Get to Know Author Anna Kashina

The-Guild-of-Assassins-Anna-Kashina

Personal

  • Can you tell us a little about yourself? 

I have two lives: a scientist and a fantasy author. Some say this keeps both halves of my brain busy. This is probably true, judging by how difficult it is to keep up. I try to stay grounded by looking at the world through the eyes of my Majat warriors, all of them exceptional warriors with perfectly balanced minds–at least when it comes to fighting.

  • Do you have a day job? 

I do biomedical research and teach at major a university. None of these activities can possibly explain why I write fantasy in my spare time.

  • Do you have a saying or motto for your life and/or as a writer? 

Yes, my motto is “never give up”. I had to put it to the test many times, at it has never failed me yet.

  • Where can people find you on the web? Where can they read more about your books? 

www.annakashina.com (links to my blog at http://annakashinablog.wordpress.com/)

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Anna-Kashina/215289654593

https://twitter.com/annakashina

Your Novel

  • What is your book about?

“The Guild of Assassins” is the second stand-alone installment in my epic fantasy adventure series, which opened earlier this year with “Blades of the Old Empire”. On the action side, it is about a group of people fighting an ancient and very powerful magical order. On the emotion side, this book is of course about love. But then, on a big scale–what book isn’t?…

  • What about your book might pique the reader’s interest? 

Personally, I love the concept of the Majat warriors, which are, essentially ninjas in the European setting. They are martial artists brought up and trained in a world that resembles medieval Europe, complete with armored knights and heavy weapons. When I developed this concept, I was curious at how they would fare against different kinds of opponents. I have to say, they tend to do surprisingly well.

My book features several of those warriors, whose occupation is somewhat similar to assassins, or sometimes elite guards for hire. It gives a glimpse of very personal sides of their lives. Readers who enjoy action with elements of romance evolving around highly skilled, notorious warriors, would hopefully like my book.

  • Are the names of the characters in your novel important? 

I do pay great attention to names when I create my characters. Usually, each particular character only has one name that fits him/her. Sometimes these names just pop up. Sometimes I have to go  through a lot of variants to identify the right one. It can take days, even weeks, to name a character–and of course the name then drives the personality and therefore I cannot write until this is done. Characters with difficult names can become a holdback.

  • How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the book? 

You have to become your character to write from his/her point of view convincingly. I tend to think that each of their personalities is hidden somewhere inside me, but in truth some of them are nothing like me. It feels as if becoming possessed by someone when writing. Of course, I hope my good characters share a lot of my positive traits, but all these faults–no idea where they get that from! 🙂

  • Who is your most unusual/most likeable character? 

Mai, an assassin with a special skill to kill warriors of equal rank. He started as a secondary character in “Blades of the Old Empire”, but he quickly occupied the story and became the central character in “The Guild of Assassins”, even though he does not have a point of view. It has been rewarding for me to see some of his fans emerge after the release of the Blades. I hope these fans will feel rewarded when they read the current book.

  • What was your favorite part or chapter, and why? 

I have to say, in “The Guild of Assassins”, which has a very strong underlying romance story, I really enjoyed all the love scenes. There is a total of four in the book, and I just feel they all make so much sense. Writing these scenes was, of course, a very personal thing, I am not sure how many readers will share this feeling.

Among the non-romantic parts, my favorite chapter is called “Diplomacy”. In this chapter, two main characters, both rivals for the same woman’s affections, are locked together in a room and get to say whatever they want to each other. These two guys have amazing chemistry, I really enjoyed watching them get all these feelings off their chests.

Writing

  • How many people (i.e. characters) have you done away with in the course of your career? Have you ever regretted killing one of them off? 

Oh, well, this touches on a sensitive subject. I hope I am giving no spoilers by saying that I don’t believe in killing main characters. I don’t think I have ever read a book where this was justified or benefited the story in any way, no exceptions. I guess this probably says a lot right there about myself and my writing.

I do kill secondary characters sometimes, and I never feel good about it. Sometimes it is just necessary to the plot. I try not to do it too often.

  • How much impact does your childhood have on your writing?

I was fortunate to be mentored by my amazing grandfather, Vladimir Keilis-Borok, who was my true soul mate and the man I credit with shaping me into the person I am. My serious writing started in high school, when he and I co-wrote a historical novel, “In the Name of the Queen”, published in Russian under pen names. He passed away last year, after “The Guild of Assassins” has been completed, and I dedicated “The Majat Code” series to him. He read, and loved, both books.

  • What’s your writing schedule like? Do you strive for a certain amount of words each day? 

I have an extremely crazy life with no time for anything, so I developed a habit of writing in short stretches every time I can sit down in front of my computer. Sometimes these stretches can be 10-minute long, but amazingly they still work. I do dream of having some uninterrupted time, but it only happens occasionally.

  • How many stories are swirling around in your head? Do you keep a mental list, a computer file, or a spiral notebook filled with the ideas? 

Too many for my own good :-). And yes, I do keep a mental list. I also shift between them occasionally, even though I do try to stick to one major project at a time.

  • What are you working on now? 

I am finishing the edits on the prequel to the series, and working on the first draft of Book 3 of the Majat Code, tentatively titled “Assassin Queen”.

  • Have you written any other books? 

In addition to the Majat Code books, I wrote three other novels, all of them quite different from the current series. Full list can be found on my blog and web site at www.annakashina.com

Fun (Crazy, odd questions just for fun)

  • Have you ever gone out in public in mis-matched shoes, or with your shirt on backward, and when you realized it just said ‘eh, screw it’? 

Yes, I did wear mis-matched shoes once. I was in graduate school then. When I left home I was so deeply absorbed in a scientific problem that I did not notice putting on two different shoes. In the subway I looked down at my feet and saw that the color of the shoe laces did not match — I was wearing sneakers, one white and one gray with green laces. Somehow the color of the shoes escaped me, but the laces caught my eye. I remember thinking “I heard it is fashionable to wear shoe laces of different colors. I guess I am dressed fashionably today.” Then I went back to thinking on my scientific problem, and only when I arrived at work did I realize I was wearing different shoes. Possibly it wasn’t until after a co-worked pointed it out. At that time I thought, “Wow, I am acting like a true scientist”–and of course went back to thinking about science without giving it a second throught. Recalling this afterwards was funny, but during the whole episode it somehow all made perfect sense.

  • Are you a neat freak? Or clutter-bound? 

I used to be neat. Then something clicked and I became a clutterer (is there such a word?). It does not help that I like collecting things and never throw anything away. Ugh.

  • If you could have a super power, what would it be? 

Stopping the time, so that I could fit more things in a day. I would love to be able to heal and stop death, but that is against the rules, is it?

  • Weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten. 

You don’t want to know :-). I am one of these people who would try anything if I was told it’s edible. This particular one was a kind of bean curd, fermented and flavored to taste and smell exactly like feces. I have no idea what possessed me to put a piece in my mouth, even though everyone around me was eating and enjoying it, but I could not wash off the smell for several days.

It was in China. By comparison, deep-fried scorpions I ate on another day, seemed very tasty and completely natural.

Quick Questions

  • Sing in the rain or dance in the streets? 

Dance in the streets for sure. I have done it, too.

  • Pen or pencil? 

A very particular type of soft ballpoint pen.

  • Summer or Winter? 

Summer. Despite growing up in Russia I am unable to tolerate cold. Not to mention those long nights I had too much of when I was little. Just seeing dusk at 4 pm makes me depressed.

  • Movies or TV? 

Um. Both?…

  • Theater or DVD? 

DVD. I like to watch movies in the comfort of my own home, and I have issues with overly amplified sound.

  • Facial hair or clean shaven? 

Clean shaven, always. My readers may notice that any romantic hero I ever write about would have smooth skin and hairless chest. For some reason I can’t stand the thought of facial or body hair–romantically speaking, of course 🙂

  • Fall leaves or Spring flowers? 

Spring flowers. I like beginnings. I don’t like a sense of something coming to an end.

*~*

Cover (2)| Amazon | BN | Random House |

Blurb

Kara, an elite warrior from the Majat Guild, has escaped execution and achieved something that no Majat has ever managed – freedom from the Guild!

But the Black Diamond assassin Mai has been called back to face his punishment for sparing her life. Determined to join his fight or share his punishment, Kara finds herself falling for Mai.

Is their relationship – and the force that makes their union all-powerful – a tool to defeat the overpowering forces of the Kaddim armies, or a ploy sure to cause the downfall of the Majat?
Link to Follow Tour: http://tastybooktours.blogspot.com/2014/06/now-booking-tasty-virtual-tour-for_7.html

Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/19325184-the-guild-of-assassins

AniaAuthor Info

Anna Kashina grew up in Russia and moved to the United States in 1994 after receiving her Ph.D. in cell biology from the Russian Academy of Sciences. She works as a biomedical researcher and combines career in science with her passion for writing. Anna’s interests in ballroom dancing, world mythologies and folklore feed her high-level interest in martial arts of the Majat warriors. She is a recent medalist in the ForeWord Book of the Year and Independent Publishers Book Award contests.

Author Links

http://annakashinablog.wordpress.com/

https://twitter.com/annakashina

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Anna-Kashina/215289654593

 

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Get to Know Author Avery Flynn

Today I’m pleased to have the author of Enemies on Tap, Avery Flynn, visiting!  She agreed to sit down and answer a few questions. So, please help me welcome Avery!

*~*

Thanks so much for having me over!!

Personal

  • What was the greatest thing you learned at school? – We moved around a lot as a kid and the best school advice I ever got came from my older sister who told me that on the first day to never sit in the back of the room and never sit alone in the lunchroom. Go out and make friends.
  • Do you laugh at your own jokes? – Sometimes I’m the only one who does. 🙂
  • Where can people find you on the web? Where can they read more about your books? – Come visit me on Twitter (@AveryFlynn), on Facebook or on my website (www.averyflynn.com). I’m fun. I promise!

Your Novel

  • What is your book about? – Enemies on Tap is about two people who are fighting against what the world expects of them. They’re underdogs in the game of love and you just can’t help but root for them.
  • What about your book might pique the reader’s interest? – If a reader is not into sassy, sexy, funny books than they should stay away from Enemies on Tap. If you do like that sort of thing, then come join the fun!
  • Who is your most unusual/most likeable character? – Personally, I love them all but Ruby Sue is a real hoot. You gotta love an older woman who speaks her mind without censure.

Fun (Crazy, odd questions just for fun)

  • You were just given a yacht. What would you name it? – The Full Monte. 🙂
  • Someday I want to _____ (fill in the blank) – Have my own private island.
  • If you could have a super power, what would it be? – The ability to be more than one place at the same time.
  • How many licks does it take to get to the middle of a Tootsie Pop? – 412. Try it. See if I’m wrong.
  • If parents say ‘never take candy from strangers’then why do we trick or treat? – Because candy is that damn good. 🙂

Quick Questions

  • Sing in the rain or dance in the streets? – Both at the same time!
  • Pen or pencil? – Pen.
  • Summer or Winter? – Summer for sure.
  • Movies or TV? – I love movies.
  • Cowboy or Bad Boy? – Bad boy all the way.
  • Sunrise or Sunset? – I am a night owl so sunset is like my sunrise. 🙂

*~*

**BUY LINKS WILL NEED TO BE ADDED

Enter to Win
“I Love to Read” Ring, Beer
Lovers Coasters 
& $50 Amazon GC

Brewing up trouble one pint at a time.

Enemies
What’s a girl to do when the only person who can help her is the man who betrayed her? After years away, Miranda returns to Salvation, Virginia to save her family’s brewery, but her fate is in the hands of her first lover turned enemy, Logan Martin.

Lovers
Logan, Salvation’s de facto prince, can’t believe his luck when the woman who smashed his heart to smithereens walks into his bank asking for his help. What she doesn’t know is he needs the land her brewery is on. When she tempts him with a bet—if she wins, he gives her the loan; if he wins, she forfeits the land—he knows it’s a sure thing.

An Irresistible Combination
But soon it’s a battle between their attraction for each other and their determination to win, and it’s in each other’s arms that they realize there might be more at stake now than the bet. With the town dead set against the Sweet Salvation Brewery’s success, Logan has to choose between what’s expected of him and what he really wants—even if helping Miranda means she’ll run out of his life once again. 

Avery Flynn
has three slightly-wild children, loves a hockey-addicted husband and is
desperately hoping someone invents the coffee IV drip. 

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Friday Dialogues – Author Rachel Brimble

Personal

  • Do you laugh at your own jokes?

Yes, which annoys my teenage daughters SO much! They find me funny but would never admit it, which just adds to my fun

  • Have you ever found true love?

Yes, and we’re still married 16 years later – my husband and I met when we 18, married at 24 and had our first child at 25. A lot of people thought things were too intense and quick between us but I knew he was the one. We’re still very happy!

Your Novel

  • How did you choose your title?

Luckily, Harlequin have the final say on titles which I am extremely grateful for – I absolutely hate coming up with titles! I am so unimaginatively boring when it comes to naming my work. What Belongs To Her is my twelfth novel and coming up with titles never gets any easier!

  • Who is your most unusual/most likeable character?

I adore Marian Cohen who is the matriarch of Templeton Cove – so far I have written four Templeton Cove books for Harlequin Superromance and Marian makes a significant appearance in all of them. She is by far one of my favorite characters I have ever created J

  • You got the call – your novel is being made into a TV series or movie – who’s in your dream cast?

This is an easy question for me because I start each new book trawling the internet for images of my hero and heroine – for What Belongs To Her, Sasha Todd would be played by Angie Harmon (Rizzoli & Isles) and John Jordon would be played by Cam Gigandet (Easy A)

Writing

  • How many stories are swirling around in your head? Do you keep a mental list, a computer file, or a spiral notebook filled with the ideas?

I am usually writing one book, editing another and promoting another – I am always busy! As well as juggling three books, I always have new ideas leaping into my head or ideas how to expand a plotline or character. I use a computer file for new story ideas and the notebook on my Blackberry for any expansions on the book I am working on…I also carry a notebook!

  • What are you working on now?

Right now, I am coming to the end of my first draft of my third Victorian romance for eKensington. Tentatively called, The Passion of Monica, the heroine of this book was a secondary character in book two but every time she appeared onstage, I know she deserved her own time in the spotlight. The Passion of Monica has been my most enjoyable book to write to date––hope my editor loves it as much as I do!

Fun (Crazy, odd questions just for fun)

  • Are you a neat freak? Or clutter-bound?

Clutter-bound

  • Someday I want to _

holiday in the Maldives

  • Weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten.

Snails

Quick Questions

  • Sing in the rain or dance in the streets?

Dance in the streets

  • Pen or pencil?

Pen

  • Summer or Winter?

Summer

  • Movies or TV?

TV

  • Theater or DVD?

Theater

  • Rural or Urban?

Urban

  • Facial hair or clean shaven?

Clean shaven

  • Marvel or DC?

Marvel

  • Cowboy or Bad Boy?

Cowboy

  • Sunrise or Sunset?

Sunset

  • Fall leaves or Spring flowers?

Spring flowers

  • Peanut butter or jelly?

Jelly

  • Spender or Saver?

Spender

*~*

Cover| [amazon_link id=”B00FBZ5SOM” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Amazon [/amazon_link]| BNAmazon UK |

She’s ready to take back what’s hers 

Since the moment a local crime boss claimed ownership of her family’s fairground, Sasha Todd has dreamed of righting the wrong. Now it’s time to act, and backing down from the man’s estranged son is definitely not an option. After all, giving up her legacy to hot-blooded John Jordon means losing the chance to finally heal the wounds in her past.

Stopping John in his tracks—and resisting the sizzle between them—is Sasha’s best defense. But there’s more to him than she thought, which changes everything. With what matters most at stake, she’ll have to risk a brand-new future with John, or walk away from the man whose heart belongs to her.

*~*

Me - 2012 (2)Bio:

Rachel lives with her husband and two young daughters in a small town near Bath in the UK.  After having several novels published by small US presses, she secured agent representation in 2011. In 2012, she sold two books to Harlequin Superromance and a further three in 2013. She also writes Victorian romance for Kensington–her debut was released in April 2013 and she has since signed for three more.

Rachel is a member of the Romantic Novelists Association and Romance Writers of America. When she isn’t writing, you’ll find Rachel with her head in a book or walking the beautiful English countryside with her family and beloved black Lab, Max. Her dream place to live is Bourton-on-the-Water in South West England.

She likes nothing more than connecting and chatting with her readers and fellow romance writers. Rachel would love to hear from you!

Links:

Website
Blog
Twitter
Facebook

Also by Rachel Brimble:

Cover (1)[amazon_link id=”B00BNRHN6S” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]A Man Like Him:[/amazon_link]

Changing her life…again.

After two years in hiding, Angela Taylor knows her independence is worth it. As long as she can escape her past, she has everything under control. Until a flash flood hits the park where she works, and hot Chris Forrester shows up the exact moment she needs a hero.

Chris proves he can save lives—and weaken a girl’s knees. But how can she make him understand that she’s off-limits, that getting close to her will endanger his life? Her happiness or his safety: it shouldn’t even be a choice. Because when you love someone, you protect them, no matter the cost. At least, that’s what Angela keeps telling herself….

Friday Dialogues – Author Stella Wilder

Personal

  • Can you tell us a little about yourself? I can’t. I’m relatively private. Okay, fine. I know that won’t be good enough. I was threatened with being court martialed once. Oh, and my first love was shot in the head by a terrorist.
  • What do you like to read? What’s your favorite genre? My tastes are too varied to be pinned down. If a character is compelling and the situation is dire, I’m hooked.
  • Name your 5 favorite movies. Why? Wow. Five favorite? In no particular order: Duel in the Sun, Ten Things I Hate About You, The Matrix, —I’m stuck. That’s all I can come up with right now.
  • What piece of advice would you give your teenage self? Be true to yourself.
  • What’s the best thing you’ve done in your life? Saved a life. And I’ll leave it at that.
  • What has changed for you personally since you wrote your first book? I don’t think anything has changed. I could be wrong.
  • Where can people find you on the web? Where can they read more about your books? www.AllThingsStella.com

Your Novel

  • What is your book about? A soul eating, long-lived assassin with a heart. A sexy deckhand. An inner-city kid with a bad attitude and a secret.
  • What about your book might pique the reader’s interest? The sex? No, just kidding. I can’t say exactly. I feel it would be a spoiler. Can I just go with: Nothing is what it seems?
  • What inspired you to write this particular story? It started with Frederick Forsyth’s The Day of the Jackal. One of my favorite books as a teen. It culminated with a need to put a few emotions on paper, but incognito, since I didn’t want to reveal these things personally. My books are often a reflection of what I may be involved in at the moment.
  • Are the names of the characters in your novel important? You betcha.
  • How did you choose your title? One of the characters has a white stripe from above the ear to the nape. The characters engage in dark deeds.
  • How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the book? Not hidden. That’s me, all up in your face! LOL. No, truly, my books’ main characters are a reflection of my own characteristics and life experiences.
  • Who is your most unusual/most likeable character? G-Mail
  • You got the call – your novel is being made into a TV series or movie – who’s in your dream cast? Ha. Interesting question.
  • What was your favorite part or chapter, and why? When Yaz finds out exactly who G-Mail is.


Writing

  • Are you a pantser or a plotter? I plot in pants. 😉
  • How do you develop and differentiate your characters? My books’ main characters are a reflection of my own characteristics and life experiences.
  • How (or when) do you decide that you are finished writing a story? When my editor writes me and calls BS on an ending that was too convenient. So I have to buckle down and impress him.
  • Do your characters ever take on a life of their own? Too damn often! Those brats! Love them.
  • Do you have any advice for aspiring authors? Write the book of your heart. Edit it mercilessly, don’t give up.
  • What are you working on now? The sequel to White Stripe, Dark Deeds, the sequel to Streetwise:Mercy, a dystopian young adult, an MG thriller, a sci-fi romance, and a MG time travel.
  • Have you written any other books? A historical, a contemporary new adult. Seasons of Exile, Streetwise: Mercy. Streetwise comes out this month. Or next. I’m not really sure.

Fun (Crazy, odd questions just for fun)

  • Favorite bumper sticker. No bumper stickers. Don’t do those. They pigeonhole people. Something I’d rather not have done to me. They also give criminals insight into people’s lives which could enable them to perpetrate evil actions.
  • Are you skilled with fake accents? Not at all. Which sucks, since I speak three languages.
  • Most frequently played song. I won’t pick one. These days it’s Drake’s HodfdfdfHold On, Flo Rida’s Wild Ones, I Cry, Good Feeling. HHo
  • If you could be any comic book character, which one would you be? Jessica Rabbit with Wonder Woman’s cool toys! 

 

*~*~*~*

WhiteStripe| [amazon_link id=”B00INKDYEI” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Amazon[/amazon_link] | 

Can an immortal-possessed assassin accustomed to dealing in death and deception lower her defenses enough to work with a disowned deckhand and an urban denizen? Will dropping her guard lead to heartbreak and betrayal?

Yaz wants to be human again. Or dead. She pretty much doesn’t care which. Or didn’t care, until she met Sloan. One thing she sure as hell doesn’t want is to care for that freakin’ deckhand and that weird-ass brat from the ghetto with the white stripe in his head. Torn between what she wants to do and what she needs to do, she’s faced with choices. And consequences . . .

Sloan’s more than a deckhand on a charter boat. He’s on a mission, too. But damn if that sexy, cold-hearted bitch that throws knives wasn’t effing it up all the time. What he can’t figure out is why he’s helping her and how to keep her from finding out his own deepest and darkest. He derails his mission, his plan, his life for Yaz . . .

G-Mail doesn’t need much. Or so G thinks. Until meeting an assassin with the gift and skills G wants—the gift of immortality and the skill to kill. Can G trust the assassin when it’s time to reveal an identity and a secret, or will the assassin join the pile of bones G-Mail leaves in the past?

What happens when three forces converge on the hot and humid Houston docks? What happens when they travel back in time to a parallel past?

Warning!
Explicit sex–oh yes, and a bit of killing. Come on, it’s a story about an assassin! And a hot guy.

*~*

Excerpt: Chapter 1

Five days of reconnaissance. I’d learned the captain of the Sugar Baby was a crusty seaman named Ole Pete who engaged in sex trafficking. Oh, and the Sugar Baby had a deckhand who made my body remember things it hadn’t in hundreds of years. That aside, something about that deckhand made me wonder if our paths had ever crossed.

Neither the trafficking nor the deckhand’s sexiness was pertinent to my assignment.

Five days of kneeling, squatting, or sitting on a plastic milk crate in front of a window that had fallen victim to vandalism—dirty, cloudy glass providing the perfect observation point. A missing sliver placed perfectly for looking out, allowing me to keep an eye on the Sugar Baby without getting noticed.

Five days in an abandoned warehouse without air-conditioning, making sure I didn’t leave any evidence behind, just in case someone ever thought to look for any in here. Every day, I stowed my Ducati Streetfighter in a storage unit and trekked here before dawn, staying until after midnight. I was bone-weary, achy-muscled tired. But that had nothing on the mental part. This assignment couldn’t have been better designed to test my psychological boundaries.

Five hellish days of caging my eyes to keep from focusing on the murky ocean or the muddy, catfish-ridden docks. When my eyes strayed, the worst that happened was a lurch in my gut because my feet were on solid ground. If I were standing on a ship the most terrible of foodborne sicknesses wasn’t jack shit compared to my reaction when I saw the water.

That’s what made this particular assignment a bitch. The specific nature of Moric’s instructions. Take out the target while on the Sugar Baby—at sea.

Five days and now my surveillance was complete.

Tomorrow was the day of the hit.

The day after tomorrow it would all be over. I focused on that fact instead of the water.

The surveillance may have been complete, but it wasn’t satisfactory. I found an inconsistency.

I tore my eyes from the Sugar Baby to review the notes I’d penned in the margins of Moric’s files.

Goal: Take out target, then bodyguards, and Sugar Baby crew. Torch boat at sea.

Sugar Baby: Fifty-two foot charter. Four skiffs. Fishing in shallow Gulf waters.

Target: Frenchman. Scumbucket. Organized crime. Two bodyguards.

Captain: (Ole) Pete. Rumored sex trafficker.

Deckhand: Who was he? Not the original deckhand in the picture. Familiar. A hunter.

 

I’d highlighted the inconsistency. Not the original deckhand. I took a sip of bottled water. Room temperature. Room temperature in this case was damned near body temperature. Heat—one of the perks of my latest hometown, Houston.

When I’d received the dossier for this assignment, it had a picture of a different deckhand, a toothless grin from a balding guy. That sure as hell wasn’t the current deckhand, and any deviation worried me.

This new guy. He carried himself with the confidence of a fighter, shoulders squared, eyes assessing.

I blotted sweat from my forehead. The jacket I’d donned before leaving my apartment wasn’t serving me well in the late afternoon hours on steamy docks a few miles south of Houston. But it concealed my weapons. Efficiency over comfort.

I glanced out the window, narrowing my eyes so they’d focus on the Sugar Baby without taking in the water. The deckhand raised his head in my direction, pushing his hair back. Even from this distance I could tell his eyes were narrowed—doing more than just looking around. I backed up. Every now and then over the last few days, he’d scanned the buildings, though it seemed to me his gaze lingered a scant second longer than needed in my general vicinity. I wasn’t sure if I should chalk this up to my typical cautionary ways. Fully aware, never vulnerable, yet relaxed. There was no latent body language to indicate he was anything more than a deckhand—but still.

One day Ole Pete and Deckhand left the Sugar Baby unattended long enough to allow me one foray below deck. I’d ascertained Ole Pete’s room—filthy, filled with porn. And the guest quarters—two rooms, one posh and the other not so much. The deckhand’s room—neat, but not so neat it wasn’t easily identifiable as a man’s. Nothing personal in his room. No photos, no memorabilia, nothing with his name on it. Why no personal effects? Later that night, in the comfort of my apartment, I’d sketched the boat’s layout.

I leafed for the sketch, until—

A scream brought me to a new reality. It sounded like a kid. I jumped up, hiding place and assignment forgotten, and sprinted toward the sound, drawing a throwing knife from its sheath at the small of my back.

Around the corner, in a covered alley between two warehouses, a thug with a scruffy beard, jeans, and a denim jacket held a gun to a little girl’s head. I could still walk away without compromising the assignment. Yeah, like I’d leave the girl with this thug.

A few paces in front of him, a woman reached for the girl. “I’ll pay you for it. I promise, just let her go.” Her grimy, red-tipped fingers flexed in and out the way a toddler’s do when it waves bye.

The thug brandished the gun, holding the child by her scruffy Eeyore T-shirt a few years’ worth of sizes too small. “Yeah right. You’ll pay when you want your next fix.”

Tears streamed down the woman’s gaunt face. Had to be the girl’s mother, who else? She was a bad kind of skinny. Drug skinny. “Don’t, JJ. It’s not her you want to hurt, it’s me.” Snot bungee jumped out of her nose into her mouth then up again when she inhaled. Her teeth were a color of yellow and rot.

“Killing her would hurt you more.” His voice was like sandpaper, his silver-studded leather wrist wraps glinted with wicked foreboding.

The girl couldn’t have been more than twelve. Scraggly unwashed blond hair framed her dirty, tear-streaked face. He shoved the gun into her temple, pressing pale flesh in with its dull metal barrel. The girl’s squeaky cry drowned out the mother’s gasp.

The way he shook, this idiot was suffering from withdrawal—or something. The gun would probably go off without his even pulling the trigger.

I crossed my arms, my blade resting between my forearms and concealed by the sleeves of my jacket. I wanted to go. Forget the whole thing. This could mess up my assignment. Oh, who was I kidding? I wasn’t going to let him hurt the kid. “Let her go.”

JJ turned glazed and reddened eyes my way. “Wha—who the fuck are you? Fuck off, bitch.”

I returned his stare. “No, JJ. You fuck off, but first, let the kid go. Last warning.”

“No!” The mother moved. Right in my way.

It took me a second to process this turn of events. She was protecting him over her child?

I couldn’t even see his hands. Or the girl. The only thing I had a shot at now was JJ’s head. And with a blade, that limited my options. The eye socket was really my only target.

His eyes darted above, behind, beyond, all around. “Who the fuck do you think you are? I’ll kill you, and this little shit, and her skanky-ass mother, too. Don’t piss me off, you don’t—”

His finger twitched enough to make me nervous. I raised my hand level with my shoulder and released my knife with a flick. It sailed through the air, true to its fine craftsmanship.

Thunk! It pierced his left eye. He opened his mouth and dropped to his knees, hands at his sides.

Then he raised his gun hand. It wavered. How was he even alive still? He fought to keep it steady. I was screwed. If he got a shot off it would bring attention I didn’t need. I closed in fast, shoved the kid toward her mother, and pulled a long blade from my boot’s sheath.

“Take her. Go.” I hoped the mother would get her out so she wouldn’t have to see more.

She didn’t.

His hand drooped a bit.

“Go.”

Still she stood, hands draped over her daughter’s shoulders.

He steadied his hand.

I was out of time. Out of choices.

Two steps, and I slipped the knife into his chest, straight to his evil, black heart. I ended his miserable existence with a quick thrust then retracted the blade. All he let loose was a squeak, not much more than a rat’s hiss.

A writhing deep within my abdomen made me catch my breath. The SoulLust was coming to. Bad timing for the thing in me that consumes souls to awaken. This wasn’t the time I could indulge its appetite with a victim. I bent over, took a deep breath, and fought it for control. Pushing the SoulLust’s surge back, imposing my will over its desire to engage in this kill.

Still bent over, I turned my head sideways to the girl who was watching me. She didn’t seem stunned. Either she’d seen a lot of ugliness in her short life or she played the wrong video games.

“JJ,” the woman squeaked, wiping her face with her top. She made a move toward him.

I should’ve call Child Services. Or taken the kid with me. Yeah, that wouldn’t work. An ageless assassin with a death wish was the last thing this kid—or anybody else—needed.

The SoulLust jerked my gut again. I couldn’t keep the grunt in. “Get out” was all I could manage while the SoulLust and I struggled over my body. I straightened, fighting the urge to lean against something. The SoulLust’s surge ebbed back like a slow tide, relinquishing its hold on me.

The girl and her crack ho’ momma scurried away.

I noticed him.

He studied me back.

My palms moistened. I felt my heart rate slowing d-o-w-n.

A few paces away, wielding a metal pipe like a bat, a backpack slung over one shoulder, he gestured at JJ with the black pipe. “Guess you don’t need my help.”

The deckhand.

Far more dangerous-looking than from afar. His eyes were green, unlike a green I’d ever seen—sea foam. Measuring, processing.

Far sexier up close than he was serving as the deckhand of that piece of shit. And even more familiar, but I still couldn’t place him. I was good with remembering faces. Names, not really, but for sure faces stuck—and this face would definitely have stuck like melted marshmallows on s’mores.

And now he was certain to screw up my assignment—that’s what witnesses did. I sure as hell didn’t want the captain’s deckhand to be able to identify me.

In three seconds I could’ve orchestrate his death.

As if.

I knew damned well I wouldn’t kill him. I only kill douche bags and assignments. And ones that threaten my safety. If he’d seen—

“Clean throw.”

“Thanks,” I muttered. Shit, he saw.

“You’re a cop, aren’t you?”

Weird question for him to ask.

His gaze traveled from my black steel-toed boots up to my black jacket, lingering in all the right places, bringing a rise to my body temperature which would be betrayed by my flushed cheeks.

His eyes cut to my core—vivid green lasers that could see my soul. “You’re not an average cop. You’re some sort of special forces, or an agent or something, right?”

“You know I can’t discuss that with you.”

“What will you do with the body?”

The body. Shit, that’s right—the body. JJ, blood coloring his dingy white T-shirt, one blade in his eye. Exit strategy time.

I leaned in and removed my knife, my eyes still on the deckhand.

He didn’t quease. I couldn’t help feeling he wasn’t unfamiliar with this sort of thing. Maybe I was being hypersensitive about him, his motives.

I wiped one blade then the other on JJ’s T-shirt, carefully, thoroughly. Once all the blood was gone, I tucked my weapons back into their respective sheaths, protecting my body from their sharpness and any diseases JJ carried. They pressed against the small of my back, hidden by my jacket.

“I’m not doing anything with the body. Neither are you. We’ll let the local authorities think what they want to. I wasn’t here. If you’re smart, you weren’t either.”

“I wasn’t since I didn’t do anything. Never had a chance to.” He forked his hand through acorn-brown hair too long to be corporate and too short to be hippie, but the perfect length for running fingers through.

I pointed to the pipe. “What are you doing here? With that?”

“Heard a scream. Sounded female. Thought I should check it out.” He tossed the pipe into the dumpster.

“White knight and all that.” I sneered. Nice guy. Probably meant he wasn’t involved in Ole Pete’s enterprises, not if he was going to save a kid. Or so I hoped.

“I’m Sloan.”

“Sloan.” I let the name roll off my tongue, enjoying the sensual feeling of the S while the O made my lips purse. “I’m Yaz.”

“What kind of name is that? Nickname?”

“We don’t need to be chatting it up here. As incompetent as the cops may seem sometimes, they do get lucky. And I don’t like paperwork. Let’s go.”

I should have shaken him loose. Gone my own way, but when he said “Coffee?” I said, “Yes.”

A few blocks away, we took seats at a Starbucks. I sat with the late afternoon sun at my back, almost like putting a spotlight on him. Hoping it made him strain to look directly at me, and unable to read any expressions. Maybe having met him would turn out for the best. He might be able to provide info on Ole Pete and my assignment. One thing I was certain about, whatever Sloan was, he wasn’t simply a deckhand.

He’d ordered a macchiato concoction, and I had my usual quad-venti-skinny latte. I’d fallen victim to the Starbucks baristas and been trained to their lingo. As if saying I wanted a large, non-fat latte with a couple of extra shots was blasphemy.

“You were telling me about your name, Yaz. Is that a nickname or what?”

“It’s a nickname.” Short for Yazmira, I could have said but opted not to. Complications would arise from his knowing too much about me, if he lived long enough.

He took the cap off his drink, tested the temperature against his mouth, licking the whipped cream from his upper lip. His tongue formed a perfect tip as it slid along his lip. Then he caught his lower lip between his teeth, and I fought the shiver that wanted to run from my ass to the top of my spine.

He studied me, a glint in his eye—as if he knew.

My nerve endings tingled. A twinge acknowledged him. It had been a hell of a long time since I’d been with a mortal. This time, I did shudder, unable to stop the rush that passed through my body.

“Cold?”

Damn him.

I looked away then at my cup, studying it as if there’d be a final exam covering cups, hoping to hide the desire flaring between my legs and behind my eyes.

“Where’d you learn those fighting skills?”

His question caught me off guard. “I’ve studied many styles, in many different places.”

He lowered his lids, eyes narrowed. “Which tells me nothing.”

I looked away. The grackles lined up on the telephone lines. Funky birds that looked like blackbirds. They were all over parts of Houston. Weird birds. Every time one flew in and landed, they would all realign themselves to keep a proportionate distance between each one on the line. Odd, how those birds did that, every time one flew in or out. Right now they perched by the thousands, their chirping competing with road noise. It felt like a scene from Hitchcock’s Birds.

I turned my attention back to Sloan. “You already know I’m not going to discuss myself.”

“What can we discuss?”

“Let’s talk about you. Tell me what a man named Sloan does for a living.”

“You already know what I do.” Eyes still narrowed.

“Humor me.”

“Okay. This man named Sloan works as a deckhand on a charter fishing boat doing the bidding of some old fart that doesn’t pay him nearly enough but shamelessly makes use of him twenty four hours a day, on or off the sea.”

“Why don’t you quit, then?”

“Times are tough for clientless financial advisors and newly transplanted journalists.”

I couldn’t help the laugh that slipped out. He was funny even when he lied. “Aren’t you a bit young to have two failed careers before resorting to being a deckhand?”

“I studied journalism, did a little bit of writing, and then tried financial advising. It’s not like you have to have a finance degree to try to convince people to give you their money. Except, I hate cold-calling, barely know anyone in Houston, blah, blah. I’d have had beaucoup clients if I’d stayed in New Orleans. Family, friends, all that.”

He pronounced it N’Awlins, though he didn’t have an accent.

“What happened to your accent? Or are you not a southern boy by birth?”

“Oh, I’m southern alright.” It came out suth’n, as if he allowed it to slip on purpose. He didn’t have the air of someone who failed at anything, much less a career—or even two.

“Where did you practice your journalism, southern boy?”

“I gave it a shot in the city, New York. Not my kind of place. I’m not good in a town that big. My southern charm isn’t appreciated.” The crinkles around his eyes told me this man smiled a lot.

Another lie—his charm not being appreciated—this man would be appreciated in a room full of lesbians.

The distant sound of sirens caught my attention.

Sloan cocked his head to the side. “JJ’s ride.”

“Probably. Why Houston when New Orleans would have been better?”

“Long story. What were you doing near the docks?” He leaned in. The sun’s rays set those eyes on fire, green ice with blue flecks—until the sun’s brightness caused him to pull back.

“Recon for a job.” And that was true. When your entire existence is a lie, being able to tell the truth can make you feel good.

“No details?”

“You know better.” I took a sip of the latte. At least the coffee had cooled down; my temperature sure as hell hadn’t. I felt a sheen of sweat building on my forehead. Damned jacket, damned heat. Damned man.

“You have an ulcer or something?”

“What? No. What do you mean?”

“The way you were doubled over after JJ. I didn’t think you were gonna hurl. You don’t seem a stranger to blood. What’s up with that?”

“Probably a twenty-four hour thing.” More like a forever thing. How do I even begin to explain SoulLust? Have had for a few hundred years. Using your body as a host. Forcing you to do its dark deeds while it keeps you alive. The symptoms of SoulLust were like a hyped-up pregnancy. Nausea. Controlled by something within me, but yet not me.

“Why have you been casing Pete’s boat for the last few days?”

He knew. Now what? And I was starting to like him. My eyes flew to the grackles while I tried to work out an answer.

He cleared his throat. “Okay, since you’re not gonna tell me anything else about you, why don’t we do it?”

I coughed, choking—spitting my drink, latte sputtering on the table top, and frowned at him. “That’s your come-on?”

“Why would I need a come-on? You’re going to deny the attraction?” He had a charming recklessness that masked supreme confidence.

“I won’t deny it. I mean . . .” Damn.

His lips moved, just the faintest twitch. He was fighting off a laugh. He quit fighting it and laughed.

“You’re not serious.” I squirmed in my seat, not sure I wasn’t disappointed.

“We should go talk somewhere more private. And since my place is a boat that wouldn’t afford luxury or privacy, I was thinking more like yours.”

Why did he want privacy? Though privacy wasn’t a bad idea. Just in case I had to kill him. It would give me a chance to pump him for info. There was something odd about this man. Educated, attractive, but serving as a go-fer on a charter boat.

“I don’t live in Houston.” I added to my lies, thinking of my place a few miles away.

“You probably already have a hotel room, don’t you?”

“Not checked in yet.” Why couldn’t I stop staring at those lips?

“Yeah, right. You’ve been here for days.” He wasn’t asking. He was calling me out.

“I change hotels daily.”

For a second, his brow popped up then settled back in place. “Come on.” He tossed his cup in a trash can.

Friday Dialogues – Author Joan Reeves

1. Do you have a day job?

For the last 20+ years, writing has been my full-time job. I work at home so that means I have the worst of both worlds – full-time working in my home office while constantly overwhelmed by the housework, laundry, meal preparation, and other assorted tasks associated with being at home during the day. I’ve always thought I would get a great deal more writing done if I went to an office each day the way my darling hubby does.

2. What was the greatest thing you learned at school?

That popularity doesn’t necessarily prepare you for success.

3. Do you laugh at your own jokes?

Oh, my goodness, yes. I’m awful at telling jokes, but I do love humor. Laughter can certainly smooth the rough edges of life.

4. Why do you think what you do matters?

People are driven by the need to be loved – to connect. I truly believe that there is someone for everyone, and that’s what I write about – a man and woman who are made for each, but they just don’t know it yet. Love may not make the world go round, but it sure makes the ride more interesting.

5. Have you ever found true love?

Yes, I found it with my wonderful husband. We’ve been married 36 years. It sounds corny, but we complete each other.

6. Do you have a saying or motto for your life and/or as a writer?

Oh, you really ask all the right questions. Yes, I proudly proclaim my motto: It’s never too late to live happily ever after. I truly believe that. As long as you have breath in your body, you have a shot at being happy regardless of all the bad stuff that may have happened.

7. Where can people find you on the web? Where can they read more about your books?

Look for me on my blog, http://SlingWords.blogspot.com, website www.JoanReeves.com, or Twitter @JoanReeves and Facebook/JoanReevesWrites.

8. What inspired you to write this particular story?

I guess this story is for all the women who never got that big heart-shaped box of candy on Valentine’s Day or roses or gifts of any kind. I’ve known a lot of wonderful, lovely women who never had a man in their lives who romanced them on Cupid’s special day. Sometimes men decide a woman is so pretty that she’s “dated up” so they never make the attempt. For whatever reason, this is for the women who go un-romanced.

9. How did you choose your title?

In Scents and Sensuality, the heroine Amanda is a perfumer so she knows all about the Science of Smell and the Science of Sex Appeal, but when it comes to men and desire, she knows zip. But she’s willing to learn. *g* She works with scents and wants the chance to explore her sensuality, so the title just seemed perfect. Plus, it’s a subtle homage to Austen’s Sense and Sensibility title which is one of my favorite books.

10. You got the call – your novel is being made into a TV series or movie – who’s in your dream cast?

That is my fondest fantasy – movies from my romantic comedies. For Scents and Sensuality, I think Kristen Bell would be perfect as Amanda and Tom Welling as Harrison.

*~*

Scents and Sensuality by Joan Reeves| [amazon_link id=”B00BTIDUHW” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Amazon[/amazon_link] | BN | Smashwords | Kobo | iBooks |

BLURB

Perfumer Amanda Whitfield is desperate for a date to her snooty cousin’s wedding – on Valentine’s Day of all days. But she’s a total flop with men.

Eavesdropping on the lovely blonde’s conversation, Harrison Kincaid’s mother interrupts and suggests her son, a computer genius, would be perfect for the job. Completely desperate, Amanda agrees to a blind date.

With some coaching from her best friend on how to be a hottie, Amanda is determined to convert the blind date into a wedding date. She’s prepared to do anything to hook a man because there is NO way she will go to THAT wedding without a man on her arm. Well, almost anything.

Computer genius Harrison Kincaid has had it with his mother’s matchmaking. He’s determined to teach her a lesson and put an end to her crazy schemes. But, first, he’s got to make his mother’s latest prospect, Amanda Whitfield, run in the other direction the minute she lays eyes on him.

Amanda and Harrison are determined. Desperate. Desperation makes for funny—and sexy—bedfellows.

*~*

EXCERPT, SCENTS AND SENSUALITY

Was it really all right to be herself with him Amanda wondered? To show her true personality? “Nicole said men prefer women who aren’t so serious. She said men like women who are sexy and flirty. I’m not like that. I’m serious and thoughtful and introverted. And shy.”

She was shy? Oddly, Harrison liked that. Most of the women he’d had in his bed didn’t know the meaning of the word shy. He’d never had a woman hesitate to tell him in detail what to do, where to touch, how to touch, and when to touch as she pursued her own pleasure. As if he were so unskilled that he didn’t know anything about women.

“Your friend doesn’t know what she’s talking about,” Harrison said. He stopped moving. Now they weren’t dancing. They were just swaying in time to the music. “There’s nothing wrong with the real you, sweetheart.”

In a voice so intense that it made gooseflesh break out on her arms, he whispered against her cheek, “You don’t have to pretend to be someone you’re not. I like you just the way you are. You’re beautiful, and you’re incredibly sexy without playing silly games. I want you.”

His words wove a spell around her lonely heart. “You don’t have to say that…that I’m sexy. I…I won’t change my mind about…about…you know.”

Harrison chuckled. “Are you trying to say you won’t change your mind about having a raging affair with me?”

Amanda met his eyes directly. “Despite what you say, I know I’m not sexy. I want to be honest with you so here’s the bald truth. I’m a flop with men. I was desperate for a date for my cousin’s wedding. Nicole helped me hook you. She tutored me on how to be a hot babe because that’s what men want.”

“That’s a hell of a lot of honesty.”

His comment was like the release gate on a dam. A flood of words poured out of Amanda. “I don’t want you to be confused by Nicole’s tricks and think I’m something I’m not. Even though I’m more than willing to…you know…have that raging affair with you.”

Amanda spoke faster to get all the words out before she lost her courage. “I was just pretending. So you may not really want me now that you know the truth. I’m not a sexy hot babe, and you don’t have to tell me I am just to–”

Harrison’s mouth swooped down and captured hers, shutting off the frantic torrent of words. Amanda was frozen for a split second, then the feel of his mouth on hers broke through the paralysis. Ah, this was a kiss. The kind of kiss she’d been waiting for her entire life.

*~*

BIO

Joan Reeves, a bestselling ebook author, writes sassy, sexy Contemporary Romance. Joan says she writes because she’s too young for Social Security and too old to learn how to ask: “Do you want fries with that?” Look for her newest romantic comedy CINDERELLA BLUE this month at all ebook sellers on the planet — okay, maybe not all, but most of them.

Friday Focus – Author Shauna Aura Knight

Personal

Can you tell us a little about yourself?

I’m an artist, writer, designer, event planner, and traveling teacher, so I’m a bit of a jack-of-many-trades. I’m almost always working on something creative. I often find there just aren’t enough hours in the day to do all the writing and artwork projects I have in mind. I also organize events for the Pagan/alternative spirituality community in Chicago, as well as travel and teach workshops for the broader Pagan community on topics like leadership, community building, how to facilitate workshops and rituals, and other metaphysical, esoteric, and personal growth topics.

I used to be a shy little wallflower, and now I find it amusing to be teaching workshops on public speaking and facilitation. Truthfully, I’m an introvert and I still have a lot of social anxiety, but I suppose that’s why I teach this stuff—if I can learn to do it, anyone can. I’m kind of a nerd for event planning, and I love planning conferences, concerts, and other events. I used to hang out with a bunch of Star Wars fans and we’d run room parties at Science Fiction conventions; I’d orchestrate decorating the room like a scene from one of the movies, so I’ve built a life-size Jabba the Hutt and a Carbonite Chamber.

There’s nothing I love more than getting all excited about a project, whether it’s a story, a painting, designing a magazine cover, organizing an event, building an outdoor shrine, or whatever crazy thing I’ve gotten myself immersed in.

What do you like to read? What’s your favorite genre?

Currently I find myself reading a lot of Paranormal Romance. I don’t have a lot of time for reading, and my brain is usually pretty spammy when I’m going for fiction so I like to read something that’s going to let me just get into the story and devour it. I like Sherrilyn Kenyon, Karen Marie Moning, Emma Holly, Angela Knight, and Jory Strong.

In the past, I’ve read a lot of fantasy books. Some of my favorite authors are Anne McCaffrey, particularly her Pern stories, Janny Wurtz stories about Arithon, Katherine Kurtz’ Deryni books, I liked a lot of the early Mercedes Lackey stories about Valdemar, David Eddings, Charles de Lint, and two of my favorite books are The Mirror of Her Dreams and A Man Rides Through by Stephen R. Donaldson.

Name your 5 favorite movies. Why?

I’m a total nerd for fantasy and scifi movies. Star Wars, The Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, The Matrix…there’s a host of other similar movies that I love. I don’t know what it is, but fantasy and scifi has always sucked me in. I also have a special place in my heart for disaster movies. I’m not really into many comedies, unless you count Galaxy Quest and Spaceballs. I don’t know what it is; heartwarming chick flicks, comedies, and dramas don’t really grab me. Futuristic, dystopian, epic fantasy…that’s what inspires me.

Where can people find you on the web? Where can they read more about your books?

I’ve just launched a new web site, www.ShaunaAuraKnight.com, and it’s a little barebones at the moment but there is information on all of my books there. But I also post excerpts and other posts on my fiction blog, https://shaunaknightauthorartist.wordpress.com. There are two longer excerpts for A Winter Knight’s Vigil there. You can also contact find me on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/ShaunaKnightAuthorArtist. I post there about my books and other interesting things, as well as the occasional contest and giveaway.

Your Novel

What is your book about?

A Winter Knight’s Vigil takes place in a woodland cabin the weekend of the Winter Solstice. Amber is in love with Tristan, but she knows she can’t date him. She and Tristan are there with ten of their closest friends; the twelve of them are in a Pagan coven, and they are out in the woods on a spiritual retreat. Their coven has a rule that members can’t get romantically entangled in order to prevent some of the small group dynamics that can happen in situations like that. But it’s close quarters, and the rituals they are doing together keep pushing Amber and Tristan together. Things get pretty spicy, and then the two of them have to figure out what to do. Lie to each other about what they feel so they don’t break the rules? Or lie to their best friends?  They can only hope that the Longest Night vigil will show them a way through.

What inspired you to write this particular story?

This story started—as many of mine do—with a snippet of a scene in a dream. The dream seemed to take place in a cabin, and I was reminded of a time I was out in a woodland cabin with some friends of mine. We weren’t in a formal coven but we were working toward that—at least, we would have if three of the group members hadn’t been interested in the one man in our group, two of them cheating on their partners to be with him.

And I thought, there we go, there’s the perfect conflict—the whole small group dynamics issue that happens whenever people hook up within a small group, whether religious or otherwise. I was also inspired to write about some of the particular magic of the winter solstice. It’s the longest night, and that’s why it’s sometimes used as a vigil. Once I put those pieces together, the story really fell together pretty quickly.

How did you choose your title?

The title came to me all at once; it just seemed to make sense. The characters in the story are working with the myth of King Arthur, King Arthur sat in vigil before he was knighted, and these characters were also going through a vigil, and Tristan and Amber in specific are both struggling with what to do. In this case, Tristan and Amber are each knights, facing their own consciences during their vigil.

How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the book?

Probably what’s most myself in this book is how the characters are working to face their own shadows, and in specific, how they are working to do the right thing. And they—like anyone—struggle with what they really want to do vs. their fears. For whatever reason, it seems to happen in our lives that we often have to make a choice. Do something that is right for us, but at the expense of someone else. I think it’s important to think about these things, to negotiate them as best we can. To do what calls to our soul, and still do the right thing.

What was your favorite part or chapter, and why?

Well…I do write erotic romance, so I’m always fond of the scenes where the characters finally get together after building all that sexual tension. But I think my favorite scene is where Tristan and Amber are finally starting to get comfortable with each other. Without giving away massive spoilers, they curl up and watch one of their favorite movies together and they are joking around. For me, it’s those funny, quirky things that people say to each other when they really know each other well…that’s when the characters really come alive for me.


Writing

Are you a pantser or a plotter?

I’m a hybrid. I like to see the whole scope of the plan in my head, and as things make sense to me I write it out in outline form or make little notes, but I don’t have this rigid need for an outline. For me, it’s a more organic process. Often times I’ll hear a particular song and an entire scene will just open up in my mind and I’ll see exactly how it goes. I find I get my worst writer’s block when there’s a part of the plot that I don’t understand or know what is happening there, or how the characters are getting from A to B. Then I sit there praying for that inspirational bolt of lightning to hit so I know how the story progresses.

Where do you get your ideas?

A lot of my best story ideas come from my dreams; I have been writing down my dreams since I was a kid. Actually, I just published a nonfiction book on dreamwork as an introduction to exploring your dreams. For me, dreams are a direct link to the mythic language of our subconscious. I won’t go into a deep dive on Joseph Campbell and the hero’s journey and the importance of myth. But any modern stories—the stories that really engage us—are working with those themes we find in myths the world over. And those are the same images and patterns and archetypes that come up in our dreams. Nothing inspires me to write a story like one of my dreams.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

For me, the hardest part is finishing the book…and that’s the advice I have is, finish the darned book. You can’t get published if you don’t complete your manuscript.

Have you written any other books?

I have dozens of books in the works, but so far I have 3 published novellas. One is a paranormal romance, Werewolves in the Kitchen; it’s currently part of an anthology but comes out as a standalone eBook in mid January. I also have an urban fantasy, The White Dress, the Autumn Leaves, coming out in the next month or so. It’s an incredibly romantic story, though it has a bit of a darker ending so I can’t really call it a romance. And I’ll release a vampire romance novella in early 2014 for free to people who join my mailing list.

What are you working on now?

I have a lot of books in production at the moment, but a few of my paranormal romance novels are almost finished. Jhalen’s a 4,000 year-old vampire held prisoner by demi-human monsters. They want the secret of his immortality, and it happens that he’s the keeper of a few secrets about the Grail. When he meets Cora, a human with some psychic abilities, they have to unravel the deeper Grail mysteries to escape and be together.

Angel is a woman who has dedicated herself to Aphrodite, and is then surprised when the Goddess begins to commune with her. She falls for Benjamin, and as their relationship grows, vampires and other monsters that live in the shadows start to come after her. Ben has been viciously attacked in the past, and he resists his connection to Hephaestus. However, accepting the Greek god is the only way to save either of them from the creatures coming after them.

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WinterKnightsVigilCover| [amazon_link id=”B00H545RW0″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Amazon[/amazon_link] | Smashwords | BN | 

Blurb

Sexy, kilt-wearing Tristan has captured Amber’s attention on many occasions. But as members of the Kingsword coven, which has strict rules about intimate relationships inside the circle, dating him is out of the question. When the coven heads to a secluded woodland cabin to celebrate the Winter Solstice, Amber finds herself closer than ever to Tristan. As the Longest Night approaches and their group’s ritual workings intensify, the pair realizes that they can no longer hide from their feelings.

Just as King Arthur held vigil before being knighted, Tristan and Amber face their shadows—and the realization that one or both of them might have to leave the coven. Or can they be together without breaking their honor?

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Excerpt:

The ritual drumming intensified. Eyes almost closed, Amber danced harder, stomping her feet, rocking back and forth, chanting the song that was escalating in intensity and volume, some of them adding harmonies and rhythmic words. She was dizzy with the dancing, ready to sink to her knees so she wouldn’t fall.

She opened her eyes enough to look at the fire to let the flickering light take her beyond herself. Then she saw Tristan. Sweating, wearing just his kilt now, he was dancing wildly by the fire, snarling and chanting. He seemed like the Horned One the way he was framed by the firelight, the way his hips moved, the complete intensity with which he danced.

She was hoarse, panting, as the sound of the chant finally hit its peak and then began to fade into a drone, a tone. The complicated drumbeats fell away until it was as it began, just a heartbeat, just their voices, then just their panting breaths.

She stumbled and Tristan’s arm flung out to steady her.

Amber looked at him, both of them panting, and she couldn’t help but follow the sweat that trickled down his neck to his chest. She wanted him so badly in that moment, wanted him to crush her lips with his, wanted him to throw her over his shoulder or lay her down by the fire right there and take her hard. Wanted him to tell her he loved her, that he wanted to be with her forever. She wanted him to drive into her until he came inside her, roaring into her neck, kissing her over and over.  She looked up at him, trying to breathe, moving just the slightest bit closer as she fought down a moan, looking at his lips.

His chest rising and falling with his breath, Tristan’s eyebrows lifted and he gave her the strangest look.

Blinking dizzily, Amber pulled back from him. He stared at her, and she backed off. She hauled on her coat, not even buttoning it before she was outside, hurrying out into the snowy woods.

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BioShauna2Shauna Aura Knight
An artist, author, community leader, and teacher, Shauna’s work is inspired by the mythic stories of heroes, of swords and magic, and of the darkness we each must overcome. That the challenges we face shape us, and help each character—each person–to become heroes.

She’s a fantasy artist and author, including the paranormal romance Werewolves in the Kitchen, A Winter Knight’s Vigil, and the urban fantasy The White Dress, the Autumn Leaves. Her mythic artwork and designs are used for magazine covers, book covers, and illustrations, as well as decorating many walls, shrines, and other spaces.

Shauna is passionate about creating stories, artwork, experiences, spaces, and rituals to awaken mythic imagination. She travels nationally offering intensive education in the transformative arts of community leadership, facilitation, ritual, and personal transformation, and is the author of numerous articles and books on those subjects.

http://www.shaunaauraknight.com

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