Spotlight: The Gift of Failure: Turn My Missteps Into Your Epic Success by Ari Rastegar

If you haven’t failed, then you aren’t trying hard enough.

Not just the little failures either—the big ones.

The failures that push you to the edge of insanity and potentially put your entire career in jeopardy. The failures that knock you to the ground and won’t let you back up without fighting for your life. The failures that force you to ask better questions, to learn from your mistakes, and to commit to becoming a better person.

These are the failures that plant the seeds of greatness.

Everything Ari Rastegar has achieved was forged through failure. From delivering pizzas at DoubleDave’s to his rise as real estate’s “Oracle of Austin” (Forbes)—and every step (and misstep) in between—Ari owes his success not to what he did right but to what he did wrong.

In The Gift of Failure, Ari pulls back the curtain on his darkest moments—revealing the hard-earned lessons from his struggles, showing why prosperity in any enterprise is linked to prosperity in life. Full of Ari’s trademark wit, energy, compassion, and candor, this book will help you see failure in an entirely new way.

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About the Author

Ari Rastegar, a licensed attorney, founded Rastegar in 2015 with one mission: to build the future of real estate. A true renaissance man, Ari is a larger-than-life personality who is also an artist, technologist, screenwriter, health enthusiast, and entrepreneurial visionary with the ambition to change the world. He lives in his hometown of Austin, Texas, with his wife and their three children.

Spotlight: Through Her Eyes by Maheen Mazhar

Born into a Pakistani family and moved to America at the age of three, Through Her Eyes is a story of an American girl who finds her Pakistani roots constantly clashing with her American identity.

At times she feels like she belongs to both cultures and at times to none. Later, she finds out about the struggles her family had to face when she was born in Lahore, Pakistan: a country that fires gunshots in midair celebrating the birth of a boy while in certain areas of the country girls are flushed down the hospital toilet drains as soon as they are born. When Maheen enters her teens, her Pakistani roots constantly come into conflict with the teenage American culture around her. At times, she finds herself belonging to both her identities and at times she finds her Pakistani roots battling with her American identity.

Through Her Eyes is a story of a Pakistani American who has to face many hardships after being born in a country like Pakistan and how her struggles completely changed her life as she grows up and becomes the woman no one ever thought she could become.

Buy on Amazon | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Maheen Mazhar was born in Lahore, Pakistan and moved to New York with her parents at the age of three. Growing up as Pakistani-American there was always a clash between both of her identities. She graduated from New York University in 2019 and currently works in the Fashion PR Industry as a publicist. She writes about culture clashes, identity and societal norms and is extremely passionate about such topics. She doesn't believe in norms and standards and wants to see a world where more people are concerned about being their true selves rather than fitting into cultural/ societal norms of the world we live in. 

Spotlight: It's One of Us by J.T. Ellison

From the New York Times bestselling author comes this twisting, emotionally layered thriller about a marriage torn apart when the police arrive at an infertile couple’s door and reveal the husband’s son is the prime suspect in a murder. The perfect blend of exhilarating suspense and issue-driven book club fiction.

Everybody lies. Even the ones you think you know best of all . . .

Olivia Bender designs exquisite home interiors that satisfy the most demanding clients. But her own deepest desire can’t be fulfilled by marble counters or the perfect rug. She desperately wants to be a mother. Fertility treatments and IVF keep failing. And just when she feels she’s at her lowest point, the police deliver shocking news to Olivia and her husband, Park.

DNA results show that the prime suspect in a murder investigation is Park’s son. Olivia is relieved, knowing this is a mistake. Despite their desire, the Benders don’t have any children. Then comes the confession. Many years ago, Park donated sperm to a clinic. He has no idea how many times it was sold—or how many children he has sired.

As the murder investigation goes deeper, more terrible truths come to light. With every revelation, Olivia must face the unthinkable. The man she married has fathered a killer. But can she hold that against him when she keeps such dark secrets of her own?

This twisting, emotionally layered thriller explores the lies we tell to keep a marriage together--or break each other apart . . .

Excerpt

1

THE WIFE

There is blood again.

Olivia forces away the threatening tears. She will not collapse. She will not cry. She will stand up, square her shoulders and flush the toilet, whispering small words of benediction toward the life that was, that wasn’t, that could have been.

She will not linger; she will not acknowledge the sudden sense of emptiness consuming her body. She will not give this moment more than it deserves. It’s happened before, too many times now. It will happen again, her mind unhelpfully provides.

There is relief in this pain, some sort of primitive biological response to help ease her heavy heart. Olivia has never lied to herself about her feelings about having a child. She wants this, she’s sure of it. Wants the experience, wants to be able to speak the same language as her sisters in the fertility arts, her friends who’ve already birthed their own. And she loves the idea of being pregnant. Loves the feelings of that early flush of success—the soreness and tingling in her breasts, the spotty nausea, the excitement, the fatigue. Loves remembering that moment when she realized she was pregnant the first time.

She’d known even before she took the test. She could feel the life growing inside her. Feel the quickening pulse. A secret she held in her heart, managing several hours with just the two of them, alone in their nascent lives. Every room of the house looked new, fresh, dangerous. Sharp corners and glass coffee tables, no, no, those would have to be tempered, replaced. The sun glancing off the breakfast table—too bright here, the spot on the opposite side would be best for a high chair. The cat, snoozing in the window seat—how was she going to take an interloper? The plans. The plans.

After a carefully arranged lunch, fresh fruit and no soft cheeses, she’d driven to the bookstore for a copy of What to Expect When You’re Expecting, accepted the sweet congratulations of the bookseller—think, a complete stranger knew more than her family, her husband. She tied the plastic stick with its beautiful double pink lines inside two elaborate bows—one pink, one blue—and gave it to Park after an elegant dinner.

The look on his face—pride and fear and terror and joy, all mingled with desire—when he realized what she was saying. He’d been struck dumb, could only grin ear to ear and pat her leg for the first twenty minutes.

So much joy between them. So much possibility.

Olivia replayed that moment, over and over, every time she got pregnant. It helped chase away the furrowing, the angles and planes of Park’s forehead, cheek, chin, as they collapsed into sorrow when she’d miscarried the first time. And the next. And the next. Every time she lost their children, it was the same, all played out on Park’s handsome face: exaltation, fear, sorrow. Pity.

No, the being pregnant part was idyllic for her, albeit terribly brief. It’s only that she doesn’t know how she feels about what happens ten months hence, and the lifetime that follows. The stranger that comes into being. But that’s normal—at least, that’s what everyone tells her. All women feel nervous about what comes next. Her ambivalence isn’t what’s killing her babies. She can’t help but feel it’s her fault for not being certain to her marrow what she wants. That God is punishing her for being cavalier.

Of course, this internal conversation is moot. There is blood. Again.

She hastily makes her repairs—the materials are never far away. If she stashed the pads and tampons away in the hall cabinet, it would be bad luck. Too optimistic.

Not like they’re having any luck anyway. Six pregnancies. Six miscarriages. IUIs and IVF. Needles and hormones and pain, so much pain. More than anyone should have to bear.

With a momentary glance at the crime scene in the toilet, she depresses the handle.

“Goodbye,” she whispers. “I’m so sorry.”

Olivia brushes her teeth, then pulls a comb through her glossy, prenatal-enriched locks, rehearsing the breakfast conversation she must now have.

How does she tell Park she’s failed, yet again, to hold the tiny life inside her?

Downstairs, it is now just another morning, no different from any over the past several years. Just the two of them, getting ready for the day.

The television is on in the kitchen, tuned to the local morning show. Park whistles as he whisks eggs in a bright red bowl. Park’s breakfasts are legendary. Savory omelets, buckwheat blueberry pancakes, veggie frittatas, yogurts and homemade granola—you name it, he makes it. Olivia handles dinner. If she cooks three nights out of seven, she considers that a success. They eat like kings in the morning and paupers at night, and they love it.

She pauses at the door, watching him bustle around. He is already dressed for work, jeans and a button-down, black lace-up brogues. His “office” is in the backyard, in a shed Olivia converted for his use. A former—reformed—English professor on a semipermanent sabbatical, Park has launched a second career ghostwriting psychological thrillers. He claims to love the anonymity of it, that he can work so close to home, and the money is good. Enough. Not obscene, but enough. They’ve been able to afford four rounds of IUI and two in vitros so far. And as he says, writing is the perfect career for a man who wants to be a stay-at-home dad. There’s no reason for him to go back to teaching. Not now.

A pang in her heart, echoed by a sharp cramp in her stomach. They are throwing everything away. She is throwing everything away. This round of IVF, she only produced a few retrievable eggs, and this was their last embryo.

My God, she’s gotten clinical. She’s gotten cold. Babies. Not embryos. There are no more frozen babies. Which means she’ll have to do it all again, the weeks-long scientific process of creating a child: the suppression drugs, the early morning blood tests, the shots, the trigger, the surgery, the implantation. The rage and fear and pain. Again.

The money. It costs so, so much.

She has frozen at the edge of the kitchen, thoughts roiling, and Park senses her there, turns with a wide smile. The whisk clicks against the bowl in time with her heartbeat.

“How are my darlings feeling this morning? Mama and bebe hungry?”

She is saved from blurting out the truth—mama no more, bebe is dead—by the ringing of the doorbell.

Park frowns. “Who is here so early? Watch the eggs, will you?”

Even chickens can do what she cannot.

It’s infuriating. House cats escape into the woods and sixty days later purge themselves of tiny blind beings. Insects, birds, rats, rabbits, deer, reproduce without thought or hindrance.

Nearly four million women a year—a year!—manage to give birth.

But not her.

She’s not depressed, really, she’s not. She’s come to terms with this. It happens. Today will be a bad day, tomorrow will be better. They will try again. It will all be okay.

Mechanically, Olivia moves to the stove, accepts the wooden spatula. Park disappears toward the foyer, shoulders broad and waist nearly as trim as the day she met him. She will never get over his handsomeness, his winning personality. Everyone loves Park. How could you not? He is perfect. He is everything Olivia is not.

The television is blaring a breaking news alert, and she turns her attention to it, grateful for something, anything, to focus on beside the intransigent nature of her womb and the fear her husband will abandon her. The anchor is new, from Mississippi, with a voice soft as honey. Tupelo? No, Oxford, Olivia remembers; Park took her to a quaint bookstore there on the square one summer, long ago.

“Sad news this morning, as it has been confirmed the body found in Davidson County earlier this week belongs to young mother Beverly Cooke. Cooke has been missing for three months, after she was last seen going for a hike at Radnor Lake. Her car was found in the parking lot, with her purse and phone inside. Metro Nashville Police spokesperson Vanda Priory tells Channel Four Metro is working with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and Forensic Medical to determine her cause of death. The Cooke family released a statement a few minutes ago. ‘Thank you to everyone who has helped bring Beverly home. We will have more information on her burial soon. We ask for privacy during this difficult time.’ Metro now turns their attention to identifying a suspect. In this morning’s briefing, Homicide Detective William Osley stated that Metro has a lead and will be pursuing it vigorously. Next up, time to break into the cedar closet, it’s finally sweater weather!”

Olivia sighs in regret. That poor woman. Like everyone in Nashville, Olivia has followed the case religiously. To have a young mother—the kind of woman she’s so desperate to mold herself into— disappear into thin air from a safe, regularly traveled, popular spot, one Olivia herself hikes on occasion, has been terrifying. She knows Beverly Cooke, too, albeit peripherally. They were in a book club together a few years ago. Beverly was fun. Loud. Drank white wine in the kitchen of the house and gossiped about the neighbors. Never read the book.

Olivia stopped going after a few meetings. It was right before she’d started her first official fertility treatments, had two miscarriages behind her, was hopped up on Clomid and aspirin, and all anyone could do was talk babies. Beverly had just weaned her first and was drunk for the first time in two years. She alternated between complaining and cooing about the trials and joys of motherhood. Olivia couldn’t take it, this flagrant flaunting of the woman’s success. She stood stock still in the clubhouse kitchen, fingers clenching a glass of Chardonnay, envisioning the myriad ways she could murder Beverly. Cracking the glass on the counter’s edge and swiping it across Beverly’s pale stalk of a neck seemed the most expedient.

Honestly, she wanted to murder them all, the sycophantic breeders who took their ability to procreate for granted. They had no idea what she was going through. How she was tearing apart inside, month after month. How she felt the embryos detach and knew it was over. How Park’s face went from joy to disdain every time.

Some people wear their scars on the outside.

Some hide them deep, and never let anyone in to see them.

Olivia is still staring at the screen, which is blaring a commercial for car insurance, processing, remembering, fists balled so tightly she can feel her nails cutting the skin, when she hears her husband calling her name.

“Olivia?” His voice is pitched higher than normal, as if he’s excited, or scared.

Park enters the kitchen from the hall between the dining room and the butler’s pantry.

“Honey, they found Beverly—” she starts. But her words die in her throat when she sees two strangers, a man and a woman, standing behind him, people she knows immediately are police officers just by their wary bearing and shifting eyes that take in the whole room in a moment, then settle on her appraisingly.

“I know,” Park says, coming to her side, shutting off the gas. She’s burned the eggs; a sulfurous stench emanates from the gold-encrusted pan. He takes the spatula from her carefully. “It’s been on the news all morning. Liv, these detectives need to talk to us.”

“About?”

The man—stocky, slick smoky-lensed gold glasses, perfectly worn-in cowboy boots and a leather jacket over a button-down—takes a small step forward and removes his sunglasses. His eyes are the deepest espresso and hold something indefinable, between pity and accusation. It’s as if he knows what she is thinking, knows her uncharitable thoughts toward poor dead Beverly.

“Detective Osley, ma’am. My partner, Detective Moore. We’ve been working Beverly Cooke’s case. I understand you knew her? Our condolences for your loss.”

Olivia cuts her eyes at Park. What the hell has he been saying to them?

“I don’t know her. Didn’t. Not well. We were in a book club together, years ago. I don’t know what happened to her. I’m sorry I can’t be of more help.”

“Oh, we understand. That’s not why we’re here.” Osley glances at his partner. The woman is taller than he is, graceful in the way of ex–ballet dancers even in her street clothes, with a long, supple neck, hooded green eyes devoid of makeup and blond hair twisted into a thick no-nonsense bun worn low, brushing the collar of her shirt.

“Why are you here, exactly?” Olivia asks.

Park frowns at her tone. She’s come across too sharp, but my God, what she’s already handled this morning would break a lesser woman.

“It’s about our suspect in the Cooke case. Can we sit down?”

Olivia reigns in her self-loathing fury and turns on the charm. The consummate hostess act always works. Park has taught her that. “Oh, of course. Can I get you some coffee? Tea? We were making breakfast. Can we offer you some eggs, or a muffin? I have a fresh pan here—”

“No, ma’am, we’re fine,” Moore demurs. “Let’s sit down and have a chat.”

Olivia has a moment of sheer freak-out. Was it Park? Had he killed Beverly Cooke? Was that why they wanted to talk, because he was a suspect? If he was a suspect, would the police sit down with them casually in the kitchen? Wouldn’t they want something more official? Take him to the station? Did they need to call a lawyer? Her mind was going fifty thousand miles an hour, and Park was already convicted and in prison, and she was so alone in the big house, so lonely, before she reached a hand to pull out the chair.

She needs to knock off the true crime podcasts. Her husband is not a murderer. He is incapable of that kind of deceit.

Isn’t he?

Sometimes she wonders.

“Nice kitchen,” Osley says.

“Thank you.”

Olivia loves her kitchen. It is the model for all her signature looks. Airy, open, white cabinets with iron pulls, leathered white marble counters. A black granite–topped island just the right size for chopping and serving, light spilling in from the big bay window. A white oak French country table with elegant cane-backed chairs. It was the heart of her home, the heart of her life with Park.

Now, though, it is simply the site of his greatest betrayal. Forevermore, from this morning—with the burned eggs and the somber police and Park’s face whiter than bone—until the end of her tenure here, and even then, in remembrance, she would look at this precious place with fury and sadness for what could have been. The ghosts of the life they were supposed to have clung to her, suckled her spirit like a babe at her breast never would. Everywhere she looked were echoes of the shadow existence she was supposed to be living. Here, a frazzled mother, smiling despite her fatigue at the children she’d created. There, a loving father, always ready to lend a hand tossing a ball or helping with homework. And look, a trio of towheaded boys and a soft blonde princess girl, the teasing and laughter of their mealtimes. How the table would seem to grow smaller as the boys got older and took up more space. The girlfriends came, the boyfriends. The emptiness when it was just the two of them again, the children grown with their own lives, the table bursting at holidays only. The grandchildren, happiness and racket, the noise and the joy creeping out from the woodwork again.

She is alone. She will always be alone. She will not have this life. She will not have this dream.

Park made it so.

As the detectives continue to speak, softly, without rancor, and her world splinters, Olivia hardens, compresses, shrinks. She watches her husband and holds on to one small thought.

I have the power to destroy you, too. Dear God, give me the chance.

Excerpted from It’s One of Us @ 2023 by JT Ellison, used with permission by MIRA Books.

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About the Author

J.T. Ellison is the NYT and USA Today bestselling author of more than 20 novels, and the EMMY-award winning co-host of A WORD ON WORDS, Nashville's premier literary show. With millions of books in print, her work has won critical acclaim, prestigious awards, and has been published in 26 countries. Ellison lives in Nashville with her husband and twin kittens.

Connect:

Author website: https://www.jtellison.com/ 

Facebook: http://facebook.com/jtellison14  

Twitter: https://twitter.com/thrillerchick 

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

Spotlight: Hidden Justice by Diana Munzo Stewart

Diana Munzo Stewart is relaunching Hidden Justice, this time in Kindle Unlimited! The romantic suspense will be released on April 18th–check it out and be sure to pre-order today!

Genre: Romantic Suspense

Release Date: April 18th 

About Hidden Justice

Saved from a brutal childhood and adopted into a wealthy, loving family of international spies, Justice Parish trained her whole life to rescue others. But when her latest mission hits a snag, she needs a new cover fast. Unfortunately, her best solution jeopardizes a good man. A man she can’t help but admire…in more ways than one.

After a loss too big to bear, Sandesh Ross left Special forces and dedicated his life to founding a humanitarian group in the Middle East. Helping others isn’t cheap, so when the wealthy and smoldering Justice Parish offers to fund his charity––as long as she’s put in charge of PR––he barely hesitates. What he doesn’t know about his sexy, new benefactor could save his company while endangering not only his heart but his life.

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About the Author

#1 Amazon bestselling author. 

Munoz Stewart’s work has been a BookPage Top 15 Romance of 2018, a Night Owl Top Pick, A BookPage Top Pick, and an Amazon Book of the Month. A 2014 Pages From The Heart Winner, 2015 Golden Heart® Finalist, 2016 Daphne du Maurier Finalist, and a 2016 Gateway to the Best Winner, Diana Munoz Stewart is a member of Romance Writers of America, International Thriller Writers, and Sisters in Crime. 

Diana lives in an often chaotic and always welcoming home that—depending on the day—can hold husband, kids, extended family, friends, and a canine or two. A believer in the power of words to heal, connect, and distract from chores, Diana blogs regularly on topics near and dear to her heart, including spotlight pieces on strong women from around the world. When not writing, Diana can be found kayaking, doing sprints up her long driveway—harder than it sounds–attempting yoga on her deck, or hiking with the man who’s had her heart since they were teens.

Diana is represented by the wonderful Michelle Grajkowski of Three Seas Literary Agency.

Connect with the Author: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Amazon 

Spotlight: The New Single Dad Billionaire by Tina Gabor

(Bronson Billionaire Romance Series, #5)
Publication date: February 28th 2023
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

Tyler Bronson’s hot dating app eMingle just went public, but despite his success at finding matches for other people he’s still single.

His on and off relationship with his unstable ex has finally stayed off that is until he finds out he has a son.

Now, he’s not just a new billionaire. He’s a new single dad. And he has no time for love until …

Excerpt

Betty POV

Between the heat from the fire and Tyler's body, the chill in the air had evaporated.
Tyler leaned forward, put his empty glass on the table, and took mine as well.
When he leaned back, he scooped me into his lap.
"This can't be comfortable for you,” I said motioning to his lap.
"Comfortable isn't the word I'd use, but I definitely like it. Let's make it even more fun," he said, scooting us closer to the corner of the loveseat.
"Wait," I said, not wanting to worry about his legs going numb. I scooched back so that my butt was on the loveseat, and my legs were over his lap. I rested my back on the arm of the chair.
He laughed. "Better?"
I nodded.
"This next part is cheesy, but it's happening, so stifle your inner cringe," he said.
"Okay," I said, nervous about what he was going to do next.
He reached over, grabbed a strawberry, and held it in front of my lips.
I giggled with the over-the-top ridiculousness of it.
"Open up, Betty," he said. "You don't want me to make airplane noises."
I humored him and opened my mouth to take a bite. But as he watched me with hungry eyes, I bit into the strawberry, and my insides melted.
I swallowed the strawberry, and a bit of juice dribbled down my mouth. I felt self-conscious, but he wiped it away with his finger.
"Was it good?" he asked, his voice a sexy whisper.
I couldn't even talk, so I just nodded yes.
He smiled and kissed me. The taste of his tongue, along with the leftover strawberry, was incredible.
A moan escaped from my throat. He kissed me deeper.
He shifted his body weight, and his erection grazed against my leg.
He groaned, and his hand slipped under my shirt. My heart beat even faster, and my breathing sped up.
"God, you feel so good," he said, taking a breath from our kisses and then diving back in for more.
His dizzying kisses made me even more wet, and I ran my hand along his chest to feel his hard body.
His hand moved up my torso and under my bra. I gasped as he tweaked my nipple. He groaned as he continued to kiss me.
After a few minutes, Tyler took his hand out from under my shirt, and reached under my legs. I didn't know what he was doing, but somehow, a few seconds later, I was lying on my back on the loveseat with Tyler above me.
We kissed more and writhed against each other. I could feel his erection through my yoga pants. I bucked my hips to feel his hardness right on my sweet spot.
Tyler pushed up my shirt and bra exposing my breasts. Half a breath later, he went from kissing my lips to sucking my nipple.
"Oh my God! Tyler!" I said, my voice surprised and excited. I was this close to hitting my peak, but I didn't know if this was what I wanted at this moment.
I wanted more.
I pushed him away. He stopped and gave me a questioning look.
"I was about to—” I said, not finishing my sentence. I didn't know how to say what I meant.
He smiled and looked down at me. "I know. That was the idea."
"Oh."
Tyler's eyelids were at half-mast, and he went back to tweaking my nipple with his finger. "Did you want to finish in my bedroom?"
"Yes," I gasped.
Almost before I could finish saying yes, Tyler had whisked me into his arms and was opening up the sliding glass doors that led to his bedroom.
This was really happening!

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About the Author

Are you like me?

Do you enjoy funny, contemporary romances with spicy love scenes?

Because if you do ...

You've landed in the perfect place.

I'm Tina Gabor, and it’s so much fun getting to write the books I love reading. Gorgeous men and fierce, feisty, and funny women are my jam.

And since there’s nothing like a love story with a dash of sun and fun ...

I set most of my in Southern California and Florida. I grew up in South Florida, and now I live in Southern California with my fiancee and a stray cat we named Fred.

To get special deals on new releases and updates on what your favorite book couples are doing after the story ends, go to SparksFlyRomance.com/Tina

Connect:

https://www.facebook.com/tinagaborauthor/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21831073.Tina_Gabor

http://sparksflyromance.com/

Spotlight: Secretly by Talya Blaine

(Transformation Series, #2)
Publication date: February 28th 2023
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

Unquenchable chemistry. The rare gift of a second chance. Choices that could destroy it all.

Quinn and Jonathan’s erotic journey continues as sizzling tension tests their “friends for now” pact.

After a desperate call interrupts a failed platonic dinner—and a water main break renders Quinn homeless—she’s left with little choice: Take Jonathan up on his just-friends-no-benefits offer to share his apartment.

But getting closer? A romantic relationship? Not an option. Even after that one impulsive and magical but heartbreaking kiss.

Damn, that kiss. It tells Jonathan all he needs to know about Quinn’s feelings and only deepens his desire to build a life with her. Until her defensive walls throw him back into reality. The reality in which his sweet gig as Spice of Life’s travel show host is on the line. The reality in which he can’t fully accept Quinn’s involvement at Octavia’s dungeon. The reality in which the woman he adores is still grieving—and not ready to hear the three words he needs to say.

The second novel in the Transformation Series, Secretly turns up the heat: A secret trip to a Parisian chateau dungeon, a last-minute wedding to plan, a bold, perhaps impulsive, career decision. Quinn and Jonathan each make choices that alter the course of their lives. Can they forge a shared future?

A story about discovery and desire, friendship and boundaries, freedom and risk. About the delicate balance between intimacy and autonomy. About the struggle to love again and how we choose to live the second chapter of our lives.

Friends to lovers, slow burn, second chance, fish out of water—readers will click with the themes in this edgy contemporary erotic romance. Features characters over 40 and a sexy beta hero. Mature themes, strong language, kink, dungeon and steamy open-door bedroom scenes.

Excerpt

The private elevator let Quinn off in the center of the light, airy landing. A gleaming gray floor and soaring windows encircled the three hundred sixty-degree entry to Jonathan’s penthouse. Across from the elevator the sweeping gallery narrowed, forming a generous hallway into the apartment, no front door required. 

The scent of coconut and sautéing garlic drew her in. A shimmer of anticipation fluttered as she slipped off her ballet flats and left them under the steel console table. Minimalist and masculine. 

It’s just dinner

No reason to feel butterflies. They were friends; they would no doubt enjoy each other’s company over a home-cooked meal. Good conversation, his dry, self-deprecating sense of humor, the kind, easy-going way he had about him. 

Nothing was going to happen tonight. To ensure it, she had not shaved her legs. At least not higher than the spot by her ankle where the hem of her white jeans hit. 

Partial-leg stubble, for some strange reason, seemed worse than whole-leg stubble, and it offered added insurance. Nothing was going to happen. 

The painted concrete floor was cool against her bare feet. “Come right in when you get here—we’ll find each other,” he had texted with a winking emoji just as her train left the eastern Long Island station a couple of hours ago. 

The apartment was quiet except for noise from the kitchen—the click-click-click of a gas burner igniting, a lid clanging against a pot, the seal of the refrigerator door breaking as he opened it. 

Her mind flashed back to their time on the movie set, how he always seemed surrounded by noise. You could hear the TV or music coming from his trailer, even when he wasn’t there. Her impression at the time was that he felt alone.

“Hellooo,” she called. 

“Hey.” From the warmth in that one word, she could already picture the sparkle in his eyes, the crinkled skin at their corners when he smiled. “In here.” 

“Mmm, I’ll just follow the wonderful smells.” The scent of chili peppers tickled her nostrils. The startup of the exhaust fan drowned out the crackle of hot oil. 

In the kitchen, he was standing by the stove, a wide gas range with double ovens—it was obvious he loved to cook. He held a whisk in one hand and the rim of a hammered copper mixing bowl against his white apron in the other.

The light blue button-down shirt set off the warm brown of his eyes. The sleeves were rolled, revealing the curls on his forearms, his jeans faded in all the right places, she just happened to notice once he put down the bowl and came around the island to give her a quick—regrettably quick—hug. 

He gestured to a stool in front of the granite countertop. “Have a seat. Can I get you a glass of wine?” 

“Please.” She sat facing the monster stove while he uncorked a sweating bottle of white and poured her a glass. 

A second later, the oven timer beeped, and he hurried to tend to it. As she took a sip of the peppery wine, she watched him work. Capable, confident. His placid expression fit a man at home in his kitchen. 

“So this is what you do in the daylight hours?” she teased, an unplanned note of flirtation sneaking in.

His laugh was rich, an instant reward. 

The skin around his eyes bunched with his smile, and he looked at her without lifting his head. A shiver snaked its way down her body. 

He raised a finger to signal he had to take care of one more thing. A few deft movements that she couldn’t see at the range and he turned, wiped his hands on the apron, and took it off. 

“This needs to simmer a few minutes. Let’s get out of here.” 

He picked up his half-full glass from the island and gestured toward the French doors at the other side of the open living area. 

On the way out, she left her purse on the coffee table in front of the sofa. Running the length of the opposite wall was a long bookshelf that stretched all the way to the high ceiling. A wooden library ladder leaned against an upper shelf. She quickly scanned his collection of books: shelf after shelf of travel guides, art history, politics, world history, cookbooks, fiction. 

And then her eyes landed on a section of familiar spines. The typography, the progression in hue from one to the next told her he owned all of her books. 

Except for the last one, which she, too, lacked.

He must have read her mind. “I’m eagerly awaiting the next one.”  

A sinking feeling tugged in her chest. “I’m afraid it might be a long wait. I’m officially on hiatus.” Officially, at least as far as she was concerned.

“No. Why?”  

She turned and looked up at him. “I still haven’t been able to write anything.”

“That’s understandable. Won’t Devon work with you on the deadline?” 

“They have already. I mean, I really haven’t been able to come up with anything that feels worth writing about. But . . . can we not go there tonight?”

“We don’t have to.” 

“I don’t mean to shut you down. It’s just that some things I feel ready to tackle and others, not so much yet.” Like you

In the month since she told Leigh she would not deliver a next book, she had not once regretted her decision. Yes, sometimes she missed writing, but if she were honest, what she felt more was guilt. 

Guilt that she was shirking obligation, guilt that she should write rather than that she was driven to it, like she used to be, the scenes in her mind compelling her to tell the story, to capture it in words. 

“I asked Leigh to figure out how to cancel the publishing contract. I’ll give back the money. It’s just,”—she touched her chest—“there’s nothing there, you know?” 

“I understand, I do. And when the time’s right, you’ll come back to it. I’m confident of that—you’re an amazing writer.” He gave her shoulder a quick, supportive squeeze. “So, what’s in the ready-to-tackle category?”

“Okay, maybe ‘ready’ was ambitious.” She rubbed the warm hand on her shoulder. “But I do have news.” 

“Oh? Tell me.”

“I’m moving. In two weeks.” 

“Wow. That’s big.” Concern flashed across his face. “You said you were thinking of selling, but that’s like lightning fast.”

“Right? Crazy-fast. I called a neighbor who’s a real estate agent to talk about the process. 

Turns out a colleague in her office had a client looking in the area but couldn’t find what they wanted. I’m not exaggerating—within twenty-four hours of seeing the house, they made an offer, above where we would have priced it. The only catch is, I have to be out before I close on the new place.” 

“Where’s the new place?” He rubbed the back of his neck.

“I found this small restored farmhouse in the Hudson Valley. As I told Leigh, I’ll still be close enough for regular lunches.” Noting the worry in his eyes, she added, “and dinners. I’m trying to see the fact that it’s happening so quickly as a good sign. It also lowers the risk of cold feet.” 

His eyes narrowed, assessing. “Do you have cold feet?”

“Moving is the right thing, money-wise and memory-wise. And the new place is adorable. You’ll have to see it.”

“I want to.” As they reached the wall of floor-to-ceiling glass, he opened one of the two sets of doors and gestured for her to go first, onto the expansive, sunny terrace in the sky. 

Together, they walked to the railing and set their drinks on the narrow wood balustrade. For a few silent moments, they stood side by side at the waist-high glass, looking out over the unobstructed view of the city. 

Standing here next to him reminded her of the night of Leigh’s well-intended invasion, the night the two of them stood at her kitchen window and looked out over the dark ocean.

It was easy for them to be quiet together.

“The faster I move out,” she continued without turning to face him, “the faster new people can enjoy it like we did.” She shrugged a shoulder. “At least that’s the positive spin I’m putting on it.”

He nodded, lifting his wineglass to take a sip. “It’s a great house.”

“It is. It was.” A twinge of sadness nudged her to change the subject. “You have a great place. This view is incredible. It feels like a different world up here.”

He chuckled, but those deep brown eyes dimmed. “It does feel that way sometimes.”

“What do you mean? Removed? Isolated?” 

He nodded. Lonely, she realized. His gaze moved back to the city stretched out before them, and she didn’t press. 

He turned toward her again as if he were about to say more, but the cooking timer beeped faintly from inside. “Have a seat.” He gestured to the rattan sectional. A tray on the table in front of it held two stacked bowls and shiny silverware rolled in cloth napkins. “You can set the table.” The sparkle came back to his eyes when he smiled. “Be right back.”

A few minutes later, he returned carrying another tray and set it down. In one ceramic bowl was fluffy, steaming white rice. When he took the lid off the other, the aroma of seafood and cilantro filled the evening air. She used to love seafood. “It smells fantastic.” 

“Hungry?”

“I am now.” Food had been an afterthought the past fifteen months, something she considered mostly when dizziness struck or her stomach gurgled. Nothing tasted like it used to. Flavors had lost their vibrancy, reduced to black and white. 

He topped off their wineglasses and sat down next to her, spooned rice into their bowls, and bathed it with a ladleful of creamy stew studded with pink shrimp and bright green herbs. 

“It’s moqueca de camarão. It’ll  be in the upcoming Brazil episode. Bom proveito. Enjoy.” 

Bom proveito,” she repeated, scooping both rice and stew onto her spoon. The flavors exploded in her mouth. “It tastesfantastic.”

He took a bite slowly and evaluated. “You like it?” 

Her taste buds sprung to life, along with her appetite. “I do. The lime, coconut, the heat . . . it’s a perfect mix.” 

She pictured him learning how to make the dish on his trip. He would accompany the person hosting him as they shopped in a tropical market, then chopped cilantro or deveined shrimp and prepared the meal in his local host’s home kitchen. “When’s the episode going to air?”

“Next week. Why, are you planning to watch?” His smile was playful.

“I might. If I’m not too busy with, you know, very important things,” she played back. “I know the host.”

“I’m sorry.” He wrinkled his brow, feigning concern. “I’ve heard he can be an ass.”

“Don’t believe everything you hear. Besides, I like to form my own opinions.” 

He patted her knee, two platonic pats, although she still felt the tingling charge along her skin through the napkin and her jeans.

They ate slowly and talked, and after a while both of them filled their bowls with a second helping. Finally she sat back, unable to eat another bite, and he piled their dishes onto the tray. 

She reached for it to carry inside. “Please, let me help.” 

“I’ve got it,” he said. “Sit and relax.” 

As the low evening sun blazed hot from the west, rain clouds drifted from the south. He looked at the sky. “Actually, why don’t you come inside and have a seat on the couch while I call the producers to lodge a complaint—I specifically asked them to arrange nice weather for tonight, but it looks like it might rain.” 

She giggled and noticed his chest rise and fall, a quick breath. Had he felt butterflies about tonight, like she had?

She followed him in and sat on the sofa, modern but comfortable, while he worked in the kitchen. “Are you sure I can’t do anything?” She hated feeling useless.

He looked up at her across the space. “I’m sure. You’re buying and selling real estate—you should take every opportunity to relax while you can.” 

A few minutes later, silverware clinked as he came toward her with the tray again. This time it held a small, red enamel pot, its wooden knob partially covered with a dishtowel. “Dessert’s a surprise. Close your eyes.”

The thought that immediately popped to mind, she should not have had it. What if I don’t? Will you blindfold me?

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About the Author

Talya Blaine writes later-in-life contemporary romance that’s emotionally intense and thought-provoking, spicy and sweet. She writes “older” characters (40+), sexy beta heroes, and explores how relationships of all types change over time. Silently (Transformation Series Book 1) is her debut romance, with Secretly (Book 2) and Entirely (Book 3) completed and releasing soon.

Connect:

https://talyablaine.com/

https://www.bookbub.com/authors/talya-blaine

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/23105257.Talya_Blaine