Author Archives: Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

About Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

My Niece and Nephew joke that I could open a used book store with all the books that I own. I love to read, that is my addiction. I can't go a week without going to a book store. I love crocheting. I love to write stories and poetry. I also love my family, even though they make me crazy at times. I am a huge Donald Duck Fan.

Reality Check Virtual Book Tour

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Reality Check cover

Young Adult/Poetry/Contemporary

Date Published: April 14, 2022

 

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Emotion, time and self are the most necessary parts of humanity. Emotion
draws out the best and worst parts of people. Time is something that is
never noticed, until it is. The self is the deepest part of the soul that a
person can recognize. Reality Check is a poetry collection written during
the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. These poems are how Danielle Pitter describes
hope, love, family, healing and forgiveness.

 

 

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EXCERPT

Chandelier

Celebrate those moments

Where you are the only one, 

The only center,

The only spotlight.

See how every shard of glitter

Is a reason you made it here. 

Because what is a chandelier

But broken pieces of glass coming together 

To form a new look?

Take a moment to look back on not only yourself,

But also on the shards.

The unruly, sharp edges were necessary. 

You can still see the cracks in the mirror,

But it’s not ugly; it’s a new kind of beautiful. 

Emotional Closet

Yesterday, I did something that had been on the back of my mind for ages.

Cleaned out my closet.

Not only did I clean out my physical closet,

Full of old dresses, shirts, blouses and pants

That no longer served me.

But also my closet of thoughts and feelings

That no longer served me.

Emotions of the past that didn’t funnel my creativity,

How I see myself,

How I see others,

How my truth stands out to me.

It was a grueling, exhausting task.  

I thought I wasn’t going to keep going, just let 

the rest pile 

on top of each other.

But I didn’t. I knew that if I were to stop, I’d regret 

all of this mess I’d made.

I would have had no desire 

to complete the job

if I’d stopped when it got hard.

 I kept going until it was done.

Granted, most of the leftover pieces are in bags near me.

Much like the emotions and thoughts of the past.

But at least I can schedule dates to remove the clothes 

From my closet. A breath of fresh air soon to come. 

A breath of fresh air has come. 

 

 

About the Author

Danielle Pitter

Born and raised in New Jersey, Danielle has been writing stories since
early childhood. What started from with innocent fairy-tales in first grade
turned into a growing passion that was always one step behind her. After
graduating from the University of Phoenix in 2017 with a bachelor’s
degree in Communications and Journalism, she started her writing journey as
a journalist for entertainment media outlets like TV After Dark, Fangirlish
and Glitter Magazine. She is a member of the New Jersey Library Association.
Currently, she’s both writing on her own website, PoetryBooksYA.com,
and dodging her father’s phone calls about getting a master’s
degree.

 

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The Order of the Fallen Virtual Book Tour

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The Order of the Fallen cover

Fantasy/Romance

 

Date Published: Jan. 24, 2022

Publisher: Jan-Carol Publishing, Inc.

Achaiah knew the dangers of falling to earth for the love of his human, Nev. When Nev falls for her guardian angel, Achaiah, she is unaware of the danger that their love puts her in. That’s why fallen angels have one rule: Never fall in love with a human.

The Order of the Fallen tablet

EXCERPT

Nev

“This is why I have no friends!” I screeched and slammed my door shut simultaneously. My back kissed the door gently as my body slowly dripped like fudge down to the floor. The soft thud of my body reverberated through my bones as I connected with the floor. I need time to process. Why was this happening again? She promised me it wouldn’t happen again, promised we wouldn’t be moving again. I was silly to believe her and yet, I wasn’t lying when I said I had no friends. I couldn’t pull a dollar out of my empty bank of friends. Perhaps a small part of me believed she’d do this again and making friends was just going to make matters worse for me.

I breathed slowly. I forced air in and out of my lungs. I focused on the beating of my heart—the sound pounding in my ears as if I were listening to someone’s heart beating through ear buds set deep in my ear.

I heard a small rapping at the door. It was faint enough to be the ruffling of feathers but it cut through the sound of my heartbeat. I pictured her there with her hand still gently pressing against the door, waiting to be hurled back into action. I knew she wanted to sit with me and explain. I pictured her small frame staring at me, strands of her hair softly framing her dewy faint face. I knew she wanted her chance to tell me why this was happening again and give me some asinine reason that only made sense to her. I waited. The feathers ruffled outside my door again.

“Nev, please open the door. I would like to talk with you.” She spoke softly, an earnest whisper of despair. Most people raised their voice when they were frustrated or angry, but not my mother. She did the reverse and spoke softly.

It had always been this way. When I broke her beloved grandmother’s favorite vase as a child, I remember she didn’t yell or scream. She was calm and barely audible. “How did this happen?” she had asked staring at the broken pieces of the vase that meant so much to her. The shattered pieces that littered the floor were beyond repair. The faint sound of her question whipped my soul. Her calmness was worse than any punishment imaginable. I could barely understand her but it wasn’t her words that paralyzed me. The disappointment punched me worse than a fist. I crumbled like the vase as she spoke. I mumbled that I wasn’t watching where I was going. I turned the corner and hit the shelf. Before I knew it, I heard the sound of glass shattering. It was the same sound my heart made when she spoke. Even as I explained it to her it felt like such a weak answer.

I knew she was upset but she refused to show any signs of it; refused to get visibly angry. Sometimes I just wanted her to—I wanted to know she was human. I knew I had disappointed her and that was worse than if she had yelled or screamed. Yelling would have soothed the wound her disappointment pierced me with. If she had just yelled, it would dissipate. If she yelled, I would know she was upset and then we could move on. Instead, her lack of violent outburst was a mask of disapproval. Her voice never rose to even a normal tone. Her voice was soft velvet but her silent emotion was a rapier sword. I beseeched her to get visibly mad, but she didn’t. At least, not in a way I would have.

I didn’t say anything now as she continued to softly knock on my door. I moved to my bed and distracted myself with my bedspread. I liked the comfort my bed provides. It’s soft and warm. I made a perfect nook that fit my body, cradling me every night to sleep. Comfy in my nook, I took in the whole of my room and inhaled deeply, feeling the air wash away the irritability and rush in sensibility from a small river in my brain. I absent-mindedly played with a frayed string on my comforter. It was curious how much stuff one person could accumulate over the years. I had plenty of books littering every inch of my room from my overstuffed bookcases to the paucity of walking space on my floor. Stuffed animals—mostly bears—lounged comfortably on my bed in positions a contortionist would be uncomfortable with and I had a few snow globes scuffling with books for solace on a flat surface. My room was more a library than a bedroom.

One thing was missing from the room I shared my books with, though. Pictures. I had no pictures of smiling friends cascading around my mirror to look at every morning when I got ready. There were no hidden pictures behind the large stack of books, perched precariously on the edge of sanity about to topple over into chaos below. There was no memorabilia of the ninth grade dance to adorn my old wooden dresser, competing for face time against the yellowed pages of books weathered from many years of reading. There were no pictures of my first boyfriend with me smiling into the camera; oblivious I had one eye half shut and two fingers dancing behind my head but laughing nonetheless. I had no pictures of my best friend and me at a sleepover where we had our pictures taken after a Halloween makeover. This was because I never went to my ninth grade dance. I never had a boyfriend to wrap his arms around me while smiling into the camera and I don’t have a best friend. The reason for this tragedy was standing outside of my door trying to get in.

“Nevaeh, please let me talk to you.” Her voice pierced me.

I decided to open the door. My mom had called me Nevaeh, which she only did when she was really upset, or really proud of me. Obviously, she wasn’t trying to raid my room because of her motherly pride at me being the focal point of some absurd bumper sticker about making honor roll. This fact coupled with the fact that my mother was tenacious and would stand there all night like a desert cactus prompted me to act.

“What”? I asked in a cold monotone. My voice harder than the feelings coursing through me.

“I want to talk with you about this. I need you to understand why this is happening.” She strode over to my bed, gracefully sidestepping the hodgepodge of books on the floor like a ballerina and plopped herself down on the edge with a slight sigh.

“Unless you’re about to tell me you changed your mind, I don’t want to hear it. It doesn’t matter why you’re doing this, the point is you’re doing this again.” I emphasized looking at her sharply. “I should be used to it by now but every time this happens, I think it’s the last time. Now, I obviously need to pack, do you mind?” I added petulantly and wobbled over to the door, tripping faintly on one of my own books, signaling I wanted her to leave so I could be alone and pack for our move to Connecticut next week.

I already had a few moving boxes. I kept a stack in my closet behind my clothes always waiting there for me in case I needed them to cart my books around. I knew those boxes wouldn’t sit there too long. I should have kept them out and already put together, tape holding them fully formed and ready for moving. It had been less than a year and they would come out of hiding once more to be taped up, tossed about, and ripped open like a gift.

 “We’ll talk about this later, Nev,” she said defeated as she gracefully walked out the door, respecting my wish that now was not the best time to attempt reasoning with me. I restrained myself from slamming the door and simply shut it with a soft thud. She knew I was mad, I didn’t need to make it worse. If I had anything to say about it, we wouldn’t be talking about this later.

We had moved about twenty times in my seventeen years of life. I would like to say I was an Army brat but the sad truth was my mom was indecisive. I was a senior in high school about to graduate in four months, and we were moving again. Unbelievable. My life was like the seat on a Ferris wheel, just when all was calm and the view was familiar, the wheel would turn once more, spinning me to a new view of the world. She couldn’t even wait for me to graduate—she had to move mid-year? The thought sent waves of anger through me. I hugged myself as a chill swept through the still and quiet room.

If I thought about it rationally, what was I so upset about? I was, after all, used to moving. Wasn’t that the reason I kept all my moving boxes? This would just be one more landscape to view before the wheel turned once more. It was like having a birthday every year. We all know it’s coming so there’s no surprise to wake up and be a year older. Sure, some people look in the mirror on that day just to see if there’s an old face staring back or one that looks exactly the same as the night before. Most people don’t even tell anyone about their birthday mirror ritual. It’s nonchalantly attached to a daily routine like showering or brushing teeth. But every year on their birthday, a familiar face glares back a fraction longer than the other three hundred sixty-four days. For children, it’s exciting to scrutinize their face to see if they look older and more mature. For adults, it’s a way to memorize every new wrinkle, deep laugh lines, or anything else that would encumber the sixteen year old at the grocery store from checking ID when buying alcohol.

Moving was a part of my life and trying to ignore it did nothing because it was going to happen despite my protests. I was so used to moving that I stopped trying to make friends. Elementary school was probably the loneliest. Those are the years that not having friends meant I watched all the school kids outside riding their bikes together, or running around their yards, or playing soccer in the street. I sat alone in my room, watching from my window and occupying my time with as many books as I could find. The sounds of childhood roared just outside my window while I watched it speed by me, a spectator, without participating. Sure, there was the occasional girl I would talk with in class, but that was basically the extent of it. I stuck to myself and allowed myself to get lost in the pages of my books.

Junior high school was a little easier for me. At that age, most of the kids started going to the mall or to the movies with friends. I no longer had to see it outside my window passing me by. I poured myself into my books. I enjoyed living vicariously through the rich characters of my books—eventually becoming my best friends.

In high school, dating was the thing to do. Just like junior high, I didn’t have to see this behavior from my bedroom window. I was exposed to the school hallway kiss now and again but my room was my solace and cocooned me away from most of it. I could ignore the fact that I was friendless, save a few books, but as a kid, the sounds outside would not allow me to forget. Those sounds were a constant reminder I was missing out on something. What I was missing I didn’t know. I can’t really miss what I never had.

During dinner that night, my mom and I ate in silence. I hurried through my dinner so I could go back to my room. I wasn’t in the mood to hang out in the dining room all night. I went into the kitchen and began doing my dishes. The soap rapidly began foaming all over my hands like one of those fast forward scenes in a movie. I was mesmerized by the rainbow colors. The foaming bubbles grew exponentially and held my attention longer than necessary. When the bubbles started to dissipate and I could see my hands clearly again, I realized I was gaping at my mother’s hands. My hands were her hands. There was no difference.

I peered over the counter and had a clear view of my mother eating dinner at the table. Suddenly, I had an overwhelming feeling of pity for her and it made my stomach turn. It was like watching a very private moment. The feeling was overwhelmingly strong. She did nothing more than open her mouth, slide a fork full of colorful pasta in, close her mouth over it, pull the fork out and chew. It was banal but I couldn’t look away. There sat my mother—alone. She wasn’t doing anything out of the ordinary. She was just eating but I guess because I knew how it felt to be lonely, I pitied her. If pity were even the correct sentiment. I wondered if she had some of the same loneliness I had. I stared at the white bowl she was eating from, the silver of the fork against her pale skin, the utter loneliness of it kept me rooted to my spot.

My mother was a beautiful woman. Even at the age of forty-five, she was a natural pearl among cultured ones. Her shoulder length, dark brown hair was a tidy sleek waterfall, splashing daintily around her light moonlit skin. Spending very little time in the sun, her skin was a painter’s canvas. The little makeup she did wear only highlighted her natural beauty. Her eyes were a piercing, golden brown and stood out in stark contrast to her milky skin. She had an athletic body without effort. The most exercise she achieved was climbing into bed but she looked as if her life were spent on a Stair Master. A symmetrical smile and humble attitude only increased her beauty. She was enviously beautiful.

My mom was not the kind of woman to flaunt her looks. Wearing dirty sweat pants and baggy t-shirts, she could easily turn the head of a blind man without intention. She was the kind of woman who made other women incredibly uncomfortable and self-conscious. There was nothing pompous about her and if given the chance, her character alleviated any panic reflex women had to hide all the men in the room so there would be some left to share. She was oblivious to the myriad of men staring at her daily or flirting with her to the brink of imprudence. She was only ever cordial and politely tiptoed around the pool of seduction poured before her. I admired this about her. She needn’t have to ask in order for the sun to shine attention on her. She could snatch almost any guy she desired but she didn’t. This morsel of her personality was endearing to most people, including me. Her personality was envious.

I looked away when she saw me looking at her, admiring her. I felt my cheeks redden as though looking at my mother were a crime punishable by imprisonment. She didn’t say anything to me. I finished the dishes and dried my hands; her hands. Tears stung my eyes, the way cutting an onion did and just like cutting an onion, I refused the tears their freedom to swim down my face. I blew my nose and cleared my throat. I was sure my face was still red just as I was sure she was looking at me. Thinking about my mom made me realize I was a lot like her. She was lonely too. Maybe moving was her way of finding what she was looking for. I felt stupid for getting so upset with her about moving. What was wrong with me? My mom had never asked me for anything. I was ungrateful. I was childish. I was selfish. I was a teenager.

“I love you, Mom,” I said as I stepped toward her and gave her a sincere hug. I couldn’t help it. I needed to comfort her. Actually, I needed to comfort myself. I just used the excuse I was trying to comfort her. My arms swam around her tiny frame as I leaned my head gently on top of hers. Sitting, she was just inches shorter than me.

Surprised by this gesture, my mom returned the hug with emotion. Her head snuggled up to my chest and her arms connected around my waist. A waft of her expensive shampoo met my nose and I instantly associated that smell with comfort. It was the smell of my mother being a mother; caring for me when I needed it. Loving me when I needed it. I sighed and felt shame again for ever blaming her.

“I love you too, Nev,” she said earnestly as we unhooked each other and I took my seat again. Her golden eyes seemed besotted with dark blotches encircling them. I felt a pang in my chest, I hoped I hadn’t done that to her. I hoped I wasn’t the reason her face expressed that sleep was more of a suggestion rather than a necessity.

“I know you’re not moving to hurt me. I just don’t understand why we’re always moving. I get cranky sometimes,” I offered remorseful for my outbursts earlier. Granted, I didn’t like to move but I was not handling it like an adult. I needed to start somewhere. I really desired not to act like a four year old deprived of a shiny toy in the toy store anymore. At almost eighteen, I needed to embody maturity.

She had carefully placed her shiny fork in the middle of her pasta dish. The dish was still about half full, where my dish was already washed. She was a slow eater. Her pasta was now dry with little bits of cheese encrusted into the lines of the penne. “Sometimes, I don’t even know why we move so often, honey.” Her voice was soft and drew my attention back to her.

This was an honest sentiment.

“Do you have a new job?” I wondered if this were the root of our move this time.

“Yes, the housing market is better there.” Her eyes never left mine. She wanted me to know that she cared but that this was still going to happen. “It will be better for us there. With a rising market I think we’ll benefit.”

Mom was a realtor. She was a good one too. She had a knack for exploiting the plot of the house instead of allowing clients to pass based on judging the cover. She was rewarded for this and particularly enjoyed newlyweds. The gratuitous hand holding and unbridled giddiness pleased her. She enjoyed meeting new people during this hypnotic time in their lives. She always said that finding a new couple their first home was better than the commission made from the sale. I knew she meant this, too. She truly enjoyed finding the perfect house for people. It gave her a sense of accomplishment as though she were privy to the magical world where each newlywed couple lived. She helped them find the place they would call home. She strived to make sure they were both happy with their new investment. Often, she heartily laughed and regaled me with stories of how the majority of the newlyweds she saw disagreed on everything but the overall consensus was, if the wife was happy the husband would be happy.

“Okay,” I finally said to her. What more could I say? We were moving. In silence, we just stared at each other—two statues meticulously manipulated by a photographer for the perfect picture. When I went back into my room, I packed a little more and was somewhat eager to meet Connecticut head on. Maybe this move would hold some unknown surprises for me I could not foresee and maybe mom was right that it would be better for us. Maybe Connecticut would be the place I called home. 

 

* * *

 

The chain bookstore in Cheshire, Connecticut quickly became my raison d’être. During my first month of school, I faithfully returned like a Labrador retriever after the school bell rang each afternoon. That bell signaled the school day had finally come to a close and summoned the beginning of my return to a home that I would have moved into if I could.

The ringing of the school bell reminded me of the opening segment of the Flintstones where everybody stops working to race home at the sound of the bell. I looked around at the students and it was like watching a hornet’s nest, which had just been disturbed by a toddler wielding a powerful stick. The teenagers at Cheshire High School buzzed around erratically as though the bell had puppeteered them out of their seats. I knew my bookstore wasn’t going anywhere so I wasn’t manic at the end of the day trying to leave school. I remained calm and waited patiently until the hornets were nearly gone from their nest.

I had my own car so I was in no hurry to catch the school bus. My car wasn’t that much to look at, a 2000 Honda Civic. The silver paint was still glossy but it has been around for many miles. The inside looked like it could use a good scrub and the leather seats were full of cracks from wear over the years. The cracks reminded me of deep wrinkles in people who lived a lifetime and had the stories to prove it. The car runs well enough for my needs and I was grateful just to have my own transportation. I paid for it outright. My mom made a deal with me that if I earned enough for a car, she would match me dollar for dollar. I changed too many diapers to count while babysitting to earn those fifteen hundred dollars. 

Mom and I spent a Saturday together car shopping and we decided this one was the right one for me. I knew it was right for me when I got in and found a silver chain with an “N” charm on the floor of the passenger side—no doubt forgotten by the previous owner. It was a sign. Superstitions are not my thing and I don’t normally believe in signs, but this was so blatant, like driving up to a stop sign, which had grown twice its size. I couldn’t ignore it. An hour later, I was driving home in my new car. The “N” dangled nicely from my rearview mirror and reflected beautiful spheres of color on the dull leathery interior.

The bookstore I practically moved into was not far from school. It wasn’t a popular hangout and for me that was part of the attraction. It was well lit with tables and chairs in the café along with loveseats spattered here and there. I loved that I could walk into the fiction section and see an open sofa chair just waiting for me. I knew every open seat and every section by heart. After a month of spending my weeknights in its contemporary chairs everyday after school, I started to know the crew as much as the layout. 

Ally was my favorite at the bookstore. Her black hair, consistently tethered in two pigtails on either side of her head, was her signature cutesy style. She had dark green eyes, almost black, which she colored with black eyeliner and black lipstick remained on her lips like a tattoo…never fading. Black clothes were the personal uniform she wore everyday with the same combat boots. She was petite and so skinny that if she turned sideways, she disappeared. She had one visible piercing in her nose. The piercing changed everyday. One day she brandished a smiley face, the next a tiny butterfly, and the next a flower. I began to wonder if her daily nose ornament decided her mood for the day or if maybe it was the other way around. She seemed particularly cheery on days when her nose was alight with a yellow smiley face. This almost confirmed my suspicions but I kept it to myself.

Ally was nice and I found myself inexplicably drawn to her. She wasn’t the conventional Goth, if that’s what she cared to be classified as. A broad smile was often plastered on her face. Her intellect seemed to arise out of nowhere and was somewhat shocking. It reminded me of my old doctor’s nurse. She had such a high-pitched voice, you’d think she were a child. Whenever she would speak I looked around for where that sound was coming from, even if she was right in front of me. Her voice didn’t match her physical appearance. Ally’s intellect didn’t match her physical appearance. I appreciated the understated intelligence and was a little jealous. Her sagacious intellect was a given and she didn’t have to work at it. I did.

“Your usual, Nev?” Ally asked in her signature upbeat and happy tone. She didn’t even wait for me to respond, but began the process of preparing my order as soon as she asked the question.

I went in spurts. I was either craving vanilla chai or Italian soda, which kept my throat moist and from being parched. This week was a chai week. Ally started pouring the creamy drink in a cup that exuded the character of a little coffee shop. It was the kind of cup that people in movies indifferently clasped to unwittingly flaunt the fact they patronized a trendy coffee shop and supported legal addictive substances. For a brief moment, I pictured myself as one of those actresses with a life that went along with the cup. The quintessential actress was beautiful and strong with so much on her mind because she led such a busy and productive life. She deserved to hold that cup, a beacon of status. It told everyone she was a woman with purpose, a woman with character, a woman who knew what she wanted and fearlessly attained it.

“Absolutely,” I replied absently, even though my chai was already in the process of being ensconced by my hand. I slowly drifted out of my daydream back to reality where it’s ornately obvious I had nothing in common with an actress and where anyone eyeing me with that cup would instantly recognize me as a fraud. “Thanks, Ally. Hey, what’s different about you today?” I was completely back in reality at this point. I looked at Ally for the first time and couldn’t help but notice something was different. Her makeup was neatly painted beneath her shoulder-length pitch-black hair that was perfectly plaited and perched on either side of her head and a rainbow design was solidly spiked through her left nostril. Yet, something was off.

Ally smiled at me. Her smile was genuine—it reached her eyes. “I wonder what it could be,” she said sarcastically and raising her eyebrows, not willing to offer even a crumb of a clue. Her smile didn’t match her appearance. It was like trying to mix plaid with polka dots. 

Ally’s very Goth appearance made people think she’s a downer or severely depressed—dressed darkly all in black, except a small patch of color shining from the rainbow bar in her nose. At first glance, it would seem impossible for her to smile or that she would want to smile. I could picture people shying away from her—judging her—because someone who looked like her surely couldn’t smile, as there was no hint of happiness in her attire.

I took a slight step back to fully consider her. My left leg snagged slightly on something sticky on the floor as I slid back. “Uck,” I croaked as my shoe made that obnoxious sucking sound. I looked down quickly to free my shoe and then back up at her, my attention already waning from whatever was on the floor. I focused. I even put one hand on my chin, resting just my forefinger for extra emphasis as I surveyed her—head to mid torso. Everything below her torso was hidden behind the counter that acted as a wall between us. 

My eyes were drawn to a shiny rectangle on her shirt. Her nametag read Ally Morgan in black letters as it always did. Underneath her name in smaller black italics was her title: Assistant Manager. This was new. This was what changed. Managers were required to wear white collared shirts and Ally was now wearing the wardrobe of an assistant manager. It would have been more prominent but as she was working the café at the time, her apron covered much of her clothes. The black shirts she usually wore, covering her like a second skin, would now only be worn for leisure. She was required to look more professional as a manager. This suited her. The shirt really brightened her whole appearance. I can’t believe I didn’t notice right off.

“When did this happen?” I inquired with a hint of excitement. I took a sip of my chai and noticed it even tasted better with her good news.

“Today! I have been working toward it for a while though. They’ve been training me every opportunity there was. There was finally an opening when Terri left. She graduated from college and is moving on so that meant I could fill her place. I’m still getting used to my new authority,” she joked and tilted her head back slightly, as an overhead announcement called for a manager at the front register. “That’s me,” she straightened up suddenly serious with her eyes signaling the sound coming from above, as though someone higher up were literally calling to her. “I’ll catch up with you in a bit. I’m off in two hours, I’m sure you’ll still be here.” She bounced out from behind the counter and walked toward the front registers with energy.

I watched her walk through the café toward the front registers. Even from behind she looked managerial. 

She wasn’t amiss with her comment either. I usually stayed until the bookstore closed. It was my ritual. School. Bookstore. Home. Bed. The cycle repeated itself five days a week. Predictably, I sat in my preferred seat in the corner. It was a light blue single chair sofa and had a hole on the left arm that was continuing to fray. I often picked at it and was probably part of the reason it had gotten bigger. I pried open my current reading material: Anna Karenina. I brought my own book, of course. I often wondered how many other people visited a bookstore just to keep the chairs company and enjoy the café drinks. It seemed a strange habit. I shrugged and to anyone who may have looked over at me at that moment would have thought I was engaged in a conversation with myself. This made me chuckle as I scanned my page for where I left off.

Frequenting the bookstore to read was my favorite way for me to relax. It allowed me the opportunity to sit by myself and live in worlds that weren’t mine, yet were exciting, intriguing and sometimes maddening. Home easily distracted me. The bookstore allowed me to indulge my senses. I was able to concentrate here even with all the distractions. I sometimes obediently finished homework, finding it took much less time than at home. The bookstore was a deep ocean and I was a mermaid refusing to return to land.

I was completely oblivious to civilization when Ally sat down across from me at the end of her shift. Two hours had passed in the real world, minutes passed in my ocean. I sensed a presence and looked up. Sheepishly, I folded my book and placed it in my lap. “How long have you been there?” I smiled a little embarrassed knowing it had been a while.

She grinned at me and looked at her wrist. She was sans watch so it was only ceremonial. “About an hour,” she joked.

“You’ve been staring at me for an hour?” I asked incredulously. “Why didn’t you say anything?”

“Well I did but I don’t think you heard me so I just finished up some paperwork and came back over just a little while ago. I figured you were at a good part,” she smiled.

Desperate to put this scene behind us I said, “so tell me about this,” I pointed to her white shirt keen to change the subject.

“I love it. I get to tell people what to do,” she ranted excitedly. She smooshed her lips together making one thin solid black line. “The reality is that I have a lot more work and not a lot more money. It’s good though. It’s what I’ve wanted for a while now. I’m happy they gave me the chance.”

Retail was hard work. I knew there weren’t high wages in retail but I was glad Ally liked it. I couldn’t think of a better place to work than a bookstore though if I were to ever work retail. I would probably get fired for reading on the job.

“I’m making more than the high school kids now so that’s something,” she chuckled as she continued. “I have some interviews lined up this week to take my place here.” She pointed to the counter in the café where I was so used to seeing her. “The café isn’t too busy so it doesn’t need to be full time but hopefully I get someone good.” She looked past me at a customer behind us. She scratched her head gently as her eyes settled on me again.

I’d only known Ally for about a month and “known” was an overstatement. We hadn’t met outside the bookstore and I hadn’t seen her at school. I knew she was around my age, so I wondered if she went to a neighboring school. We chatted frequently; every now and then she cheerily joined my table and offered me a free drink in return for fifteen minutes of company during her break. I was certainly not against getting to know her better. She was likable and against my better judgment, I actually conceded to maybe beginning a friendship. Maybe.

Tonight we had the opportunity to spend a little more time talking. She didn’t have to get back after fifteen minutes because she was done for the evening. Ally was easy to talk with and I enjoyed her company as much as I enjoyed watching her plaited pigtails bobbing up and down when excitement escaped her tiny body. I learned much more about her during our time that evening. She was seventeen years old and an emancipated minor. 

“That explains why I haven’t seen you in school.” I said, a lame response to being told someone was emancipated.

She nodded but didn’t offer a novella of detail about her home life before the state of Connecticut deemed her worthy of being an adult. She did, however, inform me she graduated from high school with honors at sixteen, the same year she became an adult, and started working at the bookstore. She also surprised me by telling me several Ivy League schools offered her full scholarships. She never intended to go to college and wasn’t going to take them up on their generous offer to attend school with all expenses paid.

“Why not?” I couldn’t help but ask. The disbelief in my voice and face weren’t hidden well. A full scholarship was drool worthy in my world.

“It’s just not me. I like it here,” she said, looking around the bookstore as if it were a castle and she a princess who had been rescued. Her apron was her crown and she wore it with pride. I didn’t press the issue. Clearly, a girl who was emancipated at such an early age had more going on than could be seen.

“I would love to get a scholarship to a school,” I said. “My dream is to go to college and put to use all the books I’ve been reading my whole life,” I chuckled.

I didn’t divulge much more about me. I preferred to listen. I interjected only small pieces of information about myself but not enough for her to write my memoirs. Ally didn’t seem to notice my scant biography. She spoke happily without asking too many questions. 

“So what do you like to do at home?” I was the one who asked the questions. As long as she was talking about herself, she wouldn’t think to ask about me.

“Not much. Just listen to music, paint and watch TV.”

I couldn’t wrap my head around this girl sitting in front of me watching TV or painting. It didn’t make sense. “What do you like to watch?”

“I love documentaries.” She shared eagerly. “Did you know that honey bees are dying at a scary rate, which has been having an effect on our ecosystem?” She asked excitedly.

I shook my head.

“It’s true,” she continued. “Scientists are trying to find ways to raise their numbers because they are so integral. Who would have thought a bee was so important?” 

“Did you know that coffee is actually very good for you? They say you should drink it every day for optimal health,” she relayed changing to another topic.

I didn’t know that coffee was good for you. I always heard caffeine was bad but I’m sure everything in moderation as the saying goes.

“Well, I’ll let you get back to reading,” she offered after we had talked a fair amount. My book had been residing in my lap the whole time. 

“Ok, well have a good night,” I replied as she rose from the chair and inclined her head toward me to say goodbye.

I stayed in that seat at the bookstore until it closed. I finally made it through Anna Karenina. That was my goal for the evening and I was happy I’d accomplished it. I hated starting a new book while in the middle of another one. I did it rarely when I knew I just couldn’t get through the book. Anna Karenina was definitely like that for me. I started to read it three times and failed to finish it each time. I read to the same part and then lost interest. The book became like a toddler’s toy that’d been tossed aside, only to find it later in an attempt to regain that initial excitement. After reading greedily once more, I tossed it aside like a rag doll and focused my attention on the newest toy. This time I decided I was finally going to finish it and was proud of myself for meeting my goal. Books should be read for enjoyment. This time it was a personal issue for me and I was determined to get through it.

At home in bed that night my thoughts turned to Ally. I didn’t know if I was judgmental or just comparing, but I kept thinking about what I would do if I were blessed with her brain and her potential. I knew I wouldn’t spend my life wasting away as a manager at a bookstore. Not that she was wasting her life, she was still young like me, but it didn’t seem like Ally had plans. Maybe it was because I didn’t yet know her well enough. That was judgmental though, I really shouldn’t judge. I don’t mean to be that way but I don’t know what she’s been through. I just know that if I were given the opportunity to attend college for free, I would take it as a gift and never return or exchange it. Maybe she was happy and did have plans for the future. Who says college is the only route in life? It is only one option.

These thoughts swirled through my head as I pulled the covers up to my chin. The geometric shapes from the lights outside my bedroom window danced along the far wall of my room. As thoughts of Ally, college, Connecticut, my mom and coffee cups swirled in my head, sleep came to me at last.

That night I dreamed I was a rich heiress. On the streets of Paris, I walked like a supermodel—conceited, poised, and confident. Suddenly, I was at a little street café, one of the cafes brilliantly crafted in a Thomas Kinkade painting. Small, unassuming, and warm. I asked for black coffee to go and was given some in a dirty Styrofoam cup. I held the cup in my hand and peeked behind the counter at the elegant coffee cups lined up in a tower climbing toward the ceiling. I wasn’t presented with one of those. I dropped the cup and screamed as it shattered like glass on the hardwood floor of the café, no longer Styrofoam but rather a fragile substance. I awoke sharply and sat upright in bed, my heart pounding and beads of sweat creating a partial halo around my forehead. The geometric figures still floating on the wall alerted me I was only asleep for a short while. After a few minutes, I settled back down into bed removing the comforter from my body a bit. I could feel the sweat on my body cooling in the ambient temperature of the room. Recalling the dream, a small audible chuckle escaped my mouth as I realized that even my unconscious knew I didn’t deserve a fancy coffee cup.

 

Achaiah

It was easier than I first thought. Making the decision was the difficult part. Once the decision was made, falling was a swift transition from heaven to earth. Now, I needed to search her out and make a connection with her. She was the only reason I was alive. Humans were the only reason any of us were alive, without them we wouldn’t exist. From above, now below, she would always be mine.

About the Author

Jacqueline Marinaro

Jacqueline Marinaro began her career as a therapist and college educator. Graduate school couldn’t stamp out her love of creative writing, however. Much to the chagrin of her husband, graduate school also only furthered her ability to constantly ask, “how does that make you feel?” Jacqueline lives in Florida with her wonderful husband and sweet little boy, where she enjoys the beach, reading, writing, and of course delving into the feelings of everyone she meets.

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SURGE Teaser Tuesday

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Hades Abyss MC #8

 

Motorcycle Club Romance, Bisexual, Age Gap

Date Published:  May 20, 2022

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

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Colette’s a sweet angel in need of saving, and like it or not, I have
a hero complex. Marrying her seems like the right thing to do. Then my
sometimes lover, Aidan, finds us together. The hurt in his eyes nearly guts
me.

My club knows I’m bisexual. I’ve not hidden it from them.
Doesn’t mean I’ve flaunted it in their faces either. So when I
decided to claim Aidan and Colette, I’m not sure how it’s going
to end. All I know is they both need me, and I need them too.

With human traffickers after Colette, a possible traitor in the club, and
more chaos than I can handle, I do the only thing I can… I run with
my new wife and husband. Once I figure out who wants Colette, I’ll do
whatever it takes to destroy them. Until then, I’ll keep her safe, and
Aidan too. Because they both mean more to me than I realized.

 

WARNING: Surge is part of the Hades Abyss MC series and contains bad
language, violence, and content some readers may find difficult to read.
Yes, Surge is bisexual, and therefore there are sexual situations involving
Male-Female, Male-Male, Male-Female-Male, and Male-Male-Female sex.

SURGE teaser

 EXCERPT

All rights reserved.

Copyright ©2022 Harley Wylde

 

“Don’t ask Colette to leave. S’il vous plat. She needs to
be here,” he said.

I didn’t know what the hell he’d said when he wasn’t
speaking English, but the tone was still clear. These two needed help. I
didn’t know how they’d come to be here, but I couldn’t
force them out. Not knowing if they would be okay. Although, he’d only
asked me to help the woman. I didn’t know what to think.

“Start talking,” I said.

Colette got off the bed and scrambled into her clothes. Her cheeks turned
pink as she glanced at me. She came closer and took Jacques’
hand.

“A man invited us,” he said. “He promised there would be
food and drinks. Said we were both welcome. We can leave. We won’t
cause trouble.”

“And this little display?” I asked, motioning to the bed. Her
cheeks burned brighter, and she dropped her gaze. “Were you hoping to
lure someone in and rob them?”

She gasped, and Jacques shook his head. “Non. We would never do such
a thing. I only hoped Colette could eat something we didn’t pull from
a dumpster. Your party offered us something for now,
but…”

If they’d been living on the streets, it would explain the
malnourished look. At least for the woman. The man might be thin, but he
didn’t look like he’d missed as many meals. Had they only
recently come together? Something felt off about the entire thing.

“It still doesn’t explain the rest,” I said.

“Beautiful, isn’t she?” Jacques asked. He put
Colette’s hand in mine. “We always pay our way.”

My stomach twisted at the implication. No fucking way. Nope. I wasn’t
about to use this pretty woman just because they’d come here to eat
something.

“You’re selling her to me for a meal?” I felt her tremble
and knew my words had upset her. I hated doing that to her, but I needed to
be clear on what was happening. For one, if that’s what this
motherfucker meant, I wanted to knock his teeth down his damn throat.

About the Author

Harley Wylde

 Harley is the international bestselling author of the Dixie Reapers and
Devil’s Boneyard series.

When Harley is writing, her motto is the hotter the better. Off the charts
sex, commanding men, and the women who can’t deny them. If you want men who
talk dirty, are sexy as hell, and take what they want, then you’ve come to
the right place.

 

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A Trip on the Tundra Explorer Blitz

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An Alaskan Adventure Story

Middle-Grade / Action / Adventure

Date Published: November 19, 2021

Publisher: MindStir Media

 

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The new school year is here, and Sean is worried about starting the fourth
grade. When his grandmother organizes a trip to meet Sean’s new teacher, we
learn that Mr. Simmons is nervous, too. Will their adventure into the
Alaskan tundra build their confidence, or will it end in disaster?

Jacob Deskins had just graduated Cincinnati Christian University in 2020
when he saw an ad that said, “Teach in rural bush Alaska!” Three
weeks later, he and his wife left everything they knew behind in Columbus,
Ohio, population 1.2 million, to start his teaching career and an
adventurous new life in Kwigillingok, Alaska, population 320. A Trip on the
Tundra Explorer is the first of the author’s forthcoming series inspired by
his adventures in Alaska, and in the classroom.

 

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The Oni’s Shamisen Blitz

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The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow Boy Series, Book 9

 

Historical Fantasy, Japan, Paranormal

Date Published: April 2022

Publisher: American I Publishing

 

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Japan, 1877. Toki-Girl Azuki revels in her new-found freedom. But now what
will she do with it?

Using her patterns and the looms Western Dragon Prince Iyrtsh makes for
Eastern Dragon Princess Otohime’s ambitious project—resettling
refugees displaced by the failed Satsuma Rebellion—anyone can make her
fabulous fabric designs! But what of Azuki herself? Then the Oni, Kukanko,
who is sure she’s not a demon, calls on the Toki-Girl for help.

Can Azuki, Sparrow-Boy Shota, Dragon Princess Renko and Eagle-Boy Akira
find a way to help the Oni? What will a blind musician accomplish using
their results? How can they help Uncle Yuta and Aunt Noriko find places for
newly freed mill workers with no place left to go? Or help Lady Anko and
Lord Toshio defy convention and save their unlucky twins from potentially
lethal superstition? What’s going to happen to a very special horse?

Eastern Dragon King Ryuujin and Western Dragon Queen Rizantona contemplate
the future of their species and the planet, and infant Dragon Prince
Susu’s inability to keep a secret has catastrophic results.

Will Azuki and her friends find a way to help others while saving
themselves, their friends, and their future? Can Azuki find a new
path?

The Oni’s Shamisen is the ninth in the groundbreaking Toki-girl and
Sparrow-boy series where History and fantasy and magical realism collide in
this latest tale from the Meiji Era, a time and place where anything could
happen and probably did!

 

Get the latest novel in this exhilarating series today!

Other Books in the The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy Series:

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The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 1: Coming Home

The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 2: Chasing Dreams

The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 3: Together

The Toki Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 4: Uncle Yuta has an
Adventure

The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 5: Noriko’s Journey

The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 6: The Dragon Sisters

The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 7: The Eagle and the Sparrow

The Toki-Girl and the Sparrow-Boy, Book 8: The Shadows of War

Amazon

The Oni's Shamisen paperback

 

Excerpt

CHAPTER ONE

Azuki, the girl who became a toki, laughed as she soared in the thermal. In
her form as a Japanese Crested Ibis, she rode the wind. Her powerful white
wings, touched with stunning peach accents, worked to carry her far above
the mountainous northern Kyushu landscape.

Laughing with her, Akira, the boy who became an eagle, matched her stroke
for stroke as they circled each other, dancing in the air. They were close
in size, for Steller’s Sea Eagles are proud of being the largest among
eagles—no matter what those Harpy Eagles might think—and the
Japanese Crested Ibis isn’t much smaller.

Dancing in the air wasn’t limited to birds, Akira thought as the wind
softened beneath his wings—only to those who could fly. The Western
Dragon Prince Irtysh and the Eastern Dragon Princess Otohime, though
divergent in form, had learned to dance together, and Otohime had first
learned to do it with her younger and smaller half-sister, their friend,
Renko.

But nobody did it like eagles!

“Let’s dive,” Akira cried to Azuki. She didn’t
answer, but slowed to nearly stall before tipping her long black beak
downward and tucking in her wings. Akira drove the air with his own muscular
wings to catch her, and they spiraled downwards, twisting closely around
each other, racing towards the land.

They learned this from the dragons, who rejoiced in flight as much as the
birds, and were smart enough and playful enough to take any airborne idea
and expand on it. They all learned from each other.

As they approached the treetops, Azuki called, “Crossover!” and
they changed their courses to hurtle past each other before starting the
upward curve of their next ascent. Careful to keep exact pace with each
other, they curved their angles inward so they would meet at the top of
their arc. Akira thought they might cross over again and descend in lazy
twining circles before landing.

Suddenly, right between them, a dragon appeared.

Akira and Azuki both dodged to avoid this obstacle, who was small for a
dragon, though large compared to them. He was bronze, brown and gold, and in
the classic European fashion, his hide was studded with jewels. When he was
a human, he looked Japanese.

“Nice flight, you two,” the dragon said.

“Susu-chan!” Azuki called. “What are you doing here?
Don’t pop in like that! It’s dangerous!”

“I wasn’t in your way!” Susu objected. Youngest of the
dual-natured dragons, Susu was Renko’s full brother. Otohime was his
much older half-sister, child of the Eastern Dragon King Ryuujin. Irtysh was
his much older half-brother, child of the Western Dragon Queen Rizantona.
Susu was a child prodigy who was afraid of nothing except his fierce and
royal parents, and sometimes his grown-up siblings, who could be quite
fierce themselves. Renko was young like him and would usually not only let
him get away with tricks but teach him new ones. She’d been a child
prodigy herself.

“That’s only because we’re good,” Akira said with a
mental laugh as the two big birds circled around the hovering dragon. They
all spoke in mental speech, convenient for times when their physical beings
or their circumstances didn’t accommodate physical, audible
speech.

“You did spoil our descent, though,” Azuki added.
“Isn’t it good manners for dragons to announce themselves to
avoid interrupting others?” Susu looked abashed.

“I should have,” Susu said. “I’m sorry. I forgot. I
guess I did come in right in the middle. Is it convenient?” That was a
popular dragon greeting. Dragons frequently spontaneously appeared in each
other’s presences without announcing themselves in advance, which few
of them could manage all the time.

Mental speech did not always work for any- and every-one or at different
distances. Dragons vanished promptly if they were told to come back later.
They enjoyed spontaneity and were sometimes impulsive. Susu, formally His
Royal Highness Prince Suoh-Sugaar, certainly was.

“No, but as long as you’re here,” Akira said with a grin
that forgave the dragon child too much and too often, “what can we do
for you?”

“Not for me, but for Brother.” In the Japanese fashion, Susu
usually referred to his relatives by relationship rather than name. He did
have other brothers–both his parents had other children–but when
he said “Brother,” as though it were a name, he invariably meant
the one he was closest to: Prince Irtysh.

“How can we serve His Royal Highness today?” Azuki asked
formally. She’d had just about enough of this childish nonsense. Susu
was old enough to use proper manners!

“Did you know Brother has children?” Susu swiveled to try to
follow the birds’ line of sight. Birds couldn’t hover like
dragons could. “Come land on me!”

Azuki and Akira glanced at each other, then swooped in to circle before
landing on Susu’s broad back.

“I didn’t,” Akira said as he banked,
“No.”

“I never thought about it,” Azuki admitted. “They
don’t live with him.”

“They’re kind of old,” Susu told them. “Grown-ups.
They all have their own caverns and their own mountains. All over the place.
Galina’s mountain is north of here, really close to Hokkaido!
She’s a princess, too. She’s older than me, but we like to swim
together. I think I’m her uncle.” Susu frowned at this. That
didn’t make sense to him emotionally, though if he worked it out,
intellectually, it did. His brother’s children….

“So Prince Irtysh has children?” Akira decided to move the
original conversation back on track. He positioned himself to land near
where Azuki would light down. While the prince was, by rank, His Royal
Highness, he preferred a lower level of formality from those among the
dual-natured and humans he seemed to consider part of his social circle, if
not his friends. Akira didn’t know if he would ever be able to truly
claim friendship with the suave and sophisticated dragon prince, though he
admired him enormously.

“Five!” Susu said. “He’s talking to them about
those machines he’s building for your refugees! He wants to know how
many you’ll need, so I need to get Tsuruko-san. Then she and
Kichiro-san can come back with us and we can all talk about going to the
Exhibition! It starts in just a few days!”

Susu was a jump ahead of everybody, as he often was, Azuki thought, though
he was frequently misdirected. Tsuruko-san, the Crane-Woman, was working
closely with Her Royal Highness, the Eastern Dragon Princess Otohime. Both
of them joined the fully human Lady Satsuki, her very pregnant daughter,
Anko-sama, and all the rest of them, in helping to resettle refugees
displaced by the Satsuma Rebellion. Azuki didn’t want to think about that.
The Rebellion was coming to its end, and its end would be, inevitably,
tragic.

“That’s where we’ll find out about the cotton spinning
machine.” Akira nodded. “I want to go, too.”

About the Author

Claire Youmans

Claire Youmans was captivated the first time she set foot in the Land of
the Rising Sun. After many years of travel to this magical place, the
retired lawyer now lives in Tokyo, exploring and writing fiction and poetry.
During the Meiji Era, Japan leapt from a decaying feudalism to a modern
first world power. How’d they do that? This history holds a key to
understanding Japanese culture and character. Like the ocean, Japan changes
only on the surface while the depths remain the same. Using folklore and
fantasy, Youmans tells this story in an accessible, fun, and exciting way
that reveals and explores the true nature of Japan, a culture that is
unique, quirkly and one she has ultimately come to love.

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