Halloween Release Day for The Whiskey Den (House of Witches Book 2)!

Happy Halloween!

Not only is it Halloween—my favorite day of the year—it’s also release day for The Whiskey Den (House of Witches Book 2).

I wanted to thank everyone who picked up an ARC copy of The Whiskey Den last week. I got a late start, so I don’t expect to see reviews for probably another week, but I hope everyone enjoys it.

If you like witches, and shifters and vampires, and sad, lowly humans—LOL—The House of Witches series might just be up your alley.

When I originally started writing Club 669 (House of Witches Book 1), I didn’t expect it to be more than a little one-off. I'd started it as a Tattooed Corpse Story, a series I have worked on with the amazingly talented author Ofelia Gränd where the two of us could play with genres and have a little fun. But by the time I’d made it through the first draft I knew I wanted to write more. So, yeah, sorry about that Ofelia. It just keeps happening!

With The Whiskey Den, we spend time with the witch Sebastian—the handsy one from Club 669— and he was a hell of a lot of fun to write. And, while I’m told it works as a standalone—I can never tell because I remember everything I’ve written far too well—it is still closely connected to the events of the first book.

Check out the blurb and an excerpt below…


Blurb

Bad things happen for a reason.

Adam Neive’s expiration date is closer than he would like, and it’s only a matter of time before he loses his position as a Ganymede counter-boy. When a friend helps him secure a part-time job at a whiskey bar, his only thought is to escape the looming shadow of the brothels. He never expected another run-in with the witch Sebastian.

Fourteen months after being booted from his coven, Sebastian has become convinced his brother’s death is connected to the wolves of The Whiskey Den. He just needs Adam’s help to discover how. But things are not always as they seem, and justice is more elusive than expected.

When an announcement from the House of Witches changes everything, Adam will need to choose between life within the safety of the king's Monastery and the uncertainty of the city. While Sebastian will have to decide if his family's honor and the life he thought he had lost forever is worth more than the life he's only begun to realize he wants.


Excerpt

After the doors were locked at two-thirty, and most of the staff had gone home, M had introduced himself, and he and Sebastian had shared a few drinks together at the bar.

M made small talk about the business and his family, and if it hadn’t been obvious to Sebastian that it was all a ploy to get him naked, he would have thought he had the wrong guy. Hugo would have found the conversation tiresome. Too tiresome to wade through for that first quickie.

His brother had never been good at feigning interest in other people’s lives. He’d barely been able to feign interest in the lives of his own siblings. Unless, of course, they crossed some invisible line he’d drawn.

“But enough talk.” M pulled the glass from Sebastian’s hand and smiled. “I have a better idea.”

“Finally. I was beginning to wonder whether you even liked men.”

Sebastian allowed himself to be manhandled—nudged and nipped—and expertly herded down the long, dim hall. They pushed through a door and into a dark room, and M flipped on the lights. The walls were lined with nearly empty racks, a few stray coats, left-behinds from who knew when, and a long counter with a set of drawers marked ‘Lost and Found.’

The moment he pushed the door closed, M began unbuttoning his shirt, and in moments had discarded it and pulled his T over his head.

Sebastian had to admire his speed, and the expanse of his chest, even if he had no interest at all in the wolf.

“You don’t mind if I smoke, right?” Sebastian pulled out his lighter, as he pretended to search for a cigarette with his other hand.

“No, you don’t.” M swiped it from his fingers and tossed it into the pile of discarded clothes. “No smoking in my place. Ever.”

Well, fuck. That had been his father’s lighter.

“Now take that off. I want to see you.”

Sebastian smiled, taking his time removing his coat and dropping it to the floor as he murmured a few simple words of an incantation, and then reached to splay his fingers over M’s breastbone.

“Not exactly what I had in mind, my little witch.” M grabbed his wrist, stopping him, and spun Sebastian around, pushing him hard against the wall. Empty metal hangers scattered across the floor, and M tugged at the waistband of Sebastian’s pants. “You’re right that we’ve wasted too much time already.”

In other circumstances, Sebastian might have found it a great start to a night. But not like this. Before he’d even thought about it, orange flames sparked from his fingers—his instinct for survival kicking in—overriding years of discipline to not reveal himself in public.

Conjured fire was far more powerful than any lighter, so it took only a thought to send M tumbling backward. He slammed hard against the floor, and Sebastian moved fast to press his hand, now wreathed in flames, against the wolf’s muscled chest.

“Tell me what—”

“Shit, shit, M.” A man stood at the door, eyes squeezed shut, mortified. He began backing out of the room but bumped into the doorframe. Sebastian had been so distracted that he hadn’t heard anyone walk in. “I’m so sorry.”

“Adam?” Even after all these months, just seeing him again made Sebastian’s heart pound in his chest.

Adam opened his eyes, this time truly taking in the scene, his gaze landing on where Sebastian’s hand flickered against M’s chest.

“Sebastian? What in the fuck is going on?”

“It’s not what it looks like.” The wolf stirred underneath his hand, and Sebastian focused harder on his spell.

“Really? M wasn’t trying to fuck you in the coatroom?”

“Okay, well maybe it does.”

“Did you drug him?”

“What? No, of course not.” Sebastian knew that for all Adam knew about him, there was no of course about it. “Now hush, so I can concentrate.”

He looked back down at the man under him. Shifters weren’t like humans. Humans were easy to manipulate through magic, but shifters took far more effort.

“I’m calling for help.”

“No, you’re not.” Sebastian didn’t want to have to cast on Adam as well. Not because he wasn’t sure he was strong enough to control both him and the shifter, but because of a whole slew of other reasons he didn’t want to examine. “Tell me about Hugo.”

The wolf’s eyes blinked open, but he didn’t answer.

“My brother came here the night he died. Was it to see you?”

“No.” The wolf shook his head slowly, his eyes vacant as if he was looking right through him. “Hugo.”

“What happened to him?” Sebastian was aware that Adam had moved to his side and knelt to get a closer look. “Who would want him dead?”

“M? Adam? Everything okay?” The call came from somewhere in the bar, and Sebastian and Adam looked at one another.

“Fuck.” They said the word in unison, and Adam pushed up.

“Just grab your coat and go home. If I can buy you time, I will.”


You can pick up The Whiskey Den by clicking the universal buy link below.

Not sure? You can check out another excerpt on my website.

Release Day • Findley Black and the Ghosts of Printer's Devil! 🖤 👻

It’s release day! 🎉 Findley Black and the Ghosts of Printer's Devil is finally available in stores. This is a short story about Owen Key, a man who inherits a bookstore from his biological father. A store that, as it turns out, is said to be haunted.

I wanted to thank everyone who pick up an ARC of the book. The reviews are starting to pop up, and I am thrill at Findley and Owen’s reception. I quite like them too. This one is a little bit of humor, and little bit of sweet, and a little bit spooky. I’m happy to see that I’m not the only one that thinks it’s a nice little Halloween romance. 🖤🖤🖤

Excerpt:

“So, any chance this whole ghost hunting thing was just a ploy to get me alone?” He was starting to sober up, and the idea of ghosts, even on Halloween night, was losing its appeal. “Just maybe?”

“Since I’m being honest?” Findley straightened, stepping close. “Maybe a little, at first, but I’m afraid now I’ve got my heart set on it.”

“Oh.”

Findley pulled the towel out of his hand, tossing it aside, and Owen’s heart began to pound. “Well, that’s disappointing.”

Findley smiled and then leaned in to kiss him, his hand on either side of the counter, pinning him there.

His mouth was warm, the kiss slow and deliberate, and Owen wrapped his arms around his neck, and allowed himself to be pressed back against the sink.

It felt good being kissed like this. To be touched and explored by another man’s tongue. Since moving back, Owen hadn’t so much as spent time in another man’s company. Not one that wasn’t way too young, and on his payroll. And they were strangers, yes, but it didn’t feel like all the times he’d kissed other strangers, in other places. Maybe that was because of what alcohol was still coursing through his system, or maybe it was because that, in some way, they’d lived on the periphery of each other’s worlds.

Whatever it was, when Findley pulled away, Owen fought the urge to pull him back.

They looked at each other a long moment, both breathless, and Owen hoped, both considering giving up on any thoughts to ghost spotting, in favor of getting each other off right there in the kitchen, or in the living room on the couch. Or maybe in the bed upstairs.

Owen would have voted for the bed upstairs. That way they could easily fall asleep and wake up a few hours later to do it again.

But finally, when Owen had been certain Findley was about to give in, instead, he stepped back and smiled. “Besides, haven’t you always wanted to see a ghost?”

“The thought had never occurred to me.”


Blurb:

Findley Black and the Ghost's of Printer’s Devil

Starting over at thirty-four is harder than Owen Key expected. Lonelier too. There’s Bella, and the odd assortment of kids he’d inherited when a father he barely knew left him Printer’s Devil. But his bookstore employees and his cat aren’t much good when it comes to getting laid.

Findley Black says a lot of things. At least according to everyone at the store. When Owen runs into him for the first time during one of his ghost tours, with his leather jacket and flirtatious looks, Owen finds himself more than interested in what he has to say.

Owen may have been hoping for a one-night-stand, but when Findley asks to stay the remainder of Halloween night in the Printer’s Devil in hopes of seeing the ghost of a serial killer, he finds it hard to say no.

Halloween is a time for ghost stories and trick or treat. But running out of candy is a bad omen, and it’s hard to get lucky when something otherworldly seems determined to ruin your night.


You can pick it up from most online retailers by clicking the universal buy link below.

Or pick it up from JMS Books for 20% now through Tuesday, November 2nd.


Looking for more Halloween fun?

Check out Ghost Dater from Ofelia Gränd

This is a short, Halloween follow-up with Sandy and Thad from the Rockshade PID series. But, as my TBR pile is in danger of an avalanche, this was my first introduction to the pair. I LOVE it. Werewolf ghost…say no more!

It is a ton fun, sweet, and being a Gränd book, a little dirty! LOL

Thaddeus Esax has a grumpy werewolf problem. For a year, he’s been mated to Sandulf Hunter, a ghost werewolf he brought back from the dead without meaning to. It’s been great. Thad’s been happy, and he believed Sandy was too. But Sandy has been sulking for more than a week, and Thad fears their relationship isn’t going as well as he believed.

The problem with being mated to a ghost is that said ghost never can leave your side, and therefore it’s extremely hard to keep secrets. Thaddeus wants to surprise Sandy, to cheer him up, but to do that, he has to trick him into believing they’re doing something they’re not.

Telling Sandy they’re having a Halloween party doesn’t go over well, but how do you trick a ghost? By making him believe he’ll be dressed up as a pirate for an evening, of course.


COMING SOON