Monloe asked.
“To manipulate enough thrust to send something into space. Something big.” He slammed the door behind him.
Kefan closed his eyes. “I don't think he means to say hello.”












I
live in California with my husband, and raise baby squirrels for a
wildlife care center. I could go into detail about my background and
education, but that is rather boring. Let me say that I am quiet,
love the outdoors, and never have enough time to do all the things I
want to do.




Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!






Justine's Judgement The Witches of Andar Book 2 by Ashlie Harris


Justine's
Judgement
The
Witches of Andar Book 2
by
Ashlie Harris


Genre:
Fantasy

Justine’s
Judgement is the second installment in a brand new Fantasy series by
Ashlie Harris. The first book, which bears the same name as the
series itself, is entitled The Witches of Andar and was released
January 1st, 2018. 


In
this sequel to TWoA, Justine and her friends, Alice and Malinda, are
once again fighting back against the evil Duke Ebrius. Evading and
outwitting him at every turn, the witches team up with some very
colorful characters along the way. There’s Jaicor, Malinda’s
cousin and helpful aid to the witches in the early part of their
journey. Jaicor’s wife, Marcine, is a delight, as well. Their witty
banter is a heart-warming sight to the three travel-weary
women. 

Later,
the group encounters, Jaicor’s markethand, Olendian, and continues
on to meet Malinda’s other cousin, Jaicor’s sister, Lady Luleth.
Lady Luleth’s husband, Lord Kelton and Jehren, a member of their
staff decide to help Malinda, Alice, and Justine when they come to
Crippen Manor looking for allies. While devising a plan to defeat the
Duke, Justine befriends a guest staying at the Manor. She is Eleyna,
a mysterious and beautiful woman who quickly becomes a close
confidant and ally. Though Justine and Eleyna form a fast bond,
Eleyna’s motives may not be as pure as she portends. Uncovering
secret pasts and unrecognized ancestries, not a soul will be left
unchanged by the events about to take place. In the end, the witches
and their friends will work together to bring down the greatest evil
to ever threaten the land of Andar! 







The book
cover was nominated for the AllAuthor.com Cover Contest for
September!!









Please
support the author and vote HERE!


The
Witches of Andar
The
Witches of Andar Book 1

A
trio of An-Kishar witches has unwittingly become involved in a royal
coup. After saving the murdered king's son, the foursome takes
shelter with a traveling theater troupe, hoping to stay in hiding
until the Prince is able to reclaim his throne.


Fight
alongside Malinda, Alice, and Justine to rid the kingdom of the dark
magic that threatens to run rampant. Venture into the Hanging Ferns
Forest, travel with the Thespian Connection, and help unravel the
mysteries that lie within the realm of Andar!

"Alice!...
You can't slap a Prince!" -Justine; The Witches of Andar- Book 1









Ashlie
Harris is 30 years old and a Stay-at-Home mother of four homeschooled
children. She and her husband live in the heart of the Midwest, USA,
in a place Ashlie likes to call, "The Land of Corn and Beans".
She has lived there all her life but may plan to move North in the
near future. A unique childhood and a passion for the written word
have served as motivation and inspiration throughout the years.
Always the writer, Ashlie can often be found asking inappropriate
questions, staring at seemingly nothing for hours on end, and
generally being completely socially awkward. Her biggest wish is for
people to look past their differences and start treating each other
as the one, single race we are- HUMAN.


In
addition to The Witches of Andar series (Book 1-Released Jan. 1st,
2018.), Ashlie is also the author of two anthologies- Extra Life &
Circles of the Soul- and one flash-fiction horror story, Midnight
Monster.










Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!








Curse of the Sea by Joni Parker




About the Book
Title: Curse of the Sea
Author: Joni Parker
Genre: Urban Fantasy
A NATO training exercise goes terribly wrong when five warships from different countries are mysteriously transported to Eledon, the Realm of the Elves. The warrior, Lady Alexin, is charged to escort the troops back home to London in the year 2031 with the aid of the Wizard Ecstasy and a magic shrinking potion. Yet, when the authorities question her story, Alex is detained and imprisoned under suspicion of terrorism. Caught in a web of politics, betrayal and bungling bureaucracy, the confusing world of the future will push her magical gifts to their limit, and her own future will hang in the balance, caught between “justice” and the place she calls home.

Author Bio
Fantasy novels are Joni Parker’s writing passion. Thus far, she’s written two series—“The Seaward Isle Saga,” a trilogy, and “The Chronicles of Eledon,” the award-winning four-book series. Her latest project, “Curse of the Sea” is her eighth book and begins a new trilogy. Her work extends beyond novels into short stories with two appearing in an anthology, “Tucson and Beyond” by the Tucson Science Fiction Fantasy writers’ group. Joni’s retired from military and federal government service and devotes her time to writing. She currently resides in Tucson, Arizona.

Links

Giveaway
Win a print copy of “Curse of the Sea”!

Book Excerpt
Chapter 6:

The next morning, the sailors stood in ranks on the dock near the little red ship. They wore the uniforms of their home countries—the United States, Great Britain, France, Canada, and Italy. Alex came up from behind with the Commandant, Lord Odin, Colonel Jeffrey, Prince Darin, and the Elf healer, Canfis. She wore her brown uniform as she would have worn if she were reporting to her foster father, Colonel Penser. This was official business. Her brown cloak fluttered in the breeze as the group converged at the ship. Ecstasy stepped out on deck.
Captain Jonas stepped forward. “Ecstasy, we’re ready to begin. Are you?”
“Yes, sir!” He saluted and stomped his foot. “How do you want to do this?”
Lord Odin went up to him. “We’ll bring ten people on board at a time and administer the potion. Once that group is finished, the next ten will board. Alex, pay attention. You’ll have to do this on the other end.”
“Yes, Grandfather.”
The first ten people filed onto the ship with Lord Odin, Alex, and Canfis. They gave each person a cup of water with the shrinking potion. Once they shrank in size, Alex and Canfis placed them in a bin. The next group came in and the same procedure was followed until the final group. One last cup of water remained and Captain Jonas stood beside it.
“I want to monitor the situation, so I’d like to remain as I am. I’d be more than happy to administer the counter-potion.”
“Alex will do it, Captain. There’s no need to worry,” Lord Odin said.
“May I ask, why send your granddaughter?”
“As I told you before, Alex has experience doing this. Well, if you wish to remain as you are, I believe the ship can handle the extra weight.” Lord Odin turned to Alex and held her in his arms. “Have a safe trip and come back right away. You have several more trips to make.” He released her and stepped back. “Oh, give me your weapons, Alex. You’d better not take them.”
Alex took off her sword belt and wrapped it around her sword. Then she undid the buckles that held her Elfin Blade in place on her right thigh, removed a knife blade from each boot, and gave him the cuffs around her wrists that held her assassin’s blades in place. “I’ll probably need my eating knife.” She patted the knife on her belt. “I think that’s all. What about the keys?”
“I’ll hold them until you get back. Canfis, give me a hand with this.” Lord Odin handed him some of her weapons and took the leather pouch with the keys.
Captain Jonas bit his lip as he watched her remove her weapons. She’d been armed all this time with several hidden weapons. What else could she be carrying that no one could see? What about that blue light?

So Wrong It's Right by Julie Johnson





Title: So Wrong It's Right
Series: Boston Love #5

Author: Julie Johnson
Genre: Standalone Romantic Comedy

Cover Design: One Click Covers
Release Date: October 30, 2018




Blurb


Shelby Hunt has the
perfect life, married to the perfect man. 

At least, that’s what anyone would think, looking at her. They couldn’t
possibly know about the past five years of lonely nights, or the divorce papers
still sitting unsigned on her husband’s desk, or the shady business practices
he’s brought home on more than one occasion — often in the form of scary men
with loaded guns and briefcases full of laundered cash. 

The truth is, Shelby’s perfect life is starting to feel like a prison…
one she’s not sure she’ll escape from alive… 


Special Agent
Conor Gallagher has no time for romance. 

As the head of Boston’s elite Organized Crime division, the seasoned
FBI agent is far more interested in tracking down bad guys than
wining-and-dining dates. But when a new case steers him directly into Shelby’s
path, he can’t help the fierce protective instincts that rise up inside
him. 

She needs an ally. A protector. Someone to keep her safe until the
fallout from her husband’s criminal activities is contained. But as Conor gets
closer to the plucky brunette, that protectiveness starts to feel a whole lot
like passion… and the more time he spends with her, the harder it is to imagine
ever letting her go…


SO WRONG IT’S
RIGHT is a full-length standalone contemporary romance about a woman desperate
to escape a broken marriage… and the bossy perpetual bachelor who steps in to
keep her safe. Due to sexy-times, strong language, and suspenseful themes, it
is recommended to readers ages 17 and up.












Pre-order Links

AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU

B&N / KOBO / iBOOKS










Author Bio


JULIE
JOHNSON is a twenty-something Boston native suffering from an extreme case of
Peter Pan Syndrome. When she's not writing, Julie can most often be found
adding stamps to her passport, drinking too much coffee, striving to conquer
her Netflix queue, and Instagramming pictures of her dog. (Follow her:
@author_julie)

She published her debut novel LIKE GRAVITY in August 2013, just before her
senior year of college, and she's never looked back. Since, she has published
eight more novels, including the bestselling BOSTON LOVE STORY series and THE
GIRL DUET. Her books have appeared on Kindle and iTunes Bestseller lists around
the world, as well as in AdWeek, Publishers Weekly, and USA Today.




You can find Julie on Facebook or contact her on her website www.juliejohnsonbooks.com. Sometimes, when she can figure out how Twitter works, she tweets from @AuthorJulie. For major book news and updates, subscribe to Julie's newsletter: http://eepurl.com/bnWtHH





Author Links