TEASER TUESDAY: Toran Unbound by Rebecca York #ParanormalWomensFic

 

A Paranormal Women’s Fiction Novella

(Unbound, Book 7)

 

Paranormal Women’s Fiction

Publication Date:
January 19, 2024

Publisher: Changeling Press LLC

 

 

Toran Bladewielder’s life was upended when a battle injury forced him
to leave his order — the Holy Defenders of the Gods. It is upended again
when he catches a thief pilfering food from the warehouse he is guarding.
Although the miscreant turns out to be a beautiful woman, his duty is to
hand her over to the authorities.

But when he discovers she is a slave who escaped from a ship in the harbor,
his sense of right and wrong urges him to hide her.

Desperate to maintain her freedom, Farah will do anything escape the
clutches of her cruel master — even seduce a man whose sexual innocence and
moral decency are clear to her.

But as she angles to keep Toran on her side, their relationship heats up.
Neither expected to ever find love, yet the intensity between them builds —
until Lord Camari’s men find Farah and drag her back to him for
punishment. Can Toran rescue her, and is there any way for these unlikely
lovers can forge a lasting relationship?

 

EXCERPT

Toran Unbound

Rebecca York

All rights reserved.

Copyright ©2024 Rebecca York

 

Toran Bladewielder lurked in the darkness of the warehouse, determined to
catch the thief who had been stealing foodstuffs from recent shipments.
Repressing a wince of pain, he leaned back against the building’s
rough stone wall to ease the ache in his leg. Six months ago, he had been a
Holy Defender — a member of the religious order which preserved the
authority of the gods. Then in a battle far from home, he had been struck
down by a blow from an infidel.

The injury to his leg had made him unfit for military service, and he had
been unceremoniously shipped back to his home monastery. There he had been
given a choice — accept the menial jobs of tending the garden and preparing
food for his brothers — or leave the order. After the exhilaration of
battle, he was unable to envision a life of such work. With a heavy heart,
he had chosen to renounce his vows.

For months he had felt like a brigantine without a rudder, adrift on an
unknown sea, until his old schoolmate Gareth Lamb had offered him a
guard’s job in one of the Glencarn warehouses that he and Prince
Gawain owned. It was a far cry from his former holy mission, but at least it
was work that could utilize some of his fighting skills.

When he wasn’t at his post, he was working to strengthen his ruined
leg. The combination kept him from tipping over the edge into the black
despair that had threatened to swallow him whole.

It had been a routine job — until the last few days. Now he had a real
puzzle to solve. No one had been able to catch the sneak thief helping
himself to a recent shipment of foodstuffs from far off Amorn, although the
evidence of his work was as plain as an open box of dates or an unsealed
amphora. But the knave was well-nigh invisible.

Invisible? Toran snorted. That was mere fantasy, but the lout always seemed
to know when it was safe to strike — leaving only the evidence of his
thievery.

Not tonight. Toran had worked out a plan to capture the culprit. He made
his preparations during the day, then stationed himself in one of the
smaller side rooms of the dockside building.

But the plan had its own disadvantages. After hours of waiting in the
shadows, his bad leg had begun to throb. Soon he would have to shift his
positions, and that would give him away. He clenched his fists, his jaw set
in a hard line as he fought down the pain.

He was about to give up when the sound of soft, stealthy footsteps put him
on alert. Someone had come into the room where Toran had stacked crates of
the cargo that the thief had been plundering. He stayed where he was,
determined to win the upper hand this time. He could not see into the room
where the bait was stacked, but when his keen ears detected the squeak of a
nail being eased from a crate lid, he readied himself to pull on the cord in
his right hand.

To his surprise, he heard a sudden flailing as though his quarry had
somehow realized what was about to happen. But it was already too
late.

The rope released a net that fell from the ceiling over the boxes — and
over the brigand who stood beside them.

The man let out a high-pitched scream, then scrabbled as he tried
desperately to disentangle himself from the web, but the edges were
weighted, making it hard to lift.

Toran sprang from his hiding place and moved across the stone floor as
quickly as he could. But he had been standing in place for too long. His bad
leg gave out, and he ended up going down in a heap. Luckily, the netting
trap gave him the time to crawl forward and come down on top of the
struggling prisoner.

They lay entangled on the cold floor, both breathing hard, the miscreant
trying desperately to get away, and Toran just as determined to hold onto
his captive. As the man thrashed about, Toran felt spindly arms and legs, a
slender back, and a mass of soft hair. An unusual combination, he thought as
he pulled the webbing tight, gathering it around the prisoner as though he
were securing a wild animal in a net.

“Stop struggling or you will hurt yourself,” he advised.

The words were met with a stout kick to his bad leg that might have hurt if
the netting hadn’t truncated the blow.

It was too dark in the warehouse to see the struggling form. Ignoring his
throbbing knee, Toran gathered up net and captive and dragged them across
the floor and through the cargo door onto the riverside wharf where he had
left a lantern burning on a hook.

At this hour of the night, there was no one else about. As he dragged his
bundle, he added to his impressions of the thief. This was no full-grown
man. It must be a youth — mayhap a desperate street urchin who was using
the shipments as a source of food. Still, stealing was stealing, and it must
stop.

Angry that the exertion had him breathing hard, Toran grabbed the prisoner
by the hair and turned him to his back so that he was suddenly looking down
into frightened green eyes. They were the first thing he saw, but he quickly
took in more details. Wild dark hair framing a delicate face. A small nose,
a slender neck. His gaze traveled farther downward, seeing ragged clothing
of a cut he did not recognize. Not pants below the dirty shirt, but skirts.
As a former holy brother, he had little experience with skirts or anything
else to do with the female sex. Quickly his gaze traveled upward again,
seeing twin mounds pushing up at the chest. This was no slender lad. It was
a girl.

“Blood of the gods,” he croaked. “Who are
you?”

She looked away. “Nobody.” Her voice was soft and strangely
accented.

“A thief,” he answered his own question. “Look at
me.”

Slowly she turned her face back toward his, and he saw the look of
devastation in her eyes.

“Let me go and you will never see me again,” she
whispered.

“I cannot. You have stolen from a royal warehouse, and I must turn
you over to the prince’s guards.”

He saw her lips tremble. “I did it to keep myself alive.”

“Who are you?” he asked again.

 

About the Author

New York Times and USA Today Best-Selling Author Rebecca York began her
career as a journalist writing articles for newspapers and magazines, but
after several years decided to try writing fiction. She’s a highly
successful author of over 50 romantic suspense and paranormal novels and is
the head of the Columbia Writers Workshop. Her many awards include two Rita
finalist books. She has two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times:
for Series Romantic Suspense and for Series Romantic Mystery. Her Peregrine
Connection series won a Lifetime Achievement Award for Romantic Suspense
Series. She collects rocks, and enjoys cooking, walking, reading, gardening,
travel, and Mozart operas.

 

Author Contact Links

Author’s Website

Author on Twitter

 

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

 

Pre-Order Today


TEASER TUESDAY: Lord of Dreams by Alice Gaines #ParanormalWomensFiction

 

Night Lords, Book 2

 

Paranormal Women’s Fiction

Date Published: January 5, 2024

 

 

Psychotherapist Thea’s instinct to help urges her to reach out to the
man who haunts her dreams. When they finally touch, she finds herself drawn
into his arms.

He’s the Lord of Dreams, and together they help him heal from a past
disaster. But can she learn to get over her own fear of attachment and give
herself to him?

 

Publisher’s Warning: Includes discussion of teen suicide that may be
a trigger for some readers.

 

 

 

EXCERPT

 

Thea Jamison went to the break room and filled a mug with the vile elixir
that came out of the coffee pot. After loading it with sugar, she leaned
against the counter and choked some down.

Something was happening to her patients — all of them simultaneously. It
was common for neurotics to report nightmares. Not so common for all of them
to discuss bad dreams on every visit. Unless they’d gotten together
and planned a conspiracy to make her crazy by copying each other, something
else was going on.

She had half an hour free before her next session, so she stayed where she
was and tried to make sense of something they never taught her in her Ph.D.
program. She was still lost in thought when a colleague walked in and went
straight for the coffee pot.

“You look pensive,” Bob Monroe, Ph.D., one of the founders of
the Bellville Clinic said.

“Something’s off…” She hesitated. “Some kind
of shared neurosis in my patients, but not like anything I’ve ever
read about.”

Bob stopped in the act of filling his mug. His expression grew serious, his
eyebrows nearly meeting. “What shared neurosis?”

“All my patients are reporting nightmares. All of them, every single
night,” she said. “Some are afraid to go to sleep.”

He studied her until she could almost hear wheels spinning in his head.
“All the same content?”

“No, they vary, but they’re persistent,” she answered.
“Do you think they could be pulling a prank of some kind?”

“Only if my patients are in on the joke.”

She could only gape at him. “Yours, too?”

“Yup. I heard that some of our other clinicians’ patients were
reporting bad dreams, but I didn’t pay too much
attention.”

“Oh, shit.” Maybe she should mention to Bob that she’d
been having a strange recurring dream as well. Not a nightmare, but odd.
Every night a man would appear as she slept. Ghostly figures flitted around
him. No threat to her, but he struggled against them. When he grasped one,
others would swarm, and he’d seem to choke until he fought them off.
And from time to time, he’d glance at her and beg her with his eyes.
He needed something, and he seemed to think she could give it to him.

“You got quiet all of a sudden,” Bob said. “Was it
something I said?”

Not this again. Not this morning, please. With Bob’s healthy ego, the
man couldn’t believe she’d broken up with him. She never should
have dated someone senior to her, anyway. Luckily, she’d gotten out
before she got too involved.

“Not at all, Bob. I’m just worried about the
patients.”

“All work and no play, Thea.” Bob’s ego again. He’d
gotten over Thea well enough to date others. But he couldn’t make
himself believe a lover had rejected him.

“I just don’t want to get involved with anyone…
ever.” She’d had enough abandonment for one life and
didn’t plan to put her heart in danger again.

“If you really mean that, you should work on it,” he said.
“It’s not healthy.”

“I do not want to discuss this, especially at work.”

He raised his hands in surrender. “I give up.”

If only that were true. She drank the last of the coffee she could stand,
turned, and dumped the poison into the sink. “Maybe we should get
everyone together and see how widespread this phenomenon is. We could treat
it as some kind of mass hysteria.”

“Not a bad idea,” he said. “And if it holds up, we could
write an article for one of the journals.”

Maybe he could name a syndrome after himself and get it in the DSM. Bob was
an excellent therapist, but he had a tendency toward self-promotion. Oh,
hell, a journal article would be a good idea.

Just then, Phyllis Conroy, MSW, joined them. “You two seem pretty
intense. Is anything going on?”

“Have you noticed anything interesting about your clients?” Bob
asked.

“Odd you should mention it,” Phyllis answered. “I have.
They’re all reporting bad dreams… every last one of
them.”

Thea and Bob exchanged a look.

“We’ll ask the entire team if this is happening with their
people, too,” Bob said. “If it is, I’ll call a few other
clinics to see if they’re experiencing the same
phenomenon.”

“What if they are?” Thea said.

“Then something horrible is going on with psychiatric patients
everywhere,” Bob said. “It’ll be a public health
crisis.”

Phyllis frowned. “Are you two serious?”

“Afraid so,” Bob said. “I’ll call a staff meeting
so we can discuss this.”

He put down his cup and left the break room.

“What could cause something like this?” Phyllis said.

Thea shrugged. “Beats me. A virus of some kind? Something in the
water?”

Whatever it was, it was connected to the man in her dreams. She had no way
of knowing that, of course, but the man had started coming to her about the
same time as her patients began reporting nightmares. And the knowledge she
was connected to him… maybe to help him… came through
clearly.

“Water pollution hardly seems likely,” Phyllis said.

“Do you have a better explanation?”

“I sure don’t,” Phyllis answered.

Thea had practiced directing her own dreams with some success. If she could
connect with the man, he might have an answer for what was happening here. A
far-out plan, but it was worth a try.

 

About the Author

Alice Gaines lives in the San Francisco Bay Area in a fixer-upper house she
never fixed up. Aside from writing and reading hot, hot romance, she loves
cooking, knitting and crocheting, and her church. She has a pet corn snake
named Casper. She’s insanely passionate about the funky soul band, Tower of
Power.

You can write to Alice at authoralicegaines@gmail.com. You can see
information about new releases at http://www.alicegaines.blogspot.com. Sign up for
her newsletter. From time to time, she raffles off her handcrafted items to
her readers.

 

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

 

 

 

Pre-Order Today

TEASER TUESDAY: Bewitched by the Bear by Jessica Coulter Smith #ShifterRomance

A Paranormal Women’s Fiction / Shifter Romance Novella

Date to be Published: November 17, 2023

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

 

 

Discover the power of true love in this spellbinding tale of magic and
adventure.

All Amara wants is to live a life of adventure, without being tied down.
With the dark fae relentlessly pursuing her, she needs a place to hide. Her
gram’s cottage seems like the perfect spot, but the old witch’s
words leave Amara unsettled — What you seek is in Cutter’s
Creek.

Alpha bear shifter Hale is determined to safeguard those closest to him.
His life takes an unexpected turn when he crosses paths with a captivating
witch. Enchanted by her very presence, he’s unable to banish her from
his thoughts.

As destiny ties them together, not even the dark fae will destroy their
newfound happiness.

Uncover the magic in this fast-paced, insta-love story that’s sure to
warm your heart.

 

Publisher’s Note: Bewitched by the Bear is based on the previously
published short story Ruby and the Bear. Bewitched has been expanded and is
now twice the length of the original story, complete with a new ending and
steamier scenes. No cheating and a guaranteed happily ever after!

 

 

 

Excerpt

Lunar Cycle’s dance floor cleared the moment the wolf and the bear
began circling one another. Hale Klein watched as his cousin, Duncan Hunt,
flexed his claws in his partially shifted wolf state. It took a hell of a
lot of anger to hold a partial shift, and Hale figured Duncan had to be
running on pure rage. He had to admit, he had it coming. Hale didn’t
know what had come over him since losing his father, but something inside
him had twisted. He’d taken a lucrative business of being a security
consultant and warped it. For years, he’d been a gun for hire, for the
right price, regardless of whether he was fighting on the side of good or
bad. But as his cousin faced him, fighting for the place of alpha within the
pack, he realized perhaps he’d gone too far. His hold, at first, had
been tenuous, as the adopted son of the rightful alpha.

This fight wasn’t pointless, exactly, but Hale could think of better
things to fight over — no woman was worth bloodshed. Not that’d
he’d wanted Marissa. It was more that Duncan had wanted her, and
suddenly she’d become the most attractive of women to Hale. He loved
rubbing his cousin’s nose in his alpha status, but this time,
he’d overstepped. Even he could admit it to himself at any rate.
Tricking Marissa into his bed and then tossing her aside like
yesterday’s garbage might not have been the best of plans. In his
defense, she’d been eager enough. If she’d truly loved Duncan,
she would have never strayed.

Looking back, Hale had to say that he wasn’t proud of himself. As
he’d gotten to know Marissa, he’d realized what a sweet girl she
was, and she truly hadn’t deserved what Hale had done to her. Even
still, her heart hadn’t completely belonged to Duncan. Hale had to
wonder if she’d only accepted his cousin because of his status in the
pack. Either way, was it really Hale’s fault she’d run away?
Duncan seemed to think so.

“Your reign over the Silver Crescent Pack is at an end,” Duncan
growled through his shifted snout. “It’s time for justice to
come to our lands.”

And you think you’re the wolf for the job? Hale taunted
telepathically. No one had been able to beat him in the seventy years
he’d been on this earth — what wolf could beat a bear? — and
definitely not in the twenty years he’d held the position of alpha.
What made his cousin think today would be any different?

“It’s time for a wolf to rule the wolves.” Duncan snapped
his jaws.

Bring it!

Duncan lunged at him, arms opening wide, claws brandished like the weapons
they were. Hale was bulky in his current form, but he also had power the
wolf couldn’t hope to match. Rising to his hind feet, Hale towered
over his cousin. Swiping out with a paw, he caught Duncan right across the
cheek, his claws sliding into the wolf’s skin like butter, leaving
three perfect slashes.

The wolf howled in outrage, twisting to come at Hale once more. Before the
bear could scramble out of the way, the wolf’s claws embedded in his
sides, leaving gouges in his tough hide. Hale snarled and broke free,
spinning to immediately launch another attack at his cousin. As his massive
bear paws arced through the air, his cousin charged.

Hale braced himself for the impact, claws aimed right for his
cousin’s flanks, their razor-sharp points digging into meat and
muscle. Duncan howled in outrage again, this time falling to his knees
before the bear. Hale didn’t want to kill his cousin. He only wanted
to prove a point. Opening his jaws wide, he fitted his mouth around
Duncan’s neck, forcing the other shifter to his hands and knees in
supplication. Hale growled long and low, not stopping until Duncan whimpered
in defeat.

Backing away from his whipped cousin, Hale shifted back to his human form.
Towering over the shifter now covered in wounds, Hale flexed his muscles,
ignoring the twinge in his sides from his open wounds, and kept his gaze
steady as he stared down at Duncan.

“Are we done?” he asked.

Duncan changed back to his fully human form and nodded. “We’re
done.”

“I’m sorry Marissa ran away, Duncan, and I’m sorry for
taking her from you. But there is no way that woman was your mate. If she
was, she wouldn’t have fallen into bed with me so easily. She would
have fought to be by your side, not caring whether or not the alpha was
interested in her. All she wanted was power, despite her sweet nature.
Females are all the same. They want the strongest in the pack, unless they
find their true-mate. Then no other male will do.”

“You don’t know that she wasn’t –”

“Yes, I do. And if you think about it, you’ll realize it too.
Since you’re worse off than I am, I’ll let you see the healer
first. Get your wounds tended and go home.”

“Yes, Alpha.”

Shaking his head in disgust, Hale turned, grabbed his shredded clothes off
the floor, and made his way through the crowd and outside the club. It
wouldn’t be the first time he’d driven home naked, and he
doubted it would be the last. There would always be someone wanting to
challenge him, someone thinking they were bigger, tougher. It hurt that his
cousin had been the one to instigate a fight with him. They’d fought
over the years, but it had always been more like sibling rivalry, not a
to-the-death fight over being alpha.

Hale dug his keys out of his pants pocket and slid into the large truck in
the parking lot. As the door slammed shut, he tossed his clothing on the
passenger’s seat and put his key into the ignition. The engine turned
over and he backed out of the space, then pulled out of the lot. He knew he
should just head home, to the alpha’s house in town, and call it a
night, but he wanted solitude, time to think, time to regroup. Being the
alpha meant he had an open-door policy, ensuring his pack could come to him
for whatever they needed regardless of the time. Change was coming. He could
feel it in the air, and he wasn’t certain if it was the good kind or
the bad kind.

About the Author

Jessica Coulter Smith is an acclaimed romance writer with a passion for
storytelling. Her works showcase the power of love and its ability to
transcend boundaries, capturing the hearts of audiences worldwide. With a
unique writing style and perspective, Jessica continues to inspire and
entertain readers from all walks of life.

Author on Facebook

Author on Instagram

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

Pre-Order Today

 

 

TEASER TUESDAY: Giant’s Garden by Siondalin O’Craig #DarkFantasy #Suspense

 

(Celtic Magic, Book 4)

 

Action Adventure, Dark Fantasy, Paranormal Women’s Fiction, Romance,
Suspense, Urban Fantasy

Date Published: June 16, 2023


 

A grant to do doctorate work in a bleak corner of Northern Ireland is Penny
Gallagher’s last chance to find her wings and break free of her
oppressive industrialist boyfriend.

When she finds her time there has been engineered for her boyfriend’s
profit, it takes a voiceless giant of a man to help her discover her own
magic.

 

Excerpt

Copyright ©2023 Siondalin O’Craig

 

Penny

The Giant’s Causeway

Sean Feeney took another long drag from his pocket flask. Heavy gold chains
around his wrist grated against the flask’s metal rim. Penny Gallagher
watched him sway unsteadily in his skinny designer jeans and black Converse
high tops.

He reached out and draped his bony arm around her shoulders. She
couldn’t tell whether it was to keep himself from falling over or an
awkward maneuver meant to be making a pass at her.

She hoped it was the latter. First off, they were standing at the top of a
cliff. Not just any cliff, but a bare, windswept cliff tumbled with black
hexagonal stone columns jutting out into the North Channel of the Irish Sea
between the north coast of Ireland and the west coast of Scotland. If Sean
dropped onto those lichen-pocked rocks it would mean a fatal mess involving
a lot of paperwork and long, dim conversations with uniformed authorities.
And if I fell… no, she told herself firmly, we’re not going
down that line of thinking right now.

Secondly, she hadn’t gotten laid since James Carbill threw her over
six months ago for some new interior designer he had fallen for. And to tell
the truth, she had not been laid decently for months before that.
James’s steel-blue eyes had started wandering elsewhere long before
that ugly day when he’d told her that she needed to move out of the
Beacon Hill apartment he had been keeping her in, and that both of her
positions — as his personal assistant, and as his sexual partner and dinner
party arm candy — were terminated effective immediately.

James had softened the blow a bit by pulling some strings to secure this
grant so she could finish her doctorate degree in psychology from
Boston’s Fauntel University, and that’s how she wound up
standing on top of a windy cliff, watching Sean’s long, shaggy blond
hair blow into his eyes, which were fixed vacantly on the horizon.

She reached up to her shoulder and twined the fingers of her right hand
with Sean’s, hoping to lower the odds that they’d both go off
the cliff. The smell of salt spray on stone mingled with alcohol fumes. She
reached for his flask with her left.

“Give me a hit of that,” she said, raising her voice over the
wind. “You can’t have all the fun yourself.”

He handed her the flask absent-mindedly, its cap dangling from a little
silver chain. She took a swig. Smoky, peaty whiskey seeped into her tongue
and the flesh of her throat, straight into her bloodstream. She would swear
it never even hit her stomach.

“All this,” Sean said, gesturing broadly with a wobbling sweep
of his arm. Penny braced her feet, but they did not topple over. “When
you write your… your… thing.”

“My thesis.”

“Your thee, your thing. On all this. You’ll make millions of
dollars. We’ll all make millions of dollars. Because everyone will
want it.”

Penny took another hit of the whiskey. It felt mellower this time, as if
she and the whiskey were getting acquainted. “No one ever made
millions of dollars on their psychology doctorate thesis,” she
said.

“Oh, but you will.” Sean turned around, his face close to hers,
and poked her hard in the chest with the point of his index finger.
“You will. I will. Everyone will. Because this,” he swept his
arm out again along the horizon, “this is the Giant’s Causeway.
You’ll write about why it makes people feel so good — you feel good,
right?”

Penny nodded skeptically. He didn’t wait for her response before
rambling on.

“Because it makes people feel so good that they will all want to live
here, and I’m selling my land to the American developer who will give
them all a place to live. And everyone else will too. Just as soon as you
are done.”

Penny smirked and shook her head. It’s true that her doctorate
proposal had talked about the intersection of landscape and psychology, and
the grant that James had helped her secure had sent her to this bleak,
forsaken, vertical drop-off to write about it. But in point of fact, she had
not yet started writing, and now that she was here, she could not for her
life figure out what to write about.

“Sean, you handsome devil,” she said. “It’s a pile
of rocks.” Basalt, she noted to herself, recalling one of the
guidebooks she’d read on the plane. Lava from a volcanic episode,
cooled slowly, formed hexagonal columns. Why do people find the myths more
interesting than the science?

 

 

About the Author

 Siondalin O’Craig writes romance with the slow burn of a peat fire on
an autumn night deep in the woodland hills. Sip a glass of Irish whiskey,
turn the page, and let the magic overtake you. Siondalin lives in the
mountains of New England where she walks under the trees celebrating the
wheel of the year, grows a luscious garden full of magical herbs, and plays
a wicked Irish fiddle. Follow her on Facebook and email her at
siondalinocraig@gmail.com to sign up for her newsletter.

Publisher on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram: @changelingpress

 

 

Preorder Today