Blog Tour Excerpt and Giveaway – WILDWOOD & WINDSWEPT by Jadie Jones

blogtourHello Loves and welcome to my Blog Tour Stop for WILDWOOD and WINDSWEPT by JADIE JONES hosted by Rockstar Book Tours. Today, I’ll be sharing excerpts and a giveaway at the end. Happy Reading!!!

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aboutbook

Title: WILDWOOD (The Hightower Trilogy Book #1)

Pub. Date: September 26, 2017

Publisher: The Parliament House 

Formats: Hardcover, Paperback, eBook

Pages: 294

purchaselinks

  AmazonB&NiBooksTBD

synopsis

Tanzy Hightower is not crazy. At least, that’s what she tells herself. Crazy looks more like her mother, who studies each sunrise with the same fascination other women give tabloid magazines in the grocery store checkout line. Crazy sounds like the woman on the radio claiming there’s a whole separate world existing parallel to our own. Still, Tanzy can’t deny the tingle of recognition she feels each time she sees her mother standing at the kitchen window, or hears the panic in the woman’s voice coming through the speakers of her father’s truck.
Tanzy intends to follow her father’s footsteps into the professional horse world. But the moment she watches him die on the back of a horse in an accident she feels responsible for, everything changes.
On the first anniversary of his death, a fight with her mother drives her back to her father’s farm in the middle of a stormy night. Neither Tanzy nor life as she knows it escapes unchanged when she is struck by lightning and introduced to a world… unseen, and receives proof her father’s death was no accident.
Two strangers seem too willing to help her navigate her new reality: Vanessa Andrews, a psychiatrist who believes lightning chooses who it strikes, and Lucas, a quiet, scarred stable hand with timing that borders on either perfect or suspect. But Tanzy has secrets of her own. Desperate for answers and revenge, Tanzy must put her faith in their hands as her past comes calling, and her father’s killer closes in. 

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TRADITIONS

The sweet scent of coconut pancakes draws me from the edge of sleep. I smile, knowing my mother is standing in the kitchen downstairs mixing batter, no doubt wearing a few clumps of it in her coal black hair. I toss my denim quilt aside, cool air whisking across my skin, and blink against the warm light of dawn that filters through the old lace curtain panel covering my window and sets the worn wood floor of my room aglow. The constant autumn rain must have finally offered a reprieve. My mother will be happy to see it. She’s convinced a clear sunrise on a person’s birthday is a sign of good things to come.

As I pull on jeans and a shirt, Dad’s laughter rumbles up the stairs, and then the fire alarm chirps. Mom has probably burned a pancake on the griddle.

In the kitchen, Dad is opening the window behind the sink, and Mom is perched on one foot in a wooden chair with her back to me, stretching to fan the smoke away from the alarm.

“I swear this thing is too sensitive,” she mutters. There’s a streak of flour on her hip and a glob of batter on the sleeve of her T-shirt. My mother can forecast rain better than any meteorologist. She can predict the approach of a gust of wind a few minutes before it roars across the Shenandoah Valley, but she can’t cook to save her life.

There are three plates on the table. Two of them are still empty. Mine has a short stack of blobby pancakes and a streak of runaway butter. A couple charred pancakes are tossed on the counter, and one more is on the floor at the foot of the trash can.

My dad grins at her over his shoulder and catches sight of me standing in the door.

“Happy birthday, Tanzy!” he says. “It’s the big eighteen. You know, Hope, Tanzy’s an adult now. You should make her do the cooking,” he teases, and snaps a washcloth in my direction. His smile is all teeth, and his amber eyes glitter. It’s the one physical trait we share. Otherwise, I don’t look much like either of my parents.

“I’ve made her coconut pancakes for her birthday every birthday since she was six. She may not be home for her birthday next year.” Mom’s chin quivers. She presses her lips together.

“I’ll come home for my birthday, Mom.” I slide into my seat and shovel in a bite. It isn’t cooked all the way through, but it’s warm, and sweet enough to chew and swallow without making too much of a face.

“Thank you, Tanzy,” she says, casting a mock glare at my dad. He winks at me before disappearing through the door that leads to the back porch. He reappears less than a minute later with two mason jars full of wild flowers.

“For my girls,” he says, and places one on the window sill and the other in the middle of the kitchen table. “Birthdays are big days for moms, too.”

“Travis, when did you pick these? Did you leave any flowers in the garden?” Mom arranges the blossoms with her nimble fingers, and then leans into them, breathing deep.

“Why do you think I got up early this morning? It’s freezing out there,” he says, watching her. “Weatherman said the temp is going to drop overnight and the whole valley will be covered in frost tomorrow morning. They’ll all be dead in twenty-four hours anyway.”

“Weatherman is wrong,” she replies, one corner of her mouth curling up.

Dad snorts. “We’ll see.” He rolls his eyes, but I know he believes her. “Eat up, Tanzy. We have a lot to do today.”

“Tanzy has school today,” Mom replies.

“You cook her coconut pancakes, and then she comes with me to the farm. You have your tradition, we have ours.” He winks at me. “Besides, she’s a senior. Isn’t the rest of this school year just for show? And who says she’s going to college? What if she decides to ride professionally?”

“Travis Hightower,” Mom scolds. “We’ll argue about this tomorrow. As for today, stick to tradition.” She wipes her hands on the front of her pants. “But make sure you pick up any homework assignments while you’re out. And please get home before dark. I made a dinner reservation for six p.m.”

Dad makes a face. “Isn’t that a little early?”

“I’m pretty sure that’s when normal people eat dinner,” I say, and then choke down a sticky clump of semi-cooked batter.

“We are as normal as normal gets,” Dad replies. “We’ll do our best, honey. Let’s get a move on, Tee. I’ll take my breakfast to go.” Dad kisses mom on the cheek, scoops a fresh stack of pancakes onto a paper towel with one hand and picks up his metal coffee mug with the other, and then heads through the back door toward the truck.

“Have fun,” Mom concedes, “and please be careful.” She glances out the window at the streaked sky and gnaws on her bottom lip. Her fingernails tap a quick rhythm on the countertop. I take my plate to the kitchen sink and follow her gaze to the glowing dawn. I wonder what she sees in it, and why she seems to hunt it for answers every morning.

“We’ll be fine, Mom,” I offer.

“I know.”

“Thanks for breakfast,” I say. “I really will come back every year, no matter where I go after graduation. Nobody does coconut pancakes like you do.”

“Thank you, sweetheart.” She looks at me, blinking rapidly. “Now go, the day’s wasting,” she says, and then turns back to the sun. I steal one more glimpse of her, and follow Dad to the truck.

We ride in silence for the first few minutes. Dad rolls up the pancakes with one hand so he can eat them like a burrito while he drives. Once he finishes, he wipes his mouth with the paper towel and then tucks it into the pocket of his flannel shirt.

“I don’t know why you like those,” he says, and sucks at his teeth.

“I haven’t liked them since I was about ten,” I admit.

Dad lets out a honk of a laugh. “You’re a good girl, Tanzy,” he says. He turns up the volume on his favorite radio station to listen to the morning show. The voices fade in and out for the first few minutes as we make our way to the main road. The radio host’s voice becomes audible, announcing the beginning of the routine Science Fact or Fiction Friday segment.

“With us today is Dr. Andrews, who has a rather extraordinary theory about light and lightning, and some compelling studies to back up her claims. Dr. Andrews, thank you for joining us.”

“Thank you for having me,” she answers.

“So Dr. Andrews, give us your science fact.”

“Did you know that the human eye sees less than one percent of the color spectrum, and our ears hear less than one percent of the sound spectrum?”

“No, I did not.”

“What do you think is in all that clear, all that quiet?”

Dad glances at the radio dial as if checking the station.

“I don’t know. I haven’t thought about it,” the host answers.

“What if I was to tell you that there’s an entirely separate world in the clear, undetectable by human senses.”

“A world?” the host repeats. I shift in my seat.

“Yes, a world,” the woman continues. “A world happening around us all the time. It has been operating alongside ours like two plays on one stage.”

“Do you have proof of this world?”

“None that you’d believe,” she replies. A chill of interest conjures goose bumps from my elbows to my wrist. I pull the sleeves on my jacket down to cover my knuckles.

“Well it’s pretty safe to invent something that you claim you can’t prove.”

“There’s nothing safe about it,” she answers.

“I’m not sure what this has to do with light or lightning.” The host’s voice raises an octave, and his question sounds more like an accusation. I lean toward the dash.

“Lightning and other weather events aren’t random. They’re tools of—”

“Okay, that’s all the nonsense I can take for one morning,” Dad interjects, his voice filling the cab, and turns the knob on the radio until a country song comes in clear enough to recognize. “Ruined my morning show and my drive,” he grumbles. “Let’s hope your mom didn’t hear that woman spreading her paranoid crap. She’ll stuff our house with furniture from floor to ceiling just to take up all the empty space. A world in the clear.” He huffs. “What’s wrong with these radio shows and news reports anymore? All they do is try to stir people up. They’ll give any nut a microphone and air time so long as it’ll get a reaction out of somebody.”

My gaze drifts out of my window, and to the clear air whistling by the car as we wind down a tree lined road, soaring skyward until it fades to black thousands of miles above us. Maybe it’s just the sound of the tires grinding against the asphalt vibrating through the bottom of the old Ford truck, or the whine of air curling around the hood, but the silence seems fuller than it did a moment ago.

“You are your mother’s daughter,” Dad says softly. “Don’t give wild hares prime real estate in your head. Your mom thinks her fears keep her safe, that they prepare her. All fear does is build walls, Tanzy—walls she can’t break because she’s convinced herself they’re useful.”

“I can cook. And I would rather be outside than inside,” I say, listing off the first two differences I can think of between my mother and me. I can’t imagine islanding myself at home the way she does. We only have one vehicle because she doesn’t like to drive and won’t go anywhere alone. In the last year, the walls of my room, of every room in our house, have felt a little closer in than they did before, the ceilings lower, too. Still, my heart sinks. I have felt the rabbit of nervousness race through me with nothing prompting the chase. What if, one day, I need walls the way she does?

“Before you came along, your mom couldn’t stand to spend a whole day inside. Hell, even a single lazy morning would make her agitated, and she’d need to go for a ride. Then she had that bad fall, and she didn’t want to have another one. Taking a risk has a higher price tag attached to it when you have someone depending on you. And it’s not just that. Being a parent changes things—changes everything. You see the world through the eyes of someone whose sole purpose becomes keeping a tiny, helpless baby safe. This world we’re in has more sharp edges and teeth than you realize.”

“Now who’s paranoid?” I smile at him.

“You’ll see one day, if you decide to have a kid of your own,” he says, his gaze following the nose of the truck as he makes a turn.

“That’s a big if,” I say.

“It’s also a long ways off. It better be, anyway.” He winks.

“Dad, seriously.” I fold my arms across my front. “But is Mom . . . is she okay? I know me leaving next year is hard on her. But she wants me to go, doesn’t she?”

“Of course she does. She’ll feel better once you know what you want to do and where you’re going. It’s the unknown that bothers her most. But you don’t need to worry about her. She’s stronger than you could ever imagine. I think when you have to raise yourself like she did, well, it shapes your perspective.”

“What really happened to her parents? I know you guys have said no one knows, but I always thought maybe it was some secret you were keeping until I was an adult or something. I am eighteen now.” I raise an eyebrow, and try to keep my tone light.

“It’s just something your mom isn’t willing to talk about. It took me a long time to accept it, and it’s natural for you to be curious. That’s a piece of your family and your history, too. But whatever it is, your mom keeps it from us for her own reasons, and I have learned to respect that.”

“I know.” I bite at the inside of my cheek, my mind still digging at the dark place in my mother’s past. I’m not as curious about who the people were in her life as I am interested in who she was during it.

I stare at the eastern horizon. Dad has watched the sunrise through the windshield of his truck on this drive to Wildwood Horse Farm six days a week for as long as I can remember. Nested against the west side of Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, the sunrises are long and spectacular. Mostly, so are the days. The sun comes up. The horses eat. Some of them are worked through training exercises, some are shown to potential buyers, and the rest are turned loose to run in the pasture. Stalls are cleaned. Water buckets are filled. Aisles are swept. Students are taught. The horses eat again. The sun goes down. He drives home. Aside from the sun, Dad controls everything at Wildwood. He is the head trainer there, and the biggest gear in the proverbial clock, making the other parts turn.

Next year will be different. Where will I be? Mornings will either find me in a saddle, working to climb the rungs of the international show jumping circuit, or sitting in a desk with a college text book propped open in front of me. Either way, it won’t be here in this truck. It’s hard to imagine my world changing so unequivocally while theirs remains the same, save my absence.

We pull into the parking lot at Wildwood Farm. We are the first car here. Dad could turn over the first daily chores to the staff, but he likes to be the one to start each day, to see how each horse has come through the night, and wants to be the one to discover anything out of the ordinary, not be told about it secondhand.

Today, the morning runs like clockwork. I am allowed to come to the farm for my birthday, but I’m certainly not allowed to throw off the farm’s routine. I wouldn’t want it to. The routine is a heartbeat, a living thing, breathing life into the cracked concrete aisles and faded barn walls. A horse farm isn’t wood and sand and grass and steel. It’s the movement that happens around and in and on the wood and sand and grass and steel.

After a quick lunch, we unload a tractor trailer’s worth of alfalfa into the hay shed. My dad throws a bale of hay like most people toss laundry into a hamper—easy and mindless. I grit my teeth to keep from grunting with the effort it takes to try to keep up with him. By the time we’re halfway through, sweat beads along my scalp and trickles into my ears. The radio show from this morning resurfaces in my mind. Dad’s right, that woman was a loon. She’s probably never worked a day on a farm, never felt the ache of real labor, the release of exhaustion. If she’d just look around at her own world, maybe she wouldn’t need to invent something invisible, and impossible to prove or disprove.

My thoughts drift to my mother. I don’t know how different I would be if I grew up without parents or any family to speak of. Who would she be if she’d had the security of walls and home-cooked meals, no matter how badly they were burned? I wish she’d tell me about her life growing up, and I wish she would want to be here with us on days like this. Maybe a hard day of farm work is exactly what she needs to remember that life doesn’t always have a twist lurking around every corner.

Dad waves at the driver as the empty rig pulls up the driveway.

“Do you want to take Teague and Harbor for a ride in the woods, Tanzy?” he asks. “It’s the first pretty day we’ve had in a while. It’s not going to last, though. The radar looks busy again in about an hour.”

I pause, studying his face for any sign he’s kidding. I still have stalls to clean, and he has three client horses on the schedule for training sessions. Dana McDaniel, his assistant manager, has the day off. Not to mention my mother expects us home at a decent hour. There’s no time for a leisure ride on our own horses.

“Your mom was right. This might be your last birthday at home for a while, depending on where you are next year. We should make the most of it,” he continues.

“Okay,” I answer slowly, waiting for him to change his mind or list off what we need to take care of before we tack our horses. Instead, he retrieves his helmet from his office and heads to his horse’s stall. I hustle to Harbor’s stall, buckle her halter, and jog down the aisle to where Dad has tied Teague for tacking.

“We haven’t done this in too long, Tanzy,” he says on an exhale as we finish fitting the bridles to our horses. “Life is short. Too short. Sometimes you have to slow down and take in the view. I don’t care what that whack job said on the radio this morning. A big clear sky is one of my favorite things on earth, and I think we should go enjoy a little piece of it. Let’s ride up the ridge. I bet the river is up high with all this rain we’ve had.”

“Are you sure we have time? Mom did say to stick to tradition. Leaving work behind . . .” I trail off and glance back at his office door, imagining the to-do list printed on the whiteboard. It’s only half-done. “Well, it’s not tradition,” I finish. My middle stirs and twists. Is this just one of the wild hares dad was talking about before? Is this how it all starts, and then one day I’m staring out my window at the sun, reading its color and clarity for omens of the day to come? My entire life is going to change in a matter of months. Change is a good thing.

“Maybe it’s time we start a new tradition. A birthday trail ride sounds like a good one. Are you coming?” Dad asks.

I steel myself with a quick breath in. Harbor peers at me, black eyes round and soft. “Yep, here we come,” I say, and lead her down the hall.

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Title: WINDSWEPT (The Hightower Trilogy Book #2)

Pub. Date: November 13, 2018

Publisher: The Parliament House 

Formats: Paperback, eBook

Pages: 276

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synopsis

Tanzy’s journey continues in Windswept, the second installment of the Hightower Trilogy… An Unseen World believes Tanzy Hightower is the key in an ancient prophecy meant to deliver the only new birth in all of time. They have waited a thousand years for her soul to return to life in human form. Some of them will stop at nothing to fulfill the prophecy, and others have sworn an oath to end Tanzy’s existence, permanently. Tanzy’s body is compromised. Her veins are now home to the blood of a savage, wild horse, and its instincts are becoming impossible to control. Her world is also divided. She is determined to rescue Lucas, an Unseen creature who has loved her since her first life, and to find her treasured Harbor and the other stolen horses, which are bound for a catastrophic end in a world she can’t access on her own. Yet the only allies she has left insist she seeks refuge in a remote safe house on the Outer Banks. While her fellow candidates beg her to stay in hiding, new enemies work to draw her out, making it clear Lucas and the horses are hers for the taking. But Tanzy knows all to well that when your loved ones are used as bait, finding them is only the beginning.

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CRY WOLF

“Tanzy.” My mother murmurs my name without reaching for me.

My hands tremble at my sides. I should meet her gaze, but my focus is drawn to her throat. I want nothing more than to cradle my cheek against the soft curve of her neck, to feel safe in her embrace. To feel like her child again. How many times over the course of this past year have I wanted to feel exactly the same way?

A girl steps between us—a girl I met moments ago. Her name has already escaped me, incinerated by the shock of seeing my mother come through the cloak of fog and trees. Whatever else she said, mere seconds ago—something important—has scattered from my mind like ash in the wind.

My mother. My mother is here. Here, in the woods lining Vanessa Andrews’s house. Vanessa, who’s been playing mind games with me for months, who knows what I’m going to do before I do. My mother wouldn’t, couldn’t be on Vanessa’s property without her knowing, could she? If she knew what danger she was in, she’d never have come. But she’s here. . . . She’s here.

What if this isn’t my mother at all? What if it’s an Unseen creature borrowing her face? A chill pricks my thudding heart, slowing it in my chest.

“Who are you?” My voice falters, and I withdraw behind a line of shadows. The taste of metal floods my mouth, and everything inside of me begins to hum. I mean the question for my mother, but the girl answers instead.

“I’m Jayce, remember?” she says. “We’re here to help you, Tanzy. Both of us.” Her fingers are strangling the strap of her messenger bag. Her white-blonde hair frames her narrow face. The ends are dyed pink, a shock of color against her alabaster complexion. Faint lines of darker pigment zigzag across her exposed skin. Two bright stripes descend from the inner corners of her eyes, tapering to a point at either edge of her mouth.

I recognize those markers immediately—the stain of Vires blood flowing through her body, which means she’s met Asher. If the pattern on her skin is any indicator, he transfused her with the blood of a tiger. Fresh suspicion prickles my spine, and I’m suddenly comforted by the knowledge that I’m one of the strongest mortal creatures on this side of the veil.

Jayce may have the stripes of a tiger, but the deepened hue of my skin, my long lashes and dark, wild hair, all of it emerged after my transfusion in the hospital. Asher completely siphoned my blood and replaced it with the Vires blood of a wild horse—the horse Spera saved from death a thousand years ago. The horse who laid down its life for her, and for her future incarnations, apparently. The horse now rendered to porous stone in Vanessa’s magnificent mansion, not a hundred yards from where we stand.

Vanessa, who I trusted. I wonder if I’ll ever trust blindly again. I hope not. I clinch my hands to fists and step out from the shroud of shadows.

“Who are you?” I say, staring hard into Hope’s eyes this time so there will be no misunderstanding.

“I’m your mother,” she says meekly.

I close my eyes and steel myself against the rising memory of the letter she left in my empty room:

 

TANZY,

This house is no longer your home. I am no longer your responsibility, and you are no longer mine. Don’t look for me. You won’t find me. Our paths will not continue unless we walk them alone. Leave, Tanzy, and don’t come back.

Hope

 

SHE SIGNED it with her name instead of her role. Perhaps that hurt worst of all. Not my stripped belongings, the bedroom she left bare save a lantern and a pathetic scrap of a note. Not the days I spent in the hospital wondering if she was okay, when she should have been worried about me. Not the hundreds of unanswered phone calls.

She locked up the house. Our home. Abandoned it. Abandoned me. She isn’t my mother anymore. She’s just . . . Hope.

“Even if you are my mother, I’m no longer your responsibility, remember?” I say through my teeth, my eyes brimming with tears.

“Please, I don’t have much time.” Her hands dangle at her sides. I catch myself staring at them, willing them to reach for me. They don’t even flinch in my direction. I could die a day from now; an hour. Or worse, I could be taken by Asher and kept alive for an eternity. If today is any indicator, it’s a matter of when, not if. She can’t possibly understand what I’m up against, but shouldn’t a mother recognize when a daughter needs her most?

In a way, her distance confirms her identity. An impostor would’ve tried to hug me by now. This shred of proof is sharp and hot.

The pressure in my chest creeps up my throat. “You’re wrong.” My voice cracks. “I’m the one who’s running out of time.” I turn away from her and move deeper into the trees. I can’t think in a straight line with my world so categorically flipped on its side.

“You have to stop her,” my mother cries out, choking on a sob.

Keep walking, I tell myself, but my stride slows. My pulse soars. I strain to hear the note of desperation in her voice—desperation for me. As if . . . as if she actually cares.

Footsteps, too light and quick to be hers, scurry in my direction.

“Hear Hope out, Tanzy,” Jayce pleads. “If you don’t, you’ll regret it. Trust me.” She steps in front of me, blocking my path, and hugs her arms to her ribs.

Regret. Trust. Those words make me want to laugh. Or vomit. I glare at her, but the sight of her stripes stirs something inside of me. Sympathy, remorse. Do those feelings belong to me, or to Spera? Does it matter?

I remember Jayce now, and who she once was a thousand years ago—Cavilla. I saw her in Spera’s memories. Another soul marked by Asher. Guilt creeps around the base of my throat and draws tight. A thousand years ago, my first incarnation ended hers.

Does any piece of this life belong to me and me alone? Or is my every move and relationship colored by the decisions Spera made during her existence? Is anything in this life really, wholly mine? Is even my mother a piece of this puzzle? A pawn like me? Or something else . . . something worse?

It should have been you in that river. Her words come clawing to the surface in my mind, the words that drove me back to Wildwood and into Asher’s carefully laid trap. And yet, she repeatedly warned me away from Wildwood, tried to forbid me from ever returning.

“Why is my mother here? What’s she doing with you? What’s her part in all of this?”

“She needs to tell you good-bye.” Jayce toes at the ground with her sneaker.

I press my hand against the ache in my chest, stunned there’s any piece of me left intact enough to break. I am no longer your responsibility, and you are no longer mine.

“She already told me good-bye,” I mumble, turning away. I can’t take anymore. I can’t endure another blow and be able to keep walking, keep fighting.

“Fine,” Jayce calls at my back. “Don’t talk to her. But don’t run away, either. Please, Tanzy, you have to stay with me.” Her footsteps punctuate her words as she follows behind me, and I have to stop myself from taking off at a run. “We need you, and like it or not, you’re going to need us, too. If not for her, if not for yourself, then do it for Lucas. He’s going to need all the help he can get.”

Lucas. My heart lurches against my sternum. My face snaps to the side, where Vanessa’s stone house is peeking through the trees. In my head, I hear myself calling Lucas a killer. I see the agony painted on his face, feel the burn of his eyes on my back as I turn away and leap through the window, leaving him in Asher’s murderous hands.

“I forgot . . . How could I . . .?” Freeing Lucas is my plan. At what moment did I lose focus?

“Hey, you didn’t forget him. For ninety seconds, you got distracted.”

Jayce touches my elbow. The slight contact makes me crash back into the dreary woods, gray and slick with mist. I yank my arm from beneath her fingers.

She lifts her hands in a show of surrender, then lets them drop.

“Lucas is part of one life for you. Your mom is part of another. When one showed up, the other took a back seat. I get it. What you need to square with is that Hope and Lucas are very much a part of the same life. The same world.”

“I highly doubt it.” But doubt has made a home in me, its reach consuming and breathtaking. My mother is the last piece of the world I once knew. Lucas is everything else, a lighthouse in a sea full of teeth. He was there when lightning struck me. When I died and was resuscitated. He was there day after day, sitting beside my hospital bed, filling that stale, white room with wild flowers in mason jars. Turning me into the light of the sun.

He was there when I woke in the hay shed after my trip through Spera’s memories. Guarding me. Always guarding me. And where has my mother been all this time? Even before she left, she was leaving me, more and more every day. Leaving me for a year, when I needed her most.

“Let Hope explain it to you,” Jayce is saying. “Please. This is the one lifeline you’re going to get. You can try to survive on your own, and we won’t stop you. But if you come with us, we might be able to save your soul.”

I wrestle with her words, indecision gnawing within. No one has mentioned saving my soul, only the price I will pay for living, and the price I will pay for dying. The prophecy of the Vessel is horribly simple. If I choose to open the door between our world and the Unseen world, I will live forever as Asher’s queen and deliver the Novus, the one Unseen child in all of time. The Seen world will not survive. If I choose to seal the veil, I’ll die, my soul never to return, and Unseens will be trapped on their side of the veil forever. I can’t decide what’s less likely: the possibility of some kind of ancient loophole, or the idea that my mother is somehow involved in all of this.

I work my lower lip between my teeth as Jayce returns to my mother’s side.

Always look a gift horse in the mouth, Tanzy. Always. My father’s voice echoes in my head, and I close my eyes, absorbing the warmth from the memory of him. If I’d heeded his advice, if I’d examined Vanessa’s friendship more closely, I might not be in this mess.

At last, I raise my gaze and stare at my mother. She’s thinner than I’ve ever seen her, pale as wind-driven snow, and just as shaky. I would know her face, her hands, her laugh among a million. But in this moment, I realize I know absolutely nothing true about her aside from two facts: that she loved my father, wholly and unwaveringly, and once upon a time, she loved me too.

I armor myself with these truths, and ascend the hill.

Jayce steps to the side as I approach. My mother visibly swallows. Her face is a canvas of desperation. A blue sheen ripples beneath her ivory skin. Sweat collects along her brow. Her lips move to form a word, but the lines around her mouth blur. She looks sick, dangerously sick.

My tears come, hot and disobedient and all at once. “What’s happening to you?” I take a step closer and reach for her.

“No!” She recoils from my touch. Her movements are weak, shaky.

It doesn’t make them hurt any less.

I stagger back, doubling the distance, and gulp in air as if I’ve been struck.

“I can’t, Tanzy. I want to. You have no idea how much I want to. But I can’t. What I wrote in that letter, I had to.” She struggles to catch her breath. “I couldn’t help you as a human. I had to . . . to turn back.”

Jayce’s earlier words return like the melody of a song: What you need to square with is that Hope and Lucas are very much a part of the same life. The same world.

The Unseen world.

“You’re an Unseen,” I whisper, as ringing floods my ears and the world around me blurs.

“Yes.”

I press my lips together to keep my chin from quivering. The final layer of foundation crumbles beneath me. She was in on this the whole time. She knew one day Asher would come for me, and she never said a word. I’ve been little more than a pawn from the moment I was born—reborn. But how was I born at all? Unseens can’t have children. It’s impossible. The prophecy of the Vessel states there will be one Unseen child in all of time—the Novus. I am not the Novus; I am destined to be its mother.

Hope draws enough strength to continue. “I am an Unseen, nothing but a piece of wind and sky. For a short while, I became human. Not a masked Unseen. A true, mortal human.”

“How? Why?” I nearly choke on the questions, their weight and velocity a most damaging combination.

She shakes her head, a tremor rocking her body. “The kind of help you need now . . . I can’t give it to you as a human. I found a way to change back, but nothing comes without a cost.”

“What price are you paying?” My voice breaks.

“You.” Tears roll down her face, taking strips of color with them. “The price is you. I’ve been given this time to tell you good-bye. Then I can never appear to you again. You will not see me after this. We cannot exist to each other. I promise I won’t leave you . . .”

“How long do we have?” I whisper. Please don’t go. I have so much more to say. Don’t you? How am I supposed to do this without you?

“A few minutes. Maybe less.”

“Haven’t I already paid enough?” I cry out. Everything inside of me quakes as whatever binds me together threatens to explode.

“I will find some way to make this up to you one day. Stay with Jayce. Stay alive. We’ll find a way to save us all.” She closes her eyes.

“Wait! How do I save Lucas?” I plead.

Her form brightens, glowing white at her core. “He doesn’t deserve saving,” she says. Her voice is like air, but her gaze is heavy and sad. She knows I’ll try to save him anyway. Spera would save him, and Spera and I . . . we’re two different people. But we’re also the same. “The less they have to use against you, the longer you can hold them at bay.”

Save yourself, Tanzy, she means to say. But I can’t. I won’t.

You’ve taken care of people for so long, you don’t even see when you’re the one who needs help. That was Dana, Dana who knew me well enough to betray me. But she was right. I tried to save my father from the shadows on the ridge. I tried to save my mother from herself, tried to save Harbor from those beasts, tried to save Vanessa from Dr. Andrews. Saving people . . . that’s who I am. Me, Tanzy.

It’s who Spera was, too.

My mother’s skin is fading. Becoming translucent.

“Don’t go,” I rasp.

Her face falls. A wind sweeps through the trees, distorting her form into wisps of light.

“I love you,” she whispers. Her voice hangs in the air a moment longer than the traces of her body. Then even her words are gone, claimed by the damp gray.

I reach for the space she occupied a heartbeat ago. The wake she’s left is cooler and charged. I curl my trembling hand, trapping the sensation in my fist. The chill of her slips through my fingers, and is swept into the fog.

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abouttheauthor

Jadie.jpg

Young-adult author. Equine professional. Southern gal. Pacific Northwest Transplant. Especially fond of family, sunlight, and cookie dough.​​

I wrote my first book in seventh grade, filling one hundred and four pages of a black and white Mead notebook. Back then I lived for two things: horses and R.L. Stine books. Fast forward nearly twenty years, and I still work with horses, and hoard books like most women my age collect shoes. It’s amazing how much changes… and how much stays the same.

​The dream of publishing a novel has hitch-hiked with me down every other path I’ve taken (and there have been many.) Waitress, farm manager, road manager, bank teller, speech writer, retail, and more. But that need to bring pen to paper refused to quiet. Finally, in 2009, I sat down, pulled out a brand new notebook, and once again let the pictures in my head become words on paper.

​As a child, my grandfather would sit me in his lap and weave tales about the Cherokee nation, and a girl who belonged with horses. His words painted a whole new world, and my mind would take flight. My hope – my dream – is that Tanzy’s journey does the same for you.
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Website | Blog | Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest | Facebook | Goodreads

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entergiveaway

One lucky winner will win a $10 Amazon Gift Card, International.

Rafflecopter Giveaway

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tourschedule2

Week One:

11/12/2018- Here is what I read blog– Excerpt

11/13/2018- Mythical Books– Excerpt

11/14/2018- lori’s little house of reviews– Review

11/15/2018- Lifestyle Of Me– Review

11/16/2018- Rhythmicbooktrovert– Review

 

Week Two:

11/19/2018- Adventures Thru Wonderland– Review

11/20/2018- Whatever You Can Still Betray– Excerpt

11/21/2018- BookHounds YA– Interview

11/22/2018- Graced with Books– Excerpt

11/23/2018- Texan Holly Reads– Excerpt

 

Week Three:

11/26/2018- PopTheButterfly Reads– Review

11/27/2018- Daily Waffle– Spotlight

11/28/2018- Novel Novice– Excerpt

11/29/2018- The Book Bratz– Interview

11/30/2018- Character Madness and Musing– Excerpt

 

Week Four:

12/3/2018- Dorky Girl and Skeletor– Spotlight

12/4/2018- Viviana MacKade– Excerpt

12/5/2018- Smada’s Book Smack– Review

12/6/2018- Parajunkee– Excerpt

12/7/2018- Sincerely Karen Jo Blog– Excerpt

 

Week Five:

12/10/2018- Good Choice Reading– Excerpt

12/11/2018- Oh Hey! Books.– Interview

12/12/2018- Two Chicks on Books– Excerpt

12/13/2018- Two points of interest– Excerpt

12/14/2018- D Books and Reviews– Review

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Hope you enjoyed reading these excerpts! Don’t forget to add this series on your TBR! sincerelykjologo

Blog Tour Excerpt – REJECTING THE ROGUE by Riley Cole

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Hello Lovelies and Welcome to my Blog Tour stop for the first book in THE RESTITUTION LEAGUE SERIES by Riley Cole. Today, I have an EXCLUSIVE EXCERPT from REJECTING THE ROGUE to share with you. Hope you enjoy this little treat and don’t forget to add this series on your TBR!divider4

Meet the Restitution League
They’re thieves. They’re rogues. They’re well-armed for adventure.

The crew of the Restitution League fights injustice while wrestling with love and desire and the occasional throwing knife.

One blazing romance at a time…

REJECTING THE ROGUE by Riley Cole – Available Now!

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Purchase in print on Amazon

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Thieves make the best rogues. And the worst heartbreakers.
Philomena Sweet, Victorian London’s finest safecracker, knows it better than most. The worst rogue of them all, dashing jewel thief Spencer Crane, smashed hers long ago.
And now he’s back, fleeing danger from their past. Danger he won’t survive without her help.
She’d love to refuse, but she can’t leave him for dead.
Spencer Crane would sooner steal costume jewelry than ask talented, wickedly bright Meena Sweet for help.
But revenge stalks them both. He needs her artistry. She needs his skills.
Neither needs the desire that sparks to life between them.
While they dodge criminals, carriages, and the occasional flying cabbage, who will protect these two notorious thieves from each other?

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exclusiveexcerpt

Chapter 1
Pimlico, London
June, 1881

“I’ve got you now, you beauty.”

Philomena Sweet tapped the mechanical drawing spread out across her desk and grinned. She’d found it, the way to defeat the newest, the most magnificent safe in history. If her calculations were correct, it shouldn’t take thirty seconds to breach.

She would have savored her victory a moment longer had it not been for the explosion.

To be fair, it was rather mild as explosions in her house generally went. Even so, it was strong enough to make the chandelier swing and slosh the last of the excellent Darjeeling out of its cup.

She whisked the plans away from the spreading tea. Obtaining the drawings for the newest Dreadstone Superior had been terrifically difficult. It wouldn’t do to lose them before she had the specifications committed to memory.

While the chandelier above her squeaked like a child’s swing, Philomena rolled up the large pages. She glanced at the overwrought casement clock she’d inherited from her mother’s maiden aunt. The brass cupids on either side of the clock face glared back. Their plump cheeks suggested an appreciation for mischief and gaiety. The hard set of their eyes did not.

Clearly, their appreciation did not extend to safecracking.

She stuffed the plans back into the carrying tube and rose from her chair. Poking her head out into the hallway, she called for the houseman. “Mr. Hapgood?”

The family factotum emerged from the parlor across the entryway, a dust rag in his rawboned hand. Though his tall frame was beginning to droop from the top like an aging daffodil, he still moved with the grace of the fisticuffs champion he’d been in his prime. “Miss?”

“I’m certain my cousin is uninjured, but would you mind checking on him?” she asked. “And please remind him that our client will be here directly.”

The tall man nodded and finished drying his hands on the dust rag. “Mrs. H just took the scones out of the oven, and tea is brewing. I’ll collect Mr. Edison.”

He took off toward her cousin’s laboratory at the back of the house.

“I can’t imagine Edison will be pleased with that recipe,” Philomena’s younger cousin, Briar, commented as she descended the stairs. “I thought he was working on a new sleeping draught. It’s supposed to render one unconscious in an instant. Can you imagine?” Her wide blue eyes twinkled. “So many possibilities.”

Philomena watched her cousin float down the staircase. The deep plum satin of her walking dress suited her creamy complexion to perfection. As always, her coiffure looked as if it required hours to complete, rather than the few minutes it took to twist that abundance of golden curls into submission.

Meena patted the swept-up twist Mrs. Hapgood had managed to make of her own ordinary brown waves. Both Briar and Edison had inherited their taste for danger—and their exceptional hair—from the Sweet side of the family.

All she’d gained from the male side of the line was her talent for thievery.

Briar caught sight of her and paused, a delicate hand on the banister. “Again?” She frowned. “Meena, you’ve worn that fusty old thing three times this month.”

Meena tugged the tight, buttoned sleeves of her linen day dress farther down her wrists, her movements a touch more forceful than necessary to straighten the delicate material. “I like this gown. It’s elegant.”

The charcoal broadcloth, with its severe lines and tastefully draped bustle, felt rich, like one of Mrs. Hapgood’s dark chocolate bonbons.

Smooth and satisfying, and devoid of irrational frippery.

“It is elegant. I was just hoping you’d wear the new dress, the yellow one with the…” Briar’s hands fluttered as she searched for words. “The lower neckline. It’s ever so much more—”

“Inappropriate,” Meena interjected.

“I was going to say ‘daring.’” Briar pinned her with a look that would have done a schoolmistress proud. “Dressing to be noticed isn’t a bad thing.”

Meena couldn’t agree.

While her cousin exuded the wild beauty of a riotous climbing rose, she herself preferred the potted aspidistra, serviceable in its way—and even given to blooming on occasion—but unlikely to cause an observer’s heart to race.

Briar hurried down the last several steps and crossed the foyer. “It’s not as if you’re completely on the shelf.” She brushed a sprinkling of plaster dust from Meena’s shoulder. “You might find yourself wanting to attract the right sort of notice someday.”

Meena laughed. “Eight and twenty is on the shelf and dusted over, I should think.”

“Don’t be thick.” Briar swiped a last bit of dust from Meena’s dress. “You could sparkle, if you chose.”

Meena patted her younger cousin on the arm. “And should I wish to, I know exactly who to consult.”

A hopeful look flickered across Briar’s face.

Meena ignored it. “I don’t believe it’s anything we need to put on our schedules just yet.”

Or ever.

Sparkling, shining, and standing out in any way was the last thing a safecracker sought. Even one who only used her talents for good.

“That day may come sooner than you think.” Briar tossed off the enigmatic statement and sailed past her into the study. “Where is my dagger?” she asked, hunting between the great stacks of papers Meena had pushed to the sides of her desk. “I hate being unarmed when we have company.” She crossed from the desk to a pie crust table beneath the front window and fished about behind a dusty-looking fern, finally holding up a wicked little knife. “There you are.”

Cobwebs clung to the leather-wrapped hilt. With a frown of distaste, Briar swept them off before scrutinizing Meena again. “Where’s your derringer?”

“We’re meeting a new client. She doesn’t need a weapon.”

Briar’s older brother, Edison, strode into the comfortable room, looking exactly as one would expect after being subjected to a minor explosion. His thick auburn hair stood on end around his handsome face, and his unfastened collar bowed out, away from his firm jaw. As he walked, he was shrugging into a linen jacket.

Briar intercepted him, fastening his collar and doing what she could to smooth down his wild locks.

As his sister fussed, Edison stood uncharacteristically still, his gaze on Meena. “You haven’t told her.”

Briar gave her head a quick shake. “Not yet.”

He fixed his sister with a hard look.

She brushed a rogue curl out of his eyes. “I haven’t found the right time.”

A faint growl rumbled in his broad chest.

Meena stopped in the middle of straightening her desk. “Tell me what?”

Her cousins glared at each other, each daring the other to speak.

“It’s nothing.” Briar waved a hand in the air. “The merest triviality. We can discuss it later.” She stared pointedly at the angry cupid clock. “Our new client will be here any moment.”

Eyebrows arched, Meena crossed her arms over her chest and stared at the pair of them, willing one of them to crack.

Unfortunately, both cousins appeared to be temporarily immune to her powers. Edison brushed imaginary dust from his waistcoat. Briar tested the tip of her dagger with a forefinger, avoiding Meena’s gaze.

Meena planted her fists on her hips. “You ordered more of those Chinese throwing stars, haven’t you?” She sighed. “Briar, they are dreadfully expensive.”

“No!” Her cousin’s eyes rounded in surprise. Then she blinked, making her face carefully blank. “I mean…maybe.”

Meena opened her mouth to scold Briar for her spendthrift ways, but the sharp thunk of the door knocker interrupted her.

Before Mr. Hapgood showed the man into the study, Meena stared down her cousins. “I had better not find out you two have been hiding something.”

If she didn’t know Edison so well, she would have sworn a touch of fear flickered across his face.

But Edison being Edison, that surely could not have been the case.

Their newest client was such a bundle of nerves, Meena worried he might crumple straight to the floor.

Although close to her own age, the young gentleman looked as gray and lifeless as an old man, as if every bit of joy had been drained out of him. Indeed, were his fingers not busy crushing the brim of his fine silk hat, Meena would have taken him for a statue.

Or a corpse.

Not even Mrs. Hapgood’s brambleberry scones could put color in the man’s cheeks. The fact concerned her not a little. Clearly, whatever had brought him to their door was trouble of the most dire nature. Or so their visitor believed.

He perched on the very edge of the sofa like a well-dressed mouse, ready to flee at the merest hint of danger. “Please, Miss Sweet, I was told you’d be able to help me.”

She smiled encouragingly. “That may well be the case, Mr. Montague.”

“I was such a fool. Don’t know why I even kept a damned journal.” His fingers bent the brim of his hat. “My career will be ruined, though that won’t matter, seeing as I’ll be in Newgate.”

Briar twisted a lock of golden hair around her finger and smiled encouragingly. “Perhaps things are not as dire as they appear.”

The man shuddered. If anything, the miasma of desperation around him thickened. “You’re right. They’re probably worse.”

Now even Briar was surprised. Talented as her cousin was at concealing her emotions, Meena caught the telltale widening of her eyes.

As for their visitor, he’d gone a dreadful shade of green.

Meena set her cup down and stared into the slight man’s eyes. “Mr. Montague, perhaps you should start from the beginning.”

Blue eyes weak with fear met her gaze. The man took a fortifying sip of tea and started in. “I’m a clerk in Mr. Disraeli’s— I mean Mr. Gladstone’s office.” He laughed, but it came out more like a sickly croak. “Sorry. Mr. Gladstone only just took office. Hard to keep it all straight.”

Meena returned his smile. “And what is it do you do in the prime minister’s office?”

“I’m a junior clerk. I file papers. Sort mail. Run messages to Buckingham Palace and the different embassies. That sort of thing.”

The very things that afforded one access to state secrets. Meena let out a slow breath. “What exactly have you chronicled?”

Montague’s mouth opened, but no sound came out. His body suddenly tensed, as if he wanted to flee. “Secrets,” he whispered finally. “Sh-shameful secrets.”

A flash of anger darkened Edison’s features. “Are you saying you’ve detailed sensitive information—private information—about the prime minister? Several prime ministers?” His fingers curled around the scone in his palm, transforming it into a pile of crumbs. “You bloody idiot!”

The threat implicit in his booming voice froze the little man in place. That, and the decimated pastry littering his plate.

Edison looked as if he wanted to give Montague a good thrashing. “How do we know you aren’t planning to blackmail the prime minister yourself? We weren’t born yesterday, you little rotter.”

Outrage overrode fear, returning a bit of starch to Montague’s shoulders. “I would never—” He raised his chin, staring at each of them in turn before he spoke. “They’re about me. The secrets are about me.”

Ah. The puzzle pieces were beginning to fall into place. Meena thought she might understand now. “Secrets of a…sexual nature?” she asked gently.

Montague averted his eyes and nodded. The hat trembled in his hand. “Of a forbidden nature.”

Meena shared a look with her cousins. Though many turned a blind eye, homosexuality was grounds for imprisonment, if someone were inclined to push the issue. No wonder the poor man feared for his freedom. She pressed her palms into her thighs. Things were every bit as dire as he believed.

“I’d never betray my office. I’ve never written a word about anything to do with Downing Street.”

Edison wiggled his fingers, divesting himself of crumbs. “Easy enough to check, once we retrieve the thing.”

“And you know where your journal is now?” Meena prodded gently.

Montague laughed. Stripped of joy, it was a harsh, unhappy sound. “Unfortunately, yes.”

Sensing there was more, she sipped her tea and waited.

“The man I was…seeing…” He stopped to take a deep, shuddering breath before forging on. “The man I was seeing last turned out to be a bounder of the worst sort. A fact I was unaware of until the day he robbed me blind.” A sad little smile turned up the corners of his lips. “He took everything of value I had, including my journal. That’s the worst of it.”

Briar stared down at her dagger. “And now he’s blackmailing you?”

Montague was quick to shake his head. “Not him. The man he sold my journal to is far more dangerous.”

“You’re certain this dangerous man has it?” Meena asked. “Your lover could be bluffing.”

Montague’s lower lip trembled. “That would be a blessing, but I’m positive. The villain showed it to me. He opened the safe in his office and waved it in my face.”

Edison’s eyes narrowed. “Then he suggested you pay him to return it?”

“Worse.”

Montague stared at the floor. When he looked up, the pain in his eyes was so clear, Meena had to look away.

“He knows I clerk for the prime minister. The bugger said he’d need a favor someday. Until then, he’s keeping my journal.” He sucked in a shaky breath and met her gaze. “It won’t end with one, will it?”

“Doubtful, Mr. Montague. Most doubtful.” Meena refilled her tea. “It’s a lucky thing your friend had our card.”

She eyed her cousins. “This is precisely the sort of thing we handle, is it not?”

“Most assuredly.” Briar smiled at the young gentleman, which seemed to bring a hint of color to his cheeks. “Who is this beast?”

Montague’s shoulders sagged. “Reginald Blackborough.”

“Blackborough, the crime lord?” Edison cut Meena a look. “The man eats kittens for breakfast.”

“He may well do.” Meena tapped a finger against her thigh. “But Mr. Montague’s journal is in a safe. At the risk of sounding immodest, we excel at safes.”

Edison’s left eyebrow rose, almost to his hairline. “I’m not concerned about the safe.”

Briar appeared to be studying the dagger she’d placed next to the teapot. “Surely we can find a time when this Blackborough creature is out and about. If he’s such a fearsome warlord—”

“Crime lord,” Edison corrected.

Briar rolled her eyes and continued. “Yes, fine, crime lord. He must spend a great deal of time running about the city, committing crimes then, mustn’t he? It won’t take Meena two ticks to retrieve Mr. Montague’s journal.” She favored the fragile-looking young man with a dazzling smile. “My cousin is amazing with safes.”

“Won’t be amazing once Blackborough figures out we’ve taken the journal.” Edison sat back, another scone in his large hand. “A man like that will get the information one way or another. His sort always does. Then he’ll come after us.”

He jerked his chin toward their guest. “He’ll come after you as well.”

Edison bit into his scone as if the defenseless pastry were at fault.

Meena stared out the window, sipping her tea. She barely noticed the robins flitting through the branches of the delicate ginkgo at the edge of the street. Edison had the right of it, unless…

She set her cup down. “Only if this Blackborough knows it’s gone.”

Three pairs of eyes blinked uncomprehendingly at her.

“Mr. Montague’s journal.” She flattened her palms on her thighs, waiting for them to catch on. “We’ll replace it.”

Edison stopped midchew and grinned.

Briar clapped her hands. “Brilliant!”

Poor Mr. Montague still looked lost.

“I’ll replace your journal with a counterfeit,” Meena explained. “You could make up another innocuous one, could you not?”

The man gulped. His thin chest rose and fell with the weight of an enormous breath. “I could do, yes. But would that—?”

“Perfectly safe.” She waved away his concern as she topped off his tea. “As long as Blackborough believes he has your journal, there’s nothing to fear.”

Montague’s hands shook as he accepted the cup. “But what if he—?”

“If he found out, he’d want to kill someone,” Briar pointed out unhelpfully.

“Why would he find out?” Meena argued. “Men like Blackborough collect power. He may never hold Mr. Montague to account, but if he does…” She shrugged. “Mr. Montague can simply call his bluff. Let him try to publicize the journal. Besides, by the time Blackborough chooses to blackmail Mr. Montague, he’ll have no idea who switched the journals.”

Edison ran a hand through his thick hair, making it stand up like a bristling hedgehog. “We’d have to be careful.”

“When are we not?”

He folded muscled arms over his chest and studied her. “I mean, most exquisitely careful.”

Meena shared a look with him. Neither needed to detail the horrors that would rain down on them if London’s most fearsome crime lord caught them. “Agreed,” she said finally.

She leaned forward, arms resting on her knees in a most unladylike manner, and gazed full into their client’s pinched face. “We’d be delighted to assist you.”

Mr. Montague’s reaction was less than she would have wished. Indeed, the man looked even more dejected. If such a thing were possible.

He shook his head. If his shoulders drooped any farther, they would have met his hip bones. “I can’t ask you to do something so dangerous. It’s out of the question.”

“Make no mistake, Mr. Montague.” Briar stared hard at their wilted client. “My cousin won’t be working alone. We’ve become quite a team, if I dare brag. There’s nothing we can’t accomplish when we work together.”

The man took in a long, deep breath. It nearly restored his torso to its full height. “If you are absolutely sure, then yes, I would very much like you to retrieve my journal.” He sat up straight for the first time since he’d entered the room. “I’m prepared to live with the consequences. Far better than living in fear.”

Meena clapped her hands. “That’s the spirit.” She rose. If you could get us a new journal as quickly as possible, we’ll be ready to act as soon as an opportunity arises.”

Once again, Mr. Montague looked less thrilled by her pronouncement than she would have liked. “Is there a problem?”

He stood, his fingers mangling the brim of his hat. “I haven’t much money.” He held out a hand, as if to forestall her reaction. “Don’t mistake me. I’m happy to pay whatever you charge, but on a clerk’s wages…” His voice trailed away. “It may take me some time.”

“Is that all?” Meena waved him off. “Remuneration is unnecessary. We consider our work a service to the community. We ask only that you yourself pledge to help others as the need arises.”

Edison acknowledged her with an almost imperceptible bow, and one of his infrequent smiles. It was the equivalent of a standing ovation from anyone else, and it warmed her to the core. Only years of insightful investing on her part had made that possible. Without her skills with money, the three of them would still be stealing to survive.

Now, they stole only to save others.

Mr. Montague sagged as if his knees were buckling. When he lifted his head, she detected the sheen of tears. “Thank you.” His voice was thicker, rougher. “Thank you all.”

With a deft swish of her skirts, Briar rose as well. “It is our pleasure. Assisting those who have been wronged is something of a calling for us.”

Edison grunted and moved to help his sister see their client to the door.

Meena watched them go, her mind suddenly assaulted with images from the past. Dark, shameful images. Images of a life she’d gladly consign to the bottom of the fetid Thames.

The fear on their new client’s face made the memories come more quickly. That hopelessness, that soul-crushing weight pressing down on his shoulders… She and her cousins had caused the same kind of anguish.

The fact that her father had ordered it done absolved them not a whit.

They’d stolen money. They’d stolen jewels and artwork and certificates of stock. Mostly, though, they’d stolen lives.

All her talents and skills with locks and safes had been carefully nurtured to meet her father’s grasping ends. By the time he’d met his end in Newgate, she and her cousins had collected a mountain of sins so tall, they’d never reach the summit.

She turned her gaze to the bright scene outside the window, seeking to block the dark memories. More than a calling, their work was a means of restitution. Restitution she dearly needed to pay.

As did her cousins. After the things her father had made them do… The lives that had been ruined…

Meena screwed her eyes shut. They couldn’t help that now, but they could continue onward, helping the very sorts they’d been taught to prey upon.

She only hoped it would be enough.

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SEDUCING THE SCIENTIST by Riley Cole – Releasing November 20

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Amazon | Apple Books | Nook | Kobo | Google

Purchase in print on Amazon

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A woman who disdains love collides with a man who lives for passion. Explosions ensue.
Ada Templeton believes in science. She believes in chemical reactions and experimentation and old-fashioned common sense. She’s far too clever to be seduced by a rake like Edison Sweet.
Con artist, liar, self-taught inventor, Edison Sweet, uses his hard won skills to help others. When he’s not saving unfortunates swindled by Victorian London’s criminal classes, he loves women. A great many woman.
Over Ada’s objections, Edison agrees to guard her latest invention from a mastermind willing to kill for it. He never expected to be intrigued by the lovely widow whose body he finds as exciting as her mind.
Their chemistry is impossible to ignore.
And impossible to trust.
Stalked by a brilliant killer, will they concoct a formula powerful enough to mend two broken hearts, or will love elude these two stubborn inventors?

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abouttheauthor

Riley has a long fascination with all things Victorian. She loves the peculiar mix of science, mysticism and innovation that collided in the Victorian Era.

To say nothing of bustles. Bustles and elaborate hats and parasols. Parasols for rain. Parasols for sun. And parasols that morph into swords…of course.

Sadly, Riley has little use for umbrellas in the dry foothills of the Eastern Sierra, but she consoles herself with forest hikes and dips in cool mountain lakes. Besides—no matter where one resides—a proper cuppa never comes amiss.

If you enjoy a little high adventure—and a lot of desire—with your historical romance, delve into Riley’s version of late Victorian London.

Thieves, rogues, and love await…

For more information about Riley, please visit her website, “like” Riley on Facebook and follow her on Twitter. Sign up for Riley’s newsletter to be notified about upcoming releases. She’s loves hearing from her readers. Email her directly at riley@rileycole.com.

Riley’s Jack’s House releases include Rejecting the Rogue and Seducing the Scientist from the Restitution League Series.

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