New Release Blitz: Second Chance by S.B. Barnes (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title:  Second Chance

Series: Hudson Valley Murder Mysteries, Book Two

Author: S.B. Barnes

Publisher:  NineStar Press

Release Date: 02/04/2025

Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex

Pairing: Male/Male

Length: 94800

Genre: Contemporary, contemporary, gay, demiromantic, Hudson Valley, mystery, murder, campus, town/gown, professors, auto mechanic, closeted, coming out, family drama, student/teacher relation, mental health

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Description

Almost a year after the murder that shook Lobell College to its core, the start of a new academic year brings familiar faces back to the scene of the crime. Daniel Rosenbaum starts his first year as dean of the English department and takes a hands-on role in advising students. Lily Peterson and Gianna d’Angelo return to continue their undergrad studies after the death of the professor they were both in love with.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the Hudson, Tony d’Angelo is working hard. With his sister back in college, it’s all hands on deck to keep his dad’s auto shop running and take care of his infant niece. He still finds time to spend most nights with his boyfriend, Daniel, although he can’t seem to find the words to talk to his family about his relationship. Tony’s life is exactly what he’s always wanted it to be—so why does he feel like he’s struggling to be himself?

When a Lobell professor is once again found murdered, the idyll of the last months is turned on its head. Can Tony and Daniel stay out of harm’s way this time? Or will the fragile new peace they’ve found together be shattered?

Excerpt

Second Chance
S.B. Barnes © 2025
All Rights Reserved
Prologue

With a groan, Amelia Lawrence pushes away from her desk. The sun is setting outside, and since it’s late August, that means it’s about eight. The semester hasn’t even started yet.

It serves her right for taking this long to finish the syllabus; she should have gotten the jump on planning last weekend or maybe sometime in July. It just didn’t work out. For some reason, trying to make herself work on classes in the summers feels like stuffing a square peg in a round hole, with her brain being the square peg.

That’s the burnout talking, Amy, the analytical goblin living in the back of her mind tells her.

She ignores it.

She’s getting really good at that.

Amelia vaguely recalls a phase when she was better at this. She got more things done in the same amount of time. She planned her lessons, wrote her syllabi, and there was somehow still time left over to do her own research.

The sun sets over the trees at Wordstone Mansion, down by the river. Amelia can barely see it from the science building, but she can feel in an unsettled way how beautiful it would be to be there. There and not in her office, slaving away at things she should have been done with ages ago.

Her husband sent a text. It’s a video of their daughter, Francie, waving goodnight.

Guilt swamps Amelia. Her husband didn’t mean to make her feel this way, she’s sure. He gets it. He got a doctorate, too, before leaving academia for the calmer and more lucrative waters of IT consultancy. She still feels guilty.

They talk about it in oblique references sometimes, she and her husband. The burnout. The thing looming on the edges of her psyche she can barely put a name to because it means failure. The reason she’s already exhausted at the thought of teaching on Monday.

It’s not fair.

Amelia has always loved teaching.

She was one of the few PhD students in her cohort who did.

But here she is, thirty-five years old and not even a tenure-track position to show for it. Instead, she has to hope every year she’ll be somehow, magically, gifted something more permanent than a “good work this year, let’s talk about contract renewal.” Amelia barely dares to ask for a raise in those talks, only an inflation adjustment, because what does she have to offer? Her own research is stagnating, like so many zebrafish she has her students perform experiments on.

Psychology is so glamorous.

Amelia needs to learn to draw proper boundaries. Say no and mean no. Go to class with last year’s slides and no other preparation. Not be available to everyone and anyone. Take time for her own stupid zebrafish experiments. Do some writing, catch up on journals, stop living day to day.

Take her daughter to the Catskills when autumn hits the hillsides in the Hudson Valley and turns it into a glorious riot of color.

Amelia takes a deep breath.

“Just finish up tonight, Amy,” she tells herself. “Get it done and then be happier.”

She sits down at her computer again, willing herself to work through the end of the syllabus.

Immediately, an email notification distracts her. An unread message from Lily Peterson. A vague memory surfaces in Amelia’s brain, something to do with the mess last year after Professor Lombardi died so tragically. Lily was involved. Amy has a dim memory of an all-faculty email about it. She’d been seeing him, and when he died, she vanished from class suddenly and completely. Lily was on the roster of one of Amelia’s classes, a two hundred–level lecture course about…something. Neuroscience, probably. That’s the one everyone drops out of.

Amelia clicks on the email.

Apparently, Lily returned to Lobell, and she wants to know if she can still get credit for the class by retaking the final.

For a heartbeat, Amelia thinks about it. She’d have to dig into the mess of the file structure on her computer and figure out where she left the final exam. Then she’d have to schedule a time, remember how she graded the neuroscience final last fall, oversee one student taking the exam, figure out how to get the extremely late grade through the Registrar’s office, and—

No, her burnout gremlin tells her very firmly. Boundaries. Amelia’s setting boundaries this year. She won’t let it stay this bad.

Dear Lily, she writes. I’m sorry.

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Meet the Author

S. B. Barnes attended college in the Hudson Valley, studying English Language and Literature and Anthropology (although unlike her characters, her time there was not interrupted by crime-solving). She grew up split between the USA and Germany, attending university in both countries before eventually settling in Germany. Today, she works as a teacher and lives with her husband and two cats in an apartment with too little shelf space. Fiction has always been one of her greatest loves, as a reader, as a teacher, and as a writer. While S.B. has been writing for most of her life, this is her first foray into publishing her work.

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New Release Blitz: Diplomatic Liability by Rebecca Cohen (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title:  Diplomatic Liability

Series: Devlin Taylor, Earth Ambassador, Book Two

Author: Rebecca Cohen

Publisher:  NineStar Press

Release Date: 01/28/2025

Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex

Pairing: Male/Male

Length: 65900

Genre: Science Fiction, tentacle/tail sex, aliens, interspecies, scientist, ambassador, space travel

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Description

Devlin Taylor is Earth’s first ambassador, seeing the universe with his alien boyfriend Zal by his side. But nothing is straightforward when you’re the first human on board a spaceship. Devlin and Zal need to keep their relationship hidden for now, and many others on the ship would like to get the chance to explore a new species’ anatomy.

New planets, strange worlds, and exciting adventures await Devlin, but when an unknown species tries to board the Chroalian ship, something doesn’t add up, and Devlin is left wondering what is going on. Add in homesickness, jealousy, and cultural differences, and Devlin has a lot to learn. Good job Zal is by his side every step of the way.

Excerpt

Diplomatic Liability
Rebecca Cohen © 2025
All Rights Reserved

Devlin fastened the buttons of his suit jacket. “How do I look? Suitable for drinks with the captain of a starship?”

“As much as I love you in a suit, and probably even more out of one, I do have to ask if it’s really the right attire for your new position.” Zal was sitting up in bed, his bright orange hair sticking out at all angles and looking like he’d not long before engaged in several rounds of energetic sex. Which was unsurprising because that was exactly what had happened.

“The Ministry said the office dress code extended to my position as Earth Ambassador, but you might have a point that I should probably consider this the equivalent of your dress uniform.”

“I don’t have one of those yet. While I wait, the closest thing I have are my ambassadorial robes or my formalwear. And the latter didn’t survive the evening after our leaving gala. The ship’s quartermaster told me in no uncertain terms that he wasn’t a seamstress when I asked him to repair the side seam that somehow got split.”

Devlin chuckled at the memory. They had thought it would be their last night together, with Zal leaving Earth at the end of his visit. At that time, Devlin thought he had no way to leave with him. They had been very enthusiastic. “You did get a bit excited, but at least you have a chance of repairing your robe; my poor shirt ended up being put in the rag recycling box.”

“I’m sure I can find a way to make it up to you.” Zal patted the space next to him on the bed with the point of his tail. “I promise not to damage the one you’re wearing.”

“Nice try, Zal, but you should be getting ready. You’re supposed to be my liaison officer, and I’ve got a drinks reception in my honour to attend. I don’t want to be late.”

Zal muttered something Devlin’s translator either couldn’t or wouldn’t translate but got out of bed. “We’ve plenty of time yet. Let me grab a quick shower. I can hardly turn up reeking of sex with a human.”

“For all the crew would know, the smell could be a new cologne you picked up on Earth.”

Zal laughed and stole a quick kiss as he headed to the bathroom, naked. “Eau d’Devlin does have a nice ring to it, but the last thing I want is someone else liking your scent. That, and your fuzziness, are all mine.”

Devlin loved the pattern of scales that ran over Zal’s skin and his tail which now, like often was the case, writhed as if it had a mind of its own. Zal was hairless and, because of it, had a fascination with Devlin’s body hair from the first time he’d got his hands on his hairy chest.

Staring around his new cabin, Devlin still couldn’t believe he was here. There was no mistaking that the vista outside his porthole was space. He was the first Earth Ambassador and would be travelling on this ship for the equivalent of ten Earth months before reaching Zal’s home world, Chroalia. The idea of all the fascinating people he would meet was the icing on the cake of being with Zal. They had thought it impossible, both having given up on finding their happy ever after, yet here they were.

A ping came from a panel on the wall by his bed. He wandered over to it. It pinged again, and he saw written in green font: incoming communication.

For want of a better option, he tapped the writing and when nothing happened there was a third ping. “Hello?” he tried.

The screen came to life and a face appeared. They had bright pink skin and a neatly trimmed purple beard but not a wisp of hair on their head, which made their ears look bigger than they were, especially with their elaborate earrings. “Ambassador Taylor?”

“Yes?”

“I am Dr Golic. You’re supposed to report to Medbay once you’ve settled into your cabin. Where is Lieutenant Catenmir? He was aware of the requirement.”

He had a vague recollection that he would have a medical once he came aboard, but Zal hadn’t said when. Zal was currently in his shower, removing the evidence of how they’d christened his new bed, and since no one was meant to know they were in a relationship yet, it might give the game away. “Er…”

“According to the location sensors he is in your cabin.”

“He’s just using the bathroom. Once he’s done, I’ll have him bring me to Medbay.”

“Good.” Dr Golic gave him a strange look, which Devlin couldn’t decipher. He suspected he was going to get quite a few of those in the first few weeks aboard ship. “Come immediately. That way I can take your base levels before they are contaminated from anything you might imbibe, as I understand you’ve a welcome reception to attend.”

“I’ll trot right along.”

“Walking will be acceptable, Mr Taylor. There is no need to engage in Earth equine activities.”

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Meet the Author

Rebecca Cohen spends her days dreaming of living in a Tudor manor house, or a Georgian mansion. Alas, the closest she comes to this is through her characters in her historical romance novels. She also dreams of intergalactic adventures and fantasy realms, but because she’s not yet got her space or dimensional travel plans finalised, she lives happily in leafy Hertfordshire, England, with her husband and young son. She can often be found with a pen in one hand and sloe gin with lemon tonic in the other.

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New Release Blitz: Skate City by Alex Winters (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title:  Skate City

Series: Good Sports, Book Three

Author: Alex Winters

Publisher:  NineStar Press

Release Date: 01/21/2025

Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex

Pairing: Female/Female

Length: 22100

Genre: Contemporary, Romance, contemporary, lesbian, sports, skate shop, skateboarder

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Description

All Zoe Chamberlain wanted was to buy a skateboard for her one of her perpetually late employees. Was that so hard? It shouldn’t have been, yet the minute Zoe walks into Skate City to finish up her shopping, the fiery young redhead behind the counter captures her eye, and her heart, from their first interaction. Sarcastic, funny, witty, and bold, the counter girl—Astrid—makes quick work of Zoe’s resolve and charms her with every fiery retort and sly, leering glance. It’s not quite love at first sight, more like…love at first fight! And Zoe is here for every sexy minute of it!

Astrid Woolf never imagined herself falling for the curvy MILF who walked into Skate City that day, but Zoe was unlike any woman she’d ever met before, and she was desperate to see her again. So, she improvises a lot and fibs a little, convincing Zoe that not only are the boards she’s looking at buy one get one free, but that a complimentary skateboard lesson comes with every purchase. But it’s a limited time offer: one night only! Zoe hesitantly but inevitably agrees and, after work the following night, Astrid meets her behind the bakery Zoe owns to teach her how to skate. Only, Zoe has other plans in mind, and before the night is over, the teacher will become the student, learning just what it means to please another woman, and be pleased in return. It’s a night neither woman will ever forget, but one they’ll want to revisit, time and time again…

Excerpt

Skate City
Alex Winters © 2025
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One

ZOE

“Is this…for you?”

Zoe Chamberlain registered the dramatic look on the young cashier’s face and blanched. Miserably. She’d been hesitant about walking into the too-cool-for-school skate shop in the first place, and this comely cashier had just confirmed Zoe’s suspicions that she was, in fact, thoroughly and irretrievably uncool.

“Obviously not, but so what if it was?”

The counter girl, fresh-faced and freckled with charming auburn pigtails and a creamy soft lip gloss Zoe ached to taste, gave her another cool once-over, like maybe she’d wandered into the wrong nightclub and needed to be escorted out.

Pronto.

Zoe half-expected a bouncer to show up at any moment. “Nothing, it’s just…do you need to check with the nursing home first? They might not approve of such a rash purchase.”

Zoe rolled her eyes and glanced around the empty skate shop, a bare bones affair that was so cavalier about its warehouse-inspired aesthetic it just had to be good. In the background, lowkey punk music completed the grunge vibe. “Is this how you treat all your customers?” she teased, knowing the sassy clerk was just giving her the business—and wishing she didn’t enjoy it so very much.

The wispy redhead, tall and gangly in her baby-doll-blue Skate City T-shirt with the pink cuffs and collar, met her gaze with cool green eyes, as languid as they were searching. “Not really, but it’s not every day a MILF walks in to buy a cherry-red skateboard, so I’m at a slight disadvantage at the moment.”

“I’m not a mother!” Zoe huffed, hoping the blush she felt dampening her panties didn’t extend all the way to her cheeks. “And? Gross?”

The counter girl blushed as well but met Zoe’s eyes with the indignance of a young woman clearly confident in who she was. And, apparently, what she wanted. “Maybe not, but…”

Zoe waved her hands, as nervously as she did demonstratively. She wasn’t used to such flagrant come-ons. At least, not since she’d graduated high school a good dozen years earlier. She ran a bakery for Pete’s sake. A nice, wholesome, independently owned bakery specializing in muffins and cupcakes, at that. This—this flagrant sexiness wasn’t a part of her daily routine, though Zoe couldn’t actually say she wasn’t into it. Not that she’d let the sexy skater girl behind the counter know, of course.

“Listen, let’s start over,” Zoe cautioned, feeling as if she’d just stepped into some kind of red-light district, as yet unknown to her despite living in tiny Sunset, South Carolina her entire life. She extended a cautious hand, somehow sensing that if the saucy cashier took it, Zoe might never let it go.

The redhead brightened, standing a little taller and extending a pale hand with long fingers, many of them covered in cheap silver rings that shimmered in the warehouse’s extensive track lighting. “Good idea,” she chirped, squeezing Zoe’s hand so familiarly, so warmly, it was as if they’d known each other for years. “Welcome to Skate City! I’m Astrid. And you are?”

“Astrid?” Zoe gave her a little nose wrinkle for good measure, slithering her hand out of the cashier’s grip before she could detect Zoe’s sweaty palms and the sudden tremors that seemed to rack her entire body. “Is that a real name?”

Astrid jutted out her youthful chin as predictably as she did defiantly. “I mean, is Zoe?”

“How did I say my name?” This time, Zoe did in fact look around the industrial-size skate shop, as if someone with a cue card bearing her name might be standing just behind her.

Astrid leaned over the counter, small breasts pressing against the pale blue of her clingy T-shirt. Tapped Zoe’s nametag as familiarly as she did everything else. “What? You forgot you came straight from work?”

Zoe glanced down at herself, her faded black Sunset Sweets work shirt dusted with flour and, naturally, bearing her crooked nametag just above her left breast. She blushed anew, feeling flustered and seen in ways she hadn’t in, quite literally, years. She still wasn’t sure how she felt about that yet, but part of her wished she’d just gone to the generic skate shop on the Strip like she’d intended to. Those stores were usually so busy Zoe certainly wouldn’t have been able to receive the, uh, personal attention she was currently getting at this grungy skate shop just off the Strip.

“I guess I did,” she said quietly, her hip sagging against the countertop, littered with vibrant pastel and neon Skate City stickers. “I didn’t think this would be quite so hard.”

Astrid apparently took pity on her, inching around from the counter on predictably long legs, topped by a pair of frayed denim shorts so small they could have qualified as bikini bottoms. “Listen, sorry, you’re my first customer all day and I didn’t mean to come on quite so strong.”

Zoe wasn’t letting her off the hook so easily, endless legs and small, perky breasts notwithstanding. “I mean, MILF? I should ask to speak to your manager, young lady…”

Astrid beamed, tugging on her own nametag, hiding just beneath one of her auburn pigtails. “That’d be me too, so…”

“Aren’t you a little young to be a manager?”

Astrid smirked. “I’m not as young as I look.”

“And I’m not as old as I apparently look, so…”

Astrid leaned back against the counter, a hand on either side of her impossibly narrow waist, as if posing for, well, a skater girl catalog. “You act like I insulted you or something.”

“Did I say that? I just wanted to buy a skateboard, that’s all.”

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Meet the Author

Alex Winters is the pseudonym of a busy restaurant manager whose curious young staff would love nothing more than to follow him around the dining room reading his steamiest, most romantic passages aloud! When not writing romantic holiday stories of various heat levels, he enjoys long walks with his wife, scary movies, and smooth jazz. Visit him social media to see what stories are brewing up next!

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New Release Blitz: Fae-ry Tales by Mychael Black (Excerpt & Giveaway)

 

Author: Mychael Black

Cover Art: Bryan Keller

Genres: Action Adventure, Box Sets, Dark Fantasy, New Releases, Paranormal, Romance, Suspense

Themes: Elves, Dragons & Magical Creatures, Gay, Magic, Sorcery, and Witchcraft, Werewolves & Wolf Shifters

Series: Fae-ry Tales (#5)

Book Length: Box Set

Page Count: 174

Description

Firewalk With Me (Fae-ry Tales 1)
Kyle Stafford had anything a young man could want, until a single lapse in judgment changed everything. When Roen stumbles — quite literally — into a human sleeping right at his realm’s front door, his duty requires him to take the young man prisoner — back to House Vakeor.

Broken Spell (Fae-ry Tales 2)
Kirof, formerly of House Vakeor, has no idea why Wizard Micah Norwood was exiled, but it’s only a matter of time before the wizards or the Dark Fae find them. Desperately trying to keep one step ahead of their pursuers, Kirof finds himself caring far more for Micah than he should.

Glamour (Fae-ry Tales 3)
Prince Erilan always performs his duties with unflinching loyalty, but when he meets a Dark Fae scout, his sense of duty wars with his unholy desire for the enigmatic Fae. Lyren of House Kehru prefers covertly spying from the shadows to jumping into forays on the frontlines. What he doesn’t count on is the insanely gorgeous Light Fae who nearly takes his head off with a sword.

Dawning (Fae-ry Tales 4)
Arulas is a wolf shapeshifter who lives alone in a cabin deep in the woods. His life is perfect — until he finds the half-dead Dark Fae in the middle of nowhere. He nurses Ren back to health, only to find himself square in the middle of a damn war.

Excerpt

Fae-ry Tales
Mychael Black
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©2025 Mychael Black
Excerpt from Firewalk With Me

Fuck.

Kyle Stafford huddled under the tattered awning of a decrepit old general store. Rain pounded the dirt, turning it into a lovely mass of mud. Kyle sighed. He couldn’t stay here. He needed sleep — desperately. The city shelters were too far away, and, honestly, he had no desire to go to any of them. The shelters were always overcrowded and stank of piss, body odor, and only God knew what else. No, he needed somewhere out here, a cave maybe.

The mountains loomed in front and behind him. Surely, he could find a small nook to take refuge in, at least until the rain stopped. He shivered and pulled his battered coat tighter around him. The poor thing was threadbare, but it still kept him reasonably warm. His stomach growled, and he glanced over his shoulder at the abandoned store. Nothing perishable, but maybe a can or two of something? He looked around, then picked up a broken piece of wood and finished busting an already half-broken window. Then he cautiously climbed in, wood still in hand. No telling what else decided to check out the place.

The inside seemed to have weathered time far better than the exterior. Most of the shelves, while empty, still stood in place. Judging by the various product signs hanging on the walls, the store wasn’t quite as old as the outside appeared. Thankfully, no creatures — animal or human — jumped out at him. Kyle scanned the aisles, but the place had been picked bare. He exited the same way he entered and figured his best bet stood straight ahead.

By the time he slogged through the rain and muck, he swore even his bones were utterly drenched. He ignored the cold ache sweeping up from his waterlogged feet and made his way to what appeared to be a small cave opening. It wasn’t big, but it was dry. Wood in hand, he explored it to the back, satisfied nothing else called it home. It wasn’t warm by any means, and even starting a fire the primitive way would be futile with the rain soaking every bit of wood outside.

Kyle found a relatively smooth spot and lay down. Hunger gnawed at him, but he could deal with that later. Right now, he wanted nothing more than to sleep. On his side, pillowing his head on his arm, he closed his eyes, feeling safer than he had in a long time.

* * *

The ward protecting the portal hadn’t been touched. Roen inspected every inch of the shimmering haze, but found nothing amiss. He lifted his left hand and focused on the ward. The barrier vanished, leaving only the bare rock wall.

Roen unfastened a small pouch on his belt and sprinkled a tiny bit of dust into his palm. Then he blew on it, toward the wall. The stone shuddered and slid open slowly. Most people called them portals, but they were more like gateways. Granted, only magick could open one and dismantle the ward.

Roen retied the pouch and stepped into the dark of the outer cave. He immediately stumbled over something large. Within seconds, he had an arrow nocked and ready to fire. Eyes narrowing, he prodded the lump with one boot. The shape grumbled, unintelligible but definitely not an animal. Human then?

“Get up,” Roen ordered loud enough that his voice echoed in the small cave.

The man on the floor rolled and scooted backward until he hit the opposite wall. Alert but weary eyes stared at Roen from under a tangle of dark hair. Even in the darkness, the man’s eyes seemed to shine, as if lit from within.

“Who are you?” Roen asked. “What are you doing here?”

Purchase at Changeling Press

Meet the Author

Mychael Black has been writing professionally since 2005. He writes gay romance and erotica, but also het romance as Carys Seraphine and queer fantasy as Katherine Cook.

He’s an avid PC gamer with a love for RPGs, a horror fanatic, and a fantasy nut. He also has a weakness for anything relating to skulls, dogs, and Spongebob Squarepants.

Mychael lives on the Eastern Shore of the US with his family. He loves to hear from readers, be it via email or Facebook.

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New Release Blitz: The Prince by Mell Eight (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title:  The Prince

Series: Princes of Toval, Book Two

Author: Mell Eight

Publisher:  NineStar Press

Release Date: 01/14/2025

Heat Level: 1 – No Sex

Pairing: Male/Male

Length: 45800

Genre: Fantasy, MM Romance, nonexplicit, royalty, soldiers, politics, magic, magic-user, spies, coup

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Description

Captured as a prisoner of war, Prince Clament expects rough treatment. However, the extent of torment he endures is beyond even his expectations. When Prince Braxton frees him, Clament knows it’s only a farce meant to coerce him into finally spilling all his country’s secrets. Except, despite all his efforts—magical and common—Clament finds himself helplessly drawn to Braxton, wishing he could believe the tantalizing promises Braxton makes.

Unfortunately, the war continues to be fought. When the ongoing battle spills into Clament’s healing ward, resisting Braxton takes a backseat to simple survival. And yet, Clament knows he must make a terrible decision: believe in Braxton and betray his country, or betray Braxton and possibly get him killed. That is, assuming Clament is allowed to live long enough first.

Excerpt

The Prince
Mell Eight © 2025
All Rights Reserved

Prologue
Prince Clament of the country of Namin walked through the campsite on the shores of Lake Estaral only half listening to the mercenary captain bitching in his ear about how long they had been left to wait with dwindling supplies. He tried to keep the sneer twisting his lips in place, but all he really wanted was to roll his eyes and go back to his own campsite where he could get some sleep. He really, really didn’t want to be here.

The whole plot was a harebrained idea doomed to failure, but no one back in Namin had wanted to hear Clament’s opinion. Instead, they had assigned him to lead these sorry excuses for mercenaries. The plan was simple: the mercenaries would descend from the Spikehorn Mountains into the lush northern farmland in the foothills less than a day’s ride from here, where they would pillage the local villages into oblivion. The country of Toval, within whose borders those villages were located, would be forced to respond to protect their people by sending a large military contingent to repel the mercenaries. The military would be focused on rescuing the people and on rebuilding whatever was left of the villages. While Toval was distracted by what was happening in their north, Namin planned to invade in the south, using their forces to establish a new border where Namin could claim the land in those even lusher foothills.

There was no damned way such a moronic plan would work.

A glance around at the maybe two hundred mercenaries in the camp told Clament exactly how poorly the plan was going to go. Not a single mercenary had a properly maintained set of armor or weapons. Also, none of them would be particularly pleased with the idea of having to work together and split the spoils.

Assuming the mercenaries even agreed to participate—rather than just cutting their losses and heading out to find a better job—Clament knew what would actually happen. Should this ragtag group descend into Toval’s northern farmland, the result was very likely going to be the exact opposite of Namin’s grand, hairbrained plan: the mercenaries would attack and pillage the villages and Toval would respond. If Namin was lucky, Toval might send one full contingent of forces in response. A full contingent was probably overkill to defeat the mercenaries, if Clament was being honest. The rest of Toval’s large and extremely well-trained army would remain in full readiness, completely able to respond to an incursion in the south.

Clament would probably be killed by Toval’s forces in the battle, which, in hindsight, might explain why he was sent to lead the mercenary part of the plan. A convenient way of getting rid of him—having Toval remove his head. Clament would go from the hated bastard prince to a martyr killed by the great enemy of Toval, a dead figurehead used to unify the people of Namin under the king’s call to arms. He was much more useful to Namin dead than alive, for this part of their grand plan, at least.

Two soldiers held open the flaps of the command tent as Clament ducked the low awning and stepped inside. The complaining mercenary captain followed, his mouth still running with yet more complaints. One by one the rest of the captains entered, each of them scowling and trying to look more intimidating than the others. Clament tried to out sneer them, in hopes that acting haughty would convince them to obey his orders. Last of all came the captain wearing the red patch on his piecemeal leather armor, denoting he was in charge of the Blood Lions. He ducked into the tent and looked up, immediately catching Clament’s eyes.

Prince Fenwick of Toval, Commander of His Majesty’s Royal Forces. Clament recognized him immediately.

And then all hell broke loose.

*

Clament hadn’t bothered counting the days since Toval had captured him; since Fenwick’s pet chef had interfered and ruined the doomed-to-failure plot before it could even be implemented. Clament’s hands were tied to the pommel of his horse’s saddle, and his legs tied to the stirrups. One of the soldiers guarding him held the reins. Clament couldn’t go anywhere. He couldn’t even lift his hands to wipe away the deluge of rain dripping down his face.

They finally reached a fork in the road. The majority of the royal forces went left, while Clament and his cadre of guards took the righthand path. Not too much later, they arrived at a gate set into a thick wall. The momentary reprieve from the rain as they went through the long tunnel under the wall was the only good thing he could remember happening in a very long time. Unfortunately, they emerged into a courtyard soon after and the rain resumed.

The guards cut him free and hauled him down from the saddle, then they frog-marched him across the courtyard, two guards, one on each side, gripping Clament’s arms. They walked for quite a few minutes, following the outside wall of what Clament wanted to assume was the palace of Etoval, the capital city of Toval and the royal seat, until they reached a nondescript door with a very heavy-looking lock. One of the guards banged on the door. Even over the dripping, pounding rain, the heavy thunk of a bar being removed, the rattle of a thick chain, and then the thud as the lock was turned was perfectly audible. Someone pushed the door open from the inside and his guards marched Clament into the building.

Clament dripped onto the gray flagstones for a few long seconds, taking in the narrow room. A sturdy chair sat off to one side, and the room was barely big enough for it. A second door with an equally large lock was across from the chair, and the guard who had opened the first door pounded on it.

Another thunk, rattle, thud, and the second door swung open, revealing yet another guard and a long flight of stairs heading downward. A third door that must be the access route directly from within the palace was to the left, but Clament’s two guards took him down the stairs, which had two landings as it switched directions on the descent.

At the bottom was a dimly lit hallway of more gray flagstone floors. Six barred doors dotted the walls, three on each side. The guards took him to the farthest door on the right, pushing him inside and slamming the door shut behind him.

Clament was, thankfully, finally left alone. He reveled in the peace of it—of not being tied to another person when he wasn’t tied to a horse—and took stock of his surroundings. The place wasn’t cold, which was a small mercy since he left behind a puddle as he walked forward. A hard, wooden bedframe with a thin mattress and thinner blanket was set to the left, a hole in the floor in the back right corner was his latrine, and that was it. No window, no chairs, no obvious light fixtures. Nothing except the blanket and bed and pit.

Footsteps echoed down the hall. Clament turned to face the door, and a moment later, a new face appeared. Light brown hair and intense hazel eyes set in a face that would have been handsome if not for the stern scowl currently twisting his full lips—Prince Braxton of Toval, officially a captain in the palace guard, but Clament knew better. Braxton was the kingdom’s spymaster and chief of all that happened in the dark and dank corners of the world. If he was here, it meant the king thought Clament had useful information, no doubt for their endless fight with Namin.

“You know who I am,” Braxton began, his voice powerful but not too deep. He didn’t mince words or try to pretend to be something he wasn’t, or to be after something else. Clament respected that, even if it was in regard to the person on the other side of a barred and locked door. “You know what I want. Are you ready to talk?”

Clament only glared in response. He might not be liked by his family, but he wasn’t a traitor. Braxton was going to have to wait a very long time to get any answers out of him.

“Very well,” Braxton continued, shrugging. “I’ll leave you to your thoughts for now, but I will return later. Perhaps you’ll be in a better mood for talking then.”

He left and blissful silence returned, but only momentarily. Enough time had passed for Braxton to have left the dungeon when Clament heard footsteps again. Two of the guards who had been with Braxton walked into view outside the bars, both of them grinning, their eyes shining with glee.

“You heard our dear prince,” one of the guards said, his tone singsong with happiness. He pulled out a key ring and unlocked the cell door, pushing it open and stepping inside before relocking the door behind him. “He wants you to talk. We’re here to convince you.” The smile grew and the guard clenched his fingers into a fist hard enough to make the knuckles crack.

Clament closed his eyes and let out a heavy sigh. So much for Braxton’s veneer of civilization. Well, it wasn’t like Clament hadn’t been beaten before, and at least this guard didn’t know all his weak points like his so-called brother. Still, Clament braced himself for what was to come. The best defense was offense, so he reopened his eyes and glared, hoping this wouldn’t be too bad.

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NineStar Press | Books2Read

Meet the Author

When Mell Eight was in high school, she discovered dragons. Beautiful, wondrous creatures that took her on epic adventures both to faraway lands and on journeys of the heart. Mell wanted to create dragons of her own, so she put pen to paper. Mell Eight is now known for her own soaring dragons, as well as for other wonderful characters dancing across the pages of her books. While she mostly writes paranormal or fantasy stories, she has been seen exploring the real world once or twice.

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Book Blitz: Wild Ones by Zoey Daniels (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title: Wild Ones

Author: Zoey Daniels

Cover Art: Bryan Keller

Genres: Action Adventure, Box Sets, Futuristic, New Releases, Paranormal, Romance, Sci-Fi , Suspense, Wildest West

Themes: Age Gap (Older Woman), Alien Encounters, Bisexual, Multisexual, & Pansexual, Multiple Partners, Shapeshifters, Werewolves & Wolf Shifters

Series: Wild Ones (#5)

Book Length: Box Set

Page Count: 167

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Synopsis

Four women choose to homestead on lunar colony Leman in search of new beginnings. They’re in for a wild ride!

A pair of shapeshifting wolves have adopted Lainey’s new farm on the agri-moon Leman as their home. Though wild, winning their favor is considered lucky. They have a sense of sexuality that other women would pay anything to taste. And they’ve chosen her. Lainey’s not crying wolf. She’s crying “God, yes, harder!”

Bold, independent, and free, Callie’s worked hard to become the best courier on Leman. And she’s not the only one to notice. Two stallions shadow her every move. They may be young, but these native shapeshifters are as adventurous as Callie, and they’re set on proving they’re old enough to handle her.

Some folks are victims. Some are survivors. Delia’s not sure she believes the stories about Leman’s beasts, animals who can take on man shape. But they believe in her — and in what they’ve scented waiting under the armor she’s plated around her heart. These two great cats plan to show their human cougar how much they appreciate what they see.

Rosemary, unofficial guardian of Leman, has waited — patiently, and not so patiently — in fierce hope of one day drawing the attention of the agri-moon’s strange and wonderful animals who become men. But after her fortieth birthday, she’s begun to doubt her dreams, and let her hopes drift away. Until, that is, she finds herself receiving an unexpected visitor. The first, in fact, of three…

Publisher’s Note: This box setcontains the previously released novellas Prowl, Wild Horses, Purr, and Who? in the Wild Ones series.

Excerpt

Wild Ones (Box Set)
Zoey Daniels
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©2025 Zoey Daniels
Excerpt from Prowl

Lainey closed her eyes and lifted her face toward the sun. Had any sun on any world ever felt so fine? She thought not. Leman’s sun caressed her skin as gently as an accomplished lover, but it was no weakling. Its rays burnished the world brown, carried forward over fields of gold in heated breaths of wind that reminded her of hot kisses traced down her body.

A fine world to live in. She’d like it here.

“It hits us all that way at first,” Rosemary remarked. Lainey could hear the smile in her voice. “Don’t ever get used to it. Then it’ll lose most of its charm.”

Lainey let her eyes drift open and let out a soft breath of satiated desires. She gazed across the gold and brown of the fields and unpaved roads, the green tops of trees already afire with the reds and golds of autumn. It was only natural to take her hat off and rest it not over her heart, but her hip, as a woman of her professional background might in a sign of respect.

“I don’t ever plan to take this for granted,” she said. She wished she could strip naked in the sensual warmth of this world and stretch herself out in the grass to let it saturate her through and through.

Rosemary chuckled; she had an infectious laugh and she was around the same age as Lainey. They’d probably led the same kinds of lives before they came here, to the world no man wanted and every woman dreamed of. Any woman with any sense, that was.

“Good,” Rosemary said. “Let me check once more to be sure…” Proprietress of the small mercantile that was the only place one could buy supplies without traveling a few hundred kilometers in any direction — not that that bothered Lainey — she indicated they should get back to business by removing the stylus she’d tucked behind her ear and pointing it at her digital slate.

Lainey knew as well as Rosemary what she’d need and wouldn’t need and that she hadn’t forgotten a single thing on that list, but no harm in letting the woman do her job. She stood by with her hat at her hip, half-daydreaming through the double-check. “I have gold, not credits,” she reminded Rosemary.

“Good. Gold spends; credits are almost worthless out here.” Rosemary patted the side of the wagon. “Right, then. I’ll go total up your bill.”

Politeness, that. Lainey watched Rosemary retreat inside the mercantile and approved of it. She’d have the bill already totted up on her tablet, of course, but it would have been bad manners indeed to stand by and watch a lady retrieve her money from its hiding place. Even if she likely already knew where that’d be after packing the sturdy farm wagon with everything from seeds to vegetable growth supplements to pitchforks and a tin washtub big enough for Lainey to stretch out in.

Homesteading on a new frontier or not, Lainey was stubborn enough and fond enough of her few creature comforts that she’d no plans to give up any time soon.

Though Lainey liked Rosemary just fine, she was glad enough to have the peace and quiet back to herself for a moment. She extended her arms wide, as if she’d embrace the heat from the sun, and let the golden light wash down over her, better than rain.

A slight scuffing sound broke the silence that’d fallen. Not much of a noise, but Lainey’s ears were sharp and some training lasted throughout a lifetime. She could tell even without looking that whoever had come visiting wasn’t Rosemary, nor any of the other women settlers she had a nodding acquaintance with.

No, this was a Man. Lainey could smell the musk, wilder than most of the polished rich boys she’d dealt with once as mistress and madam in turn, before selling off all that hubris and heading out here to make her way, by her choice.

Not just a man, Lainey’s senses told her. A strong man, one who walked with the confidence of a fellow who had no fear of anything, but who stopped far enough away to show her he meant no harm. And — she cocked her head, intrigued — another man, not far behind him.

She wasn’t afraid of them; they’d given her no reason. Lainey let her eyes drift open and got her first look at this pair from between the sweeping curtain of her eyelashes.

Oh my. Lainey’s skin heated from more than the baking warmth of the planet. These were a fine pair to look at, weren’t they? One tall and rangy, dark hair clinging to his forehead, cheeks and nape; the other slighter and fairer and springier of step. Both had smiles broad and white enough to rival the sun and the moons, and stood close enough to reach out and touch if she wanted. Teasing her, just a little, by being that close and no closer.

There were no men this far West, not that Lainey knew of. Some fishermen still lived along the coastlines, but not one man who’d come inland to ranch or farm had managed to stay. Bully boys, most of those, or so she’d heard, and it seemed like the land had taken objection to them. Might be a story made up to scare folks, might not be, but for whatever reason, the men had left these prime ranch lands. Left them for women fool enough to try to tame them. And try they had. Leman liked women. Liked them fine. Her sun and moons were kind to the ladies, and they treated her as best as they could in return.

But one look at this pair and Lainey knew down in her gut that while this planet might be kind to the female strangers who’d colonized her… it loved these men without rhyme or reason. They were the sun and moons, somehow.

Lainey couldn’t help smiling at that pair. Five seconds’ worth of acquaintance or not, they brought it out in her. “Now if you aren’t a treat,” she said. “Something I can help you with?”

The men glanced at one another, communicating silently in the way long-time friends sometimes developed. A quirk of the eyebrow and the tilt of a wicked grin spoke volumes.

Laughing, the taller jostled the smaller aside. He had a strange laugh, one that made Lainey sit up and take notice. Something between a rumble and a ruff, ruff, ruff. Not unpleasant to hear, Lord no. Quite the contrary. Gave her a pleasant sensation of warmth in her belly not unlike the sun on her skin. It belonged here, same as they did even if they weren’t supposed to.

Curiouser and curiouser.

“Need help?” the taller asked, gesturing toward Lainey’s loaded wagon. “I Asher. No. I… am, yes, I am Asher. He is Russ. You have long road back to cabin. We help you.”

Lainey’s eyebrows lifted, despite her years of training. Not supposed to be here and didn’t speak the language? Call her intrigued, yes ma’am.

And… they knew where she lived. Lainey figured she ought to be more alarmed about that, but so help her, she couldn’t be. She didn’t believe these two would hurt her, but if they tried? She had a rifle in the wagon, and she knew how to use it.

The taller took one half-step closer, his shorter companion jostling him in play as he followed. “Help with more than this,” the tall man murmured. He reached to touch her face, taking clear care not to startle her but not about to be denied. His fingertips were rough, as tough as paw pads, but his touch was gentle. Almost worshipful.

Lainey’s lips parted. So help her if she didn’t want to promise them anything for the pleasure of their company. It made her laugh. The shoe was on the other foot now, wasn’t it? Good thing for her she liked the fit of it just fine.

Purchase at Changeling Press LLC

Meet the Author

Zoey Daniels likes strong women, equally strong men, and faraway worlds filled with sci-fi cowboys and alpha shapeshifters. She also loves older woman/younger men. Yum, yum. Come enjoy!

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New Release Blitz: Brothers of the Sea by Larry Mellman (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title:  Brothers of the Sea

Series: The Ballot Boy, Book Three

Author: Larry Mellman

Publisher:  NineStar Press

Release Date: 01/07/2025

Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex

Pairing: Male/Male

Length: 121100

Genre: Historical, historical fiction/14th century Venice, lit/genre fiction, gay, May-December romance, age difference, political rulers, political intrigue and plotting, existential threat, apocalyptic wartime, military leaders, naval action and adventure, Venetian warships, lagoon warfare, protection of waterways and foreign trade routes, family drama, old friends, sex in a church

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Description

Running a gauntlet of raging seas and enemy warships, Nico and Admiral Vettor Pisani race to Constantinople to rescue Venice from Byzantine treachery.

A triple alliance of powerful princes plans to besiege Venice by sea and land and seize the reins of St. Mark’s legendary four horses. With Nico as his right hand, Pisani leads a war fleet to secure the island of Tenedos in the Aegean, fulcrum of the impending war. Amid the mortal dangers of the journey, Nico and Pisani wrestle with their overpowering physical and psychic attraction, knowing that the choices they make will change their lives irrevocably.

Nico first met Pisani and fell under his spell at the age of fourteen. In the decade since, despite great loves and failed loves, Nico never lost his starry-eyed admiration for Venice’s greatest admiral. Pisani, thirty years older and wiser, hesitates to risk everything for a young man’s love until Nico throws open new doors, and their age difference evaporates in the heat of battle.

The enemy triple alliance—Padua, Genoa, and Hungary—outnumbers Venice five to one. Mounted armies blockade the mainland shores and rivers while the enemy fleet breaches the lagoon. Venice can only win on water with Pisani leading her. When he is forced to fight a battle he knows he cannot win, Pisani’s disastrous defeat lands him in prison. Locked behind bars while Venice hovers on the brink of annihilation, Nico and Pisani sketch a bold plan to save the Republic.

Excerpt

Brothers of the Sea
Larry Mellman © 2025
All Rights Reserved

Venice, March 9, 1377

A Surprise Visit

I always know when he’s following me. He has followed me all my life like a vengeful shadow. My father—Marcantonio Gradenigo, also known as Brother Bernardo of the Hermits—ranks high in the hierarchy of demons roving this earth wreaking havoc. He dogs me and won’t take “no” for an answer, determined to make me his evangelist. The second time I killed Ruggiero, my half-brother, I severed his head to make sure he was dead and could never return. Nothing less will do for my father. He always appears when I least suspect him and leaves me scrambling to counterattack. He springs out of nowhere, threatens, laments, cajoles, using every weapon in his arsenal to win me to his side. I always say no and somehow escape. He takes perverse pleasure in trying to break me. Each failure gives him another opportunity. He will eventually kill me, I have no doubt, but at his discretion. To my eternal ignominy, I have failed thus far to kill him. Today may be the day. Hope springs eternal.

His presence feels clammy and close as I slip through the labyrinthine back lanes of St. Nicholas of the Beggars parish. I can do it with my eyes closed; he can’t. He makes mistakes. If I lose him, I can’t kill him, but at least I won’t have to listen to him.

He’s complicated. To the world, my father died during the failed rebellion he led in Crete. He faked his own death to escape hanging and quartering between the Columns of Doom. Everyone, even my mother, believed him dead. Today, we know better. He snuck into Padua, presented himself to the abbot of the hermits, and pleaded to be accepted as a postulant. The hermit monks wander and beg, living off alms. Brother Bernardo wanders and begs gullible nobles and princes to join his insurrection against the Republic of Venice, leaving a wake of destruction. A hefty price hangs on his head in Venice, but only the church has jurisdiction over the clergy. Since my father aims to destroy Venice, Lord Francesco Carrara of Padua protects him.

I don’t hear him; he’s too accomplished for that, but I smell him, a ravening boar. He comes to woo me, his handsome hero son, to seize the throne of Venice after he overthrows my doge. The doge eagerly anticipates snaring, hanging, and quartering him. Only I give my father the credit he deserves. He’s not indestructible, but thus far, he has eluded every attempt to snuff his candle out.

My father knows the ways of Venetians better than I do, but I know the streets. I have engraved maps of every inch of every alley, square, and bell tower in my flawless and all-encompassing memory. I never forget anything, a tremendous boon and a torturous curse.

Maybe I can trap him in the bell tower at St. Nicholas of the Beggars and kill him. He’s sixty years old to my twenty-three. He can’t give much of a chase, and I’m ferociously fit, so I take off. I’ve outrun him before. I tear across the bridge from Angelo Raffaele, taking the stairs three at a time and vaulting off the far side, but I can hear him behind me. It’s as if he knows where I’m going. I stupidly underestimated his stamina.

Maps of Venice’s twisted islets stitched up with bridges unreel in my brain. I plunge into blind alleys, whipping around corner after corner in a precise zigzag between close walls at sharp angles until I’m behind St. Nick’s church. I duck into the bell tower before he sees where I’ve gone.

The only light in the dark tower falls in thin beams through mullioned windows eighty feet overhead and lancet windows on the landings. Three flights of steep stairs ascend the brick walls of the central shaft, forty feet square, to the belfry where six bells wake the parish up and put them to bed. I bar the door behind me and climb to the top so I can watch him below.

Brother Bernardo sniffs the air at the edge of the canal behind the tower. He swivels toward the tower, and his eyes follow the masonry to the belfry, to the window where I stand watching him. As he reaches the tower, I lose sight of him, but I hear him. He rattles the barred door but can’t open it. His sword clangs from the scabbard under his hermit robes. He slips the blade between the door and the jamb and cleverly manages to slide the wooden bar until one end falls to the floor. The door creaks as it swings open. He pauses while his eyes adjust to the dark before tilting his head upward, following the sunbeams to the belfry. It’s pointless to hide in shadow; he knows I’m here. I step into the light and a twisted smile transfigures his face.

“You just can’t leave me alone, can you?” My voice echoes in the belfry.

“That’s no way to greet your loving father.”

“You weren’t so loving when you tried to kill me. What was I? Eight months? Ten?”

“A fantasy your mother fabricated to make you hate me. No, my darling son, the worst harm I did to you was to favor Ruggiero. I learned better too late, and I’ve already apologized profusely for that. I was wrong. I’m tired of apologizing.”

He starts up the stairs as I descend toward him from the belfry.

“I’ve heard your plea many times before,” I say. “My answer is no.”

He pauses, smiles, shakes his head wearily. “Alas, the world has confounded you. A monarch you abhor hops into bed with your nemesis at sea. An ally you hate falls, and false friends reveal themselves as enemies. Armageddon for the Serene Republic perhaps? I beg you, for your own sake, listen to me.”

“Not for my sake, for yours. Only ever for your own sake.”

My father flinches, as if I slapped him. “You haven’t learned a thing. Yes, I have done bad things, but always for a purpose and only out of passionate devotion to a cause. Noble Venice is as corrupt as a Syrian brothel. You know that close-up. All we need do is act decisively, and the craven weaklings of the world will kiss our feet and obey your every word. Whether they love you or hate you, they worship you. The hero of Trieste, of Curano, and of Buonconforte. The best bowman from Grado to Cavarzere four times running. A common bastard. A man of the people. They would offer you sacrifices were you bold enough to declare yourself a god.”

“No.”

He eases across the middle landing and pauses to study me a flight above him.

“You break my heart,” he says, “throwing away such a brilliant future. Donato would spit at your cowardice. He valued audacity and ambition above everything. He had no more loyalty to the doge or the Republic than I do, but he stupidly bet on their winning, choosing them with the same misguided fervor I chose Ruggiero over you. Sorry mistakes. Alas, my sons. Did you know Donato was your half-brother when he fucked you?”

“I found out after my other half-brother killed him.”

“Ruggiero was always impetuous. You never suspected?”

“Why should I? He came with the doge’s imprimatur.”

“As the ancients said, ‘When the cock grows hard, the mind grows soft.’”

“Despite being your son, Donato Venturi was a great man, and I loved him.”

“What did you love besides his body?”

“I loved everything about him.”

“Then you must love me. I am as much him as you, father to you both.”

He raises his arms in an embrace separated by a flight of stairs, gazing at me sadly.

“Your tongue befouls Donato’s name, Father.” Furious, I target his heart with my sword.

Unphased, he continues upward, toward me. To innocent eyes, he would appear to be weeping. His step is slow and measured.

“I hope you understand,” he says, “that I’m not being vindictive, but you are too dangerous a piece to remain on opposite side of the board.”

He lunges, and I dodge his sword, but he disarms me with an upward slash. I scramble for something to turn against him and find only words.

“You destroyed my mother. You ruined my life. You killed my friends and countrymen, and you want to kill my doge, who is a million times better than you. I spit on you.”

My spit lands in his eyes. He wipes them, advancing toward me.

“Better doesn’t matter,” he says. “Winning matters. Louis of Hungary, Carrara of Padua, Campofregoso of Genoa, even the idiot emperor of the east will kneel at your feet when we’re done. How can you say no to the only great man in this world who loves you for exactly what you are and not in spite of it?”

“Because I know you will fail, and whoever throws in with you will be hanged and quartered between the Columns of Doom for beggars to spit on. To his eternal shame, Bajamonte Tiepolo’s coup attempt failed, and he was a far greater man than you. They drove him out, razed his palace, and sowed the ground with salt. Marino Faliero, the doge himself, failed, and the Ten chopped off his head. No coup has ever overturned our Republic. What makes yours any different?”

“You.” The point of his sword presses against my heart. “The little people adore you, like they adore Admiral Pisani, another blind fool. You both betray the people’s love with your blind obedience to that sad wreck of a once-prosperous merchant who was elevated far above his station. After your exalted Andrea Contarini was blackmailed onto his throne, he wept he was not man enough for the job, and for once, he was right. I raised Ruggiero to seize the throne, but he was the wrong man for the job. He deserved the death you dealt him. Poor brave Donato, blinded by an incompetent doge’s bullshit, turned against me. But you can be invincible with me behind you.”

“Byzantine style, your dagger in my back?”

“You will learn to trust me.”

“I’d rather kill you. This world can’t hold us both.”

“Pompey and Caesar.”

“Me and you.”

“Good, because I am sick of your idiot refusals. Join me now and have everything or join your brothers in hell.”

He’s stronger than I remembered. Not a precision instrument, like Donato, but a paragon of brute force, fearsome but unsustainable, little consolation as he stabs and slices. Sweat blinds me. My head spins. He presses the blade of his sword across my throat.

“Last chance.”

His eyes lock on mine. They implore me, and for that instant, he is mine. I kick his balls so hard he collapses on the floor, and I leap into the tower’s empty shaft, grabbing the rope that swings twelve-hundred pounds of bronze bells. The rope rips my hands. I twist it around my wrists as I plummet downward. The headstock in the belfry creaks as it rotates. The clappers slam the bells like bombards. My toes graze the tower floor. I can’t free myself from the rope to escape. The headstock swings back and jerks me up toward belfry. My father lunges as I rise past him. I swing wide of him, pulled upward until my weight tips the headstock, dropping me to the tower floor.

He leaps down the stairs, stabbing at me, but he can get no purchase and fails to strike home. The brazen clangor of the bells batters our skulls like Vulcan’s hammer.

I hear voices. Roused by the bells, parishioners run toward the tower. Brother Bernardo is too canny to murder me with so many witnesses, each of them hating him as much as I do, more if that’s possible. As I am yanked upward again, he bolts out the door, past the priest, and disappears between the buildings, leaving me hanging.

*

I tell Serenissimo—Andrea Contarini, the sixtieth doge of Venice, my master—about my escape from Brother Bernardo. He furls his brow and shrinks deep into his gold robe, his features drooping like a Greek mask of tragedy. “That maniac wants you to be Brutus to my Caesar.”

“Exactly. He wants to publicly humiliate you before cutting off your head and feeding your body to feral pigs that have been starved for a week, and then mount your head to rot on a pike by the palace gate, at eye level, for all to pity and revile.”

Serenissimo’s eyes close. Despair becalms him, and he drifts in the current. “He’s willing to offer up his son like Abraham sacrificing Isaac.”

“Three sons that we know of, each sacrificed in his own way.”

“I witnessed his fake death, a bloody but transparent ruse accepted by the Senate, who wanted to believe it. I never believed it for an instant. A body with no head, stripped of everything, dragged behind a horse and hurled into the sea, could have been anybody. The spearhead of a bloody insurrection escaped. Thousands of our patriots were killed before we put it down. When I get my hands on him, and I will…” Serenissimo grips my forearm with his right hand, but his fingers are weak. “…I will crucify him upside down in front of Saint Mark’s until every Venetian has cursed and spat on him.”

“What the Romans did to Spartacus. He would be exalted in that. He’d take your judgment as affirmation of his greatness.”

“I know, I know…” Serenissimo grimaces, eyes closed, and just when I think he has dozed off, he clenches his fists and growls like the Serenissimo I love. “Fuck your father. Fuck the pope, fuck King Louis, fuck Francesco Carrara, fuck Domenico Campofregoso, fuck Handsome John, emperor of the east, fuck Charles the Fourth, emperor of the west. Fuck every scheming tyrant who dreams of bringing us down.”

“Don’t include my father with them. They have armies behind them. He has nothing. No peasants to milk, no slaves to arm, no bridges left behind him. He’s pathetic.”

“He’s dangerous,” Serenissimo says. “He kills without conscience.” He twiddles his thumbs assiduously. “From this moment forward, you will no longer leave this palace without armed guards until his head hangs on a pike in the square. Two men-at-arms minimum, wherever you go. Don’t look so horrified. They’ll grant you privacy. They can stand outside and wait. But they go everywhere you go and back again. Do you understand?”

I see red, as he knew I would. “Why only two? Why not a whole procession, like yours, priests and musicians and pages behind me while I go to the chancery archives or buy anchovies in Santa Margarita Square?”

“He knows your routines and inclinations, and he wants to kill you.”

“I’m twenty-three years old, not fourteen. And, oh yes, need I remind you he escaped from your prison with the aid of one of your guards? No, thank you, sire.”

Serenissimo flinches, opens his mouth, but holds his tongue.

“Your concern honors me, but when my father determines to kill me, only I can stop him. I take that into account every time I turn a corner.”

“He reduces you to a brawling wharf rat, flailing blindly. Your hatred warps your reason. He always manages to surprise and outwit you. He knows you too well for your own good.”

“You know me. He doesn’t. After he failed to murder infant me, he didn’t see me until my fourteenth year.”

“Not that you know of.”

“He knows nothing about me. I didn’t matter to him until I was selected ballot boy, and he thought he could use me. That changed the game. Yesterday, he made the stakes perfectly clear. But I know when he’s close, and I will kill him before he can kill me.”

“I’m not asking you,” Serenissimo says. “This is an order. No going out unguarded until he’s dead.”

He pauses outside the door before we join the Senate. He places his hand gently on my forearm as if for support. “I beg you, once again, from the bottom of my heart, to forgive me for stealing your youth and ruining your life.”

“You didn’t, Exalted Serenity. I was chosen at random. You couldn’t have done anything differently.”

A supplement of sixty wise men joins the Senate, extremely rich nobles with key appointments, critical players in the whirligig of committees that rule the Republic. We await the ambassadors from Padua, Hungary, and Genoa, joined by the Patriarch of Aquileia. No surprise there, but Admiral Vettor Pisani standing near the dais surprises me. I had no idea he would be here, and I’m embarrassed to discover that my boyish crush persists.

I first met Pisani in 1368. I was fourteen, an untutored fishmonger’s apprentice thrust into the palace by chance. He had to share his horse with me because I didn’t know how to ride. The rest of the noble delegation scorned me, but Pisani lifted me up with one arm and slung me behind him on the fateful day he delivered the bad news to Andrea Contarini that he had been elected doge. I overheard Pisani pleading with Contarini to accept the ducal crown after flatly refusing it. Pisani’s honesty and gentle demeanor, his adamant loyalty and patriotism, his noble brow, and downward-sloping eyes failed to convince Andrea Contarini. Only the threat of expropriation and exile did that. But they won my heart instantly and completely. Afterward, Pisani always treated me like another person, not a pest, and I learned much about the workings of the palace and the nobles from him. Vettor Pisani, Marino Vendramin, and Serenissimo were my magi, bearing gifts of wisdom, experience, and love. Whatever I am, they made me, not my father, still wreaking havoc in the guise of a hermit friar.

The ambassadors and the Patriarch of Aquileia exude belligerent defiance, each with an axe to grind. Allied, they constitute our worst nightmare. King Louis has money and a large land army. Padua commands the mainland rivers that feed us and would join any coalition pledged to our destruction. Genoa, most dangerous of all, has a navy to rival ours. If these allies attack us by land and sea, only a miracle can save us.

“Welcome, brothers,” Serenissimo says. “For we are all brothers in the one true Church of Rome. The Holy Father weeps for our grievances and begs us to behave like true Christians, to forgo warring amongst ourselves, and focus on our common enemy, Sultan Murad and his schemes for our fair lands.”

Serenissimo looks into the eyes of each ambassador and waits until each nods under threat of excommunication.

“We have no animus against any of you,” Serenissimo says. “We are bound by treaties. It would be a violation of law and a sacrilege for you to wage war against us. Please, let us resolve our grievances.”

Serenissimo finishes talking but continues staring them down, waiting to see who takes up his challenge. The silent Senate crackles like a brush fire Serenissimo lit. The four ambassadors look at one another for a sign. Carrara always waits for King Louis’s ambassador to speak first so he knows what to say. Given the hatred between Genoa and Venice, centuries old and well-known to everyone in the room, their ambassador also defers to Hungary lest he put both feet in his mouth. The Patriarch of Aquileia beams beatifically at King Louis’s ambassador, praying silently for gold and troops to keep Venice and the Turk from his farms and vineyards.

“We protest your occupation of Tenedos,” Hungary says. His jeweled brocade surcoat glitters in the sunlight through the high window. Handsome, polished, he could never be accused of willingly telling the truth, and he spreads deceit with Angevin refinement. “That is our concern.”

“You are mistaken,” Serenissimo says. “Emperor John Palaiologos the Fifth ceded Tenedos to us in exchange for returning his crown jewels which his mother pawned to Venice in 1354. They have never been redeemed, nor has he paid the twenty thousand ducats in reparations owed to us.”

The Genoese ambassador pushes forward. “Venice has no right to Tenedos.”

“Nor has Genoa,” Serenissimo says. “We, however, have the goodwill of Emperor John Palaiologos, and you do not.”

So angry he’s tongue-tied, the Genoese ambassador turns to Hungary for support.

“Be that as it may,” Hungary says, “none of us can willingly cede control of the Hellespont to Venice. Tenedos guards the entrance to the east with a fort you have recently reoutfitted. Against whom?”

Serenissimo irons every trace of rancor from his expression. “As the Holy Father so wisely reminded us, we have a common enemy, the Turk.”

Genoa explodes. “Damn your bullshit. We all know what you’re up to, and you might as well hear from us here and now. We will stop you once and for all.”

“Are you declaring war?”

“Of course not.” Hungary steps in front of the fuming Genoese ambassador. “We also revere the Holy Father. We only wish to make clear to Venice and Byzantium that Tenedos cannot be ceded to the highest bidder. All our interests must be served.”

With that, Genoa storms out and the others follow. The Senate devolves into a thousand arguments about whether we are at war or not and what to do about it. Serenissimo insists we are not at war. Yet. That unleashes more chaos until the meeting adjourns to allow the Doge’s Council to prepare an agenda for tomorrow morning.

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Meet the Author

Larry was born in Los Angeles and educated in literature, political science, and life at the University of California, Berkeley. He has worked as a printer and journalist in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, and St. Paul, Minnesota. Larry also worked with Andy Warhol and the Velvet Underground on the Exploding Plastic Inevitable in NY, Provincetown, Los Angeles, and San Francisco, was mentored by Dean Koontz, and shared a palazzo in Venice with international opera singers Erika Sunnegårdh and Mark Doss.”

While living in Venice for many years, Larry also taught English, led tours, and immersed himself in the history and art of the Venetian Republic. The Ballot Boy was born in Venice and completed in St. Paul.

Larry is a lifelong social activist and writer, a voracious reader and researcher, an opera fanatic, and devoted walker. He currently lives in St. Paul with his partner of twenty-one years and his ex-wife of twenty-five years. His son is a pianist devoted to blues and jazz.

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Book Blitz: Icarus Rising by Stephanie Burke & Areana Senoj (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title: Icarus Rising

Series: Motherboards & Magic (#2)

Author: Stephanie Burke & Areana Senoj

Publisher: Changeling Press LLC

Release Date: January 3, 2025

Heat Level: 4 – Lots of Sex

Length: 125 pages

Genre: Action Adventure, Futuristic, New Releases, Sci-Fi , Suspense

Themes: Alien Encounters, Bisexual, Multisexual, & Pansexual, Cyber-Punk, Gay, Hentai, Multiple Partners, Voyeurism and Exhibitionism

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Synopsis

Dark clouds are gathering. Icarus is the light at the end of the tunnel. And in his wake: Chaos.

Even though dark clouds gather in the distance, Asher, Vers, and Korya start to see the light at the end of the tunnel. That “Light” is named Icarus, and with him comes chaos. Even as the trio’s immediate problem is solved, more people are out to get them.

With danger at every turn, they can only depend on each other. Who is this mysterious alien called Icarus? Is he there to help protect them from the DPL or are they about to become victims of an insidious plot to end the planet? Either way, the friction is burning as they take one step closer to unraveling the mysteries of Asher’s parents’ death, and what the DPL is hiding.

Excerpt

Icarus Rising (Motherboards & Magic 2)
Stephanie Burke & Areana Senoj
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©2024 Stephanie Burke & Areana Senoj

TO THE INDIVIDUAL WITH THE GOLDEN BLOOD:

WHOEVER IS THE RH NULL,

I’VE BEEN LOOKING FOR YOU.

WE HAVE ISSUES TO DISCUSS THAT ARE PARAMOUNT TO THE PROTECTION OF THIS PLANET.

MEET ME AT THE SAHARA, LAS VEGAS

THE ALEXANDRIA SUITE (OF COURSE)

Even on second reading, the message made no sense to Korya. “Okay, what the fuck?”

Vers immediately pulled up Korya’s keyboard and began a trace. “You might want to get the boss,” Vers snapped, eyes intent as zis four-fingered hands flew over the keyboard. “I can’t find any trace, or even how they broke through your firewall.”

Korya, not needing to be told twice, spun on her pink fuzzy slippers and raced to the bathroom. “Asher!” she called out as she swung the door open and… froze.

Asher stood before her, absently toweling his waist-length hair, completely and utterly naked as the day he was born. His long hair flowed in inky waves down his back, the ends, dyed a lighter blue, drawing her attention for a moment before her gaze returned to his… other attributes. Oh, every creator god that ever existed, was that dick real?

But then her focus shifted back to his face and questioning look. His head tilted to the side, his cybernetic eye flared wide blue before a silver line overtook the red bar that had been there since he received news about his parents.

Her gaze wandered again, trailing over his golden skin, noting how soft and supple it looked, then back to his heart-shaped face — and down his neck. Even though he was breathing and swallowing normally, she didn’t notice his neck muscles constrict.

“Korya?” His voice box looked off, like it didn’t move naturally.

Her attention then traveled to his right arm, muscular and powerful looking as he rubbed at his scalp. His other hand let go of his fall of hair to rest on his hips as he adjusted his stance, then shifted his weight on his legs. And that was where the jaw-dropping confusion reasserted itself in Korya’s brain.

His left arm and hand were a strange, steel gray with what looked like swirls of silver. It covered his left arm from the shoulder down to his fingertips and both legs. The water flowed along the metal muscles that looked and moved as natural as flesh but strangely was not. Fuck. She’d forgotten that he had lost both of his legs and one arm…

But… how? If not for the color and the too graceful and smooth movements of his body, she would have totally forgotten the greater portion of his physiology was cybernetic.

But what beautiful technology, she decided as she tracked the shifting movements under the metallic skin of his thick thighs, down to his toes flexing on her shower mat, and then back up to his calves.

Her new boss was metal… well, mostly. Her gaze darted back up to his left shoulder where she would be damned if she could even see how the flesh attached to the metal. It was a smooth, seamless transition. Only the fact that the golden flesh tones of his skin faded into the stark steel-gray metal gave away his android leanings.

But damn, each muscle was defined and sculpted beautifully. Her gaze dropped to his hips where his perfect Adonis belt melded into metal in a beautiful flow that only the world’s best artists or poets could do it the most justice.

“There are veins!” she all but shouted as she moved closer, dropping to her knees and reaching out a tentative hand for the closest thigh.

She didn’t even notice his flinch, only that he stepped back a bit and stared down at her, his confused look turning incredulous as she got a closer look at what so fascinated her.

Truly, Asher would be flattered but he knew her fascination had nothing to do with him and everything to do with the hardware he sported.

“Can I help you?” he asked as she looked up at him, flushed bright red, and pulled her hand back.

“Uh… I mean… did this hurt?” Then she winced, thinking her previous question the most stupid that had ever fallen out of her mouth. “That was a dumb question. Of course, it hurt. How in the galaxy did they manage… I mean the seams are nonexistent. And you look so real…”

“Yeah, just like a real boy.” His tone was pissy at best, but he really didn’t care. There was a woman kneeling at his feet and reaching for parts of his body that only he and his many varied doctors… okay. He really didn’t care who was staring at him, any parts of him. His shame had died a hard death when they had to lift his dick for him to take a piss. The legs came first, after all, and over time they’d built the graphene skeleton for his left arm and replace the pulverized bones in his right. The legs were an easy build and began to look more and more human as the augmentation therapy advanced, but the arms… He remembered standing under the water of a hot shower for the first time in months when they finally got his legs attached and healed… and the complete humiliation of someone having to scrub between his butt cheeks after every time he took a shit when they finally allowed him solid foods. They were kind enough to do scar removal from the colostomy bag but by that time, he had been poked, prodded, scanned, examined, and touched on every part of his body, intimate or not. A female on her knees before him while he was naked was something he’d experienced several times before. Someone who was neither a medical nor scientific doctor touching him and without his consent, however…

“Did you need something, really, or is this just a thing you do? If it is, I’m sure Vers will be more amenable –”

“I’m sorry.” Korya moaned, slapping both hands over her eyes and lowering her head, giggling nervously.

No, not nervously — more like she was shocked by her actions. But not too shocked, because yes, that was her, parting some fingers to get another look at his junk… or… what was she staring at?

Purchase at Changeling Press LLC

Meet the Authors

Stephanie Burke

Stephanie is a USA Today Best Selling, multi published, multi award-winning author, Master Costumer, handicapped, wife and mother of two.

From sex-shifting, shape-shifting dragons to undersea worlds, sexually confused elemental Fey and homo-erotic mysteries, all the way to pastel-challenged urban sprites, Stephanie has done it all, and hopes to do more.

Stephanie is an orator on her favorite subjects of writing and world-building, a sometime teacher when you feed her enough tea and donuts, an anime nut, a costumer, and a frequent guest of various sci-fi and writing cons where she can be found leading panel discussions or researching varied legends and theories to improve her writing skills.

Stephanie is known for her love of the outrageous, strong female characters, believable worlds, male characters filled with depth, and multi-cultural stories that make the reader sit up and take notice.

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Areana Senoj

Areana Senoj is a multi-genre writer of erotic romance, paranormal, and sci-fi fantasy fiction. She’s been an actress, singer, dancer, educator, and, briefly, a stay-at-home “tennis, soccer, and band mom,” as well as a small business entrepreneur. Now she’s enjoying a new career living life as a full-time writer. She’s thrilled to join Changeling Press, where she’s teamed up with USA Today Best Selling Author Stephanie Burke, co-authoring Motherboards and Magic.

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New Release Blitz: Dear Presti: the Prince’s Pen Pal by Karrie Roman (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title:  Dear Presti: the Prince’s Pen Pal

Author: Karrie Roman

Publisher:  NineStar Press

Release Date: 12/31/2024

Heat Level: 1 – No Sex

Pairing: Male/Male

Length: 65686

Genre: Contemporary, humor, romance, royalty, blue collar, Australia, England, pen pals

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Description

Two men. One a royal born and bred, the other…not.

Prince James lives a life of stifling duty behind the walls of Buckingham Palace. He keeps his secrets and his stiff upper lip while dreaming of the day he will be free to find the man of his dreams. It’s a day he believes might never come. Until Prestidigitation Jones, an ethnobotany student from a small town in Australia, bursts into his life.

Prestidigitation marches to his own beat along with his small group of family and friends. He long ago accepted most people found him a little eccentric, but that won’t stop him from living on his own terms. Though happy enough, Presti dreams of finding a man who accepts him as he is and loves him unconditionally.

A fated meeting throws them together. An attraction blooms, and a friendship begins. Distance keeps them apart, but destiny brings them together.

Through a trail of exposed secrets, false starts and unfathomable tragedy, James and Presti’s feelings for each other grow stronger. Does James have the courage to fight for his dream? Can Presti face the public scrutiny of being the plus one of the spare to the throne?

Surely together, they can find their way to happiness/find their happily ever after.

Excerpt

Dear Presti: the Prince’s Pen Pal
Karrie Roman © 2024
All Rights Reserved

Some people have a unique gift bestowed on them at birth. Perhaps one they enjoy bragging about or showing off at parties, performing these oddities like show ponies. The only gift I possessed seemed to be attracting unwanted attention.

Unlike many in these strange days of reality TV and phone cameras, I preferred to remain unnoticed. Anonymous. Out of the spotlight. Thank you very much. My dearest friend, Astrid, delighted in pointing out how I drew attention as if I were a magnet. She blamed the fantastical way I’d entered the world. She claimed that it was simply not possible for me to remain in the background after I’d burst onto the world stage in such a public way at my unusual birth.

I adored my best friend even if she did have an annoying tendency to be correct.

Though I attempted to move wraith-like through my days, I tended to stand out like a rainbow on a grey day. That’s how my mother described me, at any rate.

I did not like this state of affairs one little bit.

On this overcast day, the rainbow hovered just out of sight as I attempted to wade through the press of bodies on the overcrowded bus. I tried to move silently, ghost-like. Moving this way and that, shifting to avoid others so I didn’t so much as graze anybody.

“I beg your pardon. Did you say you’re studying poo, young man?” The woman screeched as I pressed against her legs. She clacked her knitting needles at a prodigious rate of knots, quite heedless of how perilously close they were to poking the large man sitting next to her.

“No, ma’am. I said I’m trying to get through.” All eyes were fixed on our interaction, except those who chose sensibly to travel on public transport using earbuds. Those people remained happily serenaded by Bruce Springsteen or some other artist. Eminently sensible, I thought.

The octogenarian knitter nodded and returned to her stitches, leaving me to smile awkwardly at those around us.

Mentioning poo is not the best place to start my story—and I swear there will be no further scatological mentions—but I must begin this tale somewhere.

Much like life, when we are thrust kicking and screaming into this world, starting at the beginning is the best way to go. So it is at my birth that we must begin.

My fantastical birth, as previously hinted at, is quite the tale. It’s also where some might argue I peaked as a person and had my promised fifteen minutes of fame, all in one ignominious day. All this greatness and celebrity happened to me the day I was born, so I don’t remember it myself, yet I feel pretty scarred by it, nonetheless. For better or worse, I also own plenty of photos and articles to look back on so I can reminisce about my extraordinary birth. It’s not everyone who can claim a naked photo of themselves on just about every worldwide newspaper front page.

You see, my mother, the sweetest and kindest woman I’ve ever known, is also somewhat odd. At least my grandfather always described her as such. I prefer to think of her as one of those people that extraordinary things happen to. I think it was from her that I received my gift.

Her strict, conservative father, Grandpa Joe, never had any flavour to his life that I ever saw—no joy. He fancied himself the keeper of everyone’s soul. He lived miserably while trying to save us all from hellfire and brimstone. To my young eyes, he seemed melancholy. He may have loved stomping about his run-down home—asylum, as I liked to think of it—swearing at the television as if the people he cursed might take the trouble to answer. He apparently never found any happiness in it though. A smile from Grandpa Joe would be like stumbling across a blooming corpse flower.

When I think back on Grandpa Joe, sadness at his misery most often strikes me. More times than I could count, I tried to tell him not to worry about what everybody else was getting up to or with whom and instead enjoy what he had around him. Nine times out of ten, he bit my head off for my trouble. The one time out of ten he spread his arms wide and asked, “Enjoy what exactly?”

Poor Grandpa Joe, whether he loved the curmudgeon life or not, it loved him. Mum liked to say that being such a cranky old fart kept Joe alive until his early eighties when he rightfully should have died much sooner. Grandpa Joe loved his daily whiskies and packs of smokes. A courageous doctor once told him that he had the heart of a ninety-year-old. Of course, Joe was only sixty-eight at the time. But that was Joe.

He wasn’t often proud of Mum and me, but he shone with pride the day I was born, or so I’ve been told.

Getting back to that day, you should know that our queen—bless her—has been on the throne for sixty years this year. But when I was born, it had only been forty glorious years. Her fortieth year of reigning coincided with Australia hosting the Olympic Games. It was a festive year for Australia. Our highest medal tally at the games and our longest reigning monarch all in the same three hundred sixty-five days. Celebrations spilled onto the streets.

That year was a big one for my mum too. First and most importantly—she always says—she got pregnant with me. Around the same time, she successfully applied to be a volunteer at the Games. It was to be her first job, not that she’d be getting paid, but just the same, Grandpa Joe proudly told everyone he met. Mum had never had a job before. Too flighty, Joe had often said. Her head always in the clouds. Mine would have been, too, if I’d had to listen to Grandpa ranting and raving daily.

Anyway, Mum volunteered at the Olympic Games and did quite a good job. People liked her good heart and kindness. Grandpa Joe seemed to be the only one who cared about her flightiness and general lack of ambition. In fact, Mum made the news a few times during the games for being Australia’s best mascot, showing the world the kind of people we were.

Mum became so well known that when the queen went on a Commonwealth tour as part of her ruby jubilee—rubilee as Mum called it—she insisted that my mum and a handful of other volunteers were present at the athletes’ meet and greet. Imagine Grandpa Joe’s face when he discovered his daughter would meet the queen. Well, we don’t know what his face was because he’d kicked Mum out for getting pregnant without a husband by then. I guess it’s self-explanatory that he took her back, but that wasn’t till after I was born.

So, the athletes’ parade happened, and we all ended up at Government House for luncheon with the queen. I say we because, of course, I was there in my mum’s belly—but there just the same. During the luncheon, each athlete and volunteer was presented to the queen with cameras rolling for the poor folk at home to gander at.

The volunteers were to be presented at the end, but Mum told me later she didn’t care; she’d have waited all day to meet Queen Anne. Mum admires the guts out of that older woman. Even to this day, she’ll stand and sing “God Save the Queen” as loud as she can whenever she hears it, no matter where or when. No matter that it hasn’t been our national anthem for decades.

I guess that explains why Mum didn’t let the little fact that she’d been having labour pains all day deter her from her chance to meet Her Majesty.

The doctors told Mum later that I must have been crowning when Mum attempted an ill-advised curtsey before the queen. Rather appropriate term, I always thought—and so too did the newspapers when they reported on the baby who’d been born at the feet of the monarch. “Couldn’t Wait to Meet His Queen,” one newspaper headline had declared. That same article described how I’d shot out of my mum and landed on the royal toes. Mum never liked that article. She hated how common they had made it sound, talking about Her Majesty attempting to catch me like a football punt.

And so, there was my fifteen minutes of fame. Photos of my newly-arrived-into-the-world, utterly naked body lying at the feet of Queen Anne splashed in the worldwide media. A few also showed pictures of the queen’s stunned expression or my mother’s contorted face as she pushed the last of me out.

Queen Anne bore the hubbub well. She’d looked down at me and then at my mother before saying, “Well, that is either the best bit of prestidigitation I’ve ever seen, or you’ve just had a baby, my dear.”

And that was how I got my name.

Prestidigitation Jones.

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Meet the Author

Karrie lives in Australia’s sunshine state with her husband and two sons, though she hates the sun with a passion. She dreams of one day living in the wettest and coldest habitable place she can find. She has been writing stories in her head for years but has finally managed to pull the words out of her head and share them with others. She spends her days trying to type her stories on the computer without disturbing her beloved cat Lu curled up on the keyboard. She probably reads far too much.

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New Release Blitz: Parson by J. Hali Steele (Excerpt & Giveaway)

Title: Parson

Series: Scorned Devils MC, Book Three

Author: J. Hali Steele

Publisher:  Changeling Press

Release Date: December 20, 2024

Heat Level: 4 – Lots of Sex

Pairing: Male/Male

Cover Art: Marteeka Karland

Genres: Action Adventure, Contemporary Women’s Fiction, New Releases, Romance, Suspense

Themes: Age Gap (Older Man), Christmas, Gay, Holiday Themes, MC Romance

Book Length: Novel

Page Count: 117

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Description

Building a hundred walls will not prevent Parson ripping away each brick to get to the man who is his.

Parson: Raised in a religious family who accepted Parson’s homosexuality, he struggles to understand Langston Gillman’s inability to embrace who he is, what he feels. Pars put off patching with the Scorned Devils MC in fear of losing his lover. Never again. Parson will patch with the club and he means to have the man he desires. Pars vows to pursue Lang until he stands vulnerable and ready to surrender.

Langston: Bullied as a child, Langston has reached the age of fifty-two loathing his gayness. He navigates life by planning every moment of each day. Still, occasionally he is unable to rid himself of his need for a man. Unfortunately, Lang desires bad boys. When one particular bad boy rides into his life on a Harley, his presence leaves Lang confused and angry. Langston finds himself yearning for more with Parson. Problem is the biker not only refuses to cut ties with Scorned Devils, the local MC, he will not be hidden by Langston.

Rules are made to be broken, and Parson will not live his life in denial. He intends to turn Lang’s world upside down, no matter the consequences.

Excerpt

Parson (Scorned Devils MC 3)
J. Hali Steele
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©2024 J. Hali Steele

Parson

Calmness was the keystone of Parson’s life.

Today he sat beside his cousin, Mark, in a pew near the back of The Church of the Trinity Episcopal church, praying to find rekindle that trait. “I’m not asking for confession, and I don’t need a priest.”

Mark Turner was a deacon and while he could hear confession, only the priest could give absolution. Parson didn’t need that. “I’m not seeking the sacrament, because I’ve not done anything I regret.”

The deaths of the Bayside Specter president and VP had been a necessity, a matter of survival, and Pars experienced no remorse over the sordid affair.

“Good, because Father Tyson is preparing for Sunday service.” Mark stared. “What do you want, Randall? Sorry, you prefer Parson.”

“Right. Nothing, man. I’m torn about the relationship I’m in. Or was in.”

“You’re not living with — what’s his name, Langston? — anymore?”

“No.” Pars had done the one thing Langston Gillman would never accept. “He’s being unreasonable.”

“Have you spoke truthfully with him regarding your feelings?”

Mark was aware — hell, the whole family knew — Parson was openly gay. None held his relationships as a sin, believing his love life was between him and God.

“Does he know you love him?”

“No.” Parson twisted on the hard bench to better see Mark. “What makes you say that?”

“Lord help me. You’re thirty-one and you’ve never been in a relationship this long. What else could it be?”

Parson ignored Mark’s comment because, damn, Parson hadn’t thought about that. Yeah, he cared greatly for Lang, but love? “He kicked me out.”

“Let me guess — because you belong to the motorcycle club that runs around, or as some believe, runs, the city of Coatesville.”

“He doesn’t like that I’m a member of the Scorned Devils MC, but I can’t allow him to dictate who I can hang out and be friends with. Because of his feelings, I put off patching.” Parson picked at his fingernails. “Done playing games. I am who I am. Patched last week.”

“I see.”

Sunday parishioners started entering. Parson still needed to see Dread and talk about meeting with the city officials at Cutters tomorrow regarding plans for the Christmas toy drive. “Hey, thanks for letting me vent.”

“Wish you weren’t an only child.” Mark sighed. “Not sure I was much help, but if you ever need to talk to someone aside from…”

“They’re my brothers, Mark. They’d never see harm come to me.”

“That’s what concerns me. What lengths would your brothers go to in keeping you safe? I’m not blind to what happens with motorcycle clubs, Pars.” Mark stood. “I’ve heard about unsavoriness taking place in our community.”

Talk of the Specters’ bikes being destroyed at the Midway and rumors behind the incident had finally died down. There were other disputes, and if the perpetrators were wrong, yeah, they got beat down. Without knowing what his cousin might have heard, Parson couldn’t claim all the stories were lies. He wasn’t going to get in to it now. Glancing down at his watch, Parson headed for the door. “Damn, Mark, I gotta run.”

When Parson reached Hell’s Lair, the gate sprung open immediately. Damn Spinner, anyway. He was always on the computer, watching the comings and goings of everyone. Shit, it was Spin’s turn to keep an eye out for unusual activity around the Scorned Devils MC compound. Spin hadn’t come back to his place last night which, meant he’d camped out in the loft. As annoying as Spinner could be, he kept Parson’s thoughts from drifting to Langston.

Parson spied Dread with his feet propped on the desk as he entered the office. “Hey, man. What’s up?”

“Nothing much.” Dread scrutinized Parson. “You’re early for a Sunday.”

Pars usually hit the clubhouse after church. Today, he’d skipped services. “I was hoping to talk to you before you got busy.” Sitting across from Dread, he sighed loudly. “Is there another place we can hold meetings with the city council?”

“For years those fuckers have let us do the all the organizing for this event. Mostly they sit at meetings pretending they want to be there. They take credit at the end of the parade when all we get to say is — Santa Claus has come to town.” Dread studied Pars. “Hey, it’s for the less fortunate children. Shit, we’re the local MC some of those same members would like to see disappear. Don’t really want them in my restaurant unless they’re paying customers, but it is what it is, Pars. Sure as hell not having them here if that’s what you’re insinuating.”

“Wouldn’t expect that, but there are other places in town.”

“None I want to be involved with.”

“Look, Dread, Cutters is…”

“Langston is off on Sundays and Mondays. You won’t have to deal with any shit.”

Parson’s chest deflated when he relaxed against the chair back. He wasn’t sure Dread noticed. “Great.”

Standing, the VP walked to the office door and closed it. “No need for everyone to hear your business.”

Fuck, Pars was going to get an earful.

“I don’t know what happened and I don’t really give a damn. I know Langston’s been a prick this last month.” He stood right in front of Pars. “I see the fire in your eyes but I’m not the one you want to go toe to toe with today, or any day, about me calling a prick a prick. He’s been hell to deal with.” Backing up a step, he glared. “Fuck Langston. Or don’t. Whatever you choose, straighten your shit out because not every meet will be held on Monday. We have to consider the needs of a lot of people. If you can’t handle this, let me know now.”

“I got this.”

“Perfect.”

Pars got up to leave but Dread stopped him. “Another MC is joining us. They don’t have a drive where they are.”

“Who?”

“The Immoral Sinners out of Harrisburg.”

“Don’t know any of them well, but I do hear they are unruly as hell.”

“Yeah, I know. They’re small, but troublesome.”

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Meet the Author

A former MC associate, J. Hali Steele loves anything with wheels, including motorcycles, classic automobiles, and race cars. A retired winning ex-quarter mile drag racer, J. Hali often angles to get her butt back in the driver’s seat!

J. Hali is a multi-published, best-selling author of romance in Contemporary MC, ReligErotica, Paranormal, Fantasy, and LGBTQ stories where humans, vampyres, shapeshifters, and angels collide – and they collide a lot! When J. Hali’s not writing or reading, she can be found snuggled in front of the TV with a cat in her lap and a cup of her favorite beverage of the moment.

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