Monday, September 08, 2014

A Conversation with Thriller Writer Michael H. Rubin

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Michael H. Rubin
with Michael H. Rubin

We are delighted to welcome novelist Michael H. Rubin to Omnimystery News today, courtesy of JKSCommunications, which is coordinating his current book tour. We encourage you to visit all of the participating host sites; you can find his schedule here.

Michael's debut legal thriller is The Cottoncrest Curse (LSU Press; September 2014 hardcover and ebook formats) and we recently had the opportunity to talk with Michael about his new book.

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Omnimystery News: Introduce us to The Cottoncrest Curse.

Michael H. Rubin
Photo provided courtesy of
Michael H. Rubin

Michael H. Rubin: The Cottoncrest Curse is designed to set the stage for my other novels. I have also written two contemporary legal thrillers and have two more novels in the works. The characters in The Cottoncrest Curse are the ancestors of those portrayed in my other books. Each book is intended to be self-contained, so that you can read any one of them without having read the others, but if you read them all, you will have a deeper understanding of the characters and their motivations.

OMN: As a novel set in the 1800s, how did you capture the proper voices of the characters, both male and female?

MHR: While The Cottoncrest Curse centers on the story of Jake Gold, an itinerant peddler with deep secrets to conceal, there are a number of other key characters, including: Raifer Jackson, a no-nonsense sheriff; Jenny, the daughter of a slave who speaks French and acts as a nurse and translator for an elderly widow; and Sally, a former slave who longs to escape the plantation life to which she is still confined. Each brings a unique perspective to the story, and each views the world differently. It is my goal to create characters that readers will find believable and "real," regardless of gender.

Because my wife and I work on the plots and storylines together, she helps make sure that the voices of the female characters resonate appropriately, for if they ring true for her, then I'm sure that they'll ring true for all my readers, both male and female. If a character is fully developed by an author, I don't think it makes a difference to the reader what gender the writer is.

OMN: Into what genre do you place your book?

MHR: It sometimes appears that, understandably, characterizing a book occurs for marketing purposes only after the book has been completed. When I sat down to write The Cottoncrest Curse, I didn't approach it as trying to appeal to a pre-conceived niche market. Rather, I wanted to explore issues of truth and identity over the course of several generations in the context of a page-turning novel. Having written it, I have found some people describe The Cottoncrest Curse as a "thriller," some describe it as an "historical mystery," and some describe it as a "legal thriller." I understand the need for labeling, especially in today's competitive book market, but the after-the-fact label is not as important to me as writing a book that readers find engrossing.

OMN: Tell us something about The Cottoncrest Curse that isn't mentioned in the publisher's synopsis.

MHR: Although it is fiction, the background of the novel was thoroughly researched and its accuracy has been vetted by historians. For example, the historical events surrounding the famous separate-but-equal case of Plessy v. Ferguson, described in the novel, are true. Attorney Louis Martinet, depicted in the novel, was a real person, a black lawyer succeeding in racist, post-Reconstruction Louisiana. It was Martinet who came up with the idea of creating a test case to vindicate the rights of former slaves under the 14th Amendment. Martinet had a great plan and solid legal theories, but unfortunately it took almost six decades before the United States Supreme Court came around to the views he had articulated in the 1890s and overruled Plessy with the Brown v. Board of Education case in 1954, which the novel deals with as well.

OMN: How would you summarize the book in a tweet?

MHR: An elderly Civil War colonel kills his young wife and shoots himself. But his death was not the first suicide of an owner of the plantation, and it was not to be the last.

OMN: How much of your own professional or personal experience have you included in the book?

MHR: The protagonist, itinerant peddler Jake Gold, was very loosely inspired by my great-grandfather, a Russian immigrant who left home at the age of twelve to escape the pogroms and who, when he finally made it to America, started life here as an itinerant peddler.

Jake Gold's adventures, however, are not those of my great-grandfather. Jake is a purely fictional character. On the other hand, many of scenes and conflicts depicted in the novel are firmly based on actual historical events.

OMN: Tell us a little more about your writing process.

MHR: I don't work from a formal plot or a detailed synopsis; however, before starting to write I jot down notes about the arc of the story and have figured out all the key characters and their motivations. My wife and I discuss in detail possible storylines and plot points during our daily early morning walks. When I sit down to write the first chapter, I already know what the end will be and have a rough sketch of the final chapter in mind.

Concerning expanding or contracting the cast of characters in the novel, I sometimes find that a character whom I thought would have a minor role grows more important to the story, but because I feel I really know the main characters before I start writing, my primary task — along with making sure that the plot remains intriguingly brisk, with unexpected twists and turns — is to keep the voice of each character distinct.

OMN: Where do you usually write?

MHR: My home office is packed with works I admire, both fiction and non-fiction, as well as historical books and other reference materials. I do everything on my laptop — from my initial notes to an outline of the arc of the story to lists of potential names of characters to bits of dialogue, all the way through to the actual writing itself, the editing and reediting (and reediting again), and the proofreading. I make sure to back up everything I've written each time before shutting down my computer.

OMN: How did you go about researching the plot points of the story?

MHR: I have always been a history buff, and I collect non-fiction history books, especially about the 19th Century. When I sat down to write The Cottoncrest Curse, I had a firm idea of the actual historical events I wanted to depict in this fictional novel, and I used my personal library as a reference as well as relying on my knowledge of the law and my legal training.

Having The Cottoncrest Curse published by the award-winning LSU Press was a great advantage. Being a university press, the LSU Press had the novel thoroughly vetted by historians before accepting it for publication. Readers, therefore, can be confident that the story is firmly grounded in historical events.

One of the most interesting parts of the research involved making sure that the language the characters use is historically accurate. For example, in a scene set in 1893, a grizzled, no-nonsense former Civil War physician complains that a young deputy doesn't have "sense God gave to a large rock, a small pebble, or even a tiny dornick." A reader can rest assured that "dornick" was in common use in 1893.

OMN: How true are you to the setting of the book?

MHR: Being accurate about both geography and history is very important to me, because this not only gives weight and veracity to the story, but it also helps create a fully believable world for the reader. While many scenes of The Cottoncrest Curse take place in and around the fictional Cottoncrest Plantation in South Louisiana, a substantial portion of the story is set in the New Orleans of both the 1890s and the 1960s. The description of plantation life, Civil War battles, how physicians cared for the wounded, the plight of both sharecroppers and former slaves, the details of raising sugar cane, the culture, the speech patterns, and the New Orleans locale are all historically accurate.

OMN: If you could travel anywhere in the world, all expenses paid, to research the setting for a book, where would it be?

MHR: My wife and I have spent a good deal of time in both New York City and London, England. Both have not only architectural wonders and fascinating buildings, parks, and neighborhoods, but also unparalleled libraries containing massive collections of historical books, maps, magazines, newspapers, and other documents. I'd love to utilize these resources to work on a novel with a storyline that moves between these two locales.

OMN: What are some of your outside interests? Have any of these found their way into your stories?

MHR: I used to play jazz piano professionally, including in the New Orleans French Quarter. I still play piano every day. Playing jazz is like writing a novel. Both involve working creatively around a theme. In jazz, the theme is melody and chord structure. In a novel, the theme is the plot. In jazz, I use the theme as the jumping off point to create my own interpretation, freely improvising within an identifiable structure. Writing a novel is like that for me. My goal is to creatively use words to develop a plot line into a meaningful story, flesh-out the characters, reveal things that readers might not previously know or have thought of (and that even I might not have thought of when I started writing the novel), and move the tale along to a satisfying conclusion.

OMN: What is the best advice you've received as an author?

MHR: The best advice I've ever received is the one all fledging writers get but find hard to put into practice — show, don't tell. A novel isn't a textbook. A novel isn't a history lesson. A novel isn't a rushed outline. A novel shouldn't be dry and pedantic. A novel should be so compelling that readers feel as if they are completely "in" the story, not outside of it.

As you might imagine from this, the harshest criticism I received when I was starting out, was that I was telling, not showing. It took many, many rewrites to learn how to show and not tell.

In addition to the great advice I received about showing and not telling, the other invaluable advice was "don't give up." Almost no one writes a classic on the first draft. Few do so in their second draft. It is often said that mastering any skill requires 10,000 hours, whether it is playing an instrument or learning to write fiction. My wife is my best friend, my best editor, and my best critic. With a red pen, she cut out excess verbiage, stilted language, and boring paragraphs, encouraging me to revise my manuscript again and again, improving it each time. Every author needs frank comments and constructive criticism coupled with a sincere reminder that you should rewrite, and that you shouldn't give up because what you have to say is worthwhile.

OMN: Complete this sentence for us: "I am a thriller writer and thus I am also …".

MHR: I am a thriller writer and thus I'm also someone who loves to tell a tale so lurid and interesting that when a reader gets to the end of a chapter, he or she will say, "OK, I'll just read a few more paragraphs of the next chapter to find out what happened," and ends up spending all night finishing the book.

OMN: Tell us how the book came to be titled. And were you involved in the cover design?

MHR: My wife came up with the title. We were looking for a name that simultaneously evoked plantation life in the deep south, indicated that an aristocratic family was involved (because families have crests), echoed the location of the plantation at the crest of the river, and telegraphed that this book was a thriller where horrible deaths had occurred over the years and the mystery behind them had to be solved. One of our early morning walks she asked, "Why not call it 'The Cottoncrest Curse'?" When she said it, we both knew instantly it was the perfect title.

The book design was a joint effort involving my wife, me, and the great staff of my publisher, the LSU Press. We wanted a cover that told the reader this was a thriller in which a murder by a knife was key to the plot. The cover, with its plantation home, knife-like "T" in The Cottoncrest Curse, and dripping blood over the title says it all.

OMN: What kind of feedback have you received from readers?

MHR: There is nothing more enjoyable then fielding questions from readers who know a lot about the Civil War era or the Civil Rights era and who ask how I got all the historical details right while they're reading a thriller that they couldn't put down.

Likewise, I love getting questions from readers who thought they didn't care about history but who said that The Cottoncrest Curse not only gave them goose-bumps as they raced from page to page, following the dangerous adventures of the key characters, but also taught them something that they didn't know.

OMN: Suppose The Cottoncrest Curse were to be adapted for television or film. Who do you see playing the key roles?

MHR: One of the key characters is a grizzled physician who, decades earlier, was a Confederate medical officer in the Civil War. Although he's in his sixties and a bit rotund when the murders occur in the last decade of the 19th Century, he's brave, fearless, and compassionate, with a plain-spoken wry sense of a humor. The doctor helps figure out who the killer is. I can easily imagine John Goodman in the role.

OMN: What kinds of books did you read when you were young?

MHR: As a kid I loved mysteries of all kinds. After I had worked my way through The Hardy Boys novels as well as the Tom Swift series, my parents gave me "The Complete Sherlock Holmes" and I was hooked!

But, I also loved science fiction, so I read lots of Ray Bradbury, Isaac Asimov, and Robert Heinlein, as well as Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, because I found that they also were great writers whose works were as much mysteries and thrillers as they were science fiction.

OMN: Have any specific authors influenced how and what you write today?

MHR: Ray Bradury was a master of many genres, and his effortless prose has inspired me. My copies of his books are dog-eared from years of being read and re-read. My wife and I were lucky enough to spend an entire afternoon with Bradbury at his home in California a year or so before he died. During that memorable time, he not only talked about the technical aspects of constructing a novel, but he also regaled us with many stories about how he came to write Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles, The Illustrated Man, and the screen play for the movie Moby Dick, which was directed by John Huston and starred Gregory Peck. It was an afternoon neither my wife nor I will ever forget.

Charles Dickens and Mark Twain are also writers I greatly admire. I love Dickens because his characters leap off the page and into your imagination, as real as if they had knocked on your door and paid you a long visit during which you got to know them well. And Twain because of his great ability to mingle humor and incisive insights into human nature with pristine writing that sparkles.

OMN: What kinds of books do you read now for pleasure?

MHR: For pleasure right now, I'm reading non-fiction, mostly histories. Among the books I've read or reread recently are Howard Blum's "Dark Invasion, 1915, Germany's Secret War and The Hunt for the First Terrorist Cell in America," which tells the story of a New York police inspector charged with finding and stopping terrorists armed with bombs and biological weapons in the time leading up to WWI. Meticulously researched and all true, yet as riveting as novels by John LeCarré, David Baldacci, and James Patterson.

Another book I've recently reread is Barbara Tuchman's "A Distant Mirror," focusing on an elegant and ruthless French nobleman born in 1340. It deals with medieval daily life, politics and wars, and the impacts of both the Church and the Great Plague. Like any great novel, this work of non-fiction is both a page-turner and a meticulously researched history.

OMN: What types of films do you enjoy watching?

MHR: Well-done thrillers are always a treat for me to watch, particularly those where you come to understand that the line between good and evil is not always clear, where what constitutes the "truth" may not be obvious, and where the director and writer make the viewer care about what happens. Films as varied as North By Northwest, The Third Man, The Parallax View, The French Connection, and Blade Runner all do this for me.

But, I also love the classic comedies of the Marx Brothers and the great musicals of the 1930s-1950s.

OMN: What are your all-time favorite movies?

MHR: Citizen Kane, The Wizard of Oz, Danny Kaye's The Court Jester, Singing in the Rain, and The French Connection.

OMN: Have any of these films inspired the plots of your books?

MHR: While none directly inspired The Cottoncrest Curse, in an indirect way my novel owes something to each of them. Like Citizen Kane, my novel is a work of fiction grounded in an historical past. Like The Wizard of Oz and The Court Jester, my novel mixes humor with danger. Like Singing in the Rain, my novel involves music; part of The Cottoncrest Curse takes place in the New Orleans French Quarter, at the end of the 1800s, when jazz is just evolving. And, like The French Connection, the gritty realism of the locale plays a key role in The Cottoncrest Curse.

OMN: You mentioned your top five films. Create another top five list for us on any subject.

MHR: My top 5 favorite authors are: Charles Dickens, because his characters are so real and his writing seems to effortless; Mark Twain, because he cloaked astute comments with wry humor; John LeCarre, because of his intricate plotting and ability to portray our infinite ability to deceive others and be deceived; Ray Bradbury, because he wrote so well in so many different genres; and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who created in his Sherlock Holmes stories a character so indelible that more than 125 years later, Sherlock is still with us and thrilling us with his adventures in movies and books both old and new.

OMN: What's next for you?

MHR: I've almost finished polishing up Privilege, a contemporary thriller written in the film noir tradition. Privilege is about a laconic loner whom everyone is after as dead bodies keep piling up. It will be in final form shortly, ready for publishers to see.

Privilege is about … well, here's an excerpt from the prologue to give you a taste of what's in store:

"Have I become a failure as a lawyer? You bet. While others were climbing up the ladder, I fell off of it.

"I've got a broken-down office, a failed marriage, and a past-due mortgage note.

"Until three weeks ago, I had no clients.

"Well, no clients to speak of, except G.G. Guidry.

"But now G.G. Guidry has been murdered.

"And until three weeks ago, I had no money.

"Except for the $4,452,737 in cash G.G. left with me for safekeeping."

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Michael H. Rubin Book Tour

Michael H. Rubin practices law full time, is one of the managing partners of the multistate law firm of McGlinchey Stafford, PLLC, and heads his firm's appellate practice team. He also serves an adjunct professor, teaching courses on ethics, real estate, and finance at three of the four law schools in Louisiana.

For more information about the author, please visit his website at MRubinBooks.com or find his on Facebook and Twitter.

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The Cottoncrest Curse by Michael H. Rubin

The Cottoncrest Curse
Michael H. Rubin
A Legal Thriller

The bodies of an elderly colonel and his comely young wife are discovered on the staircase of their stately plantation home, their blood still dripping down the wooden balustrades. Within the sheltered walls of Cottoncrest, Augustine and Rebecca Chastaine have met their deaths under the same shroud of mystery that befell the former owner, who had committed suicide at the end of the Civil War. Locals whisper about the curse of Cottoncrest Plantation, an otherworldly force that has now taken three lives. But Sheriff Raifer Jackson knows that even a specter needs a mortal accomplice, and after investigating the crime scene, he concludes that the apparent murder/suicide is a double homicide, with local peddler Jake Gold as the prime suspect.

Assisted by his overzealous deputy, a grizzled Civil War physician, and the racist Knights of the White Camellia, the Sheriff directs a manhunt for Jake through a village of former slaves, the swamps of Cajun country, and the bordellos of New Orleans. But Jake's chameleon-like abilities enable him to elude his pursuers. As a peddler who has built relationships by trading fabric, needles, dry goods, and especially razor-sharp knives in exchange for fur, Jake knows the back roads of the small towns that dot the Mississippi River Delta. Additionally, his uncanny talent for languages allows him to pose as just another local, hiding his true identity as an immigrant Jew who fled Czarist-Russia.

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)  BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)

Paris, City of Night by David Downie is Today's Open Road Daily Deal

Paris, City of Night by David Downie

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Paris, City of Night by David Downie as today's Open Road Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Monday, September 08, 2014.

Paris, City of Night by David Downie

A Jay Grant Thriller

Publisher: Open Road

Price: $1.99 (as of 09/08/2014 at 7:50 AM ET).

Paris, City of Night by David Downie, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

An American photographer in Paris is unwittingly drawn into a nightmarish terror plot when one of his daguerreotypes puts both his life and his adopted city in gravest peril…

There is a Paris that no tourist ever sees — a shadowy secret world of intrigue, betrayal, and murder. The son of a recently deceased CIA agent, photographer and American expatriate Jason Anthony Grant knows the dark side of the City of Light all too well. When an imitation daguerreotype he created for fun falls into the wrong hands, Jay finds himself a target, accused of fraud. Only by recovering the entire series of photographic fakes can he hope to avoid prosecution.

But suddenly, other parties have become interested in his work: former Cold War operatives and Company spooks, French intelligence agents and cutthroat murderers with shady, unrevealed allegiances. They all want Jay for themselves, and not all of them want him alive. He discovers he's become an unwitting pawn in a chilling conspiracy that could destroy the beautiful city he loves — a city that has now become a dark and dangerous maze with treacherous turns and too many dead ends.

Paris, City of Night by David Downie

Playing with Poison by Cindy Blackburn is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

Playing with Poison by Cindy Blackburn

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Playing with Poison by Cindy Blackburn

A Jessie Hewitt, Cue Ball Mystery

Publisher: Cindy Blackburn

… as today's third free mystery ebook. This is a repeat freebie that was last featured on our site on February 14, 2013.

Playing with Poison by Cindy Blackburn, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of September 08, 2014 at 7:20 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

More on today's free book, below.

Pool shark Jessie Hewitt usually knows where the balls will fall and how the game will end.

But when a body lands on her couch, and the cute cop in her kitchen accuses her of murder, even Jessie isn't sure what will happen next.

Playing with Poison by Cindy Blackburn

Zoned for Murder by Evelyn David is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Zoned for Murder by Evelyn David

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Zoned for Murder by Evelyn David

A Sound Shore Times Mystery

Publisher: Trace Evidence Press

… as today's second free mystery ebook.

Zoned for Murder by Evelyn David, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of September 08, 2014 at 7:10 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

More on today's free book, below.

Getting your name in print can be deadly!

Former Newsweek reporter Maggie Brooks has two kids, a dead husband, a mortgage to pay, and a lot of competition when she tries to get back into the shrinking newspaper business. Landing a job with a local paper, she's bored to tears covering bake sales and Little League games.

But when a developer tries to build an outlet mall in a neighboring town, what starts out as potentially a great clip for her resume, suddenly turns dangerous and ugly. Someone will do anything to block the mall's construction. Dirty money, nasty politics, and shady land deals abound as Maggie pursues the scoop that might jumpstart her career.

When murder is added to the mix, she realizes that meeting her deadline might be the last thing she ever does.

Zoned for Murder by Evelyn David

Cold Blooded by Matt Cairns is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Cold Blooded by Matt Cairns

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Cold Blooded by Matt Cairns

A Supernatural Thriller

Publisher: Bay Road Media

… as today's free mystery ebook.

Cold Blooded by Matt Cairns, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of September 08, 2014 at 7:00 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

More on today's free book, below.

Suffering brutal nightmares, and with little memory of how and why he came to be back in his hometown, Jade will finally learn the dark truth of his clouded past. What was the agenda behind his sudden disappearance while fighting in the Middle-East, and the bloody events leading to his return? And why had his father, a war veteran, never spoken of his tour in Vietnam more than thirty years ago?

Together with Rebecca Leigh, a local cop with her own tragic history, Jade will face a steady stream of inhuman assassins, courtesy of the malevolent Louis Faulkner, a powerful figure with sinister ties to Jade's father.

Cold Blooded by Matt Cairns

The Cutting Room Floor by Dawn Klehr is Today's Teen Kindle Daily Deal

The Cutting Room Floor by Dawn Klehr

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature The Cutting Room Floor by Dawn Klehr as today's Teen Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Monday, September 08, 2014.

The Cutting Room Floor by Dawn Klehr

A Mystery/Thriller

Publisher: Flux

Price: $1.99 (as of 09/08/2014 at 6:20 AM ET).

The Cutting Room Floor by Dawn Klehr, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Cameras don't lie … people do …

EXT. THE FROSTS' FRONT PORCH — NIGHT

The camera moves in on RILEY FROST, a beautiful 17-year-old girl with long dark hair, crying on the porch step.

RILEY (voiceover)

The gossip has spread far and wide. My secret girlfriend publicly dumped and outed me at the same time, and now I'm on social death row. But that's not the worst of it. My favorite teacher, Ms. Dunn, was murdered at school. Now I'm beginning to feel like I'm trapped in a whodunit movie. And I can't help thinking that Ms. Dunn's killer is close by.

CUT TO:

CLOSE UP: DESMOND BRANDT

DEZ, a handsome 17-year-old boy, peers through his window at RILEY.

DEZ (voiceover)

I do this a lot — watch my life through the eyes of a director. I want to be that one person in charge. I wish I didn't crave control. But I do … badly. And though I might not be able to control Riley, I can help get her to where she needs to be. Convince. Persuade. Protect. I'll make Riley love me, even if it means I have to play the villain.

The Cutting Room Floor by Dawn Klehr

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (140908)

Big Fish Games

Here is today's mystery and suspense update from Big Fish Games …

• The New Release is Ghosts of the Past: Bones of Meadows Town.

• The current Catch of the Week is Matchmaker: Curse of Deserted Bride, just $2.99 through Sunday, September 14, 2014 only.

• Today's Special Deal — It is Bonus Punch Monday! Receive a BONUS PUNCH with every game purchase, only on Mondays.

Visit the Omnimystery Entertainment Network for more games of mystery and suspense!

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Ghosts of the Past: Bones of Meadows Town

The New Release is Ghosts of the Past: Bones of Meadows Town

The sheriff of Meadows Town has disappeared without a trace, and you've been hired as his replacement. But a recent storm has emptied the town of almost all inhabitants. The streets are boarded up and abandoned, and no one can explain the forces behind the weather … or the terrifying string of murders that has just begun. Only you and your deputy are left to piece together the mystery of mummified bodies and ghostly apparitions. Can an angry spirit really be the cause of the turmoil? Or is there something else afoot in this strangely empty town? Find out in this spooky Hidden Object Adventure game!

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. Also available for  Mac.

Also available for this game:

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Matchmaker: Curse of Deserted Bride

The current Catch of the Week is Matchmaker: Curse of Deserted Bride

It's the return of the famous matchmaker! Helen Jones settles in a town veiled in mystery, and takes on its intrigues. Your task is to puzzle out a sinister curse and help the townspeople find love again! Assisted by the appealing matchmaker, you will plunge deeper and deeper into the town's whirlpool of secrets and find yourself in the middle of events leading to a surprise ending.

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. Also available for  Mac.

Sunday, September 07, 2014

New This Week: Fatal Rhythm, A Medical Center Mystery by R. B. O'Gorman

Fatal Rhythm by R. B. O'Gorman

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during September 2014 and priced $4.99 or less …

Fatal Rhythm by R. B. O'Gorman

A Medical Center Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Immaculada Books

Price: $3.99 (as of 09/07/2014 at 5:30 PM ET).

Fatal Rhythm by R. B. O'Gorman, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

In the pre-dawn hours of the graveyard shift, the ICU at the Houston Heart Institute is quiet, and quietly patients are dying …

Surgery resident Joe Morales dreams of becoming a rich heart doctor. First, he must survive his assignment to an ICU rife with land mines — unexplained patient deaths, rival faculty, fellow resident saboteurs, a cost-slashing administrator, a ruthless insurance executive, a seductive head nurse, a jealous wife, a critically ill son, an overprotective mother, and an orderly distraught over his daughter's death.

To salvage the career he thought he wanted, Joe must determine the cause of the suspicious deaths. In the process, he's forced to re-examine the ethnic and religious heritage that he had rejected.

Fatal Rhythm by R. B. O'Gorman

Organized for Homicide, A Kate McKenzie, Organized Mystery by Ritter Ames, New This Week from Gemma Halliday

Organized for Homicide by Ritter Ames

Gemma Halliday Publishing is a boutique publisher of light-hearted mystery, romantic suspense and romantic comedy novels, perfect for popping into your beach bag for a weekend away or cozying up beside a warm fire for a quiet night in.

We've selected one of their recently published titles to feature here today …

Organized for Homicide by Ritter Ames

A Kate McKenzie, Organized Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Gemma Halliday

Price: $3.99 (as of 09/07/2014 at 4:30 PM ET).

Organized for Homicide by Ritter Ames, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Organization expert Kate McKenzie is looking forward to her newest consignment: organize the cross-country move for a divorced father and his two children. But when a dead body turns up, Kate's carefully organized plans are thrown into chaos. Was it an accident? Or murder?

Kate aims to find out and ends up falling more emotionally involved than she'd expected when the victim's teenaged daughter becomes the police's lead suspect. As a mother herself, she just can't let the girl not only lose a mother but possibly lose her freedom and future as well.

While the police follow the chain of evidence, Kate follows her gut, leading her on a dangerous investigation that could result in more than one death if she doesn't watch her step …

Organized for Homicide by Ritter Ames

Gemini, A Novel of Suspense by Carol Cassella, Now Available at a Special Price

Gemini by Carol Cassella

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Simon & Schuster …

Gemini by Carol Cassella

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Price: $2.99 (as of 09/07/2014 at 4:00 PM ET).

Gemini by Carol Cassella, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

A stranger's life hangs in the balance. What if you had the power to decide if she lives or dies?

Dr. Charlotte Reese works in the intensive care unit of Seattle's Beacon Hospital, tending to patients with the most life-threatening illnesses and injuries. Her job is to battle death — to monitor erratic heartbeats, worry over low oxygen levels, defend against infection and demise.

One night a Jane Doe is transferred to her care from a rural hospital on the Olympic Peninsula. This unidentified patient remains unconscious, the victim of a hit and run. As Charlotte and her team struggle to stabilize her, the police search for the driver who fled the scene.

Days pass, Jane's condition worsens, and her identity remains a mystery. As Charlotte finds herself making increasingly complicated medical decisions that will tie her forever to Jane's fate, her usual professional distance evaporates. She's plagued by questions: Who is Jane Doe? Why will no one claim her? Who should decide her fate if she doesn't regain consciousness — and when?

Perhaps most troubling, Charlotte wonders if a life locked in a coma is a life worth living.

Enlisting the help of her boyfriend, Eric, a science journalist, Charlotte impulsively sets out to uncover Jane Doe's past. But the closer they get to the truth, the more their relationship is put to the test. It is only when they open their hearts to their own feelings toward each other — and toward life itself — that Charlotte and Eric will unlock Jane Doe's shocking secret, and prepare themselves for a miracle.

Gemini by Carol Cassella

To Fudge or Not to Fudge by Nancy Coco, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during September 2014

To Fudge or Not to Fudge by Nancy Coco

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during September 2014 …

To Fudge or Not to Fudge by Nancy Coco

An Allie McMurphy, Candy-Coated Mystery (2nd)

Publisher: Kensington

To Fudge or Not to Fudge by Nancy Coco, Amazon Kindle format

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for September 2014. For new hardcover mysteries, visit New Mysteries where for a list of September 2014 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

More about our featured title, below …

Mulch ado about murder …

With summer in bloom and tourists afoot, Allie is out walking her pup, Mal, when the curious canine digs up a bone from under a flowering lilac bush. The bone leads to a toe that's missing a body. For the successful confectionaire it's only the first in a series of sour events in the middle of the island's Lilac Fest.

When her stint on a cooking reality show swirls up a trail of foul play, Allie will have to outwit a cunning killer if she wants to continue living la dolce vida …

To Fudge or Not to Fudge by Nancy Coco

Easy Go, A Suspense Thriller by Michael Crichton writing as John Lange, Now Available at a Special Price

Easy Go by Michael Crichton writing as John Lange

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Open Road …

Easy Go by Michael Crichton writing as John Lange

A Suspense Thriller

Publisher: Open Road

Price: $1.99 (as of 09/07/2014 at 3:00 PM ET).

Easy Go by Michael Crichton writing as John Lange, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

When he finds clues to an ancient treasure, an Egyptologist plans a very modern heist …

Brilliant Egyptologist Harold Barnaby has discovered a message hidden inside a particularly difficult set of hieroglyphics. It just may lead him to a secret tomb holding the greatest riches of the ancient world. Barnaby could put his name to the most fantastic archaeological find of the century. But he doesn't just want to dig it up. He wants to steal it.

With the help of a smuggler, a thief, and an English lord, he plans his heist. They find that tomb raiding is trickier than they thought, and those who steal from dead Egyptians face dangers worse than a mummy's ancient curse.

Easy Go by Michael Crichton writing as John Lange

The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert, New in Bookstores during September 2014

The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert

Today's featured new hardcover mystery, suspense, or thriller title scheduled to be published during September 2014 is …

The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert

A Darling Dahlias Mystery (5th in series)

Publisher: Berkley Hardcover

The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert, Amazon Kindle format  The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert, Nook format  The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert, iTune iBook format  The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert, Kobo format

For a list of more new hardcover titles to be published this month, visit our New Mysteries page for September 2014. For new paperback mysteries, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where a selection of September 2014 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers are shelved.

More about our featured title, below …

It's the spring of 1933 and times are tough all over. The only businessman not struggling is moonshiner Mickey LeDoux, though he still has to steer clear of federal agents. But banks are closing all over the country, and the small town of Darling is no exception. Folks are suddenly caught short on cash and everyone is in a panic.

Desperate to avoid disaster, several town leaders — including Alvin Duffy, the bank's new vice president — hatch a plan to print Darling Dollars on newspaperman Charlie Dickens' printing press. The "funny money" can serve as temporary currency so the town can function. But when the first printing of the scrip disappears, the Darling Dahlias set out to discover who made an unauthorized withdrawal.

Meanwhile County Treasurer Verna Tidwell questions whether she can trust Alvin Duffy — and the feelings he stirs up inside her. And Liz Lacy learns her longtime beau may be forced into a shotgun wedding. Seems other troubles don't just go away when there's a crisis. There'll be no pennies from heaven, but if anyone can balance things out, folks can bank on the Darling Dahlias …

The Darling Dahlias and the Silver Dollar Bush by Susan Wittig Albert

New This Week: On Ice, A Quin St. James Mystery by T. J. MacGregor

On Ice by T. J. MacGregor

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during September 2014 and priced $4.99 or less …

On Ice by T. J. MacGregor

A Quin St. James Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Crossroad Press

Price: $3.99 (as of 09/07/2014 at 2:00 PM ET).

Originally published in hardcover by Ballantine in 1989; this is its first appearance as an ebook.

On Ice by T. J. MacGregor, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

She was beautiful. Blonde. And bloody. McCleary doesn't know who she is. And he can't remember who he is.

When the maid walked into the motel room, she found Mike McCleary sacked out on one bed and a dead woman on the other. To the police, the private investigator claims he doesn't know the victim or, for that matter, his own name. And despite the knot at the back of his skull and the powerful hypnotic in his blood, McCleary is still the number one suspect.

It's up to his wife and partner, Quin St. James, to prove him innocent — and that's not all. Because the killer who stole McCleary's past has returned to claim his life. And someone with twenty years of memories on ice makes one easy target.

On Ice by T. J. MacGregor

Star Witness by Lisa Phillips, New from Harlequin Love Inspired Suspense in September 2014

Star Witness by Lisa Phillips

Omnimystery News is pleased to introduce a new mystery, suspense, or thriller title from Harlequin, published this month …

Star Witness by Lisa Phillips

Imprint: Love Inspired Suspense

Star Witness by Lisa Phillips, Amazon Kindle format

For more information about the book, see a synopsis, below.

Mackenzie Winters spent years building a life in Witness Protection, but when someone shoots at her, she fears her cover has been blown. Could the brother of the drug lord she put away be here for revenge?

Mackenzie must rely on her handler's twin, world-weary Delta Force soldier Aaron Hanning, to protect her. Aaron doesn't want to be anyone's hero, but he can't let this brave woman die.

Now, with danger stalking them, they'll have to make a daring choice that means life or death — for them both.

Star Witness by Lisa Phillips

Deadly Intentions, A Blackmoore Sisters, Paranormal Cozy Mystery by Leighann Dobbs, Now Available at a Special Price

Deadly Intentions by Leighann Dobbs

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the author …

Deadly Intentions by Leighann Dobbs

A Blackmoore Sisters, Paranormal Cozy Mystery (5th in series)

Publisher: Leighann Dobbs

Price: $0.99 (as of 09/07/2014 at 1:00 PM ET).

Deadly Intentions by Leighann Dobbs, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

What really happened to Johanna Blackmoore seven years ago?

Jolene Blackmoore has been asking that question about her mother's mysterious death for a long time … and now she's determined to get an answer. Little does she know, her quest will change the course of her and her three sisters' lives forever.

A magical locket, a long-estranged aunt that shows up out of the blue, and a diabolical bad guy all play a part in pulling the girls into the heat of danger, and they are forced to put their newly-found paranormal skills to the test in a battle where losing could be deadly.

Before it's all over, friends might turn out to be enemies, enemies might turn out to be friends and a long hidden secret about the girls' ancestry will come to light.

Will they finally discover the shocking truth of what really happened to their mother?

Deadly Intentions by Leighann Dobbs

Mystery Godoku Puzzle for September 08, 2014

Mystery Godoku

A new has been created by the editors of the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books and is now available on our website.

Godoku is similar to Sudoku, but uses letters instead of numbers. To give you a headstart, we provide you a mystery clue to fill in a complete row or column (if you choose to use it!).

— ◊ —

Mystery Godoku Puzzle for September 08, 2014

This week's letters and mystery clue:

C E F I K N O R T

Dana King's Penns River mysteries feature this Chicago PI (9 letters).

We now have two weeks of our puzzles on one page in PDF format for easier printing. Print this week's puzzle here.

Previous puzzles are stored in the Mystery Godoku Archives.

Enjoy the weekly Mystery Godoku Puzzle from the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, and Thanks for visiting our website!

An Excerpt from The Catch, a Vanessa Michael Munroe Thriller by Taylor Stevens

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Taylor Stevens
The Catch by Taylor Stevens

Earlier today we featured a conversation with thriller writer Taylor Stevens, and in this post we are pleased to introduce you to her most recent book, The Catch (Crown: July 2014 hardcover, audio and ebook formats) with an excerpt, the first chapter.

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The Catch by Taylor Stevens

CHATTER ROSE FROM BELOW AS women, heads wrapped in colorful scarves and dressed in ankle-length sheaths, passed by with their bundles, and scratching from behind told her that the climber had pulled himself over the ledge, that he'd stood and dusted hands off on his pants, that he made a slow, deliberate stride in her direction.
  Vanessa Michael Munroe didn't turn to look. Didn't acknowledge him when he stopped beside her to peer down at the street, ignored him when he sat a few feet away and with a satisfied sigh dropped his legs over the side, leaned back and surveyed the area.
  Most of what surrounded them was single- and double-storied buildings, mostly residential and strung along in both directions, some nestled within dirt-strewn walled compounds, and some not.
  "It's a good view," Leo said. "Better breeze up top. Not so much smell."
  She didn't answer; continued to ignore his presence. He could have spared himself the effort of the climb — spared her the effort of small talk — if he'd simply waited until she'd returned. Instead, he'd come for her, which was his way of marking territory: a reminder that he was familiar with her routines and could invade them if he cared to. She allowed him to believe it, just as she allowed him to believe that he knew who she was, where she'd come from, and why she was here.
  They sat in silence and, in spite of the lowering sun and the evening breeze that had begun to cool the air, sweat still trickled down her back and neck, soaking her shirt. The heat didn't bother her the way it would him, so she let him have the discomfort and the lengthening quiet until finally he broke and said, "We board at two this morning."
  His English was thickly accented and that he chose to use her language instead of the French with which they typically conversed, was more of his pointless point-making.
  She said, "I'm still not interested."
  He nodded again, as if contemplating her defiance, and then stood, and with his toes poking over the edge, studied the ground. Wiped his hands on his pants again and took a step back. "It's for you to decide," he said. "But if you don't board, I want you out by tonight."
  Chin still to her knee, focus out over the dirt alleys, rooftops, and laundry flapping on many lines, she said, "Why? If I come, I'll just get in your way."
  "That may be," he said. "But still you come. Or you leave."
  She glanced up, the first she'd deigned to look at him. "And then who'll be your fixer?"
  He took another step away from the ledge. "I managed before you got here," he said, and began to walk away. "I'll manage after you're gone."
   She straightened and her gaze followed him. "It's not you who has to manage without me," she said. "You shouldn't be the one to make the decision."
  Leo paused but kept his back toward her.
  She studied his posture, counted seconds, readied to slide out of the way if in response to her provocation he moved to shove her off the building.
  "You'd have been better off making arrangements to board in the afternoon," she said, "when the khat trucks come into town."
  His hands, which had tightened into fists, loosed a little. He turned toward her, and she watched him just long enough for him to catch her eye, then she shied away in that guilty manner people caught staring often did.
  This was part of her persona here, hesitant and non-confrontational. Made it easier for the men to dismiss and underestimate her, kept her beneath the radar, though for how much longer was up for debate. Like the rest of the guys, Leo had lived more life than his forty-something years indicated; he wasn't stupid. But he was often gone and when around she went out of her way to avoid him to keep from giving him enough access to her that he grew curious.
  With her back still to him, and his eyes boring into her, Munroe said, "Who're you trying to avoid by boarding so early? Ship's agent?"
  "Yes."
  "Even if he's not there, he'll hear about it. If you go when the khat trucks arrive, every man in the port is going to be focused on getting his fix — no one will pay attention to you."
  "To us."
  "Maybe."
  "You'll come, Michael."
  Not a request or a question, an order.
  "Maybe," she said.
  Leo turned again and strode toward the portion of roof they'd both climbed over, the part where there was less of an overhang and it was possible to get from ledge to balcony and down to the dividing wall without as much risk of slipping and breaking a neck. Louder, Munroe said, "If it wasn't for me, you wouldn't even get into the port tonight."
  Leo didn't answer, waved her off and kept walking. He lowered himself over the edge and, at some point on the way down, let out a grunt. Munroe stood. A thud marked his drop from the wall to the ground of the compound next door and so she turned and followed the rooftop edge to the opposite corner where she caught the colors of the port's shipping containers stacked four and five high.
  Somewhere near there the freighter Favorita would soon dock, if she hadn't already, and Leo expected Munroe to be on it. He forced her to pick between poisons: board the ship as part of his team of armed transit guards, risking her life on the water to defend his client's ship if attacked by pirates, or leave the crew — and it wasn't difficult to take a guess as to why. No matter what she chose, he got her out from under his roof and away from his wife.
  Munroe crossed the roof to the spot where Leo had gone over. Lowered and dropped from the ledge into the narrow balcony. Through the glass on the door the five-year-old girl peered out and waved, and Munroe waved back. The girl laughed and hid her face and Munroe grinned.
  Months of coming up here, of being noticed and smiled at, so many nights of hide-and-seek with sleep, of watching the stars fade under the rising glare of the sun, and not once had any of the apartment occupants spoken to her. She'd learned their routines, sometimes left gifts of nuts and fruits on the balconies when only the children were home. Occasionally handcrafted presents waited for her in exchange, but not today, which was fitting for a good-bye. The girl peered out again, and Munroe smiled, then slipped over the rail and maneuvered into position to drop to the next balcony, perhaps for the final time.
  For six months Djibouti had provided the comforting chaos that only the third-world could offer, and for these six months, navigating the nepotistic politics, the culture of graft and paranoia, the stench and the sounds and the maze of a society steeped in khat drug addiction had played snake charmer to the serpents inside her head.
  She'd come full circle, back to the African continent: had manipulated herself into the arms of a mercenary team as she'd done a decade ago, and as it had also been then, she wasn't here as one of Leo's ship-jumping little-army-for-hire, but as a linguist and a fixer. She'd wanted nothing to do with the weapons and the machismo. Though she had the skill to be one of the boys, she'd come to him as an errand runner. This was her past, comforting in a way that home might be comforting, if anything could ever be home. English-teaching parents had been her cover story — one that didn't invite questions — and really, Leo and Amber Marie had no reason to doubt. She got things done, smoothed out the abrasion of working in the grit: familiar and rote — what clocking in for a data entry job might be to anyone else — Djibouti had kept the inner voices quiet, gave her a way to keep busy without the responsibility or the burden of life-altering decisions or people depending on her for survival. She didn't need Leo's job for the money but for the sanity, and though she could eventually find something else, she didn't want to. She was dead here, liked it that way, and wasn't ready to come back to life.
  Munroe went hand-over-hand, from second balcony to wall, and dropped into the compound that housed the two single-story buildings that were Leo's base of operations. She crossed caked dirt and passed beneath the one large tree to the rearward house which was three small bedrooms and a few common areas that she shared with two other team members.
  Opened the front door.
  Natan lay lengthwise on the living room couch, his bare foot wrapped in an ankle bandage propped up on the wooden armrest. In place of ignoring her as he typically did, he watched her, and when she'd crossed half the room he said, "Leo is looking for you."
  "He found me," she said, and stopped. Doubled back and stood in front of his foot. "How bad is it really?"
  Natan shrugged.
  "That's what I figured," she said, and his expression gave away what his words didn't: he knew just as well as she did why Leo had made this switch, and whatever resentment Natan have felt at staying behind over a minor injury was probably compensated by watching Leo's jealousy reach boiling point.
  Munroe continued down the tiled hallway toward her room.
  She'd never claimed to be male, not to Leo, not to Amber Marie, not to any of the rest of the men. Unlike so many other misrepresentations in her line of work, this one hadn't been calculated or deliberate, was just a continuation of the way she preferred to dress and operate in countries where being a single woman had the potential to cause endless complications. Long and lean, with an androgynous body, it wasn't a difficult transformation. Over the years the pretense of behaving and working as a boy had become more natural than assuming her own identity.
  She'd shown up in Leo's office unannounced, dressed as she'd already been, and asked for a job. He'd given her two weeks to prove her value, and with her skillset and experience it had been easy to ingratiate herself and create dependence, to become part of an operation which, for all of its excellence in weapons and security, lacked the finesse needed to inoffensively grease the daily bureaucratic roadblock. The side effects of coming onto the team as a male had been a bonus: she didn't have endure sexist quips, no one hit on her, and Leo's men all stayed beyond the boundaries of man-to-man personal space.
  Except she'd done her job too well, her name had been uttered once too often on the lips of the boss man's wife, and because Munroe had never bothered to clarify her gender at the outset and it was too late to clarify now, appearances had turned her into the only guy the wife hung out with and repeatedly talked about during the long stretches the others were away. Call her oblivious, a husband's jealousy was a complication Munroe hadn't planned on.
  Munroe paused in front of her room to listen down the hall for Victor.
  If the Spaniard was in, he wasn't moving about. She opened her door to bare personal space: a bed she rarely slept in, an empty desk shoved up beside the bed, and a narrow armoire with a few changes of clothes. None of the furniture was from the same set much less the same decade. Her room had no pictures. No personal items. Nothing that said she belonged here.
  Munroe sat on the bed and pulled from beneath it a backpack that had been with her for nearly ten years and twice as many countries. Held it in her hands and stared at it without seeing while Leo's options chased each other around her brain: Board the ship, or leave the crew.
  To keep his marriage calm, Leo needed to make her departure look like her own doing. She had no attachments that would make walking away difficult, but his clumsy, indelicate, ham-handed approach at backing her into a corner irritated her just enough to prod her into proving points of her own. A little manipulation, a little backstabbing and the fight in her had breached surface again.
  Munroe sighed. Perhaps she wasn't as dead to the world as she'd thought. She stood. Unzipped the pack and then dumped the few clothes from the armoire into it. Against her better judgment, she'd board that ship tonight, Somali pirates be damned, and when she got back, when she was ready, she'd leave Leo's company and Djibouti on her own terms.
  Movement and a knock at the door interrupted her thoughts. Amber Marie, the other half of the company, the real brains behind the operation, stood in the doorframe, blond hair tied back in a severe bun, baggy clothes hiding both her shapely figure and her age, which was a good ten or more years younger than her husband's. It was Amber Munroe truly worked for, solving problems in a world that created new ones daily.
  "Leo says you're going with him," Amber said.
  "I might."
  "You don't have much time left to decide," Amber said, and paused. "I guess either way you're leaving tonight?"
  Munroe nodded. "Seems that way."
  Amber smiled, making it difficult to tell if she understood that Natan's injury was really just a conveniently timed excuse that allowed Leo to force Munroe's hand. Amber said, "I figure once you get a taste for the ships, Leo will steal you away and you'll never want to be my go-to-guy again." Gave a half-hearted attempt at another smile. "Either way I came to say good-bye and to thank you for everything."
  Munroe returned the half smile. "It's been a good run," she said, and in response, Amber shifted in the doorframe, anguish in her body language. If Natan hadn't been in the living room, Leo's wife would have invited herself in, sat on the bed and in response Munroe would have walked her through logic as she'd done so many times before, would have reassured her that based on probability alone, Leo would be home soon and that stress was pointless. Or they would have sat and laughed about the local inefficiencies and exchanged stories that played to similarities in lives that had left them both strangers to their home land, citizens of a planet on which, no matter where they went, neither of them ever really belonged. But given the way things were now, Amber remained leaned against the wood, arms crossed, trying to look brave.
  "So I'll see you when you get back," she said.
  Munroe shoved the last of the clothes into the backpack, and gave her the same answer she'd given Leo. Maybe.
  Amber Marie nodded and with a mock salute left for the living room. The few words she exchanged with Natan filtered back as a mumble, and then the front door closed to quiet. Munroe stared through the empty doorframe.
  Amber's parents had been English teachers, not missionaries, but the dynamics were the same. Like Munroe, Amber's loyalties, few as they were, were to people — not to any place or culture or flag. Born abroad, raised abroad, ever on the move and anxious if she stayed in one place too long, caught between cultures with no allegiance to the country stamped on her passport, the easiest way to answer the question where are you from? was to lie.
  Munroe slung the pack over her shoulder and shut the armoire with finality. In the living room Natan, still on the couch with his ankle propped up, called out as she strode through. "Where are you going?" he said, and she ignored him, just as she had Leo.

Chapter 1 excerpt from the galley edition; Copyright © Taylor Stevens 2014.

— ♦ —

Taylor Stevens
Photo provided courtesy of Taylor Stevens; photo credit Alyssa Skyes

Born in New York State, and into the Children of God, raised in communes across the globe and denied an education beyond sixth grade, Stevens was in her twenties when she broke free to follow hope and a vague idea of what possibilities lay beyond. She now lives in Texas, and is at work on the next Munroe novel.

For more information about the author, please visit her website at TaylorStevensBooks.com or find her on Facebook and Twitter.

— ♦ —

The Catch by Taylor Stevens

The Catch
Taylor Stevens
A Vanessa Michael Munroe Thriller

The adrenaline-fueled work has left her with blood on her hands and a soul stained with guilt. Having borne the burden of one death too many, Munroe has fled to Djibouti, Africa. There, where her only responsibility is greasing the wheels of commerce for a small maritime security company, she finds stillness — until her boss pressures her to join his team as an armed transit guard on a ship bound for Kenya.

Days into the voyage, Munroe discovers the security contract is merely cover for a gunrunning operation of which she wants no part. The ship is invaded off the Somali coast and in a moment of impulse while fighting her way out, she drags the unconscious captain with her. But nothing about the hijacking is what it seems.

The pirates were never after the ship; they'd come for the captain. In chasing him, they make their one mistake: targeting Munroe raises the killer's instinct she's tried so hard to bury. Wounded and on the run, Vanessa Michael Munroe will use the life of her catch as bait and bartering chip to manipulate every player with a stake in the ship's outcome, and find a way to wash her conscience clean.

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