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41 out of 43 rave reviews & a 67% price cut makes this a great day to discover a stirring work of contemporary fiction: American Warrior By James Snyder

How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

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“A fast-paced…thoroughly engrossing story of a journey through pain and violence.” Kirkus Reviews

American Warrior

by James Snyder

4.5 stars – 43 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

The year is 1961. America has a new president, named John F. Kennedy, and a new era the newspapers are calling the Dawn of Camelot. But for ten-year-old Paul Brett, dealing with an abusive father and the immigrant gangs roaming his slum neighborhood of China Slough, America is only a small, dead-end place he is struggling to survive.

That is, until the night a mysterious stranger comes out of the darkness to his rescue, and initiates a journey–an unforgettable odyssey–beyond his wildest imagination.

From his unlikely beginnings in a brutal California migrant camp, into the darkest underbelly of a distant and unpopular war, to his final and, perhaps, most deadly struggle for survival inside the bowels of a near-medieval military prison, American Warrior follows this amazing journey of one young hero from boyhood to manhood, and from love lost, to his final and most incredible attempts to regain that love.

Reviews

“This book is hard to put down, and at times…the realism is startling and palpable.”– Kirkus Reviews

“It immerses you in a rich & violent tale of courage, skill & becoming.” — Rebeccas Reads

“A gripping tale of conflict, internal and external.” — Swamy Reviews

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Free Thriller Excerpt Featuring Joseph J. Gabriele’s Crime Fiction Novel Dangerous Illusions

On Friday we announced that Joseph J. Gabriele’s Dangerous Illusions is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: 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!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

Dangerous Illusions

by Joseph J. Gabriele

4.0 stars – 9 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday Price: $9.99
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

In a beguiling tale of deception and murder, desire and theft, seduction and betrayal—where nothing is what it appears to be—a man is murdered and an iconic musical instrument is stolen during a gathering at Eliot Sexton’s Park Avenue apartment. The stolen item—an object of desire worshipped by millions—is the key to solving the crime, or so the detective brought in to investigate believes. The murder, however, is not nearly as straightforward as it seems—nor is the theft.

Though the island of Manhattan presents no shortage of suspects—many of them capable of killing to satisfy their appetites—Eliot, a young economic historian and writer, soon becomes the prime suspect. As he draws closer to the truth behind the theft and murder, he also becomes the killer’s next target.

Irreverent, provocative, and utterly unpredictable, Dangerous Illusions is a weeklong polyrhythmic journey into contemporary New York that will keep readers guessing right up to its thrilling conclusion.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

CHAPTER I

I am not a particularly superstitious man, but if something inauspicious were to happen—if a bullet should somehow find its way into my head, if I should fail to find my way home some evening, if any untoward accident should suddenly occur—I thought someone should know the truth. Perhaps I should start with the night Eugene Livingston was killed, though in actuality it all began much earlier. Of course, I didn’t realize that at the time.

As we stepped out of the office that evening, I asked Laura if she would call the police. I had the overwhelming task of telling Charles Livingston of his brother Eugene’s death.

At first, I was unable to find him among the profusion of smiling faces that crowded the living room. As I moved through the circles and triangles of conversation that surrounded me, I was acutely aware of the specific sounds of many different voices, the rising and falling cadences of varied accents, the pitch of laughter, and all of the ambient sounds of the festivities throughout the room. I caught a fleeting trace of an exotic perfume as I walked past a journalist engaged in a heated conversation with three of her colleagues about politics, finance, and fraud. She looked out at me through blue eyes and black lashes, her revealing comments as pointed as the bare breasts concealed beneath her gown. Everything around me contrasted so sharply with what I had just seen that it was impossible to quiet my mind, and I was still reeling by the time I found Charles.

Charles was standing under the archway between the living room and the dining room, speaking with Yvette St. James. The conversation was quite lively and they were laughing. Kate Livingston stood nearby, perched at the corner of the dining room table, pecking away at her plate as she observed them, obviously annoyed by her husband’s laughter.

As I walked toward them, the ensemble played against the rising sound of the storm in an ostinato pattern filled with uncertainty and irregularity. There were touches of darkness to the chords and flourishes of the piano. The guitarist fretted along unable to maintain his usual level of pensive concentration. The bassist frenetically stroked and plucked the strings of her instrument, struggling to keep pace with the storm.

Charles and Yvette both smiled as they saw me approaching, but Yvette’s smile waned almost instinctively. As I tried to summon words that would somehow soften the blow, Charles continued to smile, which only made the task more difficult. The appropriate words, which had already been said too often to Charles, seemed entirely insufficient. Perhaps I had also heard these words too recently to think anything meaningful could be said.

In the long moment after the words had been spoken, he and Yvette both stared at me in silence until a rush of boots thundered into the apartment as a squad of six uniformed officers descended upon the gathering, aggressively pushing their way through black suits and saffron, vermillion, and indigo dresses. The men were uniform in their official blue attire, in their weaponry, in their substantial bulk, and in the geometry of their shaved round heads. Only the irregular protuberances of the cranium and varying vascular patterns beneath their bare scalps distinguished one officer from another. This shorn uniformity, so often associated with the fascist, the mercenary, the convict, or the psychiatric inmate, seemed to confirm a fraternal order.

The guests scattered in terrified confusion as the police advanced into the room.

***

Once the initial terror had subsided, a state of uncertainty remained. Some of the guests, by virtue of education or natural inclination, were accustomed to a healthy skepticism of authority and were not afraid to observe, even study, the police. Those of a more timid disposition, though still unsure of what had happened, clearly felt safer now that the police had arrived and just as clearly wanted to be told what to do. But most of the guests simply kept their eyes down. Some looked nervous, while others evidently did not want to get involved.

As I approached one of the uniformed men, the distinct scraping sound of the elevator gates cut through the silence and two additional police officers entered the apartment, the first, taller and more aggressive, the other, much thinner and clearly his subordinate, in appearance if not in rank. The other officers immediately deferred to them and I led the two men across the living room and into the office.

Neither spoke as they stared into the interior of the room. The taller officer began to rub his jaw and chin, his fingertips rasping across the shafts of the coarse stubble of his beard, clearly unsettled by what he saw. The other policeman began to retch and looked away, trying to suppress a succession of dry heaves.

Eugene Livingston sat across from my desk, his head pitched forward unnaturally, the wavy hair across his right temple wet in glossy streaks of crimson, black, and orange. Blood flowed from a pool collecting in the well of his ear, dripping down along his cheek and neck. Eugene’s lax expression was almost unrecognizable. He stared out lethargically, a gaze of simple and degrading stupidity fixed in his eyes, the front row of his teeth resting effortlessly on his lower lip in an unfamiliar overbite suggesting the lazy inclination of thoughtlessness. The back-left side of his skull was missing, along with his many thoughts and ideas and the grey cerebral matter that had generated them. What had evidently been a river cascading from Eugene was now reduced to a trickle and flowed over a pebbly streambed into an estuary forming in front of the terrace doors and swelling with the incoming rain.

The taller officer was still stroking his chin and staring undecidedly at Eugene’s body when Laura entered the office.

“When I found him,” Laura said, “Eugene was—”

“And who are you?” the officer asked, eager to assert his authority and just as clearly mindless of our loss.

“Laura Arden,” she said.

“When I want to hear from you, I’ll ask.”

Laura stared at the officer, studying him with an anthropological curiosity until he turned away and looked at me.

“And you are?” he asked, with equal contention.

“Eliot Sexton.”

“Well, Mr. Sexton,” he said, a churlish smile shifting the heavily shadowed terrain of his face, “I’m Officer Armstrong. I’m the guy who takes you down to the station.”

“Officer Ripperger,” his partner said, introducing himself in a low, barely intelligible mumble.

A moment later, two paramedics arrived. Observing Eugene Livingston’s body, they shook their heads with a sense of futility and disgust. But for a perfunctory examination and a few questions to collect the requisite data, they left the room without further comment.

Armstrong began to interrogate first Laura, then me, the questions elliptical in their repetition and accusatory in their tone. He grew frustrated with our answers, as if we weren’t telling him what he wanted to hear. We had been through this responsorial ritual three times when he waved us out of the office and began to survey the guests.

Ripperger watched Armstrong in silence, waiting for direction.

“Let’s start taking some names,” Armstrong said, ready to impose his authority on the room.

***

Soon afterwards, a detective arrived with four men in familiar uniforms carrying unfamiliar equipment. A New York Police Department photographer, also with a great deal of equipment, entered almost immediately after them. The detective took off his raincoat and tossed it at Armstrong—relegating Armstrong to a post at the front door with a few short words—and then proceeded slowly into the living room, pulling his badge from the breast pocket of his pale grey suit and displaying it as he studied the apartment and guests.

The small circles and triangles of hushed conversation dispersed as he walked through the room, his eyes running over those along his path. He stopped directly behind Blair Lockhart, pausing to examine the smooth skin exposed by her backless dress, water pouring off him, streaming from his hair and rolling down his nose, which had clearly been broken in three places. Drops of rain fell from the tip of his nose in rapid succession, splashing onto his suit and darkening its fabric, but he seemed too preoccupied with Blair to notice.

Rain continued to fall from the detective and his men as Ripperger ushered them into the office, adding to the water already beginning to accumulate on the narrow oak floorboards in front of the fireplace, the smell of rain intermingling with the scent of apple, cherry, and cedar wood burning in the fire. One of the caterers followed in their wake, applying one kitchen towel after another to the floor to soak up the water they had left behind. When the caterer had finished in the living room and returned to the foyer, Armstrong looked down at his feet, clearly annoyed by the activity of the young woman mopping up around him.

The office door had been closed for several minutes when a series of flashes began streaming through the airspace between the door and the doorjamb.

The murmur of voices grew as the minutes passed. A few of the guests who had been particularly enthusiastic in their enjoyment of the wine and champagne that had been crisscrossing the room throughout the evening still didn’t seem to grasp the seriousness of the situation. Near the center of the room, a financial correspondent from one of the few remaining New York dailies, a famously boring but well-fed man, preoccupied himself with a colossal prawn, while his pretty young wife studied the somewhat younger man sitting beside her. The man, a newly tenured professor, didn’t seem to notice her. He was thoroughly engrossed in the much worldlier older woman opposite him, much to the consternation of both the young woman he had arrived with and the correspondent’s bored wife.

When the detective opened the office door a quarter of an hour later, the ultra-bright white photographic flashes emerged strobe-like in their rapidity and intensity. Officer Ripperger pointed in my direction and the detective walked over to me, taking another long look at the apartment and the guests as he approached.

“Detective Garelik,” he said, in curt introduction. “You own this place?”

“Yes,” I said.

“Live here alone?”

“Yes.”

“Divorced?”

I shook my head.

“Never married?” He looked skeptical, as if being neither married nor divorced was cause for suspicion.

“Widowed,” I replied.

“A bit young to be widowed, aren’t you?”

“It wasn’t something we planned.”

He glanced down at my hands. “Own any guns?”

“No.”

“Have you fired or handled a gun recently?”

“No, I haven’t.”

He smiled and signaled two of the men who had been in the office with him.

“Put your hands out in front of you,” Garelik said.

I felt the eyes of the room on me as the officers tested for evidence of gunshot residue. They collected samples from each hand, front and back, and then collected additional samples from the cuffs of my shirt and the sleeves of my suit jacket.

When they had finished, Garelik dismissed them and continued with his questioning.

“The man who was shot in your office was a friend of yours?”

“Yes, a good friend.”

“Nobody heard anything?”

“Not that I’m aware of.”

“And a musical instrument was stolen?”

“Yes.”

“In oyster black pearl,” he said, more as a statement than a question.

I nodded.

“Nobody saw it walking out the front door,” he added. “It just vanished.”

I ignored his sarcasm.

“That’s your story? More than seventy people saw nothing?”

And so I was taken down to the station.

 

CHAPTER II

The force of the wind bent the rain at a forty-five-degree angle as Armstrong and Ripperger led me outside. Despite the short distance to the police car, the cold rain saturated my clothing. Armstrong held the car door open and I sat in the back seat of a filthy, beat-up NYPD police car. The rear seat was lower in height than in a consumer automobile and the disintegrating cushions sagged so low that I had to strain to see above the cage barrier. There was something peculiar and foul and strangely unrecognizable in the smell of the car.

The station house was in no better condition. It had clearly been built prior to the last century and little had been done since to maintain it. The patina of the original and evidently only coat of chalk-green paint on the walls and molding was so alligatored that the underlying plaster and wood surfaces were plainly visible. Globe light fixtures filled with dust, insects, and indistinguishable dehydrated forms hung from a tarnished tin ceiling, casting a grey-green incandescent light.

The floorboards sagged and creaked as we walked past the elevated booking desk and the sergeant behind it looked up and paused in the processing of his paperwork. A small line of suspects, very wet and obviously down on their luck, also looked up at our arrival. A group of young men and women in their early twenties, perhaps even in their late teens, were standing directly in front of the booking desk, though they looked more like students than criminals. One of them was speaking with the sergeant.

“Could you please tell me where he is, then?” the young woman asked.

The sergeant did not respond.

“When will I be able to see him?”

The sergeant continued to stare straight ahead, not quite at her but through her, without a trace of emotion or concern, his indifference absolute.

“You can’t just arrest him for speaking at the Great Hall,” she said. “He’s a student at Cooper Union. We all are.”

She was obviously upset and I turned to see what was happening, but Armstrong pushed me along toward the staircase at the far end of the room.

“Why won’t you tell me where he is?” she said, her voice carrying up through the stairwell as Armstrong, Ripperger, and I climbed a dark flight of stairs to an even darker hallway.

Half the light bulbs were out and the air was cold and still. Armstrong and Ripperger told me to wait and entered an unmarked door at the end of the hallway. Darkly stained chairs and benches lined the long corridor and the worn floorboards, eroded by countless hours of restless pacing, served as a testament to more than a century of detainees.

The young woman’s voice floated up from the stairwell and continued to carry along the hallway as she made one futile appeal after another to the desk sergeant, the concern and anxiety in her voice escalating, more disconcerting with each new appeal. I stood in the near darkness and watched the rain pounding against the glass of the stairwell skylight, listening to her intermittent pleas through the staccato patterns of the rain for well over an hour before one of the hallway doors opened.

Two officers came out and escorted a young man toward another room across the hallway. His hands were cuffed behind his back and fresh blood was spattered across his face, his hair, and his white cotton shirt in wild patterns of scarlet and alizarin. His fair skin was battered and purple, his eyes blackened, one of them swollen shut, an overripe plum ready to burst with the slightest pressure.

He heard the young woman’s voice climbing through the stairwell and called out to her, his words slurring from the swelling around his mouth. When the young woman heard him, she cried out, but before he could say anything more one of the officers punched him in the small of his back and they swept him into the room, closing the door behind them.

A few minutes later, Armstrong and Ripperger reemerged into the hallway.

“The lieutenant says he doesn’t need to see you after all,” Armstrong said, the churlish smile returning to his otherwise vacant expression.

As we walked down the stairs, the sound of the young woman’s voice grew stronger.

“We haven’t done anything wrong,” she said. “Why won’t you tell me what you’ve done with him?”

She was crying now, but her pleading still had no effect whatsoever, and the sergeant maintained his complete indifference.

Ripperger smirked at the young woman while Armstrong was informing me that I wouldn’t be able to return to my apartment until the police had finished the initial investigation of the crime scene.

“We’ll bring you to a hotel,” Armstrong said.

“That’s quite all right, I can take a cab.”

“No,” he said. “We’ll take you.”

I really didn’t want to get back into the patrol car. “I’d prefer to take a cab.”

“We’re taking you back,” he insisted.

This was clearly not an act of courtesy on his part. He was determined to put me back in that car.

The young woman turned to look at us as we walked past the booking desk. She was very tired and sad and lost, the other students were worried, and the small line of suspects was a little longer now, though no less wet and certainly no less down on their luck. As I turned to look back at her, Armstrong pushed me along toward the exit.

***

On our way back to Park Avenue and Thirty-ninth Street, the undercarriage of the patrol car scraped exposed granite cobblestone protruding through shoddy asphalt and I began to ache as the car slammed its way from one crater to another.

There were two hotels located in the same block as my apartment at the Phoenix and I asked Armstrong and Ripperger to drop me off at the Vandeventer. Because of its location, I often referred visiting colleagues and friends to the hotel. Built in 1927, it provided a glimpse of prewar New York, despite modernity’s encroachment.

Flashing lights lined both sides of Thirty-ninth Street and reflected off the beveled glass of the heavy wrought-iron doors and the polished brass address plate of the Phoenix. The granite foundation and limestone pediments were bathed in the rotating lights.

It was good to be out of the car.

The rain had lapsed into a fine mist and Armstrong and Ripperger joined the crowd gathering in front of the apartment house as I walked in the opposite direction toward the Hotel Vandeventer. The lobby was empty and only the night manager stood behind the reception desk.

“I’d like a room for what’s left of the night. Do you have anything available on the tenth floor, northwest side of the building?”

He looked at me strangely, puzzled by the request. “That’s overlooking the alley.”

“Yes.”

“You know,” he said, “there was a guy killed in the next building tonight—”

“Yes, it happened in my apartment.”

I couldn’t tell if he was embarrassed by his remark or mine, but he completed the registration with as few words and as quickly as possible.

As soon as I entered the hotel room, I turned off the lights, crossed the room, pulled back the drapes and sheers covering the large windows, and found exactly what I thought I might find.

 

CHAPTER III

Over the years, I had become aware that the view into the Phoenix was of particular interest to many hotel guests. I would find them perched at all hours, peering into the apartment, transfixed. They were a polymorphic species, migrating and transitory, exhibiting a full range of plumages, color variations, and a spectrum of behaviors unrelated to age, sex, season, or geographic origin.

I sat down at the table beside one of the windows and looked over the narrow alley into the interior of my apartment. All of the guests had left and a medical examiner had since joined Garelik and the photographer in the office. I could see Eugene through the French doors that opened onto the terrace. He was still sitting in the same unnatural position across from my desk, recorded by the flashes of the photographer’s camera every six to ten seconds in a coda of repetition.

Kneeling behind the desk, Garelik was struggling to pick the lock that controlled access to the desk’s upper drawers. When he finally succeeded, he stood up and began rifling through the top center drawer. Grabbing several bundles of cash, he inspected them slowly and carefully and then tossed them back into the drawer. A moment later, he picked up my passport and began flipping through it, pausing occasionally to examine the stamps registered on its pages. He went on to discover a 1963 two-dollar United States Note with its engraved portrait of Thomas Jefferson and its vibrant red seal and serial numbers that I also kept in the drawer. He picked up the note, which had been issued by the Treasury Department during the final months of the Kennedy Administration, and held it out in front of him with both hands, staring at it. He seemed even more preoccupied with this discovery than he had been with the prior ones. Reaching into the corner of the drawer, he retrieved a handful of Liberty Head Dollars dating back to the 1880s. Palming the silver coins in one hand, he jiggled them repeatedly, perhaps charmed by their surprising weight or their inimitable clinking sound, occasionally pausing to rub a gloved thumb over the face of Liberty.

The medical examiner was exchanging words and gestures with the two technicians applying black markers to the floor, furniture, walls, and ceiling as reference points for the photographer. The photographer looked over at them, but then resumed his work, documenting Eugene’s body and the surrounding area in extraordinary detail, one blinding flash following another in a series of photographs taken from multiple angles around the room.

Garelik had moved on to the adjoining drawers, but he must have found them somewhat less interesting, judging from how quickly he searched through them. There was nothing on top of the desk and he went on to four sealed archival boxes resting on top of the wooden file cabinets along the south wall of the room. After fumbling through one box of photographs and documents after another, he decided to open the cabinets below in the same way he had opened the desk. Running his fingertips across the tabs of the hanging folders suspended in the cabinet drawers, he occasionally paused to flip through the contents of the various files, which contained contracts, royalty statements, income tax files, and other personal documents and papers. The graphic materials in the adjoining flat file cabinets were also not exempt from his search.

Soon afterwards, Garelik turned to the bookshelves above the credenza behind the desk and took hold of North’s Plutarch, grabbing both of the multivolume slipcases. He emptied the books onto the credenza, picked up one of the volumes, held it spine-up at eye level, opened it, lifted the boards of the front and back covers until they were horizontal, and then began to shake the book while randomly fanning through it, as if expecting a significant clue to drop from its pages. This went on through all eight volumes and I began to understand why I had been taken down to the station.

When Garelik had handled most of the books on the shelves, he turned toward the north wall, crossed the room, and walked out of my line of vision.

The large and small fragments of Eugene’s tissue and bone that were scattered throughout the room were being collected by the technicians, who carefully placed them in specimen bags, while the police were busy throughout the rest of the apartment. Two officers had disappeared into my bedroom, two were in the living room going through the drawers of the end tables on each side of the fireplace, and another two had moved through the contents of the dining room and kitchen and were now in the foyer.

The first officer in the foyer exited through the front door and disappeared into the tenth floor landing. The other officer appeared in the library, moving toward the large pocket window, which he opened. He crawled out onto the fire escape, preoccupying himself with the windows that opened onto it. After examining the library window, its bathroom window, the kitchen’s pantry window, and the bay window of the dining room, checking the locks from the exterior, he began to inspect each from the interior, eventually rejoining his partner in the dining room.

One of the officers in the living room perused a number of 78-rpm records stored in the console below the Victrola next to the McIntosh. Once he had made his selection and succeeded in mastering the clockwise motion of the crank handle, he began to play the record, much to the merriment of his partner.

Two officers emerged from the bedroom with several editions illustrated by Umberto Brunelleschi and George Barbier, clearly recognizable by their bright red and brilliant blue leather bindings. They quickly summoned their fellow officers to share in their booty, and Garelik, the photographer, the medical examiner, and the technicians abandoned the office for the festivities coalescing at the head of the living room in front of the fireplace.

It was obvious that the subtleties contained in the colorful texts and illustrations were lost on New York’s Finest. However, they were having a thoroughly good time viewing the books, rotating them back and forth between landscape and portrait perspectives. In a ribald salute to the moment, one officer grabbed his nuts, while the others shared body blows of camaraderie and schoolyard bonding in the glow of the fire.

Eventually, they migrated to the dining room and like dark hovering crows picked at the remains of the caterer’s magnificent spread.

***

When they had feasted and the fire had grown cold, Eugene was enclosed in a body bag, placed on a gurney, and rolled out of the apartment.

Lightning flashed in the distance and began to fill the sky, one long arthritic finger after another reaching down over the skyline of Manhattan. Skeletal and bright white, the fingers scratched at the windows and clawed their way from one rooftop to another, from townhouse to hotel, from hotel to apartment house, until they vanished into the darkness.

A pattern was forming.

Brilliance. Blackness. Brilliance. Brilliance. Blackness. Brilliance. Blackness. Blackness.

The pattern repeated itself at an ever-increasing tempo. Lightning continued to spread out across the sky. Distant thunder responded, dark with discord. Voices rose up from the basement stairs and mixed with the metallic rattling of the gurney as it emerged into the alley, its small wheels catching on the brickwork of the alleyway’s pavement, intensifying the grating and unnerving clattering of its metal frame, until it was lifted into the darkness of the open van.

Veins of lightning coursed through the blackness with greater and greater rapidity, a vast army advancing through the night sky, communicating more and more frequently with its allied legions of thunder. The lightning and thunder moved closer and closer to their intended terminus, narrowing the time and distance between them. When the lapse of time between light and sound was no longer distinguishable and any semblance of night had been inverted to an ugly fluorescence, the sky opened and relinquished the weight of its heavy tears. A moment later, the van passed through the wrought-iron gates of the alley, disappearing into the wind and rain, and Eugene Livingston was gone.

***

Gravity seemed to be pulling my body down. I looked at my watch and it was 4:14 am. I stood up, pulled the sheers closed, crossed the room to the bed, and took off my clothes, placing them over the back of the armchair. The sheets felt smooth and cool as I slipped into bed.

A wave of exhaustion carried me off and I drifted in and out of thoughts and sleep. At some point, I awoke, reeling. Lightheaded, off balance, tempest-tossed, I was overwhelmed. I closed my eyes. Time passed and I drifted back into disorienting thoughts, images, and sleep.

As morning light began to filter through the sheers, I heard the sparkling sizzle of small cascading metal pieces and felt the sensation of smooth skin slide along the side of my body. I awoke to a constellation of freckles orbiting small copper-colored nipples set against tawny skin. Blair Lockhart slowly ascended over me, gliding across the tops of my legs, her legs parting, revealing a golden cache, soft and delicate in its un-coiffed, authentic, and natural state, which she considered one of her finest traits.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading Joseph J. Gabriele’s Dangerous Illusions >>>>

Whether you like classic crime yarns by Hammett and Highsmith or contemporary thrillers by Larsson and Brown, you’ll find lots to love in Dangerous Illusions by Joseph J. Gabriele – A steal at just $2.99 on Kindle

How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are brought to you by our brand new Thriller of the Week, by Joseph J. Gabriele’s Dangerous Illusions. Please check it out!

Dangerous Illusions

by Joseph J. Gabriele

5.0 stars – 6 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday Price: $9.99
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

In a beguiling tale of deception and murder, desire and theft, seduction and betrayal—where nothing is what it appears to be—a man is murdered and an iconic musical instrument is stolen during a gathering at Eliot Sexton’s Park Avenue apartment. The stolen item—an object of desire worshipped by millions—is the key to solving the crime, or so the detective brought in to investigate believes. The murder, however, is not nearly as straightforward as it seems—nor is the theft.

Though the island of Manhattan presents no shortage of suspects—many of them capable of killing to satisfy their appetites—Eliot, a young economic historian and writer, soon becomes the prime suspect. As he draws closer to the truth behind the theft and murder, he also becomes the killer’s next target.

Irreverent, provocative, and utterly unpredictable, Dangerous Illusions is a weeklong polyrhythmic journey into contemporary New York that will keep readers guessing right up to its thrilling conclusion.

5-Star Amazon Review

“Couldn’t put it down!”

This book is so much more than a mystery. I admired the quality of the writing—it has a certain musicality to it, managing to be both lyrical and rhythmic—which, given the subject matter, is quite appropriate. The writing was extraordinarily evocative and I loved the local color throughout. I really felt that I was in the locations—the apartment house, the hotel, Music Row, the carriage house, the trip to SoHo, the speakeasy. The author perfectly captures the sights and sounds of New York City. I recognized some of the locations, but not all, and I couldn’t help but wonder if they are based on real places. I also thought the same about many of the characters, as Gabriele draws them with a knowing insight and wit. And like all of the best crime fiction, this is about so much more than a murder, it’s about the world we live in now.

josephAbout The Author

Joseph J. Gabriele is a graduate of Boston University, where he studied English Language and Literature. His publishing career includes experience at a number of leading New York trade publishers, including Doubleday & Company, John Wiley & Sons, and Simon & Schuster. He is a member of the Authors Guild.

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★★★★★ 5 Star, FREE Thriller Excerpt Featuring The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: All Washed Up by Jennifer L. Hart

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5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Maggie Phillips is fine—just ask her. So what if two psychos tried to do her in and her business is all but dead, she never wanted to be the laundry hag to begin with, so why should she mourn her tattered reputation? With spring comes a fresh start, garage sale season and the birth of her brother’s first child. Life goes on even if cleaning has lost its luster and the sight of her scarred hands brings back horrific memories.

Help is on the way, whether she wants it or not. When Maggie’s mother-in-law asks her to assist with renovations to their project house in upstate New York, she smells a rat. Matters become murkier when Laura casually tells the former laundry hag to “see to that pesky ghost,” like the phantom is ring around the bathtub. But both Neil and Sylvia are eager to undertake the zany task and really, what else does she have to do?

How about solve a two decade old murder, find a few long lost relatives, fix her mental hang-ups and reconnect with the husband she’s pushed away. And if she has any time to spare, maybe she can even survive a pissed-off apparition and keep it from finishing the job the last two killers started Third time’s the charm…right?

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

“Maggie dear, so nice to see you.” Laura did that little faux kiss thing on my cheek. Didn’t actually press her lips to my skin—for fear of smudging her nude lip gloss no doubt—but more of a weird cheek to cheek peck gesture that I supposed denoted affection in birds of prey. I stifled a shudder. It wasn’t wise to stand so close, and one hand covered my heart in case she decided to rip it free from my chest and eat it before my eyes. I could almost see the blood drip down her cashmere twinset. Corporate attorneys did things like that.

Luckily, my mother-in-law turned her attention to Sylvia, who was resplendent in her simple black cocktail dress and heels. “And Sylvia, how are you?”

“Very well, thank you.” Sylvia was too poised to shift nervously from foot to foot, so I did it for her. I smelled a rat in the elegant townhouse. Just what was Laura up to? I glanced around for Leo, my inside man. Unfortunately, he was nowhere in sight.

“Hello sweetheart.” Ralph pulled me into a hug. I still wasn’t sure if he knew my name, since he called every woman he encountered sweetheart. His hand traveled down to my ass and he gave me a little tap there. I recoiled and pressed my backside into the wall. Had I really convinced Neil that dinner with his parents was a good idea? Stupid, stupid laundry hag.

Laura glowered at her husband as he gave Sylvia the same treatment. She squeaked and backed away, too. Ralph smiled and sipped clear liquid from his highball glass. “Who wants a drink?” he asked as he headed for the drawing room.

“Honestly Ralph, I’m amazed we don’t have a slew of sexual harassment lawsuits, the way you behave.” How a sexist man-pig like Ralph and a militant feminist like Laura made a marriage work was one of life’s great mysteries. Equally mind boggling, how had their DNA managed to combine into Neil’s utter perfection?

I took a quick look at Mr. Perfect—who was still ignoring me. Usually when we suffered through dinner with his parents, we’d exchange knowing glances and small smiles. On one memorable occasion we’d played footsie under the mammoth dining room table while his mother bitched about a client. But Neil’s halo was a tad tarnished and while I wouldn’t accuse him of sulking, he was definitely giving me the cold shoulder. Fine, I’d leave him to it, as long as I could anyway. We hadn’t exchanged two words since the hospital debacle and I felt a little sick. This was more than a rough patch. He’d driven the boys separately in his truck while Sylvia and I carpooled in my Mini, so we could speculate why Laura had summoned us.

Kenny and Josh took center stage while the adults sipped martinis. Their retelling of my encounter with Frau Badass was both overblown and hilarious.

“And we saw Aunt Penny’s booby!” Kenny announced, clearly scandalized.

I wondered how much Botox my mother-in-law consumed in a year. It must be considerable, what with the amount of frowning she did. In her late fifties, Laura’s skin was still mostly smooth, so either she’d sold whatever passed for her soul to Satan or she spent the equivalent of a third world country’s GNP on the stuff.

Still no sign of Leo. I knew from experience that the dragon lady would think me rude if I just came out and asked for him. Leo was the help, not family, after all. Maybe I ought to excuse myself to the little girl’s room and then peek into the kitchen. There’d be holy hell to pay if I got caught, but better to beg forgiveness than ask permission, right?

“Maggie, did you hear me?” Laura’s tone was sharp.

“No, sorry.” I drained my martini glass for fortification.

Laura’s hazel-green eyes—so much like her son’s but oh so much older—narrowed. “I said,” she clipped out in a brittle tone, obviously irritated that I missed the memo the first time, “that we just purchased a lovely little place on the Delaware River.”

“Oh?” I feigned interest as best I could. Laura and Ralph bought real estate for a hobby and since the Great Recession, they seemed to acquire a new place every few months. Some they renovated and sold, others they rented, still others they donated to the local municipalities as halfway houses or battered women’s shelters. They went through houses like I went through tissues, so I couldn’t get too worked up about it and not look like the poor relation.

Laura’s world was martinis and investment properties. Mine was Walmart and brawling in the maternity ward. Who was I kidding, I was the burned, leafless branch of the Phillips family tree. More of a diseased stick than an actual branch.

Laura stared at me expectantly. What the hell was I supposed to say here? Mazel tov didn’t seem appropriate. Good for you sounded like a kiss off. “That’s great,” I said like a total goober.

Her expression soured. “Yes, it is great.”

Had I really thought coming here was a good idea?

Sylvia, sweetheart that she was, rode to my rescue. “Is the property on the water?”

Laura rotated toward my friend, warming to her topic. “Nearby, with a terrific view and access, but no, it’s not right on the water. That’s why we got it for a song.”

“That, and it’s haunted,” Ralph put in.

“Haunted?” Josh asked skeptically, the way only a twelve year old boy can.

“Cool!” Kenny crowed. “Was there a grisly murder there or something?”

“Pish. There’s no such thing as a haunted house.” Laura dismissed the ghost with the same nonchalance she did interns at her law firm.

“Of course, pet. But the legend that surrounds the place is what kept the price down. And will be exactly the sort of story that will help sell it. Once you take care of the lost soul of course.” Ralph saluted the room with his glass.
It took me a minute to realize that I was the you he meant. “Me?” I squeaked.

Ralph and Laura both stared at me expectantly. “You and Sylvia, of course.”

Sylvia looked as poleaxed as I felt. “What?”
Laura’s perfectly sculpted brows drew together. “I thought that was what you did with your new business. Neil mentioned something about cleaning up spirits.”

I blinked. Opened my mouth, then shut it. Cleaning up spirits? That sounded like mopping the floor of a bar. But they’d purchased a haunted house, not a tavern. My head swiveled toward my husband. Heat suffused his cheeks along the path of his sharp cheekbones. Slowly, he turned and met my incredulous stare. My first thought was that this was some twisted sort of revenge for the dinner or the hospital or the lack of lovin’, but Neil wasn’t that petty.

At least I didn’t think so.

Steam must have billowed from my nostrils, because his eyes went wide. Never one to back down from a fight, his chin went up and he met and held my gaze.

I fired the opening salvo. “You told your mother that we were ghost hunters?” I asked, my tone deliberately even to counteract the ridiculous statement.

Neil shook his head with vehemence. “No.” At Laura’s sharp inhale, he hastily tagged on, “Not exactly, anyway.”

I gave him my best squinty-eyed death stare. “What do you mean, not exactly?”

A lesser man would have scrambled around until he wormed his way out of the awkward situation. Neil drummed his fingers on his knee as he picked his words with care. “I’d mentioned that you were thinking of going into business with Sylvia. And that she would specialize in a spiritual cleanse. Those were her words exactly.”

“Right,” I said slowly. “But it was just an idea. We haven’t had time to come up with a business plan or anything. And just how did we get from talking about assisting Chi to cleaning up spirits?”

Laura looked as confused as her Botox treatments would allow. “Isn’t that the same thing?”

Sylvia started to shake her head and then paused, a thoughtful expression on her face. “I guess—”

I stood up before she could utter another word. “Neil, Sylvia, could I talk to you privately for a minute?” Without waiting for a reply, I strode from the room, a ship under full sail.

My husband and my business partner followed at a more sedate pace.

“Maggie,” Neil began, but I cut him off with a sharp hand gesture.

“Is this because I won’t have sex with you?” I blurted, before I thought better of it.

A muscle jumped in his jaw. “Sylvia, give us a minute.”

She turned to go but I gripped her like a lifeline. Tired and upset and betrayed, I didn’t want to be alone with him, not in the volatile mood we were both in.

He glanced at my grip on her arm, then back to my face. “Calm down,” he said.

Oh man, he knew better than to tell me to calm down. “You’re doomed,” I told him through gritted teeth. I didn’t know how or when, but that much was certain.

“If you’ll just listen—”

“Doomed,” I repeated as the fury grew into a raging inferno, the kind of crazy that ate the sanity right out of a body.

Neil stared at me for a minute as though he’d never seen me before, then turned and walked away.

The anger evaporated as suddenly as it had come on and I sank down against the wall.

“Maggie, are you all right?” Sylvia asked me.

The short answer was no, I sure as hell wasn’t all right. But the thought of putting words to something I didn’t fully comprehend….I just shook my head. “Give me a minute.”

She knelt down beside me, oblivious to her dress or the cold that seeped through the tile floor. Her quiet, undemanding presence soothed my frazzled nerves. Distantly, I heard the clanking in the kitchen, pots and pans, the low murmur of conversation, the steady bustle of feet as the drones buzzed about doing the queen bee’s bidding.

“A freaking ghost?” I said to Sylvia.

Her low chuckle made me smile. “You have to admit, it’s different. And it was sweet of her to think of us.”

Poor misguided Sylvia, always seeing the best in people. Laura would grind her bones into paste for a light evening repast. “No, it certainly wasn’t sweet. It’s a pity job.”

She squeezed my arm. “Maybe, but it’s also a paying job.”

“Family wages,” I muttered. “No reward is worth the grief. Besides, you’re a life coach now, right?”

She winced. “Yeah, about that. I don’t think it’s going to work out. I don’t feel like I have the right to tell people how to live when I can’t get my own life together.”

Well, that made one of us. “Okay, but what the hell could we do about a ghost infestation? It’s not like there are humane traps for disembodied spirits at the local hardware store.”

“Fly paper?” Sylvia asked with a grin.

“Hell, we could just make one out of duct tape.” I smiled at the thought of pissed off ghost stuck to a giant silver hag-spun web.

She nodded. “This might be a good trial run, to see if the two of us actually can work together. If we can’t, well, then we’ll know and won’t lose our shirts on a doomed experiment.”

“So, you catch them and I’ll tidy their graves? Nothing ruins the death experience like mold and mildew.”

Our laughter was interrupted by the smart click of heels. “What on earth is going on here?”

“Just a business meeting.” I hefted myself off the floor. “Laura, I’m not sure what you thought we could do about your…um….ghost, but—”

She cut me off with a sharp gesture. “Maggie, you don’t need to do anything.”

I blinked. “No? Then why—?”

“You’re the placebo.”

“What?”

Laura rolled her eyes. “It doesn’t matter what you do there, so long as people think you are doing something worthwhile. I already have Leo working PR with the local paper. They’re going to do a story on the revitalization of a haunted house.”

Well, that explained where Leo was, but I still didn’t understand what I could do about a haunted house. “So, why do you need us?”

A slow grin spread across Sylvia’s features. “To make it look like we’re doing something about the ghost, even if we can’t. That way, you can dispel the rumors and tell people the ghost has been dealt with at the same time as you get the word out. A total win-win. That’s brilliant, Laura.”

“In any case, there isn’t a ghost.” Laura’s hands went to her slim hips. “But people are seldom interested in the truth. It’s the notoriety of it all that’s the real gold mine. So. What do you say, ladies?”

Sylvia actually bounced on the balls of her feet but I put a staying hand on her arm. Being impulsive had hurt me before and I had too much at stake to make a snap decision. With a metric ton of baggage to consider, I needed to hash things out with Neil before we committed to anything.
I squared my shoulders and met my mother-in-law’s gaze, full on. “We’ll let you know.”

****

“Hey.” I found Neil in the miniscule back garden.

“Hey yourself.” He took a pull from his beer—God alone knew where he’d found it—but he didn’t look at me.

There was enough space on the bench for me to sit next to him, but I had to know something first. “On a scale of one to ten, one being miffed and ten being you want my guts for garters, how angry are you?”

He didn’t smile and his voice was level as he said, “Don’t have too much use for garters myself.”

Joking was good, or at least it was better than yelling or cold silence. I sat beside him, not quiet touching but close enough to share body heat. The damp spring air cooled my flushed face. Or maybe after a day full of Walmart, hospitals and my in-laws, I simply needed the reprieve a hidden garden offered.

“I used to come out here whenever it got to be too much in there.” Neil indicated the house with his beer bottle.

“Did you?” He’d never told me that before. “Did it help?”

He nodded. “Sometimes. Like if I failed a test and mom was on the warpath. Other times, not so much. Like when Dad had a new mistress.”

I sucked in a sharp breath. “Your father had an affair? Did Laura know?” I couldn’t imagine that she would know and Ralph would still have all his body parts attached.

“Not just one. Multiple women. Not constantly, but often enough. He was always discrete about it, but I could tell when the pattern started up again. Hang-up phone calls, nights when he stayed too late at the office, shit like that. And if I knew, I’m positive she did.”

“Holy frigging crap,” I muttered. My heart went out to my husband. In my mind’s eye I could see him, a scared kid, maybe the same age as Josh was now, perched all alone in the darkness and worried about what would happen with his family. And the overused organ in my chest ached for the man I’d met years before, a father with two beautiful children of his own whose first wife had cheated on him in the same par for the course, cavalier way. And for maybe the first time, I felt a pang of sympathy for my mother-in law, too.

Neil polished off his beer. “The worst part, though, was that if she did know, she didn’t do anything about it. You know my mother, she gets results. That was what I used to think about when I sat out here. Not why he did what he did, but why she didn’t put a stop to it. In the end, I don’t think it really mattered to her. They got married for my sake but as to actually being a family, well…she just wasn’t interested. ”

“God, Neil.” I took his warm hand between my cold ones and squeezed. In the dark I couldn’t see my mangled hands, but it wouldn’t matter if I could. My man needed me and I wished fervently I had more to offer him.

“I hadn’t thought about all that for a long time. Maybe because I don’t run away and hide from problems anymore. Maybe because I’m like her and I’m used to doing, to getting results, even if they aren’t the ones I intended.” His tone was rueful, but he squeezed my hand before withdrawing his own. “You used to make it so easy for me, Maggie. You never once hesitated to tell me what was on your mind or in your heart. I think I took it for granted a little bit. That you would always be you.”

“I’m still me,” I assured him, though I had my doubts. “I haven’t changed since high school.”

There was anguish in his voice as he answered—a sort of hoarse rasp that scraped along my every nerve ending. “Yes, you have. And it’s my fault. I couldn’t protect you from it, from what happened with the Klines or the Valentinos. You were hurt because I didn’t stop it and it’s affected you. How could it not? You were always so strong, so capable, and now….”

I’m broken, I thought, but couldn’t say it. Didn’t need to say it. The words sat there between us in the expanding gulf that kept us both from being who we were meant to be.

He turned to look at me and I could barely make out his profile in the darkness. “You’re afraid and I don’t blame you. I blame me. It was my job to keep you safe and I let you down. That will haunt me forever. I don’t know what to do to help you. And you…you don’t seem at all interested in helping me figure out how to make it right.”

Lord have mercy. Emotions warred within me, fear, anger, guilt, but most of all a wrenching tenderness for the man beside me. A man who wasn’t afraid to take the entire weight of my baggage onto his massive shoulders. He loved me that much and I owed him so much more than I’d given him lately.

And what as worse, he was right. As stupid as it was, deep down I did blame him for not protecting me. Not the way I blamed myself, but I’d had endless hours of recovery to imagine ways it all could have been different. To wonder what if. What if I hadn’t involved myself with the Klines or the Valentinos? What if Neil had fought me harder, done more to stop me, talked sense into me? It was sick and twisted, but that didn’t change the truth. He was supposed to be my hero, supposed to take on all odds and see me safely through any ordeal unscathed.

But I had been scathed, massively. Not just the healing burns, but my innate faith that good would triumph. I’d come so close to being murdered. Twice. The fact that I might be too stupid to live for getting involved in those cases in the first place was on me, but Neil was right. I’d counted on him and he hadn’t been there when I needed him most.

This wasn’t a quick fix conversation, something we could hash out in the darkened sweet scented garden with the tulips popping through the moistened ground. Not even on Dr. Bob’s Naugahyde couch with new pennies glinting in our marriage facilitator’s loafers. We had to work our way back together, to reestablish a trust we’d both taken for granted.

Decision made, I immediately felt better, more like the old Maggie somehow. Because I had a goal, a purpose, and failure was not an option.

“I am interested,” I murmured and took his hand again in a firm, no-nonsense grip. Let him try to get away. I’d hunt him like a lioness hunts a baby gazelle across the savannah and take him down to the ground and consume him.

He didn’t move or make a sound but I could feel his relief. It cascaded off of him in waves.

“Do you wanna catch a ghost with me?”

 

 

****

 

“I can’t believe we’re doing this,” Sylvia squealed.

“Sssh,” Penny and Marty, the sleep-deprived new parents shushed her in unison.

Baby May, the blond-haired blue-eyed cherub, stirred in her bassinette. We all held our collective breaths, but she simply sighed deeply and slept on. Soft suckling sounds came from her rosebud mouth.

“What a good girl.” I grinned down at the newest addition to our family. I’d been so freaked out by hospital drama that I hadn’t appreciated my newborn niece at first. More than a week later, I couldn’t bear the thought of parting from her. There was no help for it though. A haunted fixer upper on the scenic upper Delaware didn’t exactly scream childproof. And the research Leo had done on the place made the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end.

“It says here that most ghosts are only partially aware of the living world.” Sylvia moderated her tone to barely above a whisper. “Spooky.”

“So then they can’t hurt anybody, right?” Marty asked. He wore green plaid pajama bottoms, and one side of his shaggy dark hair stuck up straight while the other was mashed down flat. His gray T-shirt was stained with baby spit up and spilled coffee, and his red-rimmed eyes told me he’d rather be sleeping than talking turkey with the ghost hunters. But since he and Penny were in charge of Kenny and Josh, he needed to stay informed of our plans.

“Of course not,” I assured him, though I had no proof of anything. I still wasn’t sure how I’d been nominated to morph into ghost huntress extraordinaire.

“Your folks are as nutty as a bin full of used jock straps,” I’d said to Neil the night before. “Who buys a house they know nothing about?”

“That’s why it’s called a risk, Uncle Scrooge.” Neil patted my butt on his way to his sock drawer. “They might have a great place, or it could be a total pit. I’ll pack the camping gear just in case, though.”

Camping, oy.

Neil and the boys had gotten me to go camping exactly once and I’d vowed on my mother’s lemon pound cake recipe that I’d never do it again. While the idea of snuggling with the man I loved under a blanket of stars sounded wonderful, the reality was mud, mosquitos and magpies trying to nest in my hair. Maybe I would have been more forgiving of the great outdoors if there were some way for me to pee and keep my backside poison ivy-free at the same time. As it was, there were certain places a girl just didn’t want to have a rash, because calamine lotion should never be used as a lubricant.

I shoved aside the unpleasant thoughts of living rough and returned to the task at hand. Namely, research. Though Laura had made it clear she didn’t really expect us to do anything about the ghost, Sylvia had prepped a ghost-be-gone kit equipped with everything from dried sage to Peter Venkman’s proto pack, which she’d procured from Craigslist. You really could get anything there.

“Don’t cross the streams,” I muttered and stared at the device, which looked like nothing more than a car battery strapped into a cradleboard with a hose attached via duct tape.

“Hmmm?” Sylvia continued to scour the internet for more mentions of our apparition.

“You know that thing isn’t real, right?” I gestured toward the pack.

“Sure it is.” She double clicked on another screen.

I was torn. Yes, it was great to see Sylvia enthusiastic about something, even if it was a ridiculous exercise in futility arranged by my mother-in-law. Her divorce had rattled her confidence and while living with Marty and company helped her make ends meet, she’d been floundering, at a loss as to what to do next. I could so relate, but the whole ghost hunting thing…I still didn’t know how I felt about it.

Neil and I had agreed to oversee the project because we needed to spend time out of our natural habitat. We needed to reconnect, to bond, and the home improvement project was just what Dr. Bob ordered. Literally. He’d told us to get away together. He probably hadn’t meant with my wacky best friend armed with ghost-busting goodness in tow, but we’d left that bit out.

I nudged the proto pack with one finger. “It looks nothing like it did in the movie. And even if it did, that was just a prop.”

“But the movie was based on a real ghost hunter’s story,” she argued without looking up.

“There was a giant marshmallow man bent on destroying New York City. How real could it be?” My incredulity came out louder than intended, and May jumped and cried.

Penny gave me the evil eye as she scooped her daughter up and rocked her in a comforting gesture. “There, there sugar booger, it’s all right.”

Worst. Nickname. Ever.

“Sorry,” I hissed, then rose from the table. “I’d better go finish loading the car.”

Penny allowed me to drop a kiss onto May’s sweet scented head. If only cleaning products came in that baby fresh aroma. On second thought, better that they didn’t because there’d be even more imbeciles huffing chemicals out of aerosol cans.

Marty walked me to the door. My brother was newly employed at the local Stop-N-Rob as a night clerk, a job that scared me out of my wits. I pulled him into a tight hug. “Promise me you won’t do anything heroic while we’re gone.”

Marty made a dismissive sound that was part nose whistle, part scoff. “Do I look like an idiot?”

Probably a rhetorical question. “I’ll send the boys over as soon as they’re done with their homework.” Our plan was to get on the road tonight, though there was no chance we’d get to the place before dark. That way we’d see it in all its spooktacular glory and get a feel for what we were dealing with.

And maybe be back by morning if it was half as bad as I feared.

“Are you sure you guys can handle everything?” I asked Marty for the bazillionth time. “We can always wait and go next week so you don’t have to juggle May and my boys, too.”

“Maggie, go. You need to get out of this town for a little while. Trust me, Josh and Kenny will be fine. I’ll hold down the fort and we’ll see you next weekend.”

“Not if we see you first.” I hugged him and sent up a silent prayer to our parents to watch over him and the lives for which he was responsible.

I was snuffling like an idiot by the time I reached my own doorstep and detoured to the garage instead of the house. Neil was in there, inventorying what we’d take in his truck and what we could cram into Sylvia’s car. Atlas snuffled through the various toolboxes and bags that waited next to Neil’s truck. The dog added a little extra slobber in case our bags were too dry.

“How’s it going, slick?”

Neil grinned at me from the bed of his truck. “Almost there. Did you get your baby fix?”

May’s scent still lingered in my olfactory receptors. “Best smell in the world. Other than fresh coffee.”

Neil hopped down from the bed of the truck in one fluid movement. He looked better than he had in weeks, happier and more like himself. This trip was a good thing, no matter how harebrained its inception. “Poor Uncle Scrooge. Is your biological clock ticking?”

He meant it as a joke but I froze. Not that I’d been moving, yet every cell in my body stopped and waited. The baby thing kept coming up, like a song stuck on repeat. It was only natural, what with our family’s latest addition, but it was one thing to appreciate May in all her pink-cheeked perfection, quite another to imagine my own baby. I didn’t know how to respond.

Neil and I had exactly one pregnancy scare in our relationship, way back in the beginning when we weren’t sure we’d have a future together. Nothing had come of it and Kenny was still in diapers at the time, Josh barely a toddler. By mutual consent, we’d delayed any discussion of adding more offspring to the mix and I’d been diligent about birth control for more than a decade. The subject hadn’t come up again.

Not until now.

“Sorry,” he said, though his tone didn’t hold a hint of apology. If I had to put a name to the emotion he exuded I’d call it wistfulness.

“Nothing to be sorry about.” I didn’t have any regrets. I really didn’t.

One finger traced along the side of my face. “Do you ever think about it? What a child of ours would be like?”

“Of course I did.” Did he? His demeanor suggested he did but I was afraid to ask.

“You never said anything.” His touch was gentle, sweet but careful, like I was breakable. Maybe I was.

“It never seemed like the right time to talk about it. It’s still not.” Not with the mess we were currently in. Adding something small and helpless and completely dependent on us for its survival seemed almost cruel.

“I know.” His hazel eyes were hooded, seductive. “But it’s a thought.”

A very appealing one what with the way he touched me. Tenderly, with sure strokes that blotted out my good judgment. It’d been so long since we’d shared a moment cocooned in intimacy meant for the two of us alone. Even though I’d slithered away from it, I’d longed for it too. No shouting or door slamming or idiot dog barking up a storm. I leaned into his caress, savored the rough texture of his calloused hands. For the first time in weeks the panic and fear weren’t with me and I only wanted our connection to go on forever.

Of course it didn’t.

“Hey, thought I’d let you know, Leo just pulled up.” Sylvia popped her head around the corner of the garage.

Neil and I sprang apart as though guilty of doing something more than canoodling and talking crazy. My heart pounded against my ribcage as though the damn thing wanted to burst forth and ricochet off the garage walls. I shook my head as though I could rattle the errant thought Neil had placed in there free. Did he really want to talk about us having a baby, or was that just a new way of hinting that we should make with the lovin’?

Sylvia’s eyebrows went up as she looked between the two of us. “Should I give you guys a minute?”

Neil snorted. “It’d take more than a minute for what I had in mind.”

I looked away to hide my blush and focused on the mountain of stuff that we still needed to load. No way would it all fit, even with Neil arranging the bed of the truck like it was a giant jigsaw puzzle. “It’s fine, Sylvia. Do you have any more room?”

Since there were three of us, plus a monkey-butt-ton—the technical term—of tools, cleaning supplies and ghost busting stuff, we were caravanning along with Leo, who knew where he was going, to the place in upstate New York, a small town nestled along the Delaware River near the Catskill Mountains.

Sylvia shook her head and grinned. “Nope, my car is packed to the gills.”

“And possibly radioactive,” I muttered. Who’d have thought my vegan neighbor, who made her own herbal deodorant, would have cornered the market on toxic ghost remedies?

Sylvia wrinkled her nose. “It’s not that bad. Most of the stuff is completely organic.”

“So is the Ebola Virus. Organic doesn’t mean harmless. Look at Neil’s mom.”

Neil covered his laugh with a cough. “Play nice, Uncle Scrooge.”

“I just want to make sure our bases are covered,” Sylvia said with a shrug.

From her preemptive packing list I felt certain Sylvia had covered acids, bases and everything in between. Her enthusiasm for our mission was weird, but it was nice to see her revved up about something again. I just wished it was contagious.

“Maggie, you’re riding with me, right? I just downloaded eight steps to a cleaner aura onto my iPod and I thought we could listen to it on the ride.”

I pasted on a smile, though it felt a tad brittle. “Sounds great.”

“I didn’t know your aura was dirty,” Neil remarked after Sylvia had left.

“Not as dirty as my mind, anyway.” I climbed into the bed of the truck to help him load our gear. I frowned as he handed me a large gunny sack. “What’s with the dog food?”

“It’s for Atlas.”

At my blank look he set down the Rubbermaid bin he’d muscled into position. “We can’t leave him here alone all day, he’ll eat his way out of the house. Penny has her hands full with the baby and the boys will be in school.”

That was it, the bridge too far. “We can’t.”

Neil scowled at me. “Why not?”

I really didn’t have a good reason, other than I didn’t want to drag the hairy, slobbering beastie all over Hell’s half acre in the middle of BFE nowhere on a ghost hunt. Atlas was not the peaceful, short-haired lapdog I’d agreed to a few weeks back when the Phillips men ganged up on me about getting a pet. That was the last time I’d let them go to the humane society without me.

Granted, he was a sweet tempered dog, but while his size and youthful exuberance were endearing, he stank, shed, slobbered and made his presence known every second he was in the room. Bad enough I had to deal with his mountains of poop on my own turf. No way did I want to road trip with them. Desperate times call for desperate measures. I took a deep breath and lied my ass off. “Leo’s allergic.”

Neil hopped down out of the truck and offered me a hand. “So?”

“Whaddya mean, so? He can’t be around dogs, so therefore, Atlas can’t come.”

Neil stared down at a grease spot on the concrete floor. “Sure he can. We’ll just keep him outside.” At my look, he clarified, “The dog, I mean, not Leo.”

“Neil—” I didn’t whine, but it was a close thing.

My husband held up a hand. “Do you want to pay to board him?”

Appealing to my thrifty nature. Low blow, slick. My shoulders sagged and I uttered a defeated, “No.”

“Then he’s coming with us.” Neil slammed the gate of the truck to punctuate his declaration.

Damn. “You know what this is starting to remind me of? Four people and a dog driving out into the middle of nowhere to chase a ghost—we’re living a freaking episode of Scooby Doo.”

Neil grinned. “Too bad we don’t have a Volkswagen Bus. So, are you Daphne or Velma?”

I felt neither pretty nor smart. “I want to be Shaggy. Not the new generation Shaggy, either. The one who got stoned with Mama Cass and the Harlem Globetrotters.”

“I’ll see what I can do,” Neil said.

Continued….

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★★★★★ 5 Star Thriller of The Week:
Help is on the way, whether Maggie Phillips wants it or not, in The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: All Washed Up by Jennifer L. Hart

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Here’s the set-up:

Maggie Phillips is fine—just ask her. So what if two psychos tried to do her in and her business is all but dead, she never wanted to be the laundry hag to begin with, so why should she mourn her tattered reputation? With spring comes a fresh start, garage sale season and the birth of her brother’s first child. Life goes on even if cleaning has lost its luster and the sight of her scarred hands brings back horrific memories.

Help is on the way, whether she wants it or not. When Maggie’s mother-in-law asks her to assist with renovations to their project house in upstate New York, she smells a rat. Matters become murkier when Laura casually tells the former laundry hag to “see to that pesky ghost,” like the phantom is ring around the bathtub. But both Neil and Sylvia are eager to undertake the zany task and really, what else does she have to do?

How about solve a two decade old murder, find a few long lost relatives, fix her mental hang-ups and reconnect with the husband she’s pushed away. And if she has any time to spare, maybe she can even survive a pissed-off apparition and keep it from finishing the job the last two killers started Third time’s the charm…right?

About The Author

Former navy wife turned author Jennifer L. Hart loves a good mystery as well as a good laugh and a happily ever after is a must. Her works to date include The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag series, Redeeming Characters, River Rats, Stellar Timing, Who Needs A Hero?, and Daisy Dominatrix.

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