Spotlight: Song of the Dragon Rider (The Dragon’s Ballad 2) by Karina Espinosa

Cover Designer: Covers by Christian

Publication Date: April 18, 2025

My life's taken a dive straight into an episode of "Game of Thrones"—minus the cool graphics. Here I am, Cat, Hollywood stunt double turned unwilling guest in Damien Drakonar's dragon-infested soap opera. Yep, that Damien—the hot, broody dragon shifter prince who's as infuriating as he is mysterious. And guess what? He's decided to keep me around because of some cosmic joke involving twin flame marks. Apparently, we're destined to be together—talk about a plot twist!

As I try to wrap my head around our supposed bond, this little secret of ours doesn't stay quiet for long. We've got a traitor in our midst, causing more trouble than a season finale of your favorite reality TV series. Now, every step I take in Damien's world draws me closer to him. My heart, that traitorous little thing, seems to forget I'm more into Netflix and chill than fire and brimstone.

Caught between a return ticket to my comfy old life and the fiery gaze of a man who's equal parts danger and allure, I've got decisions to make. With alliances shifting like sand beneath my feet, it's hard to tell friends from enemies. Will I ever zip back to my world, or will Damien's world—with its dark charm and hidden threats—become my new norm? As we face the ultimate showdown, I have to wonder: Can love truly conquer all, or am I just playing a part in a story that might not get a sequel?

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About the Author

Karina Espinosa is the Urban Fantasy Author of the Mackenzie Grey novels and The Last Valkyrie series. An avid reader throughout her life, the world of Urban Fantasy easily became an obsession that turned into a passion for writing strong leading characters with authentic story arcs. When she isn't writing badass heroines, you can find this self-proclaimed nomad in her South Florida home binge watching the latest series on Netflix or traveling far and wide for the latest inspiration for her books. Follow her on social media!

Connect:

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Spotlight: The Third Ring by A.N. Horton

Publication date: April 15th 2025

Genres: Adult, Romance, Urban Fantasy

Synopsis:

Ten Trials. Two Oaths. One Chance.

To Adrian, the gods were never anything to be worshipped, just tolerated. But in the walled city of Sanctuary, whether through the religious fervor of the elite or the quaking fear of the poor, the Geist have always been served. And now it’s Adrian’s turn.

Born into power and raised for greatness, Dante stands for everything Adrian has come to despise, but he may be her only hope of survival. When the two of them are bonded against their will and forced to compete together in the Trials, the god’s ancient gauntlet of physical brutality and psychological torture, they have no choice but to set aside old prejudices and work together. Navigating religious zealots, a patriarch intent on breeding the pair for power, and the increasingly obvious cruelty of the gods, Adrian must come to terms with the fact that, whether Culled or Championed, we all serve the gods in the end. And, for her, betrayal has always been waiting just around the corner.

Excerpt

I tried to pull my hands from the stone, but I couldn't. My palms were fused to the rock.
"I vow to obey the tenets of the Trials."
I hesitated. Did I truly want to go through with this? As confident as I'd been this morning, as resigned to follow through with Darius's last wish of me, this was...something else entirely. Something I hadn't expected.
"Make your Oath," my own voice hissed at me.
"I-I vow...to obey the tenets of the Trials," I repeated. It seemed to be my only way out of here.

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About the Author

A. N. Horton is a two-time award-winning author living in Nashville, TN with her husband, children, and moderately chunky Corgi. When she’s not writing, she’s reading, baking more cookies than her family can eat, and plotting crimes against her characters. Best known for crafting characters that steal her readers’ hearts as much as they shatter them, A. N. Horton is a cross-genre writer focused mainly on fantasy and romance with her upcoming urban fantasy series, The Third Ring, and her soon to be released historical romance novel, A Promise Kept.

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Spotlight: Spies Like Me by Doug Solter

(The Gems, #1)

Publication date: October 4th 2016

Genres: Thriller, Young Adult

Synopsis:

They offered Emma revenge…

When she discovers her father’s plane crash wasn’t an accident, sixteen-year-old Emma wants to punish those responsible. Even if it means becoming a spy for a mysterious organization known as The Authority. They want Emma to join the Gems…four teenage girls with unique skills…who know how to handle dangerous spy missions around the world…like storming a mountain stronghold to stop terrorists from incinerating the world’s food supply.

The Authority thinks Emma is the missing link to make this team work.

Emma thinks The Authority is her only chance for revenge.

Spies Like Me is the first novel in The Gems Young Adult spy thriller series, although all books in the Gems world can be read as standalone adventures. This is a fast-paced action story with diverse characters, cool spy gadgets, girl-power bonding, deep family secrets, ruthless villains, twists and turns, and a romance with a complex boy to figure out.

Excerpt

The school’s auditorium stage was bathed in colors. White for the actors. Orange for the wooden set representing the faraway pyramids of Egypt. Blue to emphasize the painted sky backdrop above it all. It was the opening night performance of The Spy Who Loathed Me.

Emma Rothchild strutted across the stage in a gorgeous floor-length silk dress, her costume for this scene. Tonight, she craved the eyes of the audience and knew this dress guaranteed their full attention. 

Emma was deep into character. She was Russian spy Olga Tetrovich. Emma had studied online videos of Russians speaking candidly and mimicked their accents as best she could. Her drama teacher had complimented Emma on her dedication to the craft.

The MI6 spy George Bond followed Olga on stage, but hid behind a fake tree. The actor’s rich brown skin might be a shock to the 007 spy traditionalists in the audience, but Emma hoped that his performance would win them over. Bond was following her in this scene, thinking she would lead the English spy straight to the microfilm that was stolen from him by a Brazilian dwarf named Tatu. 

From a souvenir stand, Emma picked up a clay model of the pyramids, something a tourist would buy at a market. She smashed the stage prop against the table in dramatic fashion and held up the roll of microfilm hidden inside so the audience could see it.

George Bond made his move. He crept up behind Emma without detection while she slipped the microfilm into her small hand purse. Emma’s hand came out holding a cap-gun revolver. She pivoted on her heels, making her dress swoosh around her ankles, and aimed the gun at Bond. The move looked great in rehearsals.

“I don’t think so, Mr. Bond,” Emma said, with her gentle Russian accent. “Our brief partnership is at an end. I have what my government wants. Now I will take my revenge. Do you remember that man you killed in Vienna?”

“Yes, I do,” George Bond said.

“He was my lover.”

Emma waited for Bond’s next line.

But the actor hesitated. 

Emma was about to lose it. Did Lewis forget again? They’d rehearsed this scene, like, twenty times.

“What do you have to say about that, Mr. Bond?” 

The line was an ad-lib, something to draw the next line out of the boy’s mouth.

Lewis’s face was a river of sweat as his eyes glazed over, the actor turning himself into just another tree on stage. 

“Your silence is a good enough confession for me. Any last words before I fire?” Emma went off script, but Lewis could pick his line up there. She was trying to help him.  

But the boy shook his head. Lewis wasn’t taking the hint.

Emma pulled the trigger and the gun hammer snapped forward. She squeezed the trigger numerous times in a series of loud snaps. Emma dropped the weapon. “You planted that empty gun in my handbag, didn’t you?”

Lewis nodded. Okay, he’d reacted to that ad-lib. 

It was a sliver of hope, so Emma went with it. “Then I’ll have to kill you with my bare hands.” Emma approached Lewis with her arms raised in a karate-looking stance. The boy blinked, still trapped inside his scary place. What could Emma do now? Physically attack him? Bond was supposed to seduce the Russian agent, not have her attack him.

Then a breath of inspiration hit her.

Emma grabbed Lewis’s shoulders. She guided him over to a bench on the set and made him lie down. Emma plopped her body on top of Lewis and pretended to struggle with him. Emma whispered into his ear, “Now get up and glare at me, Lewis.”

His eyes blinked again. Lewis rolled out from under her and stood on stage. Emma pressed her back against the seat of the bench and stayed there while Lewis glared.

Emma labored her breathing, as if she were being seduced. “Oh, why can I not kill you, Mr. Bond? What power do you hold over me?”

Lewis didn’t move, his glare frozen on his petrified face.

Emma knew this would work better if Lewis helped sell it, but…she lifted herself from the bench like a graceful ballerina, trying to act seduced by Bond’s man-powers. “Why can I not kill you, Mr. Bond?” she repeated.

Emma went for his lips, kissing Lewis with passion, as if the male spy had successfully messed with her brain. As Emma eased her lips away from his…life came back into Lewis’s eyes. He gripped Emma and pulled her towards him and they kissed again. 

Finally, the boy was acting.

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About the Author

Doug Solter has worked behind the scenes in television for over twenty-five years. He began writing screenplays, then made the switch to young adult fiction. Doug respects cats, loves the mountains, and one time walked the streets of Barcelona with a smile. Doug is a member of SCBWI, IBPA, and Pennwriters.

If you would like to know when his next book will come out, please follow him on Amazon or visit his website at dougsolter.com and sign up to receive emails about new releases and special giveaways.

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Spotlight: Omega’s Choice by Michelle Minnie

(The Omega Chronicles, #1)

Publication date: March 27th 2025

Genres: Adult, Fantasy, Romance

Synopsis:

Helena has led an often restrictive life as a sacred Omega wolf and Princess of the Lichtenberg line. With unimaginable power, come responsibilities and dangers that fill her days, but the time has come for her to choose her Alpha and enjoy the freedom of her very own pack. Alpha Aldric Forst has been seriously scarred in numerous battles for his King while leading armies in the fight to protect their lands from the growing evil. Knowing his ability to attract an Omega mate was slim and he’d resigned himself to a life of loneliness filled with duty to his pack and King Leonidas.

Princess Helena has other ideas for the massive wolf, who both intrigues and sets her heart on fire. At the choosing ceremony, she intends to make her intentions of mating with Aldric Frost known to all. However, an evil is lurking inside the castle walls waiting for its chance to steal away the Princess and as many other Omega wolves as possible. Can Aldric uncover the traitor in time or are the lonely Alpha’s dreams destined to remain just that, dreams.

Buy on Amazon

About the Author

Michelle grew up with a love of reading and writing as most authors do but her desire for action and adventure led her to create worlds far different from her own. With creatures of myth and legend, as well as from her imagination, Michelle crafted entire universes into her pages where she brings her characters to life in a stunning array from shifters, witches, demons, ogres, gods, fae, fairy, and dragon, to countless more. Hold on tight as her high fantasy stories take you on journeys to faraway lands where nothing is as it seems.

Connect: https://www.instagram.com/authormichelleminnie

Spotlight: Meant for More: Following Your Heart and Finding Your Purpose by Karen Olson

Pub Date: September 10, 2024
Genre:
Memoir 

Do you feel you are meant for more?

Many people feel a deep longing for something more, for richer meaning in their lives, but are unable to identify where that longing is coming from or how to come to terms with it. Many people seek happiness through acquiring material goods or achieving status, only to find a lack of fulfillment. At one time, Karen Olson, a successful marketing executive, felt the same.

Then, one fall day in 1981, as she hurried to a business meeting in New York City, she noticed an elderly, homeless woman outside Grand Central Station. Impulsively, Karen darted across the street and bought the woman a sandwich and an orange juice. She listened to the woman’s story and learned her name: Millie.

This small act of kindness changed the trajectory of Karen’s life. Karen dedicated her life to those in need and founded Family Promise, a national nonprofit organization that helps homeless and low-income families. Today, the organization boasts more than 200 affiliates across the country, with more than 180,0000 men, women, and children served each year. In Meant for More, Karen tells her story, from tragedy in childhood to an adulthood full of compassion and service, which has made her stronger, healthier, and more fulfilled than ever before. 

With firsthand testimonials from Karen and other volunteers, Meant for More is an inspiring call to action: when you reach out beyond yourself and seek to make a difference in the lives of others, happiness will catch up with you.

Excerpt

Compassion is an incredibly powerful agent for healing and transformation. If someone has ever been kind to you when you were down then you know how intensely appreciated support can be. Just the simple act of having someone care for us or be present can touch us and warm our heart. Because it restores our spirit, kindness and compassion can lift us up and inspire us to change our lives.

Interestingly, some people are astonished to see how much their simple acts of generosity affect others. But when they do realize how big the impact they had was, it moves them. They discover immense empathy in themselves that they did not necessarily know they had.

Pace, a senior executive at Sandia National Laboratories, is a great example of a person who discovered a newfound sense of purpose and fulfillment when he became an overnight volunteer for Family Promise. His story is a testament to the transformative power of giving back and cultivating a more expansive heart. It’s stories like his that shine a light on the remarkable character and empathy of our volunteers.

Pace

In 1993, I was transferred to lead another organization within the laboratory. My associates were throwing me a going-away party. Several people, mainly scientists, stood up to give testimonials; however, I only remember one.

When the scientists had finished talking, a secretary, Alice, whom I did not know well, shyly raised her hand for permission to speak. Alice shared the story of a chance encounter with me several years earlier when I had come to her aid one wintry night when she got a flat tire that left her stranded.

Alice told everyone about the evening that she left work. There was a sudden cold snap, and it started sleeting. Before she reached the main road, she pulled over with a flat tire, but a stream of cars continued to pass by, causing her to panic. Alice noticed someone pull up behind her, get out of their car, and knock on her window. It was me. Ignoring the conditions, I went ahead and changed her tire. Alice recalled that I wasn’t dressed for the weather, but didn’t seem to mind. She said, at that point, I stopped being “just a suit” and became a human being to her.

Touched by her thoughtful words, their effect extended beyond that party. In the following days, I reflected on how my simple, automatic response to her situation had made such a lasting impact on her. It wasn’t significant to me because I’d done this before and had forgotten about the encounter with Alice. However, it was of importance to her. I concluded I could do more to make a difference in people’s lives. I didn’t want to be known as a “suit.” That began a more thorough search for meaningful ways to assist people. Unknowingly, Alice opened my heart to become more expansive.

I got involved with Family Promise when my church, First United Methodist, helped start the Albuquerque affiliate. Due to my hectic schedule, family, work, and church seemed to be the only things I had time for. However, the program appealed to me emotionally, and overnight hosting was something I could fit into my busy life because I had to sleep. So, in that position, I slept overnight at the church. Then, before I headed to work, I would prepare and serve breakfast.

Every quarter, at my church, they select a different coordinator to oversee the program. Very quickly, I recognized it was suffering from a lack of continuity, so I volunteered to coordinate. In addition, I wanted to contribute some management skills to the program, and I became the program coordinator for more than eleven years.

I have retired from my job at the laboratory and now conduct research on physics that might lead to new energy sources, so I’m working fewer hours. Consequently, that allowed me to devote more hours to Family Promise. I led our congregation’s hosting of homeless families by recruiting and coordinating the work of approximately fifty volunteers who provided families with essential respect and loving-kindness, as well as food, lodging, and transportation.

When I began helping on weekends, I got to know our guests personally. They would open up to me and, without asking, tell me their stories. Like Alice, I got to know them as “real people.”

On the weekends, I prepared breakfast for our guests and planned recreational activities for families. Our activities ranged from yoga sessions and mountain hikes to bowling, and my wife Nancy assisted me with the program. Hospitality isn’t just a word to use with Family Promise. We invited our guest families to our home. We had a zip line in our backyard that we invited them to try. Although it was only about fifteen feet high, it was high enough to provide our guests with the experience of tackling their fears and persevering. On weekends we began holding mock job interviews, and these have since been incorporated into the day program that our guests attend. As an experimental physicist, I can fix almost anything, so I helped our guests with car repairs and occasionally organized dinners for volunteers to facilitate training, and building rapport. After every hosting, I emailed an after-hosting report to volunteers, sharing significant milestones our guests had reached so that they can see how they had touched the lives of our guests.

I keep in touch with many of the families we’ve hosted. I remember one of the first families who graduated from our program. About a month after that hosting, I saw the family in a local restaurant. Their five-year-old son ran up to me and gave me a big hug, which surprised me because I didn’t think they would remember me. I deemed it another “Alice experience” —when we care and act, we make lasting changes in people’s lives.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Karen Olson, the founder and CEO emeritus of Family Promise has dedicated her life to transforming the present and futures of homeless and low-income families. Karen has rallied more than a million volunteers nationwide, fostering an extensive network of support for the vulnerable. Also, because of all the efforts of the volunteers, the organization has been able to assist over a million people experiencing homelessness.

Before her remarkable transition into the realm of social advocacy, Karen demonstrated her leadership prowess as a manager at Warner-Lambert. However, her leap into the world of nonprofits truly underscored her compassionate spirit and steadfast determination. 

Karen’s efforts have been duly recognized, and she has received numerous awards. Some of them include President George H.W. Bush honoring her with the prestigious Annual Points of Light Award, and the New Jersey Governor’s Pride Award recognizing Karen’s remarkable social-service contributions. The American Institute of Public Service also bestowed upon her the Jefferson Award, acknowledging her tireless public-service efforts.

In 2019, Karen experienced a freak accident that left her in a wheelchair. While it has changed her life, Karen continues to be involved. 

Spotlight: Another Fine Mess by Lindy Ryan

Making sure dead things stay buried is the family business...

For over a hundred years, the Evans women have kept the undead in their strange southeast Texas town from rising. But sometimes the dead rise too quick–and that’s what left Lenore Evans, and her granddaughter Luna, burying Luna’s mother, Grace, and Lenore’s mother, Ducey. Now the only two women left in the Evans family, Luna and Lenore are left rudderless in the wake of the most Godawful Mess to date.

But when the full moon finds another victim, it’s clear their trouble is far from over. Now Lenore, Luna, and the new sheriff—their biggest ally—must dig deep down into family lore to uncover what threatens everything they love most. The body count ticks up, the most unexpected dead will rise–forcing Lenore and Luna to face the possibility that the undead aren’t the only monsters preying on their small town.

Excerpt

Chapter 1

Sissy Broussard, September 1999

Sissy Broussard disliked a lot of things.

She disliked the kind of rain that came down in sheets, the scratch of a brush through her hair, the chalky pills Mother pushed down her throat every evening. Scents of citrus and mint and pepper. Loud noises. Cold. Sissy especially disliked the necklace Mother gifted her last birthday. She disliked the way it fit, too tight around her throat, how Mother insisted that she wear it, that it looked so pretty on her. She disliked the cool metal clasp that pulled at the hair at the nape of her neck, the glitter the necklace left along the edges of her vision, the silver charm that jangled loud enough to hurt her ears.

But most of all, Sissy disliked cigarettes.

Especially the ones in the green and white package, she thought and sneezed. The acid and peppermint made her nose itch and her lungs burn—which put Sissy in a predicament, because the mint cigarettes were Mother’s favorites.

Mother did her best to control the cigarette stink, but she could pump the air inside the house thick with all the Glade she wanted and it would still smell like burning menthol, but with the added fumes of Vanilla Breeze and Rainbow Potpourri. Sissy let the choker squeeze her throat, pull her hair, clink against her chest because Mother said it was important, but the curling acrid smoke that stunk up her beautiful coat and made her sneeze?

That she could not abide.

“Don’t you go sneakin’ out tonight,” Mother reminded her from behind the acidic fog, forever worried about cranky Mr. Gordon, who opened his front door and made sweet sounds whenever Sissy walked by. “Too many gone missing lately,” Mother said. “Don’t want nobody makin’ off with my pretty girl.”

Sometimes Sissy listened to Mother’s warnings and sometimes she didn’t, but the concern that she’d wander too close to the old man’s porch was wholly unnecessary.

Offensive, really, Sissy thought. She disliked Mr. Gordon, with his loud catcalls and coffee stink almost as bad as Mother’s cigarettes. His frizzy brown hair and frizzy brown eyebrows and frizzy brown beard. She only ever walked on his side of the road to get a better look at the birdbath on his front lawn, and even that she preferred to watch from the comfort of her favorite reading chair.

Aside from a little window shopping, birds were too much trouble for Sissy to bother with.

Too much, really, for Mr. Gordon to bother with. If he wanted to invite birds to his yard, he already had a perfectly good nest perched right on top of his head.

But Sissy disliked involving herself in anyone else’s business almost as much as she disliked anyone involving themselves in hers. And so, after a lazy Sunday spent lounging in her favorite reading chair, caught in a beam of warm September sunshine, she nibbled at the dinner her mother served, enjoyed the clack-clack-clack of the spinning wheel on her favorite game show, and then, when Mother retired to the back bedroom to smoke herself to sleep, Sissy pushed open the screen door and went out to get some fresh air.

The night’s warm breath pushed the cigarette odor out of her nose, tickling along her back as she padded down the center of the quiet residential street.

Daytime strolls were fun but when the sun went down, Mother went to bed, Mr. Gordon shut his door, and all the silly birds that flitted about the ugly concrete eyesore in his front yard hid themselves away for the night.

Everything else woke up.

Sissy knew every house on her street, every pet, every sound, all the way from the small house with the red shutters where she and Mother lived to the two-story at the opposite end of the block where a bratty Pomeranian yipped from behind the window every time Sissy strolled by. Now, from her viewpoint in the middle of the streetlamp-shadowed road, everything lay before her, spread out in every direction—the neat little houses all in a row, with their matching shutters and matching front doormats and closed garages. A few porch lights were on, but all of the windows dark. A tall trash bin punctuated the end of every driveway, lids closed to keep out the sort of nocturnal critters that dined on refuse and rubbish.

That don’t have mothers to lay out their meals for them.

Sissy disliked Mother’s habits as well as her gifts, but she quite liked her daily servings of cold fish and liver pâté.

Tomorrow morning the big green truck would make its way down the street, snatch up the plastic cans waiting at the end of each driveway, and gobble down their insides, just like they did every Monday morning—just like Sissy did when Mother served treats of chilled cream and crust in a special dish on the kitchen counter.

She listened to the sounds of night as she passed the tall can at the end of her driveway, the abandoned birdbath two doors down on the left, the square tubs the lady across the street always put out one night too early, on green trash night instead of blue recycling night. Sissy crept just outside where the streetlights touched, where the sparkles on her necklace didn’t glimmer in her peripheral vision. Her ears quirked at the tiny nicks of squirrel claws on bark, the scuttle of nocturnal critters as they skittered around, the crunch of dry leaves scattered against curb walls.

A possum hissed at her as she passed, but Sissy ignored it.

A squirrel chittered overhead, but she—

A flick of fur caught her eye.

Sissy froze. The stupid silver charm on her neck tinkled at the abrupt stop, then lay quiet against her chest. She stood stock still, the coldest thing in the warm autumn dark, not a wiggle of nose or twist of ear. Her eyes locked on the small tuft of what might be a tail, might be a paw, half-hidden behind one of the big green bins at the end of somebody’s driveway. She scented the air. Whiffs of moldy food scraps and drying leaves, a trace of Pomeranian scat on the downwind, but nothing that smelled like dinner.

Moonlight deepened the shadows around the trash can, outlining its edges with thick black borders. Even with her night vision, Sissy couldn’t make out the fine details of the brush of fur, but she lowered herself onto her haunches and listened.

A twig snapped. A mouse, maybe.

The brush of fur moved, became a ball of dark.

Raccoon, Sissy guessed as the fur swelled around the moon-shadowed edges of the can and she caught the scratch of nails against asphalt. Some little bandit, hoping it could wrench open the tall bin’s lid with its little humanlike claws, scavenge around in the filth within.

Electricity surged under Sissy’s skin. Dinners nibbled out of a tin were easy and cheap, but she’d trade every last puck of tuna and saucer of cream in Mother’s kitchen for the feel of a fresh catch between her teeth. A taste of raw meat.

A mouse would make for a delightful midnight snack, even if it would mean extra bathing tomorrow as Mother cleaned the blood from her fur.

Tomorrow Sissy would have all the daylight in the world to bathe, to snooze, to sneeze.

Now in the fresh air and wane of last night’s full moon, she’d hunt.

She crouched low enough that her small, lithe form might become nothing but a blur on the pavement, a smear as easy to overlook as an oil stain. As the snarl of dark hair that tried to hide in the can’s shadows.

Sissy’s ears twitched, her stomach rumbled, when the trash can growled. Definitely not a mouse, then. Not a raccoon, either.

Mr. Gordon?

Sissy’s ears flattened against her head. Her whiskers worked, her fur jumping up at the roots when an odor almost as acrid as Mother’s stupid cigarettes infiltrated her nostrils. The scent tore the hunger from her instantly, and a new instinct flooded through her. When Sissy pushed her body against the hot top now, it wasn’t so she could watch the creature behind the bin.

The ball of dark shifted, stretched, stood on all fours. The mass of fur and teeth atop its shoulders turned toward the street. Sissy stayed still as a statue while gleaming eyes cast out into the night, searching the shadows, scanning the dark—catching the sparkle of Mother’s necklace around Sissy’s neck.

The cat sprang to her feet and ran.

Another snap, another growl, and the predator behind the trash can gave chase.

The silver bell on Sissy’s collar screamed against the sound of the beast’s feet as they pounded behind her on the pavement—a ting, ting, ting, tracking her every step as she raced away from the thing behind her.

Her paws left asphalt, hit grass, slid over sidewalks, driveways, porches, as she fled, the neat little houses all in a row, their matching shutters and matching doormats and closed garages, all suddenly strange and unfamiliar.

She did not see Mr. Gordon’s house, his stupid birdbath.

Didn’t see the recycling tubs, set out a day early.

Didn’t see Mother’s house.

Sissy saw nothing but black. Smelled nothing but fear.

Heard nothing but the sound of her own collar, making it so easy for the monster to close in.

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

About the Author

Lindy Ryan is an award-winning author, anthologist, and short-film director whose books and anthologies have received starred reviews from Publishers WeeklyBooklist and Library Journal. Several of her projects have been adapted for screen. Ryan is the current author-in-residence at Rue Morgue. Declared a “champion for women’s voices in horror” by Shelf Awareness, Ryan was named a Publishers Weekly Star Watch Honoree in 2020, and in 2022, was named one of horror's most masterful anthology curators. Her novel Bless This Mess is currently a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award. Born and raised in Southeast Texas, Ryan currently resides on the East Coast. She is a professor at Rutgers University. You can visit her online at lindyryanwrites.com.