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giveaway – Page 248 – Luv Saving Money

Life in the Atmosphere Book Tour & Giveaway

 

Life
in the Atmosphere
by
Anthony Wilson
Genre:
YA, Coming of Age
 
Jahlil
Adams is just a regular teenager. In fact, you could say that he is
“super regular” with his glasses, comic books, and cheap fashion
sense. He doesn’t want popularity. He doesn’t want a pretty
girlfriend. He wants to just be who he is. Well that and not to be
bullied by Max Maniac. 

 

 

Yet,
everything changes once Mr. Malachi gave Jahlil a necklace that he
didn’t even want.

 

After
that, everything was not the same. In fact, Jahlil began to realizethat there was much more to who he was. There was much more to who
Mr. Malachi was. There was much more to his existence. The lid of
limitations was lifted from Jahlil’s life.

 

Now,
all that mattered was the limitations that the sky had to offer.

 

 
 

 

Anthony
Wilson is a new author that hails from the Midwest. Being that this
is his first book, he took the extra care of creating a 1st person
perspective from the realities of teenage living in the year 2000.
Being that Anthony Wilson is an educator, he wanted to create stories
that students in middle (and even high) school could relate to. Also,
he wanted to create stories that his teenage daughter would be proud
of. When he isn’t being a husband, teaching, or writing, Anthony
Wilson also maintains his health through physical activity. 

CHAPTER ONE
Things were rough for me as a 15-year-old boy living in the hood. I don’t care
what anyone says.
I had to be the most awkward and sensitive boy ever. Not only did I wear glasses,
I also had the worst fashion sense. Oversized shirts and Walmart clothes came off as my
wardrobe. To top it all off, I rarely kept up my appearance. I didn’t alway keep my hair
brushed. Yet, I kept my teeth clean and my clothes washed. But who cares when I keep
holes and stains in my fresh trailer trash clothing? I guess you can say I may have been
born to lose.
Or, I didn’t understand what winning meant.
Regardless of it all, I kept my composure. I tried to do my work in school during
my ninth-grade year. Not many girls liked me, but it did not matter. Most of them
weren’t an interest to me. All I cared about were my comic books and my basketball. No
more, no less. Everything else came off as extra-curricular.
That is, until the faithful day I got into the crosshairs with Maxwell Smith a.k.a.
“Max the Maniac”.
The day carried itself as a regular old day walking to Montclair High School.
Winters in the Midwest are always pretty cold. However, with the uneven brisk lakefront
winds coming in, it felt much colder than perceived. So, you know a little man like me
had to bundle up. Big jacket, a couple of scarfs, and about two different shirts with
gloves and a skullcap were the ideal wear for this madness. I kept myself pretty warm
until I became snatched up in the alley as I walked to school.
The tug threw me to the ground by a dingy old garage. As I looked up, wiping the
snow out of my eyes, I saw him. Max Maniac wanted to do his worst to me.
“Your money or ya life, kid. Your money or your life,” he said with a stone-cold
glare. Maniac’s stare became so frozen it could freeze a polar bear’s toenails.
“My mom gave me this money,” I said, trembling within my clothes. For it to be
such a cold winter morning, I became strangely hot at the time. Call it nervousness. Call
it adrenaline. Whatever it may have been, it had me sweating like a hog in heat.
“Oh, okay,” he said kindly, helping me up. As I became close to making it to my
feet, he blindsided me with a slap to the face. Due to the piercing wind and below
freezing temperature, the slap hurt more than it needed to. My face ached. Before I
could get the pain out of my mind, the sharp pain took over once Max kicked me in the
back. The pain became so intense that it almost paralyzed me.
“Alright, alright…take it. Take it all.”
I tearfully pulled the five dollars out of my right pocket and handed it to Max. He
snatched it from my hand with sheer force. Sneering at me, he had the nerve to say,
“You better not make me keep harassing you for it, punk.” Max trotted off while I stayed
seated, wallowing in the pain of being his inferior.
I knew this could not keep going on. I would have to keep being hungry forever if
I kept giving up my lunch money. I would have understood if I possessed a Starter jacket
or a pair of Jordan’s that people wanted. But I had none of the material stuff people
wanted. All I had were the comic books in my bag and the lunch money in my pocket to
eat with. And now, I had to be hungry for the rest of the week? Devastating. Nothing
more than devastating.
As I lumbered to the school, I had to make sure I wiped the snow off of me, so it
wouldn’t stick too long. Let it stay on there, and it would melt. Let it melt and my body
would be wet. Nothing could be worse than sitting in class with wet clothes. Ninth grade
in the year 2000 should not have been so rough. Alas, that is how it all happened.
Making it through the double doors past the principal’s office, I crept so nobody
would notice me. The shame of being bullied out of my lunch money had been an
ongoing thing for a while now. Nonetheless, it never becomes customary. I never gotused to it. So, each and every week, I would make sure to become invisible to those
around me. I wanted to make sure no one knew my inner struggle. Or my outer disgrace.
“Hey, young man. Are you okay?” asked Mr. Malachi, the school janitor. He
carried himself as a cool cat, if I would say so myself. He stayed right above me in the
same apartment building I lived in. He kept his demeanor very respectful, but also very
quiet. Weirdly, I would always notice he found a way to always be around me when I
went outside. It seemed as if he kept an eye on me. It felt kinda weird on a pedophile
level. So, I usually spoke but stayed away.
“Hey. Yeah, I’m cool,” I stated, trying to get away from those piercing eyes. They
always glanced at me in my neighborhood.
“You sure? You look like you had a rough morning. Want to walk and talk about
it?” Mr. Malachi asked, hands in full “shrug” position. He looked okay enough at this
moment. Contrary to my previous beliefs, he presented himself as quite nonchalant. He
almost had an aura about him. Then again, I had been beaten and robbed in the alley
some odd minutes before. Blame it all on disorientation.
“No, sir. I’m okay. I need to hurry up to class,” I said as I sped off.
Geez, Mr. Malachi came off as weird. First, he always wants to look at me and
stare at me while I played outside at the apartment complex. Now, he wants to chat?
Naw, man. I know about the evil men giving candy to kids to take them and molest
them. I’m good with the situation I’m in.
Making it to my locker, I noticed most of the hallway being clear. This gave me
temporary relief until someone startled me from behind.
“Do you ever smile?” the soft voice said as I turned around. It had to be Trisha
Thompson, the pretty nerd girl of ninth grade. And the truth came to be: my assumption
became reality. While many would make notice of her glasses, I made notice of her soft
chocolate skin and her pretty smile. Plus, she possessed smarts that eclipsed the rest of
these idiots I became surrounded by. Good lord, I adored her.
“Yeah. Ain’t nothin’ to smile about,” I retorted with a bad attitude. Using a better
tone with her seemed to be the better option. All around, I came off out of character and
bitter. But before I could clean up the mess I made, she said “Well, excuse me for
caring”, and walked off.
Man, I couldn’t catch a break!
The only good thing about it all is that I did not end up late for Miss Ellis’s class.
If there could be anything could be said about Miss Ellis, is she had a wonderful class.
Not too decorated but had enough colorful flair to keep us engaged, Miss Ellis kept an
environment conducive to learning [ And yes, I do mean conducive. I like words like
conducive. Sue me.]
“Morning class!” she started off each day of the morning.
“Good morning, Miss Ellis!” we would all shout in unison. Some would try to drag
it out and be cute. Whenever she got tired of the foolishness, she would give a look
sharper than a laser cutting through butter. I always found her look to be hilarious.
“Alright, your assignment is to read the book “Bud, Not Buddy”.
“Awwwwwww…” the entire class emphatically let out.
“Now, now,” Miss Ellis related with her serious yet soothing tone. “You all have a
chance to read a story won an award for its excellence. Do not miss the opportunity to
learn something worthwhile. This book can be enlightening. Work to draw parallels
from what you read, okay?”
“Miss Ellis, what is enlightening and what are parallels?” noted James, the
prototypical class clown within the ninth-grade class. Everybody else either snickered or
rolled their eyes.
“Well, anyone wants to explain what I said by using smaller words? You all are
pretty smart, so I’m not explaining myself more than once,” noted Miss Ellis, with full
seriousness to test our mettle. All the students looked at each other, waiting for the
other person to take the risk of raising their hand. Me? I kept trying to sink into mychair and play like Sue Storm [i.e. Invisible Woman= become invisible]. Trisha looked
dead at me. She figured I knew the answer. But, forget all of the immaterial. I wanted to
be unseen and unheard. So, being tired of me not taking the risk, her hand rose.
“Yes, Trish. Did you get the message?”
“Well, Miss Ellis,” noted Trisha in all her teenage intelligence, “parallels go along
with showing how things are the same. Enlightening means it helps you learn more. So,
you want us to see how we are like Bud and learn something. Right?”
With an emphatic laugh, Miss Ellis says “You are correct. Thank you, Trisha, for
the wonderful summary you gave the class. Class, it’s time you learned the value of
reading. Take the time to learn something for real. This is why each one of you possess a
book on top of your desk. Your assignment from here until the bell ring: please start
reading.”
And easier than expected, the room hushed and we were reading. As I read, the
time progressed from one point to another. By the time I got into the story well enough,
the bell rang and time shifted for my next class. I gathered my things and scurried along
to the next class.
“Hey, Jahlil! Wait up!” Trisha yelled as she tried to catch up with me. I stopped in
the middle of my tracks so I could listen to what she had to say.
“Yo. I’m sorry for what I did earlier. You forgive me?” I noted before she could say
anything to me.
“Yeah. But, what is wrong?” she inquires. The look in her eyes said I could trust
her with all of my heart. I don’t know what this girl possessed that drove me crazy. It felt
like everything seemed more worthwhile. Life with her around became great. Maybe the
attraction blinded me. Maybe her kindness influenced my opinion. Or her spirit. I don’t
know. But whatever it could have been, I felt good around her. I felt right.
“Max. He is always taking my lunch money,” I noted to her with a look of pity and
seriousness.
“You should tell someone.”
“I don’t know if telling would be a good idea,” I noted, feeling nervous thinking
about the pummeling I would get if I squealed on Max. I know I would get my butt
handed to me on a silver platter if I told. And I am referring to a silver platter with
garnish and vegetables.
“No. Either you go or I will go,” Trisha said.
“Okay. But you are going with me,” I said with plenty of stern seriousness.
Let’s think here, people: this moment scared me!
“Alright. I’ll go with you.”
So, we went and told the principal. As I told my story to Mr. Baldwin about how I
had been harassed, I could see the concern over his face. Once it happened, he excused
me from the office and had Max called down. During the time, I walked out and saw
Trisha at the front.
“Let’s hurry up and get outta here,” I said with an uneasy feeling I could not
explain. As we both walked out, my favorite weirdo (Mr. Malachi) stopped me in my
tracks. Not this again. I started to believe I became a magnet for madness.
“Hey, Young Blood! Come here real quick,” he said as he walked around with a
mop bucket coming out of the bathroom. As I cautiously walked toward him, he reached
out his right fist. In his hand resided a crucifix on a beaded chain. Nothing fancy. Some
regular silver jewelry. “I think you are gonna need this. You got some trouble with Max,
I hear?”
Insurmountably stunned, I almost shouted “How you know about any of it?”
“Look, Young Blood. Don’t worry about your situation, man. You need to wear
this cross around your neck at all times. It’s for protection. Whenever you need extra
help, rub on this cross.”
Yeah, okay. Now I know he is a child molester, a sideline reverend, or a substance
abuse addict. Whatever it may have been, I stood dumbfounded he knew my business.

No one sat in the office but me, Trisha, and the principal. We had left the principal. So, I
highly doubt he told either. This situation becoming very, very strange.
Still, any type of help would not be turned away. So, I took the necklace (like a
dummy) and put it on. But if Mr. Malachi tried to touch me, I had to report him.
The day moved on at a speedy pace, yet slower than I would have hoped. It may
have been the rumbling in my stomach kept me unnerved. Also, the sneers and jeers I
kept getting from Max every time I passed by him in the hallway did not help me. Even
Rip, Man-Man, and Bink would give me those looks. Those soul piercing stares. I knew
trouble awaited me as soon as 3:00 p.m. hit the clock.
And then the bell rang, signaling school time ended for the day. My ending
became my future.
“Whatever happens, don’t fight him. Well, maybe you gotta fight,” noted Trish
right next to me at my locker. I could feel it all as she peered at me through her glasses. I
saw her concern. But I felt too busy being scared for my life.
“I guess I gotta fight, huh?” I loudly questioned with no belief in the mess I got
myself into. All of this for trying to be honest. For trying to avoid another beating for my
lunch money. Now, my anti-bullying stance just led to more bullying. Great. Great
indeed.
“No, Jahlil. Look. I don’t want you to do anything crazy. You know there is…there
are four of them. They want to get you. Wait…” Trisha says before trailing off into
thought. “I got it!”
“You got what?” I wondered out loud.
“I know what we are going to do, Jahlil. I know EXACTLY what we are going to
do. I got an escape route. Follow me.”
So, me and Trisha darted through the hallways into the back of the school. The
back doors led to the football field. In between the space and the football field sat a
parking lot. I had NO clue as to what she figured she could do, but I hoped that it
worked in our favor.
“See? I told you this would be better. Now you gotta wait here and don’t try to do
anything foolish,” she said.
“Like what? I still gotta make it home, remember?” I questioned her, looking all
wide eyed like I just witnessed the birth of sweet baby Jesus.
“I know, I know. But cool out, though. You gonna make it home safe. I promise.”
“Alright, whatever. So, what are we supposed to do under the football field
bleachers until it’s time to go, woman? It’s cold out here, remember?”
“Well,” Trisha began, “we can sit here and talk. We are friends, somehow.”
“Somehow? You’re joking, right? You the only person I know who looks forward
to seeing me on a daily basis.”
“Alright, we are friends. But, dang! Nobody knows who you are and what you are
about. All I know is you are unhappy most of the time.”
Lord, why me? Why did I have to feel like I played Caine in Menace 2 Society
when the old bald-headed detective interrogating him. Couldn’t we try to keep each
other warm instead of having all of these weird talks about my plans, my desires, and
why? I hated talking about myself. Half of the time, I hated my life. But, since its Trisha,
I guess I can warm up to her interrogating ways. The minute she asks something crazy,
though…the conversation is over.
“Okay, ask me any question you have on your mind and I will answer it,” I said,
with my soul wincing at the thought of sharing myself with someone else.
“Any question?”
“Any question your heart desires.”
“Okay, let me get them outta my brain first,” Trish says while rolling her eyes. I
think she kept trying to gain access my mental Rolodex. This all meant I not going to be
left alone anytime soon. Me and my big mouth: it always got me into trouble.
“Oh! I got my first question. Who lives at home with you?”

“It’s me and my mom alone. I have not seen my father since my days as a toddler.
I still possess some of the old dusty records and cassette tapes my father used to keep
around. Plenty of Maxell UR’s. Plenty of mixtapes. Hip hop. R&B. Dusty grooves. This is
how I identified my dad: as the music lover. But nothing much is said about him. I miss
the man. I don’t know…”
With sorrow, Trish said, “Dang. Must be rough, huh?”
“Yeah, it is. Look at me. No real friends to note of (besides you). No nice clothes.
Well, the clothes are okay. And then, there’s the glasses. They have me looking like the
best side of Urkel. But there isn’t much going on with me. I keep to myself. It makes
things easier.”
“Oh, wow. Next question: what is your favorite hobby?”
“Well, I do love to draw. I also love reading comic books and shooting hoops.
Listening to music, relaxing with my art pad, collecting my Marvel, DC, and Image titles.
Nothing too fancy. Nothing too exciting. I am your basic nerd in the hood.”
“So, who is your girlfriend?”
“Girlfriend?” I asked. Why would she ask whether or not I had a girlfriend in the
first place? “You trying to be my girlfriend or something?”
“No, no boy! I’m asking. You never know nowadays. Plus, I don’t want any of your
hussies and heifers coming up to me in school trying to lump me up.”
“You ain’t gotta worry about anything. These chicks ain’t thinking anything about
me or what I got going on. Trust.”
“Alright, well,” Trisha gathers as she shivers while hiding with (and for) me,
“those are all the questions I got for you. Now, it’s time for us to get outta here. You sure
you gonna be okay?”
Inquisitively, I sighed “Yeah, I’m gonna be okay. All I gotta do is run home fast.”
“Fast, huh? How fast?”
“Carl Lewis fast. Like 1984 Olympics fast,” I noted with a giggle.
Trish, quite confused as to what my reference meant, inquired “Okay, but who is
Carl Lewis?”
“Eh, he’s before our time. Don’t sweat it. Do some research on the guy. The
internet is useful for more than Instant Messenger, you know. You ask me, I think it’s
the future.”
“I’ll believe it when they come up with something better than dial up
connections,” Trisha joked. “You good, though? You think you can make it home
without getting in trouble?”
I looked at her perplexed. I looked around at all the whiteness around me and
Trisha. As I became concerned, I felt the silver cross around my neck become warm. I
thought my mind played tricks on me: as soon as I touched my chest, I didn’t feel a
thing. Maybe the nervousness played mind games with me. Whatever the case may be, I
knew I had to get home. My mom? Worried sick .
“You know what, I’m good. I’ll stick with my Carl Lewis story.”
Laughing enough to make visible mist come from her mouth, Trish says “Alright,
then. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
“Aiight, Trish, See ya tomorrow.”
I began my nice brisk jog across the streets. Already my watch shown me the time
as being close to five o’clock. I knew my mom had to be worried. Hey, with the lateness I
had going on, I knew I had a potential cursing out coming my way. The thought of
having my mom exercising her inner demons through her word became a bigger
concern for me than any type of problems with Max Maniac. As my luck would be as it
may, jumping many gates and fences, strolling through alleys, and fending off stray dogs
made this effort to get home much more worthwhile.
As I unlocked the door to the apartment, I met by my mom. I knew a chew out
became the imminent reality.
“Jahlil, why haven’t you told me about this Max boy?” my mom questioned. I

stood there, looking around to gather a great explanation for what occurred. Yet, the
more I looked into her overly-concerned eyes the more I couldn’t come up with any
worthwhile excuses.
“Ma, I didn’t wanna bother you about it. I wanted to handle the situation myself.
Who told you?”
“Your principal. He felt concerned about whether or not I knew. Of course, you
didn’t tell me. Jahlil, you have to tell me if these things are going on. I told Mr. Malachi
to keep an eye…”
“Mom, he is weird. I think he is some type of sexual predator or something. He’s
always looking at me. Always wants to talk to me. I get a funny vibe from him.”
Laughing loud enough to awaken resting spirits, my mom said “Hush the fuss,
boy. Mr. Malachi has known us for quite a while. He became very good friends with your
father before he left us. He cares. And we all need people who care.”
“Whatever, Ma. I don’t trust dude for anything on my life.”
“Well, you need to. He’s a loyal and trustworthy man. Okay?”
“Alright, Ma,” I said with a reassuring, yet defiant tone. I knew good and well I
didn’t wanna have anything to do with Mr. Weirdo. But my mom said I may have to
consider this “trust thing”. I had not been too keen on doing any of it. But I did know I
had to honor my momma. So, maybe I could give this “trust thing” a good whirl around
the merry-go-round. And if it didn’t work? I could go back to my regularly scheduled
program.
I got my clothes off and put them where they needed to go (coat in closet; other
clothes in the laundry). Afterward, I retrieved my book to read for Ms. Ellis’s class. As I
read my book, the cross on my neck began to glow. It had an aura of its own. If one
could capture pure sunlight and harness it from a small artifact, this would be it.
Dang. I may have been young and silly, but not a fool by a longshot. I knew my
mind could not have been playing tricks on me. I am not Willie Dee, Scarface, or
Bushwick Bill.

 

Follow
the tour HEREfor exclusive excerpts and a giveaway!








Cruelty’s Daughter Book Tour & Giveaway

 

 

Cruelty’s
Daughter
by
Anna Willett
Genre:
Thriller, Suspense
 
When
a young girl is abducted by a notorious serial killer, a woman risks
her own life trying to save her. 

 

 

Mina
is struggling to come to terms with her past. Having led a reclusive
life, 
shunning
human contact
,
she decides to take on a local college course to help get her life
back on track.

 

 

However,
when a young girl who tries to befriend her is 
abducted
by a serial killer
,
Mina feels responsible. She refused to wait with the girl for her
mother to pick her up. And she shrugged off the youngster’s
fears.

 

 

Now
Mina cannot rest until she finds out what happened. But as she probes
into the events of that evening, her own 
nightmares
start to return
.
She has put herself in danger, one that leads to an increasingly
tense standoff with a cruel and vicious man who will stop at
nothing.

 

 

Can
she find the strength to stand up to her demons, past and present?
And will she do so, even if it means 
risking
everything
?

 

 

CRUELTY’S
DAUGHTER is the fifth novel by best-selling Australian author, Anna
Willett. She writes in the thriller genre, with a touch of horror.
Her books explore how women react to difficult situations. The books
are full of tension, physical and psychological, and they are
difficult to put down.

 

 
 
Anna
Willett is the author of Backwoods Ripper, Retribution Ridge as well
as the bestselling, Unwelcome Guests and the tense new psychological
thriller, Forgotten Crimes. Raised in Western Australia, Anna
developed a love for fiction at an early age and began writing short
stories in high school. Drawn to dark tales, Anna enjoys writing
thrillers with strong female characters. When she’s not writing, Anna
loves reading, travelling and spending time with her husband,
children and dogs.
 

The flap on the back of the mailbox clanked open. The box was not as
overflowing as she’d expected. Reclusive behaviour has its advantages,
she thought, flicking her tongue over her suddenly dry mouth. Glancing
around, she was struck by how silent the street seemed. In the windows,
lights flickering behind closed curtains and blinds were the only sign of
life. With the stack clutched to her chest, Mina turned and hurried up the
path.
A glass-rattling clang echoed and the front door slammed behind her.
Another envelope, identical to the last. The same rich texture and an
odour. She tried to identify it but all that came to mind was polish of
some sort, maybe wax. Had the smell been on the first note? Mina
dropped the packet on the table and sat.
It wasn’t over.
How had she ever convinced herself it was?
She let out a long breath, surprised at how laboured it sounded. I
could throw it away. If I don’t look, I won’t have to know. Her mind raced
through possible scenarios. Maybe this time the Magician would give
details. A location. Mina pulled her hair over her right shoulder and
twisted it around her hand.
She picked up the envelope and tore it open. Once more, a single
sheet of paper, thick and grainy. Before unfolding it, she shook the
envelope and a second penguin clip tumbled out. A soft noise somewhere
between a sigh and a gasp escaped her lips. The clip bounced on the table
and then lay still. Mina had the urge to sweep the little plastic clip to the
floor and crush it under her foot. Instead, she unfolded the paper.
This time the message was longer, but no less disturbing.
The gift that keeps on giving.The large sloping letters were unmistakably written by the same
person. Mina stared at the words trying to see more than what appeared
on the page. What does he mean? And more importantly, where is this
going?
Six words. Enough to send a trail of sweat running down her spine.
She put the page on the table alongside the clip and focused on one
word, keeps. Did that mean Andrea was still alive? Maybe he was trying
to tell her something? But why her? In movies, the killer often sent
taunting notes to the police or the hero. But this was no movie and she
was as far from a hero as a woman could be.
The light drained out of the day, reflecting darkness into the kitchen.
She had the eerie sensation of being watched: someone hiding outside
the house, peering in the windows. She had the urge to turn and look out
of the kitchen window, but the fear that she might actually see a face

pressed against the glass kept her from looking over her shoulder. She
needed light to chase the shadows away.
Half out of her chair, the shrieking of her phone erupted. The noise
was so shocking in the darkening room that Mina slapped her palm on the
table in surprise. The phone was on the counter where she’d left it after
Lee had called. She stood on numb legs and reached for it, keeping her
eyes off the window.


Follow
the tour HEREfor exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!








Great Scrape Woody Shovel Giveaway

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GIVEAWAY DETAILS

Prize: Woody Shovel ($35 value)  

Giveaway organized by: Oh My Gosh Beck!

Rules: Use the Rafflecopter form to enter daily. Giveaway runs from 7/18 to  8/1 and is open to the US only. Winner will be notified via email. Sponsor is responsible for prize distribution. Please email becky@ohmygoshbeck.com with any questions regarding the giveaway.

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The Children of Never Book Tour & Giveaway

 

The
Children of Never
The
War Priests of Andrak Saga Book 1
by
Christian Warren Freed
Genre:
Epic Fantasy
 
The
war priests of Andrak have protected the world from the encroaching
darkness for generations. Stewards of the Purifying Flame, the
priests stand upon their castle walls each year for 100 days. Along
with the best fighters, soldiers, and adventurers from across the
lands, they repulse the Omegri invasions.
But
their strength wanes and evil spreads.
Lizette
awakens to a nightmare, for her daughter has been stolen during the
night. When she goes to the Baron to petition aid, she learns that
similar incidents are occurring across the duchy. Her daughter was
just the beginning. Baron Einos of Fent is left with no choice but to
summon the war priests.
Brother
Quinlan is a haunted man. Last survivor of Castle Bendris, he now
serves Andrak. Despite his flaws, the Lord General recognizes Quinlan
as one of the best he has. Sending him to Fent is his best chance for
finding the missing children and restoring order. Quinlan begins a
quest that will tax his strength and threaten the foundations of his
soul.
The
Grey Wanderer stalks the lands, and where he goes, bad things follow.
The dead rise and the Omegri launch a plan to stop time and overrun
the world. The duchy of Fent is just the beginning.
 
 
Christian
W. Freed was born in Buffalo, N.Y. more years ago than he would like
to remember. After spending more than 20 years in the active duty US
Army he has turned his talents to writing. Since retiring, he has
gone on to publish 17 military fantasy and science fiction novels, as
well as his memoirs from his time in Iraq and Afghanistan. His first
published book (Hammers in the Wind) has been the #1 free book on
Kindle 4 times and he holds a fancy certificate from the L Ron
Hubbard Writers of the Future Contest.

 

 

Passionate
about history, he combines his knowledge of the past with modern
military tactics to create an engaging, quasi-realistic world for the
readers. He graduated from Campbell University with a degree in
history and is pursuing a Masters of Arts degree in Military History
from Norwich University. He currently lives outside of Raleigh, N.C.
and devotes his time to writing, his family, and their two Bernese
Mountain Dogs. If you drive by you might just find him on the porch
with a cigar in one hand and a pen in the other.

 

 
Baron Einos awoke to unfamiliar sensations. Cold, almost unbearable, filled his
bedchambers. Winter was a memory and spring well underway. This southern duchy was well
south of the northern ice flows and far enough east of the Barbacus River to avoid the heavy
winds. A thick blanket and small fire in the hearth were more than sufficient for keeping Einos
warm throughout the shortening nights.
The Baron wiped the crud from the corners of his eyes, yawned, and sat up. His bearskin
blanket fell away, exposing his naked chest. Young for one of the ruling class, Einos was broadacross the shoulders and slabbed with muscle. His sand colored hair draped across his shoulders.
Bright green eyes scanned the chamber.
His wife, still sleeping, shifted beside him and exhaled deeply. Einos resisted the urge to
rouse her, at least until he was satisfied nothing was amiss. Not finding anything of concern in
the immediate area, he slipped from the bed and donned a thick robe that fell to the floor. The
fire had gone out, leaving the chamber in darkness. Frowning, Einos reached for the short sword
he kept beside the bed. Fent was a relatively peaceful duchy, but one does not rise to power
without creating enemies capable of extreme violence.
He took a step, then a strange noise froze him in midstride. Einos gripped his sword
tighter. “Who goes?”
The sound of sobbing returned. Einos frowned, certain he’d heard a child. There were
numerous children in the keep, though none his own. Aneth, his wife of nearly a decade, was
heavy with child and due by the end of spring. He suspected the draft coming through the cracks
in the walls provided the strange sounds, but one could never be too cautious.
Einos fumbled for a match and lit the candle nearest his bed. Soft light turned his
bedchamber into a shadowed realm. Einos remained still, listening against the dark. His efforts
were rewarded by uncontrollable sobbing coming from the far corner. Sword in one hand, candle
the other, the Baron of Fent took a step closer to the sound.
His exposed toes kicked the chamber pot, spilling old piss over his foot. Einos snarled a
curse and kept going as the sobbing intensified. A wall of light crept across the stone floor until
it reached the huddled figure of a young child. Einos cocked his head as he tried to get a clear
view of the face. Knees drawn with arms wrapped around them, the child, a girl by the length of
her hair, had her face buried.
“Child, why are you here? Who let you in?” he asked, his normally rough voice softened
so as not to frighten her further.
The sobbing increased as the girl lowered a fist and began pounding on the floor.
Einos, concerned, set the candle on the nearest table and crouched. “There is no need for
that. You are safe here. Tell me your name, child.”
Curls fell over her shoulders as the young girl lifted her head and turned to face him.
Einos tripped and fell backwards as he gazed upon what remained of her face. Both eyes were
gone. Dried blood streaked down her cheeks.
She reached a hand for him and cried, “Why did I have to die?”
The girl screamed. The candle flickered, then went out, leaving the lord of Fent alone in
the darkness. Einos scrambled back and managed to light the candle after several tries. When he
cast the light into the corner, he found only stone. The girl, if she had ever been, was gone.

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the tour HEREfor exclusive excerpts and a giveaway!








Mermaids of Eriana Kwai Book Tour & Giveaway

 

 

Ice
Massacre
Mermaids
of Eriana Kwai Book 1
by
Tiana Warner
Genre:
YA LGBT Fantasy
 
A
mermaid’s supernatural beauty serves one purpose: to lure a sailor to
his death.

 

 

The
Massacre is supposed to bring peace to Eriana Kwai. Every year, the
island sends its warriors to battle these hostile sea demons. Every
year, the warriors fail to return. Desperate for survival, the island
must decide on a new strategy. Now, the fate of Eriana Kwai lies inthe hands of twenty battle-trained girls and their resistance to a
mermaid’s allure.

 

 

Eighteen-year-old
Meela has already lost her brother to the Massacre, and she has lived
with a secret that’s haunted her since childhood. For any hope of
survival, she must overcome the demons of her past and become a
ruthless mermaid killer.

 

 

For
the first time, Eriana Kwai’s Massacre warriors are female, and Meela
must fight for her people’s freedom on the Pacific Ocean’s deadliest
battleground.

 

 
 

Ice
Crypt
Mermaids
of Eriana Kwai Book 2
 

From
award-winning author Tiana Warner comes the sequel to Ice Massacre,
the #1 Amazon Kindle Best Seller.

 

 

*

 

 

Meela
has just returned from the Massacre—the annual attempt to wipe out
the mermaids threatening her people’s survival. After forming an
unlikely connection with Lysi, a mermaid she was trained to kill,
Meela is determined to stop the war between humans and merpeople for
good. She knows of a legendary weapon that could bring peace if she
uses it against King Adaro, ruler of the Pacific Ocean. But her
people have plans for future Massacres and refuse to help her uncover
it.

 

 

While
Meela works in secret to unearth the Host of Eriana, Lysi is held
captive under Adaro’s tyranny. Sent to the battlefront, Lysi joins
forces with a band of rebels that could either bring her freedom—or
have her executed for treason.

 

 

Separated
by the vast Pacific Ocean, Meela and Lysi must find a way to defeat
King Adaro and end the war that has been keeping them apart.

 

 

 

Ice
Kingdom
Mermaids
of Eriana Kwai Book 3
The
final adventure in the Mermaids of Eriana Kwai trilogy …
Meela
and Lysi have unleashed Sisiutl, legendary two-headed serpent of the
Pacific Northwest. It was supposed to be an ally that would help them
win the war. Instead, it has fallen under the control of King Adaro,
ruler of the Pacific Ocean. If Meela and Lysi can’t stop him, Adaro
will use the deadly serpent to rid the oceans of mankind. 
With
the American military using catastrophic weapons of their own to
retaliate, Meela and Lysi must make peace between humans and
merpeople before one race destroys the other. The journey will risk
their lives and put their relationship to the test—but the
vengeance that has been consuming Meela’s thoughts, day and night,
might prove even more dangerous.
 
 
Tiana
Warner is the best selling author of the Mermaids of Eriana Kwai
trilogy. Her books have been acclaimed by Writer’s Digest, Foreword
Reviews, and the Dante Rossetti Awards. She holds a bachelor’s
degree in Computer Science from the University of British Columbia.
Tiana enjoys riding her horse, Bailey, and is an active supporter of
animal welfare.

 

 

Somewhere on the Pacific Ocean

The young man aimed his crossbow at the water, ready to fire a bolt of solid iron at the
first glimpse of flesh beneath the surface.
“Sir,” he said, “shouldn’t we have seen one by now?”
The captain turned his back to the salty wind, jaw tight. “They know we’re here.”
“So what are they doing?”
He followed the captain’s gaze. Blackness merged with the empty grey horizon in
every direction. A long silence passed, filled only by gentle swells lapping against the
ship.
The captain drew his own crossbow.
“Forming a plan.”
All twenty men aboard the ship readied their weapons, reacting in a chain until the
last man at the stern took steady aim at the waves.
“Make ready your iron, men,” shouted the captain. “We have ripples approaching
off the port side.”
A handful of places in the water puckered, as if something lingered just below the
surface. The sea was too black to tell.
Then it happened. Fifty, maybe sixty sea demons burst from the water and
slammed against the ship. The men wasted no time. They reacted with trained speed
and agility as the demons thrust stones and jagged shells into the wood, both to break
holes in the ship and to scale the sides. The men picked them off with bolts of iron and
watched them fall one by one back into the sea.
But they were outnumbered. Soon the demons were upon the ship, pulling
themselves across the deck with bony arms.
The young man had already shot a dozen and the water reddened with each
passing second.
Slow scraping sounds threatened him from behind. He whirled around, crossbow
ready. Burning eyes met his, and sharp teeth, bared to rip into his flesh. He gripped the
trigger, felt the bow tighten—
And the demon was gone. The young man stared into the wide gaze of a girl his
own age. With a startled cry, he jerked his aim so the bolt barely missed her.
She held a black shell in her hand, sharp at the edges and ready to use as a club.
But she didn’t raise it. She just looked at him.

Page 2 of 2

He lowered his crossbow.
Her blonde hair fell heavily over her shoulders, dripping beads of water down her
naked chest and stomach, pooling where her torso joined her tail.
He blinked, but made no other motion—where her torso joined her tail. Scales faded
into flesh like some sort of beautiful, green and tan sunset.
She pulled herself closer.
“Stay back,” said the young man, unsure what prompted him to hesitate.
He looked into her eyes—emeralds surrounded by pearl white—where moments
ago they had burned red. Her sharp teeth had retracted behind rosy lips. The seaweed-
coloured flesh of her upper body was now olive and raised with goose bumps from the
icy wind.
“Hanu aii,” she whispered.Do not fear. She spoke his language.
He loosened his grip on the crossbow, studying her. She lifted a frail arm and
pushed the hair from her eyes, then motioned him forwards.
His pulse quickened as he stared at the beautiful girl.
“Hanu aii,” she said again, her voice resonating sweetly, as if she sang without
singing.
Suddenly, he was kneeling in front of her, level with her luminous eyes. The
sounds around him faded but for the soft purr in the base of her throat.
She reached up and held an icy hand to his cheek, not for a moment breaking eye
contact. The hand slid behind his head and pulled his face towards hers, slowly but
firmly. He inhaled her sweet breath.
“No!”
He flinched. He turned to see the captain racing towards them, aiming his
crossbow at the maiden.
The young man grasped the scene around him. The ship was empty. A few stray
weapons and barrels bobbed serenely in the water. Blood soaked the deck in places,
and even the main mast had a splatter across the bottom.
The captain fired wide. Before he could reload and aim again, the sea demon put a
hand on the young man’s chin and pulled his gaze back to hers.
Her eyes blazed red. Her skin rippled into the rotten colour of seaweed. Her ears
grew pointed and long like sprouting coral. She opened her mouth to reveal a row of
deadly teeth.
The young man screamed.
The demon pulled him against her with more strength than three men combined,
and they dove headfirst off the side of the ship.
They disappeared into the blood-red water.

 

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