Murder
in Plain Sight
Summer
McCloud Book 1
by
Nikki Broadwell
Genre:
Paranormal Mystery
Like
Stephanie Plum?
Just
add ghosts and stir!
Summer
is an amateur sleuth with the hots for a cop on the local police
force. And Jerry is on her trail, but not because he wants her
body.
Summer
is a suspect in a murder investigation.
When
Summer dons a wig and sunglasses and disappears, her best friend,
Agnes, is worried--will Summer end up being another
victim?
Meanwhile
Jerry is seen on the news asking her to turn herself in.
Will
she heed his warning?
Find
out in this fast-paced sexy and humorous thriller by picking up a
copy now.
Note
to readers: If you are a stickler for police procedures or read a lot
of hard-boiled murder mysteries, this might not be the book for you!
I was sitting on my couch reading when someone rapped on my door. It was
nine o’clock at night and I was getting sleepy, the sound startling me so much
that I nearly knocked over the antique Tiffany lamp in my haste to answer it. I
opened the door and peered into darkness, surprised to see Agnes. She seemed
distraught, her straight dark hair in tangles as though she’d run in a high wind.
“I had to come over to warn you, Summer,” she said breathlessly. “Since you
don’t own a TV I figured you wouldn’t have seen the local news.”
I flung the door wide. “Come in,” I invited, closing it behind her.
Agnes was very pretty with dark eyes always lined with kohl, her lipstick
varying from kiss me red to a deep maroon color. Her hairstyle reminded me of
the roaring twenties with clipped straight bangs that stopped just above her
eyebrows, the rest of her straight dark hair ending neatly at her chin. Her highheeled
boots made her look impossibly tall as she teetered toward the couch.
“Did you run in those?” I asked, pointing to the red ankle-high boots.
Agnes looked distracted as she pulled her heavy sweater over her head and
lowered herself to the couch. “What? Yes, of course I did. Come sit, Summer.
You aren’t going to like this.” She patted the couch next to her.
I stared at her bare arms, fascinated as always by her beautiful tattoos.
Saraswati the Hindu goddess of knowledge, music and creative arts, was
depicted in sinuous and colorful detail on her right arm. On her left forearm
Guanyin, the Chinese goddess of compassion, had been rendered in the
traditional seated position, and above her was a satyr, an oddity that didn’t really
go with the rest of them but was actually my favorite with his goat eyes and
horns.
I sat down next to her wondering what could possibly have happened. I
hadn’t heard any sirens and my cell phone hadn’t alerted me to any coming
storms.
“Did you have a visitor in your store today, a woman who you’ve never seen
before?”
I frowned, going back over my day. “There was one woman. She was kind of
unusual and the book she wanted wasn’t in the database. Why?”
Agnes sat forward, turning toward me with an intense gaze. “Dark hair?
Older?“
I nodded.
“Her name was Serena Weatherby.”
“Was, as in past tense?”
“She’s dead, Summer.”
“Dead? How?”
“That’s the funny part. No one knows. There wasn’t a mark on her.”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“Because the only clue they could find was the receipt inside the book she
bought from you.”
“So?”
“I think they’re going to bring you in for questioning.”
“You’ve got be kidding!”
“Jerry was kind enough to warn me.”
Jerry Brady was a man we’d both dated in the past who just happened to be a
homicide detective on the local police force. I stared at her, trying to take in the
situation. “Do they think I had something to do with her death? All I did was sell
her a book!”
“There’s more. One of the poison recipes included in that book was authored
by your mother.”
“What? I’ve never seen that stupid book before. It wasn’t even in the
inventory on the computer. And why would my mother have a recipe to kill
somebody?”
Agnes picked up my crystal paperweight and turned it over in her hands. “It’s
a good thing I went by the station today,” she said, placing the paperweight
down on the side table. “Jerry left a wool scarf at my house ages ago and I
picked today to take it back. Kind of lucky, don’t you think?”
I didn’t pay attention to what she said, my mind on my interactions with
Serena Weatherby. “She mentioned that I looked like my mother.”
The dark window reflected my image back to me as I attempted to collect my
thoughts. I saw two lines appear between my brows. I turned away. My heart
was beating a little too fast and I felt as though I might be holding my breath. “Is
it possible I could be arrested? I don’t have enough money for a lawyer.” My
mind hurtled ahead like a runaway train. A vision of me in handcuffs being
dragged off to jail went through my mind. This was no ordinary imagining, it
was a real vision of my future and I needed to pay attention to it. If I didn’t it, I
was sure it would come to pass.
“I don’t know what they’re planning. Jerry said something about a ‘person of
interest’. I guess that’s what they call a suspect these days. He knew I’d tell you
—maybe he wants you to lay low?”
This was the message I needed. I had to get out of here before they picked
me up. I was meant to solve this. “Agnes, you’re on vacation for a few days,
aren’t you? Could you watch the store?”
Agnes looked startled. “Take over Tarot and Tea? I don’t know…”
“You don’t have to sell, just be there to ring people up. Oh, and someone
needs to feed the animals. And Cutty needs to be walked. You could take him to
your house or maybe you could stay here?” I watched her for a reaction to all
these demands, surprised when she smiled.
“And what, my little amateur detective, are you going to be doing?”
“If I tell you I might have to kill you,” I said, sotto voice, trying to make light
of what I was feeling.
“Shall I say anything to Jerry?”
“I don’t want to get him involved—I’m sure it would compromise his
position if he tried to help me. I have his number if I need it.”
“You’d better get to it. I have a feeling they might come tonight and if not
tonight then early tomorrow. Sorry I didn’t tell you earlier. Where will you go?”
“I know a place where I’ll be safe.” I hugged her and promised to be careful.
After Agnes left, I packed a bag. Before I left I hugged Cutty. Mischief eyed
me from on top of the hutch in the corner of the living room as I headed toward
the back door. “Don’t worry, kitty. I’ll be back soon,” I told her. As I hurried
down the dark street I heard sirens approaching. My fast walk turned into a run.
Saffron
and Seaweed
Summer
McCloud book 2
Summer
and Jerry’s romantic weekend takes a dark turn when they discover
the body of a young woman in the surf.
When
the local police deny the crime and the newspaper prints nothing,
Jerry and Summer realize they are on their own. But they have no idea
how deep they will have to dig to find out the truth. The murder is
only a thread in a web of lies that extends to the furthest reaches
of political office.
Are
Summer’s visions to be the only clues? Jerry doesn’t think so,
his focus on good old-fashioned detective work, but when he doubts
her psychic abilities the trust between them begins to crumble.
As
the days pass, Jerry and Summer come to understand that not only
their relationship, but their very lives are in jeopardy.
It was two in the afternoon before we rolled into the wealthy beach resort of
Watch Hill. Once we drove through the town of Westerly, six or so miles away,
we took the scenic route along the water, driving by elegant mansions that could
house dozens, each one unique in its design of stone or wood and looking like
various styles of castles. They all sat on the ocean side of the road and were
surrounded with lawns the size of golf courses, some lined with trees and some
sporting swimming pools filled with azure water sparkling in the sunlight.
As we edged closer to town the road curved away from the ocean,
meandering through narrow streets filled with holiday goers. The buzz of
mopeds, purr of sporty convertibles and whizz of bicyclists melded together into
a clamor that said ‘weekend away’, the crowded streets slowing us to a crawl.
Here the houses were somewhat closer together but still enormous and unusual,
with cupolas and glassed-in porches. Some of them had been around before cars,
the carriage houses now remodeled into small cottages for houseguests. We
drove by the magnificent Ocean House Hotel where room prices began at three
hundred dollars and went up from there. It had first opened its doors in 1868.
The newly rebuilt monolith sat on a bluff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, the
view spectacular. Beyond the hotel the road narrowed and curved downhill to the
right, heading by the Flying Horse Carousel, originally erected in the late
eighteen hundreds, and then dropping us into the Bay Street village by the Watch
Hill Yacht Club.
Jerry pulled into the parking lot and cut the engine. “What do you think?
Take a walk on the beach and go for a swim?”
I brightened immediately, pulling off the hot jacket and helmet. “I have my
bathing suit on under my clothes.”
He raised one eyebrow, a unique ability that I found very sexy, and then his
gaze went from my T-shirt to the cut-off shorts I was wearing. “I hoped…” he
began.
I knew that look and what lay behind it. “That we’d go skinny-dipping? Do
you think there’s a secluded beach in this town? Look around, Jerry, and tell me
what you see.”
Jerry scanned the crowded parking lot, the cars rolling slowly by the
shopping strip and restaurants, the people in bathing suits going in and out of the
stores and the yacht club and heading toward the cabanas. He made a face.
“Maybe there are less people out by the point.”
Napatree Point was a spit of land that stuck out beyond the harbor, separating
it from Fishers Island Sound on the other side. Most beach-goers hung closer to
the village where the water was calmer.
“What do we do about our stuff?” I asked, gazing down at the expensive
customized leather bags he’d purchased.
“They lock, Summer. It would be pretty hard for someone to get them off.”
He looked around at the assortment of Mercedes, BMW’s, and Porsches in the
lot. “And besides, who here would care to steal our stuff?”
I pulled off my T-shirt to reveal my brand new black bikini top bought
especially for this trip, watching Jerry take off his leathers. He stood around six
feet tall with a solid body and broad shoulders. His brown hair was windblown,
his face dark from the sun. Even after a year I still got a little thrill when I
looked at him.
When his gaze met mine his mouth quirked. “And what are you thinking
about?” he asked, stuffing his leathers into one of the bags.
“Nothing,” I answered, looking away. Maybe it was the heat or maybe it was
because we were away from Ames and all our responsibilities, but right now I
wanted to run my hands all over his naked body and have him run his over mine.
I thought about the privacy of water. “Let’s go,” I said, pulling him across the
parking lot toward the dunes in the distance.
The sand was hot and I ran toward the surf, slowing to a walk once I reached
the shallow water and sea-drenched packed sand. Seagulls wheeled in the sky
above us, the calls strident as they begged for food. I saw one steal some bit of
sandwich or cracker, rising into the air as a child of about five chased after it. A
lot of people were out today, the high-pitched cries of children, barking dogs and
the thunder of waves crashing suddenly on the beach mingling into a summer
medley in my mind. I jogged up the beach away from the crowd, heading toward
the barrier beach and the point.
“Wait for me!” Jerry called, hurrying to catch up. He grabbed my hand.
A few people were meandering around the fort in the distance taking
pictures. Fort Mansfield, or what was left of it, had been a coastal artillery
installation built around the turn of the nineteenth century. It stood at a curve in
the narrow peninsula and beyond it was Sandy Point, a thirty-five acre island
that had been turned into a nature reserve. Until the 1938 hurricane these two
landmasses had been connected, but now the ocean raced between them, a
hazardous place for boats. Once we reached the ruins we continued on, searching
for a more private place to swim.
The wind came up suddenly, whipping our hair and sending stinging sand
against our skin. I bent my head and watched the sailboats coming in, sailors
hurriedly bringing down the sails as they navigated from ocean to bay looking
for their moorings. The staccato blast of the horn took my attention—skippers
calling the harbormaster to bring them to shore.
The peninsula ended and I raced down to the beach away from Jerry,
plunging into the cold water. He was right behind me and I heard his shocked cry
as he dove in. We swam out beyond where the waves were breaking and then
floated lazily on our backs for a while until Jerry grabbed me and pulled me
under the water.
I opened my eyes as he pressed against me, our lips meeting in a kiss.
Everything was green and translucent, sunlight slanting through the water and
casting rippling shadows across our skin. We bounced together as waves moved
past, our bodies undulating loosely like flotsam. I could hear the deep muffled
rumble of the waves, see the tendrils of my honey-colored hair waving like
seaweed, feel Jerry’s body bumping against mine. His leg hooked around one of
mine as his hands moved under my bathing suit top. I felt it slip off and drift
away. We rose to the surface laughing and gasping.
“My top!” I yelled, trying to locate it. Jerry grinned as I dove to find it. I let
the waves take me closer into shore hoping it was being washed along with me,
but when I reached the beach I didn’t see it. I searched in the shallows, trying not
to expose myself, but when I looked around there were no people close by.
I giggled when I felt Jerry’s leg press against mine, turning to grab him, but
when my fingers closed around something squishy I let out a shriek that could
have been heard back in Ames. It was not Jerry’s leg. It was the arm of a person
who was very dead.
Jerry swam toward me. “What’s the matter?” His gaze went from my
horrified expression to the body at my feet. The woman looked almost alive as
she moved gently in and out, slack limbs undulating as the tide rose and fell. But
the grayish cast to the skin, the bluish lips and the tangled hair filled with
seaweed told a very different story.
Black
and White and Red All Over
Summer
McCloud Book 3
A
terrible school shooting has the entire sleepy town of Ames in an
uproar. Who would do such a thing, and why can’t the witnesses
remember any details about the shooter?
When
Summer has a visit from a ghost she’s left wondering...could
someone long dead actually heft an assault rifle?
Along
with the furor over the murders, Summer is falling for Jerry again,
despite his obvious deranged state of mind. Add to that the upcoming
wedding between Sam and Agnes, and include a smattering of ghosts and
possible psychopaths to the guest list, and you have a recipe for
disaster.
This wedding had been the main focus of both our lives for months now and
I was ready for it to be over. The ballroom in the old age home had finally been
remodeled and that’s where the ceremony and the reception would take place.
The turn-of-the-century Victorian building had been a project of Agnes’s since
the fall and now it was nearly completed. I was pleased that all the ghosts
wandering around town could finally settle into their new/old digs. Douglas, a
ghost and also Agnes’s father, had remarked to me earlier today how glad he
was. “The place is just the way it was nearly one hundred years ago,” he’d told
me when he came into Tarot and Tea. He would know, I’d thought to myself,
trying to suppress a giggle.
In truth, I had no idea how old the man was, only that I liked him very much
and that he had an elegant and old-fashioned way about him. He and Agnes’s
mother, a woman who’d been murdered here in Ames two years ago, had
reconnected just before her death. Agnes still spoke about Serena Weatherby in
hushed tones, gasping over the enormous inheritance Serena had left her. I
figured she and Sam would buy some mansion to live in once they were married.
I only hoped they would stay in Ames and not move to some swank section of
New York too far away for me to visit. But then again I had a hard time
imagining Sam quitting the police force. Being a detective was his life.
Douglas and Serena, Agnes’s parents, had loved each other and apparently
conceived a child after Douglas left the land of the living. Even with my own
burgeoning psychic abilities I found this revelation disturbing. I wondered why
Serena had never appeared to any of us after her demise. I had yet to ask
Douglas if he ever saw her.
A hundred guests were coming to the wedding, Sam’s friends and family
who made up a cast of thousands, as well as Agnes’s college friends she’d lost
touch with who were now married with children. She told me she was hoping to
reconnect now that she was about to join them in the respectable institution of
matrimony.
Agnes had always been a free spirit and that’s why we’d become such good
friends. This new side of her, that seemed to think that getting married placed her
in an entirely different social stratum, bothered me greatly. She was my best
friend and I relied on her to continue in that regard. We still went to our monthly
coven meetings on the full moon, and I hoped we would continue to do so after
her marriage.
We had consumed half the bottle by the time Sam arrived, his expression
grim.
“What’s wrong?” Agnes asked, jumping up from the couch.
He rubbed a hand across his clean-shaven face. “There’s been an incident,”
he began, slanting a glance toward me. “There was a shooting a couple of hours
ago at Riverview Elementary.”
My mouth dropped open in horror. These school shootings had been
happening all over the country but I never thought they would occur in our
sleepy village of Ames, Connecticut. I clutched my glass and tried not to see the
ravaged faces of the poor children.
“Five kids and three teachers were shot today,” he continued, slumping onto
the couch. “It was a bloodbath.”
Agnes’s pale face turned whiter than usual, tears welling in her eyes. She sat
next to Sam and turned toward me. “Summer, have you seen…?”
I knew what she was referring to and shook my head. Ghosts often talked to
me but I had had no visits, at least not yet. “What happened?” I asked Sam,
girding myself for what he would say.
“Some maniac came into the school with an assault rifle and just shot up the
building. We have no motive, no name, and no understanding of where the
shooter came from and or why he or she did what they did.”
“Which teachers?” Agnes asked in a small voice. We both knew several
teachers at the elementary school.
“Linda Moser and Gabby Cozens were killed—Maggie Johnson was shot but
survived.”
Agnes let out a wail. “I know them!”
“I do too,” I said, moving next to her. She turned to face me and then we
hugged, both of us in tears.
“None of the witnesses can remember what the shooter looked like or even if
it was a he or a she. I find that odd, especially since two other teachers and
Maggie witnessed the entire thing, not to mention the other twenty children who
were in the classroom. The only thing they said was they thought the person had
brown hair.”
“Well, that narrows it down,” I said.
Sam shot me a look. “It’s a start and we have a sketch artist working with the
witnesses.”
“Linda and Gabby were coming to the wedding,” Agnes said, pulling away
to look at Sam again. “Did they die quickly? Don’t tell me,” she said a second
later, holding up her hand. “Do you think we should postpone the wedding?”
“The wedding is over a month away, Agnes. I’m sure this will be wrapped up
by then. And even if it isn’t I don’t think we should.” Sam took hold of her hand,
twining his fingers through hers. “I’ve got to get back to the police station. Jerry
and I are leading the investigation.”
So he and Jerry were partners again. Last I’d heard Jerry wasn’t even back to
full duty. But then again it had been months since his mental collapse after the
last case we’d worked on together. I wondered if the chief had insisted he see a
therapist.
“And Summer, you may be called in.”
“Called in—why?”
“Your psychic skills. The chief mentioned you during our planning meeting.”
I shook my head. “Unless one of the ghosts contacts me I can do nothing. It
isn’t like I go into a trance and know what happened.”
“Sorry to hear that,” he said, regarding me with a somber expression. He
kissed Agnes before he stood and headed for the door. “But please let me know
if you dream anything or one of them visits you. We could really use some help
on this one.” He opened the door and closed it behind him. I heard the squad car
start up and then the squeal of one of the belts as he put it in gear and headed
away.
I felt ill as I pictured Linda and Gabby lying on the classroom floor in a pool
of blood. They were both my age, late twenties. It suddenly occurred to me that I
was turning thirty this year, a milestone I wasn’t looking forward to. But then I
thought of them again, their lives cut short, and I mentally reprimanded myself.
And Gabby had a little girl, Mary. Was her child one of the five victims? And
what about Maggie—did her boy survive? I raced to the door and flung it open,
but Sam was long gone.
Finlay's
Folly
Summer
McCloud Book 4
Summer
is in Scotland doing an errand for a ghost. But when she comes face
to face with her distant past her world turns upside down.
Finlay
Ross McCloud, a ghost in the Ames graveyard, has sent her on this
fool's errand, his facts confused. And when Summer discovers the
truth she's already in over her head.
Will
she succumb to the charms of the handsome highlander she can picture
running across the moors in a kilt, or will she pull herself away
before it's too late?
Find
out in this fast-paced romantic tale of love and loss.
By the time I reached the graveyard I was seriously wondering about my
sanity. With the clear sky it had turned windy and bitter cold, and I hadn’t
thought to wear gloves, my hands sunk deep into the pockets of my coat. I was
already shivering as I pulled up the hood around my wind-burned face.
I entered the rocky uneven section of the graveyard through a small creaky
gate, my gaze going to the ancient gnarled trees that looked like skeletons
waving their arms in the breeze. The waxing moon was close to half full, the
gravestones casting elongated shadows across the silvery ground. Limbs
complained as they rubbed together, sending dry leaves swirling to the ground,
where they moved and spun like something alive. Ghost-like shapes flitted here
and there, shimmering for a moment before disappearing again.
Why had I decided to come here? But just as I turned to leave, Cutty gave a
sharp bark and I saw my ghost. The lower half his body was in shadow, the
upper half, bright in the moonlight. He looked corporeal where he sat on the
edge of the gravestone, a smile of welcome on his face when he saw me. I
moved toward him, stumbling on rocks and roots.
“Hello,” I began, not knowing what to call him—Mr. McCloud? Finlay?
The last time I’d seen him he hadn’t said anything. Could he even speak?
That question was answered when I heard him say, “Hello, lass,” in a deep
brogue. “I hoped ye would return.”
“Time means something to you?” I asked, moving closer. He was dressed as
he had been the last time, his clothes varying shades of gray in the moonlight.
“Time is of no importance where I am. But seein' ye here before brought me
into your world. I had something to say to ye that night, but you and your man
got away before I had the chance.”
I sat on the edge of the gravestone next to his, watching Cutty sniffing
around his feet. My dog looked up at him and gave a little woof. “Cutty can see
you? How is that possible?”
He shrugged. “Animals are far more sensitive to the departed than humans.
Ye happen to be a special case, lass.”
“Did you know we’re related?” I asked him. “I’m a McCloud too.”
“Aye. ‘Tis why I wished to talk with ye. Judging by how I’m stuck here, it
seems my death needs to be resolved before I can move on.”
I stared, surprised. “I’m not a detective.”
He chuckled. “I saw ye here that night diggin’ up some old bones to solve
yer case. I heard ye talkin’ to yer copper. The two o’ ye were in it up to yer
eyeballs. ’Tis nae as though I can go to the local constabulary and ask them to
solve it.”
“For your information there weren’t any bones in the casket. All we found
were rocks.”
He laughed. “’Tis naught to me, lass. I am merely pointin’ out yer
proclivities.”
“But if you were murdered it was a long time ago. The person who did it is
long dead.”
He nodded, reaching down to rub Cutty’s ears. His fingers went right
through. Cutty wagged his tail. “It will be a merry chase for ye, to be sure. It all
started back in the Highlands. ‘Tis where ye’ll need to begin.”
“Scotland? Are you kidding? I have a business to run and no money for a
trip.”
“County Sutherland in the Highlands, to be exact,” he continued, ignoring
me. “Up in the northwestern corner. Canna rightly remember it now, but there’s a
castle, and…” He stopped and scratched his head. “Stones…built of gray stone,
ye ken.”
“If you were killed there, why are you here in Ames?”
He frowned, seeming confused. “The murder must have happened here. But
whoever did it was from the old country.”
“How do you know?”
“Must have been the manner of it. The only part I recall is that it came from
behind,” he said, his dark eyes puzzled.
“So you think maybe someone snuck up on you from behind and stabbed
you. Is that it?”
He brightened, as though my words brought it all back. “Now ye have it…a
cowardly way to kill a man. Must have been a lad from the Highlands who had a
bone to pick.”
I laughed. “A bone to pick? Sounds a bit more than that. Who did you piss
off?” He stared at me, uncomprehending.
“Sorry—who did you anger enough to make them want to kill you?”
Finlay suddenly looked around, his eyes widening. “Must gae now. Make yer
plans and we’ll talk again.” He disappeared, leaving me staring at his headstone.
Cutty whined.
I clipped on the leash, my senses picking up some entity that I did not want
to tangle with. There was a glow on the other side of the graveyard, and I noticed
that any other ghosts who’d been hanging around had disappeared. I wondered if
it could be the guy who killed Finlay. I shivered and hurried through the little
gate and jogged toward home.
The
Night of the Jaguar
Summer
McCloud Book 5
A
honeymoon without a husband is not so fun.
Akumal
is beautiful, but without Jerry, Summer's hopes of sunbathing,
margaritas, and rolling around in bed together, are ruined.
But
it's the dead body in the cenote that clinches it. Jerry is working
on a case that he never mentioned, and Summer is left out-- that is
until she decides to do a little sleuthing herself.
Even
with the help from ghosts and a jaguar Summer is out of her depth.
And when her life is put in in danger it is up to Jerry to save her.
Will he make it in time?
Find
out by reading this fast-paced supernatural thriller.
My throat burned, my lungs on fire as I hurtled down the dirt road away from the
whine of the engine behind me. They were gaining. Of course they’re gaining,
you ninny—they’re in a car and you’re on foot! And not just any old car but a
black town car with bulletproof glass and windows tinted so dark you couldn’t
see inside. How could they allow…but that question left my mind when a
narrow path appeared on my right, leading through a field planted in some low
growing vegetable that did well in arid climates—maybe Mexican spinach?
When a gunshot rang out my mind went as blank as the cloudless sky. I ran for
my life.
How I had come to be out in the middle of Mexico running from banditos trying
to kill me was a question I couldn’t even ponder at the moment. My legs were
tiring, my heart rate way above anything resembling normal, and when I glanced
over my shoulder I saw two bulky men heading my way on foot, guns drawn.
Jerry, you bastard! The words that rang through my mind were not the
best way to think of the man I’d just married—and where was he now that my
life was about to be ended by two thugs in riot gear?
This entire scenario was Jerry’s fault, and if I lived long enough to see him
again I would murder him with my bare hands. Why in god’s name had I said
yes? A bullet winged my ear—blood trickled down my cheek and along my neck
as I felt the ground give way. A moment later I was falling into darkness, my
fingers clutching at air. I hit the water and sank.
I
graduated with a BA in art and English from Sonoma State University
in California. I've been an avid reader since I first learned how and
a writer from my early teenage years on. I've had several art related
businesses, including greeting cards and more recently a silk
painting business. When I began to write in earnest I put aside the
art, concentrating only on the writing.
I've
traveled a lot over the years, finding inspiration wherever I go.
Scotland holds a special place in my heart, hence the setting for
"The Moonstone". I had to make a 4th trip there to do
research as I was putting the book together!
Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!
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