Spotlight: Their Shattered Hearts by Angie Cole

Publication date: March 1st 2024
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

A story of love, loss, and redemption unfolds in the rustic charm of Cardinal Creek, Texas. Will Deluca, a stoic firefighter and ranch owner, bears the weight of his wife’s untimely demise. His world once filled with warmth, now echoes with the silent grief of his two children and the unyielding Texas plains.

Enter Anna Samuels, a heart that’s seen its share of sorrow. Leaving Missouri’s memories behind, she hopes to find solace and new beginnings in the small Texas town. As a dedicated palliative care nurse, she embarks on a mission to bring comfort to families grappling with illness. Destiny leads her to Rockin’ D Ranch, where her path crosses with Will, a man whose rugged charm and piercing blue eyes hide a world of pain.

Amidst the rolling hills of Cardinal Creek, Will and Anna find their lives intricately entwined, linked by a forgotten encounter from their youth. Anna’s arrival sparks a glimmer of hope in Will’s heart, inspiring him to fulfill a promise to his late wife: to create a sanctuary for children with autism. Together, they begin to weave dreams of a brighter future.

But shadows linger in the corners of their newfound happiness. Anna grapples with a dark secret that threatens to destroy the life she has built in Cardinal Creek. As Will confronts his own fears, he risks losing the one person who could help him heal. In the face of adversity, will they find the strength to conquer their demons and embrace a second chance at love?

In Their Shattered Hearts fate, passion, and dark secrets collide. Join Will and Anna as they journey through the complexities of the heart, learning that sometimes, the path to happiness is paved with the courage to face the ghosts of the past.

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About the Author

My journey as a romance author is deeply rooted in my personal experiences of love, loss, and resilience. The profound impact of the losses I have endured, including the passing of my grandparents and my parents, has shaped my perspective on life and love.

My own love story is one of healing and finding joy after heartache, and it mirrors the themes I explore in my novels.

As a survivor of grief and a believer in the power of love, I channel my experiences into crafting stories that resonate with the complexities and triumphs of the human heart. My writing is a testament to the idea that love can emerge from the most unexpected places, offering hope and healing. The one thing that can be learned from grief is that it's a very personal experience and isn't the same for every person. 

Connect:

https://angiecoleromance.com/

https://www.instagram.com/authorangiecole

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61554474502006

Spotlight: False Haven by Rebecca Rook

Publication date: February 13th 2024
Genres: Horror, Young Adult

Synopsis:

False Haven is a young adult horror novel for fans of Anna Dressed in Blood by Kendare Blake, Asylum by Madeleine Roux, and Fiendish by Brenna Yovanoff.

Seventeen-year-old Vivienne Barston’s life has fallen apart.

With her mother recently dead, her father disappears into his grief – leaving Viv to deal with her sadness and anger alone. Viv turns to destructive behaviors like petty vandalism, but after a disturbing stint in a juvenile detention center frightens her, Viv agrees to a court mandated service opportunity designed to expunge her record. The deal: work for six weeks with a trail conservation crew in the rural woods of southern Oregon, and she’ll be free with a clean slate.

She knows it’s her last chance to fix her life.

When Viv arrives at the small town of Hard Luck, Oregon, she meets her motley crewmates, all with troubles of their own. The unusual group travels to Grafton Stake, a remote and derelict former asylum with a haunted history–and now Viv must face the ghosts of the past while fighting for her future.

Don’t miss this inventive horror novel where Holes meets The Haunting of Hill House!

Excerpt

A short, weathered black stone pyramid rose from a hewn base buried deep into the ground. Viv could see the chisel marks at the base, lined with dirt and moss. No words or dates were inscribed, only the symbol of a single open eye.

A shiver skittered across her scalp. She recognized the symbol for the evil eye. An obelisk, she thought. It’s an obelisk.

What is an obelisk doing in the middle of the woods?

Viv peered past the obelisk. The stone stood waist-high and before a wide, flat stretch of pasture mostly clear of trees and brush. Thick holly bushes with sharp, black-green leaves lined the edges of the pasture. Unsettled, Viv rubbed her arms. Why would a clearly man-made pasture be up here, away in the woods? So far from the homestead? Viv stepped forward to take in more — and paused.

A rectangle of the same black stone lay next to her foot, embedded in the ground and with edges coated in moss. The numbers 81469 were chiseled into the dark stone.

Viv swallowed. She took another step, then another.

Then she saw it — another stone, half buried in the dirt. Almost six feet away from the first stone plaque. The numbers were 73071.

Now knowing what to seek, she scanned the earth around her. There were more. Many more. 42198.

32777.

21374.

91868.

Viv shook her head, trying to make sense of what she saw before her. She stumbled down the length of the pasture, seeking more and more of the stone plaques wedged into the earth’s sod, half visible.

Wholly terrible.

There were more than fifty plaques in the pasture, Viv realized.

She couldn’t be sure, but she thought she stood upon a graveyard.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

About the Author

Rebecca Rook designs tabletop games, manages a little free library dedicated to sequential art and comics, and lives in the Pacific Northwest with two wonderful dogs. She writes young adult fiction in the fantasy, thriller, and horror genres.

A 2021-2022 Hugo House Fellow in
Seattle, WA, she also attended the 2021 Tin House YA Fiction Workshop in
Portland, OR. Rebecca was selected as one of the 100 invited writers to participate in the Write Team Mentorship Program’s curated Pitch-a-Thon event before being chosen as a Mentee for the 2021 Program. Prior to this, she completed the wonderful Yearlong Workshop for Young Adult and Middle Grade Fiction at Hugo House.

Connect:
https://www.byrebeccarook.com/
https://www.tiktok.com/@byrebeccarook
https://www.instagram.com/byrebeccarook
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/45848659.Rebecca_Rook

Spotlight: Serabelle: Where the Wealthy Come to Play by Tavi Taylor Black

Publisher: Black Rose Writing (April 25, 2024)

An island sheltered from modern progress. Strict lines between servants and masters. Will crossing them leave her fatally exposed?

Bar Harbor, Maine. 1913. Mabel Rae is smart, reckless, and naïve. So when the ambitious seventeen-year-old joins the staff at a rocky cliffside cottage, she willingly lets the boisterous estate owner’s improper advances sweep her off her feet. And the slender young woman dismisses the vulnerability of her position when she discovers she’s pregnant with his unacknowledged child.

Brought harshly down to earth after she’s caught up in the machinations of a family feud, Mabel decides it’s time to take matters into her own hands. But with no money and few rights, she fears a forced marriage to the brutish gardener is her only socially acceptable option.

Is her future forever stunted, or can she become a beacon of change?

In a classic upstairs-downstairs tale, award-winning author Tavi Taylor Black spins an intricate web of idealism’s battle against harsh reality. Set at a time when suffrage was at its height, temperance was gaining momentum, and war loomed in Europe, this spellbinding novel shines a light on inequities we still face today.

Serabelle is a darkly humorous work of historical fiction. If you like intricate relationships, lyrical prose, and stories that tackle serious issues, then you’ll love Tavi Taylor Black’s vivid portrait of the Gilded Age.

Excerpt

My historical novel, Serabelle is set in 1913 on what was the Sonogee Estate in Bar Harbor. My family's history informs this novel greatly, as my great-grandmother worked as a cook on the Kent estate. My grandmother and mother were there during the great Bar Harbor fire of 1947. When I was a child, my family would sneak onto the grounds of what was at that time a nursing home. We played on the rocks and gathered shells for hours every summer, instilling in me a fascination for the landscape.

I was handed down a piece of jewelry, a pin with sapphire and moonstone that was said to be given to my great-grandmother by Mrs. Kent herself. When my mother spoke of Sonogee, it was with pride, as if our family, too, belonged to that cottage. Throughout the novel, I explore what ownership and dignity mean to all facets of life on the estate.

Serabelle explores the struggles of class and position, of prejudice and honor—issues as relevant today as they were a hundred years ago. Is a person born to a certain class or race or gender bound to the constraints of that caste? Mabel and a handful of other servants explore the boundaries of their positions. Those who enjoy a good upstairs/downstairs series such as Downton Abbey will enjoy the intertwining plot lines of Serabelle.

Here’s a short excerpt wherein Mabel, a maid, is talking to a stable boy, Willie, over the body of Clarissa, a mare who just gave birth:

“Willie, what do you think a life is worth?”

“Whose?”

“That is exactly what I was thinking. Some lives are valuable, some are not.” Mabel thought of the pamphlet she had been handed the other day in town. She had taken it out of the basket and tucked it inside her bodice, only to unfold it later that night in bed, by candlelight. 

Twelve reasons why women should vote, it said. Mabel read down the list, clinging especially to the words: Because 8,000,000 women in the United States are wage workers, and the conditions under which they work are controlled by law. 

  “Clarissa,” Mabel said to Willie. “No one here, except you, really cares that she is dying. She is not valuable. If she had been a stallion, if there was something wrong with Mr. Hunt’s stallion, do you think they would have left him to die?”

“Not likely,” Wille admitted.

“Just what I thought. In this world, females do not count for much. We cannot even vote.” Mabel sniffed and tried to hold back her tears. “I just cannot figure out why Beverly thought my life was worth saving. Other than my mother—who might never even see me again—who would really care if I was dead?”

“I would.”

Mabel looked at Willie’s face, sad and soft, his look distant. “You are only being kind. I do not think you would miss me.”

“I am telling you the truth.” Willie stood and walked over to Mabel. He took both her hands tentatively in his, as if asking permission. He had never touched her before. He was ripe with the scent of blood and dung but his face was suddenly flushed with life, his eyes sparkled. “I would hate it if you died. You are one of the nicest people I ever met.”

Tears rolled freely down Mabel’s cheeks and she found she could not speak. What would someone who came upon them think? A young, pregnant maid holding hands with a negro stable boy? They stood still, freezing the moment in time, looking into each other’s eyes, until Clarissa made a soft hiccup. As if he had read Mabel’s thoughts, Willie dropped her hands and lay back down next to the horses. The baby made a bleating sound, nudging its mother. Clarissa did not move.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Audible | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Tavi Taylor Black earned an MFA in creative writing from Lesley University in Cambridge where she worked with such skilled writers as A.J. Verdelle and Tony Eprile. In the years following her graduation, Tavi created a collection of short stories, Crazy Happy. Several stories from the collection were shortlisted for prizes, including the Fish One Page Prize, Aesthetica Magazine’s Creative Works Competition and the Donald Barthelme Prize for Short Prose. Other stories have appeared in Alligator Juniper and Opium Magazine online. Current stories are listed on her website at www.taviblack.com

Spotlight: Pity Parade by Whitney Dineen

Trina Rockwell here. You know, your favorite TV host from Midwestern Matchmaker? While I’ve been setting up Midwestern singles for seven years, I’ve not had any luck finding myself a guy.

My last great encounter was a year ago when I bid on a date with billionaire Heath Fox at a charity auction. But then, after a great date and an even better good night kiss, Heath told me he wasn’t looking for a relationship. Super.

Now that Midwestern Matchmaker has been cancelled, my producer has got it into his head to do a new show where I’m the one who finds love. He wants to set me up with a bunch of B-List celebrities, the likes of which have me considering joining a convent.

There’s only one thing I can think of doing and that’s finding a boyfriend for real. The last thing I expected was for Heath to come back into my life and cause trouble.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

About the Author

USA Today Bestselling author Whitney Dineen is a rock star in her own head. While delusional about her singing abilities, there’s been a plethora of validation that she’s a fairly decent author (AMAZING!!!). After winning many writing awards and selling nearly a kabillion books (math may not be her forte, either), she’s decided to let the voices in her head say whatever they want (sorry, Mom). She also won a fourth-place ribbon in a fifth-grade swim meet in backstroke. So, there’s that.

Whitney loves to hang with her kids (a.k.a. dazzle them with her amazing 80's dance moves, serenading them to Bohemian Rhapsody, and binge watch Ted Lasso ), bake stuff, eat stuff, and write books for people who "get" her. She thinks french fries are the perfect food and Mrs. Roper is her spirit animal.

To find out about Whitney Dineen’s upcoming releases and giveaways, sign up for her newsletter here

For more information on Whitney Dineen and her books visit: https://www.whitneydineen.com/

Connect with Whitney Dineen: https://www.whitneydineen.com/

Spotlight: Zero Risk Startup by Paulo Andrez

The Ultimate Entrepreneur’s Guide to Mitigating Risks When Starting or Growing a Business

Business Nonfiction / Self-Help

Date Published: May 7, 2024

Publisher: ForbesBooks

Unlock Your Entrepreneurial Potential!

In the realm of entrepreneurial endeavors, where the brilliance of innovative ideas holds the potential to reshape markets and industries, the shadow of risk often looms over visionary business pursuits. This often discourages numerous promising entrepreneurs from pursuing their dreams or it leaves them seeking grants or external funding to mitigate risks associated with launching a new business venture.

But what if entrepreneurs could systematically diminish that risk, paving a clearer path to success and even securing the trust of banks or investors? In Zero Risk Startup, Paulo Andrez, a serial entrepreneur and angel investor, offers an invaluable masterclass to help mitigate key entrepreneurial risks, providing more than one hundred concrete tips and tools to empower you to start or grow your business with virtually zero risk.

This transformative manual is far from being a mere compendium of theoretical insights. It's a reservoir of practical wisdom that you can put into action, whether you're a seasoned entrepreneur or a first-timer.

In this informative read, you’ll learn about

  • determining whether or not to start a business

  • identifying and mitigating the risks of your business with Zero Risk Startup methodology (MEFLO)

  • increasing chances to get external funding from accelerators, angel investors

  • venture capitalists, or banks, and leveraging cutting-edge artificial intelligence technologies for risk mitigation.

Every page is infused with real stories and tips from all over the world, clearly laid-out strategies, and profound insights aimed at bolstering your venture against the unpredictable tides of the business landscape.

Zero Risk Startup is more than just a guidebook; it guides you through the initial steps of minimizing every conceivable risk for your future business, including reducing capital requirements to launch it.

Whether you're a budding founder stepping into the unknown with a revolutionary idea or a seasoned innovator striving to elevate your venture to the next level, Zero Risk Startup serves as your strategic ally. It's your practical companion to transform visionary ideas into realities, navigating through the array of risks facing your business project, systematically eliminating them one-by-one.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Hardcover | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Paulo Andrez is an angel investor, serial entrepreneur, international expert in entrepreneurship and innovation, business development, scaling up and risk mitigation.

He is the author of the Amazon bestseller "Zero Risk Startup", published by Forbes in May 2024.

He owns a significant portfolio of investments in startup and scale up companies. As an angel investor, he received the award “Best European Angel Investment” in 2012 as one of his investments (United Resins) reached 24.5 million euros in revenues within the first year of operations. One of his early-stage investments (Sword Health) became unicorn in 2022.

In 2000, he played a pivotal role as one of the key shareholders in Novabase's IPO on Euronext.

Paulo is a founder of Entrepreneurship Agency DNA Cascais, which supported more than 500 startups. Paulo was appointed President Emeritus EBAN, European Business Angel Network, after serving as President until 2014.

He has a background as serial entrepreneur and is frequently invited as speaker worldwide, guest lecturer and expert in innovation, entrepreneurship and early stage investment. Since 2012, Paulo has been holding a series of workshops on the topic of new ventures risk mitigation: Zero Risk Startup.

Connect:

Website: www.pauloandrez.com

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pauloandrez/

Spotlight: Universe of Lost Messages by Janet Stilson

Izzie and Tristan were never mere humans. They are Charismites, with almost god-like powers of magnetism. They couldn’t be more different. Izzie is a reckless, playful megastar whose popularity far exceeds that of any other celebrity. Tristan is a secluded nature lover, almost completely unknown to anyone beyond a protective biodome. Their worlds explode when they are abducted by The Fist, a power-hungry political group with a master plan to control the hearts and minds of all people on Earth and satellite colonies beyond. But the plan only works with the help of Charismites.

Tristan and Izzie’s families will do anything to find them. But they don’t have much to go on until a feisty, streetwise teen, Cheeta, discovers clues about the Charismites within a strange metaverse filled with millions of missing messages. But will they actually find them? And can they destroy The Fist before they take over the planet?

Filled with an eclectic cast of characters, a slow-burn romance, humor, and wonderful descriptions of a sensual and sometimes violent world, UNIVERSE OF LOST MESSAGES is a gripping new sci-fi thriller, filled with political intrigue.

Excerpt

Editors Note: this is the first section of Chapter One, Universe of Lost Messages. It’s narrated by the character Shakespear (Shake) Cardinale.

Text copyright © 2024 by Janet Stilson, Published by Dragon Moon Press

Everybody’s blind in their own way. But I was stupid blind on that morning, when the splintering, howling, thump thump throbs of music from my sister’s room ended. In the upside-down world that Izabel always created, sweet silence was my morning alarm.

Now, you could say that there was no way for me to guess what was about to happen—that I would drop into a vortex of devastation and the sublime. But fact is, I should have seen the signs. Not all of them, but some of them, some of them weren’t that hard to grasp.

My cranky eyes let in the Los Angeles light, the savage heat ready to lunge like a tiger when I stepped outside. Stumbling into the bathroom, I peered in the mirror at my mottled brown and light face, shock of fine black hair. “Shakespear Cardinale, you talented son of a bitch,” I told myself. “You can sleep while you’re awake.”

My sister was staying in one of my guest bedrooms for reasons that didn’t make complete sense. The racket began every morning around 2 AM when she came home with her latest one-night stand. It lasted until well after sunrise. 

There were usually a few nights a week of peace when I visited the women I was seeing at the time. They didn’t need to be told why I was suddenly more willing to travel to their own turf—in Bangkok, Vancouver, and Ciudad de México. My sister’s location was tracked by gossip newshounds, who screamed information about her at all times of the day and night —everything from when she lifted her left pinky to her latest acting gigs. My friends would have gladly suffered the excruciating music to get a glimpse of the most dazzling celebrity gracing Earth and all the outer colonies. But they didn’t know who she really was: a Charismite, endowed at birth by extraordinary powers of charisma.

She was a freak of nature, and I wasn’t about to tell them, or anyone.

Only a few of us knew what Izzie really was. When she trained her startled gray eyes on someone, they saw themselves differently than ever before. Her intense interest made them feel so clever, sensual, witty—more than anyone had ever made them feel. They didn’t realize that she could shape what they believed and felt far beyond the normal levels of persuasion. Sure, other famous people were good at that, but they didn’t come close to what Izzie could do.

I’d known about her special gifts ever since we were young and had some ability to resist her because I realized what she was. But it didn’t come easy. Which was why I couldn’t convince her to cut the sound. “Sleep is so overrated,” she’d laugh when I complained, low voice drawing out each syllable between those delicious lips.

“Frickin’ pain in the neck!” I grumbled to myself as a little shaving bot did its work along my jawline. 

The mobile device in my right contact lens triggered an air screen, which popped up next to the mirror. It launched into a report about some asteroid that had crashed outside the Phoenix Zone. Like Los Angeles, it was one of many Treasure Zones within United America—a nation that extended from the Arctic Circle region of North America down through most of South America. 

The asteroid landed three days before. A lot of rocks from outer space got deflected, but somehow this one got through. The news spot was just repeating what everybody already knew. Must be a slow news day.

The screen pinged softly, and I answered a call in private mode, hiding my naked state from the face that popped up. Phineas was one of my old drinking buddies and one helluva an air race jockey. He was in a show that I was producing for Nuhope, the largest media conglomerate in the world. I was a lead content producer, and this was my biggest production to date: Space Ace. In two weeks, Phin and four other speed demons would take off from Houston. Destination: dwarf planet Ceres. With a whole lot of guts and technical skill, they’d race from Ceres to Mars.

Phineas was an ex-fighter pilot for the Republic of Europe, another one of Earth’s great super nations. He looked like a weathered elf—a giant one, that is, at over six feet. His brown hair was flying in some places and matted with sweat in others from the helmet that was now cradled under one arm, coiled air tubes dangling down to his knees.

“Hey Patch Man,” he said, referring to my skin. His Irish brogue was comfortable as an old easy chair, even when he was agitated, like now. He’d been testing out his ship and spotted a malfunction. “You know I love you, but there’s no way I’m going to fly in that.”

“Hold on. I’m gonna get our top mechanic on this.” I shrugged on a bespoke suit jacket. “Your ship will be fixed in a day. Better than ever.”

“Give me a little bonus bump? I know you can make my girl fly faster.”

“Fly fair, or don’t fly at all, pal.”

He laughed. “And when I win, we got to do a sake binge in Tokyo.”

“Yeah, and it’ll be all on you.”

As we threw information back and forth about the ship’s electrically accelerated ions system, I walked down the hall, trying to ignore the musky smell of sex and smoking sticks coming out of the guest room. Through the door crack, I could see Izzie’s golden, slumbering face above black silk sheets. The hairy forearm of someone that pumped a lot of iron stretched across her middle. His shiny blue hair spilled down the sheet like water from a faucet.

The call with Phineas ended, and I dove into another with the head of advertising. A client wanted more of its branding on Ship5. “You know it’s way too late for that, right?” I asked. Mumble, frickin’ ridiculous excuses from the exec.

“Beth, I get it. TigerBryte is an amazing sponsor. But can’t you offer them something else?”

Her pleas went on as I stumbled toward the kitchen, craving my first sip of cappuccino. Nearly tripped three times. Water Man’s leather jacket wrapped around my ankle. Food globules oozed between my toes. A half-eaten Indian feast and bottles of beer were strewn between the inevitable heap of guitars and keyboards that companies routinely sent Izzie with the faint hope that she’d use one during a performance. She had five whole rooms of them in her Sonoma mansion, which was undergoing a massive renovation.

Izzie had told me she was tired of sleeping in hotels, wasn’t going to be here that long. But she’d already overstayed her welcome by two-and-a-half weeks. Something else was going on.

About the time Beth’s call ended, I sliced my gooey toe on the metal edge of a racing air blade. I winced. “Fuck you, Izzie!”

“That’s been taken care of.” Izabel’s husky voice held a vulnerable tremor. 

I turned to see her in the doorway, flexing her dancer’s body, in black boxers and a cropped T-shirt. Hair stained copper and black, sticking out like the points of a wildfire. Sensual lips curled in a teasing smile. It was hard to ignore the electricity in the air, the feeling of being pulled toward her, but I’d learned to control that over the years.

“When did you say you’re moving out?” I reached for a towel to take care of the gunk.

“Don’t you remember? I said I was moving in permanently. Selling Sonoma after the reno. This space is so dope.”

“Oh yeah?” Why was fear coiling out of those gray eyes? I was too annoyed to ask. Instead, I programmed the foodster for an Italian brew. “Not sure I’m going to hold onto it. Changing gigs.” 

“Wait. What? Not at Nuhope?” she asked.

“Some place new.”

“Does Memere know that?” That’s what we called our only living parent.

“Yeah.” I was about to explain, but a bear-claw voice yelled out a “Hey” from down the hall. Water Man.

Want me to get rid of him? I asked Izzie silently. She nodded “no.”

A heavyweight champion emerged behind her—at least, that’s what he looked like, wearing my black silk bathrobe. The concentrated darkness of his eyes spoke of ancestors from the Indian subcontinent. He shifted under my chilly stare.

“Meet my big bad brother, Shake. This is …” Izzie snapped her fingers.

“Prill.”

“Right. We met last night at the air blade race. He’s superfast. Beat me.” He pressed the bulge under the robe into her butt. She flitted away, fiddling with the controls of my foodster.

Wasn’t hard to imagine a scene from her previous night, the bunch of feral young things zooming on air blades a foot off the ground on pressurized air, weaving between trees and buildings, then across the desert in a mad dash for some Vegas goalpost. The foodster spurted an espresso into her cup. “Hey. You should do a show on air blade races.”

“Sure, if you star.”

“No way.”

She started to program a chocolate mousse, but Prill blocked her hand. “Hey. Fuck the machine, Babe. I’ll make you some breakfast from scratch.”

“No thanks.”

“You’re gonna need more energy—”

“No. Get dressed. It’s time for you to blow out of here.” 

Prill’s voice cracked. “You don’t want that.”

“Sorry. I’ve got rehearsals.”

“Maybe tonight?”

“No. This would be it.”

Tears welled in his eyes. “But can’t we …?” Be together forever? Make love every day and night? I tried to hide a smirk. Seen it a million times.

“You know how I roll.”

“Yeah.” He fingered a stray guitar pick in a dried, sticky puddle of last night’s beer on the counter and held it up. “Souvenir?”

Izzie took it from him, washed it off with soap and water, dried it and handed it back respectfully. “Yeah.”

Prill pulled away and dragged himself back to the guest room.

She swished over to me and tamped down my hair with her fingers. “You know what the problem with you is?”

“Yeah, you.”

“Beside that.”

“What?”

She steered me over to a long mirror: her golden face, my darker one, spotted like a frickin’ riding-stable pony. “You don’t realize what girls think about you. Sure, they’re impressed by who you are. But that look of yours is raging.”

“Uh-huh.”

“I’m not kidding. That Chav-ness.”

Chav. The massive lower social class I was born into. Izzie wasn’t my biological sister. She was born an Elite—a class largely composed of super wealthy people who were genetically modified to emulate all different races on Earth blended together so that their skin tone was golden. Even the Middles class looked that way.

I’d never be a “natural fit,” the way I looked. And yet I wasn’t just any Elite; I was a prince. Our mother, Petra Cardinale, was CEO of the gargantuan media company where I worked, Nuhope. She’d wanted a kid so bad when I came along, a stray from the streets of the Boston Treasure Zone. An orphan. Hard to say who needed who more, Memere or me. Then a few years later she did the in-vitro-fertilization thing and had Izzie. 

I finished college at the age of sixteen, worked for Nuhope’s most talented producer, churning out ideas for shows and new games so fast nobody questioned my position. Not just nepotism. Wouldn’t let that be true. And now here I was, a top producer at age twenty-three.

And yet. And yet. In the small hours of the morning when I stared out at dark blinking Los Angeles, I was disturbed by what I’d become. I hated myself for being an ungrateful wretch, but there was no denying that something was missing. This wasn’t who I should be.

Izzie wrapped her arms around me from behind, her surging warmth so soothing. “Remember when you screwed the professor and then screwed his wife?”

“Izzie. That was you.”

She laughed. “Really?”

“Why are we talking about this?”

She didn’t respond. I peeled myself away and turned around. She was biting her pretty lip. “I singe you. Again and again.”

“Silly duck. Think I can’t take it?”

Her brows furrowed as she straightened my jacket, even though it was about as straight as it could get. Tears puddled her ghost gray eyes. “I just want you to know that I’m sorry. I didn’t ask for any of this.”

No, she didn’t. Our mother had conceived Izzie by using the sperm of a Charismite that she’d fallen in love with. A guy named Dove Brown. After he died, she stored his sperm until she was ready. It was a big secret. Hardly anyone knew what she’d done.

And now here we were, with Izzie all teared up. Had to make her laugh. “Yes, you are the epitome of the term ‘ill-conceived.’”

“Oh, shut up.”

A booming voice sounded from the guest room. “Hey, Izz. Coming back?”

My sister rolled her eyes. “That one was totally not worth it.”

“Why?”

“Something’s off. And I …”

“Izzie!”

“… was thinking it would be nice for you and me to grab some lunch. You know, talk.”

It didn’t hit me, that something was really wrong—that I should have drawn her out before anything else happened, yanked her out of there, down the hall, out of the building, get someplace where she could tell me, whatever it was. Even though I now realize that her eyes were like warning signals. 

Like I said: blind spot. But at the time, Prill didn’t seem that different than her other castoffs. And I really frickin’ had to solve Phin’s ship problem right away. So all I said was: “Yeah. We can do that. But you mean dinner, right?”

She walked toward the bedroom, calling over her shoulder, “Whatever you want to call it. Tonight around 7, at that Churrasco place you like on Wilshire.” They had a private dining room. There would be a bit of a crazed scene with the other diners when Izzie walked in, but we’d get through it.

“I thought you were a vegetarian.”

“Eh. You know they’ll make anything for me.”

The time readout on my air screen was scary. I was way late. It took an extra push to get my front door open. As usual, there was such a pile of bouquets and other gifts from Izzie’s fans. The building’s staff knew to just leave them at the door. It was easy to glide over the mess on my air shoes and then down the hall. I was calling up the Space Ace mechanic about Phineas’ airship when…

BAM

The blast sent me flying. My head socked hard against a flower vase. The shards punctured my temple. Ears rang like a blistering siren. Green and yellow fireworks of light.

I crawled back in the apartment’s blasted-open door, blood dripping. “Izzie!” The white door of her bedroom was black now. Why?

Strong arms helped me up. Two of the building’s security guards. Max and Hank. “You okay, Mr. Cardinale?”

I babbled something about my sister, pointing at the awful door. They were spooked but dragged themselves toward it. Looking in, their mouths dropped. I stumbled through the debris, pushed past them. Furniture, mattress, all Izzie’s personal belongings were charred. Where was she? And Prill? Her thrilling aura was completely gone. Didn’t have to look for body parts to figure out that there weren’t any.

Nothing.

Disbelief clamped down on me. My utterly annoying, absolute best friend. From the time she was born. Just vaporized? I was in shock, couldn’t trust my reactions at first. No. Something else was going on. But what? Stumbling to the shattered window, I studied the pavement thirty floors below for any signs of a broken body. But there was no trace of her or the guy, just a crowd of people that got larger, larger, larger.

She isn’t dead. There wasn’t any reason why I should be so sure, but I could almost taste it. If that was really true, where the hell was she? 

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About the Author

Janet Stilson writes scripts, novels and short stories that largely fall in the sci-fi and fantasy genres and illuminate the human condition in provocative ways. Her work has been selected to be part of the Writers’ Lab for Women, which is funded by Meryl Streep and Nicole Kidman. And it’s also been published by the esteemed sci-fi literary magazine Asimov’s. As a journalist, Janet got her “chops” at the storied showbiz bible Variety. She has traveled the world, chronicling the business of media. Learn more on janetstilson.com.