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Thursday, September 19, 2019

Hawk by Jessie Cooke

Title: Hawk: Skulls the Early Years
Series: Skulls Motorcycle Club
Author: Jessie Cooke
Genre: MC Romance
Release Date: September 12, 2019



Are some men just born bad...or do circumstances conspire to make them that way?

Grant “Hawk” Benning will go down in history as one of the baddest, most hated men on the eastern seaboard...and then some. Hawk cut his teeth on leather and steel, growing up heavily influenced by a culture of violence, drugs and crime. He would navigate the pathways between adolescence and adulthood using only the tools he'd been given...realizing too late that the club that made him a man, would likely bring about his ultimate demise.

Hawk's life, his destiny, was with the Southside Skulls. Prospect at seventeen, Vice President at twenty-one. Two and a half decades of riding alongside the prolific Doc Marshall. Hawk will have a full life...but one wrought with a loneliness built by his reluctance to allow any glimpse of the man who really lived behind the kutte. 

During his life, Hawk will fall in love with three women. The first will become his closest friend and she'll leave a legacy that will both brighten and darken Hawk's days to come.

The second, a free spirit...the one in touch with her own soul...the one who may have taught him how to reach his, if only she'd had the time.

And the last...the woman who would ultimately give him something that no one else ever could...a chance to glimpse and explore the best parts of himself...the parts that even he didn't know existed.
Ride along, read along, and make your own decision in the end. Was Grant “Hawk” Benning born to be bad...or was the deck just stacked against him from the get-go?







“You can’t bring that kid in here.” Grant stood next to Cal, his mom’s old man, outside of a “Go-Go” bar on Washington Street. Grant had been to the bar before, on more than one occasion. Cal usually made him stay in the back with the “girls.” Grant didn’t really have any complaints about hanging out with the girls. They were pretty, they smelled good, and most of them were nice to him. They gave him soda pop and chocolates and they let him watch The Twilight Zone and Bewitched on the television in their dressing room while he waited for Cal. Grant thought it was funny they called it a “dressing” room since they seemed to do more undressing than dressing in there, but that wasn’t his business, so he stayed out of it. Grant spent a lot of time with Cal since his mom worked so much, and Cal taught him a lot. One of the first things he taught him was that he should always mind his own business. One of Cal’s favorite sayings was, “Row your own boat and keep your fucking oars outta mine.”

“Do you know who the fuck you’re talking to?” Cal asked the big, bald bouncer. “Fuck” was Cal’s favorite word; he worked it into every conversation and nearly every other word. Grant’s mother asked Cal not to say it in front of Grant when they first got together, but it didn’t seem to Grant like Cal listened to much of what his mother said. After a while, his mother started saying it too...sometimes. Grant didn’t care about that, but what bothered him was that the first time that he tried saying it, she had washed his mouth out with soap. His fourth-grade teacher had talked to them just that day about double standards. Grant didn’t understand much of it, and he hadn’t even realized he’d been listening. He was almost proud of himself for pointing it out to his mother. Of course, when he did, he got the soap bar a second time. From then on, he kept his use of the word to times when his mother wasn’t around.

“I don’t care if you’re the fucking Governor of Massachusetts,” the bald guy said. “You’re not bringing that kid in here.”

Cal didn’t like the governor, or the mayor, or the police. He talked a lot about the system being “fucked” and the cops being “corrupt” and the “man” trying to keep him down. It confused Grant a little bit because despite Cal’s obvious dislike of the government, he was definitely proud to be an American. Cal rode a Harley with an American flag painted on the tank, and at his club there was a big American flag that hung right next to their black and white Skulls flag. Grant listened to Cal and his MC brothers complain all the time about “foreigners” taking everything over. Foreign cars and motorcycles pissed them off, and they had derogatory names for anyone with a different skin color or accent. But still, Cal didn’t like the governor and Grant thought that the bouncer might end up being sorry he brought him into it.

Cal sighed, and to any other bystander he looked like he was turning to leave. But at eleven years old, Grant had already witnessed three years of Cal’s craziness and he knew well what was coming next. Cal wasn’t all that big, but to hear him tell it, he’d been kicking asses in the Watertown neighborhood he grew up in since he was five years old. Grant hadn’t really believed that at first, but he did now, and he had a feeling the big guy was about to believe it too. Grant took a step backwards to get out of the way and he saw the bouncer smile, like he thought he had won. Then just like that, Cal’s fist came out of nowhere and slammed into the guy’s face. Cal had never used his fist on the boy, but Grant had seen him use it on plenty of people and he knew it had to hurt, especially because he heard the man’s nose crack. Grant had watched Cal knock out men twice his size, make them bleed, and even make them cry. Cal always told him that if you wanted respect in this world, you had to be willing to fight for it. Grant tried using that line on the school principal the last time he got in a fight on the playground. It had gotten him suspended.

Cal stepped on the now prone, incoherent bouncer and the guy let out a painful cry. Cal pointed to the small skull on the front of his leather vest that matched the big one on his back and he said, “The Southside Skulls own this bar.” The man must be stupid, Grant thought, because he opened his mouth to try to argue. Cal pressed down harder with his boot and the man howled in pain. Cal waited for him to shut up again and then he went on, “It don’t matter whose name is on a piece of paper. The Skulls own this fucking city and your pitiful little boss knows it. Now you know it and if you ever forget it again, I’ll make sure you forget how to breathe too. You under-fucking-stand me?”

The nod the man managed looked, to Grant, like it hurt down to his bones. Cal smiled and then looked at the boy and said, “You coming? Already wasted too much fucking time on you today.”

Cal stepped over the man and Grant had to step on part of the big guy’s arm to get to the door. He didn’t understand why Cal was suddenly mad at him, but he wasn’t surprised. Cal got mad at him a lot. He never argued with Grant’s mom about “watching” the boy, but it was obvious to Grant he didn’t want to. But Cal didn’t argue with Grant’s mom about anything. He always just smiled when she was mad, let her yell at him, or whatever, and then he usually went and did things his way anyway. Grant sometimes tried that too, but nine times out of ten he got his butt whooped for it.

Once they were inside the bar, Grant had to blink his eyes real fast to keep the thick smoke from making them water. His nose burned and the bright lights from the small stage blinded him. It was disorienting and he stood still for a minute just trying to get his bearings. He felt Cal’s palm tap the back of his head. “Go on in the back,” he barked at him, “and keep your oars in your own boat!”

Grant started toward the back and he had just passed the stage and was almost to the entrance for the dressing rooms when he heard the rhythmic pounding of a drum. He stopped dead in his tracks and when he didn’t think anyone was looking, he ducked into the shadows alongside the stage and waited. He knew what the drums meant. It had been almost a year since he’d seen her, but he hadn’t been able to forget her. He crouched low in the hopes that no one would spot him, and he watched the brilliant blue headdress appear from behind the shiny curtain. The vividly colored feathers framed the woman’s pretty face and fell down to the floor on both sides of her body.

Grant held his breath as he watched the woman begin to move her body slowly in time with the drums. Occasionally she turned slightly in his direction so the leering men on the far side of the room could see her. She held a big fan with yellow and lime green feathers in front of her body and she moved it up and down, just short of revealing the “things” Grant knew he wasn’t supposed to look at. With her other hand, she held one with pink and white feathers behind her back. Her long, brown legs were bare, and her feet were adorned with sparkly blue high-heeled shoes. She was beautiful, but Grant’s favorite part about her was her hair. He loved her long, straight black hair. It hung down her back, disappearing under the fan, and then reappearing and traveling down to her ankles. It shone under the lights, waved when she danced, and it looked like if you touched it, it would be as soft as silk.

The announcer, a fat guy with a bad comb-over and acne scars all over his face, introduced her as soon as the drumming stopped. “Put your hands together and then get them dollars out, boys. We got our own little squaw in the house tonight, Hialeah, the sexiest Cherokee woman this side of the reservation.” The men clapped and whistled and yelled things Grant didn’t understand. When they quieted down again, soft music started playing and Hialeah began to dance again. Grant didn’t know what it was but something about the way she danced made him happy inside.

The men were yelling at her to drop her fans as she swayed to the music and they were reaching up onto the stage, trying to touch her. Grant wanted to tell them to stop, but he knew better. If Cal caught him watching the dancers, or talking to the men, he might just know what that fist felt like firsthand. Instead, he crept as close as he could, staying on the side of the stage where it was dark, but positioning himself so that he could get a better look at her. The music sped up and she danced faster, turning her back to the howling men and finally dropping that fan. Grant watched the men stuff money into the strap on her undies and he tried not to look at her bare bottom. But her skin was so smooth...and such a pretty color that he could hardly help himself. Hialeah turned back to face the men and she began to sway and lower the fan in front when crashing sounds and dozens of men dressed in black jackets and vests and helmets were suddenly everywhere.

“Boston PD! Everyone down! Get down on the floor, now!”

Grant’s heart was racing as he searched the dark bar with his eyes, looking for Cal. The place was chaos and he couldn’t see him anywhere. Half-naked women were running around, some were screaming and some crying. Men were dropping down to the floor like flies that had been swatted, and panic began to well up inside of him. He looked toward the door, thinking about running, but the police had it blocked. He looked toward the dressing rooms, and they were standing guard there as well. Lastly, he looked back up on the stage and to his shock, a prone Hialeah was gesturing to him with her hand. “Come here little man.” He was terrified, but if he went up on the stage they would see him...everyone would. “I know it’s scary, but all we have to do is exactly what they tell us, okay?”

Finally, with nowhere else to go, Grant climbed up on the stage and got down on his belly, sliding himself over until he was close to Hialeah. He felt her soft hand reach out and cover his and she whispered, “Be brave, little guy. It’s going to be okay.”

Grant was about to nod again but the sound of a pair of boots landing on the stage and the vibrations it sent through him caused him to gasp and look up. When he did, there was a big, black gun in his face and the man behind it suddenly flipped up the goggles he was wearing and said, “Fuck, you’re just a kid.”

“He’s with me,” Hialeah said. “Please don’t hurt him.”

The cop looked them both up and down and then shaking his head he said, “Just be still, both of you.” He left them there and while Grant lay listening to the chaos around them for the next hour, she held his hand tightly and reassured him every so often that things were going to be okay. Grant was still scared but he was also confused. He knew he should want it to all be over so he could go home, and part of him did. But the other part of him was so comfortable with the gentle woman that he almost wanted it to last all night.

* * *

“Who are you?” Grant was at the police station. He had to pee and he was hungry. He’d missed lunch and now dinner. The cops had brought him a hamburger and French fries and a Coke, but he hadn’t touched them. They were trying to bring him over to their side, and he wasn’t about to go. Cal had warned him dozens of times about how tricky they could be. They’d been asking him the same questions for hours, and mainly who took him to the bar, but he wasn’t going to tell them. He wasn’t a snitch. He looked at the man in the suit who’d just come into the room, but he didn’t answer him. The cop in the uniform who had been with him since they got there answered for him:

“He says his name is Grant Benning. He gave me his home phone number, or so he says it is. I’ve been calling since we picked him up, but no one is answering. He won’t tell me who took him to the bar. That Indian chick, the stripper with all the feathers, she finally admitted he wasn’t with her.” Hialeah held his hand as long as she could during the raid, and she’d even talked the cop into letting her ride in the same police car as him on the way to the station. Once they were there, however, they told him he couldn’t go with her to booking. He still hadn’t seen Cal and the thought of being alone with the cops caused panic to consume him. Cal never said anything good about the cops. He always told Grant if he got “hassled” by them that he should keep his mouth shut and not tell them a thing.

Grant had been as stoic as possible up to that moment, but when they tried to take her away, he pulled his small hand out of the cop’s grasp and threw his body back at Hialeah. He gripped her around the waist and held on tight. It took three cops to peel him off her and when he looked up at her face a tear was running down the side of it. She smiled at him though and said, “It’s going to be okay, little man.” Grant had a feeling he’d never see her again, and that made him sad, but her kindness went far in chasing away the terror he was feeling inside. He watched them take her away and then he set his jaw, raised his chin, and walked with the cop to the interview room like a man.

The cop in the suit sat down and looked at the food that Grant had pushed off to the side. “Not hungry?” Grant shook his head. “It’s hot outside. That Coke looks good. You’re not thirsty either?” Again, Grant shook his head. “You talk?” He nodded. “How old are you, Grant?”

“Eleven.”

“Who do you live with?”

Grant sighed. He’d already answered all of these questions. He wanted to use the “F” word again, but he bit it back and said, “With my mother, Sarah Benning, and she’s not answering the phone because she’s at work. She works at Louie’s Seafood Restaurant in the Back Bay and when they get busy, they don’t answer their phone. I already told him,” he tossed his head at the uniformed officer, “all of this.”

“All except who took you to the bar. Was it your old man?”

“My old man took off before I was born.”

“Does your mom have a boyfriend?”

Grant shrugged. “You’ll have to ask her.”

“Grant, who do you stay with when your mom goes to work?” The cop was trying to trick him. He thought he was talking to an average eleven-year-old.

“I’m eleven. I don’t need a babysitter.”

“Well, Grant, I’m looking at your address and it seems impossible to me that you walked or rode your bike to that bar, so how did you get there?”

“Maybe I took the subway.”

“Maybe you did, or maybe you went in there with some guy we didn’t catch today and you’re afraid to tell us who that is. We can protect you, Grant, and your mom.”

“I don’t need protecting and neither does my mom.”

The police officer sighed. Changing tactics he said, “Grant, how is school?”

“It’s summer break.”

“Mm-hmm, but how do you do in school? You get good grades?”

“Yep. I’m a fucking genius.” Grant struggled in school, a lot. But he wasn’t going to tell this guy that. It was not his business.

The man cocked an eyebrow and said, “Your mom know you use those kinds of words?” Grant shrugged. When Grant didn’t answer him the cop said, “So Grant, what do you want to be when you grow up?”

A loud knock on the door drew the detective’s attention away. He got up and went to the door. He cracked it open and whispered to whoever was there. Grant couldn’t hear what they were saying but after a few seconds the detective pulled the door open and Grant could see a short, stocky woman with white hair standing in the doorway. She smiled at him, like she knew him. Grant didn’t smile back. “Grant, I’m Mrs. Haddock. I work with the police and help them when their cases involve children. Would you like to come with me? We can get you something to eat, and talk.” Grant was starving, but he was determined not to take anything the cops gave him. The lady had a badge on her waist, but no gun, and she looked like someone’s old grandma. He wasn’t going to tell her any more than he told the cops, but his stomach felt like it was eating into his backbone and maybe taking food from her would be okay. He stood up and went to the door. As the detective was about to close it behind him Grant turned and looked up at him and said:

“President.”

The detective lifted his eyebrows again and said, “That’s ambitious. You’ll have to make sure you stay out of trouble and...”

“Of my own motorcycle club.”

“Well then,” the cop said, putting his hands in his pockets and looking down at the exhausted, hungry little boy. Grant kept his chin up and his dark eyes locked into the blue ones of the tall man looking down at him. Another thing Cal had taught him...no matter what you’re feeling, never let anyone see your fear. They held each other’s gaze for what seemed like a long time before the older woman put her hand on his shoulder and said:

“Come on, Grant. Let’s go get you something to eat and call your mom again.”

Grant was about three steps from the door when he heard the detective say, “I don’t think we’ve seen the last of that one.” It wouldn’t be until years later when that cop was over halfway to retirement that he would realize how right he was.








Jessie Cooke writes hot romance novels about tough guys, bad boys, bikers, fighters and lovers and the women of strong character who tame them.




HOSTED BY:

Vaughn by Ella Fox & Rochelle Paige




Title: Vaughn

Series: Love Under the Lights #2
Authors: Ella Fox & Rochelle Paige
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: September 16, 2019





Blurb


Gorgeous, charming, and funny, Vaughn Corbett rose far above
his less than optimal beginning to become a household name. Known for being a
dynamic and unflappable interviewer, no one was more surprised than he when he
got tongue-tied over a gorgeous blonde in the middle of a live interview.

Allie Henderson was so focused on her career that she rarely
thought about men or dating. That all changed when she came across a
silver-tongued devil on the red carpet. The moment his deep blue eyes met hers,
something inside her shifted.

Allie was there to support her best friend. Vaughn was just
doing his job. Neither of them expected the instant, magnetic attraction that
couldn’t be denied.

Would a surprise that neither of them planned on end things
before they really began?









Purchase Links

$2.99 for a limited time!

AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU

Free in Kindle Unlimited





Excerpt

The second I saw the
sexy as fuck blonde in the green dress, everything shifted. When our eyes met,
I was poleaxed. An intensely possessive feeling roared to life inside me. The
need to touch and claim her was so extreme that I struggled not to drop my mic
and go right to her. 
I was known for
being a dynamic and unflappable interviewer, yet for the first time in my
career, I fumbled for words and struggled for coherence. This was due to the
fact that the only thing I cared about was her. Only when I realized that my
segment producer had been frantically waving at me from his spot next to the
stationary camera did I remember that I had a job to do. 
Forcing myself into
host mode, I somehow went about interviewing the group of people the girl in
the green dress was walking with. I knew who each one of them was, but her name
was a mystery because she stood off to the side, and it wasn’t like I could
call her over. 
The rules on the red
carpet were simple and definitive. Talk to the talent and keep it moving.
Assistants, friends, and family members didn’t get a lot of play, even if they
were as sexy as the goddess in the green dress. It frustrated me not to know
her name, but I comforted myself with the knowledge that it would only be a
matter of time before I solved that mystery.
After I wrapped up
my pre-show hosting duties, something that took far longer than one would
imagine, I headed into the Dolby Theatre. I was seated with one of my good
friends, Liam Hall. He wasn’t nominated but was presenting, so he was in a
chill mood. Typically, we’d have shot the shit and pressed the flesh with the
people around us, but I was so busy staring at the girl in the green dress that
I didn’t have it in me to do much more than phone it in. I was smart enough to
train my eyes mostly on the stage when the cameras were rolling, but every time
the host threw to commercial, my attention went right back to her. I hated that
she was seated so damn far away in another section.
Oscar ceremonies
were known for being ridiculously long and what was scheduled as a three-hour
broadcast always went over. Sometimes by seventeen minutes, and sometimes by
eighty. I’d never hated the length more than I did then. I silently willed the
damn show to come in on time for once, but naturally, that didn’t happen. The fucking
thing dragged on longer than War and Peace.
During one of the
commercial breaks, Liam leaned over and muttered, “What’s the deal with the
sexy chick in the green dress you’re busy eye-stalking?” 
While it was true
that I was ogling her—clearly not as covertly as I’d hoped—hearing Liam refer
to her as sexy set my teeth on edge. That I had any kind of reaction to his
question was unusual. I’d had a similar response when I’d seen Dane Garrison
take her arm earlier. The only thing that calmed me down about that was the
certainty that Dane wasn’t dating her. I knew this because Dane and I were
tight. The only girls in his life on the regular were his mom, Gloria Garrison,
and his daughter, Maggie. Thank fuck I’d remembered that before I made a fool
of myself by telling him to get his goddamn hands off the blonde. I’d never
felt territorial about anyone before, but there was no denying that I
wanted—needed—her to be mine. That brought me back to Liam, who needed to know
that the goddess in green was majorly off-limits.
“Call her sexy
again, and we’re going to have a problem,” I grumbled, speaking low enough so
only he could hear me.
Sitting back, Liam
raised his brows and gave me an “are you serious” look. I dipped my head to
acknowledge that yeah, I sure as fuck was. Unbothered by his obvious amusement
about what was going on with me, I turned my attention back to the woman in
green.






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Free in Kindle Unlimited






Ella Fox

USA Today
Bestselling Author Ella Fox
has learned a bunch of stuff along the way but the most important of all
those things is that anything is possible when you try. In 2012 she took a big
leap of faith and published her first book, Broken Hart. Since then she’s
written fifteen more full-length books and several novellas– and every one is a
reminder that you can live your dream as long as you work for it.

Ella’s favorite
things are music, movies, traveling, The Foo Fighters and, of course, reading.
This isn’t a surprise considering the fact that her mom is USA Today
Bestselling Author Suzanne Halliday.




Rochelle Paige

Rochelle Paige
absolutely adores reading—always has and always will. When she was growing
up, her friends used to tease her when she would trail after them, trying to
read and walk at the same time.  If she has downtime, odds are you
will find her reading or writing.

She is the mother
of two wonderful sons who have inspired her to chase her dream of being an
author.  She wants them to learn from her that you can live your dream as
long as you are willing to work for it.

When she told her
mom that her new year's resolution was to self-publish a book in 2013, she
pretty much told her, "About time!"






The Cannon by Leslie Pike




Title: The Cannon
Series: The Swift Series #3
Author: Leslie Pike
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: September 19, 2019





Blurb


Sawyer’s easy smile and laidback style mask his rough start.
For the tall Texan the struggle just to survive has been real. Then in a
fateful twist, life takes new direction. Fame, fortune and women all within his
grasp. Though it’s the chance meeting with a beautiful stubborn girl that has
him reaching. Bristol is the only daughter in a Memphis baseball dynasty. She
couldn’t care less about the sport or the attention she gets from its players.
Her laser focus is on her medical practice. Until one dance with a handsome
stranger. Sometimes the things you want aren't what you truly need.









Purchase Links

AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU

Free in Kindle Unlimited






Also Available


99c for a limited time!!

AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU

Free in Kindle Unlimited



99c for a limited time!!

AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU

Free in Kindle Unlimited






Author Bio

USA TODAY bestselling author, Leslie Pike, has loved expressing herself
through the written word since she was a child. Her passion for film and
screenwriting led her to Texas for eight years, writing for a prime time CBS
series. Leslie lives in Southern California with her Pom-Poo, Mr. Big. She’s
traveled the world as part of film crews, from Africa to Israel, New York to
San Francisco. Now she finds her favorite creative adventures taking place in
her home, writing Contemporary Romance.


Author Links

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

THE WOLF QUEEN: THE HOPE OF AFERI (Book 1) by Cerese Rennie Murphy



THE WOLF QUEEN

Cerece Rennie Murphy

* YA Fantasy *


Title: THE WOLF QUEEN: THE HOPE OF AFERI (Book 1)

Author: Cerese Rennie Murphy

Publisher: LionSky Publishing

Pages: 242

Genre: YA Fantasy





Once great and powerful sorcerers, the Amasiti were hunted to the
brink of extinction by the Hir and his followers. For four hundred
years, their legacy faded from memory waiting for the hope of Aferi to
be renewed…



In the Land of Yet



At the edge of the Forbidden Forest



A young woman lives alone.



Forced to fend for herself after the brutal murder of her family,
Ameenah Yemini has made a life for herself as a master tanner and
farmer, only venturing into the world to earn her living then return to
the safety and seclusion of her home.



Until a chance encounter brings her work to the attention of the powerful Hir and her careful life begins to unravel.



Drawn to the hidden magic that lingers in everything she touches, the
new Hir insists on having her for himself, using the people around her
to force Ameenah into his grasp.



When she realizes that her greatest enemy may hold the key to a
secret she thought lost to her forever, Ameenah is determined to reclaim
her stolen past.  But, at what cost? As an ancient power waits to be
unleashed, Ameenah’s choices will make the difference between awakening a
new magic or delivering it into the hands of evil.

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Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/yxqrrsrz

B&N: https://tinyurl.com/y38gg5y8
______________________







I knelt before Safaro, as I swore I would never
and accepted his chain.  I watched as he
swelled with pride, eclipsing any possibility that he would discover my plan.
Blind purpose and certain victory propelled him forward without the slightest
concern for why a woman who had defied him every day of her life would have
surrendered so easily.  I bowed my head
and followed, prepared to betray everything I knew to preserve the hope of what
we could become.

Like a slave, he brought me dutifully to his
master.  We rode through the gates of
Elan to the Hir who sat outside the battlefield on a tall, white horambus that
was draped in blood-red velvet.  The Hir
spared only a second to regard me with contempt before sending me with Safaro
to the center of the battle where our right to exist would be decided. 

All around me, from every corner of our world,
the people of Yet fought against the tyranny of the Hir.  Closing my eyes, I could smell their desire
to live, to protect their loved ones, and see them survive past this day as if
the earth itself was calling out to me. Once again I looked to Safaro for any
sign of the boy I loved, but he was nowhere to be found.  He knew, as I did, that while their resolve
was as hard as iron, the people of Yet were not warriors.  Worse, we’d only had months to prepare.  From the power-crazed look in his eyes as he
surveyed the battle, I knew that the Hir had been planning the expansion of his
Kingdom his entire life.

The final battle came to our doorstep just
outside the city of Elan, where our defenses had held as fiercely as they
could, but it was only a matter of time.
The people of Elan, the peoples of Yet had given no ground easily, with
mounting casualties on both sides, but the Hir had too much of everything we
lacked: weapons, men, strategy, and now the most powerful Amasiti at his beck
and call. 

With me at the their side, they pressed
forward.  The poison chain connected my
will to Safaro’s, so that the power between us acted as one, except only I
understood the true meaning behind the Hir’s command to create an earthquake
that would swallow his enemies.  Safaro
could wield my power, but only I could give it the purpose that would call it
into being. 

I knew what the Hir’s soul was meant to be.  His greatest enemies were not in front of
him; he was surrounded by them, masking the truth of his insanity behind greed
and false adulation. 

And so, when I spread my hands wide and bellowed
across the sky “I am the Sorceress of Elan, now and always,” I did what I was
meant to do: create.

The boats of Elan were just out of firing range,
harboring the men, women, and children who were unable to fight.  Only the strongest were allowed to keep the
front. It would be difficult for them to escape, but they had a better chance
than anyone who was not privy to my plan.

I felt the fissure crack open far beneath me,
then bubble up and break with a diagonal energy just 100 feet from where I
stood.  The fissure would only hold for a
few minutes, announcing itself as a warning of things to come, so that my
people would have some time to retreat, before the fault folded back on itself
and consumed everything standing.

Safaro watched with satisfaction as the people
of Yet began to run.  He did not
understand until he watched them forego the high ground of Elan and run into
the sea.   He rushed forward just as the
fissure we created together broke open into a chasm that pulled the dirt right
out from under the Hir’s army.

The people of Yet scattered as the depths
swallowed the Hir’s front line.  As soon
as the last of my people were safe, I took it all. The land that held Elan to
the shore of Yet fell away, allowing the water to rise up, pounding out new
territory as it ripped through the battle field.  But it was not enough. 

It was only then that I understood that creation
and destruction are often the same thing.
As the sea claimed its prize, I opened up the foundation of Elan
itself—breaking it from the bottom like an egg.

The power of the sea did the rest, opening her
arms to the island in an eternal embrace that left only the tip of the land
visible, with the children I had left there clinging to the ancient trees.

Fear, terror, and isolation had burned through
their innocence, but in exchange I had given them something else—a chance to
survive and create something new, to evolve into sorcerers who were also
warriors.

As Safaro twisted the poison chain around my
neck, I imagined I could see the eyes of all those Amasiti children and hoped
only for their forgiveness.

And in the burning light of my death, I ascended
to the withering screams of the Hir, Safaro, and all his murderous men and was
at peace.














 











Cerece Rennie Murphy fell in love with science fiction at the age of
seven, watching “Empire Strikes Back” at the Uptown Theater in
Washington, D.C., with her sister and mom. It’s a love affair that has
grown ever since. As an ardent fan of John Donne, Alice Walker, Kurt
Vonnegut and Alexander Pope from an early age, Cerece began exploring
her own creative writing through poetry. She earned her master’s degrees
in social work and international relations at Boston College and Johns
Hopkins School for Advance International Studies, respectively, and
built a rewarding 15-year career in program development, management and
fundraising in the community and international development arenas – all
while appreciating the stories of human connection told in science
fiction through works like Octavia Butler’s “Wild Seed,” Frank Herbert’s
“Dune” and “The X-Files.” In 2011, Cerece experienced her own
supernatural event – a vision of her first science fiction story.
Shortly after, she began developing and writing what would become the
bestselling Order of the Seers trilogy.  Order of the Seers was selected
as one of The Best Kindle Books of 2014 by Digital Book Today.  To
date, Mrs. Murphy has published nine speculative fiction novels, short
stories, and children’s books.



In addition to working on the 3rd book in the award-winning Ellis and The Magic Mirror children’s book series with her son and releasing her 5th adult novel, The Wolf Queen, Mrs. Murphy has launched NARAZU, an online
platform designed to deliver the best in indie sci-fi content and comic
culture to the fans who love it most. You can visit the new site at www.narazu.com.
 Her current writing projects include the second book in The Wolf Queen
duology and plotting a science fiction thriller set in outer space. 
Mrs. Murphy lives and writes in her hometown of Washington, DC with her
husband, two children and the family dog, Yoda.



Website: www.cerecerenniemurphy.com

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/cerecermurphy

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Cerece-Rennie-Murphy-205753729546299/

http://www.pumpupyourbook.com


The Holeshot Series by Lynn Michaels


The
Holeshot
Holeshot
Series Book 1
by
Lynn Michaels


Genre:
M/M Sports Romance 

In
the world of Supercross, taking the holeshot means one racer leaps
ahead of the crowd and into first, leaving the rest of the pack
behind. If Supercross racer Davey McAllister knows anything, it's how
to take the holeshot. When the hot rising star mechanic, Tyler
Whitmore, shows up in his bed, Davey does just that. But, dating a
competitor's mechanic threatens to blow his ride if anyone finds out.
With the fear of losing his sponsors, he has to keep his love life
completely under cover, but Davey is in deep and wants to tell the
world how much he loves Tyler.


Tyler
Whitmore wants to be out of the closet, but dating the competition is
a death sentence for his career. Overprotective of Davey's reputation
and his own dreams, Tyler refuses to commit to his lover and is
afraid of falling hard. Will they ever be able to find their way
through the Premiere racing league pitfalls and acknowledge their
love?

An
m/m romance with tons of hot sex - 18+ please.










Holeshot
2
Holeshot
Series Book 2

In
the world of Supercross, taking the holeshot means one racer leaps
ahead of the crowd and into first, leaving the rest of the pack
behind. Supercross racer, Tate Jordan, wants to take his holeshot on
and off the track, but no one else seems to cooperate. His love life
is in turmoil and his sponsors don’t expect him to win. Will Tate
find someone new to love and a team that believes in him?


Pilot
Mahan is a bodyguard and a street fighter looking to build a future,
but his plans get derailed when a Supercross racer catches his eye.
Can he make a go at a life with Tate Jordan, on the road?

Bryce
Nickel is new to Supercross and adulthood. He’s young and fun, but
super serious about what he wants. And what he wants is to win races
and Tate Jordan. Will he be able to take his holeshot or will the big
Apex bodyguard get in the way? Or perhaps, the three can make a
compromise?

A
super sexy MMM romance set in the Supercross industry – 18+ please








Holeshot
Christmas
Holeshot
Series Novella 

Christmas
isn’t all race tracks and dirt bikes for Davey and Tyler,
especially when they don’t see things about each other in quite the
same way.


A
short Holeshot novella
18+
please.

This
story officially takes place after the events of Holeshot 2; however,
it can be read as a stand alone novella.










Bike
Business
Holeshot
Series Book 3

Apex
Racing is expanding and absorbing Pilot and his lovers. Everyone is
happy with it…except Johnny. He's feeling constantly left out and
more alone than ever before. It's time to seek out his own win, and
find his holeshot even if its off the track and away from
Pilot.


Gavin
is determined to put together the hottest Supercross team, and he
wants that to include Bryce Nickels, but that seems almost impossible
since he signed with Apex. Perhaps, he needs a new angle, like the
sexy business partner of the bodyguard, Johnny Killebrew. Maybe he'll
sign on more than he bargained for.

Everyone
is chasing their own dreams, but Johnny isn't sure he even has one.










Lynn
Michaels lives and writes in Tampa, Florida where the sun is hot and
the Sangria is cold. When she’s not writing she’s kayaking,
hanging with her husband, or reading by the pool. Lynn writes
Male/Male romance because she believes everyone deserves a happy
ending and the dynamics of male characters can be intriguing,
vulnerable, and exciting. She has both contemporary and paranormal
titles and has been writing since 2014. Her stories don’t follow
any set guidelines or ideas, but come from her heart and contain love
in many forms.








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