Spotlight: The Phantom of New York by A.L. Janney

'This is a story about vigilantes and magic.

About prophecy and hope.

About a boy and his hotel.

When twelve-year-old Peter Constantine wakes up in the Crown Hotel with a new identity, life is over as he knows it. But perhaps that’s not such a bad thing… 

A dangerous man Peter only knows as “The Client” is after his family, so they’ve relocated to New York City. With help from unlikely friends living at the glamorous hotel, including the ghost on the tenth floor, Peter's new life begins. Soon, however, he learns of a plot to destroy his new home, a plot only the Phantom can foil.

Peter and the Crown is the first book in the Phantom of New York series, an adventure for readers aged ten and up. If you like smart, funny characters and “can’t put it down” escapades, then you’ll love Alan Janney’s Phantom of New York series.'

Excerpt

Volume One

“Peter and the Crown”

Copyright © 2017 by Alan Janney

All rights reserved. No parts of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

Part One

Chapter One - Peter’s New Home

       Peter Constantine did not know he was moving to the Crown Hotel, not even on the night his mother woke him from a sound sleep and told him they had to leave. He stumbled from his twin bed and rubbed his bleary eyes as his mother dropped a heavy backpack onto his shoulders. It couldn’t be morning yet—he was too exhausted. His mother and father loaded two yellow taxi cabs with a dozen suitcases and duffle bags and set Peter between themselves in the back seat. The over-burdened taxis pulled away from their home in New Jersey and Peter returned to sleep, unaware he’d never see his house again.

       He did not wake when, two hours later, his parents unloaded their luggage at a gas station and waited shivering until two police cars arrived. A kind officer carefully guided a sleepy Peter into the backseat. Again his mother and father loaded luggage and climbed in next to him, and off the police cars went, driving over the George Washington Bridge and plunging into the looming skyline of New York City.

       “It’s not fair,” Peter’s mother said. “He didn’t get to say goodbye to his friends.”

       “Nothing about this is fair.” Peter’s father yawned so big his jaw cracked. “But at least we’re safe.”

       His mother tried not to cry. Peter murmured in his sleep, something about Batman, and shifted into a more comfortable position.

       This late, the Crown Hotel was quiet. The two police cruisers parked under a vast red awning and the officers helped the Constantine family haul suitcases through the lobby, up one flight of stairs, and into a small apartment. Peter, who had never fully woken up, was placed onto a bed by his father and tucked in by his mother. The police officer shook his father’s hand and said, “They won’t find you here. Your family is safe.”

       “I think you’re right. At least for a while.”

       “Do you need anything else?” the officer asked.

       “No. Thank you. You’ve been very good.”

       “Are you sure? This is the last time you’ll see us.”

       “I know. It’s for the best. Goodnight, officers.” His father closed the door behind them and stayed there for a full sixty seconds, eyes shut, and that was how Peter’s new life at the Crown began.

       Peter woke the following morning and knew immediately something had changed. The pillow smelled funny and his cat Mr. Hippo wasn’t resting on his feet. He sat up and blinked. This room had no window. Where had his window gone? And his Justice League posters?

       “Mom?” Peter set his feet down on the cold floor, except it wasn’t cold. This floor was carpeted, thick luxurious stuff that swallowed his toes. “Wow, oh my gosh.”

       Peter’s mother, a pretty and dark-eyed woman named Jovanna, opened the door and hurried in. Her long brown hair was gathered into a bun.

       “Yes, sweetheart, I’m here. Everything is okay. Quite a shock, I know, because this isn’t your bedroom, is it.”

       “What’s going on? Where are we?” Peter asked curiously.

       “We’re at a hotel.”

       “At a hotel? We don’t go to hotels. Which hotel?”

       “This hotel is called the Crown,” she said. She fussed with his thick black hair, something she did which Peter didn’t like but he was too stunned to pull away. “We came here in the middle of the night.”

       “The middle of the night. Why?”

       Peter’s mother hesitated. Her face held a pained expression that Peter wasn’t used to, and it made him nervous. “Let’s eat breakfast first. And if your father hasn’t returned by then, I’ll explain.”

       “Where’d he go?”

       “To work.”

       Peter nodded. This piece of information, finally, made sense. His father always went to work in the morning, at the accounting firm. Peter found fresh socks in the duffle bag beside his bed and followed his mother into the kitchen. This was a clean hotel, much cleaner than his house which had cat hair and Star Wars action figures in every corner. The carpet felt spongy and the walls looked washed and the kitchen was a brilliant white color. He sat at the small table near the kitchen and his mother brought him pancakes and syrup and orange juice. She sat down, clutched her blue robe tight, and watched him eat.

       “Thank you,” Peter said.

       “Isn’t this a pleasant hotel room?”

       “I think this is the nicest place I’ve ever been! Look how shiny the refrigerator is.”

       Peter’s mother didn’t respond and she continued making the sad face.

       He asked, “Is there a window I can look out?”

       “No, sweetheart…well, there’s one window in our bedroom but it must remain closed except in the case of an emergency.  And it has no view, only of a wall.”

       “Are we on a vacation? What about school?”

       “I wish your father was here, so we could talk about this as a family,” she said. “But. I don’t know when he’ll return.”

       “Talk about what?” Peter’s enthusiasm over the fancy hotel room dimmed. He set down his fork because his appetite had suddenly vanished. “Mom. Tell me.”

       “Let’s wait.”

       “Now. Please?”

       “Your father got a new job. He started today.”

       “Oh. Okay, well, that’s not so bad. But why are we in a hotel?” Peter picked his fork up and ate another bite of pancake.

       Jovanna said, “Because he works here now.”

       “Dad works at a hotel? That’s so great!”

       “Do you think?” she asked. “I’m glad to hear it. It’s one of the nicest hotels in the city. Very prestigious.”

       “I can tell. That television is bigger than ours and even the bedrooms have carpet. Do we get cable?”

       “I believe so,” she said.

       “Wow! Cable television. We’ve never had cable.”

       A telephone rang in the kitchen. It sounded different than Peter’s old phone, which rang with harsh clanging. This telephone kind of beeped like a spaceship, and it had a shorter cord. Jovanna answered and said, “Hello? Yes.”  She paused to listen. “Oh goodness, I’m sorry to hear that. He’s not here right now, but I’m making a note and he’ll see it as soon as he returns. …Yes, he’s the new super. I’ve written your instructions down. …Yes, I promise he’ll see it. Thank you.” She hung up.

       “Who was that? And Dad is a super?” Peter asked, and his eyes boggled. He didn’t know what a super was, but it couldn’t be bad. Only good things started with the word super. Superman. Superhero. Supernatural. Super Bowl. “What’s a super?”

       “That was a lady who lives upstairs. She needs help with her sink. And the word super, in this case, is short for superintendent.”

       “What’s a superintendent?” Peter asked.

       “It means he helps the residents of the Crown if they need it. Like with sinks.”

       “Like a handyman?”

       “Yes.”

       “Dad can do that?” Peter finished the orange juice with a big gulp, and he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.

       “Of course. Your father is very handy.”

       “But he’s a banker or something like that.”

       “Yes, um…” She clutched her robe again and sat down. “Yes. But. Not at the moment. He’s going to be a super for a while. And. Well. We’ll live here.”

       Peter gaped at his mom, bewildered. Those words didn’t make sense. People cannot live two places, everyone knew that. And Peter’s family already had a house, in a neighborhood with a playground.

       “I don’t understand,” he said suspiciously. “People don’t live at hotels.”

       “Some do.”

       “But not us! Who on earth lives in a hotel?”

       “This hotel is special. Some people who work at the Crown also live here. Like us. This entire floor of the hotel is full of live-in workers.”

       “We can’t live at a hotel. We have a house!”

       “Yes, but didn’t you think it was too small?”

       “So? It was ours!”

       “Look how perfect everything is, sweetheart. Don’t you just love the carpet? And the kitchen appliances are top shelf, believe me.”

       Peter felt as though a pressure was building inside of him, a ball of panic and anger. His mom made no sense. Where was his dad? He felt dizzy and the pancake inside his belly lurched. “What does the carpet have to do with it? We already have a place to live.”

       At last, Peter’s father arrived. Manos was a handsome man with olive skin and a thin face and wavy black hair. He had kind eyes, and at once he saw the look of distress on Peter’s face. They met and hugged in the hallway. After a moment Jovanna joined them, and together the family cried.

       “Peter, I’m gonna tell you the truth. It’s a little scary but you need to know. And you have a right to know, because you’re a member of this family.  We had to move suddenly and it’s not fair to anyone,” Manos said. The three of them sat at the little table and Jovanna brought Manos coffee.

       “Okay. Tell me. I’m not scared.”

       “I was an accountant at my old job and I handled money for people. One of my clients was a wealthy man, a treasure hunter. I found out a few days ago that he was taking things that didn’t belong to him. His business isn’t legal.”

       “Did you call the police?” Peter asked.

       “Not at first. I called the client and asked for details. I explained his business was breaking the law, and he got worried. And this is the scary part, okay?”

       “Okay.”

       Peter’s mother fidgeted at the table.

       “My client is a powerful man. And he decided to…get rid of me.”

       “What’s that mean? Like, kidnap you?”

       Manos nodded. “Maybe.”

       “Something worse than kidnap you?”

       “Maybe.”

       Jovanna said, “But we’re safe now.” She took Peter’s hand and squeezed. Peter didn’t notice — he pulled idly on his lip with the other hand and wondered how on earth anyone could want to hurt his dad.

       “Lucky for us, a friend of mine warned me. About the client and his plan. I alerted the police, and they helped us move to safety.” Manos took a long drink of his coffee and then sighed in the way he often did during breakfast. “I told the police yesterday. We moved last night, and that’s why you woke up in a hotel.”

       The Client, Peter thought. What a terrifying name. “Will the police capture The Client?”

       “It’s more complicated than that. They have to gather evidence to prove he was breaking the law.”

       “How far away did we move?”

       Peter’s mother and father shared a worried glance. “Three hours.”

       “Three hours! What about my school?”

       His parents didn’t respond.

       “What about my friends? My soccer team?”

       “Peter. I’m so sorry…” his dad said. “But—”

       “Where is Mr. Hippo?”

       “I left our cat with the neighbor,” replied Jovanna hesitantly.

       “Are we still in New Jersey?”

       “We’re in Manhattan.”

       “Manhattan. Where’s that?”

       His father answered, “New York City. Far away from my client. And we have to stay here a while.”

       The telephone rang suddenly and Peter was so startled he jumped. Manos stood to answer it. “Hello? Hello, Mrs. Trolley. …Yes I got your message.”

       Peter thought his head would explode. He ran into his room, which wasn’t really his room, and closed the door and got under the covers.

       The next three days were the darkest of Peter’s life. He didn’t leave his room for forty-eight hours, because his heart was too broken. He stared at the blank walls and read books and thought about his friends and his cat. A hotel. Nobody lives in a hotel. What kind of hotel didn’t have windows with a view? A bad hotel, that’s what kind. It even smelled funny, or at least it smelled different. Plus, their apartment wasn’t very big. A kitchen, an eating area, a couch with a television, and two bedrooms—that was it. Their old house had been twice this big, and it had a cat.

       Peter’s family had relocated once before, just before his fifth birthday, and that move had been sudden too. He’d been ready to start kindergarten with the kids from his pre-school class and then suddenly, poof, they were gone. The giant insurance company his father worked at closed unexpectedly and they’d moved to New Jersey. Now it had happened again.

       As a result, Peter felt a little homeless. And friendless. Like he didn’t belong anywhere. He knew that making a family leave in the middle of the night was wrong. But what could he do?

       Peter thought about the evil Client. His father Manos claimed he was a treasure hunter and scuba diver and explorer, but wouldn’t tell him what The Client did that was so awful, but Peter knew it must be terrible. He imagined The Client stealing cars and bullying children and robbing banks and laughing about it. Peter got so mad that his ears turned red.

       What he wanted most of all was to have a home and to stay there, and to have friends he wouldn’t worry about leaving.

       And to be Batman. He’d like to be Batman. That way, he thought, he could find The Client and throw him in jail personally.

       Overtime Peter became aware of new sounds from outside his wall, like whooshing water and soft voices. Sometimes it sounded as though he was in the belly of a whale under water. He placed his hand flat on the wall and noticed a subtle vibration, a faint humming, one which hadn’t been present at his old house, except maybe when the air conditioning had rattled to life. Secretly, he liked the humming. The hotel felt alive.

       His mother visited for the fifth time that day, bringing a sandwich.  Peter sat up in bed and asked, “What are the noises in the walls?”

       “We’re on the second floor of a twenty-story hotel. You’re hearing other people.”

       Peter gasped. “Twenty floors?”

       “I told you, sweetheart, the Crown is a special building.”

       “There are eighteen levels of people directly above our heads?”

       “That’s right. And a restaurant. Two, actually. And a library. And the Tea Room. And many other things.”

       “How many people?” Peter asked in amazement.

       “I don’t know. The Crown is divided between ritzy hotel rooms on the top floors, and private condominium units on the bottom. Over three hundred units total.”

       “What’s a private condominium unit?”

       “Like an apartment where people live permanently instead of staying as guests,” Jovanna said. She was playing with Peter’s hair. “We’re living in a private condominium unit. A small one.”

       Outside of Peter’s room, the telephone rang. Manos answered it, and immediately he left to fix a problem somewhere in the Crown. He was always leaving to fix things, even during the night. Peter’s father’s full name was Manos Ambrosia. He’d been raised in Greece, and he still had a faint Greek accent.

       “How did Dad get this job?” Peter asked.

       “His friend from college is one of the managers of the Crown. Your father called his friend Mr. Conrad and explained we needed a place to hide for a couple days. Mr. Conrad told him the hotel needed a new superintendent and he offered your father the job.”

       “Mr. Conrad sounds friendly.”

       “I wish you’d come outside. I want you to see the Crown. I just know you’ll like it after you’ve explored, Peter. This is a wonderful place. But, for it to be perfect, it needs you.”

       Peter rolled over in bed, once again desperately sad. He didn’t want to help the hotel be perfect. It’s hard moving to new places, and Peter had lived seven years at their old house. He didn’t even know they’d moved until he woke up, and his mind was having a hard time adjusting.

       On the third day, Peter came out of his room to watch television with his parents. They let Peter choose the show, but he’d never had cable before — he wanted to watch it all. He flipped back and forth between the Weather Channel and Scooby-Doo, eating Cheerios.  

       After several shows, his mother took the remote. “Peter. There are a few things we need to discuss.”

       Peter lowered his head onto his knees and scrunched his eyes. “Yes ma’am. About what?”

       “I start work tomorrow. Downstairs, in the Laundry.”

       “The Laundry? You mean, like, clothes?”

       “Yes. Dad’s job will pay for most of our bills, but not all. So I’m working part-time,” Jovanna said.

       “Whose clothes are you washing?”

       Manos laughed. “Everyone’s.”

       “A lot of people live at the Crown, and there are no washing machines. So the tenants send their dirty clothes to the Laundry and we return them clean and pressed.”

       This didn’t strike Peter as unusual. His dirty clothes always came back clean and pressed, and his mother was the one who cleaned and pressed them. “Sure, okay. What will I do?”

       “You can come with me,” Manos said. “I’m installing Mr. Banks’s new stove, and then working in the Mechanical Rooms in the basement.”

       “That doesn’t sound safe, Manos. He can stay here, or he can look around. He has to leave the apartment sometime. He’s a very trustworthy boy.”

       His father said, “Another thing, Peter. And this one is weird, buddy, okay? We’re changing our last name.”

       “Dad. Be serious. That’s not even possible.”

       “At our old home, I was known as Manos Ambrosia and you were Peter Ambrosia. If we keep those names then my client will find us. So we need a new last name. Make sense?”

       “None of this makes sense,” Peter said miserably. “What’s our new last name?”

       “I like Constantine,” he said. “Short for Constantinides, a good Greek name. What do you think?”

       Peter leaned against his mother and fought back tears. “I think this whole thing is awful.”

       Even though he couldn’t admit it to his parents, he secretly thought Peter Constantine sounded catchy.

Chapter Two - The Brown-Haired Baker Girl

       On the morning of his fourth day at the Crown, Peter realized with a shock that someone was banging on his bedroom wall. From the other side.

       Manos was working on Mr. Banks’s stove, and Jovanna had left for the Laundry, and Peter was lying in bed feeling sorry for himself when the soft banging began. Peter placed his ear against the wall.

       A voice on the other side said, “Boy? Boy! Are you still sad?”

       Peter jumped to his feet, standing on top of the bed. Unless this hotel was magical, walls didn’t talk. It had to be someone in another room. He pressed his face flat again to listen.

       “Are you ever gonna come out? What’s so great about your room?” the voice asked.

       Could this person be talking to Peter? It certainly seemed so because Peter was a boy and Peter had decided to never leave his room again. But who—

       There was a sharp WHACK on the wall.

       “Boy! Answer me!”

       Peter gave the wall a soft tap with his knuckles and held his breath.

       The wall answered him with a Knock Knock Knock.

       “Come outside, boy!”

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About the Author

Winner of the 2016 National Indie Excellence Award!

You work hard.
I write adventures.
Let me entertain you.

My favorite adventurers: Ender, Frodo and Sam, Rand, Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin, Katniss, Spenser, Peter and Alicia and Amy (from The Passage), Jack Ryan, Dirk Pitt, and many others, including my two sons and my super hot wife.

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Chapter Reveal: Undefeated by Stuart Reardon and Jane Harvey-Berrick

A powerful contemporary romance set in the fast-moving world of international rugby.

When your world crashes down
When they all say you’re out
When your body is broken
I will rise.
I will return.
And I will be undefeated.

Nick Renshaw is the golden boy of British rugby. When a serious injury threatens his career, he starts to spiral downwards, a broken man.
Feeling abandoned and betrayed by those closest to him, he fights to restart his life. Maybe there’s someone out there who can help him. Maybe he can find his way back toward the light. Maybe … not.
Dr. Anna Scott might be the one person who can help Nick, but she has her own secrets. And when Nick’s past comes back to haunt them both, the enigmatic doctor is more vulnerable than she seems.
Broken and betrayed, the struggle to survive seems intolerable. Who will give in, and who will rise, undefeated?

Coming January 23rd 2018

Excerpt

Prologue

It’s a beautiful game.

It’s a hard game.

And even on a good day your body is battered and bruised. It’s a brutal game with blood, mud and dirt.

See this scar on my cheek? Rugby.

See this scar running through my eyebrow? Rugby.

I have a lot of scars.

I have 13 scars on each arm from keyhole surgery, knee surgery, scars on my forehead and the back of my head, scars on my knuckles, broken fingers. I’ve had both eyelids stitched, surgery on both shoulders, suffered a broken nose twice and spiral fractures in my hands, I’ve broken my fingers so many times, I don’t event count those. I’ve had cartilage cleaned out of my left knee, two medial ligament grade two tears on each knee, three lots of surgery for Achilles tendon injuries, and once I put my bottom teeth through my top lip. Getting stitches in your mouth isn’t much fun. They tug when you eat or speak.

There’s nothing nice about rugby. Maybe that’s why I bloody love it.

Chicks dig scars? Yeah, I’ve heard that, too.

In my experience, they’re not so keen on being around while you’re healing. Being the loser who’s benched, not so sexy. Being the guy who’s career went down the toilet … I’m looking a lot less appealing now
Trusting a woman when you’re at your lowest—dumbest, stupidest thing ever.

Beat me, break me, butcher my heart.

I’m coming for you. And this time…

I’m going to win.

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About the Authors

Stuart Reardon

Stuart is a retired England International Rugby League player who’s career spanned 16 years as a professional playing for several top League clubs.  He has had several major injuries that nearly ended his career just as in Undefeated, the amazing collaboration with Jane.
Currently he is a Personal trainer living in Cheshire, and has an online fitness program: Fear Nothing Fitness.

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Jane Harvey-Berrick

I enjoy watching surfers at my local beach, and weaving stories of romance in the modern world, with all its trials and tribulations.
It’s been the best fun working with Stu on this story. And yes, he did think about joining the Marines once.

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Spotlight: Something So Irresistible by Natasha Madison

Max Horton

They call me an outcast like it's a bad thing.

An asshole byproduct of a shitty upbringing. I don't care about anything except myself and my little sister.

I will always protect what’s mine.

With one year left on my hockey contract I'm keeping my head down and my eyes on the goal.

A collision, with her, changes my entire existence.

Allison Grant

Never fall in love with a sports star. That's what my stepfather always said. He told me athletes are complicated and moody—that the higher their paycheck, the lower their morals.

As public relations for the New York Stingers I know exactly what he means, but I can’t seem to say no to a friendship with one beautiful, damaged man.

What started out as hate turned into something else.

We tried to stay away, to keep our distance, but the pull was too strong.

Something forbidden turned into something so irresistible.

Excerpt

“You may now kiss the bride,” Judge Reynolds says right before Max grabs my face in both of his hands.

“I love you,” he whispers, then his lips land on mine, gently and full of love.

My hands go to his waist as I close my eyes and take in the safety of my husband.

“I love you with everything that I am,” he murmurs against my lips. I smile and look into his crystal blue eyes.

“I love you more,” I say. He lets go of my face and we shake the judge’s hand. He grabs my hand and we walk out of his chambers while my chiffon train trails us.


Max proposed to me three hours ago. He got down on one knee and vowed to love me and only me till his last dying breath while I stood there in the middle of the shark reef in the Mandalay Bay. It took me two seconds before I nodded and got down on my knees with him, buried my face into his chest, and cried from happiness. I was completely and utterly in love with him. And not one person in my family knew. Well, none of the men knew. But this isn’t about them. This is about me, about Max, about how he took my heart into his hand and treated it like delicate crystal, making sure he bubble wrapped it to keep it safe.

Now here I am, watching my husband dressed in a black tux hold my hand and me in my two-piece lace dress. It is beaded from my collar all the way down. It ties around my neck but leaves my back bare. My arms are also bare. A gold belt ties the second part of the dress, floor-length split chiffon. My legs slip out while I walk, showing off my something blue, which is my Carrie Bradshaw Blue Manolo Blahnik.

As soon as the door to the chapel opens, my chiffon dress blows up almost like Marilyn Monroe’s, the hustle and bustle of Las Vegas almost non-existent since we are off the Strip. Someone in the distance must have snapped a picture because his flash went off.

“I think someone just took a picture of us,” I tell him while we make our way to the car that is waiting for us.

“Angel, it’s Vegas, everyone is taking pictures.” He waits for me to get in before climbing in after me. “So, my wife, where do you want to go?” Max turns to me and smiles while his thumb rubs the hand he’s holding.

“Back to our room.” I look at our hands. “I want to go back with you and lock the door and just be with my husband.”

“I was hoping you’d say that.” He pulls me to him, his arm going around my shoulder, and I fit perfectly in the crook of his arm.

We watch the city lights come into focus again once we get on the Strip. Walking through the lobby, I hold on to my husband’s hand, watching his ring glisten in the light. Max unlocks the door for us. Walking in, I head for the living room that is now turned into what looks like a small reception. Gone are the couches, and in their place is a cast iron square with blush pink roses wrapped all around it. Tea lights make it across. All the furniture is gone. The only thing in this room are blush roses, which are my favorites.

“This place looks like a fairy tale.”

Max walks to me, holding a bouquet in his hands. “For you.” He hands it to me as our song “Dive” comes on.

“Dance with me?” I ask him as I walk to him.

“Every single day of my life.” He wraps an arm around my waist. I hold the bouquet around his shoulders and we hold our free hands to his chest.

He takes his phone out and raises his hand, snapping a picture of us. I’m looking at the camera while he looks at me. “Stunning,” he says quietly as his cell phone rings. “Angel, don’t freak out.” His voice is curt, tight.

I don’t have to time to say anything because my phone buzzes with a text from Matthew.

Allison, when you get this you better call me.

“Oh my God.” I look at him. “What did we just do?” He looks at me shocked, steps back, and away from me.

“Max.” I reach out to him while he dodges me.

“A mistake.”

I don’t know if he’s asking or telling. My heart hurts as his eyes go dark. He darts out of the room and the front door slams after him. As I stand here in my wedding dress, a tear rolls down my face, and I look down and see my glistening wedding band.

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About the Author

When her nose isn't buried in a book, or her fingers flying across a keyboard writing, she's in the kitchen creating gourmet meals. You can find her, in four inch heels no less, in the car chauffeuring kids, or possibly with her husband scheduling his business trips. It's a good thing her characters do what she says, because even her Labrador doesn't listen to her...

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Cover Reveal: The Billionaire’s Betrayal by Mika Lane

The Billionaire’s Betrayal
Mika Lane
(Billionaire, #2)
Publication date: January 16th 2018
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

I own the hottest boutique hotel in Manhattan. Only the rich and famous stay here. They’re the only ones who can afford it. And they’re the only ones we allow.

I’m busy, I’m successful, I’m rich, and I can seduce any woman I want. So when I agreed to another god-awful “bachelor auction” fundraiser for some freaking charity, I prepared myself for a date with some crazy chick who blathered on about her cat, and how many children she’d like to have one day.

Thanks, but no thanks.

So when my “date,” the winner of the latest auction of my bad boy self, emailed me to set up a rendezvous, I planned on having one drink and bailing. My assistant knew exactly when to call me so I could fake an emergency.

Only this date was different. Sure, she was beautiful—Manhattan is full of stunning women, mostly looking for rich husbands. But this one was the brilliant CEO of a tech firm. And she could have given two craps about me. Before I knew it, her half-empty martini sat on the bar wearing the slightest smudge of her red lipstick.

Was she beating me at my own game? I couldn’t let that happen. I wouldn’t.

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Author Bio:

Writing has been a passion of Mika’s since a young age (her first book was "The Day I Ate the Milkyway"), but erotic romance is now what gives purpose to her days and nights. She lives in magical Northern California with her own handsome alpha dude, sometimes known as Mr. Mika Lane, and an evil cat named Bill. A devotee of the intelligent and beautiful, and lover of shiny things, she’s a yogi, hiker, traveler, thinker, observer, and book worm. She has been known to drink cheap champagne and has way too many shoes.

A National Reader's Choice Awards finalist, Mika always deliver a hot, sexy romp, often with imperfect characters, and a promised happily ever after (or at least happy for now).

She LOVES to hear from readers, and can be found at www.mikalane.com, and facebook.com/mikalaneauthor, when she's not dreaming up naughty tales to share.

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Audio Excerpt: Dark Retreat by Grace Hamilton and narrated Andrew Tell

Three months after life as she knows it was decimated, Megan Wolford has only one goal: protect her daughter, Caitlin, at any cost. When a mysterious illness strikes Caitlin down, Megan is forced to forage for medical supplies at a remote lodge. The last thing she wants is help from her fellow survivors when so many in her life have let her down—but soon she'll find herself with no other option. 

Ex-Navy SEAL Wyatt Morris is doing everything he can to hold his family together after the tragic death of his prepper Dad, so when Megan enters their lands, he is mistrustful at first despite feeling drawn to her. He won't turn away an ill child though--no matter how deadly the world has become. But the arrival of another stranger named Kyle soon gives them all a new reason to be suspicious. Wyatt knows he’ll have to forge alliances in order to keep his family safe, but trusting the wrong person could be a deadly mistake. 

When Megan and Wyatt discover her daughter’s illness may be linked to Kyle’s arrival, it sets off a race to discover the truth before it’s too late to save Caitlin—and the rest of the Morris clan. Can they work together for survival . . . and something more?

Excerpt

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About the Author: Grace Hamilton

Grace Hamilton is the prepper pen-name for a bad-ass, survivalist momma-bear of four kids, and wife to a wonderful husband. After being stuck in a mountain cabin for six days following a flash flood, she decided she never wanted to feel so powerless or have to send her kids to bed hungry again. Now she lives the prepper lifestyle and knows that if SHTF or TEOTWAWKI happens, she’ll be ready to help protect and provide for her family.

Combine this survivalist mentality with a vivid imagination (as well as a slightly unhealthy day dreaming habit) and you get a prepper fiction author. Grace spends her days thinking about the worst possible survival situations that a person could be thrown into, then throwing her characters into these nightmares while trying to figure out "What SHOULD you do in this situation?"

It’s her wish that through her characters, you will get to experience what life will be like and essentially learn from their mistakes and experiences.

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About the Narrator: Andrew Tell

Andrew is an actor and voiceover artist based in Los Angeles, California. He is a versatile, articulate, and technically clean narrator with a strong background in improvisation and comedy.

In audiobook narration, he is an Audible-Approved producer with thousands of 5-star performance reviews by Audible listeners. I work closely with independent authors and publishers to bring their books and characters to life.
Here’s what listeners have to say:

“The narration of this audiobook was EXCELLENT. It was clear right from the beginning that this narrator is a professional. I’m not sure what else to say about it because, quite frankly, it could not have been any better. The narrator was able to draw me into the story right away and allowed me to follow along without ever having to wonder if I had missed anything. “

“The narrator makes the story even better! He’s excellent and I’ll be searching for, and keeping an eye out for other books he narrates.”

“The narration of Andrew Tell is excellent, his performance is spot on and I felt I was listening to more of an Audio Drama at times. His voice and words are crystal clear (even when using various accents for the various characters) and it was a joy to listen to.”Connect: 

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Spotlight: Learning to Love the Heat by Everly Lucas

What she needs most might be what she least expects…

Living without air conditioning in a Philadelphia heat wave has Claire on the brink of a total meltdown. When she escapes her overheated apartment to spend a day at the park, the last thing she expects—or wants—is for a gorgeous guy to chat her up. But his sweet smile and nerdy charm are impossible for even Claire to resist.

Patience and persistence go hand in hand…

For Ben, Claire is the One, but there’s a small snag—she’s terrified of a man’s touch. But now that he’s found her, he’ll never let her go, even if he never gets to hold her.
Another snag? Her obvious attraction to his best friend.

Sometimes it takes fire to wash you clean…

Ben respects Claire’s firm boundaries, but Andy crashes right through them. He’s arrogant, crude, a total jackass…and criminally sexy. 
Even if she can fix what’s broken inside her, how will she choose between the delicious slow burn she feels with Ben and the explosive inferno Andy ignites in her? 
Can they find their happy ending without three hearts going up in flames?

Exclusive Excerpt

Shoving off the wall, I clear the final step and have a fucking heart attack when I see a tall, broad silhouette blocking one of the windows.

“Andy?”

At the sound of his name, he looks over his shoulder, wearing a heart-stopping smile meant just for me.

Simply put, the man steals my breath, leaving my lungs empty and aching. In the dim light of the room, he’s dark and handsome from head to toe, with his glossy black hair, black dress shirt, and charcoal gray pants. Until this moment, I thought only my grandmom and black-and-white movie stars used the word debonair, but Andy DelVecchio is very much here and now and debonair as fuck.

His beauty both lures me in and screams danger, kind of like the first time we met. Only I didn’t know him then, and he didn’t know me. I’m starting to think we were better off that way.

“Peach.” His deep voice caresses my nickname, making my heart stutter. My hand flies to my chest, clutching my literal pearls. “I saw you down there. You really are an angel tonight,” he says, gesturing at, well, all of me.

My knee-jerk response is to reject and deny his words, but instead of keeping that response to myself, my impulsive mouth sets it free. “I’m no angel. Trust me.”

Why I blurt that out is beyond me. It’s not my usual M.O. to open myself up to further discussion about my flaws. They exist. They’re obvious. No need to poke at them.

Stepping farther into the room, I perch on the edge of Ben’s bed, crossing my ankles and folding my hands in my lap. Andy sits beside me, so close our thighs almost touch. I freeze, keeping a watchful eye on the two inches of space between us to make sure they don’t get any radical ideas, like shrinking or disappearing altogether.

“Nobody’s perfect, babe. Some people just come closer to it than others. Benny’s practically a saint, and you…” His rich, brown eyes meet mine, and I can’t look away. I’m trapped by his gaze, with no real desire to break free. “Like I said, you’re an angel. You’ve just got a few broken feathers. That’s all.”

Try a few hundred.

“Ben might be close to perfect, but I’m…” I trail off, shaking my head to finish the thought. Best to keep sidestepping that conversational landmine. “You should hear the way he talks about you, though. It’s embarrassing, really. He’s all, ‘Andy’s super talented.’ ‘Andy’s so much cooler than I’ll ever be.’ ‘Andy’s the absolute shit.’”

Okay, so I’m paraphrasing a bit, but the sentiment is pretty accurate.

Andy’s booming laugh fills the room with pure, concentrated awesomeness. It’s impossible to hear that sound and put up a decent fight against fangirl-level giddiness. I dare anyone to try. It can’t be done.

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About Everly Lucas

After years of rooting for couples and falling for heroes created by other authors, Everly decided to create her own. She now has a crowd of characters hanging out in her head, with no intention of kicking them out.

She lives in Philadelphia with her precious laptop, a cat named Bunny, and a kitten who falls down a lot. Her favorite things include Dr. Pepper, sparkly stuff, blissful silence, and singing while doing the dishes.

Everly can be found on Twitter, like, all the time.

Connect with Everly: Website | Facebook | Twitter |  Instagram | Goodreads