Spotlight: At the Island's Edge by C. I. Jerez

An Iraq War veteran returns to Puerto Rico to reconnect with—and confront—the past in a heart-wrenching novel about duty, motherhood, and the healing power of home.

As a combat medic, Lina LaSalle went to Iraq to save the lives of fellow soldiers. But when her convoy is attacked, she must set aside her identity as a healer and take a life herself.

Although she is honored as a hero when she returns to the US, Lina cannot find her footing. She is stricken with PTSD and unsure of how to support her young son, Teó, a little boy with Tourette’s. As her attempts to self-medicate become harder to hide, Lina realizes she must do the toughest thing yet: ask for help.

She retreats to her parents’ house in Puerto Rico, where Teó thrives under her family’s care. Lina finds kinship, too—with a cousin whose dreams were also shattered by the war and with a handsome and caring veteran who sought refuge on the island and runs a neighborhood bar.

Excerpt

Chapter One

I hate the taste of desert earth and fuel exhaust.

The wind from the helicopter above us lifts the papers attached to my clipboard. After completing my walk-around, I scrawl a messy signature at the bottom of the page, finalizing the inspection of our Humvee. I pull at my sweaty uniform, already damp from another sweltering morning as we wait to leave the wire. Truth is, I’m exhausted, battle weary, and ready to end my second tour across the pond.

I knew what I was getting into returning to Iraq, but the situation with my son back home is worsening, making the normal pressures of war even heavier. I’d just graduated from high school the year I turned on the television and watched the towers fall on 9/11. I burned with protest, wanting to take a stand and fight back. We’ve occupied Iraq for six years now, and after last week’s losses, I’m beginning to wonder if I’d made the wrong choice.

I look out at the soldiers ahead, loading their packs and checking their own vehicles. They have families, too. Kids, just like me. Do they wonder if they’re missing out on what really matters—at home? I do.

Except right now I can’t think like that. Anything can happen during a convoy. If someone gets injured, I’ll need to operate at my best. Which means it’s time to tuck away my doubts and the images of the explosion during last week’s “routine” convoy. Worst case: life and death hinge on my ability to do my job.

Stay alert, stay alive.

I cap my pen, slide it into the pen pocket on my sleeve, and strap into the passenger seat of our truck. Reaching down, I tap my medical bag for assurance, transitioning for what still lies ahead.

I tally the vehicles, one behind another, seven trucks in total. Mine is second to last—the designated ambulance. The unit chaplain sits alone in the back seat. His graying temples indicate he’s probably been at this awhile.

The executive officer’s voice breaks through the static on the radio.

“Convoy in position. All soldiers prepare for departure.”

I tucked an extra stethoscope into one of my pant pockets and a roll of wound-packing gauze in the other. The last mission served as a painful lesson of all the things that could go wrong when you’re not readily prepared. I once ran out of nasopharyngeal airways for the number of wounded soldiers that needed them, the same mission where I reached for rusted scissors that didn’t allow for a clean and efficient gauze cut. I won’t let anything like that happen again. 

Wiping the sweat from my brow, I close my eyes for a moment before glancing down at my watch. It’s only five thirty in the morning, but time is irrelevant here—it’s always hot. The Iraqi dry heat has turned the cab into an oven, and I’m baking to a golden perfection underneath my armored plates. Sergeant Fuentes, our driver, swings open his door and moves into position. He reaches down to the console between us and reviews the order detailing our mission.

“Hope you two hit the latrines, because we aren’t stopping for potty breaks,” he says with way too much cheer. “And remember, there’s a no-return policy on this cab. All sales are final once we hit the road.” He smiles when he turns to me. “Buckle up, buttercup.”

I give him a half-hearted smile in return. I can’t imagine it’s easy to keep a sense of humor under the circumstances. I certainly don’t. But that’s because I’m wondering whether my little boy will ever truly understand why I had to deploy, not once but twice. I don’t know much about my driver, but I know he doesn’t have kids. I’d already asked.

Fuentes just arrived from a sister unit south of us. Rumor is he had contact with the enemy, but survived and insisted on staying in country to finish his tour. He’s still getting his bearings shifting in his seat, pressing buttons, running the wipers.

The radio below the dashboard crackles to life, filling the truck with static.

“All clear,” the commander calls.

I release a deep sigh of relief. “Finally.” I look over at Fuentes. “I hope the rumors about your good luck are true. On our last mission, two soldiers didn’t make it back alive.”

“Don’t you worry, Sergeant,” Fuentes chides. “Only the good die young. Isn’t that right, sir?”

The chaplain looks over and smiles softly. “Oh, I don’t know about that. I think we all have a date, and when the time’s up, it’s up. Nothing anyone can do about it.”

I shake my head. “Sir, respectfully, I don’t agree. A lot of people die because they aren’t paying attention or refuse to take proper pre- cautions. Not me. I’ll make damn sure I get back home. My son, Teó, is counting on it.”

“Gotta lotta fight in ya, Sergeant,” he says, revealing his thick Irish brogue. “Good for ya. For us, too, I suppose.”

I do have a lot of fight. It comes from mornings like today when I wake up angry. Last night I used the remaining ten minutes on my pre- paid phone card to call home, only to hear Teó’s getting worse. It’s been nine months since his diagnosis of Tourette’s syndrome, and because I had to deploy only a month after we found out, I still don’t fully under- stand what we’re up against.

The military pediatrician had assured us his condition could be easily managed in my absence. He signed off on my deployment paperwork, stating Teó would likely grow out of this around his eighteenth birthday, like nine more years wasn’t a big deal. Nothing more than an adjustment, he’d said. Nothing to worry about.

The doctor was wrong. He never considered the bullies in the schoolyard, or the impact they and his absent mother would have on worsening his symptoms.

Tía Kika, one of my father’s two sisters and the only family I have in the continental US, left her life and her city—twice—and relocated to North Carolina to take care of Teó for me. Not wanting to worry me yesterday, she kept it light, but I could still hear what she wasn’t saying: His health is declining. He needs more medical care. He needs his mother.

And I need the army to provide that medical care.

My foot taps impatiently as each truck, front to back, confirms its readiness over the speaker. At our turn Sergeant Fuentes leans closer to the radio. “Vehicle six, ambulance, confirmed. I’m here with our medic, Sergeant Lina LaSalle, and the chaplain, Captain Michael McGinnis. Vehicle six, out.”

I like how he says my name. If I had to guess, I think Sergeant Fuentes is either Puerto Rican or Cuban. I’ll have to ask him once we get on the road.

I pull down my sunglasses and watch the tires up ahead rotate.

Here we go. One more convoy, Teó, then Mamá is coming home to take proper care of you.

Fuentes doesn’t look nervous. It’s as good a time as any to ask. “I heard an accent. Where are you from?”

He glances over at me and smiles. “Puerto Rico.” The two words are full of pride.

I return his smile. “Me too. Except I left twelve years ago. My parents sent me to live with my aunt so I could go to high school in Florida and pursue the American dream. I never went back.”

He frowns. His eyes shift over to the road.

I bet he thinks I’m a traitor for leaving the island and not returning.

What does he know?

I force myself to focus, knowing my duties to the US government force my little boy to once again wonder if I’ll make it back alive. Today it’s up to me to do exactly that.

###

It’s been nearly two hours, halfway there, and nothing but standard radio traffic. The engine’s hum is still the only sound on the quiet stretch of road. So far, so good.

My head nods with the hypnotic lull of sleep threatening to take over. The increasing heat makes fighting the drowsiness damn near impossible.

Breaking the hum, the truck swerves to the left, avoiding a large pothole. My helmet collides with the armored door, jostling me awake.

I look up to see beyond the vehicle in front of us. Buildings are scattered up ahead. The sun’s fiery rays are blinding, despite the standard-issue Oakleys.

Sergeant Fuentes radios in an update. “Vehicle six is green. We are all good.”

“Are we?” My newly racing pulse heightens my senses. The army has trained our bodies to shift in one instant from relaxed and sleeping on a convoy to battle ready.

Something doesn’t feel right. I can sense the danger like a storm cloud moving in fat with rain.

Fuentes leans his head down toward his shoulder playfully. “Relax. It was just a pothole. Sounds to me like you need a distraction. Tell me, Sergeant, why do they call you ‘Stone Cold’? Is the rumor true? Do you get ice cold when you’re in action?”

I keep my eyes straight ahead, watching the empty horizon, straining to see what no one else can.

“Come on,” he presses. “What did you do to get that nickname?”

He’s flirting. He’s definitely Puerto Rican. “Let me guess. You talked to the infantry guys, right?”

His smirk answers for him.

“And what did they tell you, Fuentes? Why did they say they call me ‘Stone Cold’?”

“Listen, in my defense, I wasn’t asking about you,” he says with a laugh. “When I told ’em I was driving the ambulance, they warned me to watch out for the sexy medic. They said your pretty brown eyes could melt hearts but that I shouldn’t be fooled because you were stone-cold ice.”

“I’ve been demoted. I was a stone-cold healer before. Do you want to hear the real story?”

“For sure.” He chuckles, but his focus remains straight ahead.

“So last week they cried and I didn’t when the unit’s rescue mutt, Sparky, died. I tried to help him, but it was too late. One of the infantry guys said I was stone cold. I guess the name stuck.”

He considers my recount. “So why didn’t you cry? No feelings, LaSalle?”

My chin rises. “I have feelings, Fuentes. I just don’t act on them when I’ve got a job to do. I tuck them away, exactly how my father taught me. I think it makes me a damn good medic.”

None of these guys need to know how I returned to my CHU that night and cried for the dog or whispered a prayer for his journey over the rainbow bridge. They don’t get that while it’s all right for them to cry in public, the standards are different for me. Crying in front of them would only push the narrative that I am weak, emotional, and a lesser soldier than they are. I need them to trust me with their lives. So I tuck it away until later, when I’m alone.

Fuentes turns and winks at me. “And you got great hands. I bet that makes you a damn good medic, too.”

I ignore him but find myself staring down at my long, slender fingers.

“Fuentes, don’t you have some pretty girl back home waiting for you?”

My question grounds him. He reaches up and wipes the sweat from his brow, smiling wistfully. “Yeah, actually, I do. She’s pretty special, for sure. I think she might be the one.”

I purse my lips. “I bet she has great hands, too.”

“Ah, come on, LaSalle. I’m messing around,” he teases. “Can’t blame a guy for noticing how pretty you are. But I’m harmless, I promise. Besides, I bet you get hit on all the time. I’m surprised your family in Puerto Rico didn’t push you to compete in the beauty pageants. You know how competitive we are when it comes to fighting for the Miss Universe title.”

His compliment makes me blush. “My mother did. At first. But I was a lost cause—too much of a tomboy. No surprise I ended up in combat boots and camouflage.”

Fuentes isn’t wrong about getting hit on. Guys here do flirt, maybe because I’m one of only four women in the unit. Some of them watch me, even whistle when I brush my long hair back into a bun. I have kept myself in good shape. My job demands it, and the guys notice, but it’s not for them; it’s for me. I need power and strength to execute a fireman carry on a wounded soldier. 

The rhythm of the convoy changes. The engine’s hum shifts, accelerating and decelerating, buzzing alongside the clanging of the truck’s metal frame. We slow to a jostle along the graveled desert road. Clouds of gray dust splay across the windshield under darkening skies.

Sergeant Fuentes and I lock eyes, realizing at the same time that it’s not dust—it’s ash from the smoke ahead.

We are entering into danger. I feel it. The darkness means an explosion.

I sit up straighter, immediately picturing my son. I’m coming home to you, papito.

That’s it. That’s all I can allow.

I force my mind to go blank. If I want to stay alive and do my job, I must be focused.

The convoy slows even more. The truck ahead is closing in, forcing us to crawl to a complete stop. The darkened air against a blaring sun makes visibility noticeably difficult.

The radio crackles again. “Possible IED, one hundred meters ahead. Stop to deploy the robot.”

The robot sits in the large truck behind us. It can detect an explosive device and provide visuals to soldiers in harm’s way. This is not good.

I look up, channeling my grandmother, Mama Lina. I was only seven when she died. Ever since, I’ve prayed to the woman who loved me best.

Please protect us.

My head whips from left to right. I’m scanning the perimeter, forcing my breath to quiet so that I can hear anyone call for a medic. Stay alert, stay alive.

Sergeant Fuentes calls into the radio. “Vehicle six, requesting further instruction.”

It’s too late to turn back and change course. I’ve done this enough to know the commander will insist we press through.

The village outside Fuentes’s window is awakening. The danger from the explosion heightens the tension in the air. I can tell by the tightening in his jaw that he feels it, too.

I look through his window to see a commotion of movement from the village. My heart pounds but holds a steady pace—my training taking effect. Open doors from the stacks of rectangular clay buildings slam shut. Five or six groups of Iraqi men huddled together stand less than fifteen meters from where we’ve stopped. They sprinkle the landscape on street corners and storefront entrances, watching suspiciously as our convoy comes to a complete stop.

My watch reads 7:50 a.m.—too early for them to be out gathering. Something is up.

The cab crackles to life again as the commander’s voice breaks through. “Vehicle Six, make sure the medic is on standby. We have a visual. Possible IED.”

Now my toes and fingertips are tingling as my body releases adrenaline to keep me alive. “Ay bendito,” I whisper. This can’t be happening. Not now. I picture Teó in distress on the other side of the world. This is fear taking over. I can’t let that happen, not when I’m so close to going home.

I reach down and lift my medical bag onto my lap and scan my area of operation. I need to lean into my training to regain control. If I don’t, I’m the one stacking the odds in the wrong direction. I can’t do that. I take a deep inhale, the familiarity of my tools grounding me back into muscle memory. Don’t be nervous, Lina, be ready. Stone cold.

The radio crackles desperately. The convoy commander is now shouting. “All personnel dismount and set up a perimeter. We need to take a defensive position.”

Dismount? My head whips over to Sergeant Fuentes. “Is he for real? We are stopped, wide open. Those guys out there are watching us. This is not good, Fuentes. We are sitting ducks.”

“LaSalle, move,” he says, his words curt. “He gave a command.” Fuentes leans over the seat. “Sir, you too.”

The chaplain, silent until now, reaches for the door, transitioning into action. We all know the drills. There’s no ignoring the reality of our situation. This is a war zone, and our convoy is in danger.

I pull open my door, ignoring the pressure in my chest from fear’s grasp. After grabbing my stuff, I shuffle to the front tire on the passenger side of the truck, knuckles stretched tight from the death grip on my medical bag. I can’t see the village from this side, but my job is to listen and be ready when and if someone shouts for a medic.

The two-man team in the vehicle ahead move their truck forward before coming to a full stop and widening the gap between us. The truck’s lights shut off as the driver and the lieutenant beside him dismount.

Angry yells carried by desert winds echo in the distance, growing wilder. I can faintly hear the shouts from our unit commanding the villagers to get back and the angry Arabic responses. From what I gather, no one is really listening on either side.

An eerie calm comes over me as I begin to assess. I want to run back to the safety of my Humvee until we get the “all clear” and I can return home, where I’m needed most, but my system knows instinctually what to do. I lean in.

Scanning my right flank, I identify movement behind a crumbling stone wall approximately fifteen meters away on the opposite side of the village. It’s the only activity on this side of the convoy. My side. The hostility from the villagers grows on our left.

A puff of dirt floats up from the ground in the shuffling of loose rocks. I strain to focus, but the noise surrounding us distracts me. The lieutenant up ahead runs toward the beginning of the convoy, essentially leaving me wide open.

I shake my head. There goes the LT trying to play the hero.

My eyes move back, following the chalky cloud of dust to the dirt-smudged face of a young man still lacking the confidence of a seasoned adult. He struts a few steps forward with intention, but the look in his eyes is so similar to my son’s when he’s unsteady and afraid.

My heart pounds with familiarity. I’m on the other side of the world, and yet the stubbled skin of a beard not yet grown in and those large almond eyes, blinking with regret, remind me so much of how Teó will look during his transition to manhood.

With quivering steps, he moves around the stone edge, stopping to assess us. He looks right at me. My instincts are to run out and push him back where he will be safer, but I know that’s impossible. Moving from my position would endanger my unit. I strain to catch his gaze, ignoring the reality of what is right in front of me, and silently urge him to return behind the wall.

The rustling behind him draws my attention. There’s movement. Someone else is behind that same wall—yelling. An older man. He pushes the trembling volunteer forward.

The man’s face juts out. He’s still shouting in a tone that sounds like a command. I strain to listen. He hollers again in Arabic: “Ezhab!” Go. The man is urging, directing his protégé farther out into the open and into view.

The young man looks back. His eyes wide with terror, shaking his head. “La,” he says. No.

“Go,” the bearded man shouts.

I watch as he stumbles forward. My gaze narrows, and I pray that somehow his course will change at the last minute. It’s obvious he’s scared.

He looks back in my direction, raising his hands slowly and clasping them behind his head.

My eyes trail down, confirming what I already knew in my gut to be true. His soccer jersey rises, revealing the olive-green edges of a belt wrapped around his waist. A glint of foil exposes shiny duct-taped bricks tucked into the belt’s pockets.

The pounding against my ears intensifies, while I helplessly search the row of trucks and endless miles of sky and sand, wondering whether anyone else has noticed this threat. But the convoy is spread out now, and the only other person on my side is the unarmed chaplain facing the rear.

Darting back to look at the older bearded man, I see that his other hand is holding something much more dangerous. A cell phone. A detonator.

My stomach drops with a horrific realization. We are all going to die. Not only will Teó be left alone in this world by a father who abandoned him before he was born, but by a mother who broke her promise and never returned home. A second passes where I can’t tell the difference between my son and hers . . . whoever this boy’s mother may be.

No. He can’t take me from my son. I won’t let him.

My heart hurts at how much this young man looks like Teó. He still retains soft, rounded cheeks and the familiar messy dark curls. How can such innocence be the enemy? In many ways he’s still just a child with a world of possibilities ahead of him.

My eyes shoot over to the bearded man. I want him to be my target, but he is even farther back. No way I can get an accurate shot with a pistol at this distance.

I peer across the front of the truck, shouting, “Sergeant Fuentes, there’s a threat. One hundred meters at my three o’clock. He is wearing a vest.”

My sentence is capped with an explosion from the village in the opposite direction of the convoy from where I stand. The ground shakes below us as the skies darken further. I try to hold my breath and calm my pounding heart.

Fuentes peers from around the other side of the front bumper. “What, LaSalle? Can’t hear you.”

I open my mouth to shout again, but Fuentes is still hollering commands in my direction.

“Stay low. Snipers . . . Get ready to help.”

The voices around me are growing louder. A series of directions stream through the radio in the vehicle. Even with my door open, I can’t make it out clearly, but there’s something about the robot being deployed to the IED. I look back, but the team behind us is not coming across my side.

The young man takes a step forward.

He is crying. I can easily still see the little boy within the changing body of a man. Gray streams of dirt, sweat, and tears slide down his cheeks.

Please, I beg, please stop. Let me help you. I want nothing more than to rip that damn belt from his body.

Almost as if he can hear my thoughts, he hesitates.

Come on, kid. Don’t take another step. You don’t have to do this.

I can see it in his face. He doesn’t want to do this. Neither do I.

The man behind the wall shouts again. The resolve is too strong, his features shift, conjuring determination. He isn’t going to stop. I reach down to touch the 9-millimeter on my hip. If he won’t stop, then neither can I.

“Sergeant Fuentes!” I shout again, but there’s no response.

“No hay otra,” I whisper tragically. If I don’t do something right now, my son will be left an orphan.

I won’t let that happen.

“I’m moving, LaSalle,” Sergeant Fuentes finally says in the distance, but two shots—enemy fire from the village—punctuate the end of his sentence.

The chaplain and I drop conjointly to the ground.

In the distance, I hear, “Take cover! We need to get back!”

Another round of fire fills the air. “I’m hit. LaSalle, help.”

Sergeant Fuentes lands with a thud in front of our vehicle. I smell the iron rust of blood before I see it. But from my position on the gravel, I have a direct view beneath the cab. Our eyes meet. The light behind his expression is fading.

Oh God. No, please.

I rise to render aid, but from my periphery I see the young man push through his hesitancy and begin advancing toward us.

“Sir, Sergeant Fuentes is down. Help him,” I scream at the chaplain, pointing to the front of our cab.

The chaplain looks up and sees the young man slowly approaching and the obvious bulk at his waist. His eyes fill with the horrid realization I’d discovered only a moment before.

“Jesus, Mary, and Joseph,” he shouts, rising to his feet, crouching low. He runs past me to Sergeant Fuentes and grabs Fuentes’s rifle.

He doesn’t have the training to use it. I do. “Give me his weapon,” I yell.

The chaplain slides it over to me.

Bullets firing from both sides fill the skies.

I grab Fuentes’s rifle and lie on my stomach, elbows firmly planted in the dirt. I peer through the scope and settle on my sight picture.

The target has stopped moving. His hands are on his knees, his chest palpitating, leaning forward. His body is weighed down by the heavy explosives, giving me precious seconds to take proper aim.

I point the muzzle slightly above his head, ensuring an accurate shot, and focus inward, holding my breath.

Now, Lina. Do it.

I force the transition. He is not someone’s son; this is a target, a black silhouette on a white sheet of paper. An enemy combatant. A weapon.

I pull back my trigger finger, numb, and brace against the blast of my rifle.

My nose fills with the peppered scent of metal and sulfur as his skinny body falls to the ground.

A few seconds pass, then another rifle shot rings out. This time it comes from the vehicle up ahead. The team finally saw the bearded boogeyman behind the wall. He falls in a crumpled heap at the wall’s edge. The detonator tumbles to the ground beside him.

My head drops to my chest. It’s not over yet. The vest could still detonate.

I close my eyes and wait, picturing my sweet baby boy’s big blue eyes and wide, silly grin. If I’m about to die, I want to be thinking of my tesoro, my little treasure, when it happens.

A quiet breeze passes along the back of my neck. Still holding my breath, I wait, but mercifully, the young man’s vest does not detonate. I exhale, my lungs pounding. The sulfur of gunpowder combines with the scent of Sergeant Fuentes’s rusty blood, trailing beside me like a river in search of an ocean.

The rifle tumbles from my hands to the ground. My chest aches with the pressure of what I’ve just done. I swallow it deep and hold it down. I cannot break. Not yet.

“You saved us,” the chaplain says, kneeling above me.

I don’t believe him. The team ahead of us took out the real threat— the man with the detonator. What if I had just waited another couple of seconds?

“Look at me, Lina,” he says, using my first name.

I raise my head but don’t turn to face him. My focus is out on the horizon. Murderer. The word repeats itself over and over in my head.

I imagine a mother somewhere in the distance, mourning the loss of her son and all the dreams she held for his life. Over and over I see her son’s body crumpling to the ground.

I had to do it.

I had to stay alive for my son. I had no choice. I swallow and repeat the words in my head.

I had to do it.

My heart pounds at the realization that somewhere out there a mother has just lost her son. Now she will be forced to bury him and sever the living connection between them. And it is all my fault.

Murderer.

When I finally look over at the chaplain, his fingers move deftly down his face and across his chest. “You did the right thing,” he offers gently.

I know in my head I had no other choice . . . didn’t I? No. Teó needs me. I had to do it.

There’s a famous saying in Puerto Rico my father used to quote in his darkest moments: Tanto nadar para morir en la orilla. I’ve swum sofar, only to drown on the coastline.

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About the Author

C.I. Jerez is a proud Latina who was born in Miami. Her mother, a native New Yorker, blessed her with both Puerto Rican and Irish roots, while her father, a Cuban immigrant, inspired her to embrace the culture of the Caribbean. These multicultural influences, including growing up on the West Texas border in El Paso, have shaped her desire to bring Latina and Latino characters to life in her stories.

After graduating from the University of Texas at El Paso, she commissioned as a signal officer in the US Army and rose to the rank of Major before transitioning out of the military. She holds an MBA from Webster University and a doctorate in international business from Liberty University. When not writing, she serves as cofounder and vice president for Ashire Technologies & Services Inc., a cybersecurity firm specializing in securing federal information systems. She lives in central Florida. For more information, visit www.cijerezbooks.com.

Spotlight: Changing Lanes by Claire Yezbak Fadden

A Roxy Adams Mystery Book 1

Genre: Humorous Cozy Mystery, Romantic Suspense

For fifty-something Roxy Adams, life is simple and beautiful. Her days are drenched in southern California sunshine and passion for Sam Reyes, the man she loves and shares a business with.

When Sam vanishes with their savings, leaving only a note behind, Roxy is faced with a harsh reality. Broke and confused, she learns they never owned the business. The actual owner will let her keep her job if she provides him with benefits.

Convinced there’s no knight in shining armor riding to her rescue, Roxy dusts off her chauffeur’s hat and returns to the career she trailblazed twenty years earlier.

With a steady income, new friends, and the possibility of romance, joy slowly replaces insecurity. Foxy Roxy is back. Life is wonderful and exciting once again. Until Sam turns up dead in the trunk of her limo. And Roxy is arrested for his murder.

Excerpt

Roxy dialed Alma on her drive home. The meeting with Alex, Stacy, and Cecile had left her anxious and unsettled. 

Was she imagining things about Alex or was her intuition doing what it did best, questioning everything? Alma could talk her down when her chaotic brain took control. But today, her friend’s phone rang unanswered.

“Alma. Are you home? I’m out on bail, and I need to talk to you. Can we get a coffee or something stronger tonight?” Roxy looked at her watch. Too early for Alma to be on air. “Hope you’re out doing something fun with that new fellow. Call me later when you have a minute. I need you.” 

Roxy disconnected and tossed her phone on top of her purse. She tuned her radio to KODO and sang along to a vintage R&B song. After the next song ended, she heard:

“This is Soul Sanchez, spinning the tunes that make you move. Coming up at the half hour, all the news to keep you on cruise.” 

 “There you are my friend, hard at work,” Roxy shouted into the emptiness of her car. “Call me!” 

From the apartment parking lot, Roxy spied Alma’s planter box, a trail of ivy draping down one side. Her geraniums, along with the rest of her garden, appeared healthy and undisturbed. 

Roxy hustled up the stairs and opened her apartment door. Before she entered, she checked that she was the only person inside, then dumped her purse on the kitchen table and opened her sliding glass door. 

She walked onto her patio balcony and glanced around. No one was watching—at least no one she could see. 

Alma wouldn’t be off for another few hours. Roxy wasn’t certain she could wait that long to retrieve the key. 

Why had she told everyone where she had hidden the key? What a stupid mistake.

She went inside and opened a bottle of red wine; the nice one her niece had gifted her on her fiftieth birthday. Roxy had been saving the wine for a special occasion. What was more special than getting out of jail? She couldn’t think of a thing.

The first glass coasted down her throat as though on skates. She’d never been a wine connoisseur, but she sure liked how this one tasted. She took a few more sips, then swirled the wine left in her glass and watched the liquid form “legs” down the sides. Roxy knew that quality wines had good legs. And that was the extent of her expertise. She wouldn’t be adding sommelier to her resume any time soon. 

Oaky notes, nuances of spice, smokiness. Wine lovers used these terms. All that seemed pretentious. The wine she normally consumed offered nuances of gym socks or the smoky notes of stale licorice candy. She couldn’t taste the difference. 

Well, until today. 

She poured another glass, debating if she should go into Alma’s home and nab the tiny key while Alma was still at work. She had already snuck in once using Alma’s hidden key. She couldn’t sneak in twice. Someone might be watching.  

No, she’d wait until Alma came home.

That was, if Alma came straight home. 

She’d been dating a new guy. The last time she’d seen her friend, Roxy would have sworn Cupid’s arrow was sticking out of Alma’s chest. 

What was the guy’s name? she wondered, halfway through her second glass.

Roxy let the wine relax her. In fact, she moved several degrees to the right of relaxed, headed directly to buzz country. She hadn’t gotten drunk in so long it took only two glasses to get her woozy. 

Can’t get plastered tonight. Gotta keep my head on straight. Think. Think. Ricky, Randy. Something with an R. Ryan. No. Too common.

“Rudy!” she shouted into the air as the name appeared in her mind. “Yes. Rudy!” She lifted her wine glass. “Tell me, Alma, how are things going with Rudy?”

Roxy downed the remainder of her second glass, chugged some water, and curled up on her couch to sleep, maybe to dream. Maybe to subconsciously figure out what that dang key opened.

When Roxy’s cell phone chimed, waking her up, she looked at her watch. She’d been asleep for three hours.

“Hello,” she answered, before taking a drink of water to combat the cotton balls forming inside her mouth.

“Finally. I’ve been calling every five minutes for the last half hour. Where have you been?” Alma screeched in Roxy’s ear.

“At my place. Guess I dozed off.”

“Sorry I couldn’t be there when you got out. Had to fill in for an early shift. Stacy said she’d take care of everything.”

“How can I thank you for putting up my bail,” Roxy said, gratitude swelling in her chest.

“Stop,” Alma said. “Stacy and I figured it out. She said she’d ask Alex to pick you up. Did he?”

“Well yes,” Roxy said, not ready to elaborate on her uneasiness about Alex. “Are you still at work?”

“No. I’m at Rudy’s.”

“Rudy. I knew it.”

“Knew what? Rocks, are you okay?”

“Well, I have been better, but yes, I’m okay. Except that I’m a lousy friend. I haven’t even asked how things are going with your new beau. How are things going with Rudy?”

“Beau? Are you messing with me right now? You’re out on bail for a murder charge, and you want to have girl talk. Maybe I should pop over, and we can paint each other’s toenails.” Alma huffed at the end of her rant, emphasizing her frustration.

“Are you mad at me?”

“No. Well, maybe a little. You have to answer your freaking phone, so I don’t have a heart attack. I thought something happened to you.”

“I’m fine. Really. I’ll probably have an enormous headache tomorrow, though,” Roxy said, rubbing her temple.

“Now what are you talking about?”

“Doesn’t matter. I had too much wine.”

You drank too much? Well, that’s a first. But I guess being charged with murder is a first for you, too. You’re getting to check a lot of boxes on your bucket list.”

“Hangovers and murder are not on my bucket list.” Roxy couldn’t help giggling.

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About the Author 

Pennsylvania-native Claire Yezbak Fadden lives in Orange County, California with her husband and two spoiled dogs. She spends her spare time playing with her four grandchildren and immersing herself in the words of other authors.

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Cover Reveal: Swipe Right to Flirt by Martha Sweeney

Publication date: June 17th 2025

Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

Flirting is easy. Falling in love is complicated.

When she turned fourteen, Deidre found out that her parents were getting a divorce. As the gossip spread through her small hometown, and the ugly divorce unfolded, the choice be willing to leave with her father was easy.

As the years passed, Deidre’s father had learned to move on and find love again. Though Deidre is happy for her dad, secretly she believes that everyone is bound to break trust at some point. Instead of desiring a relationship, Deidre focuses on becoming a top coder in Silicon Valley. She ends up assisting with a startup which leads to the development her own app called Flirt. Engrossed in her work, Deidre is willing to play the game of a flirt all for the sake of her app to explode even further in the market.

For the first time in her life, Deidre feels as if the past will never bother her again—that is, until she finds out that her brother is getting married. What she doesn’t realize is that facing her past just might be what she needs in order to let go of the pain and become the entrepreneur she’s meant to be. Can Deidre let go to gain more than she could ever imagine?

About the Author

Martha Sweeney is a BESTSELLING author who writes in a variety of genres: romance (contemporary, romcom, suspense, paranormal and historical), suspense, fantasy, thriller, coloring books, and soon, science fiction. She strives to push herself as a storyteller with each new tale and hopes to push her readers outside of their comfort zone whether it be genre or the stories themselves.

With a B.S. in Psychology, Martha utilizes her knowledge of human and animal behavior successfully in the business world and in her writing to present realistic characters and situations. She's been creative since she was little, always drawing, coloring or making crafts, so her venture into being an author was a natural transition.

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Spotlight: A Winding Wave of Magic by Nicole French

Release Date: April 11

AVAILABLE IN KINDLE UNLIMITED

He was fae. I was sure of it. A sorcerer, full of cool, clear-eyed control, looking for a seeress to read thoughts and tell the future. And he was here for me.

Four months from starting a quiet teaching career, Cassandra Whelan receives a message the disrupts everything. Her beloved grandmother has been killed, and she’s given Cassandra the strangest inheritance ever: the family beach house, a centuries-old secret to protect that seems suspiciously like Pandora’s Box, and a coveted position on the council of the magi: the mysterious governing body of the fae world, which Cassandra knows nothing about.

After all, it’s hard to care about your magical powers when they never do anything but misbehave.

Now, to avenge her grandmother and protect a legacy that has cost her family everything, Cassandra must embark on a new kind of education: one that teaches her how to become the most powerful seer of a generation, even if other fae don’t believe she can do it.

Fae like Jonathan Lynch, an enigmatic (and somewhat grumpy) sorcerer-shifter sent to guide her on her new path.

With every passing day, Cassandra comes closer to full manifestation, when she can take her seat on the council—unless, as she suspects, they are hiding their own terrible secret.

Love, hate, and lies. It seems everyone in the fae world has a hidden agenda—and who better to find the truth than the most clairvoyant seer of a generation?

If, that is, she can finish her training alive.

Addictive and action-packed, A Winding Wave of Magic is a gorgeous, soul-searing, and surprising romantic fantasy!

A note to readers: Parts of this book were previously published under the Nicole Demery as novellas in The Magi Series. While the story is at its heart the same, large portions of the book have been edited, rewritten, and reconfigured. The story also includes an additional 50,000 words that were never published and provides an end to this story. I hope you enjoy it!

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Meet Nicole French

Nicole French is a USA Today bestselling author of contemporary romance. She's also a hopeless romantic, Springsteen fanatic, and total bookworm. When not writing, she is hanging out with her family, playing soccer with the rest of the thirty-plus crowd in Seattle, or going on dates with her husband. In her spare time, she likes to go running or practice the piano, but never seems to do either one of these things as much as she should.

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For more information on Nicole French and her books visit: https://www.nicolefrenchromance.com/

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Spotlight: All Along the Watchtower by Harper Jackson

Release Date: April 11

Will Be Available in Kindle Unlimited April 18

For ten years, I've perfected the art of ignoring Ford Donoghue whenever he comes home on leave. You can't completely avoid anyone on Hatterwick Island, but I've made it work. Until his daughter shows up.

She's thirteen, scared, and looking for the father she's never met. And suddenly I'm the one making the call I swore I'd never make, pulling Ford away from his Navy post and into my carefully constructed life. But something about her story doesn't add up, and when a body washes up on our quiet beach, the whole island starts to unravel.

Now a teenage girl is counting on me, a murderer walks freely among us, and the only person I can trust is the former best friend who broke my heart a decade ago. And the people threatening everything I love? They're counting on the fact that Ford and I are too broken to work together.

They don't know how wrong they are.

In this small tourist town, old wounds run deep and deadly secrets hide in plain sight. And this time, running away isn't an option—for any of us.

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Meet Harper Jackson

Harper Jackson has rescued her co-workers from a hostage situation, battled ninjas, and stopped international espionage—in her head anyway. Now that she’s no longer busy devising ways to make staff meetings more entertaining, she’s pouring that imagination into tales of breath-stealing, small-town romantic suspense. She believes that peach cobbler with ice cream is the best dessert ever and has a black belt in taekwondo to back it up. She lives in the Deep South with her husband and canine furbabies. You can explore her lighter contemporary romances at https://kaitnolan.com.

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Connect with Harper Jackson: harper@harperjackson.com

Cover Reveal: Keeping the Countless by Lille Moore

Publication date: June 24th 2025

Genres: Adult, Historical, Romance

Synopsis:

In this first installation of the DAMSELS IN DISGUISE series, a passionate clergyman on a mission to steal an earl’s secrets finds himself captivated by a cunning and courageous countess.

Charismatic curate Jonah Sinclair survived the deadly streets of south London with two well-trained fists and divine intervention. He will let nothing—not his vocation, nor his yearning to find love—stop him from pursuing the criminals who killed his father. When he learns the notorious Earl of Rochford could hold the key to retribution for his family, he seizes on the chance to become tutor to the earl’s young ward. But the only trace of Rochford he discovers at the mysterious Ravenglass Hall is his abandoned countess, a woman whose fierce strength stirs a forbidden temptation.

Faith Trenton, Countess of Rochford, is on the brink of ruin. Betrayed and abandoned by her husband, she disguises herself as a man to defend her estate from an embezzling steward. Jonah’s arrival threatens her carefully constructed masquerade, and despite the irresistible spark between them, she must send him packing, or risk having him expose the dangerous secrets she keeps hidden. But when a succession of attacks threatens everything that Faith has fought to protect, she’s forced to place her trust in Jonah, and pray he won’t unravel the truth, or her heart.

Helping Faith could sabotage Jonah’s mission. Loving her might cost him everything.

About the Author

Lille Moore writes romance with a twist on time-honored tropes and tales. Her hard-fought happy endings feature strong heroines, seductive heroes, and plenty of steam and shenanigans.

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