Showing posts with label Excerpts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Excerpts. Show all posts

LOST IN STARLIGHT ~ Sci-Fi Romance

 


 
💫High school drama meets forbidden love in this interstellar romance!💫
 
Don’t miss this epic blend of paranormal romance and sci-fi intrigue. Perfect for fans of Twilight and Roswell!


Senior year is tough. Crushing on a gorgeous, possibly unearthly outcast? That’s a whole new level of complicated!

Sloane Masterson, high school newspaper reporter, has a knack for sniffing out stories that are stranger than fiction. When she’s not dishing out snark in her wicked cool column—Fright Night Babble—where she chats about cliches in horror films, she’s busy scooping her next big story. Her latest obsession? The enigmatic and swoon-worthy Hayden Lancaster.

But Hayden’s not your average high school hottie. When Sloane catches Hayden defying the laws of physics, her reporter instincts kick into hyperdrive. It seems his superhuman abilities are literally out of this world. (And no, it’s not just his uncanny ability to rock skinny jeans.)

Suddenly, unmasking the truth becomes her top priority—right after over-analyzing why he makes her heart do backflips. Yet, learning Hayden’s secret might be more than Sloane bargained for—and even more dangerous for her heart. Because despite Hayden’s insistence that their relationship stays in the friend zone, their fierce attraction threatens to go supernova.

And there’s a cosmic catch (isn’t there always?): if they follow their hearts, there are dire consequences—like his intergalactic enemies permanently erasing Sloane’s memories faster than you can say “alien abduction.” (Talk about an otherworldly relationship hurdle!)

Now Sloane faces a choice more challenging than picking the perfect scary movie for a first date: protect herself, or forget the boy she loves forever.

Is this star-crossed romance worth potentially losing her mind over? (Spoiler: It just might be!)





READ AN EXCERPT OF CHAPTER ONE

I don’t usually stalk boys, but if I hadn’t been spying on Hayden Lancaster, I never would’ve seen the mind-blowing fork-bending incident. 

I scoot back the creaky plastic chair and rest my chin on my fist. Lunch hour is the best time to study my classmates undetected. Especially the tall, hot, and broody ones.


Not that I’m a bad person. Honest. I’ve never narked on anyone. I don’t kick puppies. And I normally don’t play at undercover agent. Well...until today.


“Are you scoping out a new story?” My best friend, Viola Saks, shifts in her seat, her nose stuck in a horror novel. 


Viola prefers her book boyfriends over real guys, and I gotta admit, she has a point. Fictional hotties seem way more exciting than real boys.


“Yup. But right now, I’m only observing,” I lie. “People watching.”


Tiny white lie. I’m secretly kicking off Operation Lancaster.


Haven High’s cafeteria is the perfect spot to catch up on gossip, observe clique wars, and witness any mean girl activity. This is where I discover the most newsworthy stories. 


As two girls pass our table, one of them bumps my chair without apologizing. To me, the lunchroom is more than just a place to chow down on industrial-grade food. It reminds me of a prison scene, with its hostile mingling and violent chaos, like inmates at mealtime. Saying the cafeteria is only for eating is like saying an underground lair is only for villains plotting world domination. If you can survive a high school lunchroom, then you can survive anything. Well, with the exception of a zombie apocalypse. 


The double-doors swing open and in walks Hayden Lancaster, chin held high. Next to him is his younger brother, Zach, bouncing a basketball with one hand and drinking a soda with the other. Hayden’s eyes are trained directly ahead, as the brothers stride across the crowded room and take seats at an empty table. 


About time. The focus of my new article has finally arrived. Opening my purse, I get out my Hello Kitty spiral-bound notebook and pen. Now I’m ready.


The Lancaster brothers are both gorgeous in a way that should be totally illegal, but look nothing alike. Zach is a cocky, dark-haired, all-round jock, and Hayden is the quiet, rockstar-sexy, drummer-type. He’s one of those guys who prefers to function in his own little world. And I’ll admit that I sure wouldn’t mind a starring role on his planet.


I’m not sure which social group the Lancaster boys actually fit into. Maybe the misunderstood-brooding-guys club? I jot that down in my notebook.


While Viola’s reading her book, I covertly look over at Hayden sitting three tables away from mine. He’s six feet tall, and lean, yet muscular. The times we’ve passed each other in the halls, his eyes are usually narrowed as if he knows an intriguing secret. Today, Hayden’s wearing a dark blue short-sleeved, button-up shirt with faded skinny jeans, a studded belt, and scuffed Etnies. On one arm, he has several black rubber bracelets. Nothing too unusual about him. Except for one very odd feature. 


Hayden has two different colored eyes. He turns his head and his light brown fauxhawk falls over his forehead in a messy yet somehow deliberate way, landing over his one strikingly blue eye. The other one is green. Besides the rare heterochromia iridis, he seems to be just another smokin’ hot brainiac. 


Flipping open my notebook, I write: Startling eye color and member of the wickedly cool Hair Club. Check.

 
Wait. Why am I thinking about how über hot he is? Seriously not important. 


Viola lowers her book a fraction. “You’re totally staring at the Lancasters.”


“I’m not staring.” 


“Oh, right, you’re observing.” She tilts her head. “Most girls can’t resist guys like them. They have that...” 


“Incredibly sexy quality?” 


“Well, there’s that. But I was gonna say, dangerous vibe going,” Viola says. 


I pull out a bag of celery from my lunchbox. “Yeah, I guess.”


Maybe I should write that down. Sexy bad-boys. Check.

 
She points at my lunch. “Your mom on that health food kick again?”


“Yup.” 


“She’s like the damn food police. I’m glad my mom’s not like that.” Viola reaches out a slender arm to nab a French fry and shove it into her mouth.


“How are you supermodel thin when you eat stuff like that?” I groan and glance at her slim figure clad in a skintight black dress with thigh-high boots. “I could eat only yogurt for the rest of my life and I’d still be your chubby sidekick.”


She scoffs. “You’re not chubby, Sloane. You’re extra curvy.”


“Whatevs. Guess that’s just what people always say when you’re a foodie like me.” 


Viola’s flicks a page of her book. “So what’s this article on?”


I clear my throat. “Actually, I’m investigating Hayden Lancaster.”


“Should be interesting.” One brown eye peeks over the edge of the paperback. “Any particular reason?”


“Because of this hacker rumor going around. The gossip this morning was off the hook. Supposedly, Hayden hacked into the school’s computer system over the weekend to change some grades. School administrators are saying that they’ll probably need a day just to block any security breaches.” 


She straightens, lowering her book. “That’s odd. Isn’t he on the honor roll? Why would he need to alter his grades?”


I shrug. “Beats me. Maybe he was doing it for someone else.”


For a reporter with the school’s online newspaper the Haven Gazette, a hacker scandal is way huge. Since my college resume is in dire need of some padding, this assignment was just too juicy to pass up. Plus, a front-page byline will look much more impressive in a hardcore journalism-type of way than my own wicked cool column—Fright Night Babble—where I mainly review and chat about horror films. 


My gaze strays back to the brothers as I sip my drink. I can tell by Hayden’s jerky head movements that the brothers are engrossed in a heated discussion. Somebody’s not a happy camper. Hayden’s flawless skin reddens, and Zach’s square jaw clenches.


Dang it. I’m too far away to read their lips. 


Mid-rant, Hayden scoots his chair back, the metal legs squeaking on the linoleum floor. He slides his cell phone out of his pocket and reads the screen, then scratches the stubble on his cheek with a frown. Zach tries to grab the phone, but Hayden shoves it back into his pocket. 


“You dumped her, Bro?” Zach practically shouts, a small silver hoop in his ear glints in the light.


Hayden’s hands curl into fists. “Will you stop making a big thing out of it!” 


Viola and I exchange a look. For a minute, the entire cafeteria falls silent.


“Whoa.” She points a fry at the brothers. “I wonder what Hayden and Zach are fighting about. And who got dumped?”


“Sounds like it’s over some girl. I didn’t even know he had a girlfriend.” 


But it would seem that he’s a free man now. Interesting…


“Neither did I. As far as I know, Zach and Hayden have never dated any of the girls at this school.” Viola sighs. “Like they think they’re too good for us or something.” 


I slam my juice box down on the table, purple liquid shooting out of the straw. “Maybe that’s because everyone’s so damn cliquey at this school. It’s just wrong, the way the other kids treat them,” I say. “Did you hear? Someone jacked up Hayden’s locker again with spray paint.”


I’m beyond disgusted by some of my classmates’ Neanderthal moves. 


“Then maybe you should investigate who keeps screwing with the Lancasters. Hayden and Zach can’t help being sexy and brilliant.” Viola is an advocate for social justice in high school, and totally reading my mind. “Besides, if Hayden got away with the hacking incident, there’s no real story, and you probably won’t find any credible sources to verify the allegation.”


I bite off the end of a celery stalk. “Are you kidding me? There’s a story here—I can feel it.” 


“If you say so, but be careful. That boy’s getting a serious rep.”


“True. Except, I think he’d prefer to fly under-the-radar. Although it’s a little late now,” I say. “Hayden’s become infamous overnight. But the hacking isn’t the weird part...” I lean closer and lower my voice. “My sources say that Hayden walked away with only a slap on the wrist. No expulsion or suspension, not even Saturday detention. Who gets away with stuff like that?” 


She rolls her eyes. “He does, apparently.”



“But why? How? These are things I need to know.” 


Viola sticks a bookmark in her novel. “Whaddya got on Hayden so far?” 


I push my hair—originally blonde, and now dyed a black and purple—out of my eyes and scan my notes. “Oh, well, not much. Just that the Lancasters moved to the island about six months ago. Hayden’s a senior and antisocial, and Zach’s a junior and on the basketball team. I heard that Hayden was booted from his last school in Modesto and he did a stint in juvie. Should be pretty hard to get in that kind of trouble around here.”


“Agreed.” She smiles teasingly. “We seem to be short on our quota of cute psychos.” 


I roll my eyes. Viola goes back to reading, and I go back to observing. I busy myself by searching through my purse for something, but glance out the corner of my eye at the Lancaster brothers.


Hayden’s gesturing with his hands in a harassed way. The ropey stomach muscles beneath his tight shirt flex across his midsection with each movement. And I’ll bet my collection of George A. Romero DVDs that he has rock-hard abs.
Zach grunts loudly and twirls the basketball on one finger. Hayden looks around nervously, his shoulders hunched. Even from a short distance, the boy looks mouthwatering good. 


When his extraordinary eyes lock onto mine, an unfamiliar thrill shoots through my veins. Then Hayden stiffens and his eyes harden into dichromatic chips of ice.


Although I’m obviously busted, I can’t look away. The thump of my galloping heartbeat thunders in my ears. There’s a wariness lingering in his expression that I don’t understand. My body temperature rises as if ignited by kerosene. Finally, I’m able to tear my gaze away. 


Then a fierce spark of panic hits hard. Is my hair tangled? My pencil skirt unzipped? Lip gloss on my teeth? 


Pulling a quick ninja hair inspection, I look out the nearby window while surreptitiously using the reflection to ensure that my flyaway hair looks tame. I sweep a hand around my waist to check my zipper, and then run my tongue over my teeth. All good. I grip the hem of my black tee under my leather jacket, the silver studded leather cuff on my wrist digging into my stomach, and yank it down. Much better. 


Embarrassing situation averted. 


Swallowing hard, I shift in my seat. I need a minute to calm down, so I stare at my notebook, picking invisible lint from the wire spiral. The peculiar feeling in my chest gradually shrinks, as if a vacuum is sucking the swirling emotions from my body. 


A few seconds—that seem like hours—pass before I gather the nerve to look over at the Lancaster’s table again. Thankfully, Hayden is back to arguing with his brother. 


“You know, this story is actually the perfect excuse to get closer to a guy you’ve been crushing on for the last few months,” Viola says.


More like six months, four days, and thirteen hours. But who’s counting? 


“This is just for the paper. Someone has to write it,” I say casually, although a part of me is secretly thrilled at the prospect of getting the inside scoop on Hayden Lancaster. 


Right now he’s only a news story. Never mind the fact that a mere glance from the teen Adonis turns my insides into a quivering mass. I have to remember I’m a professional. I got this. And like any great journalist, I must note every detail, so I jot down: Hayden: hacker and computer geek. Check.

 
“Doing anything fun this weekend?” Viola asks. 


I shake my head. “Nope. I’m on babysitting duty.”


 “Again? That blows. Your dad still out of town?” She grabs a fry off her plate and sticks it into her mouth.


“Yup. Which means I’m stuck looking after the menace my parents spawned.”
“I think your little brother’s cute.”


I spear Viola with a steady gaze. “He doesn’t live with you.”


She laughs. “Maybe I shouldn’t complain about being an only child.”


“You got that right.”


 “I said no!” Hayden’s sharp tone carries across the room. He thumps his fist on the table so hard a bowl of potato salad topples over. 


Zach’s eyes narrow to slits and his face darkens. He leans toward his brother and speaks in a hushed tone. Hayden clutches a stainless steel fork in his left hand. He blows out a frustrated breath and nods at whatever Zach’s saying to him.


I quickly add to my notebook: Hayden’s a lefty and brings his lunch to school. Check.

 
When I look up, my eyes widen. Hayden’s ears are bright red and his whole body tenses, as if he wants to punch his smartass sibling. Suddenly the metal fork clenched in his fist folds in half, like it’s made out of pliable, soft plastic.


Pause. Rewind. What the hell? 


My jaw practically hits the table. My eyes must be playing tricks on me. Did that fork really just flop over like a warm Hershey bar? 


I blink and look again. Everything inside me screams to deny it, but really, how can I? The twisted stainless steel proof is right there in front of me. The deformed fork is still clenched tightly in his hand like a beacon of unreality.


Hayden—sexy-lone-wolf—suddenly went from stoic recluse to wicked interesting hottie. 


Frantically, I draw a bent fork in my notebook and write: Hayden can somehow bend metal objects. Check.

 
My stomach churns. This is way too bizarre, even for me. Maybe I’ve been sucked into some freaky SyFy original movie. Because this kind of epic weirdness usually only happens in the movies, not in real life. 


I look at Viola. She’s still absorbed with her novel and no one else seems to have noticed the fork bend in half.


I bump her with my shoulder. “Did you see that?” 


She doesn’t look up from her book, but a few strands of glossy black hair tickle the pages. “No. What?”


With a trembling hand, I reach out and touch Viola’s arm, desperate for an anchor in the midst of such improbability. It’s as if a door has burst open to some strange new world. 


Viola lowers the paperback. “Sloane, what’s wrong? You look paler than usual.”


What can I say that won’t sound batshit crazy? That I saw Hayden doing—what? Using some mystical-type mojo? 


Before I utter a word, Hayden drops the fork onto the table with a clatter and stiffly crosses his arms. My body twitches with the sudden urge to snatch it up for a closer inspection. Zach grabs it and tosses the warped utensil behind him in the trash. They continue to argue in low tones.


Now the evidence is gone, and if I try to explain, my best friend might accuse me of rocking the crazy pants. It’s probably not a good idea to make a scene in front of the whole school. This can wait.


 “Never mind. I’m fine,” I mumble.


Hayden pushes away from the table and storms out of the cafeteria. Grabbing my phone from my bag and pretending to listen to a voicemail, I scoot back my chair and speed-walk across the room to stand by the windows. Hayden marches over to the closest tree and slams his fist into the bark. Talk about anger issues. Shaking out his hand, he stalks toward the parking lot, which probably means he’s cutting his next class. 


Unless I go digging through the trash for that fork, I will need additional proof that something is off about Hayden Lancaster. It seems the computer hacking is just the tip of the iceberg. 


I return to my seat and scan my notes. Now that I think about it harder, Hayden and Zach look like typical teens, but they’re almost too perfect. Extremely attractive. Very athletic. And wicked smart. Now, the fork mutilation.
Too freakin’ weird to ignore. 


Viola leans over my shoulder. “What’re you doing?” 


“I’m keeping a list.”


She frowns. “Huh?”


“My observations on Hayden for a possible scandalous article.”


“Lemme see that.” She snatches the notebook from my hands and flips through the pages like a cop checking notes. “I think the salad your mom is forcing you to eat is warping your brain.”


“Get serious.”  


When Viola finishes, she hands me the notebook and says lightly, “I’d say vampire, but he can go out in daylight. A relative of Superman?”


My pulse races at the idea of him being something otherworldly. 


“Huh. I hadn’t thought of that. Maybe he is a fledgling superhero…” I jot that in my notebook, and then vehemently cross it out. “Nah. Hayden’s a computer geek. Doubt he’d make much of a crusader.” 


Viola dips a limp fry into her ketchup. “Then he’s a villain.” 

 
The bottom falls out of my stomach. Who the heck is this guy? And what if his whole scowly bad-boy act isn’t just an act? 


Leaning back, I resolve to do what any good journalist would do—I’ll go stalking for answers. 


The pen in my hand slightly trembles as I write: Proceed with caution. Check.








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WITCHY WICKEDNESS ~ YA Urban Fantasy




Seeking to fill that Buffy-sized hole in your heart?

Read the Chilling Adventures of Shiloh, a teenage witch struggling to live in two very different worlds: surviving high school with it's teen angst and dating, and her hellish destiny, hunting the things that go thump in the night. 



YA URBAN FANTASY by Sherry Soule
 
 One soul-sucking demon. One haunty mansion. And one witch-tastic destiny…

Ravenwood, California isn’t like other coastal towns. It’s a mystical place, where the teenagers inexplicably disappear and the fog hides chilling secrets. And Shiloh Saintcrow isn’t like other girls—she’s a teen witch who can sense the things that go bump in the night. 


After Shiloh gets a visit from a shadowy demon, threatening to steal her family’s spellbooks, her life quickly spirals into one of unending weirdness and danger. As if life isn’t complicated enough, she takes a job at the local haunted house, where she meets the sinfully hot Trent Donovan and his ghost-hunting uncle, Mr. Evans. 


When another teen vanishes, Shiloh’s forced to team up with Evans to solve the mystery, but their investigation only uncovers a shocking truth about Ravenwood’s founding families. But before she can expose the town’s ominous secret, Shiloh has to evade a kooky ghost on a revenge haunt, contain the scary dark power tainting her magick, and survive attacks by a pack of creeptastic demons first.


For poor Shiloh, life’s a real witch





EXCERPT FROM CHAPTER ONE



Since my thirteenth birthday three years ago, I’d seen things in the shadows—ominous, twisting shapes, slithering through the night. Scary things that didn’t belong in our world, like ghosts, demons, and a whole host of other nasties. Whenever I’d catch a glimpse of their crimson eyes or sharp claws, I’d wish for an elsewhere to be. 

Like anywhere, other than Ravenwood, California.


Shifting on the bed, I glanced at my cell phone where I’d been scrolling through my Instagram feed and hearting cat memes, then closed the app. 


Normally, I felt safe during the day with all the lights on, but when I sensed a low-voltage hum floating in the air and vibrating the floor with a supernatural energy, a wave of unease washed over me like icy rain. 


The nightstand lamp, the desk light, and the floor lamp in the corner blinked off and on. The flames of the candle-infested dresser flickered. The raised blinds over the closed windows eerily fluttered. 


Nothing to fear. Nothing to fear. Nothing to—

 
Dark shadows slithered along the wall. These small demonic creatures—darklings—avoided the light, murmuring in an eerie language. 


My jaw clenched tight. “Sheesh, is it too much to ask for a couple hours of non-paranormal activity?”


Somehow, those shadowy creatures had gotten past the supernatural safeguards protecting the house. The ones I’d just reinforced last night. Apparently not good enough.


Let’s just say, even though I was witch, paranormals and me weren’t besties. No, not like Hermione or Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, but close—I was more like Shiloh, the teen with much witch-attude. Even my aunt and my mother were witches. In fact, all of the females in the Broussard family had magickal roots, but I wasn’t supposed to tell anyone. Not even my best friend or my dad because outsiders would never understand my aunt had said. It was forbidden and people feared what they couldn’t rationalize she’d said. I’d rolled my eyes at the time, but I realized pretty quickly that she’d been right. 


Halloween witches were acceptable. Real witches? Not so much.


When the darklings reached the floor, I slid off the rumbled bed, my bare feet touching the cold hardwood. “Get the hell outta my room! Before I hex your shadowy butts.” 


I glanced down at my clothes. Huh. Guess that would’ve sounded a whole lot tougher if I wasn’t wearing my black cat printed PJ top and polka-dotted drawstring shorts. 


The darklings trickled like spilled ink into the cracks of the floorboards and disappeared. 


“Just craptacular.”


 Now I had to hunt them down. I squatted to check underneath the bed, then under the nightstand. No signs of evilness. I went around the bed to peek below the wicker chair smothered with discarded clothing. Nothing. 


Passing the closed bedroom door, I crouched to look beneath the dresser, and then the battered desk littered with unfinished homework. I even lifted the circular vintage rug, but the darklings had temporarily vanished.


The opposite side of the room had two windows facing the backyard, with a dusty bookshelf between them, and the raised blinds let the midmorning sunlight glare into the space. A mound of clothes slouched in the corner, and stuffed animals crouched below a windowsill. 


The lightbulbs blinked and the candle flames flickered. I listened hard. 


Inhuman mutterings came from the closet, and I whirled around. “Oh, shut up!”
Stomping to the closet, I kicked the door open. On tiptoes, I stretched over the threshold to grasp the brass chain, and gave it a yank. Light illuminated shoes piled on the floor and an overflowing laundry basket. Dusty board games cluttered the shelf, and haphazardly hanging clothes swayed on the bar. Fuzzy bunny slippers stared upward with glassy button eyes. 


With hands on my hips, I turned and scowled at the room. “Where are you hiding?” 


Suddenly, the lightbulbs exploded, raining shards of glass onto the floor. My pulse jumped. Then the blinds dropped downward, plunging the room into semi-darkness. 


The only source of light, the flickering candle flames.


The darklings reappeared from under the rug, covering the floor like an opaque stain. Red eyes gleamed from their shadowy forms. They murmured in anxious voices, almost like a warning, “Shiloh, Shiloh…” 


In a corner by the nightstand, a mass of blackness, solid and vertical, detached itself from the shadows. The entity pulsated and churned like a spatter of crude oil until it nearly touched the ceiling. The odor of sulfur, musty and acrid, filled the room. Power surged through the upper-level demon as he swelled into a seething maelstrom of dark energy.


Bile rose in my throat. This was insane. Paranormals usually avoided me, or I used magickal shields to block them. But this monstrous entity? 


Well, it was the scary-as-hell-demonic type that I’d read about in the grimoires, and obviously not so easily scared off by sixteen-year-old witches with mediocre talents. 


A growl came from the demon, and the darklings shrank back, blending into the dim corners like frightened children. 


When scary things get scared—so not good.    


The demon’s reptilian features fought to become corporeal. Muscles expanded over bones of shiny obsidian, smooth and razor-sharp. The entity throbbed and coalesced into scaly, dark green lizard skin, more sinuous than flesh. Heat, like the breath of a dragon, emanated from the seven-foot-tall demon. Once be become more solid, his appearance looked partially humanoid. He had no hair, a flat snout, and luminousness yellow eyes. Black pants covered his lower-half and his bare feet had webbed toes. 


I stumbled sideways, my knees buckling. My hip whacked the desk, blood roaring in my ears. 


The demon flexed his hands. “Greetings, Thirteenth Daughter.” 


My scalp prickled with sweat. It wasn’t as if I were some girly-girl afraid of her own shadow, but when they had glowing eyes and spoke to me…well, I majorly freaked. 


“W-what? You’ve got the wrong person,” I said, my voice croaking. “Seriously. So you can just go back to your Hell dimension.”

“Gee, isn’t this interesting. It seems you don’t know the truth. Then let me enlighten you, little lamb.” He tilted his baldhead. “You were offered, and I wholeheartedly accepted.”


I backed up a step. “Um, I’m thinking your reality check bounced.”


He sniffed the air. “You make jokes to hide your fear, but I can sense the terror filling your veins like sweet nectar.”


Until this morning, when this upper-level demon and the darklings had broken through the wards, I’d been able to stay clear of anything I couldn’t handle or scare off the less threatening paranormals, but this changed—everything.
Showing up in my bedroom without an invite? So not cool.


“Before we get all personal,” I said, “do you have a name?” 


“Irrelevant,” he said.


“Well, it’s nice to meet you, Irrelevant.”


“If you must, then you may call me Nocturne.” He stayed in the corner away from the windows, glancing at all the lamps and candles cluttering the room. “Hmmm, I do find it so very disappointing that a girl of your unique talents is afraid of the dark. I would think by now, you’d be embracing it since you are bound to me.”


 “Say what? I-I don’t even know what you’re talking, Mr. Nocturne—”


“I am no mister. I am death! I am immortal! I am a terror!” He bellowed. “And you, dear child, bear the devil’s mark. We share a malignant bond. I will prove it.” He pointed at my scarred arm with a devious smile.


A blast of scorching pain, as if I’d plunged my arm into scalding water, struck the scar. Sucking in a breath, tears filled my eyes. The puckered flesh, paler than the color of my olive skin, was hard not to notice. The scar snaked a line from elbow to wrist like a crooked seam. I ran my fingers over the raised ridges and jagged edges.


“Exciting, isn’t it? Being bound to a demon of my stature? You have no idea how darkly special you are. How you’ve been chosen by the coven for a glorious purpose. Your death shall become legend…”


My back pressed into the wall beside the desk, as if I couldn’t put enough distance between the scary Nocturne and myself. “What does that mean? What coven? Who sent you?”


“Not Lucifer, if that’s what you’re assuming. I am an agent of the Underworld, but my duties are mostly ceremonial. Just the occasional goat sacrifice or damnation of a human soul, that sort of thing. I try to stay out of politics. You, on the other hand, have a genuine devil’s mark—a vessel of delectable evil. Yes, you are special indeed.”


“It’s only a scar,” I whispered, holding my arm against my chest as if I were a bird with a tattered wing.


Tsk, tsk. I think you know that it isn’t true.” Nocturne lowered his arm and his inhuman voice sounded resonant and sinister, like the threat of a snake before it strikes. “Debts must be paid.” 


My mouth went dry. “I-I don’t owe you anything. So please just forget about this bound, debt thing.”


I kept an eye on the darklings with their onyx hands, arms, and flashes of red eyes. Their shadowy forms continually moved, sliding under the bed in a twisted game of peek-a-boo. 


“Gosh, well, an oath between a Nocturne and a hecate can never be broken. How would it look if I went around breaking my promises, young witch?” 


I had no clue what he was talking about, and I instinctively knew he wasn’t the monster to ask. I just wanted the demon the hell out of my room.


 “Maybe you teleported into the wrong house. You know, there’s this weird lady up the street with a hairy mole and pointy shoes. Why don’t you try her?”


Nocturne stood unnaturally still and ignored my snark. “Did you know that demon essence is better than Wheaties? It has all the nutrients a growing witch needs.”


“Oh, is that so?” I searched the room frantically. “Thanks, but, uh, I’ve already had breakfast.”


Okay, focus. 


No weapons. Only a pair of dull scissors on the desk. My gaze darted to the bottle of holy water on the bookshelf, then at the closed blinds. Sunlight might be my only ally. If I lifted the blinds, the sun’s rays would turn the demon into a crispy-critter. At least that was the hope. 


He clasped his hands together. “This tête-à-tête has been vaguely amusing, but it has gone on long enough.” 


My breathing stuttered. Oh, god. He was going to kill me. 


Okay, deep breath. Do the calm thing. The non-freaking out thing. 


Nocturne blocked the door. No escape there. The demon’s yellow eyes narrowed and he stepped closer. 


Well, hell. Instead of cowardly screaming, I’d try the brave thing. 


“Kiss some daylight, demon!” 


Rushing forward, I seized the bottle of holy water on the bookshelf. I twisted off the lid and hurled the contents at his face. He shrieked as steam rose from his burning scalp. 


A trickle of holy water splashed onto my skin and the scar seared with pain like a horde of wasps had stung me. 


Stumbling, I fell to my knees, gripping the ledge of the nearest windowsill. A surge of magical energy shook my limbs, crackling with power. “Please open…”



author Kiersten White - Slayer - Buffy the Vampire Slayer Watcher’s Guides - Chosen Ones - Angel - girl squad - YA novels witches - Willow - Xander - Spike - free ebook - BtVS fanfiction - Sunnydale - Hellmouth - Faith - Scoobies - Buffy inspired fiction - Buffy Angel Fanfiction - Buffy the vampire slayer fanfic - paranormal romance - urban fantasy - young adult fiction - Buffy the vampire slayer 20th anniversary - BEAUTIFULLY BROKEN SHERRY SOULE

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Paranormal Romance - IMMORTAL ECLIPSE


New Paranormal Romance Mystery by author Sherry Soule! I have included a sexy excerpt to read below for your enjoyment. 




READ AN EXCERPT OF IMMORTAL ECLIPSE

Paintings do not come to life. The bump on my head must really be messing with me.
He opens his mouth to speak, then snaps it shut. His posture stiffens, and he stares—his face impossibly gorgeous—with a shrewd, outraged expression. My heart skitters. The dark look only lasts a second, but it chills me more than the icy amulet did.
As we stand there staring at each other, a thrilling electric current courses through my body and short-circuits my brain. I blink several times at the dark-haired man standing in the doorway, trying not to stare at his eyes, an intense shade of blue. Damn, he’s better looking than most of the male fashion models I’ve photographed.
Mr. Tall, Dark, and Yummy tilts his head and his eyes lock on mine. Even from a distance, I can tell he’ll tower over me, and I’m no midget. He’s even dressed similar to the man in the portrait: a soft, white linen shirt—bulging biceps stretching the fabric—under a black vest paired with snug pants and boots. Although, he appears to be only in his late twenties, he looks reserved and intimidating.
Conclusion: no sense of style, but still smoking hot.
Matthew didn’t mention anyone like him living on the property. Having eye candy like him around will be a nice distraction. The hottie regains his composure and clears his throat.
Stop acting like a drooling idiot and speak to him!
“Hello. I’m, uh, Gerard Blackwell’s niece.”
My face heats. God, that was brilliant. Great first impression. I could really, really use a do-over so I don’t come across as an ogling idiot.
One eyebrow arches and his lips curve, but he doesn’t truly smile. He just studies me with that flawless, icy gaze. “A pleasure to make your acquaintance,” he finally says. “I’m sorry for your loss. I considered your uncle a friend.” His accent is unfamiliar, almost clipped—definitely not from California.
He must be foreign. Or he’s an actor, which usually equals player. Still, the insta-lust has come on fast and strong. Yet with both an accent and a body like a model from a Mr. Hardbody calendar, what’s not to lust after?
“Thank you, that’s very kind. He was a great guy.” I shuffle my feet, and nervously blurt, “We were close when I was a teenager. And he was always supportive of my photography. He even bought me my first camera.” I’m oversharing. Again. I swallow hard, suddenly wanting to get off this subject.
He gestures to my bloody forehead. “Are you okay?”
I frown. Telling him that I bumped my head and feel like some sort of time-traveling freak after seeing Summerwind will only get me put into a straitjacket.
“Oh, this?” Pushing back the tangled hair hanging lank in my face, I touch the lump. “I’m fine. I got into an accident.”
An odd expression crosses his face. “Are you sure you’re okay? I’d be happy to get your things if you tell me where the car is.”
The image of him effortlessly hauling those heavy suitcases flashes in my mind, and my breath catches.
“That would be awesome.” I tell him where he can find my uncle’s BMW off the main road. “I’ll have to call a tow truck after you retrieve the luggage.”
“I’ve heard a lot about you from your uncle. Although, I admit...you’re not quite what I expected.” The soft cadence of his voice carries the romance of a distant era. “I remember how he used to boast of your success.”
At his slow, easy smile, my heart goes into hyper-drive. He seems only slightly interested in my response, but polite, and his bright blue eyes regard me shrewdly. 
“He did?” I’m horrified my voice squeaks.
He cocks his head to the side, obviously intrigued, with a ghost of a smile on his lips. “Gerard was proud of you. He said you have an illustrious career as a photographer.”
More like past tense. 
I draw a deep breath and get myself together. “That was sweet of him.” Swallowing hard, I say, “So, you must be...?”
He removes the shotgun from his shoulder, and props it against the door frame. “I’m the estate caretaker, and I supervised the staff for your uncle. I live in the cottage on the north side of the property.” He steps forward into the foyer, grasps my hand, and kisses it smoothly, as if he were a duke from another era, which is pretty much what he resembles. “Dorian Alexander Delacroix at your service.” He’s watching me, and attempting to suppress a smile.
The instant his warm hand closes over mine, the world rocks on its axis and a zap of desire ripples through my body. The man packs a seriously bizarre physical punch. It must affect him too, because his eyes flare briefly in surprise.
My interest is definitely piqued.
Hastily withdrawing my hand, I say, “Oh, really?” I motion toward the panting in the room behind me. “Isn’t that Dorian Delacroix, in there?”
Shaking his head as if to clear it, he takes a step back, and an impish, almost curious expression settles on his handsome features. A faint smile appears on those beautiful lips. “Indeed, and so am I.”
“A relative? Your grandfather?”
The grin wilts. “You look quite flushed, Miss Blackwell. Let’s step outside for some fresh air.” He spins on a booted heel, strides onto the porch, and holds the door open. “After you.”
My gaze flicks to the shotgun as I walk past him, and he shuts the door behind us. The amulet bounces against my breastbone as I move, and I finger it. I push my shoulders back and straighten, but I don’t bolt back inside the safety of the house. Although my subconscious screams, Go inside and lock the door, I ignore it. Even if I wind up shackled in a dark basement...well, it’s not as if I have anything important to do tomorrow...
*** 
Hope you enjoyed this post. 









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