#blogtour Dragons of Mu by Pamela Ackerson

 

The
Eternals, a non-magical woman as the Chosen One, Marfóir,
and her best friend join in the battle to slay the
most evil dragon on earth who’s plan is to take over the world.

Dragons of Mu

by Pamela Ackerson

Genre: Epic Fantasy Adventure

Drakine is rising.
The only hope is the hero no one expected.

One non-magical woman is the Chosen One. Destiny won’t wait. With her fiercely
loyal friend, Lottie, by her side, and Blaze’s army behind her, Amy is thrust
into a war against the most evil dragon ever to preside over the dragon realm
on the Island of Mu. A creature whose heinous ambition is nothing less than
total annihilation of the mortal world and complete global domination.

To survive, they must fight the ancient powers and unite the fractured
kingdoms. The Island of Mu is burning… and only she can turn the tide. Grab your copy today.

 

**Releases June 26th – PreOrder Now for Only
.99cents!**

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She
rubbed the back of her head, felt a small lump, and winced. Her head was
throbbing. Her knee was yelling at her and now she heard angry, men’s voices.

One of them yelled, ā€œOver there! There she
is. Get her!ā€

Another pulled out a long knife and they
ran toward her.

Amy rushed into the woods. Turning around,
she could see they were catching up to her.

Up,
Amy, up.
They won’t be
looking up.

She climbed an oak tree as high as she
could. Pulling on the long skirt, she squatted on a branch.

The branch felt odd and slithered
underneath her. A large, looming face in the shape of a dragon stared at her
unblinking.

Holy
cr—

The creature put a long claw to its mouth
and said, ā€œShhh.ā€

Amy took a deep breath. A scream was
building inside her but before she could release the ear-piercing screech, she
was muzzled by the creature. Her heart jolted as its wing enveloped her and she
lost consciousness.

A few moments later, she was gulping for
air. Fully expecting to open her eyes and see the hotel lobby, she was stunned
to be staring into the eyes of a dragon.

–A dragon, a huge dragon with big, green
eyes.

You’re
safe.

Amy shook her head. ā€œNo. No, I’m not.
There’s no okay in this, whatever this is at all. This is crazy. Why is this
happening?ā€

Where
did you come from?

She stared at his mouth. It wasn’t moving.

This hallucination was freaking weird. A
talking dragon that didn’t move his lips. They’re going to take her away and
leave her in the psych ward for the rest of her life.

Her eye began twitching. It wasn’t real.
None of it makes sense.

Think,
Amy.

Dragons aren’t real. How could a dragon talk?

Anything can happen in a hallucination.
She repeated to herself. This isn’t real.

Was she dead? Is this purgatory? Her own
personal nightmare of an afterlife? Could she have injured herself so badly
that she died?

She wasn’t a bad person. It certainly
wasn’t in Hades. Well, it better not be Hades.

A talking, psychic dragon communicating
with his mind.

Of course, it makes soooo much more sense.

She watched as the men ran into the woods,
searching for her.

The dragon spoke in a deep, soothing
voice, ā€œWhy are you dressed in that garb?ā€

Amy stared at the huge beast.

The beast’s green eyes penetrated her with
a questioning glare.

ā€œA— a party. We were going to a party.ā€

He looked at the bracelet.

ā€œSomeone put them in my shopping bag.ā€

ā€œLet’s go. We need to get you into normal
clothing. I’ll take you to Bev’s.ā€

Amy started climbing down the tree.

ā€œNo, no.ā€ The dragon grabbed her and
placed Amy on his back before taking flight.

Amy squealed, inhaled and released another
louder scream.

ā€œStop.ā€ His body jolted. ā€œYour obnoxious
squawking is impaling my ears.ā€

Within a few moments, they soared through
the air and flew from cloud to cloud.

Her stomach flipped and she swallowed the
huge lump in her throat.

ā€œUgh, no ups and downs, please.ā€

He laughed. ā€œNo quick drops? You’re the
slow-boat kind of person.ā€

Her heart was finally returning to its
normal beat. She was getting comfortable riding on his back and was beginning
to enjoy the view.

ā€œWhoa! This is awesome. I never have
flying dreams.ā€

The dragon huffed.

Amy was mesmerized. It was freaking
fantastic. The warm heat from the sun and soft air on her face, the flapping of
his wings, it was glorious.

She could do this. It was peaceful. He was
gliding along and she was euphoric.

Hold
on.

ā€œHold on? No, don’t ruin the moment!ā€

The dragon took a deep dive. Amy let out
an earsplitting shriek and gripped the back of his neck tighter as he
gracefully landed on the ground in front of a small, wooden cabin.

He grunted in pain.

ā€œYour fingernails are cutting into my
skin.ā€

ā€œSorry.ā€ Amy dismounted him like she would
a horse.

ā€œYou don’t look like you’re sorry.ā€

She gave him an angry side-eye.

He grumbled, ā€œGo. Tell her I sent you.ā€

ā€œUm. You want me to knock on a stranger’s
door, in the middle of BFE, and tell her a dragon sent me?ā€

 ā€œWe’re not in Egypt.ā€

She snapped, ā€œWhat? We’re in the middle of
freaking nowhere. That’s what BFE means!ā€

Ignoring her irritation, he responded,
ā€œWe’re in Ireland.ā€

 ā€œIreland? I’ve never been to Ireland. How am I
dreaming that I’m here? I’ve only seen pictures and this in not anything like
the pictures.ā€

ā€œIt’s fine.ā€

ā€œNo, it’s not fine. I don’t have a passport with me!ā€

She rubbed her forehead. Why would she
need a passport in a dream?

ā€œNo worries.ā€ He blew out a frustrated
breath. ā€œI’ll be back in a blink. In the meantime, tell her Blaze sent you.ā€

ā€œOh, look. A fairy circle.ā€

His wide-eyed, incredulous stare gave her
pause. He shook his head. ā€œWow.ā€

She shrugged.

ā€œI can’t keep up with you.ā€

ā€œYeah, I get that a lot. My mind goes
really fast sometimes.ā€ She limped toward the fairy circle.

ā€œWhat are you doing?ā€

Amy chuckled. ā€œMaking a wish.ā€

He looked at her like she was growing
horns.

ā€œUm, yeah. Make a wish and the fairies
will grant it only if they see fit. You have to watch out for all the
fairies protecting the
fairy circle. You don’t want to step on them, you know.ā€

Amy stepped back from the circle. ā€œHello, little fairies. I hope
you’re having a pleasant day.ā€

He harrumphed and walked away.

ā€œHey, it’s my dream. I can do what I want.ā€

Amy raised her hand to knock, but never
made contact. An elderly woman, in her mid-seventies, opened the door.

ā€œOh, I thought I heard Blaze’s voice.ā€

ā€œI’m Amy. He told me to tell youā€”ā€

The woman opened the door wider. ā€œCome in.
The sun’s going to be setting soon and it’ll be a bit chilly.ā€

The elderly woman had light hair, dark
blue eyes, and a wide, pleasant smile. Her hair was rolled up into a bun tucked
on the back of her head. Amy’s memories immediately went to the cartoon with
the grandma lady who owned the canary, Tweety.

Amy cautiously entered the house and as
she turned to look about, a man rushed through the doorway.

He was an average-looking man except for
his eyes. They gleamed an effervescent green. The man’s dark hair was a deep
contrast to his light skin.

She never cared for the five o’clock
shadow but it did do him justice.

ā€œThere you are, Blaze.ā€ She handed him a
mug.

ā€œThank you, Bev.ā€

ā€œMark on his way?ā€

ā€œSoon. He has a few things he needs to
take care of before he comes.ā€

Mark?
As in Harlow?

Bev turned to Amy. ā€œWhat would you like,
dear? I’ve got some hot tea on the table or, if it pleases, I can pour another
draught.ā€

ā€œTā€”ā€

ā€œShe needs normal clothes.ā€

Amy glared at Blaze. ā€œAnd who are you?ā€

ā€œI’m the man who saved your skinny bum and
brought you here.ā€

ā€œAnd how, pray tell, did you do that? A
dragonā€¦ā€ Her voice trailed off.

Bev looked puzzled. ā€œSo, she’s not from
medieval times?ā€

ā€œNo.ā€

ā€œShe didn’t time-travel here?ā€

ā€œNo.ā€

Time
travel?
Amy interrupted, ā€œI can speak for myself.ā€

ā€œReally?ā€ He snorted. ā€œGo ahead, darling,
and explain how you got here.ā€

ā€œFine. I was at a party.ā€ Amy flipped her
hand in the air. ā€œI tucked the jeweled comb in my wig and the next thing I
knew, these men attacked me and I’ve been having this dream or possibly been
unconscious ever since.ā€

Blaze sat at the table. ā€œYou’re not
unconscious.ā€

ā€œThen you tell me what’s happening.ā€

Bev took her arm. ā€œOh, sweetie, it’s been
a day for you, hasn’t it? Sit, relax, and have a cuppa. I’ll get you some
clothes that should fit you. We’ll get you all sorted out.ā€

The concern in Bev’s voice was telling.

Wariness clung to Amy as a hesitant smile
tugged at her lips, a stark contrast to how she was feeling.

ā€œI don’t need clothes. I just want to wake
up.ā€

Bev asked, ā€œWake up?ā€

Blaze waved Bev’s question off and spoke
to Amy, ā€œSomehow, you’ve managed to get two very powerful and magical relics to
bring you here. People have gone to war to possess the magical comb and
bracelet.ā€

Amy grunted.

ā€œThose men stole the relics to take over
Mu and conquer the magical world. They will not hesitate to kill you for them.ā€

Amy bit her upper lip, repressing a
nervous giggle. ā€œNot ruby-red slippers? Will lightning flash from the jewelry
when you try to remove it from my hair and wrist? Do I repeat ā€˜there’s no place
like home’ three times?ā€

Blaze glowered. ā€œI don’t find your sarcasm
amusing.ā€

She removed the jeweled comb and handed it
to Blaze. ā€œHere. Take it.ā€

Bev glared at Blaze and tapped Amy’s hand.
ā€œBlaze can get you back to where you belong and to your party whenever you’re
ready.ā€

ā€œGood.ā€ Amy put her wrist toward Blaze.
ā€œI’m more than ready.ā€

Blaze reached to take the bracelet off her
wrist. ā€œIt won’t come off.ā€

Bev put her hand to her chest. ā€œWhat?ā€

Amy’s voice shook in panic. ā€œNo, no, take
it off!ā€

ā€œIt won’t come off.ā€

ā€œFine, then I’ll do it.ā€

She fiddled with the clasp and finally
threw up her hands in frustration. ā€œIt won’t come off!ā€

Bev walked over to the cabinet and brought
back a bottle of Irish whiskey and three glasses, and said, ā€œIt has begun.ā€

 

Amazon, Barnes and
Noble, and Wall Street Journal bestselling, award-winning author, Pamela
Ackerson is a time traveling adventurer. She was born and raised in Newport, RI
where history is a way of life. She lives on the Space Coast of Florida where
everyone is encouraged to reach for the stars!

Her literary
journey is as diverse and adventurous as the time-traveling escapades she
writes about. With a rich tapestry of genres at her fingertips, she weaves
stories that span from the wild frontiers of the Old West to the intricate
cultural tapestries of Native American history. Her work doesn’t stop at
fiction; she delves into the realms of history, self-help, and even marketing,
showcasing a versatility that resonates with a wide audience.

Ackerson’s
presence on the Space Coast of Florida reflects her forward-thinking approach
to writing, always aiming for the next big leap in her storytelling odyssey.
Her prolific output is a testament to her dedication to her craft, inviting
readers to join her in exploring the vast landscapes of human experience and
imagination.

Honest reviews of
Pamela’s books are always appreciated.

Absolutely no AI
programs were used to create any story she has written.

Thank you and have
a good moments day.

 

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* Goodreads

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the tour
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#blogtour The Dark One by Angela Knight

BDSM Romance, Capture Fantasy

Date Published: June 26, 2026

 

Kaska means to make Matia the centerpiece in an erotic ritual to honor his
Dark god.

Matia of Ruza is one of the legendary Battlemaids — a woman warrior who has
taken an oath of celibacy in service of the Maid of Light. When mercenary
Kaska of Artane helps Matia defeat a gang of brigands, the two become
partners.

Matia finds her oath of celibacy tested by her handsome Shieldmate’s
erotic appeal. But Kaska means to do more than test her. He worships the Dark
One, and he wants to make Matia the centerpiece in a sizzling erotic ritual in
honor of his god.

But first, he must defeat her in combat — and win her heart.

EXCERPT

 

Kaska of Artane slowed his stallion to an easy amble. Prince Britar’s fortress
lay a full day away, and he’d ridden poor Warbringer hard this past month. He
knew the Prince awaited the intelligence he’d gathered as a spy in neighboring
Trovan but laming his horse would serve no purpose.

Particularly with war on the horizon.

Besides, the last time Kaska had come this way, he’d had to battle the local
brigands. Two fell to his blade before the rest fled, but that left five. And
they might be in the mood for revenge. I don’t care to ride headlong into an
ambush.

“Whoreson bastards!” A woman’s roar of fury brought Kaska’s head up. He drew
Warbringer to a prancing halt.

Swords clashed, interspaced with male taunts and laughter. The laughter had a
distinctly ugly note. The woman swore again, an edge of grim desperation in
her voice.

The thieves had found a new victim.

Kaska set his heels to Warbringer’s flanks and thundered up the road toward
the sound. Rounding the bend, he saw five men fighting a lone female traveler
they’d managed to unhorse. He recognized the dented, rusted armor and unshaven
faces; it was indeed the same band of thieves.

But their victim was no common woman. Her armor and sword marked her as a
follower of the Maid of Light — a female warrior. She was tall for a woman,
with a lithe, muscular build and pretty breasts barely contained by her
intricately embossed breastplate. Long black hair swirled around her face as
she spun and hacked at her tormentors with a slim sword designed for a woman’s
hand.

One of the brigands already lay dead at her feet, but four others remained,
odds too great even for one of the legendary Battlemaids.

A grin of sheer, savage joy spread across Kaska’s face. With a howl, he drew
the blade sheathed across his back and kicked Warbringer into a thundering
charge.

The nearest of the brigands whirled too late. Kaska took his head with a
single stroke.

Another of the men jumped at him, hacking for his thigh with an axe, but Kaska
spun Warbringer aside and thrust his blade into the thief’s chest. The man
tumbled off the lethal point, gurgling out his life.

Meanwhile, the third brigand fell to the Battlemaid’s sword. His head tumbled
from his shoulders.

The fourth man looked from Kaska to the thieves’ would-be victim, calculated
the odds, and took to his heels.

Kaska snatched a dagger from his thigh sheath and hurled it at the coward with
an expert flip of his wrist. The man went down, the blade buried to the hilt
between his shoulder blades.

Scarcely breathing hard, Kaska turned to the maid. “Are you well?”

“Well enough.” She studied him, her dark eyes level. There was a sharp and
elegant beauty to her face, with its broad, high cheekbones and square little
chin. Her lush mouth could inspire a monk to carnal fantasies.

“My thanks, warrior,” she said at last in a low, husky voice, pushing the long
black hair out of her face. “There were too many of them for me to best
alone.” She considered him, appraising the width of his chest and the strength
of his sword arm. Female appreciation lit her gaze, mixed with a warrior’s
caution.

She had reason for that caution, for he meant to challenge her himself. He
worshiped the Dark One, and his god relished nothing as much as the moans of a
defeated Battlemaid.

Imagining the tight grip of her virgin ass, Kaska felt his cock swell behind
his loincloth.

Give her time to rest, and then…

Of course, the maid might well kill him instead, but looking at her long legs
and full, sweet breasts, Kaska thought it a chance well worth taking.

But as he opened his mouth to warn her of his intent, all color left the
Battlemaid’s face. Her eyes rolled up. Kaska threw himself from Warbringer’s
back as she collapsed in a heap.

Two long strides carried him to the maid’s side. Dropping to one knee on the
dusty road, Kaska began an anxious examination. He found no wounds on the
front of her body, so he rolled her onto her back.

The maid groaned and lifted her head. “Wha -?”

“Seems one of your cur attackers landed a blow after all,” he told her grimly.
“There’s a stab wound in your back just under your backplate, over your left
hip.”

“Aye,” she said, letting her head fall. “One of them had a dagger.”

“‘Tis not deep, but it bleeds still,” Kaska said. “I can treat it, if you
permit.”

“Aye,” the maid said, breathing now in shallow pants. “My thanks.”

Kaska nodded and rose to retrieve his pack of battlefield medicines from
Warbringer. Well, he thought as he walked to his horse, I won’t be challenging
her any time soon. Not with that wound.

Later, perhaps. When he’d examined her, he’d noticed she had a truly delicious
ass.

He wanted it.

 

About the Author

New York Times best-selling author Angela Knight has written and
published more than sixty novels, novellas, and ebooks, including the
Mageverse and Merlin’s Legacy series. With a career spanning more than
two decades, Romantic Times Bookclub Magazine has awarded her their Career
Achievement award in Paranormal Romance, as well as two Reviewers’
Choice awards for Best Erotic Romance and Best Werewolf Romance.

Angela is currently a writer, editor, and cover artist for Changeling Press
LLC. She also teaches online writing courses. Besides her fiction work,
Angela’s writing career includes a decade as an award-winning South
Carolina newspaper reporter. She lives in South Carolina with her husband,
Michael, a thirty-year police veteran and detective with a local police
department.

Author on Facebook


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

 

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RABT Book Tours & PR

#blogtour Sister Olive Wouldn’t Hurt a Fly by Gill Calvin Thomas

Fleeing to Dorset traps a mother and son between 

a cult and a
killer waiting in the shadows…

Sister Olive Wouldn’t
Hurt a Fly 

The Purebeck Mysteries Book 2

by Gill Calvin Thomas

Genre: Paranormal Mystery

If this whole saga was a fight between good and evil, then
who had won? As far as Miriam could work out, neither good nor evil had
triumphed yet. Now she was having to confront the grim consequences of Will’s
behaviour, and she was mortally afraid. Maybe he and his darkness would win
after all.

The tragic suicide of a young student starts a shocking chain of events for
William Marshall, his wife Miriam and their son, Ollie. As Will descends into
madness, a ghostly presence appears in their old house to protect Ollie.
However, when two strangers threaten Miriam and an attempt is made to snatch
Ollie, mother and son are forced to flee.

Amidst ever-present danger, they shake off pursuers to seek sanctuary in Rock
House in Dorset, where they meet Caitlin and her friends. Twenty years have
passed since Charlie Bond helped Caitlin solve the mystery of her mother’s
death. Now, it is the turn of Charlie’s sidekick, Sam Haskell, to investigate a
mysterious cult and unmask a killer.

 

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* Goodreads

 

Gill Calvin
Thomas is a retired academic who lives with her husband in Swanage , UK.  She finds inspiration in the landscape around
her – the Isle of Purbeck has a spectacular coastline and beautiful beaches,
and it is whilst walking here, that Gill develops characters and plots the
twists and turns you will find in her books.

 Gill’s life
experiences have informed her writing. 
For example, her mother’s death when she was a small child, influenced
her first book, Vex Not Her Ghost, where the heroine has to delve into the past
to uncover the real circumstances of her mother’s death, the cover up and the
ongoing corruption.  Her experiences as a
social work academic governs the plot of her second book, Sister Olive Wouldn’t
Hurt a Fly.  In this book the fatal
combination of a researcher’s mental collapse and a sociopathic opportunist
give rise to a cliffhanging finale.

 Reviewers
have said that Gill writes the sort of books in which you find yourself racing
to the end, whilst not wanting to finish. 
Her characters are compelling, well-drawn and sensitively portrayed.  In her books bad people get what they
deserve, but it is never quite what it seems.

 She is
currently writing her third book. 

 

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the reveal
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#blogtour City at the Edge of Time by Janet & Chris Morris

 

Stuck at the very end of time.

If you love gritty dark fantasy, epic mythical battles, and
ancient gods interfering with mortals, you need to check out City at the Edge of Time by Janet and
Chris Morris!

City at the Edge of
Time

Sacred Band Series Book 5

by Janet & Chris Morris

Genre: Epic Heroic Fantasy Adventure

“An exciting and brilliantly colored sortie . . .”
– David Drake

Join Tempus and Niko on the triple shores of land, sea, and eternity . . .
Where a young girl trembles between love and sorcerous obsession . . .
Where a prince’s refusal to admit his flaws makes him a pawn of hell . . .
Where a city of immortals learn that Death has not forgotten it . . .
In the catacombs beneath a warlock’s citadel, swords and courage face the jaws
of demons — with a girl’s life and a god’s vengeance resting on the outcome.

 

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A red
cloud rising out of the east was borne seaward on a hungry wind that howled
like a devil. It was a hot cloud, a wet cloud full of the promise of rain, and
yet it shed no drop on the forest below. It spread across the wilderness
without end, a cloud like a funnel, a cloud like a waterspout turned on its
side.

It crossed
the scorched earth between the forest and the city on the coast, low to the
ground and howling. Then it arched up like a striking snake, a hissing serpent
that ate the sky and reared high over the city’s walls.

By then no
one walked the city streets. Everywhere the city’s folk had fled indoors, even
from the courtyards of the king. No peltast stirred on the battlements; no
sentry held his ground. From within the walls of the palace, men peered out
through slits at the unnatural red storm.

Women held
each other in their boudoirs, and children sheltered under mothers’ skirts.
Noise went everywhere, carried on a wet and flailing wind that made hairs stand
up on arms and necks and dogs scramble under sturdy beds to whine.

Macon was
in his father’s stables with his sister Tabet when the maelstrom started; and
there he stayed, working with the grooms to calm the horses, lest one break a
leg rearing and kicking. Among horses, as men, hysteria travels fast.


Don’t miss the
rest of the Sacred Band Series!

The Sacred Band of Stepsons series is Homeric and heroic
fiction following the exploits of an ancient cavalry unit modeled on the Sacred
Band of Thebes. Deftly mixing history, myth, and fantasy, Morris’ Sacred Band
of Stepsons live and die in a world where gods are real and magic works —
sometimes.

Morris’ accursed cavalry commander, Tempus, first
appeared Sacred Band first appeared in the million-selling Thieves’ world
shared-universe in 1981. Subsequently, Janet Morris, first alone and
subsequently with her husband Chris Morris, take the Sacred Band into their own
series of novels, set in the fourth century BCE. Passionate, gritty, lyrical
prose and unforgettable characters make this series. Perseid Press Sacred Band
novels includes the ā€œAuthor’s Cutā€ of the Beyond Sanctuary Trilogy and Tempus, as
well as the epic novel The Sacred Band, and The Fish the Fighters and the
Song-girl.

 

Find them at Perseid Press

Best selling author Janet
Morris
began writing in 1976 and published more than 30 novels, many
co-authored with her husband Chris Morris or others. Most of her fiction work
was in the fantasy and science fiction genres, although she also wrote
historical and other novels. Morris either wrote, contributed to, or edited
several book-length works of non-fiction, as well as papers and articles on
nonlethal weapons, developmental military technology and other defense and
national security topics.

 

Christopher Crosby
Morris
(born 1946) is an American author of fiction and non-fiction, as
well as a lyricist, musical composer, and singer-songwriter. He is married to
author Janet Morris. He is a defense policy and strategy analyst and a
principal in M2 Technologies, Inc. He writes primarily as Chris Morris, but
occasionally uses pseudonyms.

 

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#blogtour Nitro Reckless Kings  by Harley Wylde

 

(Reckless Kings MC 9): A Dixie Reapers Bad Boys Romance

MC Romance

Date Published: June 26, 2026

Publisher: Changeling Press

She came back with a secret. He answers with a claim.

Willa — I tell myself I’m here for one reason — to survive. Not for
him. Not for what we had. One night shouldn’t have mattered. But it did.
Now I’m back, pregnant, and desperate, standing in the last place I
should be. And the worst part? He sees me.

Nitro — She thinks I won’t recognize her. Thinks I won’t put it
together. She’s wrong. One look at her, at the curve of her stomach, and
I know exactly what she tried to keep from me.

I don’t hesitate. I don’t negotiate. I claim her in front of
everyone. She can be angry. She can fight. Doesn’t change anything.
She’s mine. The kid’s mine. And I don’t let what belongs to
me walk away.


Perfect for fans of dominant bikers, secret baby romance, and second chance
love stories.

 


Excerpt

Copyright ©2026 Harley Wylde

Willa

The gate loomed ahead, iron and intimidation. I adjusted my canvas bag higher
on my shoulder. Dusk had settled over the compound. I’d rehearsed what
to say fifty times on the bus ride over, how to stand, how to sound casual
about a decision that had kept me awake for weeks. But now, with my heart
hammering against my ribs and my hand resting protectively over the two lives
growing inside me, the words dried up in my throat.

I hadn’t planned for this — for any of this. One night with a man whose
face I’d memorized in the dark, and then the positive test, and then the
second one, and then the doctor’s office confirming what my body had
already told me. I’d kept moving. Found a room in a house with thin
walls and a landlord who didn’t ask questions. Worked shifts until my
feet ached and my back protested. Except it hadn’t been enough. I could
either pay rent, or eat. Most of the time, I didn’t make enough to do
both. And all the while, the babies inside me grew, a reality I couldn’t
walk away from no matter how much I sometimes wanted to.

I buttoned my coat one more time, checking that it covered the slight curve of
my belly. Not that it mattered anymore. Four months in, there was no hiding
what I’d come here to admit.

The Prospect guard stepped forward as I approached the gate, his expression
caught between wariness and routine assessment. Young — maybe twenty-five —
with a patch that marked him as not quite a full member. He had the careful
stance of someone who’d been told to take his job seriously.

ā€œThis is private property,ā€ he said, voice neutral. ā€œYou
looking for someone?ā€

I’d expected this. Rehearsed for it. ā€œI’m here about a job.
At the strip club.ā€ I kept my voice steady, pitched it to sound casual,
like applying for work at an outlaw motorcycle club’s strip joint was
something I did every Tuesday. ā€œSomeone told me you’re hiring
dancers. I stopped by the strip club, but it looked closed.ā€

His gaze moved over me once, taking stock. I’d done what I could to look
the part — worn jeans tight enough to show the shape of my legs, a top with
sleeves long enough to cover my arms but cut low enough to suggest what was
underneath. Of course, my coat currently covered the top half of me. My hair
was loose instead of pulled back the way it had been the night I’d met
Nitro. The night this whole thing started.

ā€œWe don’t take applications at the gate,ā€ the Prospect said,
but his tone had softened slightly. Maybe he believed me. Maybe he just wanted
to believe a woman with my face would want to take her clothes off for money.
Men usually did.

ā€œI was told to ask for Nitro,ā€ I said, the name catching in my
throat.

The Prospect’s expression changed — a flash of something like
recognition, quickly masked. ā€œNitro’s busy. Maybe you should come
back another time.ā€

ā€œI don’t have another time.ā€ The truth of it slipped out
before I could catch it. I took a breath. ā€œPlease. It won’t take
long.ā€

He hesitated, clearly weighing options. I watched the calculation happen
behind his eyes — the balance between turning me away and the potential
consequences if I was telling the truth about knowing someone important.

ā€œHold on,ā€ he said finally, and reached for the radio clipped to
his belt.

I shifted my weight, trying to ease the persistent ache in my lower back. The
bag on my shoulder felt heavier by the second. The night I’d spent here
had been warm — hot with bodies and music and the specific heat of
Nitro’s skin against mine — but now the air carried a chill that cut
through my jacket. Or maybe that was just fear, sending ice through my veins
while my heart tried to beat its way out of my chest.

The Prospect was speaking into the radio, voice too low for me to catch the
words. I turned away slightly, giving him the illusion of privacy, and
that’s when I saw him.

Nitro.

He stood at the edge of the parking area, half-shadowed by the building. Even
from this distance, I could read the lines of his body — the way he held
himself, alert without appearing tense. He’d been about to leave or had
just arrived. It didn’t matter. What mattered was the way his gaze found
mine across the open space, the way his head tilted slightly as recognition
hit.

I didn’t move. Couldn’t move. My rehearsed speech, my careful
composure — all of it evaporated under his gaze. He was exactly as I
remembered. Tall, solid, with that watchful quality that made him seem both
completely present and somehow separate from whatever was happening around
him. I’d spent four months trying to forget the feel of his hands and
the sound of his voice, and here he was, real as anything, looking at me like
he was trying to fit the pieces together.

Then his gaze dropped to my stomach.

Just for a second — a quick, involuntary movement — but I saw it. His
expression didn’t change, but something happened behind his eyes, a
recalculation. When he looked back at my face, his gaze had sharpened.

The Prospect was saying something, but I couldn’t hear it over the blood
rushing in my ears.

Nitro straightened, said something to the men near him without taking his gaze
off me. The Prospect fell back a step, his posture shifting subtly into
something closer to deference. Nitro was moving now, crossing the open ground
between us with the same measured confidence I remembered from that night. Not
hurrying, but covering distance efficiently, each step deliberate.

He stopped three feet from me, close enough that I could smell the faint trace
of cigarette smoke on his clothes, far enough to give me room to step back if
I wanted to. I didn’t. My feet felt rooted to the ground, my body caught
between fight and flight with nowhere to run.

ā€œNitro,ā€ I said. Just his name, the way I’d said mine that
night. Nothing attached to it, no explanation for why I was here or what I
wanted or why the shape of me had changed since he’d last seen me.

He looked at me for a long moment, his expression giving away nothing. Then,
without speaking, he tilted his head toward the gate and stepped aside,
creating a path.

An invitation. Not a question.

I swallowed hard. This was it — the moment everything changed. I’d
thought about it for weeks, turned it over in my mind during the long nights
when I couldn’t sleep, played out every possible reaction, every
potential ending. But standing here now, with the reality of him in front of
me and the knowledge of what I carried between us, none of those rehearsals
mattered.

What mattered was the step forward. The commitment to whatever came next.

I moved past him through the gate, feeling the brush of air as he turned to
follow. My back tingled with the awareness of his presence behind me, the same
awareness I’d felt that night in the hallway when I’d followed him
to his room. The same pull, complicated now by everything that had happened
since.

The compound opened up around me — the main building with its lit windows,
the row of bikes gleaming in the fading light, the sounds of voices and music
carrying on the evening air. It was exactly as I remembered and completely
different, seen now with the knowledge of what had happened here and what it
had led to.

I stopped a few yards inside the gate, suddenly uncertain. The bag on my
shoulder felt heavy. The babies in my belly seemed to pulse with their own
heartbeats, separate from mine but impossibly connected. I’d come this
far. Made the decision. Stepped through the gate. But now, with the reality of
it surrounding me, I couldn’t remember why I’d thought this was
the right choice.

Nitro moved past me, not touching, but close enough that I caught the scent of
him — clean and sharp underneath the smoke. He glanced at me once, his
expression still unreadable, and then tipped his head toward the main
building.

ā€œCome inside,ā€ he said, the first words he’d spoken. Not a
question. But also not a command.

I followed him across the gravel, my footsteps sounding too loud in my ears.
The Prospect watched us go, his expression carefully blank. A few of the men
near the building turned to look, curiosity quickly masked when they saw who
was with me. I kept my gaze on Nitro’s back, on the straight line of his
shoulders under his cut, on the measured certainty of his stride.

He held the door for me, one hand on the frame, not quite touching as I
passed. The warmth inside hit me like a wall after the evening chill, along
with the smell of beer and leather and the scent of a space lived in by too
many people for too long. It was exactly as I remembered from that night —
the same low lighting, the same sense of contained chaos — but empty now of
the press of bodies, the crush of the party.

We were alone in the main room, or nearly. A man I didn’t recognize sat
at the far end of the bar, nursing a drink and pretending not to watch us.
Otherwise, the space was ours — Nitro standing with his back to the door, me
with my bag still on my shoulder and my hand still resting protectively over
my stomach.

He glanced toward the bar and made a motion with his hand. The music died down
a few seconds later. He looked at me for a long moment, his expression giving
away nothing of what he was thinking. Then he reached for my bag.

I let him take it, my fingers slow to release the strap. As he lifted it, it
felt like some small piece of the burden I’d been carrying grew lighter.
Not the important one. Not the one that had brought me here. But something, at
least.

ā€œWhy are you here?ā€ he asked, his voice level.

I took a breath. ā€œYou know why.ā€

His gaze dropped to my stomach again, this time holding there. Yeah. He might
not be able to see through my jacket, but he’d figured it out anyway.
Why else would I show up here out of the blue? Sure, he’d used a condom,
but those were never foolproof.

ā€œFour months,ā€ he said. Not a question.

 

About the Author

Harley Wylde is an accomplished author known for her captivating MC Romances.
With an unwavering commitment to sensual storytelling, Wylde immerses her
readers in an exciting world of fierce men and irresistible women. Her works
exude passion, danger, and gritty realism, while still managing to end on a
satisfying note each time.

When not crafting her tales, Wylde spends her time brainstorming new
plotlines, indulging in a hot cup of Starbucks, or delving into a good book.
She has a particular affinity for supernatural horror literature and movies.
Visit Wylde’s website to learn more about her works and upcoming events, and
don’t forget to sign up for her newsletter to receive exclusive discounts and
other exciting perks.

 

Author on Facebook, Instagram, & TikTok: @harleywylde

 

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

 

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RABT Book Tours & PR

#blogtour A Weaponized Mind by Bruce M Perrin

The Mind Sleuth Series

 

Murder Mystery

Date Published: June 23, 2026

Sometimes, Wilford DeBeer’s high-risk, high-reward financial plans
worked, and when they did, the clients of DeBeer Wealth Management lauded his
brilliance. Unfortunately, sometimes they didn’t, and people lost their
businesses, their retirements, and sometimes their lives. So, when Henry
Jansen, who was caddying a round of golf for DeBeer, pulled a gun and killed
him, the reason seemed obvious.

It wasn’t. Jansen had never been a DeBeer client.

Four days later, Jansen was identified as the shooter. But before the police
could locate and arrest him, he was found dead in an alley near downtown
Denver. At that point, suspicion pivoted to DeBeer’s many disgruntled
clients. One of them must have hired Jansen as their instrument of
retaliation, then killed him to cover their involvement.

This theory, too, led nowhere as the investigation stalled after three months.

Frustrated by the apparent lack of progress on the case, Lauren Beckwith,
Jansen’s cousin, hired Private Investigator Rebecca Marte to continue
the hunt. And while Rebecca apparently retrod much of the same ground as the
police detectives, she must have done something different, because before she
knew it, she was fighting for her life in a diabolical trap set by
Jansen’s killer.

 

About the Author

 

 If you’re interested in what I’m like in something more detailed
than what will fit in this space, I’d say, buy any of my books. That
overly analytic guy (read geek) is me. OK, I’ve never saved the day like
the heroes in my books, but we think alike. I’m interested in technology
and psychology (my formal background) and enjoy writing about where they meet,
now and in the future. In addition to pounding the keyboard, I like to tinker
with home automation and I’m an avid hiker. When I’m not on the
trails, you’ll find me at home with my wife and our dog in Aurora, CO.
For a closer look at my writing life, book reviews, and progress on my
upcoming novels, please join me at brucemperrin.com.

 

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RABT Book Tours & PR