SHOPPING FOR A BILLIONAIRE’s BABY by JULIA KENT

Shopping for a Billionaire’s Baby
Julia Kent
(Shopping for a Billionaire #13)
Publication date: April 24th 2018
Genres: Adult, Comedy, Romance

You know what’s even better than marrying a billionaire? Having his baby.

We’re ready. We’ve studied and planned, read all the birth and labor books, researched parenting classes, consulted our schedules, and it’s time.

And by we I mean me.

Declan’s just ready for the “have lots of sex” part. More than ready.

But there’s just one problem: my husband and his brother have this little obsession with competition.

And by little, I mean stupid.

That’s right.

We’re not just about to try to bring a new human being into the world.

We have to do it better, Faster, Stronger.

Harder.

McCormick men don’t just have babies.

They engage in competitive billionaire Babythons.

I thought the hardest part about getting pregnant would be dealing with my grandchild-crazed mother, who will go nuts shopping for a billionaire’s baby.

Wrong.

Between conception issues, my mother’s desire to talk to the baby through a hoo-haw cam, a childbirth class led by a drill sergeant and a father-in-law determined to sign the kid up for prep school before Declan even pulls out, my pregnancy has turned out to be one ordeal after the other.

But it’s nothing — nothing — compared to the actual birth.

Shopping for a Billionaire’s Baby is the newest book in Julia Kent’s New York Times bestselling romantic comedy series.

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EXCERPT:

First morning urine is precious cargo. My Kegel muscles kick in and I halt midstream, panicking, my wet thighs making me slip slightly forward on the toilet seat, and–

I drop the test into the toilet.

“DAMN!” I scream. My vaginal wall muscles are clamped down like the Hoover Dam holding back an unexpected early thaw, and I involuntarily shake the urine off my hand, flinging droplets all over the rest of me. I jump up, turn around, and try to retrieve the ruined test.

Just then, a whuff of cold air assaults my bare ass. Declan has apparently opened the bathroom door.

“What’s wrong? I heard you scream. Are you…” His voice trails off as I look at him, hand in the toilet, naked ass on display, single-handedly proving that taking a pregnancy test is, in fact, rocket science after all.

“We have got to stop meeting like this,” he says softly, closing the door before bursting into laughter.

Now I know why they sell pregnancy tests in packages of two.

Also on audio:

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Author Bio:

New York Times and USA Today Bestselling Author Julia Kent writes romantic comedy with an edge. From billionaires to BBWs to new adult rock stars, Julia finds a sensual, goofy joy in every contemporary romance she writes. Unlike Shannon from Shopping for a Billionaire, she did not meet her husband after dropping her phone in a men’s room toilet (and he isn’t a billionaire). She lives in New England with her husband and three sons in a household where the toilet seat is never, ever, down.

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~ Book Blitz ~ WEST BEGG by Mari.Reiza Humour / Satire

About the Book:

 

A hilarious yet dark novel on how power, and the lack of it, shapes people. 



Luca’s job is being a punch bag, a tea towel, a toilet bowl, to the undeniable and unbreakable king of egg power proud of averaging two hundred flights a year to visit chicken markets around the world. 

Anna moved to Catania to work for caper queen Madame Sicily, fulfilling varied tasks from picking up Céline swimwear before it hits the runways to recovering badly parked Lamborghinis. 

La Revolução dreams through buildings but builds parking spaces, when she’s not helping launder money for her boss’s dad’s dodgy charities. 

And finally, Carolina is out to conspire with Paquita who met their boss the German in a red lit booth, to understand why the man has to drain the passion out of everything. Their fates will inevitably collide. The question is, will their bosses get what they deserve? 

Book Links:

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Quotes:

At the office, Macco One’s sickened secretary barely acknowledges me. She firmly maintains that it is sickening to work in our place, Macco One’s place, says that it is not about the chickens but the cocks, ‘Too many big cocks flying around.’ I have never known her on a high. I leave the box of Indian sweets I bought her by the pot plant on her desk and hope that they poison her, ending her ordeal. (Luca)

The thought of my boss’s iron calves ungoverned scares me. Is it panic or an absolute type of anger? Does he know what he is angry about?’ Ignorance about one’s anger can be harder to deal with than deliberate devil. Sometimes I have nightmares where he chops my arm with the drama of a man picking cherries. (Carolina)

I cannot leave the swimwear on the bike. It is a church, Saint Agatha. No one should steal it by the virgin’s gate. But even so. These people cannot help themselves. They all want to look good at Mondello this summer. (Anna)

Irajá, which means beehive, is stunning, very pale with dark hair, so pale you can see millions of small blue veins through the skin of her face and neck, giving her a magical tinge. This is not the kind of woman you can imagine doing ordinary things like shitting or clipping her toenails. (La Revolução)

I’m crying on Paquita’s shoulders yet again. Her jumper is cheap cashmere. She is small and delicate and perfectly proportionate like a kid’s mannequin. And I am totally aware that this is the strangest of arrangements. (Carolina)

She is not Fuksas. Even if Irajá is convinced that in her heart she is a great architect with a social vision. I guess it keeps her away from pretending to be something more dangerous. When she purses her lips, the natives show fright on their faces and for a moment I expect a long viper tongue to come out pushing against her lips. I think they do too… This pale bundle of nerves is so thin and young, must be less than fifty kilos, below twenty five years of age. Any of those native hands could easily crush her to the ground, but they are afraid. (La Revolução)

Read a Snippet:

I stick out like a sore thumb on my bike in this town, my red curls to the wind, racing through the streets in the old centre, between the ruins of the Greco-Roman theatre in Piazza Stesicoro, up Via Etnea to Piazza Università. That is my first scheduled stop today, at a friend of Madame Sicily. This friend has had the latest Céline swimwear delivered three weeks before it hits the runways.

Madame Sicily had a preview of the collection sent last week in high resolution on her iPhone 6. I printed it for her two days ago on high quality glossy paper, as instructed. She glanced at it in the car whilst travelling to an important meeting in an upmarket country club outside Catania. I waited in the car with Rodolfo, her driver, whilst she went into the meeting, and when Madame Sicily came out she said the meeting had gone well. She gave me back the glossy papers, she had ticked five models. She was happy.

As a result, today I am carrying a 1,500 euro cheque in my right hand pocket. It’s heavy against the light fabric of my ten euro H&M pantacourt that fit me well last summer. I am wearing it today despite it being only April; April is already hot in Catania. The cheque will cover the purchase of an immaculate white bandeau one-piece with a large rose at the right hand breast, a red playboy in Lycra with plunge halter neck to the belly button around which there is an embroidered daisy motif, a Bond girl bombshell two piece in neon orange, and two other plunging necklines, one white and another black, both with the traditional Céline chains design in gold. Madame Sicily has said to her friend Maria Luisa that she needs to get these pieces today, to try them on and decide before her May break on the Agnellini boat in Sardinia. She says if she does not have them today, she will not go. They and the smuggled collagen suppositories from some doctor in Miami are her two requirements ahead of this trip.

Madame Sicily is constantly threatening people in this way and it works for her. So much so that I would go and get these costumes collected today even if I were run over by a maniac en route. I would still get to Maria Luisa, down on my bloodied knees. She would have the package ready, for her own sake, and I would pick the stuff and get to deliver it to the office on time, stain free. I would delicately hand it over to Madame Sicily, and only then I would be allowed to die.

(Anna)

About the Author:

Mari.Reiza was born in Madrid in 1973. She studied at Oxford University and worked as an investment research writer and management consultant for twenty years in London, before becoming an indie fiction writer. Also by her, Inconceivable Tales, Death in Pisa, Sour Pricks, A Pack of Wolves, STUP, Mum, Watch Me Have Fun!, Marmotte’s Journey, West bEgg, PHYSICAL, Room 11, Triple Bagger, Opera and the Retreat, all available on Amazon.

Author Links:

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Nikki Loves Her Hair by Nailah Jones

 

Nikki is a young girl who loves everything about her natural hair. She loves all of the hairstyles she can do and matching with mommy and friends!
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Nailah Jones is a natural haired girl from Snellville, Georgia. After years of getting relaxers, she realized her natural hair better fit her identity and later decided to go back to her natural roots. She has now had locs for two
years and counting. Nailah thinks that it is important to let other natural girls in her community know how beautiful their natural hair is, so they never have to wonder!

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CASTING STONES by Jay Beck

  • What inspires you to write?
I’m an only child and entertained myself for long hours when I was a young.  I loved stories, jokes, and my family was very outgoing, verbal and funny.  I loved to listen to people tell stories, to read stores, films and the inspiration was that I wanted to be able to “do that.”
  • How often do you write?
I generally write every day unless something comes up to force a distraction.  It’s a natural thing that I HAVE to do. If I don’t get to write something…a sentence… a phrase or description of something or someone I feel cheated.
  • Do you have a set schedule for writing, or are you one of those who write only when they feel inspired?
I’m a morning person, well, after coffee, and that is when my mind is fresh to write.  I’ve found that I can think of an issue the night before and by the morning I have a better idea about how to express that concern.  Sometimes, however I jump up in the middle of the night to write down a thought that has come to me, least it totally vanishes by the morning’s light.  I go over and edit what I’ve written at different times as that is not as creative, but at least I can see what I don’t like and mark it for a revisit later, when I’m fresh like in the morning.
  • How hard was it to sit down and actually start writing something?

 

Not hard for me.  I don’t force things.  That usually has a bad outcome.
  • Do you aim to complete a set number of pages or words each day?
No.  Turns out I usually get 2-3 pages a day on average.  Sometimes that is spread all over the book as I go back over a sentence in one place and add a fresh paragraph in another.  If I have a scene that I’m planning and concentrate on it, I can get 2-3 pages done sometimes before the juice goes flat. 
  • Writers are often associated with loner tendencies; is there any truth to that? 
Well it’s hard to write in the middle of a crowd.  I think the act of putting words down on paper almost has to be solitary.
  • Do you think writers have a normal life like others? 
I do.  Although the routine of when I write is less spontaneous than not writing, I can’t say the rest of it is not normal.  How else would I get ideas if not among people?   
  • Do you set a plot or prefer going wherever an idea takes you?
Often, I have an outline of where I want the story to go, but it works best when the story takes over and goes where it wants to go with me trying to keep up. 
 

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Jay Beck has continued writing about the fascinating adventures of political consultant, Mark Young, in his next book, “Casting Stones.” Set in Greece during the 1985 elections, the historical novel pits the United States against the Soviet Union in a battle over Greece’s future political economic soul.

The novel is set in the turbulent times of airline hijackings, terror bombing and assassinations. The Soviet KGB, Greek secret police and terrorists all conspire against Mark Young as he tries to win a national election while simultaneously rescuing the most valuable ancient sculpture ever created.

Mark is torn between the turmoil in Greece and a critical situation threatening to end his relationship with his girlfriend, Vicki back in Washington, D.C. All of these diverse threads come together in an unexpected and thrilling conclusion.

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By writing fiction, I’ve try to expand on my history and the events I have observed. I still have a long way to go in tapping into all of that rich material, particularly since politics and entertainment so often go hand in hand, as I hope I have demonstrated in my work. These will be exciting areas for me to investigate and discuss while I continue to write about them. As I mentioned earlier, the third book in the trilogy concerns the interactions between the campaigns and the time of history of Ross Perot, Bill Clinton, and George Bush, a vast political world for me to plumb. I have stories to tell.

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FINAL YEAR by MJ MOORES

Find it: Goodreads, Amazon

Flawed Attraction Romances Icon - Campus

Graduation can be killer…

Beth pushes beyond her comfort zone to prove a sociology thesis. She turns a chance meeting with a known player into a personal experiment on first impressions. Weaving herself into casual meetings with the guy reinforces her assumptions… until she’s no longer the one pursuing him.

Jeremy’s only serious relationship is with his studies as he competes for the coveted post-grad theoretical chem spot with Dr. Young. When the campus goes into lockdown and everyone is evacuated to the stadium, his habit of “fun only” friendships turns into a curse.

Can he trust a skittish girl he’s known for ten days to help him find his not-so-theoretical chem project or will her assumptions about him keep her at arm’s length?

Final Year – a fast-paced new adult romantic suspense that keeps you guessing at every turn.

EXCERPT; PANIC

If Beth had known befriending Jeremy’s womanizing ass would lead to this, the apology she’d made seven days ago might have been her farewell, too.

Shivering from a brief gust of wind, she zipped up her jacket and continued to pace. The dim light of the underground passageway clashed with the harsh, grey November day breaking through the ivy at the tunnel mouth. The intermittent wail of the campus alarm made Beth’s nerves spike. I should be heading to the stadium with everyone else, just like I told him. Why am I still here?

Echoes of curiosity jarred with concern as passing voices filtered into the tunnel from the distant crowd beyond the treeline. 

I’m not supposed to be here.

You can’t ignore what you saw. If anything happens to him between the tunnel and the stadium, you’ve only yourself to blame. 

But he’s a sweet talker. Used to getting his way–

“Gah!” She pressed her fists to her forehead fighting against common sense, logic, the need to follow the rules and still do what’s right. The war between her brain and her gut waged on as the scent of the dank earth and moist concrete clung to the hairs at the back of her nose. Beth drew a deep breath through her mouth to avoid the scent of decay.

A pebble clattered from the depths of the darkened tunnel. She froze. Her heart raced–Run! Leave. Follow the crowd. That could be anyone. She wanted to obey, but couldn’t. Beth barely knew the guy but something–Footsteps. Foot drags. A stuttered stumble and a familiar curse echoed from down the tunnel.

“Jeremy?” Elspeth breathed.

The drip from some distant pipe echoed.

“Elle? You stayed?” He sucked air in between his teeth.

She gave a grim smile at Jeremy’s nickname for her, then breached the darkness of the deeper tunnel, dragging her frantic heart back into the abyss. Relax already. It’s probably a false alarm. Precautionary evacuation. The light in this section burned out, and lack of maintenance meant it would stay that way. The imposing darkness had nothing to do with someone threatening the campus.

In the gloom, she found Jeremy hunched over, leaning heavily against the wall. One hand cradled his head, the other gripped the concrete with pale knuckles. The whiteness of them made her skin crawl, or was it the damp air? She touched his arm.

“What’s wrong?”

“Lack of insulin – catching up to me. Making me nauseated. Weak.” He drew in a heavy breath.

“We have to get to the stadium. I’m sure they’ll have medics there–”

“No.”

“What?”

“No. Just get me to the pharmacy. I need my medicine.”

“It wasn’t in your room?”

He pushed himself from the wall and stumbled forward. His knees gave out. Shit! He’s not acting.

“Okay! Just give me a minute.” Beth surveyed the situation. He’d forgotten his coat and the wind would pierce his sweater in no time. She liked oversized jackets, but his shoulders were twice a broad as hers. Still… Beth unzipped her coat and pulled her right arm from her sleeve before kneeling down beside Jeremy. Loose gravel bit into her knees. She couldn’t see him well, but the droop of his neck and outline of his parted lips told her she’d made the right decision. Six days ago, Beth had been mistaken and she couldn’t afford a repeat of that ignorance. “Put your arm across my back and grip my left shoulder.” He placed it over the coat.

Under my coat, Jeremy. The temperature has dropped. Wind chill.”

He carefully slid his arm across her back. She allowed him to breach her bubble of comfort. The jacket pulled tight and tugged against the strain. A brash flitting of her heart startled Beth, causing her to stiffen. Get it together, Donaldson! You’re barely friends. She made herself shift closer to his lean torso and turned her head toward him as she draped the open-half of her jacket across his back. The tip of her nose accidently brushed his ear. He startled at the contact. She couldn’t help but wonder if the jolt was from her unwanted touch or from the feel of her heart pounding against the side of his chest. What are you doing? Is this really necessary? Just get him to safety already!

“Grab the sleeve. Slide it on if you can. Make sure your shoulder’s covered.” Beth slid her hand across his back, noting the contour of each taut muscle and caught her breath. It had been a long time since she’d been this close to a guy. Stop it. You’re not his type. He’s not your type. She moved her fingers, searching for the best grip to help him up, even as their bodies crushed against each other inside her woefully undersized jacket. His torso expanded and contracted as she felt him force slow, deep breaths. Shifting her arm across his spine, Beth settled her hand just under his ribcage.

“Ready? Now.”

Grunting and gasping, they struggled to stand. Beth gripped him tighter for stability. The alarm wailed yet another warning, followed by a cop’s bull-horn-voice directing the masses to the stadium. Jeremy flinched, sensitive to the harsh sound, as always. The hair on Beth’s arms and the back of her neck rose. Her insides tried to flee one way as she forced herself to go in another direction.

They stumbled then walked as one, slowly matching their steps and finding a rhythm – just as they had muddled their way these past weeks chatting over coffee.

Beth used her free arm as a counter-balance. The ivy at the opening to the tunnel wisped against her face. She shut her eyes against the daylight.

“Wait. I can’t see yet,” she said. He stopped, allowing her eyes to adjust. She cracked a lid, slowly gaining her bearings. The crisp air bit at her throat as she searched the branching walkway before them. A wall of bushes blocked all but the top of nearby stores.

“Where’s your pharmacy?” Beth asked, squinting. The noise of the evacuation hit her full-force now they were outside, but no one walked on this side of the hedge.

“Other side of the bushes,” he said.

“Have you come this way before?” she asked.

“Yes.”

“We’re surrounded by nine-foot hedges. Which way?” She turned them as she looked left and right.

He vaguely waved his hand. “Through. It thins a bit to the right, I believe.”

Beth moved them closer. Surprisingly, there was a break in the trunks covered by drooping branches.

“How on earth did you find this spot?”

“I’ve had a lot of time on campus to discover the best routes to and from certain places. This was a happy accident in my second year.”

“Something tells me this isn’t the first time you’ve stumbled over here with a girl.”

He smirked. She glanced at his loose, shaggy, blond curls, and ice-grey eyes before shaking her head. Leave him. Just leave him. He won’t care about you once he’s got his meds. You’re only a tool, Beth. Yeah, a real tool. But she couldn’t leave, and not just because she felt the quake of his ailing body… From the moment she first saw him, her intuition overruled plain and simple logic.

They pushed through the greenery and emerged on the local campus road, thick with students and professors heading down the extra-wide path toward the stadium.

Jeremy stumbled over the curb. Beth cursed herself for not warning him, tightened her grip around his waist, and widened her stride to compensate. His fingers dug into her shoulder as he staggered, dragging her farther into the crowd. People swarmed around them, jostling and commenting with disgust.

“Which way?” she asked. He leaned on her, his weight making her stagger.

“Should be just ahead. Shop’s in the corner of the plaza.”

Beth squinted through the crowd. The excitement ran the gamut from near-running strides on the edge of hysteria to small groups of friends pushing and shoving each other as if they knew this was a false-alarm. She could still see the top of the long building adjacent them, but no store signs. Too many people. Beth didn’t often travel this way on campus, it always felt so isolated from the main concourse and lecture halls. But not now. She could barely move.

Faceless bodies blocked her view. No one bothered to clue-in that they needed help. Disembodied voices assaulted her ears as she elbowed her way through the throng of students.

“–might be terrorism!” a group of girls shrieked, then whimpered as they passed. Jeremy’s body stiffened.

“–the police say emergency evacuation but no explanation,” a guy tried to make sense of the situation.

Beth pushed them through a small break, but the crowd’s comments lingered like an aftershock.

“I thought I saw the police with the Dean. Whatever it is, it’s serious.”

“–think it’s a bomb. What else could it be?” Jeremy’s breath hitched at the comment and he coughed, his whole body shuddering.

The alarm wailed. Both of them jumped. Then the voice of the bull-horn cop carried above everyone. Jeremy slammed his free hand over an ear, bashing his head against Beth’s to cover the other ear.

“Oww. Jer–”

“Keep calm but keep moving. This is an emergency evacuation. Keep calm but keep moving. Head to the stadium.”

Beth glanced along the road, following the weave of bodies down the hill to the safe-zone. 

We have to get out of here. 

No. You promised you’d help him to the pharmacy.

A bulky guy in a red York U jersey cut them off. Beth nearly rebounded off his bicep; his cologne reeked of musk and sweat. Coughing, she turned her head and found her nose buried in Jeremy’s collar. The scent of Irish Spring cleared her head. Travelling against the mob wasn’t helping their situation. Jeremy wavered.

“Steady there!” She squeezed to keep him upright as jolts of fear lit up her nervous-system.

“Not so tight–”

“Sorry.” She let go of his stomach to hug his ribcage instead. He dropped several inches and walked with bent knees. With Jeremy being half-a-foot taller it didn’t make hauling him around any easier.

Beth tripped over a passing foot. Come on!

“Hey! Watch out.” The owner of the foot scowled. Jeremy counter-balanced to help keep them standing. More and more students and professors careened past, yelling and calling to each other; some carried stacks of books, others were on their cell phones waving their hands at people who couldn’t see them, but all headed to the stadium just off campus. Exactly where we should be going, too.

“We’re almost there,” she assured. They were more than half-way across the asphalt path now. A faint ray of sunlight broke through the grey clouds and glinted off a modern-looking glass door above which the word PHARMACY was spelled in red block letters.

“There’s an old guy with silver-streaked hair locking up.” That’s not helpful. “Wait!” Beth called. The bodies on the street absorbed her voice. It disappeared, much the same way she did in a crowd. “Mister–”

Jeremy winced. “–probably Pelbourne.”

“Mr. Pelbourne! Wait!”

He turned. She waved wildly at him. The man dropped his keys when he saw them, a flash of disbelief crossing his face. Then he snatched his keys up and strode the last remaining steps between them. He looped Jeremy’s free arm around his shoulder and helped Beth carry him to the storefront.

“Jeremy, what in God’s name are you doing?” Pelbourne asked.

“My medication–” Jeremy leaned against the display window, trying to breathe slowly, deeply. His curls hung moist and limp as his long fingers left smears of cold sweat on the glass. Beth had never seen him this out-of-sorts, the cocky confidence gone. She pulled the jacket from him, back around her shoulder. The wind didn’t cut into the shop corner as it had out in the open.

“My prescription. I need a refill.”

“What am I supposed to do? They told us to leave immediately. There’s an emergen–”

This is an emergency,” Beth said, following the pharmacist’s gaze as he watched the mass of evacuating people; then he glanced at his watch.

Please,” she said. He had to help, for Jeremy’s sake.

“Where are the pills I gave you a couple of weeks ago? The prescription’s good for a month.”

“Gone,” Jeremy said.

“Gone?”

“Stolen from his dorm room,” Beth clarified, assuming, but it sounded bad even to her ears. She hoped Jeremy’s reputation ended with the ladies and didn’t carry over into selling off his prescriptions. “It’s been over…”

“A week.” Jeremy provided, placing an awkward hand on Pelbourne’s arm. His pale, icy eyes vainly sought a connection with the pharmacist. Beth squeezed her fists tight in the confines of her jacket pockets and stared at the man.

Mr. Pelbourne sighed. His keys jingled as he pulled them out again. I should leave now. The pharmacist can help Jeremy. And yet, Beth found herself resuming her role as a crutch while Pelbourne unlocked the store.

Inside, behind the drug counter, the pharmacist automatically reached for an empty bottle and the medication. Beth sat Jeremy down in a blood-pressure chair. She cringed at the grey wash of his face, making his eyes almost disappear.

“We talked about this,” Pelbourne grumbled, glancing at the time again. “You can’t forget about your medicine even if you don’t need it as often any more. The diabetes is unforgiving – your body is struggling to access your insulin supplies. I–” He opened and closed his mouth a few times then shook his head. “I’m just repeating myself. I’ll put a note on your file. We don’t have time to do this properly. Grab a bottle of water for him, young lady, he’s probably parched.”

“Yes, Mr. Pelbourne–” they said together.

Back outside, Beth waved off the pharmacist’s efforts to help her with Jeremy.

“Are you sure?” Pelbourne asked. 

No. “We’re gonna stop a minute so he can take his meds, then we’ll catch up.”

Jeremy finished a swig of water, “S’okay, Mr. P. We’re right behind you.”

The pharmacist glanced at his watch. “If I didn’t have to meet my wife, I’d– She’s a– Well, she worries and– You sure you’re okay?”

Jeremy nodded. Pelbourne joined the wave of pedestrians heading for the safe zone. Beth turned, leading Jeremy to the parkette behind the plaza. Every nerve in her body screamed she was going the wrong way. They walked with the crowd to the end of the building then moved off toward the manicured green-space just behind.

“Careful, now,” she said, lowering him to a wooden bench. She sat, too, and fought with the cap on his pills as he rested, head down, forearms on knees. Beth stared at him, so lost and alone. Where were his buddies? Did no one else think to check on him? A strange ache welled up in her chest. She swallowed, forcing it down before refocusing. Her freckled skin pulled with tension as the ribbed plastic bit into her flesh. The burn of it grinding against her palm made the image of the sexy red-head Jeremy followed from the restaurant pop to mind; the perky blonde he’d paced himself to meet outside the pub; and the dark-haired, dark-skinned, beauty

leaving the dorm the day of her surprise visit. Each time her cheeks burned with embarrassment. Why the hell am I here? Where are they?

The cap popped. She dropped an Amaryl in his outstretched hand then swiped a tendril of light-brown hair from her face, locking it firmly behind an ear. Downing the pill, Jeremy then chugged the rest of the water. Beth tossed the empty bottle into a nearby bin.

Neither of them spoke.

She stared at his right ear.

He faced the ground.

The wind gusted past and he shuddered. Part of her wanted to slide over and wrap a protective arm around him, and the other part, well, she wasn’t so sure he deserved her walking off right now. Perhaps a week ago, but not now.

“This isn’t going to cure me,” he said.

“Nothing will cure you. I’m not an idiot. It will help. You said it would help. Maybe I should take you to a medic if it’s that bad.”

“No. It doesn’t work that fast. I’ve been off them a while now.”

“It. Will. Help. Maybe I should get you another water.” She stood, ready to search the shops nearby.

“No. I’m fine.”

“You’re not fine.” She flopped down again, jamming her hands into her jacket pockets, wanting to stick her face in front of his to make her point but knowing the futility of it – of pitting her will against his.

“I will be. Besides, I need your help.”

“As much as I should, I promise I won’t leave you here. We’ll go to the stadium toge–”

“I’m not going to the stadium.”

“What?” What now? I can’t–

“I didn’t just go back to my dorm for the medicine.”

“The medicine that wasn’t there?”

“Right. The medicine that I knew wasn’t there. I went back for my experiment.”

Beth bristled. You lied to me? “Why? It’s safe,” she said, her voice clipped, edged with anger.

“Actually, it’s not.”

“What do you mean?”

He briefly massaged his temples with one hand. “My pills weren’t the only things missing.” 

About M.J.:Growing up in Ontario, Canada, MJ was the only child of a single mom. MJ’s passion for the arts ignited at a young age as she wrote

MJ
M.J. MOORES

adventure stories and read them aloud to close family and friends. The dramatic arts became a focus in high school as an aid to understanding character motivation in her writing. Majoring in Theatre Production at University, with a minor in English, she went on to teach both elementary and high school for 10 years throughout Simcoe County.

MJ currently lives with her husband and young son in Caledon, Ontario. She keeps busy these days with her emerging authors’ website Infinite Pathways: hosting writing contests, providing editing services, free publicity tips, book reviews, and opportunities for authors to build their writing platform and portfolio. In addition she writes articles, works freelance writing and editing, and is preparing to launch her first science fiction novel The Chronicles of Xannia: Time’s Tempest on October 1st, 2014. She firmly believes that if she hadn’t been born a Virgo, she would not be half as organized as necessary to accomplish everything in her daily agenda.

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Giveaway Details:

5 lucky winners will win an eBook of FINAL YEAR, International.

Giveaway Link:

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e2389ba2904/?

Tour Schedule:

Week One:

3/4/2019- Lone Tree Reviews– Excerpt

3/5/2019- BookHounds– Guest Post

3/6/2019- Kelly P’s Blog Excerpt

3/7/2019- Lisa Loves Literature– Spotlight

3/8/2019- Down The Rabbit Hole– Excerpt

Week Two:

3/11/2019- ❧Defining Ways❧- Excerpt

3/12/2019- Two Chicks on Books– Excerpt

3/13/2019- Owl Always Be Reading– Excerpt

3/14/2019- Smada’s Book Smack– Spotlight

3/15/2019- Cheyenne Reads Interview

 

via Review / New Release: “The Summer of 1974” by Yael Politis

via Smorgasbord Short Stories – Diana Wallace Peach – March’s Speculative Fiction – A Moment of Alignment by Sally Cronin

via Lent…A 40 Day Fast…What will YOU be giving up???

via Smorgasbord Poetry – Colleen Chesebro Weekly #Poetry Challenge – ‘March Hares’ #etheree by Sally Cronin

SCALES by NICOLE CONWAY

Find it: GoodreadsAmazonB&NTBD 

About the Book

Title: SCALES (Spirits of Chaos, #1)
Author: Nicole Conway
Pub. Date: March 5, 2019
Publisher: Owl Hollow Press
Formats: Paperback, eBook
Pages: 300
Find it: GoodreadsAmazonB&NTBD

When New York City faces the threat of an ancient evil, a teenage boy must use a magical bracelet to transform into a monster-slaying dragon superhero.

Koji Owens is the new kid … again. As the only son of an Air Force F-16 pilot, he’s learned to adapt and survive every time they move. It’s not easy starting over with new friends and schools every two years, but when the Owens family makes their final move to New York, Koji finally has hope for a normal high school life—that is, until he finds a strange bracelet in his locker.

Transformed into a storm-summoning dragon warrior, Koji finds himself caught up in a world of ancient powers, secret identities, and colossal monsters threatening to destroy his new home. But these awesome powers come with strings attached, and revealing his true identity could mean losing everything he loves. With his family and friends now in mortal danger and New York City in flames, Koji must find the courage to become the hero they need and face down an enemy hiding in plain sight.

A comic-obsessed teenage misfit embraces his inner hero in this action-packed adventure that will leave you ready to get your scales on!

EXCERPT

CHAPTER 1

Ever had a bowl of cereal call you a loser?

That’s how my day started.

Sitting alone at a table in the hotel lounge, I stared down into my bowl of Alphabet Puffs. There it was, plain as day. L-O-S-E-R. The soggy cereal bits floated innocently in my milk, like none of this had been planned ahead of time. Talk about bad omens.

I tried to ignore it. It was probably just a coincidence, right? I mean, who ever heard of divining the future out of a bowl of cereal? Cereal wasn’t going to ruin this day for me.

“Morning, Koji,” my dad called across the lobby as he strolled through the revolving glass door. His outfit drew a strange look from the receptionist as he made his way over to join me at the table. He wore his standard, olive-green flight suit with matching green combat boots—the same uniform I’d seen him in since…well, as long as I could remember. Tucking his navy-blue flight cap into the big pocket on the leg of his suit, he flashed me a quick grin as he sat down. “Got everything packed up?”

I nodded to the two giant rolling suitcases next to my chair. “Yup. Ready to go.”

“Excellent.” Dad sat back and yawned, rubbing the bridge of his nose. “The traffic is murder out there. It’s going to take some getting used to. Good thing we’re close enough to your new school you can walk. It’ll take me an hour just to get to the university. And that’s on a good day.”

“Did you see our new place?”

He smiled again. “Sure did. I think you’ll like it. Your room has a great view. And, hey, no more sharing a bathroom. You’ve got your own this time.”

“Sweet!” I sprang out of my chair and seized one of my rolling bags. “Let’s go.”

Dad followed, chuckling and rolling my second bag. After checking out of the hotel, we made our way into the chilly, early morning air and caught a cab. It took a minute or two to cram my stuff into the trunk, but then we were on our way, headed for Yonkers, where our new life was supposed to begin.

The streets of New York churned and buzzed with early morning activity as they slid past the back window of the cab. I caught a glimpse of the cabbie eyeing my dad curiously in the rearview mirror. Dad had been getting those kinds of looks basically since we stepped off the plane. Growing up as a military brat, I’d always seen Dad wear flight suits. It was the standard outfit he wore to work every day. In fact, it was weirder if he wasn’t wearing it.

My dad flew F-16s for the majority of his twenty-year career in the Air Force. Basically, that meant two things. One, we moved a lot—more than ten times in all. And two, Dad worked nonstop. He’d always come straight from work to catch the end of my soccer or basketball games, to PTA meetings, or to pick me up from a friend’s house after school. He was usually late, but I didn’t mind it much. It wasn’t because he forgot or didn’t care. Dad worked hard to keep things going for us.

But here, Dad had promised me things were going to be different. This was going to be his last post, his “twilight tour,” before he retired from the Air Force for good. As the Detachment Commander for the Air Force ROTC program at his alma mater, he was supposed to have a much less stressful schedule. That meant no more long night-flying weeks when we didn’t see each other because he couldn’t get home before three in the morning. No more weekends spent doing my homework in the squadron bar, eating a lunch of jalapeño popcorn and guzzling down Gatorade while he caught up on whatever mission he needed to plan to fly the next day. No more being babysat by my grandparents or living as an awkward houseguest with another family in the squadron while he went on TDY trips to Alaska or was deployed somewhere overseas.

This was our chance to finally get comfortable, get into a routine that would last, and build a life that I wouldn’t have to say goodbye to in a few months.

Not that my life had been the norm for a military kid. All I had to do was take a look around and see that things were… different for Dad and me. Nearly all of the other families in our squadrons had moms at home. They brought in food and fresh meals for everyone at the office, hosted big parties over the holidays, cooked delicious dinners, came to every school play and sporting event to cheer on their kids, and made sure the family landed on their feet after the chaos of every move.

I didn’t have that.

It wasn’t all bad though. And it’s not like I was bitter about any of it. This was the way things were, and I was comfortable with it. Sure, the moves were rough. We ate a lot of fast food, lived in hotel rooms until we found a good place to rent, and I had to overlook the few minutes here and there where Dad might come dashing in late because he’d gotten hung up at work again. I had to start over every time with a new school, new teachers, and try to build some semblance of a social life from scratch. But I knew Dad had always done the best he could on his own. We were a team. And things here were going to be different—that’s what he’d promised me.

This time, there’d be no looming expectation of another painful goodbye when it was time to leave for the next base.

This time, it was forever.

It was six o’clock when our cab pulled up to the front of a narrow, red brick house with a big cement staircase out front. It stood on a quieter street traffic-wise, but there were still people strolling the sidewalks in both directions. Our new house was tall, narrow, and had three levels. A big, circular window looked out from the top floor.

I unloaded the bags while Dad paid the driver. Then, together, we walked up the front steps and opened the door. It swung in slowly, creaking on rusty hinges. Inside, dim morning light trickled through the wood blinds. The air had a funky, stale smell, like no one had been in here in a long time.

“Not bad for a rental, huh?” Dad said as he closed the door behind us. “There’s plenty of space. Kitchen and living room are down here. My room is on the second floor, yours is on top. There’s a little courtyard out back, too. Pretty cool, huh?”

“Yeah,” I replied, peeking into the kitchen.

It was pretty nice. Old but cozy. The dark floors were weathered, and little bits of plaster had chipped off some of the walls, but everything looked clean. At least, as much as I could see through our mess of stuff. Cardboard boxes were stacked from floor to ceiling in every room like giant, brown building blocks. The couch and both recliners still had plastic wrap around them.

We had a lot of work to do.

Dad rolled my suitcase to the base of the stairs. “I had them put your stuff up there for you and grabbed a few things from the supermarket around the corner.” He glanced down at his watch. “You’ve still got a few hours before school starts if you want to start settling in, but I need to get going.”

“Right,” I recalled. “One-hour commute.”

He groaned, his shoulders slumping and head rolling back with dread. “Anyway, you’ve got all the information for your school, right? Think you can handle it?”

I nodded.

Dad dropped a set of house keys into my hand, snagged an arm around my neck, and pulled me into a gruff hug. “Good. You watch out for yourself today, okay? This place isn’t like Arizona.”

“No kidding. I haven’t seen a single cactus yet.”

He was smirking when he let me go. “All right, I’m gone. Give me a call if you need anything. Oh, and lock up when you leave.”

I waved a hand dismissively. “I’ve got this.”

His expression softened and I caught a hint of sadness flickering in his eyes. “I know you do. Have a good first day, Koji.”

“You too.”

I waited until I heard him shut the front door before I let out a sigh. The bad cereal omen had me worried. It didn’t matter how many times I’d been the new kid—another new school filled with strangers was still daunting. And I always did something extraordinarily stupid on the first day that sealed my fate. It never failed. Sometimes it seemed like the universe was out to get me, although this was the first time it had taunted me by sending messages in my food.

I gnawed the inside of my cheek as I climbed the stairs to my new room. A new school meant a new chance and a clean slate—which normally would have been a good thing. Not for me, though. Cereal omens aside, I didn’t need any extra help making myself look stupid in public. Whether it was tripping on stairs, falling out of busses, spilling mustard down my shirt, walking into the wrong classrooms, or going the whole day with my shirt on backwards, I had a long-standing track record of terrible first days. And this was my last chance, so I couldn’t afford to screw it up. Whatever impression I made here was going to stick.

No pressure, right?

My new room was at the very top of the stairs, just where Dad had said it would be. Long and narrow, the room’s far wall was dominated by the huge round window I had seen from outside. It had a pretty awesome view of the city. The place was bigger than my room in Arizona, which was nice, and the tiny bathroom across the hall was all mine too.

The movers had already assembled my bed frame and plopped the mattress on it. My computer desk, rolling chair, and bookshelves sat against the opposite wall. Somehow the movers got the positioning just how I liked it, with the desk in the middle and the shelves on either side. Dad must have insisted on that. I still had plenty of leftover wall space to display my vintage Marvel posters and Gundam Wing wall scrolls.

A grin wriggled across my lips as I cracked open the first two boxes, surveying all my pristinely wrapped collectable action figures. The other boxes held my comic books and graphic novels. As soon as school was over, I could start setting everything up. Visions of gaming grandeur danced in my head as I pictured my TV mounted on the wall right above my dresser. I could set up my consoles, display my inventory of classic and vintage games, and Dad could help me set up the surround sound. This place would feel like home in no time.

Weaving my way through the towers of boxes labeled KOJI’S ROOM, I looked around for one that might have clothes in it. I used the house keys to cut open a few boxes and dug around to find a nice pair of jeans, a shirt that wasn’t too wrinkled, and my favorite navy-blue canvas jacket. It all smelled like cardboard and packing paper, of course, but at least it was clean.

The hot water in the shower took some finesse to figure out. The handles were ancient, and I couldn’t tell which one was hot or cold because the lettering had been rubbed away probably decades ago. The old pipes made weird groaning noises when I turned them on, and I got a few blasts of ice-cold water to the face before I got the balance of hot and cold right. With that trust bridge officially in embers, I made a mental note to test the temperature with my hand before getting in next time.

I dried off with a beach towel since I couldn’t find the normal bath ones and hurried to get dressed. My favorite pair of black-and-white converse sneakers—the ones with my lucky Dragon Ball Z laces—was the perfect finishing touch to my “first day of school” ensemble. I wiped a few smudges off the toes before I went fishing through the boxes again to find my old school backpack. Lucky for me, it was in the second one I opened.

I dropped the bag on my bed and double-checked to make sure I had everything I needed: a few blank notebooks, a calculator, pens, pencils, my wallet, a spare phone charger, a little cash just in case. That should get me through the first day. I zipped up all the pockets, grabbed my phone off the desk, and charged for the door at full steam.

This was it, day one of my sophomore year, and there was no way I was going to screw it up. Look out New York: Koji Owens has arrived.

I threw open my bedroom door and immediately tripped. My face met the hardwood floor with my backpack smacking me in the back of my head on the way down. For a few seconds I just lay there, asking myself if this was the cereal again.

“No!” I declared and pushed myself up to my knees, whipping around to figure out what I’d tripped over. An uneven floorboard? A nail? One of my precious collectable action figures that had fallen out of a box?

Nope.

Dead center in my bedroom doorway, like someone placed it there for me to find, sat a little package about the size of my fist, tied up neatly in a purple handkerchief. A gift? Who would leave me something like this sitting on the floor?

“Very funny, Dad!” I yelled down the stairs. “You could’ve just handed it to me!”

No answer. Dad had already gone. There was no one else home.

A tingly, nervous, swimming feeling rose in the pit of my stomach. It was a prank. It had to be. Dad had obviously snuck back into the house while I was in the shower and left it for me. I’d just missed it on my way back to my room. Right. That explained everything.

Picking up the package, I tossed it into the top drawer of my desk to open when I got home. If today went anything like all my previous first days at a new school, I might need something to cheer me up later. Then I could give Dad a hard time about making me trip.

I slid the drawer closed and bounded for the stairs, opting to slide the last few steps on the railing before I jogged for the door.

* * *

The front of Saint Bernard’s Catholic School appeared through the tapestry of modern buildings like an ancient monument to a bygone era. The high, Gothic-style towers, stone archways, and tall stained glass windows were a stark contrast to the sleek, urban area surrounding it. It was like something straight out of a superhero movie—an academy for gifted kids that could walk through walls and shoot lasers from their eyeballs. I expected to see a charming old guy in a wheelchair waiting just inside the door, ready to hand me a spandex suit and ask me what my secret superpower was. Somehow, I doubted cereal divination counted.

I hesitated on the curb across the street, watching as a bunch of other high school students about my age wearing gray-and-red uniforms filed up the steps and through the front doors.

My mouth scrunched. Dad hadn’t said anything about uniforms.

Actually, he hadn’t said much about this place at all. Only that it was supposed to be a really good school and I was lucky to have gotten in with my grades. Dad grew up in New Jersey, not far from here, so he knew a few of the admissions council members from when he was in college.

A couple of guys dressed in the school’s uniform walked past close enough to get a good look at my future attire. Pleated slacks? A blazer? They carried the same bags and even had their hair parted and combed in the same exact style. Freaky.

I swallowed hard. Was I joining a cult? My sweaty hands curled into fists. Whatever happened, I had to stay positive. This was going to work. It had to.

I took a deep breath and started toward the front steps.

A loud, scraping crash behind me made me come to a flinching halt. I turned back, staring down at a girl who’d just tumbled onto the sidewalk from the backseat of a slick black sedan. She wore the same red-and-gray uniform, and a big, oddly shaped case lay on the ground next to her.

“Hey, are you okay?” I immediately stepped over and offered a hand to help her back up. “That looks kinda heavy. Need any help?”

The girl blinked up at me in surprise. The second our eyes met, my heart started racing like I’d been electrocuted. She was gorgeous. Lengths of thick golden blond hair fell down her back in loose, shining curls, and her wide, upturned eyes were a dark, stunning shade of bluish green. She was like something cut straight out of a magazine—almost too flawless to be real.

She hesitantly put her small, slender hand in mine and let me help her to her feet. While she stood there, dusting off her pleated gray skirt and examining a fresh tear in one of her stockings, I darted over to grab the huge, hard plastic instrument case.

“I can manage it—really, you don’t have to do that,” she protested and leaned in to try to stop me. Her hand brushed mine again.

My throat went dry. Had she felt that? Our hands touching for just a moment?

I stared at her, trying to remember how to talk while my face flushed like someone had lit my hair on fire. Alarm bells screamed in my head. I had to say something—now! Before it was too late. Something cool, something suave…

“A-are you sure? I really don’t mind,” I croaked. Okay, not my best line, but at least it wasn’t embarrassing. Progress!

She studied me for a moment, those enchanting, catlike eyes darting over my features like she was trying to read my thoughts. Then I saw the corner of her mouth twitch with a brief, faint, but glorious smile. “Okay. If you insist.”

“No problem. I was, uh, just on my way inside, too. Lead the way.” I grabbed the case and started lugging it along, following her up the stairs and into the school.

“I’ve never seen you around before. Is this your first day?” She flicked those dazzling sea-green eyes back at me again, taking another hard look at my clothes.

“Uh, yeah. Actually it is.”

She opened the door to let me by first. “Welcome to Saint Bernard’s, then.”

The school’s main hall was unbelievable. My eyes roamed the domed glass ceilings, marble floors, shiny fixtures, and sloping, red-carpeted stairs, and I slowly set her case down just inside the door so I could take it in. It was like a scene from a Victorian era film. Everything was so elegant and steeped in a sense of elegant antiquity. Basically, the last place in the world a guy like me should be going to school.

Seriously, what was I doing here? Dad was out of his mind if he thought I would ever fit in at a school like this.

I was so busy turning in circles, my jaw still slack as I took it all in, that I didn’t notice the group of students watching me. That is, until one of them giggled. I stopped short, almost crashing into the golden-haired girl who had paused to watch me gaping. Embarrassing.

“You’re late.” A short, sprightly looking girl swaggered up to us with a coy smile playing over her features. Her auburn red hair was arranged into long, silky smooth pigtails, and her light brown eyes glittered with a few flecks of gold. “What happened? I thought you were going to let me copy your notes.”

The blond girl beside me ducked her head slightly. “I’m sorry. Mom and I were…” Her brow furrowed slightly as she stole a peek at me out of the corner of her eye. “It doesn’t matter.”

The redhead nudged my new acquaintance and tipped her chin in my direction. “Claire, who’s this? A friend of yours?”

Claire—so that was her name.

She blushed and shook her head, making her golden curls swish. “No. I mean, we only just met. He’s new.”

“So I see.” The redhead gave a sly little smirk as her eyes traveled down to my sneakers. “Nice shoelaces.”

Somehow, I got the impression that wasn’t really a compliment.

“Thanks,” I answered anyway.

“You should probably go to the main office and let them know you’re here,” the blonde suggested quickly. When she reached for the handle on case, her hand brushed mine again and I got a warm, tingling feeling in the pit of my stomach. Had she done that on purpose? No—surely not.

“I can handle it from here,” she added quietly, avoiding my gaze. “Thank you very much for your help. The main office is down that hall and to the left.”

I opened my mouth to reply, maybe offer my name and ask for hers, but she was gone with her redheaded friend before I could get a word out. I watched them walk away and join another group of students like I didn’t even exist. The redheaded girl’s laughter echoed around the room as they climbed the stairs and disappeared. No one looked back.

Well, so much for that.

I stuffed my hands into my pockets and followed her directions until I found the office where the headmaster’s secretary sat behind a claw-footed mahogany desk. She peered at me over the rim of her narrow reading glasses as I walked in. Once again, I got the full-body scan—like they’d never seen someone in street clothes before. She also seemed to take a similar interest in my shoelaces.

I blushed and looked down at the floor. “Uh, hey. I’m supposed to be starting today. I’m Koji Owens.”

The secretary stood and waved me over to her desk. “Yes, we were expecting you. Right this way. The headmaster would like a word with you. When you’re finished, I’ll have your materials ready and you can go get fitted for your uniforms.” She guided me to a door at the back of the room and opened it, standing by with what seemed to be a forced smile.

I hesitated, staring at the gold placard hanging on door that said HEADMASTER in gold letters.

“You’ll be just fine.” The secretary’s brow arched, as though she could sense my apprehension and wanted me to hurry up. “This meeting is routine. We are a small school, and Headmaster Ignatius likes to go over our rules and policies with new students personally.”

“O-okay.” That didn’t sound so bad. I managed to smile back at her before I went in.

The secretary shut the door behind me, and suddenly I was alone in a dimly lit office. Heavy shades covered the bay windows on the far side of the room, grand bookcases arranged with leather-bound tomes lined the walls, and polished wood plaques, awards, statuettes, and weird little figurines under glass cases were displayed throughout the room. A few of them looked like the kinds of old artifacts you’d see in a museum. Some of them even looked like they might be Egyptian, not that I was an expert.

Behind another big claw-footed desk sat a stiff-looking man in a tailored suit and tie. The clear block of glass on the edge of his desk had the name GERARD IGNATIUS engraved on it in swirling letters. He was probably around my dad’s age, but his cold, severe expression made him seem much older—like his features had been chiseled out of stone. His dark eyes glittered in the gloom as he scanned me from head to toe, finishing with disapproving snort. I guess he had noticed my shoelaces, too.

“Mr. Owens, I presume?” He beckoned for me to sit in the chair directly across from his.

The expensive leather squeaked as I sank into it. “Yes, sir.”

He opened a thick dark red folder with a golden crest leafed onto the front and studied its contents with a pursed lip. “I understand your father is a colonel in the Air Force?”

“Yes, sir,” I repeated.

“Average grades at a public high school. Below average scores on your placement tests. Average IQ, average SAT score, below-average athletic ability. Hmm,” Headmaster Ignatius murmured as he flipped through the pages. Pausing, he looked up with narrowed eyes. “Your father has quite a few friends on the admissions board, I understand. That is the only reason I can logically use to justify your presence here.”

My palms started to sweat.

The headmaster shut the folder and placed his hands on top of it. “Let me be clear: this school is not a joke. Not to me, and not to any of the students or teachers. There are expectations for your conduct and performance, and regardless of who your father knows, you’ll be expected to meet those expectations.”

“Y-yes, sir.”

“You will arrive every morning on time, no exceptions, unless you have a doctor’s excuse in hand. Even on those absent days, you’ll be responsible for making up whatever work you miss. We enforce a strict dress code and infractions will not be tolerated. No jewelry apart from a modest wristwatch or conservative religious medals is allowed. No absurd hair colors or styles. Only black dress shoes are permitted; absolutely no sneakers or tennis shoes.” He paused there, as though making a point about my footwear choice today. “You’ll be given four sets of uniforms, which are to be clean, properly ironed, and without any tears or stains. These uniforms are to be worn whenever you are on school property or attending a school-related event. There are no exceptions unless another faculty member or I give you explicit permission.”

I was starting to wonder if I should be writing any of this down.

“You’ll be issued a bag to carry your things in. Please have it monogrammed with your name in gold as soon as possible. Cell phones and other electronic devices are to be left in your locker during school hours. We have a firm policy on this. The first time you’re found using a phone in class, it will be confiscated and returned only after you’ve served an hour of detention. The second time will result in a meeting with your father. The third time will be suspension. Do you understand?”

I swallowed hard. “Yes, I understand.”

“Excellent. It goes without saying, Mr. Owens, that we are one of the finest private high schools in the country, and we intend to keep it that way. I expect you to behave like a mature, mentally competent individual.” The headmaster pulled a piece of paper out of his desk drawer, folded it crisply in half, and handed it over to me. “This is your class schedule. You’ll be required to take at least one elective class of your choosing per semester. Be aware that some of these classes also hold meetings or require practice sessions that take place outside normal school hours, and you will be expected to attend. You have until the end of the day to decide your elective. Once you’ve chosen, come back and let my secretary know.”

I glanced at the schedule quickly. Geometry, Chemistry, Economics…it all looked pretty standard. That is, until I spotted elective stuff near the bottom of the page. Fencing? Debate Team? Chess Club? Ballroom dancing? Robotics Club? Tennis?

“You are fairly tall for your age—perhaps you would perform well on the swim team,” the headmaster suggested.

I folded up the paper again and tucked it in my coat pocket. “Oh, uh, actually I can’t swim.”

He raised an eyebrow. “Not at all?”

“No, sorry.” I chewed on the inside of my cheek.

Luckily, he didn’t seem to care enough to ask why. “Well, there are plenty of other options for you to choose from.”

I assumed that was it and the meeting was over. But when I started to get up, the headmaster spoke again. “I understand you were involved in a physical altercation at your last school?”

I froze.

Headmaster Ignatius leaned forward to rest his elbows on his desk. He laced his fingers together and let his chin rest on them, watching me with an ominous, probing smile. “The other boy involved was sent to the hospital. You were suspended for a month. In fact, the only thing that spared you from being expelled altogether was the fact that, according to bystanders, you had been taunted and physically assaulted previously by this particular student.”

My shoulders tensed. I hung my head and stared at the floor, my heart pounding so hard I could feel it in my fingertips. I should’ve known this would come up again.

“There are police reports, reports from the other students who saw the fight, and even one from your father. But you didn’t make a statement,” he said. “So in your own words, I want to know what happened. Why did you beat him so badly? You certainly don’t strike me as a fighter. Or at the very least, not an instigator.”

My pulse roared in my ears. Every beat made my skin feel hot and my breathing become deeper. I focused on the tops of my sneakers as I fought not to let my mind go back to that day.

“Mr. Owens?”

“He kept getting in my face and calling me names,” I growled in spite of myself. “He told me to go back to…” I stopped, setting my jaw as I tried to keep my voice steady. “I-it doesn’t matter. He said a lot of things. None of it matters now.”

“So you hit him?”

“No. Dad told me just to ignore it; some people are just like that. But I saw him doing the same thing to another girl from our class. She’d just moved from Korea and didn’t speak much English yet. He kept grabbing her and trying to scare her. I told him to stop. So he punched me in the stomach and spit on me.” Slowly, I lifted my gaze to meet the headmaster’s. “Then I hit him.”

The headmaster and I stared at one another from across his desk while the seconds ticked by, counted noisily by the grandfather clock in the corner of the room. Every muscle in my body drew tight, and heat bloomed through my chest like wildfire. I didn’t understand what this had to do with anything. It was one fight more than a year ago. I’d never gotten into a situation like that before then, and I hadn’t done it since.

At last, Headmaster Ignatius leaned back in his seat and nodded slowly. “I see. While you may believe your actions were justified, you should take note that I will not tolerate any physical altercations like that at this school. Any infraction, regardless of the reason, will result in anyone involved being expelled.”

I squeezed the straps of my backpack until my knuckles turned white. “Yes, sir. I understand.”

“Heroics are best saved for outside the school, Mr. Owens. I can’t allow street justice to prevail here,” he said as he waved me off. “You are dismissed.”

About Nicole:

MY NAME IS NICOLE CONWAY and I love to write stories! I’ve been writing books since I NicoleConwayPhoto-300x204was very young, and am blessed beyond measure to be able to do it now as a full time career.

Although I sometimes step out into other genres, I primarily write Fantasy for teens and middle graders.

​I graduated from Auburn University in 2012, which is also where I met my husband.

As a military family, we move frequently and have lived numerous places all around the world. We have one very energetic son, Ethan. We also have two dogs (French Brittanys) named Joey (currently 5 months old) and Phoebe (4 years old) and a ball python named Noodle Nagini.

​For inquiries on how to book me for a school visit, presentation, or interest in my future or current projects, please contact my amazing literary agent, FRAN BLACK, of Literary Counsel.

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Giveaway Details:

2 lucky winners will win a finished copy of SCALES, US Only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

Tour Schedule:

Week One:

3/4/2019- BookHounds YA– Excerpt

3/5/2019- Descendant Of Poseidon Reads– Excerpt

3/6/2019- Lisa Loves Literature– Spotlight

3/7/2019- ❧Defining Ways❧- Excerpt

3/8/2019- Shortie Says– Excerpt

Week Two:

3/11/2019- Ya wonderlust blog– Review

3/12/2019- Lone Tree Reviews– Excerpt

3/13/2019- Smada’s Book Smack– Spotlight

3/14/2019- Elley the Book Otter– Excerpt

3/15/2019- Kelly P’s Blog– Excerpt