Labels

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Book Blitz: Alive for a Reason by Jaiden Jackson Smith @imalive4areason @RABTBookTours


What You Don’t Know Will Kill You and It’s Not the Pandemic: Julia’s Story


Nonfiction / Biographies / Health

Date Published: December 23, 2024



You don’t have to die… like Julia almost did.

This gripping memoir tells the true story of a sudden, devastating illness—thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)—a rare blood disorder with a 90% mortality rate if left untreated.

Through a deeply personal and conversational narrative, Jaiden Jackson Smith brings readers into Julia’s world:

● A body turning against itself

● A mind navigating fear, confusion, and altered reality

● A spirit clinging to faith and purpose


What You’ll Discover

● The hidden dangers of undiagnosed illness

● The link between stress, trauma, and autoimmune disorders

● The reality of hematological conditions and platelet disorders

● The emotional and spiritual battle of survival

 

About the Author


Jaiden Jackson Smith is an award-winning author, advocate, and storyteller whose work centers on truth, healing, and human resilience.

Her debut memoir earned the 2025 International Impact Book Award, marking her as a powerful new voice in inspirational nonfiction.

Jaiden holds a Master’s degree in Law and Public Policy in Nevada and is committed to continuing her education to advocate for:

● Individuals with intellectual disabilities

● People with disabilities

● Senior adults

Her life is guided by three core values:
Integrity. Loyalty. Determination.

Beyond her professional achievements, Jaiden finds joy in:

● Spending time with her husband

● Enjoying music—especially Earth, Wind & Fire

● Writing and creative expression

● Bringing light into the lives of others through kindness

Her mission is simple yet profound:
To remind people they are seen, valued, and never alone.

 

Contact Links

Website

Youtube

Instagram

Facebook

X

TikTok

LinkedIn


Purchase Link

Amazon


RABT Book Tours & PR

Book Blitz: Voyagers: Homeland to Heartland by D. L. Norris @RABTBookTours



Biographical Fiction

Date Published: March 26, 2026



Voyagers: Homeland to Heartland is a sweeping, multi-generational saga inspired by true family history, tracing a Norwegian immigrant family's journey from the rugged valleys of Norway to the windswept prairies of Nebraska.

Rooted in the author's own heritage, the story follows Kittil and Marte Dyrebu as they leave behind everything familiar-family, language, and homeland-to chase the promise of opportunity in America. Their passage across the Atlantic is only the beginning. What follows is a lifetime of perseverance: carving a home from raw prairie, enduring devastating storms, profound loss, quiet joys, and the relentless demands of frontier life.

Told through richly detailed vignettes, Voyagers weaves together the lives of parents and children, siblings and spouses, revealing how love, faith, and tradition are carried forward even as circumstances change. From intimate moments around a family table to life altering crossroads shaped by duty, sacrifice, and longing, each generation faces its own tests-yet remains bound by shared memory and resilience.

At its core, Voyagers is a tribute to storytelling itself: the way stories preserve identity, heal grief, and connect past to present. It is a novel for anyone drawn to historical fiction, immigrant journeys, and the enduring power of family legacy.

Both tender and unflinching, Voyagers honors the courage of those who came before-and the stories that continue to shape who we are.


About the Author


Award-winning author and motivational speaker, D. L. Norris is widely recognized for her insightful contributions to literature and personal development. With a prolific career spanning several decades, Norris has explored themes of health, emotional wellness, family dynamics, and cultural history, earning her a devoted readership. Her acclaimed novels, "The Long Way Home," "Where the Heart Is," "Old Books and Faded Dreams: Collector's Edition," "Field of Memories: A Tapestry of Heartwarming Short Stories," The Intercessors: They Walk Among Us," and "Voyagers: Homeland to Heartland"—are celebrated for their vibrant, oft-humorous stories and authentic portrayal of real-life events and mindsets inspired by her beloved Scandinavian heritage.

Norris's writing is characterized by its warmth, wit, and ability to capture the complexities of human relationships, drawing from her own experiences and family traditions. Through her work, she invites readers to reflect on the importance of resilience, hope, and unconditional love, weaving together narratives that resonate across generations.

She and her husband, Quincy, reside in the picturesque city of Hartford, Connecticut, where they continue to inspire others through their commitment to storytelling and community engagement.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

BookBuzz


Purchase Links

Amazon

B&N


RABT Book Tours & PR

Review: Tangled in Magic (Crystal Beach #9) by Karen McSpade

Tangled in Magic

Crystal Beach #9

by Karen McSpade

Published: November 21, 2023

Publisher: Newcastle Media Publishing

Genre: Animals, Cozy Mystery, Fiction, Mystery, Psychics, Suspense, Paranormal, Witches, Magical

 

Blurb:

Quirky characters. An enchanting town. A cat that talks. This magical mystery series has it all, like you've never read before!

Welcome to Crystal Beach, an enchanting town with a dangerous secret.

As Sidney and her magical felines search for a new place to call home, a peculiar creature roams the beach under the cover of night, setting Sidney's supernatural senses tingling. And more disturbing trouble is heading this witch's way.

A woman close to Sidney's heart vanishes without a trace, leaving behind a chilling puzzle. Is there a connection between her disappearance and the enigmatic beach creature? To find out, Sidney must harness her own magical abilities, as even Ada-Mae's spells are no match for the task at hand.

As the mysteries deepen, an old seafaring ghost emerges with a forewarning, hinting at an impending catastrophe that threatens Crystal Beach. History may be doomed to repeat itself unless Sidney can piece together the cryptic clues in time.

Can this gifted psychic witch untangle the web of strange events, connect the dots between a baffling death, a woman's vanishing act, and the elusive beach creature, and decipher the ghost's ominous prophecy before it's too late to save her beloved town and the people she holds dear?

Join Sidney, her talking cat, and the unforgettable residents of Crystal Beach in Tangled in Magic, the ninth installment of the Crystal Beach Magic Mystery Series.

Get cozy and immerse yourself in this spellbinding mystery adventure today!

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub


My Review:

Sidney Grace and her magical cats return in the ninth book, Tangled in Magic, part of the Crystal Beach series by Karen McSpade. This story is highly entertaining and leaves you eager for more with every page turn.

It includes everything: magic, talking cats, ghosts, a creature that enjoys walking on the beach at night, mystery, suspense, and much more that makes it truly enchanting.

Sidney’s father is being released from prison, and someone very close to her, her dad’s girlfriend, has gone missing. With the help of her grandmother, Ada-Mae, her mother Julia-Mae, and other witches, Sidney works on a spell to find the missing woman.

Sidney starts to question whether the missing woman, the creature on the beach, the ghost, and her father’s release from prison are all connected. If they are, how?

Tangled in Magic is a fantastic addition to the Crystal Beach mystery series. The world-building is magical and among the best I’ve seen. I’m excited to read more stories from Crystal Beach.

I highly recommend Tangled in Magic to all fans of magic and talking cats! Get your copy today for another exciting adventure with Sidney, Mojo, Ada-Mae, Julia-Mae, and all the wonderful characters of Crystal Beach!

Check out all the books in the Crystal Beach Series I’ve read.


Dog Gone Troubles 0.5

Goodreads


Cat Scratch Murder #1

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Feline Like A Suspect #3

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Witch Under Pressure #6

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Tangled in Magic #9

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Paws of Justice #11

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Connect with Karen McSpade

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub

Facebook ~ Instagram ~ TikTok

Blurb Blitz + #Giveaway: The Secret Cottage by Kate Ellington @GoddessFish



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Kate Ellington will be awarding a $20 Amazon gift card to a randomly drawn winner. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Blurb: 

Isabel Tate yearns for the simple pleasures she took for granted before scandal rocked her family two years ago. On May Day, she's determined to forget her troubles and enjoy herself at the Claremont family's annual festival. Meanwhile, Robert Claremont steels himself to begin courting the haughty heiress next door, but his bashfulness is only one obstacle to winning her hand. Despite a deep sense of family obligation, he dreams of choosing his own bride. Captivated by each other from the moment they meet, Robert and Isabel are kept apart by a misunderstanding until a chance encounter leads to friendship and more. With opposition on all sides, they must overcome inconceivable odds to claim happiness.

 

Purchase The Secret Cottage on Amazon

 

Read an Excerpt


Isabel turned her horse into the woods, directing him to a gurgling stream under a canopy of trees. The forest was quiet but for the splashing of the water, bird songs and the rustle of branches. They hadn’t been there long when Isabel heard a new sound. Hoofbeats and muffled voices. She urged her horse closer to the road, and easily heard the riders' conversation.

“What makes you think she came this way?” a man asked.

A deeper voice answered, “Merely a guess. It seemed as good a place as any to look, but I'm thwarted again.”

“Let's turn back, we can look for her tomorrow.”

“I'm sitting for the portrait tomorrow.”

Isabel's pulse quickened as she recognized the deeper voice. Robert Claremont. So he’d been looking for her. Why hadn't he come to the house? She started back toward the stream, but suddenly reason left her and she guided her horse through the trees, emerging just as Robert and his companion rounded the bend going in the opposite direction. They hadn't seen her.

Isabel paused for a moment, thinking what to do. Go back home and hope he came to the house soon? Or seek him out for herself? Her reckless side won. Spurring her horse to a gallop, she chased after them. Robert turned in his saddle and Isabel was delighted with the look of shock on his face as she sped past him and who she could now see was Mr. Kensington.


About the Author:


Kate Ellington grew up in a woodsy New England town where summer days at the lake seemed to last forever. She read her first historical romance at age eleven when a teacher challenged her to find a book in the library written by an author she’d never heard of. Thus began a life-long love of love stories.

After graduating from college with an art degree she settled in the Pacific Northwest, where she currently resides with her family.

Connect with Kate Ellington

Goodreads ~ Bluesky ~ Website ~ Facebook



Giveaway:



$20 Amazon/BN GC





Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.


Monday, May 11, 2026

Book Tour + #Giveaway: To Die For by Audrey Steidl @Books_by_Audrey @RABTBookTours




Young Adult

Date Published: April 10th 2026

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

 


To Die For is a harrowing look into the life of a narcissist who refuses to take accountability for the damage she inflicts.

High school senior Dei Fields appears completely harmless, but she has a keen instinct for manipulation. When she first sets eyes on hot star athlete Mika St. John, she’s determined to have him … and Dei always gets what she wants. There are only three obstacles: Mika’s friends, his family, and his girlfriend. But Dei isn’t afraid to destroy relationships to satisfy her fantasies.

In a matter of weeks, she love-bombs Mika into thinking he has found his soulmate, but when Dei’s plans go awry, everything changes—including her identity. Will Dei get what she wants this time? Or will she finally get what she deserves?



Interview with Audrey Steidl

Could you tell us about any research trips you took for this story? Which places did you visit, and what made them essential to your writing?

Most of the action takes place in San Diego, where I have lived for the last few decades, so I didn’t need to do specific research on that area. For the Florida chapters, I relied on research as well as the input of friends in that area, who were able to tell me specifically what it was like to survive Hurricane Ian in September 2022. Fortunately, they applauded my descriptive accuracy!

What's the strangest thing you've ever had to research online for your book?

I wouldn’t call it “strange,” but I had to dig deep to find out the specific smells and types of wreckage in the aftermath of a major hurricane, including the difference between water and wind damage.

What research (history, mythology, science) goes into your world-building?

“To Die For” was very much grounded in the real world of high school and suburban life until the story moves to Florida, when a major hurricane devastates the Naples and Fort Myers area.

Have any of the people you've known, past or present, left a lasting impression on your writing journey? If so, we'd love to hear about a memorable experience that stands out to you.

I was an actor before I was a writer, which made me acutely aware of the power of words, whether on stage or on the page. In particular, I was privileged to see Judy Dench on stage in London, and I am still in awe of the depth of emotion she could bring to a single phrase.

Do you write in the same genre all the time?

No. My first book “The Fallen” is considered literary fiction-mixed genre and won the International Impact Award for the “Best Fantasy, Mystery, Thriller” of 2025. It also won the American Legacy Award for the Best Paranormal Romance. My second book, “To Die For,” has no supernatural elements and is an exploration of what happens when a narcissist sets about destroying the lives of those around her to get what she wants.

If so, have you ever consider writing in another one?

I’ve just finished writing the sequel to “The Fallen” so I will stay in that genre for the time being.

Which character, supernatural or human, do you enjoy writing the most and why?

I don’t want to give away any plot points, but one of the characters I most enjoyed writing about in “The Fallen” was an angelic being who demonstrates great compassion and healing power. In “To Die For,” I got a chuckle out of one of the supporting teen characters, who was refreshingly irreverent in the midst of all the drama, and another who gets that you DON’T peak in high school.

 

About the Author

 

Audrey Steidl is the award-winning author of the romantic thriller The Fallen. Her passion for storytelling began at an early age when she wrote scripts and performed them with her neighborhood friends in full costume and makeup. This love blossomed into a career as an actress and as a producer for cable television.

Now, when she’s not writing page-turners, Audrey is a hotel travel executive, a pilates fiend, and a lover of travel and art. A long-time San Diego resident, she shares her home with her husband Jamie and their mischievous Pomeranian Loki. Her latest novel, To Die For, is inspired by those who have the courage to walk away from narcissists and emotionally abusive relationships.


Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Goodreads

LinkedIn

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

B&N





RABT Book Tours & PR

Book Tour + #Giveaway: Montana Matrimonial News by Candace Simar @RABTBookTours




Historical Fiction

Date Published: 10-07-2025

Publisher: NorthStar Press



Loneliness gnaws and chews like the relentless prairie wind. Dakota homesteader, Digger Dancy, props his feet in the oven and waits for the storm to end. His brother, George, barges into the soddy in a swirl of blowing snow. George announces he will abandon his claim to seek a wife. He can’ t stand the loneliness. Digger slaps a stack of old newspapers on the table and convinces him to place an ad for a correspondence bride in the Montana Matrimonial News. Doctor Gamla, the almost-doctor and midwife, treats George’ s frostbite, and offers a cure for his melancholia. She tells of two sisters living in tar-paper shacks along the Mad Dog River. The brothers cannot imagine how Doctor Gamla’ s cure will change their lives. Nickelbo’ s whole world is wheat. The homesteaders talk about crops, worry about the weather, complain about prices, and dream what they’ ll buy after the harvest. Asa Wainwright busts sod with a grasshopper plow. Ingrid Larson dallies over planting to avoid her sister’ s wedding. Drunken Oscar Borgom gets lost in a storm on the way to the outhouse. Through it all, Doctor Gamla delivers babies, treats ailments, and offers advice. “My cures work if you can stand them."

 


Interview with Candace Simar

Could you tell us about any research trips you took for this story? Which places did you visit, and what made them essential to your writing?

I visited many small town museums and the North Dakota Historical Center in Bismarck, ND. I read multiple nonfiction books about life as a prairie homesteader. My favorite research sources are the memoirs of people who actually homesteaded in the 1800s. These are often found as small chapbooks in museums. I also researched the laws regarding homesteading and the experiences of correspondence brides. Two of my great-uncles homesteaded in the early 1900s and family stories found their way into MONTANA MATRIMONIAL NEWS.

What's the strangest thing you've ever had to research online for your book?

I did extensive research on how to build a sod house. Ask me anything!

I also read extensively about pioneer experiences, especially the women. They showed great tenacity to endure life in sod houses or claim shacks, little money, many children, and great physical demands.

What research (history, mythology, science) goes into your world-building?

I once took a class from Diana Ossana (Larry McMurtry’s writing partner) at the Iowa Summer Writing Festival. She taught me Mr. McMurtry’s way of blending research in a seamless way: do your research first, set it aside, and write your story. That way the research bubbles up organically without overpowering the story line. This advice has worked well for me.

A historical novelist needs all the research of a non-fiction writer but uses only 10% of it. Without doing the entire amount, the reader feels there is something “off” about the authenticity of the work. Knowing the mores and zeitgeist of the times makes the story ring true.

Have any of the people you've known, past or present, left a lasting impression on your writing journey? If so, we'd love to hear about a memorable experience that stands out to you.

First of all, my third grade teacher, Mrs. Gense, was first to encourage me to be a writer.

I have found inspiration and encouragement from Diana Ossana at the Iowa Writing Festival, Jonis Agee and Lisa Tucker at the Taos Writing Conference, Sheila O’Connor from local workshops, and Robert Olen Butler at the Lake Superior Writers Conference. I first began writing poetry with a local chapter of the National Federation of States Poetry Societies, an invaluable group of supportive poets that helped me learn lyrical and sensorial techniques that prove to be a great foundation for all writing.

Do you write in the same genre all the time?

I mostly write frontier/historical fiction, but have also written poetry, memoir, inspirational writing, and short fiction.

If so, have you ever consider writing in another one?

I grew up as the granddaughter of Scandinavian immigrants and hearing their stories. I am also passionate about history. It feels most natural to blend the immigrant experience with historical events. Family lore is woven into my writing.

Lately I’ve been feeling pulled back to poetry. There is something most satisfying about a poem that “works.” We’ll see where that takes me.

I also enjoy writing inspirational writing. It’s on my to-do list.

I keep a list of ideas for short stories. My imagination keeps me up at night.

Which character, supernatural or human, do you enjoy writing the most and why?

My favorite character from MONTANA MATRIMONIAL NEWS is Doctor Gamla, an elderly midwife and almost-doctor in Nickelbo, North Dakota. Doctor Gamla is based on my great-grandmother’s midwife. She was sometimes called a witch because of her herbal remedies and was famous for her cures. She also gave advice freely about every human malady. In MONTANA MATRIMONIAL NEWS her mantra is: “My cures work if you can stand them.”

I enjoy writing older female characters with grit and determination—also women without filters. I remember relatives and neighbors who had survived wars, the great depression, and other hardships. In my 30-year experience as a Certified Gerontological Nurse, I knew many such women!

I’m working on my next novel, PRAIRIE WIND CARRY ME HOME, also set in Nickelbo, ND. Dr. Gamla shows up again as the mentor who helps a young woman face tragedy.



About the Author

 

Candace Simar likes to imagine how things might have been. She combines her love of history with her Scandinavian heritage in historical novels that examine the early days of Minnesota and North Dakota. “I write historical novels to share painless history lessons about the fascinating and unique history of our region.”

Her historical novels include: Sister Lumberjack, book five in the Abercrombie Trail Series (North Star Press, March 2024) Follow Whiskey Creek (Sweet Honey Press 2023) Escape to Fort Abercrombie (Five Star Cengage 2018) Shelterbelts (North Star Press 2015), Blooming Prairie (North Star Press 2012) Birdie (North Star Press2011) Pomme de Terre (North Star Press 2010), and Abercrombie Trail (North Star Press 2009). Her short story collections: Dear Homefolks (River Place Press 2017) and The Glory of Ordinary Time (Wolfpack Press 2018). Farm Girls (River Place Press 2013) is a book of poetry co-written with her sister, Angela Foster. Candace’s short stories have been published in the anthologies: Spoilt Quilt (Five Star Cengage 2020), Librarians of the West (Five Star Cengage 2021); and Why Cows Need Cowboys (Two Dot Press 2021).

Simar is a Spur Award winner and Spur finalist from the Western Writers of America for her Abercrombie Trail series. Shelterbelts was a finalist in both the Willa Literary Awards in Historical Fiction and the Midwest Book Awards. Escape to Fort Abercrombie holds a Will Rogers Gold Medallion and a Peacemaker Award from Western Fictioneers.

Her short stories and poetry have received awards from the Bob Dylan Creative Writing Contest, Lake Region Review, League of Minnesota Poets, National Federation of State Poetry Societies, Dust and Fire, and the Laura Awards for Short Fiction.

Candace enjoys sharing her research and writing with groups and book clubs across the nation.


Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Goodreads


Purchase Links

https://mybook.to/MontanaMatrimonialNews 

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Bookshop





RABT Book Tours & PR

Book Blitz: Garbage In, Faster by Claude Hanhart @claudehanhart @RABTBookTours



Why AI Needs Conversation Architects

 

Business, Nonfiction

Date Published: April 19, 2026

 


AI doesn't remove the need for human alignment. It amplifies it.

From the co-author of the #1 Amazon Kindle Bestseller Connecting Goals to Impacts and Outcomes comes a provocative companion: a book about why AI makes human conversation skills more essential — not less.

Organizations laid off Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches. Then they adopted AI. They eliminated the people who create alignment — and bought a technology that makes alignment more critical than ever.

The result? Garbage in, faster.

 

This book was written in collaboration with Claude AI by Anthropic. The entire manuscript was generated in under 60 seconds. But those 60 seconds only worked because of the hours of structured conversation that preceded them — and the twenty years of expertise behind those conversations.

The process of writing this book proved its thesis.

 

What you'll learn:

• Why "agile is dead" is the wrong diagnosis — and what actually failed

• Communication Debt: the invisible liability destroying your organization

• Why AI multiplies clarity AND confusion equally — and you choose which

• How VERB + NOUN syntax creates infrastructure for both humans and AI

• Why "context engineering" is Structured Conversations by another name

• The five conversations AI can never have for you

• How to become a Conversation Architect — the role organizations need most

• Five conversations you can have Monday morning with no new tools

 

Who this book is for:

• Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches wondering what comes next

• Product Managers whose AI tools produce beautiful, meaningless artifacts

• Executives who invested in AI but aren't seeing results

• Anyone who suspects that better conversations might be the answer

 

A companion to Connecting Goals to Impacts and Outcomes: Harnessing Structured Conversations for Customer-Driven Value Delivery. That book is the complete toolkit. This one is the argument for why that toolkit is now existential.

Structure the Conversation. Deliver the Outcome.

 

 


About the Author

 

Claude Hanhart is a Product Strategist and Agile Coach with 10+ years of leadership experience in driving groundbreaking product strategies and agile transformations. His approach centers on fostering innovation rooted in business objectives, customer experience, and market leadership through tools such as Generative AI, OKRs, and Behavior-Driven Development (BDD).

Claude's unique academic background - with an MA in Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology and Languages from the University of Berne in Switzerland and an MA in Geography from the University of Minnesota - brings an interdisciplinary perspective to modern product challenges. His multilingual abilities in German, Swiss German, and French have proven invaluable in international collaborations.

Structured Conversations represents Claude's commitment to bridging strategic thinking with practical implementation. Currently based in New Jersey with his wife, Claude finds that their three energetic dogs serve as daily reminders about the importance of clear communication and patient guidance - principles that translate beautifully into his professional coaching work.

 

Contact Link

Website

 

Purchase Link

Amazon


RABT Book Tours & PR

Teaser: RIP by Marteeka Karland @marteekakarland @RABTBookTours @changelingpress



(Kiss of Death MC)

 

Motorcycle Club Romance, Suspense, Age Gap

Date Published: May 15, 2026




She found her strength. I’ll makes sure no one takes it again.

 

Jade -- I ran from a man who broke me, only to land in the arms of a biker who could destroy what little I have left. Rip is an alpha protector with a dangerous edge I can’t seem to resist. He sees too much, wants too much, and makes me crave things I swore I’d never risk again. He gives me the courage to believe in myself. When my past refuses to let me go, I know I can surrender or stand and fight. If my ex thinks he can take everything from me again, he’s about to learn exactly how wrong he is.

Rip -- The first time I see Jade, she’s barely holding herself together, a trauma survivor trying to outrun a nightmare who won’t stay buried. She’s still fragile enough I know better than to push my way into her life, even when every instinct tells me to pull her close and never let her go. I don’t expect her to see me as anything more than a safe place. Whether I claim her or not, my MC brothers will lay down their lives for her. And when the smoke clears and the blood is washed away, Jade will know she was always meant to be mine. Forever.

 


EXCERPT

 

Jade

The soft, warm lighting in the small dining room did little to reassure me. I stared at my hands resting on the scarred wooden table, watching them tremble against my will. Three weeks at Haven, and my body still hadn’t gotten the message that I was safe now. Safe. What a strange word to apply to homelessness, to sitting in a communal room, surrounded by women who couldn’t meet my eyes because we all recognized the shame in each other’s faces.

I pulled down my sleeve to cover the faint, yellowing bruise on my wrist. My ribs still throbbed with a dull persistent ache that no amount of ibuprofen could completely relieve. The pain was almost comforting -- a reminder that I hadn’t imagined it all, that I wasn’t crazy. My fingers brushed against my cheekbone, the swelling finally gone but the discoloration still visible beneath the concealer I’d carefully applied that morning.

A little boy, maybe five or six, darted past me chasing after his sister, both of them laughing. Their mother called after them in a hushed voice. All the women here spoke quietly most of the time, as if normal volume might shatter whatever fragile peace we’d found. Or too afraid our respite would end in violence once again. I watched them without trying to seem like I was watching. Their mother had dark circles under her eyes, but she smiled when she caught them, tickled them until they squealed.

I looked away. There was an intimacy to their bond that felt invasive to witness, like I was trespassing on something precious. I didn’t belong here, among these women who’d fled with children, with purpose. What did I have? A business degree I’d never used, a dried-up marketing career, and a suitcase only half full of clothes I’d grabbed while Eric was at work. No kids. No friends left. Just bruises and tremors and the growing realization that I had nowhere else to go.

“Jade? Do you have a moment?”

I looked up to see Ada approaching, a clipboard tucked under her arm and a sympathetic smile on her face. Since I’d come here, I’d learned that every woman from that club Mia’s new man belonged to volunteered at this place. The men guarded Haven but never made the residents feel smothered. In fact, I only saw them occasionally. Everyone here cared. Probably too much sometimes. I saw the few people who came through here. Everyone had a sob story and most of them were horrific. By comparison, I had it pretty easy.

“Of course,” I said, straightening my posture automatically.

Ada slid into the chair opposite me and placed the clipboard on the table between us. “Your thirty-day evaluation period ends this weekend,” she said, her voice soft. “I have your extension paperwork here. I hate that we have to do shit like this, but it gets us money for supplies.” She smiled.

My heart stuttered. I hadn’t realized how terrified I was of her saying anything else until the relief flooded through me. “Yes,” I said too quickly, then bit my lip. “I mean, if that’s OK. I’m still working on… figuring things out.” I had to force myself not to wring my hands. I didn’t used to be like this. I didn’t want to be like this now.

Ada pushed the clipboard toward me. “That’s what we’re here for. I just need your signature.”

I picked up the pen, my fingers trembling. I gripped it tighter, trying to control the shake as I signed my name. Ada watched without commenting on my obvious anxiety. She was good at that -- giving people dignity even when they were falling apart.

“Thank you,” she said, taking back the clipboard. “The extension is for another sixty days. After that, we’ll reassess.”

I tried to smile but couldn’t quite commit. I knew how pathetic I looked by not getting back in the game of life, but the thought of trying to explain the abrupt departure from my previous job, of interviewing with visible bruises, of having to be around strange men who might remind me of Eric, could send me into a panic attack.

“Jade, honey? You OK?”

I glanced up at Ada when she spoke. Short answer? No. I wasn’t OK. Better answer? “Fine,” I said. “Just tired.”

Her eyes softened with understanding that made me want to crawl under the table. “There’s a resume workshop on Thursday. No pressure, but it might help to interact with others. And group therapy tomorrow at four is open to everyone.” She put her hand on my shoulder. “There’s no rush, you know. I’m checking boxes because it’s required. You take as much time as you need. We call this place Haven for a reason.”

When she left, I let my shoulders slump, exhausted by the brief interaction. Across the room, a woman about my age was showing her daughter how to braid string into a friendship bracelet. Another was helping her son with what looked like math homework. I’d wanted that once. A family. To be all domesticated and stuff.

Eric had told me he had the same dream. Turned out, his dream had been more about building himself up by keeping someone under his foot. It had been me since before college. Then he wanted Mia but wanted his fucking mind games with me too.

I picked at a dangling hangnail until it bled, sucking the small wound. I’d come to Haven because the nice lady who’d brought me said this place would keep Eric away from me. No questions asked. I stayed in Haven because I was officially homeless and had nowhere else to go. The sad truth was, I hated the thought of leaving this place because I’d never stayed anywhere I felt safer than I did at Haven.

What came next? The question circled in my head like a vulture. I couldn’t stay here forever, but I couldn’t imagine a life outside these walls either. Not when Eric was still out there.

I wrapped my arms around myself, pressing against the bruises on my ribs until the physical pain drowned out everything else.

The crash shattered the afternoon quiet like a gunshot. I didn’t see what happened. First, the ball bouncing across the linoleum, then a little boy chasing after it. One or both of them hit the table where a ceramic vase sat just a little too close to the edge. I only registered the sound as it exploded against the floor, blue and white shards spraying outward like shrapnel. My body reacted before my mind could catch up. Flinch. Gasp. Arms over face. Heart instantly hammering against my ribs as if trying to punch its way out of my chest.

The rational part of my brain knew it was just a broken vase. Just a child’s accident. But my body was already in full survival mode, dumping adrenaline into my bloodstream. My ears rang. My vision tunneled. My muscles coiled tight, ready to do anything I could to avoid what usually came after a crash.

I sucked in a sharp breath that hurt my throat. Held it. Forgot how to release it. The common room had gone still. Through the gaps between my fingers, I saw women frozen in various postures of interrupted activity. Some exchanged knowing glances and looks of sympathy, a language survivors recognized as a trigger response. Others deliberately turned away, giving me privacy in my panic, or maybe protecting themselves from the mirror I’d become.

“I’m so sorry,” the little boy’s mother murmured, already on her knees, gathering ceramic pieces into her cupped palm. “Tyler, go put your ball away, please.” Her voice was tight but controlled. Tyler looked terrified, his lower lip trembling as he clutched the rubber ball to his chest and scurried away.

“It’s fine,” someone said. “Just an accident. Our fault for having something not kid-proof in here.”

“I’ve got a dustpan,” another woman offered, heading toward the supply closet.

I forced my arms down, away from my face. Attempted a smile that probably looked more like a grimace. My hands wouldn’t stop shaking, but I couldn’t just sit there like a broken doll while everyone else handled the situation. I slid from my chair and knelt beside the boy’s mother.

“Let me help,” I said, reaching for a larger piece of ceramic.

She glanced up at me, her expression a careful blank. “Thanks.”

My fingers trembled so badly I couldn’t pick up the shard. I tried again. Failed again. The third time I managed to grasp it, but my hand shook so hard that I dropped it almost immediately. It clattered against the floor, breaking into smaller pieces.

“Sorry,” I whispered, mortified.

“We’re all a hot mess,” she said with a watery smile. “How about we do the best we can and understand we’re all ghosts.”

The woman with the dustpan and a hand vacuum arrived, sweeping carefully to get the larger pieces before using the vacuum. I tried again to help but my breath came in shallow gasps that weren’t bringing in enough oxygen. Black spots danced at the edges of my vision. I was going to pass out and make an even bigger scene.

I stumbled to my feet and backed away, scanning for somewhere to retreat. The bathrooms were too far. The dormitory area was up a flight of stairs. My legs couldn’t even manage to make it to the elevator much less make it up a flight of stairs. Luckily, I found an empty corner by the bookshelves, partially screened by a large potted plant. I made my way there on wobbly legs, pressing my back against the wall and sliding down until I sat on the floor, knees pulled tight to my chest.

I used to be good at talking myself down from the ledge. Back when the panic attacks were just garden variety anxiety and not the souvenirs of systematic abuse. I tried now, struggling to find the rhythm of controlled breathing that had once been second nature.

I pressed my forehead against my knees, trying to make myself smaller. A tear leaked from the corner of my eye, sliding hot down my cheek. Then another. I wiped them away furiously with the heel of my hand. I was not going to cry in this fucking corner like a child because someone broke a vase. I was not going to be this broken thing Eric created.

But the tears kept coming, silent but unstoppable. They weren’t really about the vase or even about the flashback. They were tears of pure frustration at my body’s betrayal and my mind’s inability to distinguish past from present. And for how pathetic I’d been for so long. Now I had nothing.

* * *

I’d come to an agreement with Hannah. I help out with housekeeping, cooking, and anything else needed in Haven, and I could stay longer. At least, that was the agreement I proposed. She’d smiled and told me that of course I could stay. That there were no conditions and I could stay as long as I wanted. As safe as I felt here, I knew it would be a long while before I “wanted” to leave. And also, I didn’t really believe they’d let me stay here much longer. It was past time I left. I just couldn’t make myself go.

Now, I pushed the supply caddy, which seemed to weigh a ton, its wheels squeaking as I pushed it down the hallway. Hannah had asked me to deliver fresh towels and toiletries to the linen closet where everyone got what they needed. A simple task, but it got me away from the sympathetic glances after my meltdown in the common room. The building designated for Haven had been a former warehouse. But someone had converted the place into a very comfortable, very soothing atmosphere inside.

I passed the small office and approached the security station that controlled access to the entire building. The security here was insane and every security guard working here took their job very seriously. No one got inside Haven who didn’t belong. The door was ajar, and I slowed as I heard Hannah’s voice from inside, clearer and more authoritative than her usual soft-spoken manner.

“-- have to adjust the rotations since Noose’s funeral. We can’t leave any gaps in coverage, especially at night. The restraining orders don’t mean shit if --”

I hesitated outside the door, not wanting to interrupt but also curious about the changes happening around us. Noose had been killed just before I came here. He’d died in the same fire that had nearly claimed the lives of Mia and Oktober, as well as Pain and Inferno. The Kiss of Death MC had been providing security for Haven since its founding, a fact that had initially terrified me until I realized they were the only thing standing between the women here and the men who might come looking for them. More than once, I’d been ashamed of the way Eric had called these men criminals. I’d learned that, while most of them had killed, they’d all had good reasons for what they’d done and had taken their punishment.

I knocked lightly on the doorframe, the caddy parked beside me. “Sorry to interrupt. I have supplies for --”

The words died in my throat as I stepped into the doorway and saw who Hannah was talking to. A large man filled the small security office with his presence across from Hannah. The Kiss of Death leather cut stretched across shoulders that could have belonged to a linebacker. His dark hair was buzzed short on the sides but longer on top, and a shadow of stubble darkened his jaw. But it was his hands that held my attention. They were large and weathered with scars across the knuckles. I didn’t know this man, but he obviously belonged to the club.

I froze, instinctively. I didn’t like strange men. Most of the women here had issues with strange men. I gaped at the guy, feeling like prey caught in a predator’s trap.

“Jade, perfect timing,” Hannah said, seemingly oblivious to my reaction. “This is Rip. He’s taking over Noose’s security detail.” She turned to the man. “Rip, this is Jade. She’s been with us about three weeks now and has been helping with a few chores. She’s been a lifesaver in so many ways.” Hannah gave me a smile before reaching out to take my hand and tug me farther inside the office. “If you can’t find something, find Jade. She’ll either know where it is or if we have whatever it is you need.”

I managed a tight nod, my throat too dry for words. This man was here to protect us, not harm us. I knew he wouldn’t be here if he were a bad person, but my body didn’t get the memo.

“Rip’s going to be handling the night shift security,” Hannah explained, filling the quiet.

I nodded again, stealing a glance at the man from beneath my lashes. I found it difficult to read the guy. His gaze was direct and penetrating, taking in everything around him. When they met mine, I felt a jolt of emotion. Not fear, exactly, but I knew he could see straight through to the very core of me and saw the wreckage hidden underneath the surface. His eyes were intense but kind.

The longer he looked at me, the more his gaze narrowed. He looked almost startled. He turned his head slightly toward me and rubbed the center of his chest absently as though it ached.

I dropped my gaze immediately, studying the scuffed toes of my shoes. My chest tightened with the familiar anxiety that men triggered in me. This man saw things I didn’t want him to see. I knew it like I knew my own name.

“Good to meet you,” I managed to say. I backed toward the door, eager to escape the intensity of his gaze. “I should let you get back to it.”

Rip nodded once. He still hadn’t spoken, but somehow his silence wasn’t threatening. It felt considerate. As if he understood that his voice might be too much for me right now.

I slipped out of the doorway and leaned against the wall in the corridor, breathing deeply to slow my racing heart. Through the partially open door, I could hear Hannah resuming their conversation as if they hadn’t been interrupted.

I pushed away from the wall and headed back toward the common area, my mind replaying those few moments of eye contact. There had been something oddly comforting about the weight of his gaze. Rip hadn’t given me the predatory assessment I’d grown accustomed to from Eric but simply waited. Watchful in the way a guardian surveys their charge.

Strangely, for the first time since arriving at Haven, I felt truly seen. Not as a victim or someone who’d betrayed her best friend, but as a person worth protecting.

 

 

About the Author

Marteeka Karland is an international bestselling author who leads a double life as an erotic romance author by evening and a semi-domesticated housewife by day. Known for her down and dirty MC romances, Marteeka takes pleasure in spinning tales of tenacious, protective heroes and spirited, vulnerable heroines. She staunchly advocates that every character deserves a blissful ending, even, sometimes, the villains in her narratives. Her writings are speckled with intense, raw elements resulting in page-turning delight entwined with seductive escapades leading up to gratifying conclusions that elicit a sigh from her readers.

Away from the pen, Marteeka finds joy in baking and supporting her husband with their gardening activities. The late summer season is set aside for preserving the delightful harvest that springs from their combined efforts (which is mostly his efforts, but you can count it). To stay updated with Marteeka's latest adventures and forthcoming books, make sure to visit her website. Don't forget to register for her newsletter which will pepper you with a potpourri of Teeka's beloved recipes, book suggestions, autograph events, and a plethora of interesting tidbits.

 

Author on Instagram & TikTok: @marteekakarland

Author on Facebook

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15




RABT Book Tours & PR