It is my pleasure to present to you The Path of Needles by Hannah Kollef! If you like fairy tales, be sure to check this one out. It’s a new twist on an old tale mixed with some modernization. A must-read, for sure! I can’t wait to work on the sequel!
ALSO! I have a wonderful guest post about where the idea for this story came from and what tales were its influence. Keep reading for this sneak-peak into the mind and world of Hannah Kollef… I mean, Kat Finnegan. đ
Blurb:
When 17-year-old Kat Finnegan is warned in a Brooklyn alleyway that her father is going to disappear, she shrugs and walks away. The next morning her father is gone–leaving behind a booby-trapped apartment and a mystery that has slept for a thousand years.
To get him back, Kat and her twin brother Roger will have to unravel the secrets behind the Rose Queen–the fairy queen who ripped apart reality and stitched it back together, transforming the Fey into the memories known as fairy tales. They will also have to come to grips with their emerging powers and discover why they are known to the magical world as “The Truth” and “The Lie.”
Hunted by demons and treacherous Fey, Kat and Roger follow the Queen’s trail from Manhattan to Newark. But neither the Queen nor her curse is what they expected, and more is at stake than their father’s life–and theirs.
Path of Needles is the explosive first book in the Paths series: urban fantasies littered with deadly fairy tales, tangled romance, and heartbreaking betrayals. Continue reading New Release: The Path of Needles→
For two years running (2011 & 2012) Above the Universe Below was was a semi-finalist in Amazon.com’s Breakthrough Novel Award and Publishers Weekly:
“Brilliant writing carries this pleasantly odd tale of an agoraphobic artist, Carder Quevedo… Carder’s road is not an easy one, but readers will be rooting for him in this unusual and beautifully written book.”
An agoraphobic artist in our world but a grim reaper in another, Carder Quevedo hides at home, immersing himself in the paintings which commemorate the strange deaths he’s witnessed. He ventures into public only when necessary, scrambling to his hospital job to extract corneas from deceased donors or darting to the diner to share a meal with Darren, his only friend. That’s Carder’s existence – and he’s content.
Until…
Haika changes that. As the bored, beautiful owner of an art gallery – who also happens to be married – she stumbles into Carder in a chance encounter and soon becomes obsessed with his art. As they forge a quirky, electric relationship, Carder is reluctantly pulled into Haika’s social world of wealth, status and the peculiar characters that come with it. Carder is pushed further to the edge when his teenage niece visits, rebelling against her ultra-conservative upbringing. All the while, Carder’s hidden history threatens to ruin his developing chance at normalcy, and on the opening night of his art gallery show, his past finally catches up to his present and wreaks havoc upon them all. Continue reading FMB Blog Tour: Above the Universe Below→
 Welcome to my stop on the FMB Binding Arbitration Tour! Keep scrolling for the book info, giveaway, and an AWESOME guest post! Seriously, don’t miss this one!
Title: Binding Arbitration
Author: Elizabeth Marx
Genre: Romance, Family Saga, Contemporary/Chick Lit
Through the corridors of the Windy Cityâs criminal courts, single mother Libby Tucker knows exactly how far sheâll go to save her cancer-stricken sonâs life. The undefeated defense attorney is prepared to take her fight all the way to the majors.
Circumstances force Libby to plead her case at the cleats of celebrity baseball player Banford Aidan Palowski, the man who discarded her at their college graduation. Libby has worked her backside bare for everything sheâs attained, while Aidan has been indulged since he slid through the birth canal and landed in a pile of Gold Coast money. But helping Libby and living up to his biological duty could jeopardize the only thing the jock worships: his baseball career.
If baseball imitates life, Aidan admits his appears to be silver-plated peanuts, until an unexpected confrontation with the most spectacular prize thatâs ever poured from a caramel corn box blindsides him. When he learns about his sonâs desperate need, it pricks open the wound heâs carried since he abandoned Libby and the child.
All Libby wants is a little anonymous DNA, but Aidan has a magical umpire in his head who knows Libbyâs a fateball right to the heart. When a six-year-old sage and a hippy priestess step onto the field, thereâs more to settle between Libby and Aidan than heartache, redemption, and forgiveness. Continue reading FMB Blog Tour: Binding Arbitration→
Welcome to my stop on the FMB Blog Tour for Antithesis! I have a great guest post on how the world for this book was developed, plus an excerpt for you. And a giveaway! Enjoy!
Justice Alezair Czynri is the newest recruit of the Jury, a group of powerful beings who reside in Purgatory and enforce the Code between Heaven and Hell. However, Justice Czynri could not have come at a worse time. A storm lays just over the horizonâŚ
One that brings with it a war.
SERIES BLURB:
This is a story about God and the Devil, but not how you were taught to believe.
This is also a story about love and hate, and the suffering both can bring.
This is about rights and wrongs, and all of the spaces in between.
This is about revenge, courage, death, passion; with no villains, no heroes⌠only those left scorned.
This is a story about Heaven, Hell, and the Jury that holds them together.
Welcome to the Duty and Desire Blog Tour stop! Check out the excerpt below and a guest post from author Anju Gattani about researching your novel. She has some good info and tips in her post so check it out!
How Can Happiness Survive When Duty Clashes With Desire?
Sheetal Prasad has it all: youth, beauty, wealth and education. But when this modern Indian woman surrenders love for honor and marries into Indiaâs most glamorous âroyal familyâ, these very advantages turn against her and she is stripped of her freedom.
Meet the Dhanrajs â a powerful family bound together by a web of lies where infidelity, greed, secrets and hidden identities lurk beneath the lush tapestry. The Dhanrajs have plenty to hide and will do what it takes to mask the truth from the world.
Milk Carton People is a paranormal thriller about people who suddenly find themselves invisible, able to observe things but unable to participate. Do they go mad? Maybe they find others. It is quite possible that there is no point in being invisible.
This is a book that plays on the very thin line of sanity and pure despair. The characters act and react to the new challenges and the reader gets to go along for the ride.
Excerpt
Iâm going to wake up, now, and go about my day with my cup of coffee. By the time I get to work, the whole thing will disappear like all dreams. I wonât even remember it.
She turned away from the little tree and took a few steps down the sidewalk. She intended to turn back toward the book store again, to somehow retake control of her destiny. As if turning back would give everyone one more chance to tell her it was all in fun and she was such a good sport.
Just then, a woman in an electric blue colored coat, walked right into her.
âExcuse, me,â Ruth began and stopped speechless. For one long, drawn out, slow motion, nightmare second, her vision was obscured by a brownish red filter which blurred everything before her. She felt hot, sticky, and confined. A cloying odor of spoiled hamburger made her gasp for clean air. She tasted copper pennies in her mouth. At the same time Ruth heard a gurgling noise and a squeak and as the whole event suddenly ended she heard a plop like pudding falling from a spoon back into the bowl.
A sudden cold sweat competed with stomach acid lurching into her throat. Ruth swallowed it back and turned to watch as the woman in electric blue continued walking down the sidewalk without breaking stride. Ruth watched the woman in the electric blue coat disappear around the corner.
âNo,â Ruth said aloud with authority. âNo,â she repeated louder, hoping make it all go away. âThis did not happen.â
She walked to the nearest building and stood close to the cold bricks in the shadows.
I have to go home.
Guest Post:
Milk Carton People is told through the eyes and mind of Ruth.
The seed for Ruth was planted as I observed a waitress with Ruth on her nametag. She was very nondescript, average in every sort of way.
I took Ruth home and imagined a back story for her and gave her a disability.
I gave her a back story. As a person with a disability she lived her social life in some isolation. Children can be very mean or busy and she was often left behind.
This isolation is probably what kept her sane as the story began to form.
I began by plopping Ruth on a park bench before work. She nods off and when she awakens life as she knew it was forever changed.
She had become invisible and unable to interact with the physical world around her. People walked right through her and she began to adjust.
Why was she invisible? Was she dead? Where was her body? She muddled for a long time before she found others that were like her.
She left her isolation and became part of a small group of equally confused people and began to cope with the new world.
Ruth never had an easy time but she gained some strength and understanding of other people and their coping skills.
Ruth remains nondescript but she does evolve and adapt. If she comes back in another book she will no doubt have made herself into a very memorable, capable and confident leader.
About the Author:
Eternal Press Staff Member
Biography
Marketing Manager
Sally Franklin Christie has spent her life achieving incredibly average goals. Her challenges and choices have led to into the world of organizing for social change, civil rights and helping people navigate in a world filled with physical barriers and discrimination. She photographs and paints landscapes, when she isnât at the computer researching, networking and writing. Special interests include Missing Children and Adults, Astronomy, Character Traits and Criminal Thinking.
A home schooling mother of children born eleven years apart has added to her liberal arts education. She’s had plenty of time to practice and refine the art and craft of writing coupled with opportunities to learn the marketing aspects of writing. She interned for a spell at WOW-Womenonwriting.com and currently has a position as a moderator at The Writers Chatroom. Various published articles appear in places like Pangia Magazine, Creations Magazine and other almost forgotton places. She writes one novel a year as a NaNoWriMo Participant and keeps a more serious project simmering year round.
In the wasteland of commercial culture that is future America, police are operated not by government but by private companies.
In Seattle, that role is filled by Civil Protection, and Daniel Gray is a detective in Homicide Solutions. What used to be considered an important – even glamorous – department for public police is very different for the corporate species, and Gray finds himself stuck in a dead end job. That is, until the Spine Thief arrives.
When a serial killer begins harvesting the spinal tissue of corporate employees all over the city, Detective Gray finds himself plunged into the first truly major case of his career. Caught in a dangerous mix of murder, betrayal and conflicting corporate interest, Gray will find himself not only matching wits with a diabolical murderer but grapple with his growing doubt toward his employers in the dawning months of the American tricentennial.
A thrilling mystery set in the same world as the Wonderland Cycle, Bone Wires is a grim trip into the streets of the empty future. Continue reading FMB Blog Tour: Bone Wires→
I’m trying out something different. Please let me know how you like the guest post below. I’m hoping that it is helpful to other writers out there. If so, I’ll try to post more guest posts like this. Thanks!
Transcending the Mundane: How to Enhance Creativity
The earliest cave paintings date back to approximately forty thousand years ago! Considering that Rome existed less than two millennia ago, this is quite a stretch of human history. The Cave of Altamira, located in Spain, is thought of as the Sistine Chapel of cave paintings by modern anthropologists because of its ornateness and implied intelligence, creativity, and resourcefulness. What spurred on and enabled this type of high-level creativity? The jury is still out for anthropologists but the demotic consensus appears to be swift and profound development of the neocortex, which is part of the brain’s cerebral cortex.The fascinating thing about this theory is that in many ways these early humans – the forebears of modern homo sapiens – have essentially the same brains as we do! The truth is that the same neocortical development that helped the early humans paint these ornate images at the Cave of Altamira can help modern humans be more creative in their day-to-day lives! Since the neocortex is associated with spatial reasoning, language, conscious thought and perhaps creativity, and since creativity and intelligence are highly linked, optimizing brain performance might be the ideal way to bolster creativity. Continue reading Guest Post: How to Enhance Creativity→
The first twenty readers who request a Kindle ebook today will receive a free copy of The Crooked Swan by Julie Helm. Please leave the email and specify the device where you would like your gift sent in the comments. Thank you.
About the book: What was Kayla thinking when she gave Narissa the solo in the Christmas recital? Caught in a world she thought sheâd never be a part of, Kayla learns that what was given in a moment of frustration and pity cannot be taken back so easily⌠especially with Narissa. As Kayla recognizes within herself a great need to help Narissa dance, she discovers patience and forgiveness, and the beauty found within the soul of a little girl who is more angel than child⌠she discovers the healing power of loveâŚand the joy found in truly caring for others.
Julie Helm speaks out about what inspired The Crooked Swan:
When I was a young girl I loved to dance. Iâd lie in my bed at nights and imagine that I was the lead dancer in a world famous ballet company. My dreaming took me everywhere: On pointe shoes I danced into the waiting arms of a dreamy dance partner. He would lift me so high the stage lights forced me to close my eyes. It all felt so real. Leaping and whirling, moving gracefully on my toes, I danced until sleep claimed me and I could no longer think.
So I begged my mother for dance lessons. And though I danced my heart out in my classes, becoming a world-class dancer would never be part of my future. As I stretched and tried bending my young body into the limitless contortions my dance teacher tried teaching me, I realized that all I needed was to enjoy myself. Some bodies arenât designed to be as limber as others.
Dancing became a lot of fun. I met other dancers, from time to time, who were more coordinated and obviously more talented than me. Sometimes it was hard to watch them because I wanted to dance perfectly, too. But I kept dancingâŚbecause I knew that if my abilities were ever judged by what was in my heartâŚI would be the prima ballerina, the most graceful beautiful dancer of them all.
Years passed, and dancing was put aside to raise my family. One night while I was lying in my bed trying to find sleepâŚI thought again of a young imperfect girl who wanted to dance as gracefully as other dancersâŚand The Crooked Swan was born. Though the main characterâs story is not my own, there are many situations in the book that related to me as a young dancer.
A beautiful dance, one that is orchestrated to perfection, is never just about what the body is capable of doing, even with God given abilities and talent. Itâs the combination of both heart and ability that make the truly great dancers.
I invite you to read The Crooked Swan. You will not be the same afterwards. The story takes you on an unforgettable journey into the world of dance, so that we may all appreciate and love The Crooked Swans in our lives.
Bio:
About the Author: Julie G. Helm grew up in Idaho, lived several years abroad, and has spent the last twenty-three years living in Utah. She has been writing stories for children, young adults, and adults as long as she can remember. At present she has three books on the market, The Crooked Swan, The Lost Monster Tales, and Merlin for Sherman. She has belonged to one of the top fantasy and science fiction writer’s groups in the area, acted as the liaison for the BYU Writer’s Conferences, and worked as an acquisitions editor for Gibbs Smith Publishers. She won first place in an area writer’s conference judged by the late Roger Zelazney. Along with raising her six children with a devoted husband, Greg, she continues to write stories to delight and thrill all those who read her books.
Today I have a special treat! Jim Galford, author of Into the Desert Wilds, with a guest interview/short story from Oria! I had posed some questions to him for her to answer, and instead, I got a short story! Read on to get this special “extra” from Jim!
Authorâs note:
This tidbit was presented in the form of a list of questions for Oria, a main character in Into the Desert Wilds. As character reactions are meaningless without context, Iâve taken the questions and integrated them into a scene that does not occur in the book, but has a place in the timeline. All interviewer questions for the character are merged into this story scene. The actual original questions are listed before the story begins.
Q1) The mists really changed your lives. Can you say what’s the biggest difference now?
Q2) Estin is like a father to you. Is there an advantage to having a ‘prey’ breed as a father figure?
Q3) It seems like you feel the need to prove yourself. Are you trying to do so for your mother or yourself?
Q4) You and your brother have different strengths in combat. Do you attribute this to anything in particular?
Q5) Your younger siblings didn’t get the opportunity to know your homeland, only the desert that you are in now. How do you think this has effected/shaped them?
Q6) What is the greatest strength a leader can have? Weakness?
Q7) What drew you towards Phaesys? What ways is he like/dislike you?
Waiting for the inevitable sunrise and the dangers that would come with it, Oria lay against the side of the crumbling room where they were staying, hoping that sleep would come but knowing better. She closed her eyes in vague hopes of some rest, even if sleep was beyond her reach. Even then, she nervousness about the day to come made her want to fidget or walk around. She found herself mostly changing position as her tail cramped or her ears itched randomly, keeping her on-edge at all times.
âCanât sleep, kid?â asked one of the elves in the room. The others appeared to be sleeping, but Oria doubted that was the case.
The armored woman, Sirella, sat against the wall nearby with a sword resting across her knees, ready to be used at a momentâs notice. Her long black hair had been braided and draped over her shoulder. Despite having her own eyes closed for nearly an hour, the woman must have been feeling much the same as Oria and was unable to sleep either.
âJust worried about tomorrow,â Oria admitted, pulling her knees up to her chin. âCanât get my mind off what willâŚand couldâŚhappen.â
Sirella set her sword aside and leaned forward, watching Oria briefly.
âThen would you like to talk about something other than that?â
âAnything else.â
An evil smile passed over Sirellaâs lips, making Oria wonder if it was wise to say she would talk about anything with the former leader of a thievesâ guild. Still, it was better than letting her mind race with ideas of who might be hurt or killed in just a few short hours.
Estin by artist Darryl Taylor
âI had questions for Estin that he refused to answer,â noted Sirella. âHe never wanted to talk about the past or his family except in terms of wanting to be with them. Would you mind?â
âGo ahead, Sirella. If we even live to see tomorrow, I can decide then whether it was a good idea to tell you any of this.â
âGood girl.â
Scooting a little closer, Sirella glanced over at the other elves in the room, then whispered to Oria, âDonât worry. They wonât tell anyone unless I say itâs alright.â
âYouâre not making me feel like this is a good idea. Maybe my dad had the right ideaâŚâ
âNonsense. Do you really want to be as tight-lippedâŚmuzzledâŚas Estin? Thought not. Besides, itâs just a few questions to pass the time. Whereâs the harm in that?â
Folding her legs under her and pulling her bushy tail into her lap, Oria watched Sirella expectantly, reserving judgment on whether she wanted to talk until after hearing the questions.
âEstin said you were all from somewhere in the mountainsâŚâ
âAltis. Well, the woods near Altis.â
ââŚand that it was completely unlike Corraith. Aside from taller rocks, how different could it be?â
âYouâve never seen mountains, have you, Sirella?â
âNo. Never got farther than the southern oasis.â
âTheyâre not like the desert at all, big rocks or not. The majority of the hills and mountains are covered with thick woodsâpines for the most part. There arenât as many rocks as youâd expect, though the cliffs are pretty bare.â
Sirella nodded, though something in her eyes indicated a degree of confusion.
âPinesâŚbig green trees with needles instead of leaves.â
âSimilar to palm trees?â
âNot at all. They provide a lot more shelter against the rain and snow.â
Blinking, Sirella seemed totally lost at that point.
âRain I understand. But you get snow out there?â she asked Oria, wrinkling her nose a little in confusion. âI heard the southern oasis gets a few flakes a year, but mostly they make due with the three or four rainstorms each wet season. Never seen the snow myself.â
Oria laughed and shook her head.
âNot a few flakes. Mounds of it. My last winter there, I was up to my waist in snow, though I was only about as tall as your chest. My brother and I had to be careful not to fall into valleys filled with snow or mom wouldnât find us until spring. The rains werenât much different. When those came down, whole sections of the woods would flood out and make new streams.â
Despite her usual careful control of expression, Sirellaâs eyes widened and Oria knew she had the woman hooked. Deep down, Oria wished she had an elaborate lie to tell her, but none came to mind easily. A simple one would have to do.
âIf it rained too hard,â she told the elven woman, making sure to keep from smiling, âthe entire plains below the mountains could wash away. Thatâs why we stayed in the mountains, so we were above the water.â
Sirellaâs face revealed little, but her eyes told Oria that she might have gone too far on that one. The woman did not believe a word of it and might have even dismissed the talk of snow entirely.
âWhat about your siblings?â she asked Oria.
âWhat about them?â
âThey never got to see the mountains, the snow, or the pines. They only know the desert. Do you think theyâll be different from you and yourâŚyour parents?â
âProbably.â She picked at bits of dirt in her tail as she thought a moment. âMy fatherâs people werenât from the mountains and he turned out fine. Maybe itâs just enough that we remember and that mom and dad raise them. Iâm sure Corraith will make them a little different, which is fine, as long as they donât turn out like the snobby nobles you had around here. Iâd have to thump them if they did.â
Sirella giggled at that, then brushed a long strand of her hair back behind her pointed ear as she asked, âYou keep saying âfather,â when talking about Estin. Youâre a foxâŚnot a fox like we have around here, but a predator is a predator, no matter whether they have snow or not. Heâs not your real father Iâm guessing, soâŚwas it hard growing up with prey as a dad?â
âWhat was your father like, Sirella?â
âA foul old sot who lost the house in a game of chance when my sister and I were barely old enough to last a night on the streets.â
âDid he care about you, your sister, and your mother?â
âHe died trying to put food in our bellies, for all the good it did.â
âMy birth father,â Oria began, trying not to think too hard on the topic. It was not something she was comfortable talking about with anyone. âHe was scared of my motherâŚof her power. He loved my brother and I dearly, but as soon as he saw that he was not the top predator in the area, he ran. He took Atall and I and fled from mom, throwing away all the promises heâd made her. He was a warrior, a decent male, and would have been a good fatherâŚif he hadnât gotten himself killed running from his mate.
âHe, unlike Estin, was a predator for all the good it did him.â
âThat doesnât really change that your âdadâ probably looks and smells like dinner to your mom. That canât be healthy.â
Feanne by artist Darryl Taylor
Nodding, Oria answered, âIt wasnât. Mostly it was hard on mom, though. The camp did not exactly approve and many really wanted to see her gut him. They could get along with predators and prey living as neighbors, but her taking him as her mate was not a popular choice. Before it was official was the worstâŚat least after she made it public, the pack had to stand by her decision or openly oppose her, which was not a wise thing to do.â
âSo your mother chose himâŚso what? Iâd still think a predator would consider him beneath them.â
That amused Oria and she laughed a little at the thought.
âMy birth father gave up his life for his children, but abandoned his mate. Without hesitation, Estin would give up his life for any of Feanneâs children, whether they are his or not. He doesnât care who our father is. His life belongs as much to us as to our mother. Iâve never seen that kind of dedication in anyone of any breed or race. Heâs my father because of who he is, not anything to do with birth, breed, or anything else. BesidesâŚus not knowing if he might actually be our real father means looking at him as prey would say something bad about my siblings and I.â
Sirella pondered that for a while, then motioned for Oria to stay quiet as she ran off to investigate something. It did not take long and she returned, taking her seat beside Oria again.
âOld rubble falling,â she explained. âThought they might have found us, but weâre still getting lucky.â
They sat in silence for some time, the only sounds being the shallow breathing of the other thieves that had come with them. When Sirella spoke next, it jarred Oria and she realized she had been lost in thought.
âYour family is leaving as soon as things calm down, arenât they?â the woman asked Oria, more of a statement than a question.
âAs soon as this battle is done. We donât belong here. The soldiers are terrified of my mother and would love nothing more than to kill my father. The city itself doesnât need us or people like us. Weâre better off trying to make our way home.â
âYour mother to her role as pack leader and you to wait to inherit it? Sounds thrilling.â
âIt doesnât work that way,â Oria replied, realizing that it was the first time she had really thought about that in many months. âIf and when mom dies, the strongest or most respected member takes charge. I donât get anything without workâŚand a lot of fights.â
Sirella smiled knowingly, asking, âIs that why youâre out here, risking yourself with us lowlifes? Trying to prove yourself for when you go home?â
âThereâs no pack left to impress. They may have all died around the time we left. We wonât know until we go home.â
âThen youâre trying to convince yourself that youâre strong enough.â
âNo, not meâŚâ Oria started to say, then trailed off, wishing she had kept her mouth shut.
âYouâre showing off for your mother. You want her to know youâre good enough, whether thereâs a pack or not. I did the same thing to impress my parents, at least until I stopped caring what they thought.â
Sirella picked up her sword and lifted it so the point was aimed at the ceiling. With a casual wave of her left hand towards the blade, the weapon burst into flames that glowed red, then shifted to blue, then green. She smiled at Oria, then winked and the flames went out.
âTook me forever to learn to do that,â the elven woman admitted, putting the sword aside. âNow, I realize it doesnât mean anything. Whether my parents were impressed or not, Iâm still a street thief in a city that hates me.
Tricks and personal accomplishments donât make us better peopleâŚthey just pass the time.â
Oria nodded quickly, but saw Sirellaâs eyes following her every movement. The woman was trying to read her.
âItâs not about mommy and daddy,â whispered Sirella, her sparkling eyes widening with interest. âYou were proving it to yourself, but not anymore. Youâre showing off for someone else.â
âI donât know what youâŚâ
âOh yes you do, kid. Itâs the fennec, isnât it? I saw the sappy way you looked at him back at base. Youâre doing this to convince yourself that youâre good enough for him.â
âShut up, Sirella.â
âHeâs a noble, stuck up, born to wealth and privilege, and probably heir to a dozen womenâŚwhat do you two possibly have in common? Iâd think to him, you were just another peasant girlâŚâ
Oria snarled and leapt to her feet, grabbing the taller woman by the armor and slamming her into the wall.
Behind her, she could hear the other elves drawing weapons and could feel them just behind her, waiting for a cue to strike. She did not care, focusing only on Sirella, keeping one hand locked into the womanâs armor to prevent her from moving and the other holding her curved knife. Oria did not even remember drawing the weapon, but she held it steady near Sirellaâs throat.
Though she blinked as she hit the wall, Sirella seemed entirely unsurprised and had not a bit of concern on her face.
âI was not criticizing you, kid,â she said, her voice calm despite the weapon near her neck. âThatâs how nobles around here think. Iâve dealt withâŚand stolen fromâŚenough of them that I know itâs true. Getting yourself killed isnât going to prove anything to him. I donât know what you see in him, or what he sees in you, but itâd better be something stronger than recklessness to make it work out.â
Letting her weapon drop to her side, Oria released Sirella and stepped away. By the time she turned around, the other thieves were sitting casually around the room as though nothing had happened.
âI donât know what I see in him,â Oria admitted, shoving her dagger back into its sheath. âHeâs handsome and strong, but that isnât it. I think itâs just that he treats me wellâŚeven when Iâm being stupid.
âDonât get me wrong, heâs just as reckless as I am. He tries to prove himself to his father and his soldiers all the time. What sets us apart though is that he tries to be sensible and do the right thing, even if it gets him hurt. Heâs like my father in thatâŚhe wants to help others, no matter the risk. Thatâs not something Iâm good at and I think I envy that about him just a little. I just want him to know how much IâŚâ
Oria let that trail off and sat down hard. This was not something she had wanted anyone else to hear. It was not even something she really wanted to discuss with herself in the privacy of her own mind.
Kneeling beside her, Sirella lifted Oriaâs chin to look her in the eyes.
âIf thereâs one thing I understand, itâs being stupid about who you love,â the woman said, this time without a hint of deception or sign that she was trying to lead Oria into saying more than she intended. âWhen this is all over, Iâll help you understand what makes the men of these lands pay attention. You two are good together, that much I saw just in the little time you were both at the base. You just have to undo years of his upbringing if you want to keep him. Itâs no different than training any other man, really.â
âAnything,â Oria said softly, pulling her head away. âI feel like Iâm losing him and donât know what Iâll do if that happens.â
A distant horn made everyone in the room look up. Faintly, Oria heard shouts that soon grew into a jumbled rumble of many people yelling at once.
âWorry about your man later. Thatâs our cue, kid,â Sirella announced, nodding at the others. To the two women in the group and Oria, she added, âItâs time for the girls to show that army of men that it only takes a couple of us to do what a hundred of them are trying to do. Gear up, itâs time to go. Letâs get famous and win back this city.â