Showing posts with label romantic thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label romantic thriller. Show all posts

Saturday, June 20, 2015

"Seven Sons" by Lili St. Germain

FREE
EXCERPT
Seven Sons
(Gypsy Brothers Book 1)
by Lili St. Germain


Seven Sons, the first book in the Gypsy Brothers series by Lili St. Germain, is currently FREE. Also available: Six Brothers, Five Miles, Four Score, Three Years, Two Roads, and One Love.


Description
My father was most certainly NOT an innocent man. As the leader of the Gypsy Brothers MC, he was guilty of many things. But he died for a crime that he didn’t commit, framed by an enemy within who then stole his club and everything he had ever worked to protect.
Including my innocence.
When Dornan Ross framed my father, he set into motion a series of events that could never be undone. My father was murdered by Dornan Ross and his sons when I was fifteen years old.
Before my father died, Dornan and his sons stole my innocence, branded my skin and in doing so, ensured that their lives would be prematurely cut short. That they would suffer.
I’ve just turned twenty-one, and I’m out for blood. I'm out for revenge.
But I didn't expect to fall for Jase, the youngest brother in the club.
I didn't expect that he would turn my world upside down, yank my heart out of my chest and ride away into the sunset with it.
Now, I'm faced with an impossible choice - Jase, or avenging my father's death?
Note: This story unfolds over seven volumes approx. 25-30,000 words each. Please note this book is dark romance and deals with serious themes including rape, violence and murder.


Excerpt
Confucius said, "Before embarking upon
a journey of revenge, dig two graves."
I planned to dig seven.
Sometimes I don’t think about it for hours at a time. Sometimes, a whole day will pass, and it’ll be there, under the surface, burning my insides with the brutality of its truth. My truth.
And I’ll get home from my dead-end job in this dead-end fucking town in the asshole of Nebraska, and I’ll have almost made it through a whole day of not thinking about it, about my father and Dornan Ross and his sons.
But then I’ll do something without thinking, like undress to go to bed, or slide under the covers of my bed. And I’ll see the marks they branded on my right hip – seven horizontal lines, each stacked on top of each other, made by casting the blunt edge of a butcher’s knife into fire and then pressing it into my flesh. A line for Dornan Ross and a line for each of his six older sons. Notches on a bedpost. Scarred for a lifetime so that I can never forget. Some are thicker than others, some short and others long, but each one a devastating reminder of everything they took from me that night.
Even if I stay in my stale clothes to avoid seeing my scars, I still can’t escape them. I never sleep well. I toss and turn, fitful and drenched in sweat, awakening from nightmares where they find me and turn the knife to the sharp side. Where they don’t just brand me – they cut me until I am dead, so I won’t talk to the police. I know things, see.  I know things that the police don’t, about purchased alibis and body disposal spots, about too many girls who went missing and too many men who kept too many secrets.
I used to wish every day and every night to forget about my father’s murderer and what he did to us. Not anymore. Now I want to remember every tiny detail so that I can exact my revenge.
Tomorrow is different. Tomorrow is my twenty-first birthday, the day I gain access to my secret inheritance. The several hundred thousand that my father managed to hide before Dornan framed him for the murder of a policeman and his family, a crime that Dornan and his eldest son committed as retribution for a drug bust that almost wiped the club out. It might be dirty money – my father wasn’t above money laundering and drug manufacturing – but it was his money. Dornan managed to seize control of the rest when he enacted his devastating betrayal.
Tomorrow is truly my birthday, for I will become another person. Today my name is Juliette Portland, but tomorrow I will wake up as someone else entirely.
Someone who will bring Dornan Ross and the Gypsy Brothers Motorcycle Club to their knees.


Praise for the Book
"What a story of revenge!!, A good read ... A good mix of love and hate.. It is definitely a page turner and I am anxious for the next book to come out!!" ~ Sandra Schanck
"This book is what I want in biker books. It has a bit of everything, the violence is shocking and ugly, emotions are all over the place, I love some of the characters and hate others. The writing is fantastic, I feel as if I am there watching everything unravel and I am scared of what is going to happen next. The story has me sucked in completely and I am going to be impatient waiting for every next book in the series. Highly recommend to read." ~ Peta Benjamin
"Seven Sons is mostly about the dark side of life, dealing with a deep look into a victim that of violence that is out for revenge and willing to risk her life to get it. It is not for the reader looking for a nice love story with happy ever after ending in this episode and the description of the next episode looks like more of the same theme." ~ Jane Jones
"I love a good biker book and this one did not fail to meet my expectations. Definite must read, you won't be disappointed" ~ Beatrice Valenzuela
"First this book is awesome. It gets you roped in from the beginning. [...] You will love this book and you will want to help Samantha exact revenge. You will want to get revenge for her." ~ Amazon Customer


About the Author
Lili writes dark, disturbing romance. Her USA Today bestselling Gypsy Brothers series focuses on a morally bankrupt biker gang and the girl who seeks her vengeance upon them. The Cartel series is a prequel trilogy of full-length novels that explores the beginnings of the club; the first book, Cartel, is out now.
Lili quit corporate life to focus on writing and so far is loving every minute of it. Her other loves in life include her gorgeous husband and beautiful daughter, good coffee, Tarantino movies and spending hours on Pinterest.
She loves to read almost as much as she loves to write.


Links




Thursday, January 22, 2015

"The Hidden Auditorium" by Rosanne Dingli

EXCERPT
The Hidden Auditorium
by Rosanne Dingli


Today we bring you an excerpt from The Hidden Auditorium. This is the fourth in our special feature on author Rosanne Dingli.
For more books by this author, please check out our previous blog posts: Death in Malta (blog post), According to Luke (blog post), and Camera Obscura (blog post).

Description
Another exciting art heist novel featuring Prof Bryn Awbrey.
When Richard Wagner died in Venice in 1883, it was the end of a creative and tumultuous life. His family grieved, and the world lost a brilliant composer.
Nearly 130 years later, antiques dealer Nic Manton is led to a valuable pendant he feels provides a solution to his precarious finances. With no idea of its meaning or provenance, he is mystified why the pendant creates such fear and confusion, and aggravates rather than solves his problems. Its apparent owner is beautiful but erratic. She leads him from Rome to Venice and then to Malta, on a chase that becomes more perplexing and dangerous than it has to be. A melancholic widow and a brilliant but vague professor are willing to help. But Manton doubts whether they can.

Excerpt
Her eyes were slitted, her mouth hard, but it was only for a second, a glimpse. Tiana’s expression cleared suddenly into a bright face with a flashing smile, her eyes directed at Nic. ‘I’ve expected you for some time.’ Her hand fluttered at her throat. Her eyes moved upward, and they heard music upstairs.
Behind her, as she stood back and opened the door wider, an elaborate wrought iron banister curled upward around a wide flight of fanned stairs, where an arched window brought as much sunlight in as they left behind on the bastion.
Blinded for an instant, Nic said nothing but looked at Tiana’s slight figure, the high wedged sandals she wore with blue Capri pants, and a dazzling white top. Her blonde hair formed the usual curtain that swung as she moved.
It was unnerving. She had already done this, in another country, in another street just as old as this. It placed Nic at a disadvantage, to encounter a young woman who seemed to be in residence wherever she went. Another grand house in another grand city.
‘What …?’
‘Hello, Nic. Welcome to my grandmother’s house.’
‘Ah! This might explain a lot.’ Bryn Awbrey nodded his large head and stood at the foot of the grand staircase, looking up. ‘Tell us, please. We’re mystified. We’re here seeking Mrs Grixti. The owner …’
‘… of Grixti’s, in St Lucy Street. My grandmother.’
There was a pause. Someone moved at the top of the stairs and they all looked up.
‘My name is Erminia Borbonese Grixti. Please come up.’

The excerpt scene takes place inside one of these terraced houses
 on St Barbara Bastion, Valletta, Malta

Praise for the Book
"In The Hidden Auditorium Rosanne Dingli offers another master class in mystery writing. It takes a vibrant imagination and special skill to run two stories in parallel and keep the reader's attention, but she manages it again with this brilliant book. Some of her characters we have met before in According to Luke, but this doesn't detract for they wrap themselves around you like a comfort blanket as she creates a world full of uncertainty and menace. [...] Her knowledge and detailed research of the locations and history bring each stage of the stories to life in vivid colour. Her descriptive power lets you feel you know the locations as you hear the sounds of the streets, smell the fetid stench of the canals, and feel the damp seeping through crumbling old stone walls in palazzos long past their glory. At the same time her style generates an urgency to find out what happens next, which will keep you reading to the end. Dingli's denouement amounts to a thriller in itself, with already discounted events resurfacing and piling new discoveries one on another. There is always something new to find and she maintains the tension right to the end, leaving you with an intriguing twist in her last breath. This book should win prizes and its author should be far better known than she appears to be." ~ Ian Mathie
"The Hidden Auditorium by Rosanne Dingl, internationally known author from Australia, is categorized as a mystery, but it definitely is not your father's murder mystery. It is literary, has believable, real characters, whose motivations and thought processes are important to the story. It has a story line that you will have trouble putting down. I have already had dreams about two of the characters. It even has romance. What's more, you will learn about Venice, Malta, Rome and lots about ancient art. The main character, antique dealer Nic Manton finds himself in possession of a remarkable 19th century pendant that he thinks will solve his financial problems. Unfortunately, it came with a young woman who will cause him more problems than financial. The pendant involves a perplexing secret about a famous composer's life and works. Trying to solve the mystery plunges Nic into danger. The book tells us about classical music, old jewelry and classic art. The twists and turns of the plot will tantalize traditional mystery lovers, and the beautifully written prose will appeal to literary devotees. This is Ms. Dingl's fourth novel. I have read them all, and each one is better than the previous one. I can hardly wait for the next one. Don't miss The Hidden Auditorium." ~ Boyd Lemon
"It is not often that I can find one book that fulfills many of my requirements: well-written, educational, musical, artistic, strong plot, historical interludes, creepy stalker, surprise ending, likable characters and a dash of romance. The Hidden Auditorium makes me feel that Rosanne Dingli wrote it especially for me! It is a wonderful story with lots to ponder about the composer Wagner, mental illness, and marriage. Location is also somewhat important, so I enjoyed reading about Malta, a country encountered in the pages of Pynchon's V when young. Just the word 'Malta' evokes a magically floating island in Avalon-like mists. I look forward to reading Dingli's other Maltese books." ~ Clarissa Simmens
"Rosanne Dingli has once again confirmed why I am such a fan. The Hidden Auditorium is a mystery. That’s true. But it is so much more. Dingli has created a fresh new recipe for mystery that makes it hard to keep it neatly tucked into that box. There is the mandatory puzzle, some danger for spice, even a dash of fatal attraction. But what make this so special are the added ingredients of art history, travel to exotic places such as Venice, Rome and Malta, fabulous jewels, music and well researched connections to real history. Even the food is interesting and made my mouth water. These elements set it several cuts above other mysteries I have read. Her characters grow and change in real ways that lead us to become invested in what happens to them. The result is a delicious, rich escape into a world most of us can only dream of. Find out what a jaded antiques dealer, a beautiful widow, an elderly art historian, a bitter, wealthy Jew, a deranged stalker, Hitler and Wagner have in common. Now there’s a mystery to grab you and hold you until you understand it all. It did me." ~ Yvonne Hertzberger
"The Hidden Auditorium is a captivating novel, in which the past, casts in an aura of mystery, horror and foreboding is slowly revealed though fast-paced and unexpected twists and turns taking place in the present. It is a mystery, a romance, and a reinterpretation of a composer’s life, all brilliantly researched and wrapped up in an original plot that keeps one spellbound to the end, not only because of the evocative passages dealing with classical music and the aura of Venice in the 19th century, but also because of two completely unexpected revelations, one romantic and the other related to music and history itself. Refreshing to read something so different and yet truly original!" ~ Hugo

About the Author
Sought by an international audience for prize-winning short stories and intricate novels, Rosanne Dingli has published fiction successfully for over 25 years. Most of her body of work is available in paperback and ebook.
This author's fiction centres around the classical Arts, such as painting, music, and literature. She also uses locations and their allure to anchor her stories and give them substance.
Rosanne is the author of a number of books, including The Hidden Auditorium, Camera Obscura, and According to Luke. She is now writing full-time after retiring from teaching in 2009. Her out-of-print short fiction and poetry is once more available in handy easy-to-read volumes that do not cost the earth.
To sample Rosanne's writing, download a FREE copy of The Red Volkswagen and Other Stories by Rosanne Dingli from B&N, iTunes, Kobo, or Smashwords.


Links





Friday, February 7, 2014

"Run to You" Series by Clara Kensie

GUEST POST and GIVEAWAY
Run to You Series
by Clara Kensie


Clara Kensie's Run To You is a serial published by Harlequin Teen consisting of six books. The first three books have just been released and are featured below. Each episode is novella-length, and the three parts together make up one full-length book of 86,000 words, or 350 pages. The next three parts will be released in June 2014.
Run to You is currently on tour with YA Bound Book Tours. The author stops here today for a guest post, and there's also a giveaway to enter. Please make sure you visit the other tour stops as well.


Run to You Part One:
First Sight


Description
Part One in the riveting romantic thriller about a family on the run from a deadly past, and a first love that will transcend secrets, lies and danger …
Sarah Spencer has a secret: her real name is Tessa Carson, and to stay alive, she can tell no one the truth about her psychically gifted family and the danger they are running from. As the new girl in the latest of countless schools, she also runs from her attraction to Tristan Walker - after all, she can't even tell him her real name. But Tristan won't be put off by a few secrets. Not even dangerous ones that might rip Tessa from his arms before they even kiss …

Excerpt
My cell phone rang, loud and shrill, shattering the classroom’s silence.
He’d found us. He was coming.
The teacher scowled, reaching out her puffy hand to confiscate my phone as I slid it open and held it to my ear. Answer on the first ring—that was the rule.
One word, my mother’s panicked command: “Run.”
With trembling hands, I swept my American History notebook into my bag. Leave nothing personal behind—that was another rule.
Every second, he was getting closer. I stumbled toward the door.
“Maddie, where are you going?” Mrs. Landon demanded; then her voice softened. “Is something wrong?”
I rushed past her and out of the classroom, my breath coming in stuttery little gasps. Dennis Connelly was coming. How did he find us again?
I raced to my locker—the combination, what’s the combination?—and cleaned it out, stuffing everything into my bag. Flew down the stairs. Dashed down the hall, almost colliding with a girl carrying an armful of books. Sprinted past the office, reached the exit—
“Hey!” A security guard, belly hanging over his belt, grabbed my arm. “Where’s your pass?”
My brother darted over, lugging his book bag and saxophone. “Let her go,” he said, his calm and firm tone betrayed by the terror in his eyes. He pulled me away, and when I stumbled, he pushed me out the door. “Tessa, run!”
We were in public, but Logan had used my real name. We no longer needed our aliases.
I glanced behind me. “Where’s Jillian?” The doors burst open and our sister shot outside, her blond hair flying behind her like a shiny cape.
Its engine running, our getaway car waited in the pickup lane with our dad holding the back door open. We ran and dove in. Dad jumped in the passenger seat, slamming his door closed as Mom stomped on the gas pedal and sped us away.
***
Night fell long before my mom pulled off the highway. She needed a break, the car needed gas, and we needed food. Weary, stiff and achy, faces hidden under plain baseball caps, we filed into a twenty-four-hour diner and evaluated the late-night patrons: a couple of truck-driver types sitting at the counter drinking coffee and watching CNN on the grainy TV hanging in the corner; a table of teenagers goofing around, shoveling forkfuls of syrup-soaked waffles into their mouths.
A few of the boys, and one of the truck drivers, noticed Jillian. They always did. But their glances were appreciative, not suspicious. We could stay.
Normally Jillian would have given the boys a sly smile in return. This time she tugged her cap lower and turned away.
At sixteen, I was only a year younger than my sister, but at four foot ten, I was almost a foot shorter. If the boys noticed anything about me at all, it was my lack of height. And that was fine with me.
When the gum-smacking hostess tried to lead us to a booth near the back, we asked for the table closest to the door. Always sit near the exit—that was another rule.
My parents took a newspaper from the counter and huddled over it while we waited for our food. Watching them closely, Jillian sipped ice water from a straw. Logan jotted musical notes on a napkin.
I slid my hands into the sleeves of my hoodie, poking my thumbs out of the holes I’d worn in the cuffs. “How did he find us this time?” We didn’t use credit cards. We didn’t use the internet. We didn’t mail letters or borrow books from the library. Yet Dennis Connelly still managed to find us.
“We don’t know, Tessa,” Mom said, looking up from the newspaper and wiping the graying hair from her eyes. “Your dad saw him, so we ran.”
Logan looked up from his napkin. “Where do we go now?”
“How about Louisiana?” Jillian said. “Or—ooh—California?”
“We’re thinking Illinois this time,” Dad said. “It’ll work for our cover story.”
She groaned. “But winter’s just a couple months away! Illinois in winter will be no better than Nebraska was last year.”
“Don’t argue, Jillian.” Mom rubbed her fingertips under her eyes. “Please. It’s been a long day.”
“You said our next place would be somewhere warm.” Jillian’s lip curled defiantly. “You promised.”
Mom wrung her hands on the table. “I know. I’m sorry. We’re just trying to keep everyone safe.” With a low rumble, the coffee mugs started to vibrate.
Every muscle in my body went rigid. Logan’s gaze darted to the kids in the back and the men at the counter. “Mom.”
The napkin dispenser tipped over, hitting the table with a sharp slap.
“Wendy.” My dad put his hand over hers, making a soft clink as their wedding rings touched. “Careful. You’re losing control.”
She gasped, and the mugs stopped rumbling. Keeping one hand on Mom’s, Dad glowered at Jillian. “We’re going to Illinois. That’s it. No more discussion.”
Jillian stared at the table and nodded. Mom set the napkin dispenser upright by hand, but only after she gave me a remorseful squeeze was I able to breathe again.
Our meals arrived, delivered by a bored waitress with lipstick on her teeth. No one ate much. This was our thirteenth run in eight years, but they never got easier. My father ate nothing. He scratched the stubble on his jaw, then rubbed his temples. Mom caressed his cheek. “Is your headache that bad, Andy?”
“I just need to sleep.” He took her hand again, giving it a gentle kiss. “We all do.”
We paid for our meal in cash. Logan pocketed his napkin. Later he would copy the new song into his composition book, which he always kept with him. Then we would burn the napkin. We could leave nothing personal behind.
***
Sometime in the middle of the night we stopped at a motel in a not-so-nice neighborhood where we could pay with cash and without answering questions. After reserving two adjoining rooms, we towed our only belongings, one getaway bag each, Logan’s sax and three heavy bags filled with cash, inside.
Not ready to separate for the night, Jillian, Logan and I gathered in our parents’ room. We spoke in whispers and kept most of the lights off. But even whispers were too loud for my dad tonight, so Mom eventually shooed us out. In their dark and silent room, she would rub his forehead until he fell asleep.
In our room, first thing I did was take a shower. I scrubbed myself clean, making the water hot, then hotter still, until the steam was thick as fog, thick enough to hide me from the world. I twisted the knob all the way up to wash my stomach. As I scrubbed the five jagged scars that ran from my sternum to my pelvis, I tried to ignore the memory of Dennis Connelly slicing me open eight years ago, with nothing more than his murderous glance.
When I was done, I turned off the water but stayed in the steam, breathing it in, filling my lungs with it, filling every cell with it, until it dissipated and the world came back into icy focus.
After putting on pajama bottoms and a T-shirt, I lugged my getaway bag back to the bedroom. Logan lay on one of the beds, eyes closed, listening to his iPod and waving his index fingers like he was conducting an orchestra. Even after this long day, his conservative haircut was perfectly combed.
My mom sat with Jillian on the other bed, an issue of Seventeen open between them, their spat at the diner completely forgotten, or at least ignored. I crawled in on the other side and pulled the sheet up to my chin, using its sharp bleachy scent to conceal the stench of stale cigarettes from the mattress.
Mom shifted over to me. “I think,” she said as she smoothed my hair, “this is the last time we’ll have to run. He’ll either give up, or he won’t be able to find us.”
I nodded, but she said that every time, her words generated only by wishful thinking. My mother was psychokinetic, not precognitive.
And Dennis Connelly would never stop hunting us. Not until he killed us.
A low moan came from the next room. Mom pushed herself off the bed. “Dad will be okay in a few days,” she assured us. “Once we find our new place.” She kissed us good-night, then, shoulders slumped, went to rub his forehead again.
Jillian slid under the covers next to me. Her getaway bag lay open on the floor, a jumble of clothes, cosmetics and well-worn ballet shoes spilling out. She flicked her fingers at the magazine, and it rose from the bed, then set itself on top of the pile. “I wish we could’ve stayed in Vermont a little longer. I kind of liked it there.”
“I thought Vermont was too cold for you,” Logan said, pulling his earbuds out. With a dismissive wave, he sent his iPod floating over to the nightstand.
She sighed. “This morning Kenny Fitch asked me to Homecoming. I said yes.”
“I wonder how long it’ll take him to realize he’ll have to find a new date,” I said.
It wouldn’t take Jillian long to find a new boyfriend. She would go on dates at our next location, too. Logan would probably start dating as well, now that he was in high school. They would make friends and go to dances and join clubs. I was the only one who couldn’t pretend our lives were normal.
But tonight, my siblings couldn’t pretend either. The door connecting to our parents’ room swung open a bit wider after Logan’s furtive glance. A tear slid down Jillian’s cheek, and when she saw me looking, she swiped it away and turned her back to me. She flicked one finger at the lamp, and the room turned dark.
I lay awake for a long time, trying to imagine a life free from secrets and lies and Dennis Connelly. A life free from flinching at every horn beeping outside and jumping at every footstep passing by our door.
Wait. The door. Was it locked?
Jillian had come in behind me. She’d locked it. She must have.
But I hadn’t seen her turn the bolt.
I whispered into the darkness. “Will one of you make sure the door is locked?”
Their only replies were the soft, even breaths of sleep.
Holding my breath for courage, I scrambled out of bed, scurried to the door. The bolt was locked. I tugged on the knob anyway, making sure. The door didn’t budge. I rushed into my parents’ room to check their door, too. We were all locked in.
Safe.
But not really. A locked door wouldn’t keep Dennis Connelly out.
I crawled back in bed and stared at the shadows until a cloud of exhaustion finally carried me away.
The nightmare came and quickly brought me back.
***
Early the next morning we waited silently on one of the beds while Dad searched for Dennis Connelly. He closed his eyes and sat motionless. 
My father was a remote viewer. All he had to do was touch someone, and from then on he could see through their eyes and hear through their ears, no matter where they were. Dennis Connelly was one of the very few who could block himself from my dad’s mobile eye. Dad could never see him, except when he was close. That was how we knew it was time to run. That was how we stayed alive.
Dad slowly raised his hands to rub his temples. Jillian and I shot each other worried glances. His headaches were getting worse.
Finally, he opened his eyes and blinked, his gaze unfocused.
“Where is he?” I asked.
“I can’t see him, which means he’s far away. We’re safe.”
I added a silent “for now” at the end of his sentence.
It was getting late, and staying in one place too long between locations made us all jumpy. Time to pack up. With a few waves of her hand, Jillian’s clothes stuffed themselves into her getaway bag. Logan directed his clothes to fold themselves up neatly. Our mom packed her things without even looking up from her crossword puzzle in the newspaper. A white washcloth scrubbed our fingerprints off every surface while our toiletry items floated out of the bathroom and tossed themselves into our getaway bags.
I collected my belongings and folded my clothes to put in my bag. “Relax, Babydoll,” my mom said. “I’ll do that for you.” She returned to her crossword puzzle as my pajama bottoms floated over to the bag.
I plucked them from the air. “I got it, Mom.” I might not be psychokinetic and move objects with my mind, or have remote vision and see through other people’s eyes, but I could pack my own stuff. I didn’t have much, anyway. A toothbrush, toothpaste and a hairbrush, jeans and hoodies and sneakers, and my jogging clothes. That was all I needed.
Before we left to spend another day on the road, Mom made two last calls on her cell phone. First, she called our school and gave the secretary the same story she used every time we fled. All that ever changed were the names she used.
“Hi, this is Susan Monroe, I must apologize for not calling to excuse Meredith, Maddie, and Michael from school yesterday. We had a death in the family and in my distress I simply forgot to call you. Thank you so much for your condolences. Actually, we’re not coming back. Burt finished writing his book, so it was about time to move on anyway. You know, there is something you could do. The kids are still too upset to contact their friends. Will you please spread the word and tell everyone we’ll be in touch soon?”
We wouldn’t be in touch soon, or ever.
Next, she called the owner of the house we had rented with the same excuse. She told him to keep the security deposit, which we’d paid in cash when we moved in last April. The next time he came to the house, he’d find no sign that we had ever lived there. Before picking my siblings and me up at school, my parents had destroyed everything we’d brought into that house. We’d left nothing personal behind.
This was our thirteenth “death in the family,” the thirteenth “book” my dad had written. A flimsy story, but if anyone cared enough to look into it, they wouldn’t be able to find us. No one would be able to find us—not our classmates, not our landlord, not our neighbors.
Only Dennis Connelly. He found us every time.
My dad was still recovering from his headache, so Mom got behind the wheel of our getaway car again. We zigzagged from state to state, town to city to sprawling farmland, flying down highways and crawling down small roads, sometimes doubling back to cover our tracks. I stared out at the landscape as it zoomed by, not really seeing it. I’d seen it all before. 
A few hours into our trip, we found a parking lot behind an abandoned building. We made sure there were no security cameras, then stuffed everything we could—our towels, sheets, and pillows from the motel, Jillian’s magazine, Logan’s napkin, our book bags—into a metal garbage can. We stood back as a match lit itself upon Mom’s silent command and floated into the can, burning everything to ashes.
In the next state, we stopped at a used car lot. My dad hopped out and paid the sticker price, in cash, for the first car he saw, a rusty maroon minivan. He followed us to our last stop, a junkyard. After ensuring there were no witnesses, Dad and I watched as Mom, Jillian and Logan pulled and twisted our old getaway car into tiny pieces of unidentifiable metal. 
Now the Monroe family no longer existed.
The Carson family existed, but no one knew us. We were shadows.

Book Links

Run to You Part Two:
Second Glance


Description
Part Two in the riveting romantic thriller about a family on the run from a deadly past, and a first love that will transcend secrets, lies and danger
Tessa Carson has unlocked her heart and her secrets to Tristan Walker - but Tristan has secrets of his own, and his might just mean the end of Tessa's family. Unaware, Tessa embraces falling in love and being herself for the first time since she was attacked when she was only eight years old. But secrets can't be run from forever, and sometimes love is too good to be true …

Book Links

Run to You Part Three:
Third Charm


Description
Part Three in the riveting romantic thriller about a family on the run from a deadly past, and a first love that will transcend secrets, lies and danger …
Betrayed, heartbroken and determined to save her family, Tessa Carson refuses to give in to Tristan Walker's pleas for forgiveness. But her own awakening psychic gift won't let her rest until she uncovers the truth about her family and her past. And Tristan is the only one who can help her sift through the secrets to find the truth hidden in all the lies …

Book Links

Guest Post by Clara Kensie
Many of the characters in my novel Run to You are psychic. Many of my favorite books, movies, and TV shows have psychic characters. But do I believe psychics are real? Do I believe it’s possible to see the future and the past, to communicate with spirits, to read minds, to move things without touching them?
I have to say yes. Well, maybe moving things with your mind is impossible (darn it), but I have to believe the rest is entirely possible. I have too much proof to think otherwise. I’ve had several amazing encounters with psychics in my life, one of the most accurate being a white-haired, blue-eyed man named Patrick.
My friend Lisa often has the neighborhood girls over for a psychic party. We congregate over wine and appetizers in the kitchen as one by one, we venture into the living room to meet with her psychic friend, Patrick. No crystal balls, Tarot cards, or tea leaves for him. He doesn’t need tools. He just… knows things. I’ve had three readings from him, and each time he’s said some amazingly accurate things.
But I didn’t think he was all that great at first. During our first encounter he stated that my husband had just gotten a raise. Well, I knew that wasn’t true. My husband could not have just gotten a raise, because he would have told me so.
When I went home after the party, I told my husband what the fake psychic had said. Hubby’s eyes grew wide, and he said, “But I did get a raise today. A small one. I just didn’t have a chance to tell you about it.”
Chills, right? Do you have goosebumps? Maybe this Patrick guy is legit after all.
The second time I met with Patrick, he talked more about my loved ones who have passed on. He sniffed the air and said, “Perfume. Something with an S. …Shalimar. Your grandmother, correct?” Of course he was correct! Shalimar was my maternal grandmother’s favorite perfume, and she wore it all the time.
Patrick also said that I had a constant companion at my side: a little shaggy dog with white fur. “He’s named after a drink,” he said. “He follows you around everywhere.” When I was a kid, I had a West Highland Terrier named Whiskey. I love the idea that my childhood pet is still with me today.
During our third meeting, Patrick stated that I was going to become an author. I hadn’t told him that I was writing a book - I hadn’t told anyone yet. I would not be here on this blog if that prediction hadn’t come true! He also said, “Hmm… something about west coast, east coast.” Well, you can interpret that any way you want, but I like to think that by west coast, he meant my literary agent, Laura Bradford, who is located in San Diego. And by east coast, he meant my editor, Natashya Wilson of Harlequin Teen, who is located in New York City.
Now, I do have to admit that many things Patrick said were incorrect, or did not come true. He was either far off the mark or spot-on accurate. The things he did know, the things he predicted that did come true… how amazing is that? It would be easy to be a skeptic, but that’s not very fun. I prefer to believe that psychics are real.

About the Author
Clara Kensie grew up near Chicago, reading every book she could find and using her diary to write stories about a girl with psychic powers who solved mysteries. She purposely did not hide her diary, hoping someone would read it and assume she was writing about herself. Since then, she’s swapped her diary for a computer and admits her characters are fictional, but otherwise she hasn’t changed one bit.
Today Clara is the author of romantic paranormal thrillers for young adults. Her first book, Run To You, a super-sized three-part serial from Harlequin Teen, releases February 2014. The sequel, also a super-sized three-part serial, will be released in June 2014.
Clara's favorite foods are guacamole and cookie dough. But not together. That would be gross.

Giveaway
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