15 July 2018

Taking Care of Business by J. D. De Roeck Book Tour and Excerpt!



Taking Care of Business
by J. D. De Roeck

Summary:
When Paul Smith travels to the south of France for a sales conference, events conspire to drag him into a world of kidnappings, blackmail and murder.

Following a violent incident, Paul instinctively offers refuge to a girl he believes to be a vulnerable lost soul in a desperate situation, only to find that all is not as it appears. Unwittingly, he finds himself caught between competing international crime syndicates as they go to war, and two powerful Russian families as they fight for control of a vast Russian conglomerate.

What begins as a routine business trip to Nice, turns into a journey of self-discovery that takes him to some of the most glamorous locations on the Cote d’Azur. Paul is compelled to confront each new escalating threat in turn, while his neatly ordered world spirals relentlessly out of control.

As events unfold, he is forced to challenge everything he thought he knew about himself, before finally embracing the danger and brutal violence he encounters along the way.

Can Paul get to the truth, and does he have what it takes to keep those he cares about safe, and himself alive?
Information about the Book
Title: Taking Care of Business
Author: J. D. De Roeck
Release Date: 3rd July 2018
Genre: Crime/Thriller
Publisher: Clink Street Publishing
Format: Paperback
Read an Excerpt!
Chapter 1
THREE YEARS AGO (JANUARY 2011)
ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA
It was dark, the modest chamber lit only by the flicker of a roaring fire that did little to warm him. He knew it was time and dismissed them all. He would do this alone.
The study was sparsely furnished, a large desk at its heart, aged and scarred from years of wear. His old chair was set behind it, as it had been for so many years, now dusty from lack of use. There was a Chesterfield and a small table, both from a previous life yet still treasured for the history he shared with them. The heavy curtains were drawn against a Russian winter’s night, but still the cold bit deeply into his failing frame.
It was a small room, lost among the vast halls and suites of the old palace that had been his home for so many years. It was his most private place, a refuge, pared back and simple.
The hour was late; the ornate clock on the mantelpiece recorded the passing of time relentlessly, its inevitability a stark echo of the life that was now ebbing from him.
He had achieved many things in his life, but, like so many great men in his country, he too knew regrets, the legacy of each tormenting him over the years, exacting a heavy toll.
There were many things he’d done in the early days that he knew would haunt him for the rest of his life. Now that the end was drawing near, he took some comfort in knowing that they did. At least he’d endeavoured to put things right, long ago accepting the full burden of his own guilt. He’d been complicit in all that took place, yet even now he only ever truly embraced the shame of it in private. He knew he could never be fully reconciled, and as the minutes ticked inexorably by, the torment that had plagued him for a lifetime troubled him more deeply than ever.
Over the years, Valentine had laboured to balance the scales, his philanthropy a price he was all too willing to pay. If there was a God, and, surely, he would have his answer soon, there would be a reckoning. He doubted that any God of worth would value such belated acts of kindness as fully paying down the debt. A debt stained with the blood of his enemies and those who stood in his way. That was how it was back then; surely any judgement would take such a context into account. But that was not his concern for now, at least not yet.
He’d done all he could to make his peace, and now one task remained. He clawed at the document on his lap, a pen painfully gripped between his trembling fingers. His eyes were failing; in the firelight no text was legible to him, but he knew where to sign. Now, with a shattering certainty, he accepted it was the right thing to do, the only responsible course of action and perhaps his last mortal act. He was resolved, and with the last vestige of his fading strength he would set this one remaining matter straight. It would define his legacy, and it would break the old man’s weary heart.
The pen tumbled from his grasp, the ink spilling viscous from the nib and forming a black pool on the oak floor. It was an unsettling image for the old man. He made no attempt to recover the pen, but stared, transfixed. There had been so much blood in those early days, as dark and indelible as the ink that now spilled from the broken tip. The pen was a treasured gift from a wife taken from him so long ago, but now it was nothing more than a shattered instrument, a mere device, complicit in one last moment of defiance.
Valentine had done the right thing, and although he knew there could be no redemption in this life, he slowly closed his eyes one final time, to face his judgement in the next.  
Chapter 11
Paul awoke suddenly. He wasn’t sure at first what caused him to stir, but something was wrong. There was a loud bang from the bedroom lobby and he heard a female voice. He was disorientated, and he couldn’t be sure if what he was hearing was real or imagined.
There were a few seconds of silence followed by the same sound again. There was no mistaking it this time. The bang wasn’t so loud on this occasion; it seemed further away perhaps, and then he heard the female voice again. No words were spoken, just a muffled cry followed by a groan. No discernible words, just sounds.
Paul couldn’t be sure. Was someone in trouble or was it something else? Whatever was happening, it was playing out in the lobby of room 733, in his bedroom or perhaps in the corridor just outside. Paul was momentarily torn. Did he switch the lights on or just shout out? What the hell is going on?
More cries – more of a whimper this time – and then silence once again.
Paul tried to shake the sleep from his mind and assimilate what was happening. There was limited evidence of anything sinister taking place but, for reasons he couldn’t yet fathom, he felt a deepening sense of foreboding. He heard the sound again and felt the hairs on the back of his neck rise.
Something was very wrong, and he couldn’t just hope it went away or convince himself it was nothing to do with him. It was happening and he couldn’t just ignore it. More cries. This time they were more urgent. He was certain it was panic he could hear; there could be no doubt about it.
A man’s voice broke his malaise. It was suppressed, as if trying not to be heard, but there was no disguising the ferocity of the outburst.
Chapter 24
THREE MONTHS EARLIER
NORILSK, SIBERIA
The man jumped from the train into a deserted and desolate wasteland, and a fresh covering of snow broke his fall. The icy winds clawed at his skin and the crisp fresh air filled his lungs. The contrast was stark: the dark foul-smelling claustrophobic gloom of the railway carriage replaced by an unending monochrome landscape under a leaden sky.
There was little hint of nature to give the land definition. All around him the frozen ground was strewn with the debris of decades of industrial neglect: machinery, piles of waste and crumbling abandoned buildings, all ravaged by yet another unforgiving winter.
He took in the scene. It was familiar, enduring, depressingly constant, and nothing much had changed with the passing of time. Behind him, the train crawled noisily away in the direction of the dilapidated unmanned station. He knew it wouldn’t stop. The freight transport would just rumble through en route towards its final destination, the city’s freight yards another five kilometres to the east.
Knee-deep in the snow he waited, scanning the platforms for life. There was none. But unmanned or not, the station wasn’t his destination – the marshalling yard was as close as he would get.
As the last few wagons passed, he settled on his haunches, low against the biting wind and static in the bleakest of landscapes. The ageing diesel locomotive laboured onwards. Fifty carriages, maybe more, a combination of rusting tanker wagons, open tops and the putrid enclosed rolling stock that had been his refuge for the journey. Each battered wagon was now en route to receive their first payloads of the season, the weather having finally relented. It would be twenty-four hours before that same train headed back to Dudinka. Twenty-four hours was all he had.
He already knew the journey back would be worse than the one he’d endured on the way in. The locomotive would labour again, struggling to cope under the massive increase in weight, each wagon fully loaded from the stockpiled output of the winter’s smelting and mining operations. Finding shelter among it would be a challenge.
As he waited, his breath formed crystals in the air that billowed wildly on the arctic wind. A few chilling minutes later he was completely alone in the marshalling yard, still half a mile from the station and as anonymous as he’d hoped. He scanned the route just travelled for signs of life but there were none.
In the distance, the city was waking up. He pulled his collar close and plunged his double-gloved hands deep into his pockets. Heading out across open land, he braced himself against the freezing gusts and made his way to the road, a narrow single-lane strip of tarmac visible only as a grey shadow as it cut its way through the vast snow-covered wastes to the north.
It was late June, the start of the all too short summer season, and still the thermometer barely passed zero. The journey was slow, bitterly cold and hideously uncomfortable, back to Norilsk this one last time; he’d already determined he would never return again. If it hadn’t been for the job, he would never have returned at all.
The winds had caused the fresh falls to drift, and he waded through them towards more open ground, where the going would be easier. As he left the drifts behind, the snow crunched angrily under his boots as he walked. It was frozen and compacted like concrete, and it had a permanence that implied it might never thaw at all. The road was still covered with a thick icy crust, stained and soiled, still supercooled by the all-pervasive permafrost that left the land bleak and lifeless.
The industrial plants continued to take their toll too. The air was tinged with a hint of sulphur and laden with a fine corrosive grit. It irritated his eyes and scoured the exposed skin on his face. Nothing much could live in such conditions, the soil long since rendered poisonous from years of acid rain and unending falls of dangerously contaminated acrid dust. Nothing had changed; nothing had changed at all.
He paced up and down under the soft haunting glow of a solitary street light. Incongruous in its setting, it was miles from anywhere. There seemed to be little point to it other than to mark out a single location in an otherwise featureless stretch of carriageway. “Wait by the street light,” had been his instruction, but standing out in the open in the middle of nowhere was the last thing he intended to do.
It was a dangerous secretive place, with access to the city itself strictly controlled and monitored. Norilsk was a “closed city”, its existence denied, a national embarrassment, an industrial schism in an ancient wilderness.
He needed to stay unnoticed, but once in the city itself he knew it would be almost impossible. He didn’t care for scrutiny, but in such a place, it wasn’t so much if he was being observed, but who was doing the observing that really mattered. He self-consciously stepped away from the light, taking cover in the lee of a huge earth-moving machine. It was a mere carcase, way beyond any possibility of repair and long since abandoned.
There was daylight but it was subdued and reluctant. He knew the quality of it would get better as summer went on, perhaps for six weeks more, before finally giving way to months of darkness, an unnatural all-consuming perpetual night-time. The seasons were brutal, a period of constant daylight followed by months of unrelenting gloom. Even now the sun was so low on the horizon it shone pitifully, barely visible through the pall of smog that belched from the chimneys that gave the city its only reason to exist.
The streetlight buzzed in the silence and flickered in the half-light.
He checked his watch. Twenty minutes before his lift was due to arrive.
He studied the grey outline of the city in the distance, the ghostly scare he’d once called home. That hadn’t changed much either; it was just as he recalled. It was a truly vile place. Norilsk was nothing more than a godforsaken Siberian outpost, bleak and isolated, its history as bleak as its setting. He knew its origins well enough, built on the agonies of thousands of forced labourers, all victims of the Gulag and the unwilling founders of Stalin’s industrial dream city in the north.
The result was nothing less than a dystopian landscape made nightmare by its grotesque proportions and impossible, life-reducing living conditions. It was still the most polluted and coldest city on earth, and to him it appeared to be just as much a prison now as it had ever been. His own childhood had slipped neglectfully away amid its filthy, crumbling tenements. There were no walls even then, no fortifications or guards, but even so, there had been no possibility of escape. The city was so remote, so removed from the rest of the country, stripped from the nation’s conscience and embargoed to keep its appalling legacy hidden. There was nowhere within a credible distance to go and, then as now, no legitimate means to get in or out.
And now he was breaking back into the nightmare. He didn’t have the papers, the state ID card or any of the other numerous bureaucratic approvals required to make his journey, but who on earth would really care? Who, that mattered, would even know?
Chapter 38
Paul shifted uneasily in the bed, opened his eyes and began assembling a jumble of fragmented thoughts into some sort of order. He’d awoken suddenly from a fretful sleep, his mind racing and his heart pounding in his chest.
It was six o’clock according to the digital display permanently illuminated on the vast TV, a full eighteen hours since they’d received the text message. It seemed like an eternity ago, and now events began to replay themselves unbidden and in no particular order as he shook the sleep from his eyes.
Since that one single text message, Boris and Giorgi had remained totally silent. No further text messages and no phone calls. Just one chilling message with its haunting video and sickening threats. It was dictating everything they did, and that, Paul reluctantly acknowledged, was exactly how Boris and Giorgi would have wanted it. That realisation hit him hard, and he cursed his stupidity. The threats were unsettling and utterly compelling, but allowing Boris and Giorgi to dictate their response was surely the wrong thing to do. He felt his pulse surge, his chest tightening. But what should his response be? What should it have been? Why was he waiting for them to make the next move? The bedside phone rang and Paul picked it up immediately. It was the front desk; the hire car had arrived. It was time to take the initiative.
Chapter 42
In the dark, Paul’s reflections drifted back to home, and as one day slipped silently into the next, his thoughts turned to Sophie and the first time they were in Nice together. He saw them both standing arm in arm at the viewpoint of the Quai Raubu Capeu, where so many couples before them had spent the last few moments before sunset, staring indulgently out to sea. As he closed his eyes he could almost feel the sun’s gentle warmth. He recalled the mellowing red glow of the approaching dusk as it consolidated into a flaming yellow haze. Time seemed to stall, the sky becoming a brooding canvas as the day melted into the horizon.
Paul remembered how Sophie had gently pulled him to her as the sky burned red about them. He remembered her turning to kiss him. He recalled her tenderness, a tenderness that had seemed sadly remote of late, yet the memory of it transported him back to those early days, as their love for each other had taken root, and on that first night in Nice, it began to blossom into something he thought would last a lifetime. Their lips had met in a soft lingering embrace as the dusk settled. It had all been so completely perfect. But, as Sophie slowly pulled away, her hair was burnished golden by the dying embers of the fading sun, and it was only then he realised it was Alisa’s smile that met his gaze. In that moment, and with so many miles between them, he knew for certain that nothing would ever be quite the same again.
Chapter 43
For Paul, the prospect of spending the day alone with Alisa was a welcome one, and it started well. The carriages were sparsely occupied despite the time of day. Blocks of empty seats faced each other with tables in between; all but a few were free.
Paul gravitated towards an empty section of the carriage on the side of the train that offered at least some prospect of a view of the sea as they travelled west towards Cannes. Alisa had consciously chosen to slip in beside him instead of taking the seat opposite. She instinctively took his arm as they both stared out of the window together, casually watching the villages and towns of the Côte d’Azur slip steadily by.
He placed his hand on hers, as if to reassure her, and she smiled sweetly, closing her fingers around his. Paul’s mind drifted back to the early hours of the morning and to the reconstructed memory of his first night in Nice with Sophie four years earlier. He and Sophie had been a couple in the early throws of a genuine love affair, but this was very different. Why did it all suddenly feel so very real to him?
“You’re very quiet,” she said. “Is everything okay?”
“It’s fine,” he said unconvincingly.
She gave his arm a gentle squeeze and snuggled in a little closer.
Such a gentle act conferred an honest affection. It felt totally natural, yet there remained an unresolved ambiguity in her touch. It was becoming increasingly difficult for Paul, Alisa had never been far from his thoughts, her beauty and vulnerability captivating him from the very first moment he saw her in the restaurant. And now, as she laughed and smiled spontaneously at his side, he felt drawn to her as never before.
She was beautiful, seductive and utterly intoxicating, and he found himself regretting the brevity of the journey as the train slowly pulled into Cannes station. The time alone together had been all too short, a few fleeting minutes that had quickened his pulse and softened his resistance to her, but the allusion of her intimacy remained a mystery, an enigma still to be revealed. Paul wondered, with a growing sense of sadness, if he would ever really know the girl at all.
****
Alisa had once again, contentedly bound herself to his arm. It all felt so familiar, she seemed totally relaxed and, at least for now, completely at ease with Paul by her side. He occasionally caught a fleeting glimpse of her reflected in the windows of the boutiques as they wandered by. She had a seductive elegance, an inherent grace and each step had its own engaging rhythm that drew him closer to her. Her soft features seemed to glow in the sunshine and her thick mane gentle bobbed and swept at her shoulders as she walked.
Paul allowed himself to imagine, if only for a moment, what it might be like to be an ordinary couple, together through choice and in the early flush of mutual attraction, perhaps without a care in the world.
He determinedly shook the thought from his mind.
Finally, they stopped to admire an exquisite light blue summer dress. It was beautifully displayed in the window of a boutique so exclusive as to negate the need for price tags. Alisa loved it, and Paul was certain there were few girls that could wear such a dress to better effect. He could contain himself no longer.
“Alisa…” he began, almost entirely against his better judgement, “there’s something I need to tell you…” But whatever it was, the words just wouldn’t come. “I think… what I’m trying to say…”
She just smiled softly. It was as if she already knew, but she allowed him to pursue his cause a little longer.
“Alisa, these last few days with you have been incredible.” He struggled on. “It’s true that we’ve only just met. I know we barely know each other, but I was thinking—”
“What were you thinking, Paul?” she purred, as her smile broadened.
“Well, I was thinking that maybe, once this is all over, perhaps…” He paused for a deep breath.
Paul was floundering hopelessly, and she took pity on him. She raised a single delicate finger to his lips.
“Let’s eat,” she said, with all the ambiguity in the world.
Chapter 60
SATURDAY
At 2.30 am, Maria had been missing for eighty-seven hours.
The calculation helped to keep Paul awake at first, playing on his mind and inviting unwanted images of a woman he barely knew. Each image felt darker than the one that preceded it. Maria tied to a chair, tears streaming down her blood-smeared features, beaten, lying on a featureless floor in an anonymous room. The images began to flash in sequence: Maria, then Alex, Maria again. Now the floor was smeared with blood, Alex’s blood, as he lay bound with the cables ties that had become Boris and Giorgi’s signature. The darkness and isolation of the quayside taunted him. He felt a chill. He felt Maria’s loneliness and sensed her fear. Outside the car every sound carried a threat, every shadow was filled with uncertainty.
A noise startled him, nothing more than a cat calling out in defence of its territory, but the picture in his mind was of Maria calling out in pain and desperation. Paul let down the window, fresh cold sea air filled the car and his body shook with a chilling apprehension. When would they come? Surely, they would come…
As a distraction, he re-read the email he’d sent earlier. He considered all the details he could have added to make it even more compelling than it already was. He closed the window as something close by fell to the ground, or was it kicked, a clattering sound that echoed in the stillness? The cat perhaps, or was there someone else out there in the dark, watching him? He scanned the road ahead and then each mirror in turn as he sat alone in the car – nothing, there was nothing at all. But they were out there somewhere. Giorgi and Boris were both out there, planning their next move. He watched the shadowy form of a street cat mount the sea wall and drop down out of sight. Silence returned and the darkness closed in around him, a little blacker than before.
Chapter 63
The engine note changed and the tender picked up speed. He could only speculate that they were out into open water and free of the restrictions of the tiny harbour.
He renewed his grip on the sturdy steel bar in his hands, the wheel brace seamlessly morphing from wrecking tool to weapon, and he felt emboldened by its cold utility. His mind drifted back to the violence he had witnessed, Boris launching a brutal assault. The violence was extreme, yet controlled, and completely uninhibited. It was Boris’s cold-blooded disregard for any consequence, that made the attack so totally overpowering. Paul determined then that he would suspend all caution, any regard for outcomes, if he got the chance. He would take any opportunity that came his way, and he would take his lead from Boris.
Still they headed out to sea, and suddenly a sense of dread washed over him. What if they weren’t going out to Barabus after all? What if the Russians were just taking Maria out to deep water? No witnesses! No loose ends!
Chapter 65
Maria released what little grip she still maintained on the massive handgun as Boris closed his enormous fist around its handle. Paul looked on as Boris fixed his finger on the trigger.
“Shoot him now!” Paul screamed in frustration as the red dots danced frantically around the deck. “Shoot!” But his cries were lost as the engines roared and the massive concussive plume of water churned and boiled behind them. It would have to be him. He would have to take the shot himself. Paul felt the trigger of Dimitri’s gun firm against his finger… just the slightest squeeze would discharge the weapon. Paul waited.
But now Boris held the gun in his left hand. With his right he pulled Maria to one side and behind him. It was as if he was protecting her. Why would he? Something had definitely changed. Boris raised the gun and, in a single action, aimed and fired.
Chapter 66
Paul launched himself down the stairs, leaping from the fourth step and leading with his knee. He piled into the man, who was ill-prepared and stunned by the speed of his reaction to his presence. He drove his knee hard into the man’s face and he crumpled to the deck at the foot of the stairs. He felt the bone in his adversary’s cheek fracture, deforming under the weight of the impact, and then, without a second thought, he attacked. There was no hesitation, no restraint at all, Paul’s fists clenched as he tore into him, his face, his throat, both unprotected and open. He was defenceless now, pinned down helplessly by the full weight of the assault. Paul felt a sickening sensation as the flesh on his own knuckles tore and peeled back as he struck. But he couldn’t stop now; he wouldn’t stop. Again and again he hammered his punches home, his victim was barely conscious, but still he continued. It was instinctive, brutal and completely overpowering.
Paul screamed insanely as he vented the full depth of his fury. Previously controlled and repressed, he found release in yet one more series of crushing blows.
And then it was done. Paul stood over his victim, a man he’d never seen before, and the extent of the wounds he’d inflicted suddenly sickened him and a deep churning clawed away at the pit of his stomach…
About the Author



Residing in the East Midlands, J. D. de Roeck is a career hotelier and company directory. He loves travel and regularly visits the South of France, Nice, Monaco and Cannes. Taking Care of Business is his first novel. The inspiration for this novel came from one of his many trips abroad.
Tour Schedule



Monday 9th July

Tuesday 10th July

Wednesday 11th July

Thursday 12th July

Friday 13th July


Saturday 14th July

Sunday 15th July


14 July 2018

Not Always a Bridesmaid Anthology!



4 Stories about Love, Laughter, and
Wedding Disasters.


5 STAR REVIEW:
The plot kept me captivated as a budding romance develops between Chasen and Skye, who seem to have the same vision and goals in life. I found the dialog to be open, honest and heartwarming and a few lines to melt the heart. “It looks like your journey brought you love.” “If you dream together, then it’s a reality.
I enjoyed this fast pace wedding novella with interesting characters. The plot kept the pages turning, and the dialog was entertaining. What happens when the wedding planner and her fiancé have a difference of opinion? A wedding is a girls dream, and she knows what she wants, but what if the groom is trying to rush things?




The Professional Bridesmaid
To help three co-workers coordinate their weddings, Skye Wilson must act as a bridesmaid for them. Skye dreams of becoming a wedding planner and needs to start somewhere and reluctantly agrees. Just when the wedding arrangements and her plans started going wrong, she meets Chasen Dantrell, a handsome limousine driver.
Chasen has a growing limo business. He loves his job but the long hours of waiting by himself wear on him. That is until a cute, blue-eyed bridesmaid named Skye stumbles his way.
As their two worlds become more and more entwined with each wedding they work, Skye wonders if she'll ever be a bride and would it be Chasen at the end of the aisle with a ring?
The Undecided Bride
When Steven, the man of Bridgette North dreams, proposes she automatically says yes until her fiancé’s constant pressure for a speedy wedding has her questioning his motives and love. Now she is undecided whether she wants to marry him.
Mason is hired to trick Bridgette into marrying Steven quickly to ensure a promotion but ends up falling head-over-heels in love instead.
Can Mason explain his deceit and still win her heart?
And will Bridgette be willing to risk her heart one more time?
Red, White, and Bridesmaid
Jess Caldwell is the third in line to wear the mistletoe headband until she’s kissed. But it’s her best friend Kara’s wedding, Jess needs to keep her mind on designing the flowers and not on the fact that Kara’s older brother, Darrin, who she’s had a crush on for years will be there.
Darrin’s happy to be moving home, and what is even more of a pleasant surprise is seeing her again. Jess isn’t the geeky girl he remembered when he left. But after all the mean things he said in the past, will she give him another chance?
When things at the wedding go wrong, more than fireworks fly for this 4th of July wedding.
Will love be in the air?
The Reluctant Bride
Penelope Moore’s last boyfriend had no qualms about cheating even after he professed his undying love. As a wedding event planner Penelope has seen plenty of happily-ever-after. But with her terrible luck in the relationship department, she is reluctant to believe it will ever happen to her.
Ferguson enjoyed the freedom of bachelorhood until he met his last girlfriend. He considered her the love of his life until she betrayed him. Without his consent, she used his professional experience and knowledge as a private investigator to write and publish a best-selling novel. Ferguson couldn’t forgive her underhanded deceit and ended their relationship.
When Ferguson meets Penelope he is once again willing to risk his heart, but Penelope isn’t as trusting. Just when he is beginning to win the beautiful event planner’s heart, his ex-girlfriend arrives in town and causes heartache all over again.
Can Penelope and Ferguson trust each other and their hearts enough to get their happily-ever-after?
Available now on multiple platforms in eBook and paperback. Coming soon in audio and foreign language translations.


13 July 2018

Murder in the Cards (Psychic Poker Pro Mystery) by Paige Sleuth Book Tour!


Murder in the Cards (Psychic Poker Pro Mystery) by Paige Sleuth

About the Book

 
Murder in the Cards (Psychic Poker Pro Mystery) 
Cozy Mystery 1st in Series 
Self Published (July 1, 2018) 
Print Length - 252 Pages
Tiffany Swanson is finally living the dream when she quits her stressful job to become a poker pro. Except her dream job doesn't turn out to be so perfect when she picks up the troubling vision of a murdered man from one of her opponents. Even more disturbing, Tiffany didn't know she was telepathic.
Before long she finds herself spending more time investigating a homicide than playing cards. But with an entire wedding party to suspect and only one weekend to pinpoint the guilty party, how will Tiffany ever figure out "whodunit" in time?

About the Author

Paige Sleuth is a pseudonym for mystery author Marla Bradeen. She plots murder during the day and fights for mattress space with her two rescue cats at night. When not attending to her cats' demands, she writes. She loves to hear from readers and welcomes emails at paige.sleuth@yahoo.com.

Author Links Website: http://www.marlabradeen.com/ps 
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/marlabradeenauthor 
Twitter: https://twitter.com/marlabradeen 
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14207326.Paige_Sleuth 

Purchase Links Amazon Apple iBooks Barnes & Noble Kobo Google Play  

As part of Paige Sleuth's third annual "Buy in July" event, $1 from every Paige Sleuth book purchase (excluding ebook purchases of Murder in Cherry Hills) will be donated to the Community Cat Coalition of Clark County (C5). C5 is a volunteer-powered organization that seeks to reduce the number of cats euthanized every year by trapping and spay/neutering feral cats in the Las Vegas area before releasing them back into their communities

  a Rafflecopter giveaway 

TOUR PARTICIPANTS
July 2 – Babs Book Bistro – SPOTLIGHT
July 3 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR INTERVIEW  
July 3 – The Avid Reader – REVIEW
July 4 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT
July 5 – Devilishly Delicious Book Reviews – REVIEW
July 6 – Back Porchervations – REVIEW
July 7 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – SPOTLIGHT
July 8 – The Montana Bookaholic – REVIEW
July 9 – Books a Plenty Book Reviews – REVIEW
July 10 – Mysteries with Character – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
July 11 – StoreyBook Reviews – REVIEW
July 12 – Paranormal and Romantic Suspense Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
July 13 –Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
July 13 – Teresa Trent Author Blog – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
July 14 – Laura’s Interests – REVIEW

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12 July 2018

Into the Woods Tour and Giveaway!





Into the Woods is the title and theme for this assortment of short stories, poems, essays, music, and one walking meditation. Each piece is unique in tone and genre and the result is that the collection captures the fascinating, frightening, fun, healing, and fantastical wonder of time spent in the woods. The twenty-six contributors who attend Mindful Writers Retreats in the mountains of Ligonier, Pennsylvania, are donating one hundred percent of the proceeds to support the research and work of The Children’s Heart Foundation.

Available at....




Book Excerpts
Short Story
TRAIN WRECK
by Kathleen Shoop

Ellie Trumbull squinted out the window of the Uber, gripping the door handle. The car swerved and bounced up the long driveway leading to the retreat center where the courts had sent Ellie for punishment. She grabbed her stomach to stave off nausea, but when it began to launch itself she smacked the driver’s arm. He slowed and stopped. Ellie pulled the handle, and tumbled out of the door onto all fours, heaving.
She gasped for breath, dizzied. Voices sounded as she struggled to stand. She focused on the group heading toward her: two women, a man, and several children who simply bolted past her, their squealing laughter filling the air.
A graceful woman with gray, bunned hair and dark skin approached. She took Ellie’s arm and pulled her close, leading her into a building. “Welcome. I’m Vera.”
“I’m Alice.” A stout woman with platinum spiked hair followed along.
A lanky man with hair so perfect it looked plastic picked up Ellie’s duffel bag. “I’m Brandon. Your husband’ll send the rest of your luggage shortly.”
Ellie grunted. They led her upstairs. Brandon rushed ahead to open a door. Ellie shuffled inside.
“Your room,” he said. “I’ll set your bag here.”
Ellie looked over her shoulder to see him smiling, as he’d been doing since she arrived. “Thanks, Guy Smiley.”
“What?”
She ignored his question, held onto one of the top bunks and surveyed the space. Three large windows at the end of the room and three sets of bunks with plastic mattresses belted the perimeter.
Ellie collapsed onto a bed.
“Plastic makes it easy to clean,” Vera said.
“Shut those.” Ellie shook her hand at the windows.
The woman sighed, closed the curtains and lowered the blind that covered the center pane. She lifted Ellie’s feet off the floor and swung them onto the bed. “Housekeeping’ll make up the bed in a little bit.”
“Fine,” Ellie groaned.
Vera loosened Ellie’s shoelaces.
Ellie snatched her feet away. “I’m fine.”
Vera backed away, her large hands flailing for a moment before she tucked them against her belly. “Our healing circle begins in an hour.”
Ellie turned away and balled up. Leave me alone.
And a few seconds later the door clicked shut.
***
Giggling children and the sound of feet running down the hallway outside Room 2 woke Ellie. Her mouth was desert dry, so she headed downstairs to the great room where she saw a kitchen area. With the kids gone, the silence felt good.
Ellie startled at the sight of Alice, Vera, and Guy Smiley sitting around an island. Guy Smiley poured coffee. Healing circle.
“Ellie,” he said. “Welcome.”
Vera sliced banana bread. The scent threatened Ellie’s stoic facade. A smile tugged her lips, but she tucked away the fleeting happy sensation, hid it where it wouldn’t remind her how Maggie’s face would light up when she bit into her favorite treat.
Alice clomped her feet onto the coffee table. Vera batted them away and pushed the banana bread toward Ellie.
She looked away.
“I’ll take hers,” said Alice.
“I’d like to begin,” Vera said, her voice gentle and melodic. “The healing circle guides us into continued acceptance and strengthens our endurance as we grow through the pain that comes with losing a child. Each of us understands the daily shock of waking and realizing our lives will never be the same. So how do we go on?”
Guy Smiley sipped coffee. “Feels good to be with everyone.”
“Each time we meet I do better back home,” Vera said.
“Same,” Alice said.
“We hope you’ll find our group helpful, Ellie,” Vera said.
When Ellie didn’t respond the others went around describing how they lost their child. Ellie blocked out every word, rubbing her temples. Her own pain was enough. She wasn’t about to invite theirs inside. Her gaze strayed to the kids outside, the game of tag that left them breathless, rolling down the hill and out of sight. How lucky they were.
“Ellie?” Alice asked. Ellie turned her gaze back to see Alice glaring.
“It’ll help,” sweet Vera said. “To share.”
Guy Smiley slid forward in his seat, fingers steepled. “Change brings…blah, blah … comfort, healing…” He droned on and on and finally Ellie’s mind snapped back to what he first said.
“Change?” Ellie said.
He nodded. They all did.
Ellie’s anger surged. She wiped spittle from her lip. “I don’twantchange. I feel Maggie more now than I ever did… before she died I couldn’t wait to get to work, or girls’ night out or go away with my husband. My daughter… difficult from the day she was born… is dead. I’ll never sit with you people thinking about change and eating stinking banana bread.”
She stood and stomped away.
“She don’t want help,” Alice said.
“But her husband…” Brandon said.
Ellie got farther away, unable to hear what they said. Her husband? He was finished with her. She jogged to her room and crashed onto the mattress that housekeeping hadn’t yet returned to make. She covered her face and held back tears. With balled fists she tried to resist.
But she couldn’t.
Up off the bed, Ellie dug through her duffel and found it. Vodka. Cap unscrewed, she gulped, washing away the scent of banana bread, the thought that she’d never again see Maggie’s smile when she took a bite of it.

***
Short Story
EIRA
by Wende Dikec

The lights went out, and Eira held her breath, waiting for the emergency generator to work. It started with a shudder and a horrific crunching noise, but at least it continued to function.
She closed her eyes, feeling the fear in her chest ease when she heard the comforting sound of the humming engine. She couldn’t bear the thought of being left cold and alone in the dark.
Tugging her pale, blond hair into a ponytail, she pulled her ragged wool cardigan tightly across her body and walked over to the window of Alexander House, a grand name for such a Spartan hunting cabin, to peek outside. She waited for the sun to come up, looking out the dirty glass pane, and continued to stare out the window long after the sun rose in the sky. She didn’t know why she bothered. She saw nothing outside except the same white expanse she’d seen every day for the last five lonely months.
Eira opened the door to grab some wood from the pile for her fire, her body flinching from the chill of the icy wind. She had enough wood to last a few more weeks, and then she’d have to make the dangerous trip into the forest to chop more. She dreaded it, but not as much as she dreaded living without the generator. If she rationed carefully, she’d have enough fuel for another month, but she wasn’t sure what she’d do after that. She hadn’t planned on being stranded for such a long time. Spring should have arrived almost two months ago.
She blinked in surprise when she saw a figure moving toward her house, struggling in the waist deep snow. Eira squinted against the harsh sunlight reflecting off the white landscape, trying to make out if the approaching form was human or animal, friend or foe, but she could see very little at this distance. She stumbled back into her warm little house, and reached for her heavy coat. She quickly slipped on her snowshoes before grabbing her gun, a nervous sense of excitement building inside her. If it was a person, it would be the first human being she’d seen in months. If it was an animal, she’d shoot it and have food for a week. And if it was one of the strange ones, the creatures that were no longer human yet not completely animal, she’d kill it without remorse and leave its carcass for the hungry bears to find.
She waited on her front porch, her gun ready as it came closer. It looked human, bundled under layers of heavy clothing, but she wasn’t taking any chances.
“Who are you?” she asked, her voice echoing in the quiet wilderness.
The figure stopped moving and looked directly at her. She could see a dark beard covering the skin exposed beneath protective ski goggles. It was a man.
“My name is Ben,” he said, his voice sounding scratchy and strange, as if it hadn’t been used in a long time. “I saw the smoke from your fire. Can I come in and warm up?”
Eira paused, considering his request. He seemed human enough, but it was a risk. He could steal her food, hurt her, or take her precious fuel. She weighed her options quickly. Loneliness won out over caution, but she wasn’t stupid. She clenched her gun as she waved him in.


***
Poem
FOREST BATHING
by Martha Swiss

I am alone in this place that is alive, anticipating the gift before me.
I open it slowly, with grateful breath, footsteps and heartbeats,
then thankfully sink into the purifying molecules of chlorophyll and humus.
I bask, now able to sense the purpose of ferns, snakeroot, noble trees and the creek that tumbles past my feet.

Crayfish pay me no mind in their muddy caverns.
Trees skyrocket overhead, on a mission.
Chipmunks skitter through leaf litter
and a kingfisher pounds its teal wings heading upstream.
I am dwarfed by the hillside vaulting from the floodplain. Boulders and saplings cling to its spine.

I am free to bathe here in clarified cells of cambium, xylem and phloem.
I wring my sponge in the generosity of flora.
The stream’s effervescence cleanses the tangled energy seeping from my pores.

I celebrate my fresh spirit with a confetti of scarlet, orange and yellow leaves that bob on the breast of the creek
as silently,
the trees disrobe.

***
Short Story
LIGHT OF THE MOON
by Ramona DeFelice Long

After three weeks in jail, Mama asked me to talk to Judge Rousseau about getting her some decent food to eat.
“Mon Dieu,I am wasting away,” Mama said from her cell. Behind her, the narrow cot was covered with a quilt from home, and on top of the wooden crate she used as a table was a kerosene lamp on a doily. She’d left a half played game of solitaire spread over the doily. Where she got playing cards, I didn’t know. The Bible that had been on the pillow was nowhere to be seen.
She showed me her bowl of half-eaten stew. I think it was stew. “That old cow Lorraine Badeaux is poisoning me.”
“Hush, Mama,” I said. “Mrs. Badeaux is doing no such thing.”
Mama pressed her face between the bars. Her eyebrows and cheeks lifted up. That, plus the pounds she’d lost eating jail food and all the naps she took out of boredom, made her look as young as me. Trust Mama to turn getting arrested into getting prettier.
“Geneva,cher, just go ask him,” Mama wheedled. “That sheriff can hardly look at this slop. He passes me my plate and runs away. Or maybe he believes I’ll bewitch him, too.”
I begged her not to joke about that.
She narrowed her eyes at me. “And pour l’amour de Dieu, when you go see the judge, don’t wear what you got on. You look like a blind nun dressed you.”
“Mama—”
“Your hair’s all right, but get you some lipstick and rouge and use it. Judge Rousseau is old, but he ain’t dead.”
No, he wasn’t, but his brother-in-law was, and that’s why Mama’s bail was set high as the moon. But explaining that to her was like talking to a tree stump.
I said I had to leave. I was Mama’s only visitor, and she was bitter. Where was our family? Where were her friends? She was lonely and felt forsaken. I never told her that, at home, nobody came to visit me either, and I had not even murdered anybody.
Most days she begged me to stay, but tonight she told me to get on home. I suppose she thought I had a busy evening ahead tarting myself up before going to see the judge.
***
When the young deputy was on duty, he sat in a chair five feet away from Mama’s cell, as if he thought I’d help my mother escape by slipping a bolt cutter under my dress—a dress fit for a convent, indeed, because my teacher contract said I had to “act and keep my person modestly.” I worried every day I’d be fired over Mama’s scandal.
Sheriff Reyes usually sat in his office up front and read the newspaper. When my visiting time was over, he always asked, “Things all right, Miss Geneva?”
I answered, “Yes, Sheriff, thank you,” except for the time or two when Mama asked for a warmer shawl or the quilt off her bed.
Once, horrifyingly, I had to say I needed to come right back; when he frowned, I whispered that Mama needed some womanly things. He let me into her cell with a paper sack that he did not inspect. Had I been wily, I could have slipped her anything—a pistol, liquor, tonic from Madame Velda—but wily was Mama’s way, not mine. The sheriff trusted me. If you can’t trust a twenty-year-old spinster schoolteacher who dresses as modestly as a nun, you have faith in no one.
Tonight, Sheriff Reyes stood at the window. The kerosene lamp on his desk lit him up from behind: tall, broad-shouldered, brown hair cut short but still wavy. On one of those shoulders was the scar from a shell that blew him out of the sniper’s nest he’d sat in for three days, picking off Germans but never giving away his position. I’d read that in the Bossier City newspaper, when he’d come home a hero after the war ended.
He turned around and said, “Your mother’s right. Mrs. Badeaux can’t cook.”
I didn’t speak; he was also very handsome.


***

into the woods SQ teaser



Mindful Writers Retreat Authors 
Many of the writers who contributed to the anthology. 
The retreats happen at Ligonier camp and conference center in Ligonier, PA. Tenth retreat is coming up this fall!


Twenty-six Mindful Writers Retreat Authors contributed to Into the Woods. The group consists of bestsellers, award-winners, first-time authors, seasoned veterans, poets, memoirists, essayists, musicians, journalists, novelists, and short story writers who are traditionally, self and hybrid published. At Mindful Writers Retreats the labels don’t create a hierarchy, but instead reveal the richness of those who attend. Every single writer contributes to the magic and the fun that results from meditation, walking in the woods, and hour upon hour of mindful writing.

Authors in alphabetical order:
Lorraine Bonzelet
Wende Dikec
Teresa Futrick
Selah Gray
Hilary Hauck
Michele Zirkle
Eileen Enwright Hodgetts
Larry Ivkovich
Lori M. Jones
Kimberly Kurth-Gray
Laura Lovic-Lindsay
Ramona DeFelice Long
MaryAlice Meli
Gail Oare Sher Pensiero
Kim Pierson
Cara Reinard
James Robinson, Jr.
Larry Schardt
Linda K. Schmitmeyer
Carol Schoenig
Kathleen Shoop
Martha Swiss
Amy Walter
Madhu Bazaz Wangu
Denise Weaver

Many of the writers who contributed to the anthology. 
The retreats happen at Ligonier camp and conference center in Ligonier, PA. Tenth retreat is coming up this fall!

Find the Mindful Writers Retreat Series on Facebook HERE

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