10 February 2025

White Picket Fences Behind Closed Words Collection #1 by Kyle Ann Robertson Author Spotlight! @SilverDaggerBookTours #WhitePicketFences #NotSoLittleThings #AuthorSpotlight @kyleannrobertson

Behind Closed Words

 Exploring the impact of miscommunications and misperceptions within families, delving into the chaos that ensues, even when driven by love.

White Picket Fences

Behind Closed Words Collection #1

by Kyle Ann Robertson

Genre

 Women’s Fiction

 

White Picket Fences is a heartfelt family drama fueled by an honest story of motherhood, written for those of us caught up in our own self-searching journeys. The one thing Julie Cahill knows because of her transitory upbringing as a military brat is that she never had a hometown. So she has made sure her kids would grow up in one forever home, in a forever neighborhood, with lots of forever friends. Yet her dream of a permanent hometown has her feeling fenced in.

Set in the Delaware Bay area, Julie has achieved her dreams but struggles with having to accept invisibility, underappreciation, and being taken for granted by her family in trade for her unconditional love. Her guilt over not being available for her family on that one fateful day has her challenging karma by tightening her grip on her daughters and husband, ultimately pushing them away.

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 In the split second the door was open; I locked eyes with the

 thin woman, her hair wrapped helmet-like in a scarf. Even with dark circles around her sunken eyes, the tube in her nose leading to a white box hanging off her shoulder, and the ridiculous-looking floral housecoat-type dress, I recognized Mary Jane Edwards instantly.

 “Tina, come on, open up.” She pounded with more strength than I thought possible. “Is this any way to treat your mother?”

 “Go away. You’re good at that. Just go away,” I said under my breath and leaned on my side of the door. The battle line was drawn. I refused to let the woman who abandoned me when I was nine years old walk into my life like no time had passed.

 “Tina, I’m not leaving until we talk,” Mary Jane said as she wiggled the door handle.

 You’ve got to be kidding me. Stretching and loosening my jaw, I backed away from her insistence. What on earth could she want from me after all this time? I stared at the door, shaking my head as if the action itself would send the woman away.

 “Come on, Christina, we need to talk,” she said with a crack in her voice as she wiggled the door handle and tried to force the door open.

With deep breaths in through my nose and then eased out through my mouth, I slowed my hammering heart, a technique I’d learned through years of therapy. But the long-buried memory of being dropped off at Aunt Liddy’s house for an hour, only for it to turn into forever, ached all over again. “You haven’t had a word to say in over twenty years, and I certainly have nothing to say to you… and don’t break my frickin’ doorknob.” I yanked open the door.

 Holding on to the doorframe, Mary Jane took a step forward. “Thank you.”

 Squeezing my eyes to expel visions from the last time I saw her, I allowed one word to exit my mouth. “Speak.”

 “I’m not going to talk to you in this hallway.” She gripped the hanging white box as if using it for balance. “May I come in? Please?”

Still, the nine-year-old in me refused to budge.

 Mary Jane took a breath. With her attempt at more words, she wheezed, which led to chesty coughing.

 I winced as this woman, who was practically a stranger, dug a tissue from the purse hanging off her arm. She hiked up the strap on her shoulder, swung the white box to the front of her hip and adjusted a knob. After several deep inhales, she relaxed.

 Aunt Liddy would have been horrified had she seen me treat anyone like this, let alone my own mother. Truth be told, my behavior was appalling, even embarrassing, but what was I to do? With my aunt’s loving parenting, strategies from a knowledgeable therapist, and emotional support from my bestie, Nissa, I had painstakingly put in place a life that honored my late father, blocked out my estranged mother, and propelled me into an existence all my own, one I thoroughly enjoyed. I owed it to all of us not to go down this rabbit hole.

 But I had already stepped on the trigger. The steel jaws had snapped, trapping me between head and heart. With thoughts of hashing things out and never having to see her again, I resigned myself. “Just this once.” I lowered my shoulders and prayed I wouldn’t regret letting her into my home. L’Air du Temps, the scent of my youth, passed by ever so slightly as Mary Jane entered.

 With my forehead pressed against the closed door, I took two deep breaths and got ready for battle. I pulled a rubber band off my wrist, piled my long brunette curls into a bun on the top of my head, and reminded myself that my difficult childhood had very little to do with me and a lot to do with the woman sitting on my couch. I peeked at the clock: 9:30 a.m. Was it too early to open a bottle of wine? Whipping around, ready to face my past, a loose curl fell down the side of my face. So much for being Miss Tough Guy.

 Mary Jane seemed out of place, sitting slumped and focused on her breathing in my living room, which reflected the mid- century home my father had built for her where she always dressed picture-perfect, behaving like royalty. Seeing her now, in her unbecoming pink floral housedress in contrast to my sleek, custom-built, 1920s-inspired, fluted-back, Art Deco couch bewildered me. Who was this woman interrupting the ethos of my condo?

 Even with a mildly warming heart, I couldn’t let go of my veil of protection. “Talk.”

 She began. “I know it’s been a long time, and we have a few things to work out.”

 “A few? Jesus, Mother, you’re unbelievable. You. Left. Me. Remember?”

“Will you sit? Please? I need to explain a few things I thought Liddy had told you long ago. I’m surprised she never...” Mary Jane’s cough snuck up on her again, but I still refused to sit.

 Aunt Liddy? I paced, waiting for Mary Jane to get her cough under control. She had no business bringing Aunt Liddy into this. Liddy was like a mother to me. She had raised me from the age of nine. Liddy took me to buy my first bra. She listened when I lost my first crush and cheered me on when I graduated from high school and college, then moved into my own apartment as I attempted to enter adulthood.

 “Aunt Liddy?” I questioned once Mary Jane’s cough subsided. “You, Mom. Let’s talk about you. I saw you last year at Liddy’s funeral. You didn’t stick around long enough to talk to me.” I paced, unclasped my tense hands, and glued my arms to my sides to keep them from flailing in anger. “You know what? This isn’t going to go anywhere. You need to leave. I can’t do this. I don’t need you to tell me we have to talk because I know there’s nothing to say.” I marched to the door and yanked it open.

 “Tina, I know showing up like this is a shock, but I don’t know how much time I have left to straighten things out with you. I have lung cancer. I’ve quit my job and would like to be with you during the experimental treatment I’ve signed up for.”

 I froze. Oh, no. No way. No way will my mother do this to me. Mary Jane could not come into my home and drop a bomb of this caliber. The walls of my carefully assembled life began to crumble.

 “Shut the door, Tina. We really need to talk.” She pulled a large folded manilla envelope out of her purse and laid it on the coffee table.




Not So Little Things

Behind Closed Words Collection #2


Tina Edwards loved her childhood and creating fairy houses, a passion shared with her father, a world-renowned architect. But at nine years old, she found him dead at his desk and is haunted by this memory. Tina's mother abruptly moved away leaving Tina with feelings of abandonment and suspicion. Raised by her loving, wheelchair-bound Aunt Liddy, her father's sister, 33 year old Tina has become a miniature room artist and cherishes the control she has over her life in Northeast Georgia as she works hard to please her beloved dead father's wishes of following in his footsteps in art and history. 

 At the same time Mr. Jake Martin, all six-foot three of him, with a heavy southern drawl and winsome dimple, hires Tina to build replicas of the original rooms of his own family's Victorian mansion purchased to turn into a B&B, Tina's estranged, dying mother re-enters her life with family secrets that must be told. Amid their research for Jake, Tina and her assistant find out that stories from his past were unfounded and prove that miscommunications and misperceptions passed down through families create unwarranted, painful separations, echoing Tina's life story.

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My father’s voice echoed in every movement of the second hand from the vintage desk clock he had passed down to his grandson. “Time. Heals. All. Wounds. Give. It. Time.” I was pretty sure there was not enough time in the universe to surmount the death of my son.

I summoned strength by running my hand over the collage of superhero posters: Captain America, Spider-Man, the Hulk. After today, the walls would be bare. The slight leathery, sport-locker smell of the light-blue room elicited visions of my darling son. And so, between therapy sessions, grief groups, and the several books I’d read on loss over the past year and a half, I digested my pain in a void forever in my heart. If it wasn’t going to get any better, then I had to learn to live in the now with my grief and help my family heal. I could understand that Curtis would never come home, but I couldn’t accept that he was gone forever. I called the incident an accident. Surely, an eleven-year-old dying from a brain aneurysm could be nothing but a mistake.

Curtis’s dearest possession, a team-signed baseball, rolled between my fingers and brought a smile to my face. On the hottest afternoon of his last summer, Curtis hit a home run in the ninth inning of his Majors All-Star Game. He tied up the longest, most boring, 1–0 game. He single-handedly brought a small stadium of zombies back to life. The echo of his laughter above the awakening crowd and his smile as he slept that night were forever locked inside my heart.

Draped over his karate trophy at just the right angle, I could easily read “Most Valuable Player” on the medal Curtis received from that game. The tears I had been holding back fell as our eight-year-old golden retriever entered the room, wanting his morning walk. Was he looking for Curtis too? Plopping on the corner of the twin bed, I ruffled the puffs of fur behind Roger’s ears as he settled at my feet. “I know, Rog. I know.” Together we shared the loss, which was no less today than it had been yesterday or all the yesterdays before then.

 I picked up book number eight of Darren Shan’s Cirque Du Freak, making sure the bookmark was secure where Curtis had left it. I smoothed out the wrinkles I had created in the superhero duvet cover and flipped the matching pillow, exposing the lump of Curtis’s hidden “Doggie.”  From inside the pillowcase, I pulled out the threadbare stuffed Doggie Curtis never slept without. But after one embarrassing sleepover with a few baseball buddies, I found Doggie tucked deep inside the pillowcase. Close by but hidden. Had everything not happened so fast in the days after Curtis’s incident, had I time to think about it, if I could have thought at all, I would have placed Doggie in the casket with Curtis.

“Come on, Rog. Let’s go for your walk.”

 Roger sauntered in front of me down the long hallway. I paused at the door to my art studio as the early morning light illuminated the painted canvas on my easel. I would get back to my latest com- mission as soon as I cleared my thoughts and got through this first step toward my family’s new normal. Silence came from behind the twins’ closed bedroom door across the hall. The twins were either still asleep or understandably tucked under their weighted comforters to delay the start of their day.

 By the time Roger and I made it to the sidewalk, pink and purple light seeped through the grays, but the sun hadn’t quite snuck above the horizon. I now walked Roger every morning and under- stood why Curtis never complained about this one chore. The boost of energy from the brisk stroll, the silent moments for clear thought, and the apparent joy it brought Roger was a great way to start every day.

 Although Roger stopped and smelled every yard, his tail never failed to wag. If only it were that easy. Stop and sniff and move on. I needed to move on, but not back to where I was before Curtis’s incident. Life had gotten stale, and as good as Michael was to me, I thought I wanted more, but I was wrong.

 The day of Curtis’s passing, I had taken some time, just a few meaningless hours, for myself. Time to catch up with an old friend, one visit. It wasn’t intended to be a secret. It just wasn’t anybody’s business.

Curtis’s death pushed me closer to my empty nest sooner than I’d ever wished and was not what I imagined when I said I was tired of being Mom and Mrs. just for an afternoon. Would things be different if it weren’t for my selfishness and for not appreciating what I already had? I’d apologized to the universe every which way since then.

I kicked a stone. It bounced and rolled down the sidewalk in front of me. Roger chased it down, sniffed, then snorted, not pleased with his discovery. As we walked, the neighborhood came alive. Lights switched on. People brewed coffee and brushed their teeth. Across the street, Mrs. Amberly rocked on her front porch, sipped coffee, and watched me with consideration. Old Mr. Pender stepped out in his bathrobe, shot up a quick wave, then searched the ground as if the newspaper at his feet had disappeared before his eyes. Mary Simon herded her three small children into her minivan. I caught her eye, but she looked away, overreacting to her oldest child climbing into the back seat. It had been more than eighteen months, and still, people felt the need to avoid me. But I understood. How many times could a person say, “Sorry you lost your son”?

Since achieving her Creative Writing Certificate from Emory University, Kyle Ann has authored the children's book series " Nissa The Woodland Fairy." as writer BB Walsh. is the CWO (Chief Writing Officer) of the blog IF CORKS COULD TALK. And now her first novel WHITE PICKET FENCES with more to come. 

Kyle Ann's a retired Physical Therapist Assistant with most of her education coming from raising four children who are all out of college, happy in their own space, and paying their own bills! She spends as much time as possible reading, writing, golfing, gardening, and enjoying a glass of wine with friends and family.

  KyleAnnRobertson.com

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07 February 2025

Mob Knight by Sabine Barclay X: @Bookgal Instagram: @therealbookgal Blog Tour!



 Synopsis (from Amazon):

How did I get so lucky?

She shouldn't have been there.

She shouldn't have tried to protect me.

Now I'll move Heaven and Earth to keep her safe.

I'll be her knight in shining armor.

Stand in my way, and you'll breathe your last.

Nothing will stop me from seeing that smile when she's in my arms.

There's more to life than pleasure, but I'll give her more than she dreamed.

She's my light after the darkest night.


Synopsis (from Goodreads)


Cormac

How did I get so lucky? She shouldn’t have been there. She shouldn’t have tried to protect me. She stepped in the line of fire and didn’t even know me. That’s the kind of woman she is. But she’s stubborn too. It surprises us to discover we enjoy her submitting to my demands when no one’s watching. Nothing will stop me from seeing that smile when she’s in my arms. I’ll be her knight in shining armor. She’s my light after the darkest night.


Joey

No good deed goes unpunished. I didn’t think before I acted. Now I’m fighting my attraction to a man I should avoid. I keep families together. He tears them apart.


But he’s so much more than I expected. This New York Irish mobster might be ruthless with everyone else, but I see the man he only shares with his family. He lets me, and I won’t walk away. When outsiders try to drag me away, I know he’ll move Heaven and Earth to save me.

There’s more to life than pleasure, but he gives me more than I ever imagined.


Series information:

Mob Knight is an interconnecting, standalone Dark Mafia Romance with a HEA and no cliffhanger. It contains EXTRA-STEAMY scenes that will make your toes curl and your granny blush.


The O'Rourke Brotherhood is a six-book series that’ll keep you warm at night. Mob Knight is book six in the series.


Discover the four NYC rival families that make up The Syndicate Wars world. Each family has their turn to be heroes in their own series. When it’s not their family’s turn for love, discover whether they’re the villain.


You’ll meet all 24 men of the Four Families throughout the interconnected series, each taking their turn to fall in love. By the end, you’ll have a love/hate relationship with them all.

The Ivankov Brotherhood

The Mancinelli Brotherhood

The O’Rourke Brotherhood

The Cartel Brotherhood


Author bio

Sabine Barclay a nom de plume also writing Historical Romance as Celeste Barclay, lives near the Southern California coast with her husband and sons. She loves her days at the beach soaking up way too much sun, a good Netflix binge, and a strong hot chai.


Her heroines are independent women who can defend themselves but love their Alpha heroes who want nothing more than to protect their soulmates in her Mafia Romances.


She's Gen Y/Oregon Trail and loves creating engrossing contemporary romances that will make your toes curl and your granny blush.


Website

https://www.sabinebarclay.com/

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/SabineBarclayAuthor

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/sabinebarclayauthor/

TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@sabinebarclayauthor

Amazon

http://amzn.to/4gd7yJQ

Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/220296765-mob-knight

On writing

How did you do research for your book?

I spend a lot of time researching my Contemporary Mafia romances that I write as Sabine Barclay and my Historical Romances that I write as Celeste Barclay. I begin with a google search of whatever I need, then I hop around from there. I research names, dates, places, etymology, songs, poems, prayers, oaths, events, medieval forms of measurement, medieval homeopathic/plant remedies, anatomy, and weapons. All sorts of things. Then I decide what I want to incorporate into the story and what I tuck away in my memory for general knowledge.


Where do you get inspiration for your stories?

One story leads to another leads to another. Usually, there’s something I come up with in a story that plants the seed for the next one or a future one. Sometimes I merely think about what I haven’t written before or haven’t written in a while. It might be something I see on TV or while people watching. It might be something I read that I want to put my spin on.


There are many dark romance books out there. What makes yours different?

I love dark romance, but my natural storytelling style is deep shades of dark gray. Every book I write, Mafia and Historical, centers upon family. It could be blood or found. It’s always about love, loyalty, honor, and duty. Those are important values to me as a person, and it comes out in my writing. My Mafia books have dark plots, dark settings, dark backstories, but the relationship between the main couple is one of respect. My heroines are nobody’s fool and pretty kickass. Both MCs just know they’re better together than apart. With big families and a relationship of equals, there are moments of humor or levity interspersed with the darkness. I write stories that make you feel like you’re walking alongside the characters, not just being a fly on the wall.


What advice would you give budding writers?

No matter how great you think your story is, there’s always room for improvement. What makes sense to you may not make sense to others. Take time to get feedback, and it’s not a personal slight if someone doesn’t care for your book. You can’t please all the people all the time. At best, you can please some of the people some of the time. Find the readers who want to read you, and find the authors who you can network with. Build a village of readers and writers.


Your book is set in New York City. Have you ever been there?

The majority of each book is set in NYC. There are four rival Mafia families, so there are four series in what I call The Syndicate Wars world. You meet the men who take turns as heroes and villains throughout each series, so I keep most of each story in one place. I’ve been to NYC many times and love it. I just wouldn’t live there. Sorry, New Yorkers, but it smells funny.


How long have you been writing?

I’ve been writing creatively since Aug of 2017. I had a few months off, then finished my first book in Feb 2018 and published it on April 15, 2018. Better to celebrate that than Tax Day. Before that, I wrote a lot of academic and professional work. I didn’t know how much I would love storytelling until I started doing it. My imagination is a fabulous place to be.


Do you ever get writer’s block? What helps you overcome it?

Knock on wood, I haven’t gotten it. I think that’s because I’m an immersive or binge writer. When I start a story, I write most days until it’s done. It keeps me in the flow and makes it easier for one idea to germinate into another. If I get stuck, I switch to handwriting rather than typing. Just having another means to put my thoughts onto the page usually helps me move past the speed bump.


What is your next project?

I’m writing the first book, Cartel King, in the last series in The Syndicate Wars world, The Cartel Brotherhood. People have been meeting members of the Colombian Cartel for the past three series. They’ve had their turns at being villains. Now it’s their chance for redemption. The series kicks off with Enrique Diaz, the leader in NYC, with Cartel King. There will be six books just like in the previous three series. I’m already thinking about the next world I’m creating. That’ll take place in Boston and will launch in 2026. This year is the year of the Cartel. I’ve already had the American branches of the Russian bratva, the Italian Mafia, and the Irish mob. 


What genre do you write and why?

I began in Historical Romance and still write mostly Highlanders when I’m writing Hist Rom. I was a history teacher for years, and I love falling back in time. I love writing about independent women and the men who love them. I love the battles and clan politics based on real events. I love that it’s so far in the past that maybe I could have been that heroine. I don’t have to worry about my everyday real life. No thinking about oil changes or mortgages or electricity bills. I can be free to have an imaginary life. When I read a Hist Rom author friend’s Mafia book, I was hooked. Mafia Romance is Medieval Romance today. If you love swords and kilts, you can love guns and suits. If you love guns and suits, you can love swords and kilts. They are based on the exact same things: rivalries, protecting those you love and who rely on you, vengeance for wrongs, getting away with things you can’t in real life. It was a natural progression to write Mafia after writing Historicals for many years.


What is a favorite compliment you have received on your writing?

I feel like I’m part of your characters’ families. I know them like they’re real, and I feel like I’m in the story not just reading the story.


What were the biggest rewards and challenges with writing your book?

The biggest reward is offering escapism and entertainment to others. That’s what I get from writing, and that’s what I want to offer readers. The biggest challenge is juggling all the things that go along with being a professional author.


In one sentence, what was the road to publishing like?

Bumpy. I suppose I can say more than a word, so it has had high and lows that have taught me how to adapt to keep loving what I do.


Which authors inspired you to write?

Maggie Cole, Jagger Cole, Bianca Cole—there’s something about that name—and Jane Henry for Mafia. Eliza Knight, Emma Prince, Keira Montclair, Cecelia Mecca are among a slew of Medieval Romance authors I devoured before becoming an author.


On rituals:


Where do you write?

In my living room most of the time. I have serious neck issues, and writing on my sofa actually puts the keyboard and mouse at the right height for me. I have my laptop on a stand to bring it to eye level. I can shift into different positions to stay comfy, which also makes it easier on my back. I sound so old! But that’s where I’m happy.


Do you write every day?

No. If I’m currently working on a book, I write almost every day. But I give myself days off here and there to get real life things done—getting my roots done or doctor’s appointments or lunch with my family or friends—or just to have a break. I give myself a few days to a couple weeks off between books.


What is your writing schedule?

I’ve gotten into dictation recently, so I go for a long walk—about 4.5 miles—most days and dictate during that time. I can write as many words walking for an hour-and-half as I can in twice that time of typing. It allows me to get exercise and fresh air without feeling like I’m cutting into my workday. I’ll continue writing once I’m home and back at my computer. When I strictly typed, I would write anywhere from eight to fourteen hours. I get immersed in my stories. I love being in my imagination, so time just isn’t a thing. It passes without me noticing.


If you’re a mom writer, how do you balance your time?

When I started, I was a middle school teacher and had an upper elementary and middle schooler at home. I would write during my lunch, while my kids were at swim practice, at night after they went to bed, and during the weekend. I have one in college and one about to graduate high school, so it’s easier now that they don’t need me the way they used to. Since this is my full-time job now, I work until my family gets home, then I try to be off the clock. But when I first started, it was grabbing any time I could anywhere I was.


Fun stuff:


What is something you've learned about yourself during the pandemic?

I’m a happy hermit. After years as a stay-at-home mom, a teacher, a personal trainer, and being in sales, it was wonderful to just not have to talk to people. My family each had a spot in the house to work, and I had quiet and solitude. I hadn’t realized how exhausted I was being an introvert who’s learned to navigate an extroverted world.


What TV series are you currently binge watching?

I have a few! Fire Country, S.W.A.T., FBI, Tracker, Landman, Matlock, Poppa’s House, Dexter: Original Sin, Miss Scarlet 


What is the oldest item of clothing you own?

I have a couple of oversized men’s button downs I’ve had since high school. I graduated in ’98. Wow. Now that I think about it, they are WAY older than I realized. I don’t wear them that often, so they’re still in great shape and never go out of fashion.


Who was your childhood celebrity crush?

Oh, that’s easy. Joey McIntyre from New Kids on the Block.


Content warnings:

These are NOT Daddy Dom/ Little Girl (DDLG) books, but the terms Daddy and baby girl are used as endearments.

Praise kink (NOT degradation/shame kink or bully romance though)

BDSM/spanking

May have elements of domestic discipline

Multiple explicit sex scenes

Extensive use of profanity

Explicit and implicit reference to violence, drug trafficking, weapons trafficking, organized crime.








Pre-Order Blitz Murder on the Steel Pier A Tess Mancini Time Travel Mystery By Rosie Genova!

Genres: An Adult Time Travel Historical Mystery (with cozy noir elements)

Publisher: Two Roses Press

Publication Date: March 31, 2025

The morning after a blowout thirty-fifth birthday celebration in Atlantic City, crime reporter and party girl Tess Mancini wakes up in an unfamiliar place—1955. Bread is eighteen cents a loaf, Ike occupies the White House, and the Boardwalk is crawling with vintage cars and vintage wise guys. A bewildered Tess is sure of only two things: One, she’s not crazy, and two, the clothes are fabulous. And somehow, she’s living the life of her Great Aunt Theresa, who disappeared decades before Tess’s birth.

In her 1950s existence, Tess is a reporter for the local newspaper, living and working at a boarding house owned by her Zia Antonetta, an Italian immigrant with secrets of her own. Tess also discovers that Theresa has a kid brother, teenaged troublemaker Val Mancini—also known as Tess’s paternal grandfather. Though determined to return to her own time, Tess’s curiosity takes over. What happened to the first Theresa Mancini? And is Tess’s trip through time somehow connected to her aunt’s fate?              

But when young Val is accused of murdering a boarding house guest, a Nazi in hiding, Tess ends up with two investigations on her hands, and though desperate to leave the Nifty Fifties, she’s stuck in time until she can prove Val’s innocence. As she searches for answers, she finds allies in a dishy police detective and a suspiciously charming fellow reporter. She also crosses paths with a Mid-Century icon of science—possibly the one person who can help her get back home—but not until she finds a way to keep her grandfather off Death Row.

Because before Tess can get back to the future … she needs to make sure she has one.

Purchase Links Can Be Found At:

https://books2read.com/u/bpVKdz

From Chapter 1, Murder on the Steel Pier

Someone was smoking a cigarette. I sniffed, and spikes of pain started at my chin and shot through the top of my head. Oh God, make it stop, and I promise I’ll never touch another drop of tequila. Being another year older was bad enough—did I have to be punished for it, too? My nose twitched as the smoke teased my nostrils and caressed my olfactory nerves. I’d quit a month ago, but the longing for a cig came roaring back.

With my eyes still closed, and my head nailed to the pillow, I had one coherent thought: This is supposed to be a smoke-free hotel. As far as I knew, it was also bird-free, but the chirps and twitters assailing my ears were clearly coming from feathered creatures. Then again, it’s Atlantic City. Maybe the birds were part of the hotel show. Ever so slowly, I slid my hands from under the covers and cupped them over my ears.

“Please, birdies,” I whispered. “Stop singing.” Geez, they sounded close enough to be in my room. I exhaled, yoga style. C’mon, Tess, time to open your eyes. You can do it. Actually, I couldn’t, as my lashes were glued together. (Had I slept in my make-up? Not a good sign.) Still covering my ears against the piercing bird song, I fluttered my left eyelid and squinted.

Big, fuchsia-colored roses seemed to scream at me from the wall. And sun—blinding, eyeball-searing sun—streamed in through an uncovered window. And not a hotel window bolted shut and draped to keep out that awful light, but a wooden one with glass panes. And across the top, a ruffly white curtain.

Okay, not my hotel. So where was I? My empty stomach grew queasy; I wouldn’t have gone home with a stranger. Though I did remember a cute blond guy playing the slots next to me, but it was all so … blurry. I eased open the other eye. Across the room was a vanity table draped in more white ruffles. Somehow, I doubted the blond guy lived here.

This place was obviously some kind of historic inn or something, but that still didn’t explain how I’d gotten here. I looked down at the sheets, also decorated with roses. Only these were little yellow ones. Somebody sure liked her florals.

“So weird,” I muttered. Hands shaking, eyes half closed, I felt around for my phone, but my fingers landed on a string of beads. I let go of the necklace and blinked hard, trying to ignore the little flashes of pain behind my eyes. Next to me was an old-fashioned nightstand; on it was a lamp with a frilly pink shade, an analog alarm clock ticking loudly, and the “necklace,” which had a cross hanging from it. A face stared at me from a black-and-white photo. I shifted closer, peering at a guy with slicked-back hair, thick brows, and dark-lashed eyes. Across the bottom of the picture was a name, signed in blue ink. I frowned at the image. Who the heck was Tyrone Power? Was he someone’s boyfriend? Or part of the décor?

Hangover and rubber legs be damned, I had to get moving and find my phone. But before I could get a big toe out from under the covers, a knock sounded at the door. I sat up in the strange bed, holding my throbbing head as though it were a soft-boiled egg.

“Tess? Are you awake yet?” The voice on the other side of the door had a slight Irish brogue. “Can I come in, then?”

“Yes,” I croaked. Whoever she was, she knew my name. Despite the sunlight, the room was chilly, and I huddled under the cotton blankets as the woman bustled in holding a small tray. I sniffed coffee and toast, and when she set it down on the nightstand, my stomach gurgled audibly.

“Now,” she said, wiping her hands on her apron, “we served breakfast some time ago, and when you didn’t come down, I knew you’d be oversleepin’ again.  Your auntie will have my hide and your own if you don’t get down to that kitchen.” She crossed her ample arms and sent me a stern look. “You know we don’t serve anyone in their rooms, guests or otherwise, but Carolina insisted I bring you your coffee. Said you’re no good without it.”

I looked up at a broad-shouldered woman in a green housedress. Over that was an apron in a loud, orange-and-green pattern of forks and spoons. Her thick white hair, twisted into a bun, was bright against her weathered skin. Her small dark eyes gave the impression of two raisins set in a gingerbread face. I’d never seen her before in my life.

“Sorry, Mrs. Flaherty.”  How did I know that? It surely must have been her name because she didn’t correct me. I sat up quickly, my mouth hanging open in shock, and the blankets slipped to my waist.

Mrs. Flaherty took a step closer to the bed and narrowed her eyes at me. “Just what are you wearing, missy?” What was I wearing? I glanced down at the cursive “T” stitched on the pocket of my favorite monogrammed PJs. Expensive ones. And why did she care? I opened my mouth to answer, but Mrs. F got there ahead of me. “They’re silk,” she hissed. “And black, for the Lord’s sake.”

“Uh huh,” I said slowly, wondering if she commented on the nightwear of all her guests. Still, I pulled the blankets up to my chin.

“Best not let your auntie see them. Don’t know how in the world you afford such things,” she grumbled. “Eat up quick now, and bring down that tray when you’re through.”

“Okay,” I whispered, staring at the door she closed behind her. 

About the Author:

Photo by Joan Marie Photography

Proud Jersey girl Rosie Genova is a multi-genre author. Her work includes a Jersey shore cozy series, The Italian Kitchen Mysteries, and the upcoming Tess Mancini Time Travel Mysteries, set in 1955 Atlantic City. She is also the author of standalone suspense and a couple of rom-coms that presently live in her computer files (but are longing to be released into the wild). A former teacher and journalist, Rosie’s non-fiction has appeared in Entrepreneur magazine and The New York Times. The mother of three sons, Rosie still lives in her favorite state with her husband, too many dusty antiques, and a charming mutt named Lucy.

Contact Links:

Website

 http://www.rosiegenova.com

Facebook

 https://www.facebook.com/RosieGenova

Goodreads

 https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6462450.Rosie_Genova

Amazon Author Page

 https://www.amazon.com/stores/Rosie-Genova/author/B00BEKZU5U

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