Issue 7, Febraury 2018: Featuring Jayne Ann Krentz: Heart's Kiss, #7

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Issue 7, Febraury 2018: Featuring Jayne Ann Krentz: Heart's Kiss, #7 Page 16

by Jayne Ann Krentz


  Title: Hot Cop

  Author: Laurelin Paige and Sierra Simone

  Publisher: Self Published

  AISN: B01N6YE99C

  Release Date: June 13th 2017

  Hot Cop was one of those books I kept seeing pop up everywhere when it released. It had been recommended by a few of my favorite authors, earlier readers of the book were praising it in reading groups, and it hit a fantastic number of reviews right out of the gate. These are all usually signs that I need to get my hands on a copy right away. According to my reading history both of these authors were new to me, so I read the sample chapter. It didn’t take me long (maybe a few paragraphs) to realize that this book would be right up my alley. Livia Ward has turned thirty and her biggest regret? That she hasn’t found the right man to settle down with and her biological clock alarm is ringing with no more snooze button. Enter our hot cop, Chase Kelly, who instantly is attracted to Livia after she steps in to help a protesting student at the high school. He goes in for his usual wine and handcuffs routine to get her into his bed, but she has a different proposition for him: let her have his sperm instead. Also? He can sign away his parental rights. No obligation to the baby after conception. All that responsible free sex is too good for Chase to pass up for various reasons of his own. This plot never gets old for me. I love the baby-making-plan-leads-to-love trope. My favorite part of this author duo is the steamy love scenes—hot chemistry for an equally hot cop. I read it in a few sittings even through a crazy busy week. This is one entertaining read!

  Copyright © 2018 by C.S. DeAvilla.

  USA Today and national bestselling author Anna J. Stewart writes sweet to sexy romance for Harlequin’s Heartwarming and Romantic Suspense lines, but paranormal romance is her first love. Early obsessions with Star Wars, Star Trek, and Wonder Woman set her on the path to creating fun, funny, and family-centric romances with happily ever afters for her independent heroines. Anna lives in Northern California where she deals with a serious Supernatural and Sherlock addiction and tolerates an overly affectionate cat named Snickers. You can read more about Anna and her books at www.authorannastewart.com.

  WARDEN OF MAGIC

  by Anna J. Stewart

  “Not another bookstore.”

  Grateful for the distraction given the day ahead, Clara MacQueen stifled a grin at her sister’s tortured groan and gazed through the grimy, cluttered window of Thistles and Thorns.

  It was only one of a dozen bookstores they’d come across since their arrival in Scotland three days before. The store had seen better days, with its crooked overhanging sign and rusted door handle. The crisp Edinburgh winter air swept over them and as Clara took a deep breath, she could all but smell the musty old pages and worn leather covers waiting inside. She tightened the plaid scarf around her neck and rocked back on her heels, determined to explore despite the snow that caked the sidewalks and continued to fall. “Give me five minutes, Nellie.” Clara glanced down the street where their oldest sister had surrendered to her caffeine addiction on her way to pick up their rental car from the agency.

  “It’ll take you five minutes to stop looking in the window.”

  At Nellie’s perfectly arched brow, Clara laughed. “Okay, a half hour. Stall Amber for me and I promise, I won’t say a word when you find another castle to tour.”

  “Hey!” Nellie’s green eyes sparkled like emeralds under a spotlight. “It’s Edinburgh for crying out loud. What else are we going to do?”

  “Visit bookstores?” Clara’s eyes watered against the chilly breeze. “We made a deal. You get your castles, Amber gets her art galleries, and I get—”

  “To buy another suitcase because you’ve already run out of space. How many antique books do you need, anyway?” Nellie let out an overly dramatic sigh and whipped her red curls out of her face. “Vacations are supposed to get you away from work. Don’t you see enough books in that library of yours?”

  “I don’t know, Professor.” Clara fluttered her lashes. “Added any more history notes to that card catalogue brain of yours?”

  Nellie smirked. “I’m not a professor. Yet. And my students love to hear about all the places I visit when we travel.” She hesitated, some of the humor fading from her eyes. “Of course the one character trait we MacQueen sisters share is the talent for procrastination. We agreed we can’t play the entire time. We have to go and see our mother some time.”

  Why? Clara bit the inside of her cheek and focused her attention on the beautifully decorated lampposts rather than the chiding expression on her older sister’s face. Given the three girls had been abandoned by Shona MacQueen before any of them could barely say “Mama”, Clara wasn’t in any hurry to get reacquainted. It hadn’t been Clara’s idea to spend their annual vacation tracking down their long-lost mother, but for whatever reason, her sisters’ yearning for healing old wounds had overridden her practical desire for the sun baked beaches of Hawaii. She’d been outvoted. Again. But at least she usually got her way when it came to bookstores.

  “We promised Dad.” Not that Nellie had to remind her. Again. “And it’s not like we aren’t having a good time. You have to admit that Christmas celebration at Edinburgh castle last night was pretty amazing. Nothing makes the holidays like bagpipes under a starry sky.”

  “There’s nothing about Scotland that isn’t amazing.” From the second Clara had stepped foot off the plane, she’d felt as if she’d come home. And not because the entire city was decked out in all its holiday finery, from Princes Street to Georges Street. The German Christmas Market had given her chills while Calton Hill had given all of them some of the most gorgeous views of the old-world city possible. “I just don’t see what good it’s going to do, meeting her. She left us, remember?”

  Clara’s chest tightened as she remembered her mother driving away for the last time. And the unending toddler tears she’d shed on her father’s strong shoulders. “There’s no guarantee we’ll actually find her. The address the private investigator found is more than a decade old.”

  But Clara knew. As did Nellie and Amber. Their mother was here. They could...feel it.

  “Oh, hey, that’s Amber.” Nellie glanced down at her phone and the text message that appeared on her screen. “They can’t find the reservation number. I need to resend her the contract. If I can find it.” She tapped on the screen. “We’ll come get you when we’re done. In a half hour. Max.”

  “Yeah, yeah. Thirty minutes.” Excitement pounded through Clara as she reached for the doorknob. “Ouch!” She jumped back, shaking her hand as the electric shock sparked along her fingers.

  “You okay?” Nellie turned back to her sister at Clara’s hiss of pain.

  “Yeah. Fine.” Clara stuck her index finger in her mouth. “Static build up I guess. Probably the wool scarf. I’ll see you in thirty.”

  “Twenty-nine.” Nellie grinned and headed back down the street, her brown booted feet clomping on the snow-caked sidewalk.

  Cautious, Clara reached for the handle again. This time there was no shock. She pushed open the door and stepped inside. Ahhhhh. She always found the smell of paper and ink both calming and invigorating and the added aroma of nutmeg seemed appropriate given the season. The quiet reverence of the cluttered store welcomed her like an old friend as the door clicked shut behind her, and she unwrapped her scarf and tucked her purse behind her as she inched down the narrow aisle.

  The dim light had her stomach jumping, as she confronted that life-long fear of closed-in dark spaces. A fear offset by the comfort brought by shelves stacked high and wide with books of every size and shape. Some had shiny new wrap around paper covers while others displayed embossed leather tomes layered with enough history to make Nellie drool. Not an inch of wall space wasn’t covered in shelves that were in turn packed tighter than commuters on a subway train during rush hour.

  “Ach. Customer.” The muffled, female voice came across as irritated and confused. “Who is it then?”

  Clara froze in her track
s as a plume of dust erupted from the end of the aisle. In reflex, she pressed a finger under her nose to stave off a sneeze attack. “I’d just like to look around if that’s all right.”

  “Look and look, sure. All people ever do is look. Those who come in at least.”

  Clara stared at the small, stooped woman who seemed to float toward her. Silver streaked her hair, the same silver that shone in narrowed eyes. The long plain black dress was so big on her slight frame, Clara worried she’d trip on the hemline.

  “Well.” The woman wrapped arthritic fingers around the copper amulet hanging around her neck. “What be your name, young one?”

  “Clara.” Clara cleared her throat and dismissed the idea the amulet had begun to glow. “Clara MacQueen.”

  “MacQueen, you say?” Her knuckles whitened around her amulet. “Ah, yes, of course. Finally. Welcome, welcome. My name is Elya. Old name. Family name. Just like yours. You’ll be wanting a special book then. Come, come. No time to waste.” She waved her hand and a trail of silvery smoke danced from her fingertips.

  Clara’s toes scrunched in her boots. “Oh, no, really, I’d just like to look around.” Her sisters’ countdown clock was already counting down and she could hear the tick-tick-tick. Shrugging, she politely followed Elya toward the back of the store, curiosity pushing her forward. She almost knocked over a stack of old text books and did a spin and stoop to stop them from toppling. “Do you have a section on...oh.” Clara stopped when she caught sight of the familiar cover on the shelf closest to the ceiling. The Bruadarach. Clara blinked and touched her fingers to her lips. Loosely translated from Scottish, the word meant dreamer or visionary. The author—unknown—had either been a fan of metaphor or unable to come up with an appropriate title for his—or her—stories.

  Memories of late nights spent under the covers reading the stories of a trio of magical warriors—Bowen, Keane, and Rivalin—charged with protecting a Celtic goddess from her power hungry, evil enemies flooded back to her. Bowen had always been her favorite because of his unwavering loyalty to his family and friends. He’d sacrificed so much to fulfill his sworn duty.

  Clara let out a long, sad breath. Books had been the only thing Clara’s mother had ever given her daughters, other than her name. One book, one volume, for each of the girls.

  How many hours had she spent reading about magic, adventure, and good triumphing over evil? Crazy magical creatures, characters with ulterior motives, mystery and honor. She’d been so silly about those stories, about those heroes, even believing they rewrote themselves every time she read them. As if books could change their plots with every new turn of the page. Never before had she ever encountered another copy, despite years of searching. She’d often wondered if that was what had attracted her to being a librarian where she could, as curator of one of the largest libraries on the west coast, be granted access to private and public collections across the country.

  She’d long given up hope of ever finding another edition. But seeing the book now...the desire to dive back into those pages left her trembling.

  “Oh, my.” Clara breathed. “Are they all...first editions?” Her credit card was about to hit Def Con One if the illustrated trilogy was indeed original. What wonderful gifts for her sisters and the perfect reminder of their long-planned trip.

  “In a manner.”

  “May I see volume one?” Clara moved in as Elya climbed onto a rickety step stool to retrieve the first of the three books. The old woman moved with far more ease than Clara expected and when Elya turned, she held out the coffee table-sized book as if presenting an honored offering.

  Hands shaking, Clara accepted the book. Her fingers tingled as she blinked tears from her eyes. The thick leather cover was intricately embossed with threads of gold and silver, twining in a vine around an elaborate tree. The branches bent in on one another to form what Clara recognized as a Celtic triskele. She traced the image, marveling at the way the gold shimmered beneath her touch. The idea of seeing the original writing, in the original language—even if she couldn’t understand it—was almost more than she could bear. She dropped her purse to the floor and drew the book close, her hopes of turning the gold-edged pages plummeting. “It needs a key.”

  “Aye.” Elya left the other two books on the shelf and climbed down.

  “Do you have it?” Clara turned the book over in case the key was somehow attached.

  Elya stood before her once more and inclined her head. “Odd question coming from one of Shona MacQueen’s daughters.”

  “I, uh, excuse me?” Clara might have gasped if she’d had any breath. Her heart hammered in her chest as the fleeting, familiar image of a tall, curvy woman with grief-filled eyes and a lying smile drifted through her mind. “How do you know my mother’s—”

  “We’ve been waiting for you. You and your sisters.” Elya moved closer, peered into her eyes so deeply Clara could almost imagine her tapping against her mind. “You have her eyes. And your Gran’s. No mistaking a MacQueen woman, that’s for certain.”

  Hugging the book to her chest as if protecting it, Clara backed away. “I wouldn’t know.” Except she did. She and her sisters all had the same gold-sparked green eyes their mother possessed. Fate’s eyes, their father had called them.

  “What do you mean you don’t know?” Elya couldn’t have gotten any closer, and the frustration in her voice matched the hold she had on Clara’s wrist. “You’re here, aren’t you? Something called you home.”

  “I live in California.” Clara began to wish she’d resisted temptation to come into the shop. She’d come to Scotland to close the book on her mother once and for all, not begin a new one.

  “Doesn’t mean Scotland isn’t your home.” Elya turned and shuffled away, tossing, “Come, tea time. Your sisters may join us when they get here,” over her bony shoulder.

  “Oh, no, please.” Clara shook her head as Elya turned around again. “I don’t have time for tea and Amber went to get coffee,” she lied. “I should probably go and...find...her.”

  Elya sighed, shook her head and looked up to the ceiling. “All this time, all this waiting. And fate sends us a clueless girl who knows nothing of her destiny.” She turned around and straightened, the amulet around her neck flickering to a steady, blue white glow. An odd, controlled simmering energy pulsed around the room. The air in the store ruffled, as if a breeze had blown through an open door. “So be it.”

  Clara backed away, the book still in her hands as she looked for a safe place to set it down. The hair on the back of her neck prickled to attention as her fingers brushed over the brass lock concealing the pages from curious readers. From her.

  A spark erupted, as if she’d struck flint against stone. Clara cried out and let go of the book, unable to do anything but watch it fall to the floor.

  It fell open.

  The light from Elya’s amulet cast its bluish glow onto the illustrated page. She should run. She knew this as surely as she knew she was meant to breathe, but she couldn’t look away. Not from the thicket of silver-topped trees on the exposed pages. Not from the obscured opening to a cave. And not from the solitary flickering flame moving through the image at her feet.

  Her breath caught in her chest as something tugged her forward and moved her feet against her will. In the time it took her to blink, in the time it took for her booted foot to brush the bottom of the page, the room began to spin.

  No. It wasn’t the room that was spinning. It was her.

  The bookstore faded behind a fog of brilliant yellow and white. A quick flash, a boom against her ears. Nausea swept over her. She couldn’t move. Couldn’t make a sound and only when she forced out a breath and released a fraction of the fear coursing through her, did her mind and vision clear.

  She let out a breath and closed her eyes in relief. Whatever had been happening stopped.

  Until she was sucked straight down.

  And the cover slammed shut above her.

  * * *

  Bowen
stumbled against the trunk of a Farrengold tree as the ground shook beneath his feet and the stag he’d been tracking leapt across the stream and out of sight.

  The Farrengold’s delicate, florescent silver flowers cascaded around him, bathing him in darkness-easing light. His calloused fingers tightened around his bow as a loud wumph ripped through the air; an unfamiliar sound which echoed across the expanse of the lush world that served as his prison.

  He straightened, spotting a bolt of light in the direction of his dwelling. Bright enough to light the sky.

  Bright enough to cause problems in the guise of the sentries that patrolled the woods.

  Familiar energy shot through him. Beneath his touch, the tree shivered. The night air—neither warm nor cool—brushed across his face and ruffled the long-sleeved tunic he wore. The dark fabric not only protected him from the cold, but also kept him camouflaged in the darkness against well-sighted predators lurking in the woods.

 

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