Anything Is Possible (A Tale of ÆSOP)
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Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert: Heather Huffman’s SUDDENLY A SPY is our eBook of the Day at just $2.99 with 5.0 Stars on 6 Reviews, and Here’s a Free Sample!
First-Class Romantic Suspense by the Author of the Free Kindle Sensation THROWAWAY:
Here’s the set-up for Heather Huffman’s Suddenly A Spy, just $2.99 on Kindle:
On her wedding day, Veronica Sinclair thinks she has it all: the loving family, the Vera Wang dress, the hunky husband.
But then a mysterious and beautiful woman shows up at the reception, suggesting Veronica’s new hubby isn’t exactly who he says he is. As if that weren’t enough, Veronica and Richard must flee gunmen in the middle of their honeymoon, convincing Veronica she got more than she bargained for when she said, “I do.”
Thrown into a world of espionage, seduction, and human trafficking, Veronica must fight for the life and husband she thought she had – and she must discover whether they are the life and husband she truly wants.
From the reviewers:
My favorite author! Heather Huffman has done it again – she’s managed to carefully balance humor and joy with the dark reality of human trafficking and organized crime (and also include some suspense and action). The end result is another enjoyable read (not too heavy, not too light) that sticks with you long after you’ve closed the book and leaves you wanting to go out and do some good in the world. — Bookie
Her writing is a cross between a love story/thriller, 007 type. This is one book you won’t put down until you are done! She is my kind of writer. Get the book, read it and you be the judge, but I am pretty sure you will love it! All her books are amazing. — J. Rogers
I read this after reading and loving Throwaway and it met all of my high expectations. … [I] thought of [the characters] as people I would love to be friends with. I especially liked Heather Huffman’s use of banter in her dialogues. I read the entire book in one day and can’t wait to read Ties That Bind. The books also gave me a website where I donated money to the abused women and girls that are written about so movingly. I strongly recommend this book! — Dafna Yee
An excellent follow-up to Throwaway, and it’s really cool to see some familiar faces pop up.
Visit Amazon’s Heather Huffman Page
I love writing. It’s more than something I do; it’s who I am. Few things bring me more joy than being elbow-deep in a story. I also believe life is more than the act of taking up air. We all have something we’re good at, something we’re meant to be doing to make this world a better place.
So I’m incredibly grateful to have a publisher like Booktrope who helps me use something I love to make a difference in a cause I care deeply about. A portion of my royalties are donated to organizations that fight human trafficking in one way or another.
When I write, I share a piece of who I am. There’s something of my pain and my victories in each page. (Have fun guessing what’s true and what’s not!) I hope to take readers on a journey with me. Nothing makes me happier than someone writing to say my characters felt like old friends – or that they laughed, cried, yelled or cheered with me along the way.
And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of Heather Huffman’s SUDDENLY A SPY:
Today’s Kindle Daily Deal: Save 67% on Karen McQuestion’s magical tale of a plucky girl on a danger-filled quest where she must come face-to-face with her greatest fears
But first … a great read from today’s sponsor:
When the Walls Fell (Out of Time)
And now, for today only, the Kindle Daily Deal!
Kindle Daily Deal: Celia and the Fairies
Karen McQuestion’s magical tale, Celia and the Fairies, takes a plucky girl on a danger-filled quest where she must come face-to-face with her greatest fears. The result is an entertaining story with an underlying message about the power of ordinary kindness.
Yesterday’s Price: | $2.99 | |
Today’s Discount: | $2.00 | |
Kindle Daily Deal Price: | $0.99 | (67% off) |
Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert! Meet characters you’ll end up cheering for in Alex Adena’s SIGNS AND WONDERS – 4.6 Stars on 13 Straight Rave Reviews, Just 99 Cents on Kindle!
What do you do when you realize the past 30 years of your life has been a fraud?
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.
“Signs and Wonders” is a story about a woman who has to start from scratch and figure out what it means to have faith. That’s not easy for anybody … and Annie Grace is anything but normal. She’s been trained since childhood to be the star of her father’s faith-healing crusade.
What do you do when you realize the past 30 years of your life has been a fraud?
Even after Annie’s father passes away, she goes through the motions – trapped by a family legacy she no longer wants. Then things get even worse. She’s threatened by a district attorney fighting ghosts of his own and hounded by a tenacious reporter hunting for scandal, as well as being let down by people she thought she could trust.
When Annie’s life is about to hit bottom, signs begin to appear around her … then miraculous wonders. What does it all mean?
This short novel inspires us to ask questions about our faith, no matter what that faith might be. (Nope, it’s not a Christian romance novel!) Meet characters you’ll end up cheering for, and get a look into what motivates people — from revenge, greed and fear to kindness, compassion and selflessness.
This story is told with love and humor and a deep affection for Annie Grace, a woman with an intriguing past and an unpredictable future. Come along for a remarkable journey of redemption.
***
“Signs and Wonders” is a 29,000 word novella, perfect for an afternoon read.
(This is a sponsored post.)
A Free Excerpt From Our Romance of the Week Sponsor, Julia London’s Material Girl
It was humiliating enough to have been brought in at all, much less wearing handcuffs. But then they took all of her belongings, including her belt, made her spread her legs so a female guard could pat her down, and when she was completely traumatized, they took her picture, fingerprinted her, and told her to quit whining; she was not going to see the sheriff, she was going to see a judge. Okay, she had said then, fully contrite for her folly, I give, let me out.
They said they would-if and when a judge said so.
And then they showed her the holding cell into which they had managed to defy physics and force at least a dozen women. Robin’s bathroom was bigger than that cell. It was a nightmare, a bona fide, unmistakable nightmare, complete with bodies under the benches and scary monster-type-looking humans, and she had no one to blame but herself. And damn it, Robin could not stop shivering-they had turned the air-conditioning on to a full-metal-jacket high, undoubtedly to keep the stench down. How long she sat there, she had no idea, and wouldn’t have been the least surprised if days had passed, maybe even weeks, until the door was at last pushed open and a guard came waddling in. “All right, ladies-time to go. You know the drill, everyone on their feet!”
Well, no, she didn’t know the drill, but Robin surged to her feet nonetheless, crowding with the others to get out of that stuffy little room.
They were lead to an open area with chairs and a bank of phones along one wall and told to make their calls. Robin went to a phone, picked up the receiver, grimaced at the greasy feel of it and debated who to call. Oh, hi, this is Robin, and I’m in jail. . . . Her attorney? Seemed logical, but no-she was also Evan’s attorney. Mia? Right. She didn’t answer the phone before noon.
Lucy? Well, sure, if she wanted it spread all over Houston. Kelly, Mariah, Linda, Susan-God, no! Her CPA? He’d probably have a heart attack.
That left only one viable option.
Grimacing, Robin dialed her grandparent’s number, praying to high heaven they hadn’t gone off on some trailer trip. Grandma answered the phone on the first ring. “Hel-lo-oh!” she sang.
“Grandma, it’s me,” she said low.
“Oh, hi, honey!” Grandma said cheerfully. “What are you up to?”
“Grandma, now don’t freak out, okay? I need you to come pick me up. Or get a lawyer-not my lawyer, but . . . oh hell, I’m not really sure what I need you to do-”
“A lawyer!” Grandma gasped. “Why on earth would you need a lawyer? And what is all that racket?”
“It’s a really long and stupid story Grandma, but . . . okay, listen, I’m sort of in a bind. You shouldn’t panic or anything, because like I said, it’s reallyreally stupid-”
“Where are you, Robbie?” Grandma asked, her voice going shrill.
There was no good way to say it. Robin forced a laugh. “You won’t believe this, Grandma!
Ha haaaa, I’m . . . I’m . . . in jail.
They probably heard her grandmother’s shriek throughout the entire retirement community. “Jail!” she cried out. “Jail? Oh no, not jail! Elmer! Robbie is in jaaaail!”
Robin heard the receiver on her grandmother’s end bounce on the phone table. “Grandma!” she cried into the phone.
“Robbie, is that you?”
Thank God, Grandpa! “Yes, yes, it’s me, Grandpa! Is Grandma all right?”
“Are you really in jail?”
“Yes, I-”
“Oh yeah? What’d you do?”
“I didn’t really do-”
“Drugs?”
“Grandpa! Of course it wasn’t drugs!”
“Well then, what? Murder?” He chuckled appreciatively at his own jest. Robin stared at the phone cradle in front of her. Why hadn’t she realized before this crucial moment that her grandparents were insane? “Oh dear, it wasn’t murder, was it?” he asked, his voice suddenly anxious.
“Of course not!” she cried. “It’s too long to explain now, but Grandpa, please come get me. This place is horrible! Everyone smells, and who knows why they are here, and the guards are just . . . just mean, and I have no idea how long they will hold me or anything, but please, please come get me,” she said, feeling suddenly and dangerously close to tears.
“Well, of course we’ll come get you, Robbie-girl! You just hold tight. We’re gonna come get you.”
“Thanks, Grandpa,” she whispered tearfully, and heard him shout at Grandma to hurry up as the phone clicked off.
Feeling a little better having called in the cavalry, Robin endured another interminable wait until they were led, single file, into another long room where a judge’s bench was elevated above the rows of wooden benches. They formed two groups, men and women on opposite sides of the room. Now Robin was feeling particularly slimy. The last seventy-two hours had been a personal trip through hell, and all she wanted was out-she had never felt so alone or so vulnerable or so insane in her life. What sort of moron picked a fight with a cop?
She shivered. They waited. She wondered what time it was, had that slow and thick feeling of having flown through too many time zones on a long transatlantic flight. When at last the judge did arrive, Robin was surprised; the diminutive African American probably didn’t reach five feet.
The bailiff announced Judge Vaneta Jobe and told them all to rise. Judge Jobe climbed up onto her big black high-back leather chair, and with her head barely visible, and her feet probably swinging a foot above ground, let her gaze travel the crowd. “All right then,” she said, slipping on a pair of round, silver-framed glasses. “Listen up, everyone. Y’all have some rights you’ll need to know about. . .” She proceeded to inform them, in a booming voice that belied her size, of their rights and the different types of bonds available to them. Then she announced she would bring them forward to hear the charges being made against them, and when she had finished her speech, she asked, “Is that just clear as mud? Let’s begin, Mr. Peeples.”
The bailiff picked up a sheet and squinted at it. “Rodney Trace.”
A man from the third row of benches stood and came forward, his head hung low. When he approached the bench, Judge Jobe glared down at him. “Seems like you gone and done a stupid thing, Mr. Trace. How many times are you gonna be stupid? Until you kill someone? Or until they send you down to the farm?”
Rodney Trace shrugged.
Judge Jobe sighed. “Bail set at twenty-five thousand dollars. Who’s next on our hit parade, Mr. Peeples?”
Horrified, Robin watched as Judge Jobe and a long string of people who alternately tried to argue their charge or took whatever bond she set with a shrug. She was beginning to feel less and less optimistic about what would happen to her, and started like a jumping bean when the bailiff finally called her name. She hurried forward, clasped her hands tightly in front of her and tried very hard not to shiver.
The judge leaned over the bench to have a better look at her, shaking her head. “Urn, um, um . . . don’t know what’s got into you, girlfriend,” she said, and picked up a manila folder. “Do you think this town belongs to you?”
Was she supposed to answer that? Robin glanced uneasily at the bailiff. “Uh . . . no,” she stammered. “No, of course not.”
“Then why were you so nasty to Officer Denton?”
“I, uh . . . I d-didn’t know that I was.”
The judge peered over the tops of her round glasses at Robin. “You trying to tell me that you didn’t know you were mouthing off to him? Or that you were being nasty? Or that by refusing to give him your name, or provide your license, or proof of insurance, that you were being disrespectful? Is that the way you do people, Ms. Lear?”
“No. . .”
“No?”
“Uh, yes . . . well, no,” Robin stuttered.
The judge snorted, looked at the bailiff. “Ms. Lear got herself an attitude problem, Mr. Peeples. That superior attitude got her into a little bit of trouble, didn’t it?”
“It sure did, Your Honor.”
“I’m surprised Ms. Lear managed to make it this long before someone knocked her down a notch or two.” The judge tossed the file down and bestowed a fierce frown on Robin that sent another shiver down her spine. “You need to wake up and smell the coffee! How many of your fine and fancy friends get themselves thrown in jail for talking trash?”
“I don’t know any,” Robin answered truthfully.
“Maybe that’s cause they don’t go around thinking they’re better than everyone else. If you’re gonna walk around thinking you are, you’re gonna keep making trouble for yourself, do you understand me?”
“I don’t think I’m better-”
“I said, do you understand me?” Judge Jobe demanded.
“Yes, ma’am,” Robin answered softly.
“I’m gonna accept your plea of guilty for driving without a license or insurance and fine you seven hundred fifty dollars for wasting my time.”
Robin blinked. When, exactly, had she pled guilty?
“Now follow the deputy here, and try not to be annoying,” the judge said and handed the deputy a piece of paper. He pointed toward the door; Robin walked, head down.
And found herself waiting in another large room after she had received her personal property, which consisted of a belt, a Cartier watch, an emerald ring, and a half-empty purse, in which, fortunately, there had been a lone credit card in the side pocket. The very helpful deputies also gave her a paper with the location of her car and pointed to the window where she would pay her fine along with everyone else in Houston.
Robin made the mistake of asking the clerk when she could pay, which earned her a reprimand to be seated while the clerk and her friend chatted away as if they had nothing else to do. Dejected, exhausted, and feeling terribly low, Robin sat, wondering if it were possible to get a bazooka in here to break up their little coffee klatch. Her head ached, her back ached, even her butt ached from sitting for so many hours on rock-hard benches like the one on which she was sitting now. She felt grimy, her mouth tasted rank, and her stomach was in knots. All she wanted to do was go home and burrow under the covers of her bed for the next five months.
She waited.
Until someone sat hard next to her, jostling her almost off the bench, that she realized she must have been drifting on the edge of sleep. With a jump, Robin blinked, looked to her left. A man with impossibly broad shoulders had fallen onto the bench next to her. He was wearing a weathered leather jacket and faded jeans, had a crop of thick dark brown hair, and when he turned to look at Robin, he smiled and said with a wink, “Hey.”
“Get real,” she muttered, and scooched over.
“Oh come on, it can’t be that bad,” he remarked, as if they were sitting in a park somewhere.
“What would you know?”
“Okay, so I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to bump into you. Truce?”
She really was not in the mood to make friends just now. With her hand, she gestured for him to move. “Just . . . please go away.”
“Believe me, lady, I’d love to oblige you,” he said, his voice less friendly, “but in case you haven’t noticed, it’s pretty crowded in here.”
“You can find another seat.”
“Maybe you’d like to find another seat. I’ve been waiting two hours.”
Only two hours? How did he get out so fast? That infuriated Robin-she had to wait all night, and this dude was out in two hours? “I was here first,” she pointed out.
“Ah,” he said, nodding. “Clearly, I misunderstood.” But instead of moving, he just settled in.
Robin glared at him. “What do you think you are doing?”
“Like I said, the room is full, so unless you can produce a deed or something that proves you own this bench, I’m not going anywhere.”
“Great,” Robin snapped, and abruptly stood up.
“Nice talking to you, Miss Congeniality,” he said as she started to push her way down the row.
Three or four seats down, she glared at two Hispanic men who, after exchanging a wary glance with one another, moved to make a seat for her.
She squished in between them like a sardine, then glanced down the row just as the jailbird got up and sauntered off. Bastard! But Lord . . . what a saunter that bastard had! Even in her dejected, repulsed, and generally miserable state, Robin could not help noticing how fine he was in his ancient denim jeans and briefly wondered what he might have done to land himself in hell.
He suddenly turned and caught her staring at his backside and flashed her a lopsided, knew-it smile. Robin frowned deeply, turned her attention forward, and did not look again. Except once. Maybe twice. By the time they finally called her name, she had definitely lost sight of him and was in such a hurry to get out of that stinking hellhole that she almost collided with him when she turned from the window, clutching her freedom on a receipt marked PAID.
“Oh man. Well, hello again, Sunshine,” he drawled.
“Jesus!” she exclaimed, holding the hand with the receipt over her flailing heart as she glared up at him. “Can’t you take a hint?”
“Hey, Queenie, I’m just waiting in line like everyone else.”
“Uh-huh, right,” Robin responded irritably and wondered for a split second why men thought women were so ignorant of their motives.
The man all but choked. He stared down at her, his copper-brown eyes wide with surprise. And then he laughed. Laughed. Laughed so roundly, as if that was so hilariously preposterous, that several heads turned in their direction. But he didn’t seem to care-he leaned forward, bent his head until his mouth was just an inch or two from her cheek, and said, “Sunshine, you’re cute” -he paused, lingered there for a tiny moment, his breath warm on her face, so close that she could smell his cheap (but not altogether unpleasant) cologne- “but no way are you that cute. And you’re mean.” He straightened up and calmly stepped around her to the payment window.
Okay. Well. She was now officially in hell. Some . . . jail guy . . . had just dissed her, and it was so unbearably humiliating that Robin beat a hasty retreat out the double glass doors, into the lobby of the processing center, clutching her purse and her receipts like a mad escapee, frantically searching the milling crowd for her grandparents.
Fortunately, her mother’s parents were easy to spot. There was her grandfather, who had the distinct misfortune to have been named Elmer, and the even greater misfortune, in his declining years, of actually resembling Elmer. He was round and squat with hugely enormous feet typically encased in white Easy Spirits, which heralded his arrival a good city block before him. And in fact, it was Mr. Fudd’s shoes Robin saw in the lobby before she saw him.
Her grandmother, Lil, was the physical opposite of Elmer. She was tall and reed thin, and wore big pink-rimmed octagonal glasses that covered her cheeks and eyebrows and made her eyes look like big blue stop signs. She also wore Easy Spirits. The taupe ones.
Grandma spotted Robin and came hurrying like a squirrel across the lobby, darting in and around people in her haste to get to her granddaughter. “Robbie!” she exclaimed, and grabbed her in a bear hold, nearly squeezing the breath from her. “Oh my God, sweet pea! What has happened!”
“Robbie-girl, you all right?” Grandpa asked, rescuing her from Grandma’s grip.
“I’m fine,” Robin insisted. “It’s really so stupid. I’ll tell you all about it in the car, but please, let’s just get out of here,” she urged, ushering them in the direction of the door.
Grandpa had scored a prime parking spot into which he had maneuvered his Ford Excursion, an SUV the size of a small condo. Robin gratefully crawled into the cavernous backseat.
“Buckle in, hon. Now, are we going to hear what you did?” Grandma insisted, fastening her seat belt.
Best to get it over. “I got stopped for speeding-”
“Speeding! Where?” Grandpa insisted.
“On six-ten-”
“Well now, six-ten, that’s just a death trap.”
“-And I guess I sort of mouthed off a little. I mean, I wasn’t doing any faster than anyone else, and I told the cop so.”
“That’s my girl!” Grandpa said proudly as he coasted out of the parking lot.
“So he asked me for my license and registration, but the thing is, I had left them on my desk at work-by the way, Grandpa, I need to go by my office and get my wallet, okay? Anyway, I didn’t have my license or registration, and suddenly I’m a criminal! So the cop told me to step out of the car, and . . . well, I just thought . . . I just thought that he was overreacting and I shouldn’t have to step out of the car.”
“Well, he should have taken your word for it!” Grandma said with an indignant nod of her head. “Surely when you told him your name he ran some sort of check or whatever they do in their cars to make sure you weren’t lying!”
Robin squirmed.
Grandma swiveled sharply to look at her. “Well?” demanded Grandma. “Didn’t he?”
Robin sighed, leaned her head against a headrest covered with a pink baby T-shirt. “I was really tired and really cranky, and I didn’t exactly tell him who I was. I just sort of thought it wasn’t his business. So he arrested me.”
Grandpa gave a shout of laughter, but Grandma threw a hand over her mouth and stared at Robin in horror for a moment. “Can they do that?”
“Apparently,” she answered dryly. “He arrested me for failure to identify myself, driving without a license, and driving without insurance.
“Oh my goodness, what does this mean?” Grandma asked.
Robin grimaced at her grandmother’s look of shock, and turned away, to the window, where cars were swerving from behind Grandpa and whizzing past as he pushed the SUV up to sixty. “It means they slapped me with a Class C misdemeanor, took seven hundred fifty dollars for their trouble, and told me to go home.”
“Did you see any murderers in there?” Grandpa asked.
“Elmer! This is no joking matter!”
“I didn’t think that was joking!”
“Grandpa, don’t forget to go by my office, okay?”
Grandpa acknowledged her request by putting his blinker on a good two or three miles before their exit.
“Well, you can’t work today,” Grandma said in a huff. “You don’t want everyone knowing why you were late-Aaron wouldn’t like that at all.”
Honestly, Robin didn’t know anymore. Maybe Dad would think she deserved to be publicly humiliated. “I just need to get my things and a couple of files, that’s all. Maybe Grandpa can go in for me,” Robin said absently.
“I just can’t believe you have been arrested,” Grandma said and shook her head again.
Too exhausted to think, Robin stared out the window, felt her eyelids growing heavy. The next thing she heard was Grandpa, saying, “Uh-oh. Looks like a fire.”
Robin opened her eyes and glanced out the front windshield. As her mind began to grasp that they were on the street of her office, she suddenly grabbed the back of Grandpa’s seat. “Oh my God!” she cried. It couldn’t be. Couldn’t be! Robin quickly counted the floors of her office building and felt her heart sink to her toes. Oh yes, it could be, and it was. The LTI offices were on fire. Her office was on fire.
In front of her, Grandpa shook his head. “Some fool probably left a cigarette burning or a computer on or something like that,” he opined, disgusted.
Left something on . . . the suggestion was suddenly clawing at Robin’s throat, choking her. The coffeepot.
She had left the coffeepot on.
KND Kindle Free Book Alert for Wednesday, October 5: FIVE (5) BRAND NEW FREEBIES in the last 24 hours added to our 1,100 FREE TITLES Sorted by Category, Date Added, Bestselling or Review Rating! plus … 4.3 Stars on 21 Reviews for Rob Cornell’s RED RUN: A THRILLER (Today’s Sponsor, $2.99)
Red Run: A Thriller
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KND Kindle Free Book Alert
Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert: Cathryn Grant’s FATAL CUT is our eBook of the Day at just $1.99 with 4.0 Stars on 2 Reviews, and Here’s a Free Sample!
Here’s the set-up for Cathyrn Grant’s Fatal Cut, just $1.99 on Kindle:
In Fatal Cut, the first novella in this ghostly psychological suspense series, a man is brutally murdered in the church parking lot. Madison Keith is the only one not surprised by the identity of the killer. She has witnessed first hand the buried resentments and bitter hearts of the people at her new job, not to mention the lingering passions of those who have passed on.
Both the living and the dead like to reveal their secrets to Madison. As the administrative assistant in the basement office of a suburban church, she gets plenty of opportunity to hear from both.
Print length for this novella is approximately 100 pages.
From the reviewers:
Cathryn Grant has given her protagonist Madison Keith a delightful voice. Madison is smart, witty, and more than a little curious–perfect for a church receptionist. She’s also tattooed, pierced, and unusually perceptive. In this first of a series, Grant introduces us to Madison’s particular brand of detection and mystery solving. Fatal Cut is a page-turning tale that will satisfy, but leave you hungry for the next one. – Linda Cassidy Lewis
Cathryn Grant invested much of the first half of her novella to developing the quirks and characteristics of her main character so that by the mid-point of this short book, I felt like I knew – and liked – Madison Keith enough to want to continue reading more stories featuring her. At that point, the other characters began to take shape for me and the whodunit and why aspects came to the fore so that the novella moved quickly to a a believable and satisfying ending. I like the novella form for its necessarily sharp focus and definitely am looking forward to the next Madison Keith venture! – Natasha Alexander
Visit Amazon’s Cathryn Grant Page
Cathryn Grant’s short fiction has appeared in Alfred Hitchcock and Ellery Queen Mystery Magazines. Her short story, “I Was Young Once”received an honorable mention from Joyce Carol Oates in the 2007 Zoetrope All-story Short Fiction contest.
Reviewers have said they “stayed up late finishing” her first novel, THE DEMISE OF THE SOCCER MOMS. Her second novel, BURIED BY DEBT, will be released in November 2011.
She is also the author of the Madison Keith Psychological Suspense Novella series – murder, ghosts, and soul mates – FATAL CUT (#1), SHALLOW WATER (#2 Sept 2011).
One reader said this about her Suburban Noir fiction: “She makes the mundane menacing.”
Visit her online at CathrynGrant.com or email her at cathryn.m.grant[at]gmail.com
And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of FATAL CUT by Cathryn Grant: