Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

Robin Martin’s Captivating Coming of Age Novel The Hiding Place Girl – 10/10 Rave Reviews & Just $2.99 on Kindle

The Hiding Place Girl

by Robin Martin

4.9 stars – 10 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Set in the American South, The Hiding Place Girl is a painfully truthful telling of a girl’s secret adolescence and young adulthood.  (Please note that this novel contains sexually explicit scenes.)

When she was a child, Renae and a boy named Patrick were friends. They shared adventures. They shared secret hiding places. But they never told each other about the secret worlds hidden inside their houses. Their sharing stopped one fall afternoon when Patrick walked home from school and found something terrible waiting for him there. After that day, what his family had hidden away was out in the open for all to see.

Years later, Renae’s father dies suddenly. Staring at his casket in the funeral home, she tumbles back in memories to untangle the connections between herself as a young girl and the woman she has become. Her memories begin with Patrick, and in them she finds that the fearful choices she made when they were childhood friends are the choices she’s been making ever since. Because the hidden world inside the house she grew up in has been following her around.

From Kirkus Reviews

“…recalling Jeffrey Eugenides’ novel The Virgin Suicides, Martin’s novel ably captures the suburban landscape and the emotional struggle that lies beneath it…Martin’s stunning prose is packed with imagery and metaphor and skillfully studies the era’s burgeoning social and sexual revolutions.”

About The Author

 Robin Martin is a pen name for Robin Billings. Martin is a family name; it’s the middle name of one of her great-grandfathers. He was the son of immigrant Irish parents, born in a small prairie town in Illinois that no longer exists.

The Hiding Place Girl is Robin’s first novel. She wrote it over the course of several years while working in Washington, DC. (If you happen to be from that general area and you noticed a woman in a black car pulled over on the George Washington Parkway or in Old Town Alexandria, scribbling furiously on a well-worn note pad, that was probably Robin, writing lines and scenes as they came to her while driving back and forth over the Potomac River bridges to work each week.)

Two follow-on novels are planned for The Hiding Place Girl, and Robin is writing another series of novels under her own name. The first of these will be published in the summer of 2013.

Robin was born in Kentucky. She’s also lived in Louisiana, Kansas, Virginia, and in England. Among other things, she’s been a convenience store checkout clerk, bank teller, scuba diver, office manager for a mightily dysfunctional construction company, graduate student in clinical psychology, and a director of corporate relations. She’s now dividing her time between the U.S. and England, where she’s enjoying the Thames and the pubs while her husband John is doing some work in London.

For sample chapters of forthcoming novels, please send a note to hiding.place.girl@gmail.com. You’ll only receive samples and news of novels being published by Robin Martin/Robin Billings. Your email address will not be shared with anyone else, and it won’t be used for any other purpose. (Robin hates spammy-waste-of-time emails just as much as you do!)

For Robin’s blog, a list of discussion questions and other things, please visit: http://robinmartin.webs.com/.
Please visit Robin’s Facebook author page: http://on.fb.me/WZrWCi for more frequent updates and the occasional chat.

(This is a sponsored post.)

Kindle Daily Deals For Wednesday, Apr. 3 – New Bestsellers All Priced at $1.99 or Less! plus Susan Griscom’s Allusive Aftershock

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

ALLUSIVE AFTERSHOCK

by Susan Griscom

4.6 stars – 31 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

What happens when a major earthquake changes life as you know it and the boy you thought you hated ends up saving you? Three times!

Courtland Reese is the guy everyone hates and makes fun of because … well, he is weird. He communicates with animals. Strange or interesting, seventeen-year-old Adela Castielle can’t quite figure out, but when he saves her from being trampled by her own horse, she begins to understand him a little better and wants to learn more about him.

But, Max—her best friend/dream guy/someday-to-be-her-husband-only-he-doesn’t-know-it-yet—hates Courtland with a passion. Adela wants to know why, except neither boy is talking.

When Max leaves her stranded in his parents’ wine cave with his worst enemy, Courtland, after what the experts are calling a “megathrust” earthquake, Adela starts to question her loyalty to Max as steamy kisses in a dark damp cellar only fuel her emotions with more conflict.

But does she really have time to worry about that when fire, destruction and mayhem surround her?

5 Star Amazon Review
“…Allusive Aftershock is such a gripping story. I found the way Susan Griscom wrote this story to be very touching. I couldn’t help but get swept away by the turmoil these characters experienced and cry when they faced the realities of losing loved ones and fighting to survive a catastrophe of such magnitude. I think everyone should read this book!!!”

Each day’s Kindle Daily Deal is sponsored by one paid title on Kindle Nation. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.

and now … Today’s Kindle Daily Deal!

Click on the image below

Screen Shot 2013-04-03 at 7.05.03 AM

Don’t miss today’s Kindle Nation eBook of the Day:

Israel Potter lives! … in this spellbinding work of historical intrigue by Alexander Kulcsar and KND fave David Chacko!

TRAITOR’S GATE

by Alexander Kulcsar and David Chacko
<%title%>
5.0 stars – New Release!
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

 

Here’s the set-up:

TRAITOR’S GATE is the complete story of the man whose life has been called “the strangest ever made known.” Israel Potter was a young man who set off to war, fighting his way through the epic Battle of Bunker Hill, until he came to his crossroads at sea, where his ship was captured by the British and all her people taken to England.
The next forty years of Israel Potter’s life, strangely enough, pass in England, where he was stranded by the vagaries of war. Or not. There is another vector to this story that David Chacko and Alexander Kulcsar follow to its exciting and logical conclusion. Take this trip, which is also one of the strangest stories ever made known, though it’s much different than the original. London, Paris, New York, the war, the love, the treachery and the action are portrayed in a way that has never been seen before in this in this period, which was the most vital, lusty and violent in American history.
Most Helpful Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars Israel Potter Lives! April 2, 2013
By Genevieve Gertrude
This wonderful book brings the pieces of the Israel Potter story, both historical and imagined, together. I have read them separately in Chacko and Kulcsar’s other books and have been fascinated by the events and possibilities; here all is deftly woven together in a tale that feels so real it MUST all be true. The story line moves forward with the urgency and wit I’ve seen in Chacko’s other spy/suspense stories as well, and the characters are well drawn, engaging, and alive. Perhaps most satisfying for me, as a professor of writing and literature, is the richness of the language: in clarity and energy it is modern English; its vocabulary is modern but draws on delightful older forms; its tones and rhythms convey the 18th century without imitating it. I also appreciate the Melville references. I said above that the characters are alive; more accurately, the book is alive. Get it. Read it.

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of the TRAITOR’S GATE by Alexander Kulcsar and David Chacko:


Publetariat Dispatch: The Future of Libraries (Infographic)

Publetariat: For People Who Publish!
In today’s Publetariat Dispatch, OpenSite shares an interesting infographic about libraries in the digital age.

We’re glad to be able to share this excellent infographic from Open Site, which has generously released it under Creative Commons licensing.

The graphic shows some very interesting statistics about library usage, demographics and how technology is being used in libraries. It should be of interest to authors and publishers everywhere.

If text in the image below is difficult to read, click here to view the infographic in a larger format on Open Site.

 

Looking to Spice up Your Book Collection? Hundreds of Free And Bargain Selections on Our Erotica Search Pages – All Sponsored by Kiki Wellington’s Supernatural Seductions

Introducing a brand new Erotica Book of the Month here at Kindle Nation to sponsor all the great bargains on our Erotica search pages.

Thousands of Kindle Nation citizens are using our magical search tools to find great reading in the Free, Quality 99-Centers, and Kindle Lending Library categories. Just use these links to search for great Erotica titles at great prices:

And while you’re looking for your next great read, please don’t overlook our brand new Erotica Book of the Month:

Supernatural Seductions

by Kiki Wellington

4.0 stars – 1 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

When Jeannie and her husband buy a house in the country, they can’t wait to fulfill their lifelong dream of opening a bed and breakfast. But as she prepares to launch her new business, she finds herself seduced by a paranormal entity dedicated to delivering sexual pleasures beyond her wildest fantasies. Confused and somewhat afraid, Jeannie is torn between wanting the entity out of her home and craving more orgasmic encounters with her ghost lover.

From the Author:
ADULTS ONLY PLEASE. Supernatural Seductions is a 13,000 word story that contains sexually explicit material and adult language. This story is not appropriate for children and may be offensive to some readers.

Warning: Supernatural Seductions contains seductions from a hot and horny ghost soldier, a paranormal ménage à trois, anal sex in the shower, a thwarted paranormal investigation, and a brief art history lesson.

EXCERPT:

I was half asleep, and I felt a little tickle on my toes. I was lying on my back, and I opened one of my eyes to see if I could get a glimpse of whether or not this thing was real. But there wasn’t anything there, and yet I felt fingers playing in between each of my toes.

I closed my eyes and smiled. I just wanted to enjoy the moment, and not worry so much about what was there. I felt my legs being caressed gently. Fingers danced up and down both of my legs at the same time. I was at peace and my whole body tingled. I wanted more of this–a whole lot more.

And boy oh boy, did I get it that night.

I felt my legs gently being pried apart and sensations dancing up and down my inner thighs. I moaned. That’s when I heard it again. It was that voice–as plain as day and as surely as I’m talking to you right now–and it said “I want you. I really want you.” It was a low male voice. I shook my head a little bit in disbelief. I could explain away the feelings, just brush them off as my imagination. But hearing this voice again? I couldn’t explain that.

The voice slowly repeated its demands: “I. Want. You.”

I guess I should’ve been scared out of my mind at that point, but in that moment, nothing else mattered but the warm feelings I had. I arched my back and looked at my nipples as they perked up, longing to have someone pinch them, suck them, knead them between horny fingertips. That was my way of saying yes. Whoever you are or whatever you are, I don’t care right now. I just want you to take me. I just want you to do to me what you want to do to me.

I sighed and enjoyed the imaginary fingers that slowly caressed my inner thighs. I tilted my head back against my pillow and moaned softly. Then I felt the fingers opening up my lips, exposing me to the still and nippy air in the room. I felt like a Georgia O’Keeffe flower blooming, opening, blossoming in the ecstasy of that exquisite touch. I was wide open for a finger circling the tip of my bud, slowly rubbing me clockwise, and then counterclockwise. I gulped. I couldn’t believe what was happening. This was like masturbation on steroids. My vibrators and dildos could do a lot, but they couldn’t arouse me quite like this.

(This is a sponsored post.)

 

Enjoy a Free Excerpt From KND Romance of The Week & NYT Bestselling Author Lisa Renee Jones

Last week we announced that Lisa Renee Jones’ NYT and USA Today Bestselling Series Tall, Dark, and Deadly 3 Book Box Set is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

This week we’re offering something a little different, featuring the work of New York Times bestselling author Lisa Renee Jones. We’re sharing a generous excerpt from her brand new release IF I WERE YOU, which has been optioned for a STARZ original film with Suzanne Todd, but along the way we can’t resist telling you about a new chance to grab three of Lisa’s novels for the price of one in this TALL, DARK AND DEADLY Boxed Set!

New York Times and USA Today Bestselling series
4.3 stars – 203 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
SALE! 

This set includes 3 full sized novels

Also don’t miss ‘IF I WERE YOU’ by Lisa Renee Jones optioned to STARZ for a television series!

About the series…

The Walker Brothers…
Tall, dark, and deadly, these three brothers run Walker security. Each brother is unique in his methods and skills, but all share key similarities. They are passionate about those they love, relentless when fighting for a cause they believe in, and all believe that no case is too hard, no danger too dark. Dedication is what they deliver, results are their reward.

Book 1 HOT SECRETS:
55,000 words
Royce Walker, a former FBI Agent, who’s opened a private security firm with his brothers, has always had the hots for the prim, proper Assistant District Attorney, but considered her hand’s off because of a family connection. However, when danger threatens Lauren, he isn’t willing to stand by and watch her get hurt. Now the passion for survival is only rivaled by the passion burning between them. And that passion, might just be the death of them both.

***
Book 2 Dangerous Secrets
72,000 words

Being a divorce attorney for the rich and famous isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Julie Harrison has learned that love doesn’t last, and she’s sworn never to make the same mistakes as her mother, or her clients. She uses the games men play to keep them at a distance. The only man who managed to break down her walls was Luke Walker, a Navy SEAL who loved her and left her, and changed her forever.

When Luke arrives back in New York, running Walker Security with his brothers and having left his Navy SEAL days behind, he sets his sights on Julie, the woman he’s always wanted and couldn’t have. Except, she runs from him every time he gets close.

But now, one of Julie’s clients, a powerful judge, gets involved with a dangerous cartel, and his soon-to-be-ex wife ends up dead. Julie’s next on the list, and she finds herself on the run from those who believe she knows too much, and counting on Luke to keep her alive. In the deepest, darkest moments of the night, passion will bring them together while danger threatens to tear them apart. Can Julie and Luke trust each other and find their happy ending before they find … the end?

***
The Prelude– a full sized bonus novel! A small connection to the other books

About Secrets Exposed: Her enemy is her passion, her passion is her enemy…
Lindsey Paxton was once the number one defense attorney in New York. She fought for those who were innocent, but charged. Her instincts were her lifeline, never failing her, as they guided her in her choices of who to defend. Or so she thought. Until she won a case she would forever wish to have lost. Her client, an accused rapist, kills and rapes a woman only a day after being set free. Destroyed by her role in the woman’s death, Lindsey blames her father’s controlling ways for what she has become, and runs from her career and life. Years later – the past becomes the present, and one man, her enemy, the only one she can turn to.

An excerpt from If I Were You by Lisa Renee Jones:

When the gallery comes into view, I pause to watch a group of elegantly dressed visitors pour through its double glass doors, which are lined in shiny silver for the black-tie affair. Artsy swirls of red letters, displayed above the entry, spell allure.

Nerves flutter in my stomach, though I can’t say why. I love the contemporary art Allure specializes in, love their mix of local new artists who I can discover, as well as the established names whose work I already appreciate. My nerves are ridiculous. I’m uncomfortable in this world, but then, this isn’t my world. It’s Rebecca’s, and Rebecca is the real reason I’m here.

 

A glance at my dainty, handmade, gold wristwatch, also bought at the pier, confirms I have plenty of time to spare. It is seven forty-five, fifteen minutes until Alvarez will be unveiling a new painting that will be displayed in the gallery and up for silent auction through the end of the week. Oh, how I’d love to have an Alvarez original, but they don’t come cheap. Still, a girl can dream.

 

Excitement filters in with nerves as I rush toward the door. A young brunette woman in a simple black dress holds it open for me and offers me a smile.”Welcome.”

 

I return the smile and enter the gallery, noting the nervous energy bouncing off the twentysomething girl as I pass, an energy that seems to what I am doing.” This isn’t Rebecca, who I know will be daringly bold and confident. In fact, the hostess brings out the schoolteacher in me, and I fight the urge to give her a hug and tell her she’s doing fine. I’m a hugger. I got it from my mother, just like I did my love of art, only I wasn’t talented with a brush as she had been.

The girl is saved from my mothering when the sound of a piano playing from a distant corner filters through the air and draws my attention to the main showroom. I am in awe. This isn’t my first time visiting the four-thousand-square-foot wonder that is the Allure gallery, but it doesn’t diminish my excitement at seeing it again.

 

The entryway opens to the main showroom of glistening white wonder. The walls are snow-white; the floor glistens like white diamonds. The shiny divider walls curve like abstract waves, and each of them is adorned with contrasting, eye- popping, colorful artwork.

 

I turn away from the showroom, attending to business before pleasure, and present my ticket to a hostess behind a podium. She is tall and elegant with long raven hair.”Rebecca?” I ask hopefully.

 

“No, sorry,” she says. “I’m Tesse.” She holds up a finger as she glances through the glass doors at an approaching customer she needs to attend. I wait patiently, hoping this young woman can connect me with Rebecca. I listen attentively while she directs the new guest to a short stairway that leads toward the music and, apparently, the location where Ricco Alvarez will be unveiling his masterpiece.

 

“Sorry for the interruption,”Tesse finally says, giving me her full attention. “You were looking for Rebecca. Unfortunately, she isn’t attending tonight’s event. Is

there something I can help you with?”

 

Disappointment fills me. To miss an Alvarez event is not something someone in Rebecca’s role is likely to do. I just want to know, for certain, that Rebecca is safe. Painting myself as a stranger doesn’t seem the way to do that. “My sister’s an old friend of Rebecca’s. She told me to be sure and say hello to her and pass along her new phone number. She seemed to think Rebecca worked big events like this one. She’ll be disappointed I missed her.”

 

“Oh, I hate that you missed her,” Tesse says, looking genuinely concerned. “I’m not only new, but I also only work part-time, on an as-needed basis, so I don’t hear much of what’s going on internally, but I think Rebecca took some personal time off. Mr. Compton would know for certain.”

 

“Mr. Compton?”

 

“The manager here,” she says. “He’ll be tied up with the presentation soon, but I can introduce you to him afterward if you like?”

 

I nod.”Yes. Please.That would be perfect.”

 

The piano stops abruptly. “They’re about to start,” Tesse informs me. “You should grab a seat while you still can. I’ll be sure to help you connect with Mark after the presentation.”

 

A thrill shoots through me. “Thank you so much,” I say, before I head toward the seating area. I can’t believe that I am about to see an Alvarez original presented by Alvarez himself.

 

A tuxedo-clad usher greets me at the bottom of the stairs and offers me some help finding a seat.And boy did I need help. There were at least two hundred chairs lined up in front of a ministage, set in front of a bay window that was essentially the entire wall, and almost every single chair was taken.

 

I squeeze into a center row, between a man that has artsy rebel written all over him from longish light blond hair to his jeans and a blazer, and a fifty-something woman who is more than a little irritated to have to let me pass. I can’t help but notice the man is incredibly good-looking, and I’ve never been one to be easily impressed. I know too well that beauty is often only skin deep.

 

“You’re late,” the man says as if he knows me, a friendly smile touching his lips, his green eyes crinkling at the edges, mischief in their depths.

 

I figure him to be about thirty-five. No. Thirty-three. I am good with ages and good at reading people. My kids at school often found that out when they were up to mischief. I smile back at the man, feeling instantly comfortable with him when, aside from my students, I’m normally quite reserved with strangers. “And you forgot to pick up your tux, I see,” I tease. In fact, I wonder how he pulled off getting in here dressed as he is.

 

He runs his hand over his sandy blond, one-day stubble that borders on two days.”At least I shaved.”

 

My smile widens, and I intend to reply but a screech from a microphone fills the air. A man I recognize from photos as Ricco Alvarez claims the stage and stands next to the sheet covering a display, no doubt his newest masterpiece. Suave and James Bond-esque in his tuxedo, he is the polar opposite of the man next to me.

 

“Welcome one and all,” he says in a voice richly accented with Hispanic heritage, as is his work. “I am Ricco Alvarez, and I thank you for sharing my love of art and children, on this grand evening. And so I give you what I call Chiquitos, or in English, Little Ones.”

 

He tears away the sheet, and everyone gasps at the unexpected piece of art that is nothing like anything he’s done before. Rather than a landscape, it is a portrait of three children, all of different nationalities, holding hands. It is a well-executed work appropriate for the occasion, though secretly, I had wished for a landscape where his brilliance shone.

 

The man next to me leans an elbow on his knee and lowers his voice.”What do you think?”

 

“It’s perfect for the evening,” I say cautiously.

 

“Oh, so diplomatic,” he says with a low chuckle. “You wanted a landscape.”

 

“He does beautiful landscapes,” I say defensively.

 

He grins.”He should have done a landscape.”

“And now,” Ricco announces, “while the bidding begins, I’ll be circulating the room, answering questions about my many works displayed tonight and hoping to have the pleasure of meeting as many of you as possible. Please feel free to walk to the stage for a closer look at Chiquitos.”

 

Almost instantly, the crowd is standing.

 

“Are you going for a close-up?” I ask the man next to me.

 

“Not much on crowds,” he said. “Nor Ricco’s attempt at portraiture.” He winks at me. “Don’t stroke his ego when you meet him. It’s big enough as it is.” He starts moving down the row toward the exit. I stare after him, feeling this odd flutter in my stomach at his departure, curious about who he is.

 

I frown as I repeat part of our conversation in my mind. Ricco. He’d called Ricco Alvarez Ricco and spoken of his ego as if he knew him. It’s too late now to find out how he knows Ricco, and portrait or not, I am eager for an up-close look at the featured painting. I have not met Ricco yet and it is disappointing, but I am still thrilled at the opportunity to see his work.

 

Sometime later, I am enjoying a lingering walk through the gallery, exploring the full Alvarez collection on display, when I spot a display for Chris Merit, whose work I studied in college. He, too, had once been a local, but I seem to remember his moving to Paris. Excitedly, I head toward his work. His specialties are urban landscapes-mostly of San Francisco, both past and present-and portraits of real subjects with such depth and soul they steal my breath away.

 

I join an elderly couple inside the small room, where they debate over which of several landscapes to purchase. Unable to stop myself, I join in.”I think you should take them all.”

 

The man scoffs.”Don’t go giving her ideas or you’ll both put me in the poorhouse. She gets one for above the fireplace.” “Stingy man,” the gray-haired woman says, shoving his arm playfully and then eying me. “So tell me, honey.” She motions between two pictures.”Which do you think is a better conversation piece, of these two?”

 

I study the two choices, both black-and-white, though Merit often uses color. One is a downtown shot of San Francisco in the midst of hurricane-like weather.The other is of the Golden Gate Bridge shrouded in clouds, the skyline of the city peeking out from behind it. “A tough choice,” I say thoughtfully. “Both have a bit of a dark edgy feel to them, and both have the ‘wow’ factor.” I indicate the stormy downtown scene.”I happen to know that one depicts the impact Hurricane Nora had on the city back in 1997.To me, that makes for a conversation piece, and a little bit of history to boot, right there in your living room.”

 

“You are so right, dear,” the woman says, her eyes lighting up. “This is the one.” She casts her husband an expectant look. “It’s perfect. I have to have it.”

 

“Then have it you shall,” her husband declares.

 

I smile at the woman’s joy, but not without a bit of art envy. I would love to be going home with the piece, as she will be, tonight.

 

“I understand you had a question for me,” a male voice says, pulling my attention toward the display entryway where a man with neatly trimmed blond hair stands. He is tall and confident, an air of ownership about him.And his eyes-they are the most unique silvery gray I’ve ever seen.

 

“I’m Mark Compton,” he says, “the gallery manager. And it looks like I owe you more than an answer to whatever your question is. It appears I need to thank you for assisting my customers.” He glances at the couple. “I take it you’ve made a selection?”

 

“Indeed we have,” the husband says, clearly pleased to have his wife make a decision. “We’d like to take it home with us tonight if possible.”

 

“Excellent,”he says.”If you’ll give me a moment,I’ll have it packaged for you.” He motions for me to walk with him, and I shake my head.

 

“I’m in no rush. Help them with their purchase, and you can find me later.”

 

He studies me a bit too intently, those silvery eyes of his rich with interest, and I am suddenly self-conscious. He is, without a doubt, classically handsome by anyone’s standards, but there is also something raw and sexual about this man, something almost predatory about him.

 

“All right then,” he says softly, “I’ll find you soon.” It isn’t a statement that alludes to a double meaning, but yet, I feel one there. His gaze shifts to the couple.”Let’s go ring you up.”

 

The couple thanks me for my help and hurry after Mark. The minute they are gone, the minute Mark Compton is out of sight, I let out a breath I hadn’t known I was holding and shake myself inwardly. And not just because of the way his eyes had assessed me so . . . so what? Intimately? Surely not. I still have this overactive-imagination thing going on from reading the journals. I do wonder if he is the he from the journals. He certainly has the animal magnetism Rebecca’s words painted him with. But then, so does Ricco Alvarez. Good grief, I’m making myself crazy.

 

A staff member interrupts me before I can go on another “crazy” thinking spree, and removes the couple’s purchase from the display. I force myself to stop overanalyzing and relax, basking in the solitude as I discover Chris Merit’s newest work.

 

“You like Merit?” comes another male voice, this one familiar.

 

I turn to find the man who’d sat next to me during the presentation standing in the doorway. I give a quick, eager nod. “Very much. I wish they had some of his portraits, but his urban landscapes are magnificent.You?”

 

He leans against the wall. “I hear he doesn’t have an over- inflated ego.That scores points with me.”

 

I tilt my head and study him, relaxing into the easy conversation.”Why are you here if you don’t like Ricco?”

 

Mark Compton appears in the doorway. “I see you didn’t venture far,” he says to me and then eyes the other man. “Don’t tell me you’re pimping your own work at Ricco’s event?” He glances at me.”Was he pimping his own work?”

 

I gape. “Wait. His own work?” I shift my gaze to my nameless new friend, who looks nothing like the Chris Merit I’ve seen photos of.”Who are you exactly?”

His mouth quirks at the edges. “The man with one red shoe.” And with that, he turns and walks away.

 

I shake my head. “What? What does that mean?” I turn to Mark.”What does that mean?The man with one red shoe?”

 

“Who knows,” Mark says, his lips thinning in disapproval. “Chris has a twisted sense of humor.Thankfully, it doesn’t show up on the canvas.”

 

My jaw goes slack.”Wait.Are you telling me that was Chris Merit?” I rack my brain over the pictures of him I’ve seen and I remember him differently. Do I have his image confused with another?

 

“That’s Chris,” he confirms. “And as you can see, he has an odd way about him. He was standing in his own display room and didn’t even tell you who he was.” His hands settle on his hips. “Listen, Tesse tells me you . . . I’m sorry, I didn’t get your name?”

 

“Sara,” I supply.”Sara McMillan.”

 

“Sara,” he repeats, his tone low, as if he was trying it out on his tongue, trying me out on his tongue. Seconds pass, and the small display area seems to get smaller before he adds,”Tesse was right. Rebecca is on a leave of absence.”

 

His tone shifts back to all business now, and I wonder if I imagine the raspier tone. I am, after all, excelling at making myself crazy.”I see,” I say.”Is there a way to reach her?”

 

“If you figure out a way, let me know,” he says. “She took a two-week cruise with some rich guy she was dating and that turned into the entire summer. I agreed because she’s good at her job and the clients love her. But depending on interns who don’t know what they’re doing is killing me. I’m going to have to get someone in here to cover for her who actually knows what she is doing.”

 

“The entire summer,” I repeat uncomfortably, focusing on the oddity that

represents. All summer is a long time for a working girl to leave her job behind. And Mark’s comment about the “rich guy” hit me just as wrong for some reason, though it could have been merely his frustration over Rebecca’s extended leave.

 

Or maybe . . . could he be jealous over this rich man? My brows dip.”Leaving you high and dry like this-that doesn’t sound like the responsible Rebecca my sister described.”

 

“People aren’t always what they seem,” he says and motions toward Chris Merit’s displayed art. “The art does not always mimic the artist.You never know the real person until you slide beneath their surface.”

 

Or look in their dresser drawer, I think guiltily. But Rebecca didn’t seem like someone to run out on her job to me. She loved her job. Then again, I might be wrong. As seduced as Rebecca had been by this world she’d created, she’d been scared, too. And I want to know why more than ever. What created such obsession, such fear?

 

A sudden burn for answers, a need to leave here tonight with something more than I came with overcomes me, and before I can stop myself, I blurt, “I can cover Rebecca for the rest of the summer. I’m a teacher, so I’m on break. I have a masters of arts from the Art Institute and a bachelors in business. I interned for three years at the Museum of Modern Art, and I know art.All art.Test me if you like.”

 

His eyes narrow a fraction, the silence crackling between us for several long seconds. “You’re hired, Sara McMillan.You can start on Monday. I’ll let you enjoy the rest of your evening.” He lowers his voice. “Then you’ll be all mine.” He turns and walks away.

 

I blink, stunned. He’d just hired me, but he hadn’t even asked me one single question. I hadn’t asked about hours or pay. I inhale a sharp breath. I’d come here to find Rebecca, to make sure she is alive and well. Instead, I am about to be Rebecca, or rather, be the marketing director for the gallery. So I can find Rebecca, I tell myself. Something has happened to Rebecca, and I have to prove it.That’s why I’m here. No other reason.

 

Click Here to Download

Tall, Dark, and Deadly: 3-in-1 Boxed Set